Turtle Sanctuary, Tahaa

Jackamy
Paul & Derry Harper
Fri 28 May 2010 19:13
16:38.701S 151.27.431W
Right then, there was Blue Magic, Miss Tippy and us three all eager to
see this turtle sanctuary. There had been rumours that previous ralliers had
taken baby turtles and released them back into the ocean so we were looking
forward to getting there. But things didn't go very smoothly right from the
start, no one could quite understand what we were asking and it was all a little
confusing until eventually a man named Dave said he'd show us the turtles. Now,
when we arrived, Amy joked that small nets/cages in the water outside the hotel
were housing the turtles and we just laughed. But when Dave jumped into the
water inside the nets we realised that there were actually 3 turtles swimming
around inside, we couldn't believe it. He caught one and lay him on the wooden
pontoon and explained in broken English that he was 6 years old. I say 'him' and
'he' but they can't actually sex turtles until they are 10 years old so we don't
know whether he was male or female but it was beautiful, the shell looked as if
it was painted! Dave said the owner would be back within the hour and he'd tell
us more about it all and take us to the actual sanctuary which was an hour away.
We didn't quite manage to establish whether there were more turtles an hour away
but it was all soon forgotten about when Leo, the owner,
arrived.
![]() ![]() Jackamy on a mooring buoy outside the Hibiscus Hotel
![]() ![]() Dave showed us one turtle
![]() And then caught another one which was slighty younger and had a different
colouration
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() He also showed us a stone fish. If you don't get to hospital within
one hour of being poisoned you will die! This is why you should always wear reef
shoes when walking in the water in these areas!
Leo and his wife Lolita started the
It was all very surreal, one minute we were talking to Leo, him with very
broken English and us with very little French and the next we were leaving
with a baby turtle. When I say 'baby' you will probably envisage as we did a
small baby turtle but in actual fact the 6 year old we were previously shown was
actually a baby! Amy and Annie were sat on the balcony talking and Sheila was
taking pictures then the next thing they knew everyone was running outside
towards the nets saying "we're getting a turtle"! We'd all made a donation
towards the foundation and that sealed the deal. We sat out on the pontoon with
Leo while Dave caught 'Baldrick' (our chosen name). Baldrick was then tagged,
weighed and measured and his credentials were written on the back of a postcard
and handed to Annie. The next minute Mark was running down the pontoon holding
Baldrick, transporting him in the dinghy to Blue Magic and filling up his bath
in his cockpit with sea water.
![]() ![]() Baldrick was caught and cleaned then measured. He was 43cm wide and 47cm
long.
![]() Finally he was tagged
![]() ![]() Before we knew it he was rushed down the pontoon, loaded into the dinghy
and transported to Blue Magic with the help of Paul and
Annie
![]() ![]() ![]() Once on Blue Magic Paul carefully placed Baldrick into the
bath
![]() Everyone was fascinated and amazed at what had just
happened!
![]() ![]() Baldrick soon settled in and relaxed in his new temporary
home
We were headed round to the north west of Tahaa and Leo said that would
be a perfect spot to release him back into the wild. It took around an hour to
reach the bay and anchor. So the Miss Tippy kids went on Blue Magic to help look
after Baldrick, they tickled him under the chin the whole way round so by the
time we reached the bay he was well and truely relaxed and settled. The next
stage was to get him back into the dinghy to take him to the shallows at the
outer reef. It was all talked through so that nothing would go wrong, he weighed
12 kilos you see so it wasn't all that easy.
![]() ![]() Mark was in position in the dinghy and Paul carefully passed Baldrick
down
![]() It took around 10 minutes to reach the reef by dinghy but it was
fantastic. We wished Baldrick a bon voyage and set him free.
Today was one of the highlights of the whole trip. When I think about
exactly what has happened in the past few hours I'm amazed, we are very very
lucky people to be able to release a rescue turtle back into the wild to
continue with his life. Although we do have to keep our fingers crossed for him
as we read a letter advising that turtle No. R13676 had been eaten and killed in
Papua New Guinea. It had travelled 7,600 kilometres over a period of 18 months
and would have returned to French Polynesia to lay its eggs, so it would have
covered more than 15,000 kilometres in its lifetime.
We look forward to our letters/emails updating us on Baldricks progress
which will be tracked by the SPRED in Western Somoa and the University of
Hawaii.
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