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Taltarzac725
06-25-2017, 12:40 PM
Helping Turtles Across the Road: Minnesota DNR (http://www.dnr.state.mn.us/reptiles_amphibians/helping-turtles-roads.html)

First you should get to a safe spot where you can get out of your car or golf cart!

OMG! There's a turtle in the road! (http://www.turtlerescueleague.com/turtle-in-road)

Gopher Tortoise: How You Can Help (http://myfwc.com/wildlifehabitats/managed/gopher-tortoise/help/)

bluedivergirl
06-25-2017, 02:06 PM
I used to live in Minnesota, and have helped many a turtle across a road. If you help one, hold it away from your body, and be prepared. They WILL pee. Don't be surprised and drop them.

Taltarzac725
06-25-2017, 03:15 PM
I used to live in Minnesota, and have helped many a turtle across a road. If you help one, hold it away from your body, and be prepared. They WILL pee. Don't be surprised and drop them.

I got this link from a lawyer in MN who frequently rescues animals on the roads up there and then takes them to vets if they need it.

Once in a while I will see a turtle in the road here in the Villages and most of these have been in places where there is no where to stop safely unfortunately.

Arctic Fox
06-25-2017, 03:39 PM
We found one heading down the Morse tunnel under 466!

Lucky we spotted it as it is quite dark in there

Turned round in church car park and lifted it back on to the grass, pointing towards the pond!

Taltarzac725
06-25-2017, 03:41 PM
We found one heading down the Morse tunnel under 466!

Lucky we spotted it as it is quite dark in there

Turned round in church car park and lifted it back on to the grass, pointing towards the pond!

Did it pee when you picked it up?

Taltarzac725
06-25-2017, 04:00 PM
We found one heading down the Morse tunnel under 466!

Lucky we spotted it as it is quite dark in there

Turned round in church car park and lifted it back on to the grass, pointing towards the pond!

Thanks for doing that. :doggie:

Allegiance
06-25-2017, 05:14 PM
We found one heading down the Morse tunnel under 466!

Lucky we spotted it as it is quite dark in there

Turned round in church car park and lifted it back on to the grass, pointing towards the pond!
Thanks for that, seems the turtle found its way home.

Bonny
06-25-2017, 06:16 PM
We have stopped for many turtles. Thank goodness most people are really good and patient. Hubby just puts on his flashers and we quickly get the turtle out of the road.

Taltarzac725
06-25-2017, 06:20 PM
We have stopped for many turtles. Thank goodness most people are really good and patient. Hubby just puts on his flashers and we quickly get the turtle out of the road.

Two people might make it easier. First year here there was a gopher tortoise crossing the road just past the roundabout near Rainey Trail (CR 472) and this was during a heavy rain. I came close to hitting the poor thing in the rain storm in my Saturn at that time. CR 472 is where Promise Hospital is if you cannot place it. Promise Hospital of Florida at The Villages – Promise Hospital of Florida at The Villages (http://promise-villages.com/) They will show a map for it.

Sandtrap328
06-25-2017, 07:56 PM
I have helped turtles in the road from box turtles to snapping turtles to big soft shell turtles. Always be careful of those jaws! They can easily take off a finger.

bluedivergirl
06-25-2017, 10:11 PM
I have helped turtles in the road from box turtles to snapping turtles to big soft shell turtles. Always be careful of those jaws! They can easily take off a finger.

Northern turtles have short necks. They can't bend around like the critters in these parts.

I'm a little intimidated by the turtles here. :shocked:

Arctic Fox
06-26-2017, 02:48 AM
Did it pee when you picked it up?

I thought it had recently come out of the pond - but I could have been wrong :-)

Taltarzac725
06-26-2017, 04:08 AM
I thought it had recently come out of the pond - but I could have been wrong :-)

Thanks for that explanation. :BigApplause:

rubicon
06-26-2017, 04:37 AM
i almost ran down a driver who stopped her vehicle suddenly on 466 to carry a turtle to safety.

she is most fortunate she was not carried away

Safety experts will tell you rather than making sudden movements while driving to avoid an animal it is safer to hit the animal because too many people have been killed or badly injured when trying to avoid an animal.

Sounds logical to me and I believe a relief for a family that would have otherwise lamented he should have hit the darn deer and stayed alive

Taltarzac725
06-26-2017, 06:55 AM
i almost ran down a driver who stopped her vehicle suddenly on 466 to carry a turtle to safety.

she is most fortunate she was not carried away

Safety experts will tell you rather than making sudden movements while driving to avoid an animal it is safer to hit the animal because too many people have been killed or badly injured when trying to avoid an animal.

Sounds logical to me and I believe a relief for a family that would have otherwise lamented he should have hit the darn deer and stayed alive

Deers are usually moving a whole lot faster than turtles.

A funny story. My then maybe 90 year old great grandmother Trueblood (cool name isn't that) in Apache Junction, AZ used to insist that she drive rather than my father because she knew where all the cows were in the desert. No. She was not senile but there way no way anyone could have kept track of the cows in the deserts around Phoenix.

I had to watch out for the cows in Nevada, Utah, Wyoming, and Colorado too. Open range - Wikipedia (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_range)

bagboy
06-26-2017, 08:17 AM
i almost ran down a driver who stopped her vehicle suddenly on 466 to carry a turtle to safety.

she is most fortunate she was not carried away

Safety experts will tell you rather than making sudden movements while driving to avoid an animal it is safer to hit the animal because too many people have been killed or badly injured when trying to avoid an animal.

Sounds logical to me and I believe a relief for a family that would have otherwise lamented he should have hit the darn deer and stayed alive

Our niece lost her life in Alaska swerving to avoid a caribou she encountered going around a curve in the road. I believe the experts are correct, but human nature and instincts are hard to overcome when confronting a big animal suddenly in front of a drivers car.
As for turtles, I've stopped and moved them more than once on our residential street with light traffic and a low speed limit. That's not something I would do on 466/466A, Morse/Buena Vista, etc.

Taltarzac725
06-26-2017, 08:29 AM
Our niece lost her life in Alaska swerving to avoid a caribou she encountered going around a curve in the road. I believe the experts are correct, but human nature and instincts are hard to overcome when confronting a big animal suddenly in front of a drivers car.
As for turtles, I've stopped and moved them more than once on our residential street with light traffic and a low speed limit. That's not something I would do on 466/466A, Morse/Buena Vista, etc.

There was a turtle on the wrong side of the fence at Doggie Doo Run Run about six weeks ago. There is a large pond to the East within Fox Run Golf Course near Glenview CC. The creature was in with the dogs so I thought about picking it up but decided against it as I was all alone in the back field. I notified the dog park owner on the way out and they said they would check on the turtle but expected it would find its way to water. I still am not sure where it got under the fence as I could find no place where earth had created a large enough hole for it to get under.