this post was submitted on 09 Jul 2026
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From The Lonely Camp

Condor 316 laid her egg in a cave on the edge of an Arizona cliff in April 2023, one of her last acts before avian influenza killed her. Her mate, Condor 680, was sick too. He stayed on the egg. For three weeks he incubated it alone, refusing to leave the cave to eat or drink. A California condor egg takes 57 days to hatch. A single parent cannot maintain the temperature alone for that long. The egg and the father were both going to die in that cave.

On April 17, biologists from The Peregrine Fund who had been monitoring 680's movements waited outside the cave until the male made a rare departure to briefly stretch his wings. They scrambled inside, wrapped the egg in towels, packed it into a small field cooler with hand warmers, and drove 300 miles south to Phoenix. Jessica Schlarbaum, a Peregrine Fund spokesperson, said 680 had been so focused on incubating that he was not leaving to find food and water for himself, risking his own life.

At Liberty Wildlife in Mesa, Arizona, veterinary technician Jan Miller candled the egg, holding it to a bright light to see if anything was alive inside. The clinic had spent the previous month caring for flu- infected condors. More than half had died, including 316. Miller had little hope. She was looking for blood vessels or movement. She saw both. The mood in the room shifted instantly. Oh my god, it is actually viable.

The egg surface tested negative for the virus. The chick inside was poorly positioned and required an assisted hatch. Veterinarian Stephanie Lamb carefully cut away sections of shell. On May 1, 2023, the chick emerged. Liberty Wildlife staff spent two anxious days waiting for the HPAl test results. The chick was negative. They learned she was female. In a species where males outnumber females, her sex made her survival even more significant. They named her Milagra, Spanish for miracle. Her official number was 1221. The Peregrine Fund normally identifies condors only by number, to avoid humanizing a wild species. They made an exception.

Within a week, Liberty Wildlife veterinarian Stephanie Lamb flew the chick to The Peregrine Fund's breeding facility in Boise, Idaho. Milagra needed to be raised by condors, not people. Her foster father was waiting. His name was Cuyama, officially Condor 27. He had hatched in the wild in California in 1983. When the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service made the decision to capture every remaining California condor on earth to save the species, there were 22 left.

Cuyama was one of them. He had spent four decades in the breeding program, siring and raising captive-bred chicks that would be released into the wild. Now, at more than 40 years old, he was raising one more.

Milagra spent over a year in Boise, first with her foster parents, then in a socialization pen with other young condors and two older mentor birds. She learned to eat, preen, interact, and establish her place in a condor social hierarchy, all from birds, never from humans.

On September 28, 2024, The Peregrine Fund opened the door of a flight pen on a red cliff at Vermilion Cliffs National Monument, 50 miles from the Grand Canyon's North Rim. Six hundred people watched from the basin below. Milagra was inside with three other captive- reared condors. The first bird left after 20 minutes. The second after 40. Milagra sat in the pen for an hour and 20 minutes. Then she walked out. She did not soar. She stepped onto the ledge and looked around.

She found a carcass that the field crew had laid out below the cliff and began eating. An older condor landed beside her. He was male, large, and his smooth pink head showed his age. They fed side by side. For a moment they turned and faced each other on the rocky ledge. The older bird was Condor 680. He was Milagra's biological father. Tim Hauck, director of The Peregrine Fund's condor program, said it was unlikely the birds recognized their family connection. For the humans watching, it did not matter whether they did.

Condor 680 survived. Removing the egg from the cave saved his life. He left the nest, recovered, and has remained healthy. Condor 316 had raised two chicks before Milagra. Neither survived to adulthood. Milagra is her last descendant.

Source: The Peregrine Fund / Audubon Magazine / Smithsonian Magazine / Associated Press / Salt Lake Tribune.

Bunch more info and assisted hatching photos in the referenced Audubon article.

Bunch of photos from The Peregrine Fund, including this beautiful one of grown Condor 1221/Milagra rising in her property habitat.

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[–] pilaz@lemmy.world 7 points 4 days ago (1 children)

What a beautiful success story. It brings me so much joy knowing there are so many good, determined people doing so much work like this in the world

[–] anon6789@lemmy.world 7 points 4 days ago

When I started dipping my toe into animal rescue last year, I was prepared for the amazing animals, but not the extent of amazing people I was going to meet. Last fall, our clinic head made a presentation at the state rehab convention about fixing turtle shells with beeswax, allowing them to heal, and now people across the globe in Australia (we are outside Philadelphia in the US) are reaching out to her to teach them the technique. Today I will be in a meeting for a study we're going to do to hopefully come up with some groundbreaking methods of saving more birds.

Animal rehab only began being taken seriously in the 1970s, so there is a ton of things we are still constantly learning on how to get greater success. It's such an exciting place to be, even at a very low level. Becoming involved is one of the greatest things I've ever done in my life. I recommend anyone who loves animals to see if it's something they'd like to be a part of.

[–] velma@sh.itjust.works 5 points 4 days ago (1 children)

This was an amazing read, thank you so much for sharing. They’re doing important work out there.

[–] anon6789@lemmy.world 4 points 4 days ago (1 children)

I was thrilled to be able to share this story with you guys. Often, I can only give you slices of stories, but having this one be start to finish is extra satisfying for me.

That condor will never be aware of the hundreds of hours humans put into it, how its father almost gave the ultimate sacrifice trying to protect it and its siblings, or that it got to briefly spend a moment with him at its moment of true freedom. It's a true miracle of a story for all parties involved, and would be unbelievable if not so well documented.

I'd recommend all to at least skim that Audubon link I shared as well to see the assisted hatching photos, maybe not while at lunch though. I've discussed on c/superbowl before that hatching is not a quick or easy process as media often makes it seem. It is just as dangerous and filled with potential disasters as mammalian birth is. There are some outstanding photos there that should not be missed, and the article itself is fabulous and goes into great detail, but I've already given you guys a ton to read already.

[–] velma@sh.itjust.works 3 points 4 days ago (1 children)

You’re not exaggerating - those photos really deserve more eyes on them! All the workers look so happy when the hatching was successful.

[–] anon6789@lemmy.world 4 points 4 days ago

I can feel the tension and relief in those pictures!