NPR Interview on Sea Turtle Strandings

December 6th, 2010

Mindy-Todd-by-Dorene-Sykes

 

Mindy Todd, NPR’s the Point

Photo by Dorene Sykes

 

Mindy Todd, of NPR’s the Point, will host a program on Tuesday morning, December 7th on WCAI/WCAN (90.1, 91.1 94.3) from 9:30 to 10:00 and again in the evening at 7:30 to 8:00 pm to discuss the record number of sea turtle strandings on Cape Cod this fall.  In addition to the FM band, you can listen live to the Point by clicking on Mindy’s photograph above, which will bring you to the NPR web site.

Don “The Turtle Guy” Lewis and Kathy Zagzebski, President & Executive Director of National Marine Life Center, discuss sea turtles and the high numbers stranding on Cape Cod beaches.

Mindy archives her programs, too.  You can listen to last Christmas Eve’s interview on this same topic by clicking here.  Later this week, you should be able to access Tuesday’s interview.

Rocky Mountain before 480


Turtle Journal Makes Time Magazine NewsFeed

December 3rd, 2010

Turtle Journal Twitter 480

Turtle Journal’s story in Cape Cod Today about the three-year-old boy who rescued an endangered sea turtle was picked up by Time Magazine’s NewsFeed.  The Time story begins,

Three-Year-Old Boy Saves Endangered Sea Turtle. What Did You Do Today?

 
Read the full story by clicking on the title above.

Three-Year-Old Boy Rescues Endangered Sea Turtle

November 30th, 2010

teague 003 480

Teague Whalley, Kemp’s Ridley and Don Lewis

Three-year-old hero Teague Whalley saved one of the most endangered sea turtles in the world from certain death on Monday, November 29th.

teague 014 480

3-Year-Old Teague Whalley Discovers Stranded Sea Turtle

Teague proves the rule that you’re never too young to begin saving the world, one turtle at a time.  Turtle Journal salutes Teague and his mother Karen Whalley for their successful efforts to save this badly injured, and cold-stunned Kemp’s ridley sea turtle.

teague 007 480

Sagamore Beach, Bourne, Massachusetts

Late Monday morning, Karen Whalley and her son Teague walked Sagamore Beach on a beautiful sunny day.  The seas were calm and the winds gentle.  The tide had receded, allowing Karen and Teague to explore the shoreline.  As they approached a rock groin (the distant one pictured above), Teague and his mom found a “beautiful” sea turtle unlike anything they had ever seen on the beach before.  Not knowing what to do, they returned to their nearby home and searched the internet to find a Cape Cod sea turtle rescuer to call.  Unsurprisingly, Google search produced the hotline number for Turtle Journal (508-274-5108).  They also found the procedures for saving a stranded sea turtle.

teague 004 480

Teague Whalley Recovers Sea Turtle from Rising Tide

After calling Turtle Journal, Karen and Teague rushed back to the beach.  The tide was rising quickly, and they had to plunge into the water to rescue the turtle before it was dragged out to sea and condemned to certain death.  As they lifted the turtle to the beach, it began to move its flippers, signaling that it was quite alive.  Karen and Teague covered the sea turtle with dry seaweed to prevent hypothermia while they waited for the Turtle Journal rescue team to arrive.

teague 019 480

Don Lewis, Kemp’s Ridley, Teague Whalley

While Turtle Journal’s Sue Wieber Nourse documented the rescue with photographs, Don Lewis examined this juvenile, 2-year-old Kemp’s ridley.  Its right eye had been damaged either by scraping against the rocks as it was driven ashore or by predatory gulls.  But this little critter proved a survivor and demonstrated its fight for life by trying to “swim” out of my arms.

teague 006 480

Kemp’s Ridley Arrives at New England Aquarium Rescue Center

It was late in the afternoon, but we knew that this animal would not survive the night unless it received immediate medical attention.  We called the New England Aquarium marine rescue hotline and explained the situation.  While they are swamped with nearly a hundred cold-stunned turtles already, and rarely accept new animals this late in the day, they generously agreed to accept this Kemp’s ridley.  Sue Wieber Nourse and I raced up Route 3 to the new marine rescue facility in Quincy, and the turtle was admitted to the emergency facility by 4:15.

teague 008 480

Sea Turtle Rescuers Teague Whalley and Karen Whalley

But none of this would have been possible if it were not for a heroic young lad, Teague Whalley, and his mom Karen.


Turtle Journal “Rescued Green Sea Turtle” Photo Goes Globally Viral

November 27th, 2010

csst 009 cropped 480

Tiny Green Sea Turtle Rescued by Turtle Journal Team

Quicker than you can say, “A. P.,” our photograph of Turtle Journal’s Jared Nourse holding the tiny green sea turtle he rescued from Breakwater beach in Brewster at 3 am on Thanksgiving morning went hyper-viral through the global electronic community.  We received a call late Friday morning from A.P. Boston to confirm that the photograph was ours and that we were willing to allow it to be distributed by A.P. to underscore the story of cold-stunned sea turtle rescues on Cape Cod.

Much less than an hour after that conversation, our computers began to buzz with hits as the image started appearing in on-line newspapers and media outlets, first locally, then regionally, and swiftly moving across the country and around the globe.   Cape Cod, Boston, Springfield, Worcester, New Haven, Nashua, Albany, Buffalo, Philadelphia, Gettysburg, Washington D.C., South Carolina, Miami, Georgia, Texas, St. Louis, Ohio, Illinois, Wisconsin, Montana, Idaho, Arizona, California, Oregon, Seattle, Anchorage, Hawaii, Samoa, Manila, India and even the Himalayan Times in Nepal.  In between, other media picked up the photograph, including CBS, ABC, Fox, Cox Cable, Time Warner, Comcast, and so on and so forth.

It’s a breathtaking, mind-boggling experience to behold as one of your creations goes viral.  It feels a bit like letting your puppy slip outside to gnaw on a bone, only to get a call a few minutes later from the Dali Lama complaining that your dog was tugging at his alarm gong. 

One good piece of news is that Jared has not let the incident go to his head, although he does assert that his hand-modeling fees will be substantially increased for future gigs.

Thanksgiving Sea Turtle Rescues For Turtle Journal Family

November 25th, 2010

csst 000 cropped 480

Jared Nourse Rescues Tiny Green Sea Turtle

A cold front plowed through the Mid West and stormed into New England for the Thanksgiving holiday.  Northwest winds swept across Cape Cod Bay, driving thunderous surf onto beaches from Barnstable to Truro, and tossing helpless cold-stunned sea turtles onto the shore.  These tropical and semi-tropical sea turtles that were trapped in Cape Cod Bay by plunging ocean temperatures became cold-stunned and entered stupor as the sea water thermometer dropped into the low 50s.  Like flotsam and jetsam, they get bounced around the bay until powerful weather conditions and high tides push them ashore.  Then, if rescuers can be on the beach to discover them before fatal hypothermia sets in, these turtles have a good chance of returning safely to the wild where they will restore declining populations.

Turtle Journal Rescues Three Cold-Stunned Sea Turtles

High tide came at 1:30 am and the NW wind direction indicated that likely beaches would include East Dennis, Brewster, Orleans, Eastham and Wellfleet.  The Turtle Journal team drew Brewster beaches from Paine’s Creek (near the Cape Cod Museum of Natural History) through Point of Rocks.  With a westerly component in the wind, the objective is to walk from west to east, keeping the wind at your back rather than in your face.  We reached Paine’s Creek a little after 1:30 am.  Sue Wieber Nourse and Jared Nourse took the first leg of the patrol from Paine’s Creek to Breakwater; Don Lewis had the easterly leg from Breakwater to Point of Rocks.

csst 007 480

Jared Nourse and Sue Wieber Nourse with Green and 2 Ridleys

Sue Wieber Nourse spotted the first turtle, a medium sized juvenile Kemp’s ridley about a 1/4 mile east of Paine’s Creek.  Jared discovered a smaller Kemp’s ridley about a 1/4 mile west of Saints Landing and a tiny green sea turtle west of the Breakwater seawall.

csst 009 cropped 480

Tiny, Cold-Stunned Green Sea Turtle

While Kemp’s ridleys are the more endangered species, it is always a special event to recover a small green sea turtle from the surf.  Here on Cape Cod, greens are relatively rare, perhaps two or three percent of all cold-stunned sea turtles.  So, the rarity of finding one makes them special.  They’re also arguably the most beautiful sea turtle, even when in cold-stunned stupor.  Unlike Kemp’s ridleys and loggerheads, their carapace (top shell) always seems highly polished and free of algae.   When opened, their big puppy-like eyes add a certain cuteness factor.

csst 012 480

Creamy White Plastron of Green Sea Turtle

Even their plastron (bottom shell) seems creamy white and shows very little algae build-up.  All in all, a very beautiful creature!  This specimen measured only 23 centimters (9 inches) from the leading edge to the trailing edge of its shell.

csst 014 480

Two Juvenile Cold-Stunned Kemp’s Ridleys

One of the Kemp’s ridleys was fairly small, while the second was a bit larger.  Because these animals are helpless in the sea, they tend to be blown ashore by physics rather than biology; that is, by size with the smaller first.  As strandings progress, larger and larger animals predominate until near the end of the stranding season, when massive loggerheads rule the beach.

More turtles were discovered on Thanksgiving Day as holiday visitors walked the beaches.  The winds have subsided now and whether or not we launch middle of the night patrols again this evening will depend on what the midday tide yields.