Friday, August 22, 2014

We Are Getting Closer

We are on our second week on the island, and our estimated nest hatch date is creeping closer! We have now built our runway, and we are beginning to sit with our nest several hours in the evening... or longer! However, if there is depression in the sand, then I'll stay there all night. (Okay, until midnight.)

Really there is nothing else to say about our nest, but there are others to talk about.

Building the runway!

Our beautiful nest and runway is complete... for now.

There was another nest close to ours that was a slow boil. That means that instead of 50-120 turtles coming out all at once, they kind of trickled out. The first night, seven turtles hatched, but the volunteer for that nest had to leave the island the next day. The volunteer coordinator, Jaymie Reneker, asked for another volunteer to sit with the nest the next night in case any others came out. We quickly said, "Yes!"

Boy, I'm glad we did!

Depression in the sand (can be a sign of hatching) and turtle tracks.

We had just began keeping watch on the second night, when all of a sudden, a Dad who had stopped by with his family said that he saw the sand move. All the eyes of the crowd switched their gaze to the nest. The man was right! After a few minutes, the speck that I thought was a rock shifted.

Then a few more seconds went by, and another "rock" came up out of the sand - a head and a flipper! After a minute or two, there was a gorgeous baby turtle creeping out of the wire nest with... Wait! There was another one right behind it!!! My brother, mom, and I grabbed our flashlights and headed down to the end of the runway.

Yay!!! They have started to crawl.

And off they go!

They stayed together all the way to the tide.

My brother was the white light holder at the waves, a person who takes a white light flashlight and holds it above the water to guide the hatchlings to the ocean. We only had a few moments with these turtles. Then they were swimming happily off into the night.

After the sun fully set, we still had to stay in case more came out. So we did.

For 30 minutes...

An hour...

Made sand castle at 2 hours...

Ate popcorn and chocolate at about 2 hours, 45 minutes... (Let's have fun with this right?)

Still no turtles.

As a storm came closer, people began to leave, but of course we stayed. Then SMACK! I felt something like a light gum ball hit my shoulder. Yes, the size of a gum ball. Then SPLOOSH! About fifty more came down on top of us causing us and the public to run almost in circles (not on the runway or nest though).

So I yelled, "Get under the blanket! Get under the blanket!!!"

As we hid out under our blanket "rain shield," we suddenly heard someone say, "Woah! Here they come!"

I quickly changed what I was saying to, "Get out of the blanket! Get out of the blanket!!!"

As we pulled the blanket off, I saw five more turtles coming up out of the sand. Five at a time! (How will we handle a 100+ turtle hatch?) Anyway, we got them to the ocean and then waited a little more, then went home. I don't remember how long the rain lasted, probably not more then five minutes.

After that, we stayed another night, but I won't go into details. Just know that five more hatched but thankfully our dear "mentor" Miss Amy, a Turtle Conservancy intern, was there to lend a hand. (Whew! She was a big help to us.)

To wrap this blogpost up, I will show you some other things that we have also seen this week.

A super tiny sharks tooth my brother found.

A ray resting in the shallows.

A huge buck deer out our window, literally seconds after I published my last blogpost.

The most beautiful sunset (notice the palm trees and passing golf carts).

Friday, August 15, 2014

Squirmy Little Hatchlings!

I am back at BHI! This time, not just meetings and vacation but serious, very serious turtle hatchings and excavations. So far, I've helped with a Loggerhead nest excavation last night and a Green sea turtle excavation this morning.

I am checking MY nest daily and getting exited for when it will hatch! Thankfully nothing has happened to it, and I'm hoping it will stay that way (unless that happening is a turtle boil!!!).

Right now, I am about to burst with happiness about the Green sea turtle excavation this morning. A total of 146 eggs hatched, and the volunteers pulled out two survivor hatchlings that didn't pop out of the surface the night of the boil. They were stronger then the ones at the Loggerhead excavation (two hatchlings also) and made it to the water quickly.


      Some of my finger, can barely see the turtle, but this is one of the Greens meeting the water!


At the Loggerhead excavation, we were observers. We saw how the nest monitors did it and also helped the turtles have some space from the crowds. The mother of the Loggerheads was a turtle named Sharkbite! I think you can tell why. She has a half moon shark bite on her shell. She can swim, walk and do anything just like other sea turtles though. She has been nesting on BHI since 2002 and has laid four nest this year!


Baby Loggerhead... such a tiny thing to be in the sea!

We agreed to be at the beach by 8:00 a.m. the next morning to do the Green excavation, but it was worth it! This time we were handed gloves, and we shared turtle facts with the public.

Then surprise! We were handed unhatched and hatched turtle eggs to show to the public. We walked around showing them and I figured out those eggs are not feathers... more like bouncy balls. So as my brother and I met up at the middle, we gave them to Jaymie (the volunteer coordinator) and started sharing facts again.

They had already found one turtle in the nest at the very beginning of the excavation, then suddenly found another. As the hatchlings were shown around, it seemed like they were the next two big Hollywood stars. Everyone was aaawwwing and cameras were clicking everywhere. (No flash though. The little babies have been down in dark sand so they are very sensitive to white light.)


Me actually holding a Green hatchling.  :D

Then... the moment came...

I was able to hold one of these creatures. Having never seen this type of turtle in real life, I was about to jump up and down like I had just won a million dollars. I held its shell and learned that you have to not worry about holding them too tight, because those things can wiggle like a worm!

It was the most amazing experience I've ever had.

As I took it around, I was so scared I was going to drop it and then accidentally step on it. But as I handed it to my brother, I knew I didn't hurt it. I realized how hard it felt to set it free, but it's what we have to do.

So we went down to the water, and let them crawl! It's been an exiting 14 hours. All that Green turtle fun this morning, and it's only 9:45 a.m.

The joys of Bald Head Island!