NEWSPhotos: Visit the animals inside Raven Ridge Wildlife CenterYork Daily RecordTracie Young examines a wound on a young fox at Raven Ridge Wildlife Center.Paul Kuehnel, Paul KuehnelTracie Young is the only one who has bonded with Baron Von Vulture, an unreleasable black vulture, at Raven Ridge Wildlife Center.Paul Kuehnel, Paul KuehnelA Kestrel with a toe cast is given physical therapy at Raven Ridge Wildlife Center. The bird is expected to eventually be released.Paul Kuehnel, Paul KuehnelA Kestrel with a toe cast is given physical therapy at Raven Ridge Wildlife Center. The bird is expected to eventually be released.Paul Kuehnel, Paul KuehnelA duck enclosure waits for an occupant at Raven Ridge Wildlife Center.Paul Kuehnel, Paul KuehnelCages and incubators with species that may contain rabies are marked at Raven Ridge Wildlife Center. This incubator held a red fox.Paul Kuehnel, Paul KuehnelTracie Young gives a young fox medication at Raven Ridge Wildlife Center.Paul Kuehnel, Paul KuehnelTracie Young in front of a box turtle enclosure at Raven Ridge Wildlife Center. It isn't legal in Pennsylvania to turn a box turtle into a pet. The enclosure is home to several turtles.Paul Kuehnel, Paul KuehnelTracie Young works on a fawn at Raven Ridge Wildlife Center.SubmittedAn albino cotton tail rabbit watches people go by at Raven Ridge Wildlife Center.Paul Kuehnel, Paul KuehnelNamed Momma Duck, this mallard was treated for a facial injury at Raven Ridge Wildlife Center. She didn't want to leave when given the chance, so she lives at the center now and free ranges during the day following caretakers into center.Paul Kuehnel, Paul KuehnelAn unreleasable great horned owl sizes up a camera at Raven Ridge Wildlife Center.Paul Kuehnel, Paul KuehnelRegurgitated owl pellets are dried in a pan at Raven Ridge Wildlife Center. The end product of digestion is dissected during educational presentations.Paul Kuehnel, Paul KuehnelVolunteer Dan Kelshaw holds Gigi, a groundhog who munches a carrot with one paw. Gigi was unusually tame for a groundhog and is used for education.Paul Kuehnel, Paul KuehnelTracie Young, right, talks to volunteers while Mamma Duck eats a bowl of meal worms at Raven Ridge Wildlife Center.Paul Kuehnel, Paul KuehnelA sticker on the back of Tracie Young's SUV at Raven Ridge Wildlife Center.Paul KuehnelGray PVC electrical conduit pipes are used for an enclosure of a bald eagle to keep it from injuring itself at Raven Ridge Wildlife Center.Paul Kuehnel, Paul KuehnelA saw-whet owl peers out of it's cage at Raven Ridge Wildlife Center.Paul Kuehnel, Paul KuehnelA rare horned lark bird with a bandaged wing at Raven Ridge Wildlife Center.Paul Kuehnel, Paul KuehnelTracie Young, right, prepares food with volunteers for the animals at Raven Ridge Wildlife Center.Paul Kuehnel, Paul KuehnelA box turtle stares at the camera at Raven Ridge Wildlife Center.Paul Kuehnel, Paul KuehnelA black vulture named Baron Von Vulture looks at the camera lens at Raven Ridge Wildlife Center.Paul Kuehnel, Paul KuehnelThank you cards line a bulletin board at Raven Ridge Wildlife Center.Paul Kuehnel