Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. Parrot Refuge Set To Close Aug. 1, Hundreds Of Birds In Need Of Homes

The Canadian Press, 27 Jun, 2016 10:21 AM
    COOMBS, B.C. — Hundreds of parrots living at a Vancouver Island sanctuary need new homes as an Aug. 1 deadline approaches for the closure of the World Parrot Refuge.
     
    Between 450 and 500 parrots, including macaws, cockatoos, lovebirds and conures, are up for adoption, following the death last February of refuge founder Wendy Huntbatch.
     
    "After Wendy's passing, the money has basically run out," said Matthew Spate, a refuge supervisor and one of its few remaining paid staff.
     
    Huntbatch, 70, an avid animal rights advocate, opened the refuge at Coombs, about 150 kilometres north of Victoria, in 2005.
     
    At one point she had more than 800 parrots at the refuge, which includes 2,100 square metres of heated indoor free-flight avaries and about 1,500 square metres of outdoor flight area.
     
    The refuge was open to the public.
     
    An obituary posted on the refuge website by her son Justin Huntbatch says his mother devoted last 25 years of her life to the health and welfare of ex-breeder and ex-pet parrots. "Her goal was to educate people why parrots should not be pets, to stop the trafficking and importing of parrots into Canada and to provide a home for life for those parrots that were here already."
     
    Spate said parrots can be difficult pets, which is why many of those living at the refuge were given up for adoption. Some can live to be 75 years old.
     
     
    "They take a lot of work and they often outlive their owners," he said. "Parrots need a lot of attention and when they don't get enough attention they do get into trouble. Stories of people getting their kitchen ruined or base boards ripped off are not uncommon."
     
    Parrots are loud, he said. Their squawks and screeches are louder than barking dogs, said Spate. They also talk, often mimicking the words of their owners.
     
    "You also get bit quite a bit," he said. "You definitely get put through the ringer. But once you get to know the birds and they get to know you, they are actually great animals who are very intelligent and very personable."
     
    The refuge is contacting the previous owners of the refuge's adopted parrots and asking if they want them back.
     
    The Greyhaven Exotic Bird Sanctuary, a non-profit society in Surrey, B.C., dedicated to bird conservation, is part of the effort to relocate the parrots, agreeing to take as many birds as they can and find homes for them.
     
    The city council in nearby Nanaimo has agreed to a short-term lease of a former Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Shelter to give some of the parrots a temporary home, Spate said.
     
    He said he expects to find homes and shelter for all the parrots.
     
    "But it's going to take a while."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Canada Must Deal With Harmful Drugs For Seniors With National Strategy: Study

    Canada Must Deal With Harmful Drugs For Seniors With National Strategy: Study
    Prof. Steve Morgan of the University of British Columbia says physiological changes associated with aging alter the effects of many medications, meaning older adults shouldn't be taking them.

    Canada Must Deal With Harmful Drugs For Seniors With National Strategy: Study

    Nova Scotia Announces Details Of Budget Funding For Home-Care For Seniors

    Health Minister Leo Glavine says the money will be used to give people the help they need to live on their own, near family and friends, for as long as they can.

    Nova Scotia Announces Details Of Budget Funding For Home-Care For Seniors

    'My Dear Boy:' Mother Still Weeps For Teen Locked Up In Florida 30 Years Ago

    'My Dear Boy:' Mother Still Weeps For Teen Locked Up In Florida 30 Years Ago
    TORONTO — Even now, almost 30 years later, Richard and Carol Davies grasp for the words to explain how they felt when a Florida jury declared their teenaged son guilty of first-degree murder.

    'My Dear Boy:' Mother Still Weeps For Teen Locked Up In Florida 30 Years Ago

    Ontario Appears To Be Killing Its Pension Plan Slowly After CPP Deal

    Ontario Appears To Be Killing Its Pension Plan Slowly After CPP Deal
    TORONTO — Ontario's Liberal government is signalling that dismantling the administration of its now-redundant pension plan won't happen quickly.

    Ontario Appears To Be Killing Its Pension Plan Slowly After CPP Deal

    Dead Inmate Had Heroin In Blood, Pills In Pants: 'How Come Nothing Was Noticed?'

    Dead Inmate Had Heroin In Blood, Pills In Pants: 'How Come Nothing Was Noticed?'
    How come nothing was noticed when he was being videoed constantly by the guards?" said Ernie LeBlanc, whose son Jason Marcel LeBlanc died Jan. 31 at Cape Breton Correctional Facility

    Dead Inmate Had Heroin In Blood, Pills In Pants: 'How Come Nothing Was Noticed?'

    RBC Says Home Affordability Worsens As Prices In Vancouver And Toronto Rise

    RBC Says Home Affordability Worsens As Prices In Vancouver And Toronto Rise
    It says the higher cost of ownership in most other areas of Canada was modest relative to income.

    RBC Says Home Affordability Worsens As Prices In Vancouver And Toronto Rise