Showing posts with label Mexico. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mexico. Show all posts

Thursday, December 9, 2010

Rare breed of turtles to leave Garden City Beach for Gulf of Mexico

Travel is nothing new to sea turtles, but they aren't usually accustomed to boat and car rides.

But three late-in-the-season nests found in Garden City Beach are getting special treatment right now because of the chill that has settled over the region. Experts moved some of the eggs from the Grand Strand to Charleston and this week, when the hatchlings are ready, they will travel to North Carolina for a boat ride to the warmer Gulf Stream waters that sweep closer to the N.C. shore.

Loggerheads are the area's most familiar sea turtles.

The tropical-water-loving Atlantic green turtles, which have a later nesting season than loggerheads, don't often lay clutches of eggs on these shores. Loggerheads can be found as far north as New England, but endangered green turtles mostly stay down in Florida and the Caribbean.

"This is rare for South Carolina, so I'm sure [DNR is]putting a prestige on these nests," said Eric Koepfler, professor of marine science at Coastal Carolina University, who also teaches a sea-turtle course every other year in Costa Rica.

The S.C. Department of Natural Resources is arranging the tiny turtles' boat trip because "they aren't going to make it" if they head straight for the cold water hitting our shores right now, said DuBose Griffin, DNR sea turtle coordinator.

The Sea Turtle Conservancy says green turtles live in tropical and temperate water, where temperatures are 65 or higher. This month, the Grand Strand's water temperatures are in the mid-50s, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

Karen Fuss, environmental educator for the Burroughs & Chapin Center for Marine and Wetlands Studies at Coastal Carolina University, said the cold water can stun the turtles and stop them from swimming.

"They have to swim, swim, swim until they reach where they want to be," Fuss said.

Fuss said it takes a lot of careful work to move a nest because the eggs cannot be jiggled and bumped, and they must be gently excavated from the sand and placed in buckets for transport.

Griffin said some of the eggs are at the DNR facility at Fort Johnson in Charleston to finish hatching, and she was trying this week to find a North Carolina research vessel or another boat that can get them out to the Gulf Stream as soon as they are ready.

While still in the sandy nests, 2 to 21/2 feet below the surface, the babies, just a few inches long, break out of their shells but take a few days to finish absorbing their egg sacs before digging out and making for the sea. That yolk will give them the energy to "boil" to the surface as a group, dig out, trundle down the beach to the water and head out into the currents.

DNR is letting the babies rest in a temperature-controlled environment so they can conserve the energy they will need to survive, trying to keep them as stress-free as possible.

Because nests typically take 60 days to hatch, Koepfler said the Garden City Beach eggs were probably laid at the end of September, and nests set that late often don't develop.

"Probably 1 percent of our turtle nests are laid that late, but the cold usually just stops the embryos from developing inside the eggs," he said.

Even adult turtles can get cold-shock, he said. For loggerheads, temperatures below 40 degrees can cause problems quickly.

"Because they are cold blooded, they rely on the temperature of their environment to help regulate their body temperature," he said. "If it gets too cold too quickly, their bodily functions can just shut down."

Baby turtles are at even greater risk, he said.

The people who work with the turtles feel very parental toward them, Fuss said.

Although she isn't working with the Garden City Beach babies, she has been part of turtle releases before, including one in which everyone involved - including the crew of the Coast Guard cutter that was delivering hatchlings to the Gulf Stream - was bawling as they sent the babies off into the wide ocean.

"It's amazing to watch them just swim off," Fuss said. "Once they hit the water, they know exactly what to do."

The Garden City Beach hatchlings will be vulnerable to predators, although they will be placed in mats of sargassum, a free-floating seaweed, which should provide some camouflage, Griffin said.

Once they have gone to sea, that will likely be the last anyone sees of them.

Contrary to popular belief, babies don't return to the exact beaches where they hatched - just the region, and that region can be 200 or 300 miles long - Griffin said.

They will eat small fish and crabs and free-float around the Atlantic for a few years, becoming vegetarians once they reach adulthood, she said.

Much of what's known about sea turtles is learned from those that are stranded on beaches, which means they are sick or dead, or from the females who come ashore to nest every three to five years. Males never come ashore voluntarily, said Fuss, who holds the turtle-monitoring permit for Waties Island north of Cherry Grove.

DNR began monitoring sea turtles in the late 1970s, and has, through a variety of groups, including volunteers and people with Coastal Carolina University, watched the beaches daily for nests and stranded turtles.

"We are all just trying to give these animals on the endangered list the best chances they can have," Fuss said.

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Thursday, November 11, 2010

Ochoa, husband take to course in Mexico

GUADALAJARA, Mexico – Lorena Ochoa hopes to start a family of her own next year. She and husband Andres Conesa, the chief executive officer of AeroMexico, plan to move next summer from their 10th-floor apartment in Mexico City to a house they’re building.

“We want to have an extra room for the baby and a yard for a dog,” she said while sipping a Diet Coke and doodling on a notepad. It’s a natural transition for Ochoa, who walked away from her competitive career last April while ranked No. 1. Her heart had moved on.

Ochoa arrived in her hometown of Guadalajara on Monday afternoon and sat with Golfweek for a lengthy interview at the host hotel of the Lorena Ochoa Invitational. She purposefully stayed away from the golf course until Tuesday morning, playing an 18-hole practice round alongside Conesa, who is caddying for the first time.

“I’ve been practicing for four months,” said Conesa, who often got in a quick nine holes with Ochoa in the early mornings before heading to the office.?

photo

Conesa, who usually walks the course outside the ropes in jeans, looked out of place and a little nervous in khaki shorts and a caddie bib. Yet both relish the idea of experiencing a tournament together from start to finish.

“For sure, he’s going to make a mistake out there,” Ochoa said, “but I think it’s very important for us to share the whole week inside the course.”

Ochoa hasn’t fared all that well at Guadalajara Country Club in the two years she has hosted the event. She grew up in a modest two-story home adjacent to club property. The club’s swimming pool is her backyard; she could hit a wedge to the short-game facility.?

Still, the course she knows so well that she could play barefoot and blindfolded has tricked her during the past several years. A 3-wood that always stopped short of the bunker suddenly rolled in thanks to harder fairways. An 8-iron that always checked bounced forward 4 yards on greens that were firmer and faster.

“I couldn’t get it straight,” said Ochoa, who finished T-14 and T-6 due to slow starts. “I think someone who has never seen the course before has more advantage.”

So this time she stayed away, hoping to come in with a fresh perspective.

Her practice sessions during these past several months were vastly different for the once hard-working perfectionist. She still put the time in, but rather than spend three hours grinding on the range, working the ball back and forth and honing her technique, Ochoa played money games with local teaching pros and thought of nothing but score. One day, she’d have breakfast with a friend and play late; the next, she’d get up early to practice so she could have lunch with Conesa. Occasionally, she wouldn’t set an alarm.

“It’s just nice not to have a plan,” she said.

For years, Ochoa would sit with her brother, Alejandro, and her swing coach, Rafael Alarcon, on Jan. 5 and plan out her schedule for the year. Every day would be accounted for, whether it was a tournament, time dedicated to sponsors, her foundation or the media. Even rest was scheduled.

Friends would tell her in February that they were getting married in May and Ochoa’s heart would sink when she couldn’t attend. The sacrifices began when she was 12, and at 28, she’s happy to be able to say “yes” to friends and family.

Things she used to do once a year, such as scuba dive, she now does three times a month. She and Conesa, who married last December, enjoy weekend road trips outside Mexico City. She makes pancakes for Conesa’s three children from a previous marriage before they go to school.

“It was very clear to me that I didn’t want to be on the LPGA forever,” Ochoa said. “You get too solitary, lonely all the time. You only think about yourself, and you get very comfortable with the money. It was a really tough life, so I didn’t want to do it forever.”

Of course, she feels fortunate. No one would accuse Ochoa of being ungrateful for the life she led, a career that changed the face of golf in Mexico. But to hear her talk about life’s next chapter, to see the look of joy on her face when Conesa lights up her BlackBerry, is enough to know she made the right decision.

Ochoa doesn’t plan to play in any events next year aside from her own. She’ll concentrate on her new home, a growing family and her foundation. She will compete in majors down the road, but not in the next three years. This is family time.

“I think I’m going to double retire after Sunday,” Ochoa said, laughing.

No regrets.

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Monday, November 8, 2010

Healey (No. 47, 2012) commits to New Mexico

Dylan Healey, of Franklin, Tenn., has given a verbal commitment to play at New Mexico. Healey considered Oregon and Arizona before deciding on the Lobos, who are ranked No. 42 in the Golfweek/Sagarin College Rankings.

“I really liked the coach (Glen Millican), and I have some family in New Mexico,” Healey said. “I really miss the West Coast.”

Healey, 16, finished second in the Golfweek Junior Invitational at Reunion Resort. The left-hander also had a T-3 finish at the AJGA Killington Junior Golf Championship in August.

“I came into this event with no pressure,” said Healey, No. 175 in the Golfweek/Sagarin Junior Rankings, after the finish at Reunion, “and I think that probably helped me play so well.”

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Saturday, November 6, 2010

2011 Golfweek’s Best Courses of the Caribbean & Mexico

2011 Golfweek’s Best Courses of the Caribbean & Mexico

1. ??????? Cap Cana (Punta Espada)
Cap Cana, Dominican Republic
Jack Nicklaus
2008

2. ??????? Querencia
San José del Cabo, Mexico
Tom Fazio
2000

3. ??????? Casa de Campo (Teeth of the Dog)
La Romana, Dominican Republic
Pete Dye
1970

4. ??????? Mid Ocean Club
Tucker’s Town, Bermuda
Charles Blair Macdonald & Seth Raynor
1921

5. ??????? Royal Westmoreland
St. James, Barbados
Robert Trent Jones Jr.
1994

6. ??????? Corales Golf Club
Punta Cana, Dominican Republic
Tom Fazio
2010*

7. ??????? Vista Vallarta Golf Club (Nicklaus)
Puerto Vallarta, Mexico
Jack Nicklaus
2001

8. ??????? Cabo del Sol (Ocean)
Los Cabos, Mexico
Jack Nicklaus
1994

9. ??????? Trump International Golf Club Puerto Rico (International)
Río Grande, Puerto Rico
Tom Kite
2005

10. ????? Apes Hill Club
St. James, Barbados
Chris Cole & Jeff Potts
2009*

11. ????? Diamante (Dunes)
Cabo San Lucas, Mexico
Davis Love III
2009*

12. ????? Mayakoba (El Camaleón)
Riviera Maya, Mexico
Greg Norman
2006

13. ????? The Abaco Club on Winding Bay
Abaco, Bahamas
Donald Steel & Tom Mackenzie
2006

14. ????? Playa Grande
Río San Juan, Dominican Republic
Robert Trent Jones Sr. & Roger Rulewich
1996

15. ????? El Dorado Golf & Beach Club
San José del Cabo, Mexico
Jack Nicklaus
1999

16. ????? Sandy Lane (The Green Monkey)
St. James, Barbados
Tom Fazio
2004

17. ????? Iberostar Playa Paraíso Golf Club
Riviera Maya, Mexico
P.B. Dye
2005

18. ????? Four Seasons Resort Punta Mita (Bahia)
Punta Mita, Mexico
Jack Nicklaus
2009

19. ????? Vista Vallarta Golf Club (Weiskopf)
Puerto Vallarta, Mexico
Tom Weiskopf
2001

20. ????? Sandy Lane (The Country Club)
St. James, Barbados
Tom Fazio
2004

21. ????? Four Seasons Resort Punta Mita (Pacifico)
Punta Mita, Mexico
Jack Nicklaus
1999

22. ????? Casa de Campo (Dye Fore)
La Romana, Dominican Republic
Pete Dye
2003

23. ????? Port Royal Golf Course
Southampton, Bermuda
Robert Trent Jones Sr.
1970

24. ????? Reserva Conchal Golf Club
Guanacaste, Costa Rica
Robert Trent Jones Jr.
1996

25. ????? Puerto Los Cabos Golf Club
San José del Cabo, Mexico
Jack Nicklaus & Greg Norman
2008

26. ????? Four Seasons Resort Costa Rica at Península Papagayo
Guanacaste, Costa Rica
Arnold Palmer
2004

27. ????? The Ritz-Carlton Golf & Spa Resort (White Witch)
St. James, Jamaica
Robert von Hagge
2000

28. ????? Moon Spa & Golf Club (Lakes/Jungle)
Cancún, Mexico
Jack Nicklaus
2002

29. ????? Our Lucaya Beach & Golf Resort (Lucayan Country Club)
Freeport, Bahamas
Dick Wilson
1962

30. ????? Trump International Golf Club Puerto Rico (Championship)
Río Grande, Puerto Rico
Tom Kite
2007

31. ????? Cap Juluca (Temenos)
Anguilla, British West Indies
Greg Norman
2006*

32. ????? Roco Ki (Faldo Legacy)
Macao, Dominican Republic
Nick Faldo
2008

33. ????? Blue Shark Golf Club
New Providence Island, Bahamas
Greg Norman
2008*

34. ????? Rose Hall Resort & Spa (Cinnamon Hill)
Montego Bay, Jamaica
Hank Smedley, 1969
Robert von Hagge & Richard A. Baril, 2001

35. ????? Casa de Campo (La Romana Country Club)
La Romana, Dominican Republic
Pete Dye
1985

36. ????? Palmas del Mar Country Club (Flamboyán)
Humacao, Puerto Rico
Rees Jones
1998

37. ????? Trump International Golf Club at Raffles Resort
Canouan Island, St. Vincent & The Grenadines
Jim Fazio
2002

38. ????? Playacar Spa & Golf Club
Playa del Carmen, Mexico
Robert von Hagge
1994

39. ????? One&Only Palmilla (Mountain/Arroyo)
San José del Cabo, Mexico
Jack Nicklaus
1993

40. ????? Cabo del Sol (Desert)
Los Cabos, Mexico
Tom Weiskopf
1998

41. ????? Tucker’s Point Club
Harrington Sound, Bermuda
Charles Banks, 1931
Roger Rulewich, 2002

42. ????? The Tryall Club
Montego Bay, Jamaica
Ralph Plummer
1958

43. ????? Ocean Club Golf Course
Paradise Island, Bahamas
Tom Weiskopf
2000

44. ????? Cabo Real Golf Course
Cabo San Lucas, Mexico
Robert Trent Jones Jr.
1994

45. ????? Tierra del Sol Aruba Resort, Spa & Country Club
Oranjestad, Aruba
Robert Trent Jones Jr.
1995

46. ????? Lyford Cay Club
New Providence Island, Bahamas
Dick Wilson, 1958
Rees Jones, 2006

47. ????? Dorado Beach (West)
Dorado Beach, Puerto Rico
Robert Trent Jones Sr.
1966

48. ????? Guavaberry Golf & Country Club
Juan Dolio, Dominican Republic
Gary Player
2002

49. ????? Our Lucaya Beach & Golf Resort (Reef)
Freeport, Bahamas
Robert Trent Jones Jr.
2000

50. ????? Dorado Beach (East)
Dorado Beach, Puerto Rico
Robert Trent Jones Sr.
1961

Courses of Distinction

Bahia Beach Resort & Golf Club
Río Grande, Puerto Rico
Robert Trent Jones Jr.
2007

Santa Barbara Plantation (Old Quarry)
Nieuwpoort, Cura?ao
Pete Dye
2009

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