I posted this on Facebook today, as I see these things every 
spring, and I thought I would use this forum as well to try and get the 
word out to people...
It's that time of year. 
Spring is when nature is pretty hyperactive, and danger is high for 
wildlife. Some things to keep in mind while you are out and about:
1) 
 Keep an eye out for turtles crossing the road. Females and males are on
 the go, seeking out new venues and females looking to dig nests and lay
 eggs. If you see one crossing the road, please try to stop and help it 
in the direction it was heading. They commonly get run over and need all
 the help they can get. Sometimes they can't get over the curbs to get 
back to safety. Sometimes people forget how tall the turtle shells are, 
and how low their cars are, and they think they can safely straddle 
them. They are often wrong.
2)  Likewise look for 
squirrels and such. Remember that squirrels are prey animals, created to
 avoid birds of prey. Their avoidance technique is zig-zagging. So 
people think they can just straddle them with their car, not realizing 
that the squirrel will dart in the opposite direction and run in an 
unpredictable zig-zag path. When you see a squirrel, slow down and just 
give it time to realize you are coming and head back to safety. It 
really isn't that difficult. I do it all the time!
3)  
People also believe that they can just head down the road at 50 mph, and
 birds will always get out of the way. Especially this time of year, 
that may not always be true. Birds are focused on courting rituals and 
building nests right now. They are distracted. And you may easily see 
something like I saw the other day, with a bird so distracted with the 
nesting material he was collecting, he didn't think to get out of the 
way of cars leaving the intersection at the light, and he was plowed 
over before he could get out of the way, because the drivers are too 
impatient to edge forward to warn the bird and get him to move. Often 
the birds are in the middle of a dispute, chasing one another, and are 
so focused that they forget the cars.
4)  And, in 
situations like the above, realize that birds are often stunned for 
awhile after being hit. So they may appear dead, but are actually just 
in stasis. Like the one I saw get hit last week. He actually laid on his
 back, feet in the air, for several minutes and appeared dead. Then he 
flipped over, as cars whizzed inches from him, but was still too stunned
 to fly off. I grabbed him and given time to recover, he wound up being 
fine and I could let him go back in the area I'd found him a few hours 
later. I've picked up stunned birds from the side of the road a few 
times now.
5)  Remember that animals that are hit by 
cars aren't doomed. They often can recover, if given an extra hand. If 
you see an injured animal, try to capture it and get it to a wildlife 
clinic like CROW on Sanibel Island. They have pick-up locations all over
 Lee County. (I picked up an injured opossum a couple of years ago that I
 spotted in the road. He had a broken jaw. They monitored him and were 
able to release him after a week or so.)
6)  Speaking 
of opossum, realize that if you see a opossum hit (or hit one yourself),
 that they are often females carrying young in their pouch. If possible,
 check for babies. I once had a maintenance crew find a dying mother 
opossum and a pouchful of babies covered in fire ants. They took the 
babies from the dying mother and gave the little pinkies to me. I took 
them to CROW. Unfortunately that bunch couldn't survive the fire ant 
venom, but often they can be saved!
7)  And, just in 
general, be patient and thoughtful. If you see an animal in the road, or
 near the side of the road, SLOW DOWN! Don't expect it will just get 
away from the road and be fine! If it is in the road, don't keep 
speeding on, assuming it will just get out of your way! 
We are the keepers of the earth and its inhabitants, and let's keep it well!
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Sprinkle me with your gracious words. (Don't ask. My mother would read that and say, "What?!" So you're not alone.)