Cyprus -Nature- Turtle Watching
Since 1992, Marine Turtle Research group, in conjunction with the Society for
the Protection of Turtles in Northern Cyprus and the Department for
Environmental Protection, has been undertaking an annual survey, recording the
turtles activity during the summer months.
In the company of the team at Alagadi Beach (30 minutes drive from Kyrenia)
you can share this unique event. Just before sunset you join the students at
their base, "The Goat Shed" at Alagadi. First you are given information about
the turles and the project, and then, when darkness falls, you will be taken
down to one of the two Alagadi bays. There you will wait while the students
survey the beaches. As soon as a female has begun to lay, you are, in slience,
allowed to approach the nesting place. (No photoflashes are allowed at this
impartant time.) And there, before your eyes, you can witness this one hundred
million year old wonder, as soon after the other these mother-of-pearl
shimmering eggs, the size of table tennis balls, are dropped into the nest
cavity. On a lucky night you will be able to experience this unique happening
several times before you return to your hotel, tired but happy.
Incubation is indeed not by the female turtles but by the warmth of the
Cyprus sunshine. After about 50 days the small hatchlings begin to emerge from
the surface of their sandy nests. This is another fantastic experience that
takes place in some forty nesting beaches around Northern Cyprus. All are
welcome to participate in this event as well to witness up to a hundred of these
amazing little creatures, not more than 6-7 cm long, fight their way from the
nest down to the sea, is an unforgettable sight. It is sad fact that only one in
thousand survive. Even less would survive if it was not for the special
conversation project taking place here in North Cyprus concerning this
endangered species. We feel it is our responsibility to help these creatures to
survive and to be able to continue, without threat to their nesting grounds, to
visit our island. This has been their home much longer than it has been ours.
The best times to observe the nesting is at the end of June and beginning of
July. To observe the hatching is the best during end of August and beginning of
September.
The Akamas Peninsula to the north west of Paphos also is a unique area which
has become almost identical with the Lara hatchery and its beaches, home to the
green and logger-head turtles. Here they lay their eggs, undisturbed by
civilization. Once the hatchlings emerge from their shells, they head
instinctively for the sea. The bright light of the water draws the tiny turtles
towards it like a magnet. The mother turtles are also bound by their natural
environment and, having laid their eggs, they too head back to the sea, as they
have done for centuries.
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