From road-side rescues to rehabilitation chambers — here's what we're doing every day for birds of prey.
Our primary active service is coordinating the transportation of injured, orphaned, and displaced wildlife — with a focus on raptors — to licensed rehabilitation facilities throughout California's High Desert and Inland Empire.
When an animal is found, we work quickly to assess its condition and identify the most appropriate facility based on the animal's location, species, and the receiving facility's current capacity. No animal waits longer than necessary because of a logistics gap.
We partner with licensed wildlife rehabilitation centers in the region, serving as the critical link between the public and professional care.
We mobilize quickly because every hour matters for an injured animal. Our transport coordination is available 7 days a week.
We work with multiple licensed rehabilitation centers to ensure animals are matched with the facility best equipped to treat them.
We currently serve San Bernardino County's High Desert communities and the Inland Empire region of Southern California.
Sometimes transport isn't immediate. When animals need stabilization before moving, we provide interim care at our Wrightwood property while coordinating the next step.
Our founder's background in falconry provides a foundation of hands-on bird handling knowledge that is directly applicable to the calm, safe management of injured raptors during the critical window before professional rehabilitation begins.
We are currently constructing dedicated housing and rehabilitation chambers on our Wrightwood property. This infrastructure is the foundation of our path to full licensure as a wildlife rehabilitation center.
Full-scale flight and recovery chamber for large raptors undergoing rehabilitation.
Secondary recovery chamber for smaller raptors and birds requiring quieter recovery conditions.
Quarantine and intake chamber for newly arrived animals before integration with other birds.
Dedicated housing for our falconry birds — supporting the skills that directly benefit our wildlife care program.
Our long-term vision is to become a fully licensed California wildlife rehabilitation center with a specialization in birds of prey. Once licensed, we will be able to provide full on-site medical treatment, extended recovery care, and ultimately — the ability to house permanently unreleasable raptors as public education ambassador birds.
Ambassador birds are raptors who cannot survive in the wild but can live healthy, enriched lives in managed care — and teach the public about their species, their importance to the ecosystem, and how we can all do better for wildlife.
Help Us Get There