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Shining World Compassion Award:
For the Love of Parrots: Canada’s World Parrot Refuge - P1/3
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Everywhere in the world,
we can observe
and be touched
by acts of kindness.
People from all walks of
life, faiths, and cultures
extend themselves
beyond the call of duty
to help others
unconditionally.
Through their noble deeds,
humanity as a whole
is elevated.
To commend
virtuous actions and
encourage more people
to be inspired
by their examples,
Supreme Master
Ching Hai
has lovingly created
a series of awards,
including the Shining
World Leadership
Award, Shining World
Compassion Award,
Shining World Hero and
Heroine Awards, Shining
World Honesty Award, Shining
World Protection
Award, Shining World
Intelligence Award,
and Shining World
Inventor Award,
to recognize some
of the most exemplary,
generous, caring,
and courageous people
who walk amongst us.
Today we present part one
of a three part series on
the World Parrot Refuge,
a non-profit organization
that has been honored
with the Shining World
Compassion Award by
Supreme Master
Ching Hai.
This bird sanctuary,
operated by
the “For the Love Of
Parrots Refuge Society”
in Coombs,
British Columbia, Canada,
provides a “Home for Life”
for parrots
who have been abused
or had a caregiver
who could no longer
look after them.
Founded by
Wendy Huntbatch
and her husband,
the World Parrot Refuge
shelters over 800 parrots
from more than 50 species,
with the birds
lovingly cared for
by a team of dedicated
staff and volunteers.
The facility is open
to the public so that
everyone can learn more
about these
wonderful beings.
Wendy Huntbatch shares
how she and her husband
first got started
in this amazing adventure.
Well it wasn’t a plan,
I can tell you that much.
What happened was
I had parrots of my own.
I had made the mistake
of buying one for a pet
and felt horribly guilty in
a very short period of time
realizing what I’d done,
that this was totally wrong.
So I had to
get him a friend
so he wouldn’t be alone.
And I met my husband
who also had a bird.
So we bought one
for him too
and so we had the four.
And then
there was another one
that no one wanted
so we had this one.
So there were five parrots.
And then in a very short
period of time somebody
gave us another one.
It was an old man and
he was going into a home
and couldn’t keep the bird.
So we said,
“This is fine.”
So we looked after him.
We took our birds
to work with us every day.
Both of us
are workaholics,
so we took them with us
and brought them home.
They had free flight
where we were.
And if we were going
for a dinner or something,
we’d put them
in big 10 foot flights,
two birds to each flight,
so that they weren’t
compromised in any way
and everything was safe.
One night
the Huntbatch’s workplace
was burglarized,
and the next morning
the couple discovered
that some of their
beloved parrot companions
had disappeared.
Four of the big birds
had gone.
It was just a nightmare,
a total nightmare for us.
So I contacted
newspapers, television,
and radio.
I posted
the whole entire town.
Well I’m pretty well known
because I’ve been
in animal rescue all my life
and people trust me.
So people started
phoning and saying,
“I’m sorry.
I don’t know
where your birds are.
I don’t have your birds.
But I have a bird
I can no longer keep.
Would you please take her?”
And in two weeks,
we had 15 large birds.
And I’m talking Macaws
here, really large birds.
As more and more parrots
came into their lives,
Wendy Huntbatch’s
husband felt a deep
awakening from within,
and realized
that he had discovered
his life’s mission.
My husband is the son
of a minister.
And his father always
wanted him
to go into the ministry.
But he just didn’t
have the feeling
to work with people
in the ministry.
It just wasn’t him.
And when the birds
started to come in,
and he loves birds,
he just loves them,
and he was covered
in these birds, he said,
“This is the ministry that
God wants for me to do.
I have to save birds.”
We had just a small business
with very little money.
But every time
more birds came to us,
the business did
that little bit more.
God made sure
we had enough money
to look after the birds.
The Huntbatch’s keep
their doors and hearts open,
and thus their flock
of bird companions
continues to grow.
Because we’re open
to the public
and our website is active,
people can see us
and they just keep coming.
This morning
I opened my email,
“Will you please take my
two Amazon parrots?”
and “Will you please take
my Moluccan Cockatoo?”
That was at six o’clock
this morning
I had those two.
So it’s non-stop.
Why do parrot caregivers
sometimes no longer
wish to look after
these beautiful
and majestic birds?
The majority
of the problems
that we see, when birds
are e-mailed into me
or phoned in to me
or brought in to me,
people’s lives change.
Everybody’s life changes!
So they buy something
and they want to devote
their life to this bird
who could live
up to 75 years
and their life changes.
They get married.
They get divorced.
They have a baby.
Mother comes
to live with them,
mother leaves them,
or the grandfather comes.
There’s all these changes
in life. They move house.
They downsize.
They have to
go out to work.
All these things
which are normal for us
are changing the life
of this poor parrot.
Given their long lifespan,
some of the birds
arriving at the Refuge are
already “senior citizens.”
But Wendy Huntbatch
joyfully accepts them all.
Let`s meet Elvis, one of
the elder avian residents.
Elvis is a very old man.
He’s totally blind.
And when I took him
to the veterinarian’s office
about five years ago,
she said, “That’s
the oldest Cockatoo
I’ve ever seen in my life.
He will never see
60 (years of age).”
And he’s still going strong.
He loves to tear up boxes.
This is his
favorite pastime.
We give him a box
and two to three days
and it’s gone.
As long as he’s happy,
we’re happy.
It’s okay Elvis.
Sometimes another bird
will open the cage
and go and visit with Elvis
and he likes that.
Some of the parrots
brought to the sanctuary
have been
horribly mistreated.
This is the sorrowful case
for both Dinky Doo
and Lucky Lou.
Every bird
that comes in here
has a story.
We had one come in,
Dinky Doo, he’s
an Umbrella Cockatoo.
But he was a featherless
Umbrella Cockatoo
who was very, very angry.
He was caught in the wild
probably 30 years ago
and quite often
when they catch birds
in the wild,
they break their wings
so they don’t fly away.
And people think
that’s a benefit because
they don’t fly away.
So they don’t fix them
properly.
The bird has to suffer
until they mend themselves,
(which is) very painful.
And with Dinky,
he’d also broken his legs
somewhere
along his lifetime and
the leg was never fixed.
So he’s quite crippled.
His beak is curved.
That’s a deficiency,
a vitamin deficiency
early in life.
So he was so badly treated.
So he had next
to no feathers.
And you could see that
his eyesight is very poor.
And I think
this is part of his anger.
And he’d been used
by a breeder
and I say ``used``
in the full sense of the word.
They do use them.
But a couple that I know
who rescue a lot,
they purchased him
and brought him
to the sanctuary.
And Lucky, she came in
about two years before him.
Lucky Lou.
She was emotionally abused.
When she came in,
she also had no feathers
at all, nothing.
Her little body looks like
a little human body.
The only difference is
our hands are like this,
theirs grow down
for the long wing feathers.
That’s the only difference
when you look at them.
And Lucky is
a very sweet little bird
but she’d had
a horrible time.
She was in the basement
of this house
because the lady
didn’t like to look at her
because she plucked
her feathers out.
So she left her alone
in the basement of a house.
And when the lady
would feed her,
I know this is it
because her voice
was the lady’s voice,
she adopted
the lady’s voice.
She’d stretch up and
bring out her little wings,
but they were arms because
there were no feathers
and she’d shake first,
then she’d say,
“I hate you. I hate you.
You’re a bad, bad bird.
You’re so ugly, I hate you.”
Well this little bird,
her soul was gone.
And we cried, but
crying didn’t do anything
so we knew
we had to change things.
So we’d start to sing
“Happy Birthday to You.”
And we looked very foolish
and sounded very foolish.
None of us can sing.
But it changed
her thoughts.
Now she sings
“Happy Birthday.”
She has none
of those times anymore
and she’s grown
a number of feathers back.
They don’t grow
in coordination;
they just grow.
But this is okay.
We love her anyway.
Well when she saw Dinky
come in, she goes over
and she’s talking to him.
And every time
a human goes by him,
he lashes out.
We were bitten quite badly
many, many times.
And she stopped him
from doing this.
And progressively
during the time,
he calmed down.
But he also went blind.
And he’s totally blind.
So she is his
“seeing eye bird.”
She takes him everywhere.
She looks after him.
She makes sure
that he’s okay.
She takes him to the food.
If you put new things in
for them to play with,
she takes him there.
It’s very beautiful.
How does
the World Parrot Refuge
manage to get enough food
to feed 800 birds?
What happens
when a new bird
joins this gigantic flock?
What is Wendy Huntbatch’s
wonderful dream?
Join us tomorrow
on Animal World:
Our Co-Inhabitants
as we continue
with part two
of our three part series on
the World Parrot Refuge.
For more details on
the World Parrot Refuge,
please visit
www.WorldParrotRefuge.org
Thank you
for your presence today
on our program.
Enlightening Entertainment
is coming up next,
after Noteworthy News.
Like a bird,
may your spirit
soar ever higher
with each passing day.
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