Thursday, November 13, 2008

Sea Turtle Flown From Virgin Islands to Key West

Here is a great little article on how folks are coming together to save our future.
I found this on the website of the Monroe County Tourist Development Council.


A rare hawksbill sea turtle that was attacked by wild dogs as she nested a month ago on a beach in St. Croix, Virgin Islands, arrived at the Florida Keys-based Turtle Hospital Tuesday night.

Weighing 170 pounds, the female turtle was transported for free on an American Airlines flight to Miami International Airport. It was then loaded on to the Turtle Hospital's ambulance to make the trip down the Keys Overseas Highway to Marathon.

"The goal is get her rehabilitated and released back to the ocean," said Micah Rogers, a turtle rehabilitation specialist. "She's a nesting female and that means if we lose her, we're losing every single nest she could possibly make in her lifetime.

"She's a critically endangered animal," Rogers said. "Every single female counts."

St. Croix-based U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service officials discovered the injured reptile Oct. 10 during a turtle survey in the Sandy Point National Wildlife Refuge. Named "Sandy," the turtle sustained serious injuries to her two front flippers and left rear flipper.

The turtle was treated at St. Croix's Island Animal Clinic, but veterinarians there decided to send "Sandy" to the Turtle Hospital, the only licensed veterinary facility in the world exclusively dedicated to treating sick and injured sea turtles.

Officials hope to eventually return "Sandy" to St. Croix.

Impact of Obama victory on Caribbean Tourism

The Islandman believes this is only the first of what will be many articles written on the impact of the Obama victory on the US relationship with Cuba and the resulting efffect on the tourist industries of other Caribbean countries.

What do think???

Lifting of Cuba ban could hit rest of Caribbean
By Benedict Mander in Caracas

Published: November 10 2008 02:00 | Last updated: November 10 2008 02:00

Fears are growing that the tourism industry in many Caribbean nations could suffer if Barack Obama, US president-elect, decides to weaken or lift the long-standing US embargo on Cuba.

US passport holders are now banned from going to Cuba. But if American tourists - the Caribbean's biggest group of visitors - were granted unrestricted access to what is potentially the region's largest tourism destination, a "seismic shift" could hit the Caribbean, said Rafael Romeu, an International Monetary Fund economist who has studied the issue.

What exactly an Obama administration will do on Cuba remains unclear. But any shift allowing US travel to the Caribbean's largest island could represent the single most significant change in US policy towards the region and its economies.

While Cuba has suffered from strict trade barriers for the past half-century, the rest of the region has benefited as a result. Now, however, they will need to act quickly to prepare themselves for this large loss in what amount to implicit trade preferences - or suffer the consequences, said Mr Romeu.

Destinations most vulnerable are those that depend most heavily on US tourists, such as the Bahamas and CancĂșn, while others that have a higher proportion of European visitors will be less hit, such as the Dominican Republic and Barbados.

Mr Romeu expects a net increase of more than 10 per cent in the region's visitors as costs of visiting fall.

About 1.4m people visit Cuba each year. But Cuba is expected to receive as many as 3.5m US visitors alone if the US changes its policy.