Meet Hedwig, an aptly named Snowy Owl who flew all the way from the Arctic tundra to the Big Apple to enjoy a milder winter (and also probably a or two). That is, until she was shot near an NYC airport鈥攍ikely the result of a legal loophole that allows airports to use lethal means to clear owls and other birds off their tarmacs.
But Hedwig is a lucky one: She was found and rescued two weekends ago, right before a record blizzard hit the city. A Queens resident found her struggling to fly a mile away from LaGuardia Airport, and called up the Bronx Zoo, which in turn referred him to the Wild Bird Fund, a rehab center on the Upper West Side of Manhattan. After examining videos of the owl, the WBF asked the rescuer to shuttle her over to the center. When he and the bird showed up though, the staff realized Hedwig鈥檚 wounds were too severe to be treated there.
That鈥檚 when Dr. Shachar Malka stepped in. Malka, who works for the Humane Society of New York and also collaborates with the WBF, is known to be the most skilled raptor veterinarian in the city. He brought Hedwig to his office and used X-rays to locate metal fragments in her right shoulder and pectoral muscle鈥攐ne of the biggest and most vital flight muscles in a bird鈥檚 body. (There was no bullet鈥攊t probably passed straight through the owl.) With a deft bit of suturing, Malka closed up the wound and sent Hedwig back to the WBF for meds and rest.
After two weeks of treatment from the WBF鈥檚 doting staff, Hedwig鈥檚 hero came by to give her one last lift. He took her down to the Raptor Trust in Millington, New Jersey, where she鈥檒l have plenty of room to spread and test out her wings. If she recovers fully, she鈥檒l be released; if not, she鈥檒l stay on at the Trust and join its fleet of education raptors.
鈥淭he only way we can serve our patients is by working with other groups,鈥 says Rita McMahon, director of the WBF. Luckily for the birds of NYC, there are plenty of hands on deck to help.
Correction: Hedwig's helpers at the WBF were staff members, not volunteers.