The Columbus Dispatch

Raptor sanctuary owner steps down after 31 years

- Patti Brandt Burgess

EMPIRE, Mich. – Rebecca Lessard released her last rehabilita­ted eagle on South Fox Island about a month ago, piling into a small chartered plane with the caged raptor and her assistant.

The eagle had come from the island and when it was released, soared down the runway before being joined by another eagle and taking off.

“It was a fun way to end,” Lessard told the Traverse City Record-eagle. “It was a fun adventure and then my helper and I went out for ice cream.”

It has been 31 years since Lessard founded the Wings of Wonder raptor sanctuary at her home in Empire. Lessard retired this month after finding homes for her beloved birds and committing to helping another sanctuary get off the ground in Harbor Springs.

The new Tribal Eagle Aviary is a project of the Little Traverse Bay Bands of Odawa Indians.

Lessard, who has wanted to see an aviary establishe­d for about 15 years, will work with the tribe this year and next to help with its design and with training.

Tribal aviaries allow tribes to shelter eagles that have been rescued from the wild because of injury or illness, are rehabilita­ted and cannot be returned to the wild. Eagle feathers lost through molting are used by Native Americans for religious and ceremonial use, and the eagles receive care for the rest of their lives.

Now that she has more free time, Lessard will begin work on a book project, a memoir of her life as a raptor rehabilita­tor. She is also working on raptor educationa­l kits that will go to public libraries, where children can check them out and learn about the magnificent birds.

She’ll also spend time hiking, horseback riding and looking at her calendar, where for the first time in many years there are four days in a row with nothing on it.

Lessard became a local celebrity through her work at WOW and people would gather to watch when an eagle or other bird was released. Some were not able to return to their natural homes and became her ambassador­s, visiting schools and other organizati­ons with her, many becoming celebritie­s themselves.

Homes have been found for the ambassador­s, including Doolin, a turkey vulture who is now at the Michigan Avian Experience, a raptor educationa­l center in Brooklyn.

Doolin, who was at WOW for 15 years, was with her for 15 years and has his own cult following, Lessard said.

“We had a really great relationsh­ip,” she said. “He’s got a really good home now, so my heart is appeased.”

Working with raptors for so many years has taught her many things, including that each bird has its own individual personalit­y, she said.

“It became my personal challenge to get to know each bird and find out what its gift for me is. Every bird gave me a gift.”

Raptors speak through a body language of micromovem­ents.

“They might move their tail a tiny bit, which means they’re going to launch off a perch,” she said. “I had to learn to listen to the bird and not get in the way, allow it to heal.”

Lessard says she is a better person for having worked with raptors.

 ?? JAN-MICHAEL STUMP/ TRAVERSE CITY RECORD-EAGLE VIA AP ?? Rebecca Lessard of Wings of Wonder shows off a juvenile bald eagle in 2018.
JAN-MICHAEL STUMP/ TRAVERSE CITY RECORD-EAGLE VIA AP Rebecca Lessard of Wings of Wonder shows off a juvenile bald eagle in 2018.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States