The amazing comeback story of the California condor

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  • Опубликовано: 16 дек 2024

Комментарии • 66

  • @lovelandfrog5692
    @lovelandfrog5692 Год назад +42

    I saw ten of them when I visited the Grand Canyon. They’re magnificent creatures! So grateful that I got to see many of them in one place.

  • @ACEDIAMOND666
    @ACEDIAMOND666 Год назад +32

    I see several of them everyday here in Blythe, California.
    I remember the birth of Molloko....I cut the article out of the newspaper and had it many years, until a house fire in 1997.....I'm glad to see Molloko is still alive and well.

  • @TonyCorsini
    @TonyCorsini Год назад +12

    Saw one today such an amazing creature!

  • @pauldubay6713
    @pauldubay6713 11 месяцев назад +9

    My uncle Dr. Michael Wallace (rest in peace) headed the development of the program back in the 80’s after studying the Andean Condors for years in the wild. He invented the “mother condor” puppet to hand feed the first chick born in captivity. I had the privilege of working at the Fillmore California ranch tracking the captive birds with telemetry along the pinnacles in the Sespe Mountain range.

  • @036whispered
    @036whispered Год назад +14

    A healthy ring of optimism in Chip's voice is good to sense in these dreary days.

  • @kami6374
    @kami6374 Год назад +10

    thank you for saving them 😭😭

  • @yoitsvenus616
    @yoitsvenus616 Год назад +13

    Such beautiful creatures, im so glad we managed to right our wrong somewhat.

    • @faretheewell3711
      @faretheewell3711 Год назад +1

      Unfortunately there is a long way to go for them to have a self sustaining population but it's wonderful that there are so many now flying free. Lead is still killing so many birds. I travel often to a place in Arizona to see them and it's a very emotional experience every time.

  • @eternallight351
    @eternallight351 Год назад +7

    such an amazing news! i wish to go and see them in person very soon!

  • @THEJOHNiVERSE
    @THEJOHNiVERSE Год назад +5

    Nice story, beautiful birds.

  • @ursulaglissmann6905
    @ursulaglissmann6905 Год назад +27

    That's great news! Now all we need is an amazing comeback of California.

    • @deathwish6778
      @deathwish6778 Год назад +1

      And a comeback for Canada as well!

    • @galileykwong7017
      @galileykwong7017 Год назад

      And get rid regulations like banning lead ammunition.

    • @normalizeappendicitis
      @normalizeappendicitis 11 месяцев назад +3

      @@galileykwong7017 did you listen to the new story at all? 50% of the condor's deaths are attributed to them eating meat with lead bullets in them

  • @reneeseaton3889
    @reneeseaton3889 3 месяца назад

    Love this beautiful story and determination of wild life science to save this amazing creature!

  • @cccccc4532
    @cccccc4532 Год назад +5

    Very cool to see! ( Much more enjoyable than a drive by shooting story)

  • @fishnrc294
    @fishnrc294 Год назад +3

    They are all over the Ojai area. At Lake Casitas there are a bunch of them as well as 2 Eagles.

  • @michaelarmenta8289
    @michaelarmenta8289 Год назад +5

    Last year I saw 3 in the San Gabriel River in Pico Rivera. Huge birds and wingspan, something to see when they take flight.

    • @Talkinsports91
      @Talkinsports91 5 месяцев назад

      My neighbor has 1 as a pet in Huntington Park

  • @michaelcharlesthearchangel
    @michaelcharlesthearchangel Год назад +7

    Yes. Bring the California Condor back! OMG! They've almost gone extinct!

  • @faretheewell3711
    @faretheewell3711 Год назад +1

    There is still so far to go for a self-sustaining population but there is hope! #nomorelead. Seeing one of these incredible creatures flying free will always make me emotional.

  • @shaneatkins213
    @shaneatkins213 Год назад +2

    Great work all of you

  • @zumeybear6883
    @zumeybear6883 3 месяца назад

    Love it !!

  • @MrPerez-oz8lc
    @MrPerez-oz8lc 10 месяцев назад

    Saw a group of condors in the El cariso mountains so awesome seeing them in the wild

  • @Tarasco-77
    @Tarasco-77 Год назад +1

    I used to see them all the time when i lived in San Diego

  • @AlexBristol-gn7uk
    @AlexBristol-gn7uk 3 месяца назад

    My favorite bird!!! And named after my home state - California 😎

  • @jjstratford
    @jjstratford Год назад +2

    Chip is the most Los Angeles name EVER. Besides Thad, Sloan, and Spencer.

  • @jfjf-yn6wj
    @jfjf-yn6wj 5 месяцев назад

    proud to live in a state that takes conservation seriously

    • @sandrosamano7442
      @sandrosamano7442 3 месяца назад

      Are you also proud of the smell of Hollywood Blvd?

  • @Talkinsports91
    @Talkinsports91 5 месяцев назад

    There's 1 in Huntington Park , it sleeps on the roof of a house on my block at night , very creepy when you stumble across it

  • @vlrolas
    @vlrolas 6 месяцев назад

    Mexico has also another conserversation program in Tijuana are being released there. In a secluded, undisclosed area. I am glad to hear more efforts are being done in the US

  • @johnl5316
    @johnl5316 8 месяцев назад +1

    I was abandoned as a baby and was found and raised by a California

  • @thescoopr7344
    @thescoopr7344 3 месяца назад

    I live in Whittier CA and me and my boy seen over 30+ and another time seem even more around Turnbull canyon

  • @ShakespeareCafe
    @ShakespeareCafe 11 месяцев назад +1

    The turkey vulture is the poor man’s condor. They soar with aplomb above the Santa Cruz Mountains

  • @curly_wyn
    @curly_wyn Год назад +2

    We have Johnny Cash to thank for almost making the California Condor extinct, btw.

  • @mutilatedhatred4868
    @mutilatedhatred4868 Год назад +1

    You love to see it

  • @mikecain6947
    @mikecain6947 Год назад +5

    Ban lead ammunition world wide please.

    • @badcornflakes6374
      @badcornflakes6374 4 месяца назад

      It's good for blocking radiation though if you need to get an X-ray

  • @LuisRuiz-sv2mz
    @LuisRuiz-sv2mz 5 месяцев назад

    I stationed in California and remember them flying around the Marine Base. Shameful

  • @theAverageJoe25
    @theAverageJoe25 6 месяцев назад

    If it was illegal to leave a carcass behind after hunting they wouldn’t get lead poisoning

  • @chalmerscharitycrouse7834
    @chalmerscharitycrouse7834 5 дней назад

    Comment 66: Thank you for letting us know.
    9:42 am CST
    Dec. 12, 2024
    In re Charity Colleen "Lovejoy" Crouse
    Senator Charity Colleen Crouse

  • @beccabast1925
    @beccabast1925 9 месяцев назад

    🐓🐂🐃🐗🐖🐷🐍🐍

  • @LuisRuiz-sv2mz
    @LuisRuiz-sv2mz 5 месяцев назад

    Lead poisoning same old lies

    • @Felis-Concolor
      @Felis-Concolor 4 месяца назад

      Why on earth would they lie about lead poisoning? Are you mentally impaired?

  • @leej2311
    @leej2311 Год назад

    I feel things are here for a reason and dings leave for a reason what reason do they need to be here for?

    • @heatherr2088
      @heatherr2088 Год назад +6

      They almost went extinct due to human causes: poaching, habitat destruction, and lead poisoning due to lead bullet fragments in carcasses hunters left behind. Some hunters are trying to normalize using copper bullets instead of lead bullets to stop poisoning these animals. Or bury the carcasses if the hunter wants to continue using lead to avoid ingestion. Species do come and go naturally, but the condor decline has been strictly due to human negligence

    • @leej2311
      @leej2311 Год назад

      @@heatherr2088 I understand that, but there are not needed

    • @leej2311
      @leej2311 Год назад

      @@heatherr2088 It’s just like If you keep trying to bring something back and he just won’t come back, maybe there’s a reason for not being here anymore like dinosaurs

    • @heatherr2088
      @heatherr2088 Год назад +8

      @@leej2311 They aren’t dying off naturally, we’re literally killing them off, and the reasons aren’t naturally occurring, they’re manmade. The dinosaurs died due to a natural cataclysmic event, not human negligence. I urge you to research the ecological importance of scavengers such as the condor for our environment.

    • @heatherr2088
      @heatherr2088 Год назад +8

      @@leej2311 They are very much needed, ecologically important, and sacred to many native tribes.

  • @leopolde2334
    @leopolde2334 Год назад

    There's no come back, they used a peruvian condor to breed more condors in North America. I'm waiting for the California tiger come back...😂😂😂

  • @RicciOlson
    @RicciOlson Год назад

    Yay. Just what the world needs right now, gigantic vultures.

    • @yoitsvenus616
      @yoitsvenus616 Год назад +1

      When gods lists his creations, will vultures not be on the list?

    • @theAverageJoe25
      @theAverageJoe25 Год назад +2

      You act like they pick up people and fly away. They are vultures they eat dead animals not live prey especially not humans

    • @lovelandfrog5692
      @lovelandfrog5692 Год назад +11

      They’re actually super beneficial to the environment! They’re scavengers that clean up decay and dead creatures.

    • @theAverageJoe25
      @theAverageJoe25 6 месяцев назад +2

      We do need more of them. One of many environmental issues is carcasses being left to decay and become diseased. These giant vultures act as a natural form of waste removal

    • @Felis-Concolor
      @Felis-Concolor 4 месяца назад

      Sometimes I forget people like you actually exist. Imagine being against a vulture that strictly eats dead animals. Their existence doesn’t affect you in the slightest and never will. I just can’t fathom your miserable line of thinking, get help.