We just got back online yesterday, which is why there haven't been any posts recently. These are snorkeling pictures from about a week ago.
Friday, February 4, 2011
Saturday, January 22, 2011
Turtle Rescue
Hello Tern Followers! This is Jimmy. Sorry its been a while since we updated. The internet has been coming and going with the wind lately, but we finally got a chance to make another post. We have been very busy lately trying to finish all our albatross sweeps before the peak of hatching. We seem to have completed the sweeps just in time as a lot of the eggs have hatched and the proud parents are extremely protective (and snappy) over their chicks.
A few days ago the waves on the north side of the island were huge; huge enough that when the same swell made it to Oahu a day later, they were planning on holding one of the premier big wave competitions on the North Shore. The waves are just starting to settle down now. Anyways, this relates to the turtle rescue because the rough waters cause the juvenile turtles to seek shelter from the strong currents and choppy shallows that they usually hang out in. Unfortunately, the gaps in our seawall provide an appealing place for them to escape, and then they get trapped in small pools just inside the wall when the tide goes out. Since this happens fairly often, the volunteers always check these pools during the daily entrapment walk. Kristina and I were scheduled for the entrapment walk this morning and were excited to rescue two unlucky turtles sitting at the bottom of the shallow pools just inside the seawall. Kristina took a video while I attempted to catch the first of the two turtles. Turtles are very quick when they are in the water so we had to corral them into a very shallow section before we could try to pick them up. We took a few pictures of us holding the turtles and putting them back through the hole in the seawall after checking them for identifying marks and injuries.

A few days ago the waves on the north side of the island were huge; huge enough that when the same swell made it to Oahu a day later, they were planning on holding one of the premier big wave competitions on the North Shore. The waves are just starting to settle down now. Anyways, this relates to the turtle rescue because the rough waters cause the juvenile turtles to seek shelter from the strong currents and choppy shallows that they usually hang out in. Unfortunately, the gaps in our seawall provide an appealing place for them to escape, and then they get trapped in small pools just inside the wall when the tide goes out. Since this happens fairly often, the volunteers always check these pools during the daily entrapment walk. Kristina and I were scheduled for the entrapment walk this morning and were excited to rescue two unlucky turtles sitting at the bottom of the shallow pools just inside the seawall. Kristina took a video while I attempted to catch the first of the two turtles. Turtles are very quick when they are in the water so we had to corral them into a very shallow section before we could try to pick them up. We took a few pictures of us holding the turtles and putting them back through the hole in the seawall after checking them for identifying marks and injuries.
Green Sea Turtle inside the seawall |
Wednesday, January 19, 2011
Black-foots are Hatching
Oreo, the Black-foot Albatross |
Freshly hatched Black-foot albatross chick |
A proud mother..or father (they take turns) |
Windy Day |
Jimmy |
Jimmy found this interesting looking red footed booby (they are usually white). Photo by Jimmy Macaulay |
Brown booby between two red footed boobies. There are only a couple brown boobies on the island, most are on La Perouse |
Red footed booby at sunrise |
Hawaiian Monk Seals love to lay in the sun |
Melinda is our fiddler on the roof |
Jimmy and I at sunset |
Snorkeling |
waves in the sand |
Melinda and I snorkeling |
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Healthy coral reef |
Wednesday, January 12, 2011
Windy day
Great Frigate Bird |
Great Frigate Bird Juvenille |
Laysan Albatross doing a Sky Moo |
Frigate Yoga |
Prius the Black-foot/ Laysan Hybrid |
Red- Tailed Tropic Bird |
Black-foot Abatross cuddling |
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Masked Booby pair |
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Black- Foot albatrosses on egg |
Jimmy demonstrating how to pick up an albatross
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