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Another Turtle Rescue by the Perry 56 ‘Foxfire’

They did it again! Mike Casey and the crew aboard the Perry 56 Foxfire managed to rescue another turtle from the scourge of fishing nets and plastic bottles. Mike wrote, saying, “We are anchored in the Tres Marias and were out observing the remote and exclusive scenery when we came across this distressed turtle in our dinghy. Wrapped around its neck were fish nets, bottles and palm frond stalks.”

Perry 56 Foxfire
Aidan O’Sullivan, aboard the Perry 56 Foxfire, takes charge in disentangling a turtle from plastics.
© 2023 Mike Casey

Sadly, it’s not uncommon to find marine animals entangled in ocean plastics (really human plastics) or for ocean biologists to find the bellies of sea life filled with discarded human plastics. Luckily these creatures sometimes cross paths with good Samaritans like those aboard Foxfire. It was just a month ago that we wrote about their first rescue.

Foxfire frees a turtle
After removal of the plastics, the turtle was released back to the wild.
© 2023 Mike Casey

After freeing the turtle they sailed on, with Mike noting, “It was weird today. We saw the same bottle and palm arrangement afloat in another place. Fortunately, no turtle was attached. Are they traps or cast-off fishing gear, or lost gear? It makes us wonder.”

Has anyone else seen this type of palm/plastic arrangement? Could it be a way of capturing turtles? If so, let us know in the comments below or email us here.

 

The turtle is now swimming freely again!

2 Comments

  1. John Arndt 1 year ago

    From the SV Sophie: “Basically a DIY fish attraction device. Small creatures find a home, bigger ones come to eat them and so on. They are very popular in Mexico, and if you’re fishing for dorado, they are incredibly effective. And also apparently brutal entanglements for sea turtles. Sad story…”

  2. Randy Repass 1 year ago

    Congrats and thanks to Mike and Team Turtle!

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