Shot in the eye, the owl lay broken—until kind hands brought him to safety, where hope now flickers behind his wounded gaze.

Nicholas Rice is a Senior Editor for PEOPLE Magazine. He began working with the brand as an Editorial Intern in early 2020, before later transitioning to staff positions. Nicholas writes and edits anywhere between 7 to 9 stories per day on average for PEOPLE, spanning across each vertical the brand covers.

Owl Transformed After Receiving Care at Penn. Wildlife Rehab Center

A Great Horned Owl is on the mend in Pennsylvania after sustaining an eye injury from a BB gun.

Last month, the Raven Ridge Wildlife Center shared in a Facebook post that they had taken in the bird after a State Game Warden discovered it “stuck in a manure pit for at least two days,” where it was “severely dehydrated” and “weak.”

Không có mô tả ảnh.

Now, in a statement shared with PEOPLE, Tracie A. Young, a Wildlife Rehabilitator at the establishment, said the owl was “shot” with a BB gun, which she noted “is a federal offense.”

Không có mô tả ảnh.

“We had to wait for the blood in the eye to be absorbed by the body, so that we could see if there was any permanent damage,” she detailed. “Over the next few days, the body started absorbing the blood in the eye. We administered fluids, the owl had to be tube-fed and given several baths.”

Owl Transformed After Receiving Care at Penn. Wildlife Rehab Center

After removing the bullet from within the owl’s eye, Young said she and her team continued to give it fluids and antibiotics, and put it on a “healthy diet,” which she said allowed it to start “eating on his own.”

Không có mô tả ảnh.

Young also told PEOPLE in her statement that a vet confirmed “there was no permanent eye damage or loss of vision.”

“This was great news!” she continued, adding: “I did not think that it was going to make it.”

Owl Transformed After Receiving Care at Penn. Wildlife Rehab Center

Raven Ridge Wildlife Center

Young also said in her statement that the owl has since been moved to an outdoor flight mew, where she and her team will monitor its flight, perching, grooming and ability to catch prey, all of which she said are “necessary functions for survival.”