We are
looking at a small patch of beach where the sand has slightly collapsed in the
middle. No matter how hard we stare, we can see no movement. Under the
collapsed sand is a hawksbill turtle nest, and the caved sand signals the
hatching process has begun. During our weekend
at Pulau Tengah in Malaysia we come back to check several times a day, but the
little turtles won’t hatch until just after we caught our boat back to the
mainland.
Because of
these elusive little fellows we decide to make ourselves useful during our lazy
trip to the island: with our friends we volunteer for a beach clean-up. Numbers
of sea turtles are dwindling fast all over the world, and one of the reasons is
the tons and tons of plastic polluting the oceans, as well as the beaches these
turtles lay their eggs on.
Turtle Beach cleanup Pulau Tengah |
A small
boat takes us to the aptly named Turtle Beach, just ten minutes away on the
other side of the tiny island. Once ashore we get kitted out with gloves and
large garbage bags and get to work. We find tons of plastic bags, cups,
bottles, straws, slippers, rope, toys, and much, much more.
The Turtle Heroes! |
Tijm and
Linde need some convincing to stop collecting shells and pretty pieces of
coloured glass, but my turtle stories do convince them, and it is not long
before our bags are full. On the way back, sitting on the pile of rubbish in
the boat, we feel good.
Proud on the boat |
Our guide
Carmen, from Turtle Watch Camp, tells us more about the turtles in this area,
and how their numbers are swiftly reclining. It brings me back to my childhood,
and our camping trips to visit the turtles at Ras al Hadd in Oman. We would
camp on the beach under the stars and were woken late at night to witness the
giant turtles come ashore to dig nests and lay their ping-pong ball eggs.
My sister looking at a turtle at Ras al Hadd |
In the afternoon we had seen their round heads bob in the surf, impatiently waiting for the safety of the dark. There were so many of them. The morning after the tracks the nesting females had left made the beach look like hundreds of trucks had crossed in the night.
Ras al Hadd beach in the early 1980s |
When I
revisited Ras al Hadd in 2008 many of these turtles had gone. A resort on the
beach, ironically named Turtle Resort, had scared them away. Seeing the destruction
of one of my favourite childhood memories was painful.
The
connection between tourism and nature is a tricky one. Well-meaning tourists
may do more harm than good. Large resorts have taken over the beaches where
turtles used to lay. Yet tourism can also help fight another threat that faces
turtles: poachers. Tourism might provide new ways of generating income for
local people, and conservation projects like Turtle Watch Camp can help educate
them on the value of nature surrounding them.
Back at
home we watch the video of the hatching we missed. We hope our hot and hard
work has helped just the tiniest bit, and that one of these little fellows will
make it back to Turtle Beach and produce yet another generation.
Do you want to be a Turtle Hero too?
Check out www.turtlewatchcamp.org