Hessilhead wildlife

Hessilhead wildlife Non profit charity for rehabilitation of wildlife
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One of our hand-reared leverets was recently released into carefully selected habitat within its natural range, in an ar...
31/05/2026

One of our hand-reared leverets was recently released into carefully selected habitat within its natural range, in an area supporting a healthy local brown hare population.

As the sun set, just moments before dusk, this little hare paused for a moment to take in the view before beginning the next chapter of his life.

These are the moments that fill our hearts with joy. After weeks of care and dedication, seeing a young animal return to the wild where it belongs is the greatest reward of all.

Good luck, little one ❤️

🦌 It's Fawn Season!!  🦌Every spring and summer, we receive calls about apparently abandoned roe deer fawns.Roe deer moth...
30/05/2026

🦌 It's Fawn Season!! 🦌

Every spring and summer, we receive calls about apparently abandoned roe deer fawns.
Roe deer mothers deliberately leave their fawns hidden while they forage nearby, returning periodically to feed them. This is a completely normal and natural behaviour, and one of the most common reasons healthy fawns are brought into wildlife rehabilitation unnecessarily.

A roe deer mother's strategy is very different from many other mammals. She leaves her fawn hidden while she feeds, often returning only a few times each day to nurse. The fawn's job is simple: stay still, stay quiet, and don't attract attention.

This means that a healthy fawn will often:
- Be completely alone
- Lie still for hours
- Allow people to get surprisingly close
- Appear wobbly if it stands
- Look slender rather than chunky
These are all normal.

Please do not pick up, move, or cuddle a fawn.
Young fawns do not run away from danger. Their natural response is to freeze and remain motionless. Just because a fawn allows itself to be handled does not mean it needs help. In fact, unnecessary rescue attempts can be life-threatening.

Deer are extremely susceptible to stress. Capture and handling can lead to severe physiological complications, including capture myopathy- a potentially fatal condition caused by extreme stress. Even when they survive admission, orphaned fawns have a much lower chance of survival than those successfully left with their mothers.

Please contact us if:
- A fawn is running around crying continuously
- It is following people
- It has obvious injuries
- Its mother has been confirmed dead
- It appears weak, collapsed, or genuinely unwell

If the fawn is simply lying quietly and keeping still, the best thing you can do is walk away and leave it alone.

As a general guide, a quiet, hidden fawn should be monitored from a distance for up to 24 hours before intervention is considered.

Every year, healthy fawns are accidentally orphaned because people assume they have been abandoned. The kindest thing you can do for a fawn is usually the hardest: leave it exactly where it is and let mum do her job 💚

Gull chicks are not abandoned! 📣 Last year, we admitted 295 gull chicks. Of these, 166 (56%) were "kidnapped"- healthy c...
29/05/2026

Gull chicks are not abandoned! 📣

Last year, we admitted 295 gull chicks. Of these, 166 (56%) were "kidnapped"- healthy chicks that had been unnecessarily removed from their parents by well-meaning members of the public. Every animal that comes into care unnecessarily places additional strain on our staff, facilities, and resources- limiting the time we can dedicate to genuinely sick, injured, or orphaned wildlife. Most importantly, coming into care is not a positive experience for a healthy wild animal. Rescue, transport, captivity, and rehabilitation are all stressful and frightening. Wild animals should only be brought into care when they genuinely need help.

Gull chicks belong on the ground!
Gulls are hardy little chicks, designed to survive falls and begin exploring on foot shortly after hatching. It is completely normal to find young gulls wandering around on the ground while their parents continue caring for them.

Please do not put gull chicks back onto roofs.
The parents know where their chick is and will continue feeding and protecting it on the ground. In many cases, you may not actually see the adults feeding the chick. Gulls often deliver food quickly or drop food from above rather than spending long periods standing beside their young. If a chick is bright, alert, active, and responsive, this is usually a very good sign that it is being cared for.

If a chick is in immediate danger: move it, don't rescue it. A short relocation to a nearby safe area is often all that is needed. The key is to keep the chick within sight and hearing distance of its parents so they can continue caring for it. There is no need to cuddle, rear, or take the chick home. Simply place it somewhere close by where possible to do so.

If the chick looks injured:
Many gull chicks will limp slightly for a day or two after leaving a roof. They typically land feet-first and can be a little stiff or sore afterwards.
A mild limp immediately after coming off a roof is not usually concerning. However; obvious deformities, dangling limbs, inability to stand, bleeding, or a limp that persists for several days should be assessed by a wildlife rescue centre.

Growing gull chicks often have droopy-looking wings. Developing flight feathers are surprisingly heavy, and it is normal for the wings to hang lower as these feathers emerge. This is usually a sign of a chick growing up, not a sign that it needs rescuing. Unless the wing is hanging at an unusual angle, dragging on the ground, visibly deformed, or the chick is unable to use it, drooping wings alone are usually not a cause for concern.

If there are cats nearby:
We are often asked whether healthy gull chicks should be taken into care because there are cats, dogs, foxes, crows, or other predators in the area.
Predation is unfortunately a risk faced by all young wildlife. While domestic cats represent an additional human-associated threat, wildlife rescue centres cannot feasibly remove every healthy chick from the wild to protect them from potential predators.
If we attempted to do so, we would quickly become overwhelmed and unable to help the animals that genuinely need rescue.
Instead, we encourage people to:
- Keep cats indoors where possible, particularly during bird breeding season.
- Keep dogs on leads around nesting and fledging birds.
- Give young wildlife space and allow parents to continue caring for their offspring.

When should you intervene?
You should contact a wildlife rescue centre if a gull chick:
- Has an obvious injury.
- Is trapped or unable to move away from danger.
- Has been caught by a cat or dog.
- Is weak, collapsed, unresponsive, or clearly unwell.
- Has definitely been abandoned for a prolonged period.

True abandonment is uncommon.
Unnecessary removal of healthy chicks, however, is something we see every single day.

Young gulls spend a period of their lives in what is essentially the bird equivalent of being a toddler. They are no longer confined to the nest, but they are not yet capable of flight.

During this stage, they are highly mobile and may wander considerable distances from where they hatched. It is completely normal to find them running around on pavements, grass, gardens, car parks, and other open areas.

Older gull chicks are often surprisingly streetwise. They have spent weeks observing their surroundings and learning from their parents. Many will actively move away from people, avoid roads, seek cover when threatened, and make use of nearby rooftops, walls, and fences for protection.

A chick moving around independently is not a sign that it has been abandoned. In fact, it is exactly what we would expect a healthy developing gull to do.

Please help us keep gull families together this year by sharing this post and encouraging others to seek advice before lifting a chick.
The vast majority of gull chicks have the best chance of survival exactly where they are, with their parents.

And please remember- gulls are extremely good parents. They often protect their chicks by swooping at predators (including humans!). We will not interfere in situations where gulls are a “nuisance”, they are simply protecting their young and will move off once the chicks have grown up.

As we head deeper into busy season, we’d like to ask everyone for a little patience and understanding 💚At the moment, we...
28/05/2026

As we head deeper into busy season, we’d like to ask everyone for a little patience and understanding 💚

At the moment, we are receiving around 200–300 calls every single day. We have one phone, a small team of 8 staff divided across 3 shifts, and often only one or two people working in the hospital at a time caring for the animals already in our care. We are also supported by a small but incredibly dedicated team of volunteers.

Right now, we are admitting around 30–40 animals per day. In the past month alone, we have had more admissions than we did in the first four months of 2026 combined. Alongside answering calls and messages, those animals all need feeding, medication, cleaning, monitoring, and treatment throughout the day.

Please call for advice before lifting or rescuing an animal unless it is obviously injured, unwell, or in immediate danger. Many of the calls we are receiving at the moment are regarding healthy fledgling birds, who are often best left where they are with their parents nearby.

If we advise that an animal does need help, we kindly ask that you bring it to us where possible. Our courier network receives many requests every day and is made up entirely of volunteers giving up their own time to help wildlife.

We always try our best to return missed calls, but during extremely busy periods this may not always be possible straight away. Thank you so much to everyone who supports us, cares about wildlife, and helps us help these animals 💚

27/05/2026

Our noisiest patients have an important message ‼️📣
Please NEVER give water or any other liquid directly into a bird’s beak.
Baby birds are too young to drink by themselves, and syringe-feeding liquids can very easily cause aspiration- where fluid enters the airway and lungs. Sadly, we have lost dozens of otherwise healthy birds in recent weeks due to complications caused by well-meaning attempts to give water.
We are always grateful to people for caring enough to help wildlife, but the best thing you can do for a baby bird is to:
•Keep them warm
• Keep them dark and quiet
• Contact us for advice
Please do not attempt to feed or give water to baby birds, especially nestlings. The wrong food (or even a drop of water in the wrong place) can be fatal.

26/05/2026

Our first wave of ducklings were released yesterday, and it went “swimmingly”! 🦆💦

With lots of young waterfowl around at this time of year, we’d like to remind everyone that birds (especially swans, ducks, and geese) should never be fed bread.

Bread is extremely low in nutrition and can contribute to serious developmental problems in growing waterfowl, including angel wing- a condition where the wings develop abnormally, sometimes leaving the bird permanently unable to fly.

We’ve also recently had several reports of people feeding soaked bread to nesting mothers. While well-intentioned, this can unfortunately do more harm than good. Not only does bread provide very little nutritional value, but feeding directly at nests can attract predators such as gulls, crows, foxes, and rats, putting both parents and babies at risk.

If you’d like to help wild waterfowl, better options include:
• waterfowl pellets
• defrosted peas
• leafy greens
• grains such as oats or wheat

And remember- the best thing you can usually do for nesting birds is give them plenty of space and allow them to raise their young naturally. 🦢

25/05/2026

With the good weather here and even more glorious sunshine forecast for the week ahead, why not come along and volunteer with us at Hessilhead Wildlife Rescue? 🦆🦊

It’s the perfect chance to get outside, enjoy the fresh air, meet like-minded people, and make a real difference helping our Scottish wildlife.

Our opening hours are now 8am – 9pm so if you’ve ever wanted to get involved after work, this could be your chance to come along and help out💚

Whether you can help for a few hours or on a more regular basis, we’d love to hear from you.

Please message our page to enquire about volunteering and becoming part of the Hessilhead team!🦉

From nestlings, to fledglings, to independence! Our first wave of baby birds have grown up and were released this week a...
24/05/2026

From nestlings, to fledglings, to independence! Our first wave of baby birds have grown up and were released this week after some time spent in aviaries 💚

From sixteen to sixty grams in the blink of an eye!
23/05/2026

From sixteen to sixty grams in the blink of an eye!

With dozens of patients coming through our door every day, busy season is in full swing here at Hessilhead!Every patient...
22/05/2026

With dozens of patients coming through our door every day, busy season is in full swing here at Hessilhead!

Every patient that comes through our doors is an individual- each with their own personality, challenges, and journey through rehabilitation.

Watching our spring babies go from tiny, vulnerable orphans to healthy youngsters ready to take on the wild- seeing them grow stronger every day- is always incredibly rewarding.

These photos show one of our hand-reared rabbits growing up- from a young kit into a healthy juvenile approaching release weight! Seeing animals reach the point where they can return to the wild to be free is always one of the most special parts of wildlife rehabilitation.

Address

Beith
KA151HT

Website

https://www.amazon.co.uk/hz/wishlist/ls/GSNTICEAUEJN?ref_=list_d_wl_lfu_nav_1&fbc

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