The Prospect
Park Alliance sent a friendly but firm reminder this week: Do not touch
land-bound turtles. They're probably fine.
By Kathleen
Culliton, Patch Staff 6/21/19
PROSPECT
PARK, BROOKLYN — Dozens of tiny lake dinosaurs are pulling themselves out of
the Brooklyn waters and may be heading to a field near you, because in Prospect
Park, summertime is turtle time.
The Prospect
Park Alliance sent out a friendly reminder this week to alert Brooklyn it's
egg-laying season for the lake's many red-eared sliders and totally normal for
the little critters to head inland.
"Most
of our turtle species need to come on land to lay their eggs, and have been
known to travel far from the Lake to do so," park officials wrote.
"If you
see a turtle on land that is not in obvious distress, we ask that you leave it
be.”
The warning
comes at the height of egg-laying season and the turtles have already begun
hunting for a safe place to dig their nests and lay their eggs.
The quest
for a good nest will send the slow-paced turtles deep into the park, and some
have even been known to scale Lookout Hill.
But the
sight of a random turtle strolling through a field can often baffle park-goers
used to seeing them basking in the sun by the lake.
Officials
ask that you not pick the turtles up (it will startle them and possibly
get Salmonella on you) and definitely
don't try to poach dozens of them by stuffing them into red plastic bags.
It's best
not to do this, park officials say:
Cruzando
Prospect Park para ir al gimnasio me he topado con una tortuga que estaba a
punto de salir a la carretera. Ni idea de cómo ha llegado hasta allí, pero la
he devuelto al lago a la parte “where turtles hang out”, que eso me han
indicado.
Red-eared
sliders like to spend the late summer soaking up the sun, the winter brumating
(think hibernating for turtles) at the bottom of the lake and, for many
Brooklyners, they are harbingers of spring when they reemerge in March.
Nothing
says, “it’s springtime!!” like a turtle on a shopping cart half-submerged in
Prospect Park Lake
Anyone who
spots a turtle in distress can call 311 to alert officials, according to the
Prospect Park Alliance post.
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