Monday, December 29, 2025
ADVT 
National

Turtle Lays Eggs In N.S. Golf Course Bunker

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Aug, 2019 08:34 PM

    HALIFAX - For the second year in a row, a central Nova Scotia golf course is home to an unusual hazard after a resident snapping turtle laid eggs in a bunker.

     

    Debert Golf Course manager Mark Webb says the sand trap next to the seventh hole has been declared off limits after the turtle laid the eggs.

     

    Webb says the turtle nicknamed Shelley was rescued from the side of a road last year by a friend and brought to the course, where it has apparently found a home.

     

    The nine-hole course has several ponds that provide an ideal turtle habitat.

     

    Webb says that after a hatching last September, he was able to help three of the baby turtles make it safely to a pond on the course.

     

    Andrew Hebda, curator of zoology with the Nova Scotia Museum, says while snapping turtles often lay eggs in June, recent cooler springs have meant the eggs are being laid later in the summer.

     

    Hebda says the current batch of eggs may not hatch until October, and if gets cooler earlier in the fall the hatchlings may not emerge until next spring.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Community Concerns Prompt B.C. Government To Add Month To Caribou Consultations

    "This is clearly an issue that has enraged some people and has inflamed passions," said Premier John Horgan in Dawson Creek, a small city in northeastern B.C. that is in the heart of caribou country.

    Community Concerns Prompt B.C. Government To Add Month To Caribou Consultations

    Use Of Roadside Saliva Tests For Cannabis Impairment Remain In Question

    Use Of Roadside Saliva Tests For Cannabis Impairment Remain In Question
    Michelle Gray says she's afraid to get behind the wheel again after having her licence suspended for failing a cannabis saliva test in Nova Scotia, even though she passed a police administered sobriety test the same night.

    Use Of Roadside Saliva Tests For Cannabis Impairment Remain In Question

    Four Dead After Shooting In Penticton, B.C.; One Male Suspect In Custody

    PENTICTON, B.C. — The RCMP say a 60-year-old man is in custody after four targeted shootings in Penticton, B.C., on Monday left two men and two women dead in what a senior police officer described as a "very dark day" for the city.

    Four Dead After Shooting In Penticton, B.C.; One Male Suspect In Custody

    Five Agencies Banding Together To Help Fight Money Laundering In B.C.'s Real Estate Industry

    Five Agencies Banding Together To Help Fight Money Laundering In B.C.'s Real Estate Industry
    B.C. Attorney General David Eby and Finance Minister Carole James released a joint statement saying the collaboration will go a long way towards getting dirty money out of the real estate market and protecting consumers.

    Five Agencies Banding Together To Help Fight Money Laundering In B.C.'s Real Estate Industry

    Independent Probe Launched Following In-Custody Death In Dawson Creek, B.C.

    Independent Probe Launched Following In-Custody Death In Dawson Creek, B.C.
     Investigators with British Columbia's police watchdog have been called to Dawson Creek after a woman collapsed while in custody and later died.

    Independent Probe Launched Following In-Custody Death In Dawson Creek, B.C.

    Alberta's Notley Talks Pipelines, Energy On Last Day Of Election Campaign

    Alberta's Notley Talks Pipelines, Energy On Last Day Of Election Campaign
    Alberta's NDP leader spent the final day of the provincial election campaign casting herself as the best person to get the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion past the finish line.    

    Alberta's Notley Talks Pipelines, Energy On Last Day Of Election Campaign