Home       Join       Calendar       Contact Us       Help         
Houston Audubon Education and Outreach
 Education       About Sims Bayou Nature Center       Activities & Programs       Adopt-a-Bird       Flying WILD       Kids Links     
            Education Animals

Tskili

Juliet

Tskili
Great Horned Owl
Juliet
Barred Owl

Percy Cairo

Percy
Eastern Screech-Owl

Cairo
Peregrine Falcon

Spirit Skeeter

Spirit
Red-tailed Hawk
Skeeter
Mississippi Kite

Scooter Sunshine

Scooter
World Famous Rooster
(Golden Duckwing)


Sunshine
& the Homing Pigeon Gang

Maizy Marcia

Maizy
Corn Snake

Marcia
Three-toed Box Turtle
Sam & Melvin  
Sam & Melvin
Green Iguanas
 


Houston Audubon Adopt-a-Bird

Secure Online Adoption Form

Every year Houston Audubon reaches over 30,000 people with their conservation education programs. You can help us bring our birds and our mission into classrooms, libraries, hospitals, adult classes and more by "adopting" an education raptor! Our education birds can no longer return to the wild so they bring the "wild" to audiences across southeast Texas. Houston Audubon's Education Raptors are the hardest working birds in Texas! Visiting hundreds of schools every year and helping to inspire tens of thousands is a big job but these feathered ambassadors are always up for the challenge. You can help us reach our goals each year by sponsoring one of our raptors. Your generous support through the "adoption" program ensures high quality housing, food, veterinary care, and training for all of our animals. Adoptions make a great gift for young and old and can be personalized for special events or holidays.

Adoption Options

  • $25 -- 8x10 photo, certificate, species fact sheet
  • $50 -- 8x10 photo, certificate, species fact sheet, magnet
  • $150 -- 8x10 photo, certificate, species fact sheet, magnet, and 8x12 collage
  • $300 -- 8x10 photo, certificate, species fact sheet, magnet, and 8x12 collage
  • $500 -- 8x10 photo, certificate, species fact sheet, magnet, 8x12 collage, plus a special one-on-one encounter with your "adopted" bird at our nature center.

All donors will be invited to an annual special event, "Adoption Ambassadors", at the Sims Bayou Urban Nature Center where they will meet their "adopted" raptor and learn all about their bird and the education mission of Houston Audubon.

 

On the Road with the Education Animals ...
Skeeter


Skeeter

Meet Skeeter

Last October, a caring individual rescued an injured Mississippi Kite in the Corpus Christi area. The kite was brought to the Texas State Aquarium’s bird rehabilitation center for evaluation and treatment. Mississippi Kites are usually well on their way to South America by October, but this kite was obviously struggling. X-rays revealed a luxated shoulder and misshapen toes on his left foot. After the kite spent several months at the center, the vets made the determination that he was not releasable.

Houston Audubon’s Education Director, Mary Anne Weber, made contact with the staff and began the paperwork to transfer the kite to Houston. After all the permitting forms were signed and sent, Mary Anne made the trip to Corpus to pick up our new education ambassador. “Skeeter” now calls Houston home and has been busy engaging audiences both young and old across the region. He is only 8 months old and still sporting his juvenile plumage. When audiences are shown a photo of a Mississippi Kite as an adult, they are quite astonished at the plumage and eye color change that Skeeter will go through.

The first Mississippi Kite recorded for science was in 1806 outside of what is now Shreveport, Louisiana. Originally believed to be a type of falcon, it was several years later that the kite was correctly identified and classified. Mississippi Kites are often called “mosquito hawks” and that prompted us to give him the name “Skeeter”. Ornithologist and painter George Miksch Sutton once observed, “The square-tipped tail tilts this way and that as the bird directs its course with caution. So frequently does the kite hang in air as if suspended, or soar as if there were nothing in the world to do but soar, that we are surprised when we see it stoop, or descend with a roar of its wings upon its prey.”

You can meet Houston Audubon’s education ambassadors at libraries throughout the Houston area this summer. Watch the website for a complete schedule of presentations and watch the skies for our returning kites!


 

Houston Audubon
Home   |    Contact Us   |    Conservation   |    Sanctuaries   |    Education   |    Docents   |    Membership   |    Donate   |    Volunteer
Events Calendar   |    Birding   |    Shop   |    News   |    Newsletters & Publications   |    History   |    Links   |    Privacy Policy   |    Help
© 2013 Houston Audubon Society. All rights reserved.