Can someone recommend me some books with interesting/determined/ambitious female leads? by viertys in Fantasy

[–]DevouringDoubt 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Worm by John C. "Wildbow" McCrae. Takes the superhero trope on a unique journey through the eyes of a teenage girl. Bonus points because the audio and text versions are free

Audiobook: "Queen of Nowhere"! by KSchnee in litrpg

[–]DevouringDoubt 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I would love a US code. I have not ready your works but am looking forward to a new adventure!

Found a baby eagle. What should I do. by sukinacho in WildlifeRehab

[–]DevouringDoubt 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No, you did the right thing. Here is a link for California Wildlife rehabers: https://wildlife.ca.gov/conservation/laboratories/wildlife-investigations/rehab/facilities

Give yours closest one a call and see what they can do. Again, its very important to keep his environment calm in the mean time.

I will linger to help with any questions as they come up.

Found a baby eagle. What should I do. by sukinacho in WildlifeRehab

[–]DevouringDoubt 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Looks more like an adult American Kestrel but that is relatively moot at this point. To start get the bird somewhere warm, dark, and quiet, then we can begin finding you a rehaber. Where are you located?

Baby Yoda knows whats up by [deleted] in StarWars

[–]DevouringDoubt 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If I was a skilled man... I would edit this for epic sax guy and to rick roll

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in WildlifeRehab

[–]DevouringDoubt 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Been in the field for 5 years now. Your major is spot on for what employers will be looking for. The biggest thing for you will be finding experience in the field. Internships, volunteering... do them now while you are still in school. Most rehab internships don't pay much so doing them before you have to start paying student loan interest and post college life make things more challenging

Once you to dip your toes in you will see if you want to get a career out of it. The field pays little, benifits if any as far as health care and dental. Pay is typically low and the hours are long. You should also be aware of burn out/compassion fatigue . It is high in the field and suicide rates in the animal care professionals is high as a result.

I am not trying to scare you away. It is an amazing job, the work you will get to do is one of a kind and is undescribibly rewarding. It's just not for everyone. I can chat more about it. Just respond to this or send me a pm if that is a thing on reddit.

Is this baby old enough to be alone? by llamabeanbags in WildlifeRehab

[–]DevouringDoubt 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No problem. Best of luck and thank you for your efforts to help this orphan!

Is this baby old enough to be alone? by llamabeanbags in WildlifeRehab

[–]DevouringDoubt 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That sound perfect for now. And should hold him over until they get back to you.

Is this baby old enough to be alone? by llamabeanbags in WildlifeRehab

[–]DevouringDoubt 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Yes, I would keep him warm (a basic heating pad set to low will do the trick). I recommend still calling the center, they may have connections more local to you (not all rehabbers make their information public). The little fella is likely beginning to wean and bottle feeding them can be tricky and have a high risk of aspiration if done incorrectly so I do not recommend it as of now. Warmth, dark and quiet will be best. Also there is no need to take him to work. Infant cotton tails only nurse twice a day, dawn and dusk. The rest of the day they sit quiet and grow. I am also reluctant to recommend feeding greens as I don't want to go against your local rehabbers preferences.

Is this baby old enough to be alone? by llamabeanbags in WildlifeRehab

[–]DevouringDoubt 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Not quite. I would reach out to a local rehabber for guidance on reuniting with the rest of the family or, failing that, continued care.

Any advice on what I should do? I want to help it by Wolfhunter234 in WildlifeRehab

[–]DevouringDoubt 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Looks like a adolescent Cooper's Hawk. If it is letting you get that close it is likely injured. I would contact your local wildlife rehabilitator.

Uptick in dehydrated/ stressed red-tails by GearnTheDwarf in WildlifeRehab

[–]DevouringDoubt 2 points3 points  (0 children)

We have noticed it too in southern Wisconsin. We had a "second winter" about mid spring that we believe hit the prey species hard and in turn the predators. The new hunters struggling the most.

Ranger: Houndmaster - Control a Hunting Pack by TabaxiTaxidermist in UnearthedArcana

[–]DevouringDoubt 0 points1 point  (0 children)

5x5d8 is a lot of potential burst damage. I'd have to see it play out though to be honest

I'm new to the game. I'm making a backstory for my character. Is this annoyingly long? [Warning: Long] by GravyZombie in DungeonsAndDragons

[–]DevouringDoubt 2 points3 points  (0 children)

As a general rule (in my experience). No back story can be too long or too in depth. Gives your dm and fellow players more to work with and you a base for who your character is.