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CRC is a non-profit nature center and wildlife hospital founded in 1987. In its first few years, the educational programs of the Raptor Center only took birds to schools and public events, but in early 1994, CRC moved to its current location on a wooded hillside in southeast Eugene and opened to the public.
Speo, the Burrowing Owl
CRC's Mission is to preserve a healthy, viable population of birds of prey and other wildlife in their natural habitat. To accomplish this, CRC has two primary goals:
Our Philosophy - Because we are both an educational and a medical facility, we have some important distinctions to make. We conduct public education activities both and on and off-premises. The Nature Center is open to members and the general public four days a week, as well as by appointment or for field trips and group tours on other days. We also have an annual Earth Day Open House in the Spring, when the whole facility is open to visitors. However, only the non-releasable birds are viewable; the rehabilitation birds are never on display, even to their finders who might want to see how they are doing or to volunteers' family or other visitors.
The birds come first at CRC, and the hospital patients are stressed by
contact with humans. Staff interaction with them is kept to a bare minimum
and the hospital, mouse and chick buildings, and outside rehabilitation
cages are always off limits to visitors. Besides the stress to the birds
from human contact, it is also against the law to display wildlife
undergoing rehabilitation. The Nature Center's permanent resident,
non-releasable birds are held under special permits for educational purposes
and their large outside enclosures allow
them to keep a distance from visitors. |
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