Redwood Animal Hospital

Redwood Animal Hospital Specializing in Small Animals, we are located in Redondo Beach, CA. - SuperMedia Content Disclaimer:

Redwood Animal Hospital is a full-service animal hospital that provides everything from dentistry and routine exams to bathing and boarding services. Our veterinarians are experienced in all types of conditions and treatments. Beyond first-rate pet care, we make our clinic comfortable, kid-friendly, and a very calm environment so your pet can relax in the waiting room and look forward to his or her visit.

After 23 incredible years of caring for pets and the families who love them, Dr. Kim Rea will be retiring next month. ❤️...
05/28/2026

After 23 incredible years of caring for pets and the families who love them, Dr. Kim Rea will be retiring next month. ❤️

Dr. Rea has been the heart of Redwood Animal Hospital's family, helping generations of pets live happier, healthier lives while building lasting relationships with her clients and mentoring her veterinary team along the way. We are so grateful for her compassion, dedication, and the countless lives she has touched throughout the years.

To celebrate Dr. Rea and all she has meant to our community, we invite our clients to join us for an Open House Retirement Party!

📅 Sunday, June 14th, 2026
⏰ 11:00 AM – 3:00 PM
📍 Redwood Animal Hospital – Parking Lot & Reception Waiting Room

Join us for light refreshments, pup cups for our furry friends, vendor stations, raffles, and more as we honor Dr. Rea and all she has done for Redwood Animal Hospital over the past 23 years.

Please help us congratulate Dr. Rea on her retirement and thank her for 23 wonderful years of compassionate care. 🐾

From backyard zoomies to camping trips and every adventure in between, parasites are everywhere, all the time. Heartworm...
05/01/2026

From backyard zoomies to camping trips and every adventure in between, parasites are everywhere, all the time. Heartworm, flea, and tick preventatives keep your pet safe wherever their paws take them. 🐾 Your pet deserves to live a life that is parasite-free, and you can help give them that with deals on meds that are simply—furnominal. 😎 Ask us how you can save today!

02/15/2026

DAYLIGHT SKUNK: CHECK THE WALK.
You step outside with your morning coffee. There, waddling across the frosty, sunlit lawn, is a Striped Skunk.
Your instinct is to lock the doors and make a phone call. After all, a nocturnal animal in the sun means one thing, right?

Wrong. Before you panic, watch the gait.
We have been conditioned to use a clock as a medical diagnostic tool. But in wildlife ecology, the time of day is far less important than the biomechanics of the animal. Here is the science of the daylight skunk, and why seeing one this morning is perfectly normal.

1. The Myth of the "Rabies Clock"
The most pervasive myth in urban wildlife is that a skunk out during the day is rabid.
While the Striped Skunk (Mephitis mephitis) is a recognized rabies vector species in the United States, daylight activity alone is not a symptom of the disease.
State wildlife agencies and veterinary pathologists stress that the rabies virus attacks the central nervous system. It causes severe neurological degradation, not just a schedule change. A healthy skunk out in the day is simply a skunk working overtime.

2. The Scientific Reality: Ataxia vs. Purpose
How do you tell the difference? You analyze the locomotion.

The Healthy Walk: A healthy skunk moves with a purposeful, rolling, plantigrade (flat-footed) waddle. It is actively sniffing the ground, turning over leaves, and ignoring you. If you snap a twig, it will freeze, raise its tail, or retreat. It possesses situational awareness.

The Viral Walk: A rabid skunk exhibits ataxia (a gross lack of muscle coordination). It will stagger as if intoxicated, walk in tight, repetitive circles, or drag its hind legs (paresis). It will often seem completely oblivious to its surroundings or exhibit unprovoked, aimless aggression.

3. What is Happening Right Now (February)
Why are you seeing them right now? Because mid-February creates a perfect biological storm that forces skunks into the light.

Insight 1: The Mating Wander. As one wildlife tracker astutely noted, "They are just looking for a mate right now." This is biologically exact. February marks the onset of the striped skunk breeding season. Males (bucks) become highly transient, traveling up to 4 to 5 miles to find denned females. Because they cover so much ground, they are frequently caught far from a safe den when the sun rises, forcing them to navigate your neighborhood in the morning.

Insight 2: The Winter Calorie Deficit. As a backyard gardener recently observed, "I saw one systematically digging under my bird feeders at 10 AM." Skunks do not enter deep hibernation; they enter periods of torpor (lowered metabolic rate). By late February, their fat reserves are dangerously depleted. This severe caloric deficit forces them into opportunistic diurnal (daytime) foraging. They are simply too hungry to wait for the dark.

4. Why This Matters Ecologically
The Striped Skunk is an obligate omnivore and a specialized insect hunter.
They are one of the very few predators equipped to dig up and consume the overwintering queens of yellowjackets, as well as destructive agricultural pests like Japanese beetle grubs. Removing a healthy skunk from your local ecosystem because of a misunderstood schedule removes a premier, free pest-control service.

5. Practical Action: The "Red-Flag" Checklist
If you see a skunk in the daylight, do not assume disease. Observe from a safe distance and run this clinical checklist:

Mobility: Is it walking with a steady, purposeful waddle (Normal), or is it stumbling, falling over, and dragging its back legs? (Red Flag).

Awareness: Is it actively foraging and reacting to sounds? (Normal). Or is it wandering aimlessly, letting flies land on its eyes, or chewing on rocks? (Red Flag).

Appearance: Does it have a full, relatively clean coat? (Normal). Or is it heavily matted, emaciated, and discharging fluid from the eyes/nose? (Red Flag).

The Action: If it passes the test, leave it alone. It will move on. If it hits the red flags, call your local animal control or wildlife rehabilitator immediately.

The Verdict
Daylight is not a disease. In February, it is usually a symptom of hunger or hormones.
Do not judge the animal by the hour. Judge it by the walk.

Scientific References & Evidence
Rabies Pathology & Behavior: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). "Rabies in Wild Animals." (Details the neurological symptoms, such as ataxia and paresis, that distinguish rabid animals from healthy diurnal foragers).

Winter Energetics & Torpor: Hwang, Y. T., et al. (2007). Winter ecology of striped skunks (Mephitis mephitis). Journal of Mammalogy. (Documents the reliance on torpor and the depletion of fat reserves leading to late-winter diurnal foraging).

Reproductive Phenology: Wade-Smith, J., & Verts, B. J. (1982). Mephitis mephitis. Mammalian Species. (Confirms the February-March breeding season and the extensive travel of males).

01/15/2026
While dusk and dawn may still be a coyote's most active times, they are not the only times coyotes are active. Stay aler...
01/15/2026

While dusk and dawn may still be a coyote's most active times, they are not the only times coyotes are active. Stay alert.

01/08/2026
"Cats and architecture"
01/08/2026

"Cats and architecture"

Pet loss grief is very real, and you are not alone.
12/08/2025

Pet loss grief is very real, and you are not alone.

Join us this week - everyone is welcome! Please pass this along to anyone who could benefit from this support. December 11th, 2025 at 6:30 pm ET Every second Thursday of each month at: 6:30 pm ET / 5:30 pm CT / 4:30 pm MT / 3:30 pm PT

Is your pet due for a wellness exam? These visits are how we keep your best friend feeling their best—year after year. 💛...
11/21/2025

Is your pet due for a wellness exam? These visits are how we keep your best friend feeling their best—year after year. 💛 Give us a call or book online today!

Address

2702 Artesia Boulevard
Redondo Beach, CA
90278

Opening Hours

Monday 7:30am - 6pm
Tuesday 7:30am - 6pm
Wednesday 7:30am - 6pm
Thursday 7:30am - 6pm
Friday 7:30am - 6pm
Saturday 8am - 4pm

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