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        • Casa Grande Ruins National Monument
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        • Horseshoe Bend
        • Jerome
        • Kaibab National Forest
        • Lee’s Ferry
        • Meteor Crater
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        • Oak Creek Canyon
        • Painted Desert
        • Pipe Springs National Monument
        • Prescott
        • Quartzsite
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        • Sunset Crater Volcano National Monument
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Category: California

14 February 2009

Working with Wildlife

Have I mentioned I was an animal keeper?

Me & baby Gracie Bobcat
Back in another life during the 1980s when I was married we ended up living in Bakersfield, California. Now that’s a story in itself; I’ll save it for later. Anyway, I was bored in this hick oil field town—no offense to those of you who like that—yet thoroughly enjoyed taking drives and hikes up into the Greenhorn Mountains and Sequoia National Forest.

CALM’s later completed visitor center, classrooms, offices and labs
After driving past the California Living Museum—CALM—several times I decided to stop and check it out. This non-profit organization provides a home to native wildlife who’ve been injured or imprinted too heavily for rehab and release. Entrance was by donation, although they charge now. It’s really like a small zoo and used as an educational facility.

Rags Raccoon dragging a raw egg to break the shell
I wandered around and saw owls and birds of prey, mule deer and coyotes, snakes and reptiles, skunks and opossum, fox, porcupine and raccoons, cougars and bobcats. I was entranced by them all and saddened by their stories. Many road and hunting victims, birds who’d flown into high wires, and large mammals who some person tried to raise as a pet.

Ringtail Cat CALM archives
As I ambled towards the exit and past the small trailer used as administrative offices a woman ran out the door in a flurry of arms flailing and shouting about the awful conditions these animals lived in. I stopped and allowed her to leave with her outrage then immediately walked into the trailer and asked the first person I saw, “What can I do here to help?”

CALM staff 1989
I was given a form for volunteers and had the option to be an animal keeper. I started the next day and worked with an awesome group of other volunteers.

Dawn preparing breakfast
My job included preparing weighed food bowls for a variety of species, recording any uneaten food, scooping poop, and filling water troughs. Another volunteer and I would load up breakfast on the golf cart and make rounds to serve.

Spike Porcupine
First stop, Spike, who occasionally received an ear of corn on the cob, one of his favorite treats. You may not want to snuggle with a porcupine but their face hair is softer than fine velvet, and Spike liked his nose rubbed.

Melissa with Cataract Squirrel
At every stop along our way, Cataract would beg for the nuts from our pockets.

Shasta & Whitney Bald Eagles CALM archives
There was trout for the eagles and mice for the owls.

Wilbur Burrowing Owl

San Juaquin Kit Fox CALM archives
Dog food and rodents for the fox.

Chiquita & Frick Opossum
We never went into the mule deer enclosure alone as they are considered the most dangerous animals to keepers. Just turn your back on a docile looking bambi and they can rear and hit you hard with hooves that can kill.

Sierra Cougar CALM archives
For me, the most amazing creatures were the cats. Imagine walking into an enclosure with that.

Me & Sierra
Yet we became friends of the highest regard when Sierra and I bumped heads. Much like any of us, she really liked a little attention. Someone had tried to raise her as a pet and by the time she came to CALM she was sickly and undernourished.

Bald Eagles during mating flight
I helped with the building of a new rapture enclosure and donated a drawing. Then during a fundraiser, with the help of my fellow volunteers and some children, I actually handled the California King Snake and overcame a childhood phobia.

Lemondrop Albino Ferret was a keepers’ pet and couldn’t be displayed being non-indigenous to California
Yes, I loved to be so close to these animals while at the same time my heart ached for them having to be restrained for the rest of their lives. Truly an internal conflict. But we all worked hard to educate the visitors about the plight of these animals and hoped there would be less of them in the future. This was a most amazing nine month experience.

 

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California Bakersfield, California Living Museum 21 Comments
29 December 2008

The gypsy life of a seasonal park ranger Winter 2002-2003

At the end of my first summer season at Oregon Caves National Monument I gave away the cheap car to a fellow guide and hit the road to continue on with my gypsy life.

Ranger Gaelyn leading cave tour Oregon Caves National Monument Oregon

Me leading a cave tour at Oregon Caves

Darl joined me with her own motorhome and we caravanned south to run away from winter and sell at flea markets. The first place we set up was in Yucca Valley, California where we could sell on weekends and stay set up and live on site all week.

Darl models jewelry Yucca Valley California

Darl at Yucca Valley flea market

Darl decided to go to a conference in Las Vegas, so we picked out some nice jewelry for her to wear. Unfortunately her motorhome blew a rod on the way there; she was towed in, enjoyed the conference, and then was towed back to Yucca Valley by a friend.

Gaelyn at Joshua Tree National Park California

Me at Joshua Tree National Park

I met a local man who sold jewelry at the flea market. We spent some time hiking in the area. One day he brought me flowers, boxes of flowers. He wanted me to remember him as the man who brought me the most flowers. And I do.

Gaelyn surrounded by flowers Yucca Valley California

Me in RV with the most flowers

After visiting friends selling in Vicksburg, Arizona we decided to join them. Darl sold the dead motorhome and bought a little trailer in Vicksburg. We loaded all her stuff, personal and merchandise, into my motorhome and moved on New Years Eve.

Flea market Vicksburg Arizona

Our set up in Vicksburg

This flea market was open seven days a week, if you wanted, and we lived on site at a crossroads in the middle of nowhere desert, just beyond Hope.

Sunset Vicksburg Arizona

Ah, the winter desert was beautiful to walk through and the sunsets were spectacular. Yet as spring approached I knew it was time to return to work at Oregon Caves.

 

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13 November 2008

Sky Watch Friday – Salton Sea Sunrise

The Salton Sea is located in southeastern California at 227 feet below sea level. This unique saline land-locked body of water is a critical part of the Pacific Flyway attracting hundreds of species of birds to its wetland habitat.

I camped along the Sea back in winter of 1996 while on a major road trip which you can read more about in next week’s My World Tuesday.

For more views of the skies around the world check out SkyWatch, and feel free to share.

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Hi, I’m Gaelyn, the Geogypsy

I retired after 29 summer seasons as a Park Ranger, traveling solo for 40+ years. My passions include travel, connecting to nature, photography, and sharing stories.

I started exploring US National Parks in 1977 and 20 years later became a seasonal Park Ranger.  I’ve lived full-time in a RV for 30 years working summers and playing winters.  I’m still trying to figure out what I want to be when I grow old, other than grow up.

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