How to Help

 
Volunteer tracking condors
A volunteer for the National Park Service tracks condors in the High Peaks of Pinnacles.

NPS/Gavin Emmons

Report Your Observations

If you’re visiting a park or other public lands and see rare wildlife or notable behaviors you think scientists might be interested in, please contact the land management agency and report your observations. To report condor observations in and around Pinnacles, please
e-mail us or call the Pinnacles condor program at 831-389-4486, extension 4276.

 
Biologists, interns, and hunters attend a non-lead shooting demonstration.
Biologists and hunters attend a non-lead shooting demonstration.

NPS

Understand the Role of Hunting

Viable, thriving ecosystems include checks and balances. Hunting has been part of natural balances for thousands of years, depending upon grazing and browsing animals just as the coyote and mountain lion do. Scavengers like condors can benefit from eating the scraps that hunters or predators leave on the land.

Hunters that use non-lead ammunition carry on the proud tradition of wildlife conservation by preventing condors and other animals from being exposed to lead, a toxic substance. Visit Hunting with-Non Lead or our lead information page for more information.

 

Volunteer

There are many groups working to help California condors survive. Consider getting involved with the organization closest to where you live:

Pinnacles National Park Foundation
Volunteer at Pinnacles
Ventana Wildlife Society
Friends of California Condors Wild and Free
Santa Barbara Zoo

 
Microtrash removed from a condor chick.
These bottle caps, can tabs, and pieces of plastic and glass were all removed from a condor chick that died.

USFWS

Reduce, Reuse, Recycle

Recycle what you can, and think of creative ways to avoid using disposable products in the first place. Not only will you help reduce energy and resource consumption, but you'll also reduce the chance that trash will end up in the wrong place. Many wildlife species, including condors, can accidentally ingest or get caught in plastic or other trash. Condors may also feed small pieces of trash to their young, perhaps mistaking the trash for calcium-rich bone chips that their chick needs. This can often be fatal for the young condors. Extend the three R's ethos to activities outside of your home and look at what you can do in your community to reduce waste and litter. Volunteering to help clean up litter from natural landscapes is a particularly effective way to help wildlife.

 
Roadkill bobcat
Bobcat road kill near Pinnacles National Park.

NPS/Daniel George

Drive Safely

Thousands of animals die every year when they are struck by automobiles. Often, these road kills are scavenged on by other animals; sometimes, the scavenger will also end up dead on the road if it can't avoid a moving vehicle fast enough. Condors rarely approach roads, but vultures and other scavengers often do. Slowing down and keeping an eye out for wildlife crossings are good for both wildlife and drivers.

Keep Wildlife Wild

Never feed wild animals intentionally or unintentionally. Properly store food and make it inaccessible to wildlife. When some wildlife species become accustomed to handouts, they will often terrorize campsites and may need to be humanely dispatched. If you want to keep the Pinnacles wildlife alive and healthy, allow them to remain wild and not become dependent on human handouts. If you see someone giving a hand out, please kindly tell them why it actually hurts the animal.

 
Report Poaching and Polluting in California (call 1-888-DFG-CALTIP)

Report Poaching

Poachers undermine sound wildlife management, infringe on people’s privacy, and disrespect the good efforts of responsible hunters. If you have information about illegal shootings or trespass, call the Department of Fish and Game at 888-DFG-CALTIP (888-334-2258), 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

Celebrate Working Rural Landscapes

Condors and other wildlife thrive in open landscapes with sparse human infrastructure. Because condors scavenge for dead animals, they benefit from finding the occasional cow, sheep or other ranch or farm animal that happens to die on the open range.

Continuation of ranching traditions is good for people, good for condors, and a great way to ensure that wide open tracts of land will remain part of the heritage of the West.

Last updated: September 25, 2019

Park footer

Contact Info

Mailing Address:

5000 East Entrance Road
Paicines, CA 95043

Phone:

831 389-4486
Please call the number above for all park related inquiries. For camping questions contact the Pinnacles Campground at (831) 200-1722. For the park book store, please call (831) 389-4485.

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