UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — A barred owl has lived at Shaver’s Creek Environmental Center since 1989. A golden eagle came one year later, and two more birds have called the Penn State outdoor education field lab and nature center home for a quarter of a century.
But now, for the first time, Shaver’s Creek’s 18 raptors will get new homes as construction continues at the Petersburg, Huntingdon County, center.
“The improvements will give the animals more choices in their own environment,” said Jason Beale, Shaver’s Creek’s program director of live animal care. “We’re flipping the enclosures to track the sunlight throughout the day. There will be more visibility for the birds and for the public to view them. They’ll be bigger enclosures, which will allow staff to work with them more efficiently and for the birds to move around and express natural behaviors.”
Six new raptor enclosures and an upper classroom comprise the latest component of a multi-phase expansion and renovation project at Shaver’s Creek Environmental Center. Major improvements are being made to the center for the first time.