In my early teen years, I heard that painted turtles had been seen living on Vancouver Island. Remembering earlier days in Wisconsin patrolling the lakes and having a heyday catching turtles around the mud and reeds I was ecstatic to imagine such a place existed on Vancouver Island and I set out to find it. Although I had spent a spring living at Saratoga Beach, a small resort town, and never seen any painted turtles, I thought it worth another go when I found inside the nature house of Miracle Beach Provincial Park. I called the lady managing the house and asked where it had been found. She said someone had found it crossing the road near Saratoga Beach. I left the nature house as the turtle continued to bash its face against the glass. The turtle had disappeared when I came to call sometime later. I searched this place, a slough between Saratoga and Miracle Beach. Besides scratched up legs, I found a variety of snakes (3 species) and frogs (3 species), but no turtles. After talking to some of the locals, I found some native naturalists who obliged me with descriptions of their own encounters with the turtles in the area. I was out of time but, given the positive, albeit, dated accounts of others, I decided to come back. Slough north of Miracle Beach Provincial Park. Saratoga Beach, near Campbell River, on Vancouver Island, British Columbia. June 11, 2009. Canon PowerShot A430. ISO 0, 5.4mm, 0 EV, f/5.6, 1/320. |
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