Nyac Says Goodbye

Filed under: Uncategorized, Animal Rescue Alert!, Educators, 1 All About Flight or Fight, State[ment] of Mind — Diane at 9:38 am on Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Nyac Says Goodbye

Originally uploaded by Jane Ray’s Wildlife Rescue Series


Nyac, one of eight otters rescued from the Exxon Valdez oil spill and brought to the Vancouver Aquarium, died yesterday. She was 20 years old.

By July, Nyac was suffering from limited energy, tremors and some facial paralysis — symptoms of what turned out to be leukemia. The Vancouver Aquarium’s staff veterinarian Dr. Martin Haulena said, “Leukemia and some other cancers have been linked to exposure to petroleum products and hydrocarbons.” A 20-year-old oil spill is still wreaking its havoc.

Like apparently 11 million other people, I was completely captivated by the YouTube video of Nyac holding hands with her pen mate Milo. CTV also offers a gallery of photos of the sweet and social little creature (including the one shown here).

My first personal experience with an oil spill was in 2000, when a North Vancouver canola oil shipping plant allowed 400,000 litres of the substance to leak into Burrard Inlet one Sunday morning in February. Friends and I rescued a surf scoter that was being repeatedly smashed up against the seawall, and took it to the Wildlife Rescue Association of BC (WRA), where volunteers had been working round the clock to try to save the hundreds of animals that had been caught in the spill.

A bird coated in canola can’t thermoregulate; can’t therefore dive for food and becomes anaemic and malnourished; can’t lift its wings from the water and fly; can’t escape from predators.

If that bird is “lucky” enough to be rescued, the rehabilitator will have a harder time removing the canola oil than if it were crude. On the other hand, crude oil is far more immediately destructive — toxic on the inside and caustic on the outside.

Next, the “lucky” animal will undergo the most stressful experience of its life: a minimum of 30 minutes of handling by humans (natural predators), being held partially immersed in a tub of hot water, soaped up, rinsed off, again and again, until the water comes clean. Then held up, down, backwards and forwards, neck and wings extended, while the rinsing takes place.

If it survives the stress, it might stand a chance at making it back to the wild.

If, however, the rehabilitator leaves even a drop of oil the size of a baby fingernail on that bird, the oil will disperse through the feathers, destroying feathering and bouyancy and insulation once more, and requiring yet another session of washing. With each wash, the animal’s chances for recovery become slimmer.

Nyac was one of those odd “success” stories — and I put “success” in quotes, because Nyac wouldn’t have survived without rescue. Couldn’t be left in her natural environment. Spent the whole of her life in captivity. Lived longer, perhaps, than her wild counterparts, and then died of complications from the man-made disaster that overtook her just a month after she was born.

But she lived, and she learned and played and (to anthropomorphize … maybe), she loved. And she touched and taught over 11 million of us — more than any other wild otter might have done.

It’s up to us now to ensure that her unique life and legacy are carried forward. So the green refrain continues: consume less, walk more, know as much as you can about offshore drilling and northern pipeline projects, seek alternatives, be part of the answer.

And play. And hold hands.


A Letter Home from a Kanata I Never Knew

Filmmaker Lisa Jackson & Author Diane Haynes

Originally uploaded by Jane Ray’s Wildlife Rescue Series
In the fall of 2005, I travelled to the Eskasoni and Six Nations reserves as a ‘production assistant’ for Aboriginal filmmaker Lisa Jackson, and when I returned home, I wrote this letter for my friends and family. It’s about history, language, culture and the country we call home. It’s also about the launch of the first book in Jane Ray’s Wildlife Rescue Series: Flight or Fight. It’s long … so make yourself a hot chocolate, relax and enjoy!

Warning: Content concerning Canada’s residential schools may be disturbing to young readers.

~~~

Hi everybody!

I’m back at my desk after three weeks away — Halifax, Cape Breton Island, Brantford, Toronto, Edmonton and home. Sporadic Internet access and a crazy schedule kept me from forwarding the regular updates I’d hoped to send. So here’s my letter home ….

I hitched a ride east on the back of a documentary. Well … actually, I was driving. My friend Lisa Jackson is an Anishinaabe filmmaker whose first documentary, Suckerfish, garnered her international attention. In 8 minutes, she captures the essence of her relationship with her mother, an Ojibwe woman from Sarnia, ON, who spent her childhood and early youth in one of the worst residential schools in the country, and who passed away about 10 years ago. The NFB offered Lisa the opportunity to make a second film, and she chose to focus on Aboriginal languages in Canada — the fact that they’re dying, why that matters, and what can be understood and expressed through them that cannot be captured in English.

For her research, she needed to visit a number of reserves across Canada, strongholds of the languages, or places where extraordinary efforts are being made to save them. Problem is, Lisa doesn’t drive. That’s where I came in. Driving Miss Jackson.
From October 7 through 20, I was Lisa’s “research assistant,” and my “gear” consisted of a couple of Chrysler Sebrings. We never bought a map for any of the cities we visited, I ran two red lights in two weeks, and I managed to get the second Sebring temporarily stuck on an above-ground streetcar girder on Bathurst Street in Toronto. Other than that, we managed exceedingly well.

From Vancouver, we flew to Halifax (an all-day affair), picked up Sebring number one, and hit the highway for Dartmouth, which is apparently the Surrey of Nova Scotia. That was my first taste of driving in a strange city in a strange car in the dark. I don’t know that I improved much over time; you’ll have to ask Lisa. I probably should have had a “How’s My Driving?” sticker on the back of the car, just to warn other folks on the road that that was a question worth asking.

Upon telling various locals we were ultimately headed to the Eskasoni reserve on Cape Breton Island, we were warned, “Oh, you don’t want to go there!” and “I wouldn’t go to Eskasoni in anything but an armoured truck.” The NFB budget didn’t allow for an armoured truck. We were going in the Sebring.

We overnighted at the Holiday Inn in Dartmouth, after a late-night dinner of baked lasagna and caesar salad (local east coast fare) at a dodgy pub called Whisky’s, by the ferry terminal. Wrestling was the television entertainment of choice, and the patrons looked as though they may have been related to the show’s “stars.”

The next morning, a Saturday, we checked out and drove over the Macdonald Bridge into Halifax, which seemed — in the brief time we had to explore — an ideal combination of Vancouver’s corporate towers and Victoria’s size and quaintness. I’d love to go back. We had breakfast at a trendy little cafe called Jane’s, which I considered an excellent omen; Jane is the name of the main character in my book.

I slacked off my very first day on the job. Whitecap, my publisher, had managed to book me a promotional event at the Eastern Shore Wildlife Rehabilitation Centre near Halifax that afternoon. So I abandoned Lisa to the care of a local friend, and commandeered the Sebring out to Eastern Shore. Lisa conducted her first interview, with Bernie Francis, a Mi’kmaq (Micmac) scholar and first-language speaker. And I survived my first on-the-road promo stop.

Eastern Shore is a wildlife rehab facility and the home of Hope Swinimer (two separate buildings), built in a cosy community among lakes and very near the shore of the Atlantic Ocean. Hope had managed to bring in about 15 young people and their parents for the weekend event, and I had my first taste of how passionate young people are about animals and the issues that affect them, the amazingly thoughtful and articulate questions they pose, and their excitement about a series of books that tackles the subject in a way that’s never been done before. That passion and excitement and the warmth of their response welcomed me everywhere I went. For those of you who attended the launch in September, you know that my book went out into the world on a wave of goodwill and support and the love of my family and friends. It is being received, it seems, in the very same spirit.

I had managed to fit 12 copies of the book into my suitcase along with three weeks’ worth of winter clothes; I sold them all that afternoon

We all met back in downtown Halifax for a pint (okay, a pint of hot chocolate in my case) with Brent Sedo, an old colleague from our REALM Magazine days, and then set out for Cape Breton Island. We had been told it was a 3.5 hour drive, so we left at about 6pm.
Then it started to rain. Then it got foggy. Then it got dark. The highways aren’t lit, and the right lane disappears every once in a while without warning and a semi is coming up on your left and there’s nowhere to go and you’re pretty sure everybody’s going to die and there’s no way the National Rental Car insurance is going to cover this.

We stopped in Antigonish. Thanks, Lisa.

The drive across Cape Breton the next morning was as beautiful as you’ve heard; the rain and fog had let up and the leaves were just starting to turn. The roads wind through the landscape and next to the sea and up and down hills and mountains. We stopped for lunch at a roadside cafe and bought some oatcakes and local apples, then continued on to North Sydney. It turned out the Best Western in North Sydney was about two hours from anywhere, including Sydney, and Eskasoni. So the next day we packed up again and moved to the (haunted) Royal Hotel on the Esplanade in Sydney. At this point, I checked an atlas; technically speaking, we were at the edge of the world.

Eskasoni (es-ga-ZO-nee) is a beautiful reserve about an hour outside of Sydney, bordered by lakes (everything in Cape Breton is bordered by water) and running in one long line down a peninsula-like stretch of land. It is a stronghold of the Mi’kmaq population (3,500) and of the language, and there are many first-language speakers. Many are elders and adults, as you’d expect, but parents have started teaching it to their children again, so children are growing up knowing it, and then attending immersion elementary and high schools as well. Lisa asked what could be expressed in Mi’kmaq that couldn’t be conveyed using English.

Most aboriginal languages in Canada are comprised primarily of verbs, as opposed to English, which is made up mostly of nouns. Things. Material objects. Mi’kmaq (MEEG-mm-ach) expresses everything in terms of process and relationship — the speaker’s relationship to the other person, or to the plants and animals of the earth. Linguists believe that although a person’s language does not actually dictate their thinking, it will bring certain ideas/foci/concepts to the forefront of thought over and over again by the way it’s structured. One theory poses that North American culture is as materialistic as it is because of the English language’s preoccupation with “things.”

We interviewed two Mi’kmaq elders in their home as young children ran in and out speaking their language. We interviewed students at Cape Breton University, a linguist in her home over a home-cooked meal, and attended a Mi’kmaq language class at the university (I learned the alphabet and the phonetics and memorized numbers from one to 10 — test me!). We spoke with the CEO of the Band (a lawyer and PhD student with UBC Law), and recorded a young boy singing a Mi’kmaq song he wrote for his aunt’s funeral. He lived with his father in a small trailer that doubled as a cigarette shop.

The reserve seemed to be a microcosm of society off the reserve — rich and poor and in-between; educated and illiterate; concerned about the fate of the language, and ignorant of any threat. I was told to expect to see band leaders driving around in Cadillacs and living in huge houses. And it’s true, in many cases when the government provided reserves with money to improve services and education, those in charge of its stewardship kept it for themselves. But why anybody should hold them to a different standard than other North American corporate leaders and politicians, I do not know.

The following Friday, we set out again for Halifax, where we were scheduled to catch a flight to Toronto. With the 3.5-hour drive time in mind, I rather obsessively scheduled six hours. As it turned out, we’d been badly misinformed, but were unaware because of breaking the trip into two legs on the way up; the drive back to Halifax took 5.5 hours … at 140km/hr.

A tripod part, a trip to Woozles Books (still no Flight or Fight in stock) and $50 worth of sushi later (Vancouver prices kick ass!), we left Halifax for the airport and said a fond (but fast — we were almost late for our flight) fairwell to our Sebring.

An uneventful flight (just the way I like ‘em) to Toronto brought us in at about 7:15 pm local time, at which point we were introduced to Sebring No. 2 and headed southwest for Brantford, home of The Great One.

I mean Wayne Gretzky, of course, but speaking of the great one, did you know the Iroquois tell the story of “the fatherless boy” who came to live among them, and who chose twelve people to learn his teachings and pass them along to the world? He is called the Peacemaker. And did you know that this legend predates Christian contact?

Once you’ve tasted 140 km/hr, you can’t go back. We barrelled down 401 and 403 with the best of them, and found our way through Brantford to Highway 54, which led onto the Six Nations reserve — a confederation of six First Nations that is one of the oldest confederate democracies and which was used as a model by Thomas Jefferson and other American founding fathers to build the constitution of the United States of America. This trip was nothing if not filled with irony.

It was late, and dark, when we pulled into the parking lot at the Bear’s Inn, a B&B right on the reserve made up of a collection of log cabins. We stayed in the Heron Building, in the Blue Heron Room. The owner had a black cat, named Shadow, who helped fill the void (I was well into kitty withdrawal by then).

Lisa had chosen to study the Mohawk (which translates roughly as “man-killer,” and which, understandably, the Mohawk people aren’t that fond of; the Mohawk term for Mohawk is Kanyen’keha [gan-yen-GAY-huh]; “people of the flint”). She had made contact with one Brian Maracle, originally a writer who lived in Ottawa and Vancouver, and who gave up his career to learn and then teach Kanyen’keha back on the reserve. With the help of a Kanyen’keha scholar working at Western (and whom we also interviewed), Brian had created an 8-month, full-time immersion program for anyone who was committed to recovering their language.

Mohawk is dying (a language dies somewhere in the world every two weeks; with about 5,000 left now, in a hundred years there may be nothing but English). Other than a few elders, there are virtually no first-language speakers. In other words, any young people or adults who speak it have learned it as a second language, and are not fluent. Brian is close; some of the students who have come through his program in the past 10 years and who’ve pursued their studies afterward are even closer. And they’ve come back to teach.

There are 10 students in the program this year, ranging from teenagers to elders, and all of them have given up jobs/schooling/other lives to be able to attend full time. They believe that if Mohawk dies, their culture will die. That whatever it means to be Mohawk will disappear.

The language is polysynthetic, meaning every word contains as much meaning as a full sentence in English. The word for “dad” actually says “he, to me, is father” — it expresses relationship, it puts the elder first, and it eliminates all the stigma English has with “stepdad” and “my mom’s new boyfriend.” The word for “one” actually says “he is one,” or “she is one.” It is a verb, not a noun or an adjective. “One” and “two” are verbs describing unity and duality. There are no Mohawk words for putting another person down, although there are many ways to express humour. There are so many permutations of words that it is possible to express all the minute variations of feeling through the language; there is, one interviewee told us, never any need to yell, or even to get angry. There is no word for goodbye.

Physicist David Bohm used to conjecture about a language that could express the relationships and processes he saw within the world of physics and quantum physics that he was studying. English certainly wasn’t capable. Near his death, he was introduced to Mohawk, and said, This is the language I’ve been looking for.

Proponents believe that if everyone spoke Mohawk, the world would be healthy and whole, instead of dirtied and half destroyed. There is no way in Mohawk to speak of the earth, or of water, or of plants or animals, without also speaking of your relationship to them. The words for “I need” actually say “all that I ever need is provided by the earth.” There would be no way to speak of “collateral damage;” we would have to say we took the lives of our brothers and sisters.

As you may have figured out by now, I didn’t sit outside in the Sebring listening to JackFM while Lisa conducted her interviews. As a matter of fact, somewhere around this time I began to get the distinct sense that the Canada I lived in and had known all my life was little more than a thin layer of onionskin sitting on top of the real home and native land. That somehow by meeting these people and sharing in these discussions, and by learning just a few words and their rich, multilayered meanings, I’d dropped through the onionskin and landed on the crust of a country that was miles and centuries deep. As soon as I accepted that there was another whole world right in front of me that I hadn’t been able to see before, I began to walk with a foot in both worlds, and to begin to see that other world, and to hear and understand things said there as though they were being transmitted to me over a great distance. But the distance wasn’t made up of miles; it was made up of time.

I am a Canadian citizen. (Yeah, yeah … I am Canadian.) This journey invited me to become a citizen of Kanata. I said yes.

It never occurred to me that at the same time Europeans imposed their cultures and religion and languages on the Aboriginal peoples, cross-polination was also occurring. It seems the conquerors weren’t that interested in giving credit to their new subjects for the things they “borrowed.” To give you an idea of how pervasive some elements of Aboriginal language and culture are throughout North America: “Uh-huh” is Mohawk for “yes.”

The imposition of the conquerors’ language and culture was the Canadian government’s explicit goal; the plan to eradicate the “Indians” and their way of life was just as explicit. Their method was the permanent break-up of families; their means, the residential schools. Most of us have heard something about them; some of them having stayed open as late as the 1990s, they’ve been in the news, mostly in the context of lawsuits against the governments and the churches that ran them for various types of abuse. There were hundreds of schools across Canada, and over 100,000 Aboriginal children from the ages of 5 through 16 went through them between the late 1800s and the 1970s.

Children were taken forcibly from their parents for over four generations, and although they received some education, they spent most of their time working — farming, cooking, building maintenance. Punishments for infraction of rules or escape attempts or talking to siblings of the opposite sex were severe; the punishments for speaking an Aboriginal language included needles through the tongue. Students were routinely subjected to abuse of all kinds, and hundreds died — of the repeated rapes and beatings, of malnutrition, of disease. Those who survive — and there are many thousands still alive — suffer post-traumatic stress disorder and other ailments typical of prolonged trauma and abuse, and many have turned to alcohol and drugs to numb the memories. A whole new perspective on the drunk Indian at the corner of Hastings and Main.

Near Six Nations is the Woodlands Cultural Centre, formerly the Mohawk Institute, and known by former students as the Mush Hole because of what they were fed. Lisa had planned to visit because the old school building contains a museum and gallery, and the old residence houses a library. When she heard it called the Mush Hole, though, she realized it was the school her mother had attended, and the visit took on another dimension.

I have been to the Dachau concentration camp museum in Germany. This was worse. The residence is essentially empty and unused, except for the library on the third floor — one small enclave of peace and relief in the whole edifice. Crew from the APTN came through some time ago with the intent of doing a broadcast program on the school; microphones without batteries picked up and recorded voices, presumably of children who had died there. The crew refused to return. I was nauseous as we toured through the building. Some areas were worse than others. The presence of the children and the sense of their suffering was overwhelming. There are people who work there full time; I could not spend a full day in that place. Brian Maracle’s partner Audrey told us that occasionally people will visit from the reserve and do ceremonies to feed and heal and release the children whose spirits are trapped there. But they don’t go often; it brings up too many memories of their own.

This Canada, too, is so far from the nice, polite nation I grew up in. But there it is, right at my feet. And here I am, a citizen.

We returned to the Mohawk immersion class for one last goodbye. The young daughters of one of the students sang us a song in Kanyen’keha and accompanied themselves by banging enthusiastically on plastic yogurt containers — all we could find to take the place of drums. It was exactly what we needed.

We drove into Toronto late last Thursday, easing ourselves into the spirit and culture of urban Canada by sitting in rush hour traffic for three hours. We dropped the trusty Sebring at National, I left Lisa at the ImagiNATIVE film festival and turned in early. The next morning, we said a rushed “bye for now” and went our separate ways

I spent the next 10 days visiting schools and libraries in Toronto and Edmonton, and talking about Flight or Fight. What a gift. I am convinced young people are coming into the world well aware of what they’re up against, of the legacy we’re leaving them. And now I’m convinced they’re up to the task. Bright, articulate, thoughtful, funny, ready to laugh, and ready to take a stand themselves. They love animals, they love a good story, and they’re disgusted with corporate and government irresponsibility. And they’re way smarter than we are. I could hardly keep up.

I had a home away from home with Marion in Toronto and with Susan in Edmonton. I was chauffered to Toronto events by the inimitable Trent Olson, whom I expect Whitecap will sorely miss. Good friends wined and dined me, made me home-cooked meals, and let me pet their cats. And yet, there were so many people I didn’t manage to see, and so many things we never managed to do — the Cabot Trail on CBI, $25 whale watching, Peggy’s Cove, shopping ….

A magical 40 days since my book launch, Flight or Fight is in Chapters/Indigo stores and other fine independents across the country, and available online at Amazon.ca. If you love me, you’ll post a review. :)

Thanks for listening. It’s good to be home. I live in a stunningly beautiful city, in an amazing land, that rests just on top of a mysterious country I never knew was there. I can never go back to not knowing. I think I will call it home someday.

Talk to you soon.


Interview With Diane Haynes — by Lisa Manfield

Filed under: Uncategorized, Media, Interviews, 1 All About Flight or Fight, More by Diane Haynes — Diane at 9:45 am on Monday, April 14, 2008

This interview appeared in ROOM of One’s Own Literary Journal (29:2):

Sixteen-year-old Jane Ray doesn’t set out to save the planet, but when she discovers a dying bird and a deadly oil spill during a seemingly innocuous run along Vancouver’s Stanley Park seawall, the shy but passionate protagonist of Diane Haynes’s debut novel finds herself leading a campaign to convince the offending company to own up and pay up.

Flight or Fight, the first in Diane Haynes’s Wildlife Rescue Series for young readers, takes aim at some heavy issues — environmental destruction, animal rescue, and corporate social responsibility — but wraps them in a youthful context complete with all the adventure and intrigue of a modern-day Nancy Drew novel.

Semi-autobiographical — the storyline is based on an incident that happened to the Vancouver author several years ago, sparking her volunteer work in an animal rescue centreFlight or Fight shows young readers that they can have an impact on issues they care about.

Lisa Manfield: Do you have a goal in writing this series?

Diane Haynes: E.B. White, the author of Charlotte’s Web and other wondrous books for children, is quoted as having said, “I wake up every morning determined both to change the world and have one hell of a good time. This sometimes makes planning the day quite difficult.” Writing books, too! But those are my goals for Jane Ray’s Wildlife Rescue Series: to inspire young people to take action on behalf of animals, and at the same time to give readers a thrilling adventure.

LM: Why did you choose this medium for getting your message out?

DH: I wish I loved TV or film best; I hear there’s money in TV. But I’ve always treasured books, and I’ve wanted to write for kids since I was seven years old myself. Carolyn Keen’s Nancy Drew and Enid Blyton’s Famous Five and Kathryn Kenny’s Trixie Belden are characters I spent time with in childhood. I wanted to create an experience like that for readers. Of course, Flight or Fight: The Movie has a nice ring to it.

LM: What role do you see young people playing in ’saving’ the environment?

DH: They’re our leaders. Most of the rest of us are just doing triage, paying lip service, patting ourselves on the back for blue-boxing. I met a young girl in Ontario who asked and answered questions about human-wildlife conflict with the insight of a university-level scholar. She said to me, “Thank you for writing a book like this. There’s nothing like it out there.” I thought, “Thank you for being the kind of person who will read it.” [Hi, Olivia!]

LM: What kind of response have you had to the book?

DH: I spent the month after publication traveling through Nova Scotia, Ontario, Albert and BC making presentations at schools, libraries and wildlife centres. Virtually every child or teen had an animal story they wanted to share with me, and they loved the idea of a young person and her friends taking on a major corporation on behalf of animals. A class in Edmonton that had witnessed the 2005 Wabamun Lake oil spill was planning a letter to the Minister of Environment by the time I left, asking for regulations to control oil dumping off Newfoundland!

LM: What’s in store for the next book?

DH: In Crow Medicine, the central animal will be the crow, which is considered a pest animal in western society, and the setting will be Vancouver before the arrival of West Nile Virus. I want to put Jane and the other characters into that tense, tight, exhausted, hair-trigger feeling that occurs when safety and danger suddenly become uncontrollable commodities and friends lose trust even in friends. The other major element with be Aboriginal mythology, in which the crow is the bringer of light into darkness, and represents the ability to take a stand, even when it means standing alone.

Purchase Flight or Fight

Purchase Crow Medicine 


Orca Whales Could Be Caught in Oil Spill

Filed under: Uncategorized, Animal Rescue Alert!, 1 All About Flight or Fight — Diane at 11:13 pm on Monday, August 20, 2007

“A barge carrying heavy equipment and a diesel fuel truck overturned off northern Vancouver Island near Alert Bay today, raising fears that killer whales who frequent the area could be in danger.” Click here for the breaking story at 680News.

Is this blog starting to sound like a broken record? Oil spill story after oil spill story? Consider instead BC’s track record for spills: two this summer (so far) and two last summer. And those are the majors. BC’s coast guard estimates as many as 1200 spills occur in our waters every years, most unreported.

I am sick at heart, and worried for the whales.

According to Native traditions, whales are like living libraries, recorders of the history of the earth since the beginning of time. Many whales now are considered toxic waste, so polluted are they from having lived in the waters we’ve desecrated. They have nowhere to go. Nowhere to go. No way to leave the water. They must swim and eat and breed and live in our garbage. The stories our whales–our living libraries–are telling us are of our own shame and greed and willful stupidity.

I am so sick of these stories. Sick and sad.

There has been another oil spill. I will follow the story and keep you posted. And I will pray for the whales.


Canada Geese + Crude Oil = Disaster

Filed under: Uncategorized, Animal Rescue Alert!, 1 All About Flight or Fight, State[ment] of Mind — Diane at 5:32 pm on Tuesday, July 31, 2007

Tube-feeding an Oiled Canada Goose

Originally uploaded by Jane Ray’s Wildlife Rescue Series


They’re black.

In some cases, I could distinguish some of the markings on their feathers, tell breast feathers (normally white) from wings. But most of the 15 Canada Geese currently in care after Burnaby’s oil spill of July 24 are — beaks to tailfeathers — the colour of crude.

I arrived at Shellburn Refinery just after 4pm yesterday, right behind Crystal. My enormous relief at running into someone I know and love told me how scared I’d been about starting my first-ever shift at an oiled animal rescue site. I should have known better by now; my own trepidation couldn’t hold a candle to the fear experienced by the animals in care.

Crystal led me through the parking lot, which was filled with oil spill response trailers and waterfowl pools, and into the animal care station. We stepped from a sunny summer afternoon into a hospital.

A large, white, windowed room. A tense hush. Worktables surrounding animal pens, staff and volunteers moving quietly and calmly, but with purpose.

From the 15 geese, not a sound.

Crystal got me suited up in white Tyvex while Vanessa explained that I’d be taking the suit off and putting it back on all afternoon, as I moved from the Cold Zone into the Hot Zone and back again. The threat of contamination with crude oil is huge; the safety procedures are strict.

As Vanessa prepped medications at the exam station, Brenda and Crystal and I worked our way around the five pens, adding layers of blankets to their floors. After only a few days in care, some of the geese were already developing Bumblefoot, sores that appear on the feet of birds used to being on soft grass or sand, in the water, or airborne. It was a swift reminder of the many complications that can arise in animals caught in an oil spill — captivity stress; anemia; sores; toxic poisoning; emaciation; aspergillosis. These are the things that most people never hear about, the stuff that doesn’t make headlines. This is the suffering that happens after the PR ends.

The other factor that hit me hard as I made the rounds was the secondary pollution brought about by an oil spill. As if the oil itself weren’t enough, there’s the water, chemicals, pads and booms used in the cleanup process. Ever wonder where it all goes when the cleaning crew goes home?

In the animal rescue arena, there’s the water used for washing the animals, and the endless laundry which, in the case of a crude spill, doesn’t get washed but gets incinerated.

And for those cynics who think it might be easier all around just to euthanize the affected animals rather than try to rehabilitate them, consider what’s to be done with the poor, toxic bodies. The real pollution count of an oil spill begins to look immeasurable.

After shoring up the padding on the pen floors, we made the rounds once more to check on diets, cleaning feces out of food dishes, topping up duck salad (a mixture of chopped lettuce and water) and refilling water bowls. By then, Crystal was off duty (she’d been there all day) and Vanessa, Brenda and I were left to prep the animals for the night ahead.

At Vanessa’s instructions, I entered various pens to collect specific animals, one at a time, so that she could sample blood, take temperatures, check weights, and give food and fluids. These were the weaker ones, the smaller ones, or the ones most heavily oiled.

Canada Geese are big, strong birds, and smart ones. Chris of Focus Wildlife told me that when they first sent the team out to collect oiled birds from the spill site, the team had little problem rounding up birds, But the second time, and ever after, collection became a race, and then a joke. The birds recognized their vehicles, knew their collection techniques, saw them coming, and simply took off. These animals are wild; to them, we’re predators, and captivity is anathema.

In my experience with the Wildlife Rescue Association of BC, getting a Canada Goose out of a pen, wrapping it in a towel and keeping it secured for weighing and medication is a significant challenge. Stress levels (mine and the bird’s), vocalizing, thrashing and wing strength combine to make the restraint of a Canada Goose no small feat.

So I think what hit me hardest yesterday afternoon was feeling these birds capitulate, one by one, in my arms. Don’t get me wrong; they still moved away when they saw me coming, still hissed and vocalized, still struggled. But they were weaker, quieter, feebler than I knew they should be.

Another pungent memory is the smell. Volunteering weekly in a wildlife hospital has not only accustomed me to the various and sundry smells of wild animals and their feces; it has also trained me to recognize one scent from another, and to notice when something is wrong. I’ll be blunt; goose poo smells strong. The grains and grass in a goose’s diet make sure of that. But I would have given anything for that to be the predominant smell in that room yesterday. Instead, it was oil. The rescue centre smelled like a gas station.

I would like to point fingers at this point, rant and rave — and I’m not the only one. Kinder Morgan and B. Cusano Contracting are waiting on tenterhooks, I’m sure, for the results of the investigation into this spill. Were the maps right? Were they off by 9 metres? Whose fault was this?

But the line between “villain” and “hero” is blurred. Kinder Morgan called Focus Wildlife and Burrard Clean immediately, and are covering cleanup and rescue costs at least until the investigation is complete. Shell Oil provided an animal rescue station and the electricity and water to run it — and this spill had nothing whatsoever to do with Shell. And CN Rail, responsible for the Wabamun Lake spill of 2005, donated to Focus Wildlife all of the leftover cleanup and rescue materials, many of which have been deployed in the aftermath of this spill.

Since the spill that got me involved with wildlife rescue work, and since writing Flight or Fight, the battle lines seem to have shifted, sworn enemies are breaking bread, and the battle is becoming less “us against them” and just a little more “we’re all in this together.”

I hope we’re not too late.

Just after 7:30pm, Vanessa and I checked the ventilation in each pen, and then closed up the rescue centre. The geese will have two more days to stabilize and get their strength up, and then the washing will begin. I will go back, to see who makes it, to help if I can. I’ll let you know how it goes.

To see more photos, click on Jane Ray’s Wildlife Rescue Series beneath the photo at the top of this post. 


Volunteers Prepare Oiled Birds for the Worst Stress of Their Lives

Filed under: Uncategorized, Animal Rescue Alert!, 1 All About Flight or Fight, State[ment] of Mind — Diane at 2:07 pm on Monday, July 30, 2007

The call came this morning, and I missed it. I  got back just last night from my cousin’s wedding in Victoria, and had turned my phone off to get some catch-up done today. I discovered J’s message about half an hour ago: “We need volunteers, starting today.”

Focus Wildlife has 14 oiled Canada Geese in care at Shellburn Refinery in Burnaby–birds caught in last week’s spill of 236,000 litres of crude oil — and teams are still out on the water trying to capture more oiled animals. They don’t show up at the wash station voluntarily, you see.

Today and tomorrow, volunteers will be suited up head to toe in Tyvex to protect against toxic contamination (mmm … full-body Tyvex in summer) and holding/restraining birds as per our rehabilitation training so that experienced rehabilitators can examine, sample blood from, medicate and/or tube-feed the animal patients.

Oiled birds are tube fed in order to protect their feathering from further contamination by food oils, as well as to protect the birds themselves from ingesting any of the toxic substances that coat their bodies.

J estimated that the washing would begin Wednesday or Thursday, once teams have collected as many oiled animals as possible, and once the birds in care are stabilized and strong enough to undergo the wash process.

When I visit schools, I tell kids that an oil spill bath is the likely the worst stress an animal will ever undergo in its entire life. Even death by a predator is over more quickly. The oil spill bath can take 30 minutes or more — that’s 30 minutes of being held captive by a “predator,” restrained indoors, and manipulated and manhandled from beak tip to tailfeathers — and many animals are known to die during the process. Many more can die during the rinse, which involves holding the bird upside down, wings spread, over a basin sink and turning the hose on it pretty much full force.

Did I mention my usual caveat? Do not try this at home.

The wash process is designed to remove every last hint of oil from a bird’s feathers; even a patch the size of your little fingernail can spread again and destroy a bird’s ability to insulate itself and maintain its buoyancy. The rinse is designed to remove every last trace of soap; its residues can cause almost as much trouble as the oil itself.

I’m going to eat now, and get ready to go. I’m nervous. Scared, actually. I feel it every week, before the start of my shift at the wildlife hospital. The knowledge that I’m walking into a life-or-death struggle for many animals, that I have the power to help — and that a mistake can cost a life. That feeling is stronger right now, by far; I’ve never been part of an oil spill response team, and I’m not sure what will be expected of me. It feels like a lot of responsibility.

Part of me wanted to say no, to refuse to go. But I’ve got no reason to, other than fear. Yeah, there were other things I’d planned to do today. But I have the chance to help save some lives. I’m scared, but I’m going.

Wish me luck …


Letters from Readers in Ireland

Filed under: Uncategorized, Educators, 1 All About Flight or Fight, 2 All About Crow Medicine — Diane at 6:47 pm on Thursday, May 31, 2007

A few months ago, I heard through CWILL, the Children’s Writers and Illustrators of BC, that a writer in Ireland who had encouraged young students by providing workshops and writing prizes had died. Many of us sent our condolences, as well as copies of some of our books, and just recently I received these responses, from students at Carnalbanagh Primary School in County Antrim, Ireland:

Dear Diane Haynes,

I liked the book called Flight or Fight. It is very exciting. I liked the bit where she rescues the Birds from the oil spill. Thank you for sending the books we all like them they are great. We are very sad that Sandy is dead and she was a great friend to all of us.

From Daniel, age 11

Dear Diane Haynes

Thank you for sending the books to our school. They are very interesting and lots of people are reading them. We have been studying birds in science so your book Crow Medicine ties in with our science. We are all sad about Sandy. She was a good friend. She gave out awards on prize day for our stories.

From Lewis, age 11, and all the other children at Carnalbanagh Primary School

Thank you so much, Daniel and Lewis, for taking the time to write, and to the staff and students at Carnalbanagh Primary I send all my best wishes!
Diane