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PINKEY |
PINKEY'S STORY | CLYDE'S TALES | CREDITS | WILDLIFE ORGANIZATIONS
(these links are Pinkey's own internal website - check it out!)
Pinkey’s story, as we see it:
Pinkey
was a cute, goofy screech owl baby, brought to Clyde Hollifield for
rehabilitation in the late spring of 2005. Clyde – who
has rehabbed many raptors over the years and who rehabbed his own
injured dog, Dr. Willie – was
trained and certified to do this work. He
is also quite creative in his tactics.
Though
he and Pinkey shared an unusually strong bond, Clyde knew he could
never let Pinkey become a “pet”. Clyde taught
him to hunt and set up a “soft release” to be sure that
Pinkey – not the most serious and mature of young owls – could
really make it on his own.

We were
able to film Pinkey while he was still fully in rehab and later with
his wilder friend Little Bit, who never formed a bond with Clyde,
after they were both released. Pinkey
continued to return to Clyde's porch for almost four months to get
reassuring chats and occasional snacks from his “Mama Clyde” (isn’t
that just like a teenager?). The visits became less and less frequent
until Pinkey was truly independent. Though he could have lost his
freedom by being “manned down,” both he and Clyde were
committed to his true nature: WILD!
Here is Pinkey's story, as he and Clyde remember it:
A little owl in trouble
It was
black as a bottle of ink the night baby Pinkey fell out of the owl
nest. His first exposure to the big wide world was cold
and wet. Even though his parents tried to help him, foolish Pinkey
flapped farther and farther from home and hearth. Within a
couple of days he was in real danger of dying from starvation and
cold....

Strangers to the rescue
The hungry
little owl wandered into a thicket and cried like
an elf having his leg twisted. Luckily, a passing giant heard
his miserable sobs. He would soon learn that these strange-looking
giants were called humans. Pinkey was scooped up in the giant’s
warm talons and carried away to a huge moving nest called a car. Pinkey's
rescue and rehabilitation had begun.
The car
smelled of strange and unfamiliar odors as a frightened Pinkey huddled
in a towel on the seat beside the human lady. A thing
called a radio made ungodly noises and had it not been for the soothing
sound of the lady’s voice, Pinkey would have died of fright. He
stared out from large yellow eyes as she explained that she was taking
him to a nature center where he would get care and food.
Food – that sounded great. He could just imagine juicy
worms, wiggling crickets, and warm mice like his mom had always provided,
but how would he ever learn to provide these things for himself? Living
in the nest with his fuzzy siblings, Pinkey had never seen his parents
hunt and had no idea where food came from… or just how one came
into possession of a live mouse. Warm for the first time
in days, the scruffy, wet owl fell asleep and dreamed of home, nest,
parents, and food.
Suddenly
the car stopped and Pinkey was snatched up by the lady, who he was
beginning to trust a bit, and taken into a very large hollow tree
that was perfectly square and brightly lit. Once inside,
Pinkey was placed on a table and closely examined by another human. Then
he was placed in a small cage and given fresh water, succulent earthworms
and a welcome lump of fresh meat. This was the first time he
had accepted food from anyone but his mom, but his hunger overcame
his caution and he ate like the ravenous omnivore that he was.
Who/what is Clyde?
Just before
Pinkey fell into the most restful sleep he had had in days, he overheard
the humans talking about sending him to something called Clyde. The next morning when he cracked a cautious eye
just a tiny bit to examine his surroundings, he saw all sorts
of other birds in similar small cages: there were songbirds, a scary
red-tailed hawk with a bad wing, a stinky old black turkey vulture
with a broken leg, and a full grown screech owl in the next cage. Pinkey
called to him in his best raspy baby owl voice and begged for food,
but the adult only turned towards him, exposing an injured bloodshot
eye.
As Pinkey
was wondering just how all these birds had been injured
and if the humans were to blame, some of those very humans entered
the room. They came directly to his cage door and peered in like
rude uneducated louts. Pinkey swelled up to his biggest little
size and stared back defiantly. A huge hand reached in and swept
him up to eye level with the ugliest human of them all. The others
called him Clyde and it quickly became apparent that Clyde intended
to take Pinkey home with him.
A new home, for a while – rehab begins
Later
Pinkey could hardly remember the ride to Clyde's home, deep in the
dark forest of Appalachia, where he was placed in something called
a cage near the human home. It was big and he could see
chickens outside and hear the wild birds in the trees...
As soon
as Pinkey was settled in and offered fresh tasty grasshoppers, Clyde
began to explain in broken owl language exactly what rehab was. Pinkey
found out that he was expected to exercise daily, study hard at learning
to hunt and adjust to all kinds of new foods. The schooling began
immediately when Clyde placed a live grasshopper in the cage and Pinkey
was expected to catch it. And so it went day after day: sleep,
wake early, do flying exercises, try to catch live food, and spend
the wild nights listening to the sounds of the mother forest. Pinkey
began to feel that Clyde was now his mother, and Clyde felt a special
connection, too.

A new friend and competition: a little girl owl!
One evening
as Pinkey was just rousing from a hard day's sleep, Clyde arrived
with a great surprise. Another screech owl was put into
HIS cage. It was a younger orphaned female named Little
Bit. And
thus Pinkey learned that he was not the only young owl needing help.

Pinkey
and Little Bit grew close like original nest mates and often slept
huddled together, in spite of their very different, strong personalities. Pinkey
was messy and silly, with poor grooming skills and an unabashed fondness
for Clyde; Little Bit was all business – neat, prim, serious
and cautious.
Even though
she was younger, Little Bit was wilder than Pinkey and soon surpassed
him in hunting training. Together they began to master the art of
catching live prey, but hunting inside a closed cage is easy compared
to what they would have to do soon. Would they
make it once they were freed into the big wide world where bugs and
mice run away from nice little owls?
Clyde
explained that the two friends would be given something called a
soft release. Clyde would continue to provide bits of food
while Pinkey and Little Bit hunted on their own. To Pinkey,
food was the most important thing in the whole universe – what
a relief!
One evening
just before dark, Clyde came as usual to feed the
owls, but he left the food just outside the cage door, propped open
with a stick. At first Pinkey cried and begged to be hand fed
but Clyde insisted that they both come out of the cage and feed themselves. Cautious
as a scared child on the first day of school, Pinkey put a single
toe outside the cage. Then Little Bit pushed him aside, flew
to the food and gobbled it up before flying up to a tree branch. Pinkey
learned that the early bird gets the worm….

The release: learning to be home in the wild
On June
29, 2005, Pinkey was released back into the wild after a successful
rehabilitation. His cage mate Little Bit was released on July
18. Over the next few weeks Clyde continued to put out food each
evening near the cage. Pinkey would call – and sometimes
whine – for Clyde from the woods, and Clyde would answer with
the same kind of call. Little Bit came along but mostly stayed
back, scolding, when Pinkey came close to get food and chat with Clyde.
All the
while, the two teenage owls honed their hunting skills in the dark
forest. Little Bit was naturally better at it than Pinkey. By
watching her and sharing in her kills, Pinkey slowly learned to acquire
his own food.
The two
young raptors grew bolder and more proficient as hunters. They
would call to each other from the bushes to coordinate their hunt as
Clyde answered with encouragements from the porch. It was becoming
less and less necessary to return to the porch for food.
Little
Bit was the first to make the leap to self-sufficiency. Pinkey
would return often to talk to Clyde and take a bit of food, much to
Little Bit's disdain. On one such visit, Clyde explained to
Pinkey that it was time for him to hunt for himself. It was a
hard thing when Clyde stopped leaving bits of food out by the cage
and Pinkey actually had to feed himself like a REAL wild screech owl.

Pinkey
still called to Clyde from the darkness most nights, just to let
him know that all was well. Then, one November night he followed
Little Bit far into the dark forest to start life on his own,
forever away from dependency on humans. Pinkey and Little
Bit are now part of the screech owl gene pool…and they have
as good a chance as any owl to make it.
Would we
ever know what happened? Perhaps they would mate and
stay together...or he would find another mate. Maybe he’ll
come back to visit, when he’s got his own children, so he can
show them off to Grandma Clyde!
Postscript from a free bird
See
our Appalachian storyteller Clyde's
emails and the night vision video with Princess
for a glimpse into Pinkey's life in the wild, after his release.
Clyde
Hollifield, AKA “dirt”, lives on a farm in the
Western North Carolina mountains, southeast of Asheville, with his
wife Adrienne, three dogs (Willie, George and Pippin), several chickens,
trout in the pond, and until the end of March 2007,
the periodic raptors he rehabilitated (mostly screech owls).
Clyde is a gifted inventor, storyteller, artist, puppeteer, wise
woodsman and Renaissance man.
You can
help orphaned or injured wildlife in many ways: by supporting
educational and rehabilitation programs in your area; by
learning about how you might become a wildlife rehabilitator
yourself; by helping organizations protecting habitat; by
donating to Little Pearls to help us get Pinkey's story out to the
public.
CONTRIBUTE
NOW
Everyone
can do something to ensure that our children will always have wildlife
to enjoy, and that wildlife can live as they are meant to live – healthy,
wild and free!
WILDLIFE LINKS
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PINKEY |
PINKEY'S STORY | CLYDE'S TALES | CREDITS | WILDLIFE
ORGANIZATIONS
(these links are Pinkey's own internal website - check it out!)
HOME | PORTFOLIO | WHAT'S
NEW | UPCOMING PEARLS | THANKS | SPONSORS | CONTRIBUTE
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FEEDBACK | ABOUT US
LITTLE
PEARLS
PO Box 8641 Asheville, NC 28814 USA
828-658-9097
info@LittlePearls.org
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Pearls is an independent non-profit, approved
as a 501(c) (3) organization by the IRS in 2004.
This
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