What does a week of aquatic turtle work look like for an ornate box turtle gal? Pretty much just a lot of water…
This past week, one of our ornate team members, Maddie, joined Lake County veterinary students and biologists and competed in this year’s Blanding’s Bowl! Blanding’s Bowl is a yearly tradition where teams split off to set traps and see who can catch the highest number of blanding’s throughout the week. This week was a whole lot of fun from trekking through thigh high mud in leaky waders, to learning how to play card games late at night in a field building, AND WINNING SECOND PLACE!
That’s right, this land turtle girl, alongside her Lake County vet student partner, Marg, put our hand capturing and trap setting skills to the test and came out in second! Although this week was a hard one for trapping due to the heavy rains that we got, we took some risks with our traps and it worked out. Marg, being an expert of the habitat there, wanted to try a new spot that they had seen some blanding’s in, but had not explored much of yet. So we set up 5 traps down a fire road, 6 by the beaver dam, and 5 in a notoriously turtley place called “Lover’s Lane”. After the hard work of the first day, our team, the “Gluten Free Blanding’s Spree” (a great team name for 2 celiacs), felt good about the traps we set and all the blanding’s that we were going to catch!
Tuesday morning we woke up to on and off showers, not a great way to start the day. Waders filled with water already, squishing in my boots, we made our way to our first set of 5 traps. Lo and behold, we got 2 new juvenile blanding’s in our first trap! These were some high point turtles, giving us over 120 points in our first trap! Our second trap also had a juvenile blanding’s in it! These turtles, having never been caught before, were extra special because we got to name them. I named our first one, Chalula, after the hot sauce because she was a little spicy, Marg named our second one George, and our third one we named Rowdy Riley.
The rest of the day, we caught one more blanding’s turtle. Now it was time to head back to the field building to complete the lab work for all the turtles our teams had caught and sampled that day!
Wednesday, the last day of Blanding’s Bowl, we caught 1 blanding’s turtle in our trap, 1 painted turtle, and Marg hand captured one more blanding’s! That brought our total to 199 points! Although we didn’t catch the largest number of blanding’s turtles in our traps, we caught some very valuable turtles. Now Chalula, George, and Rowdy Riley will be identifiable to all biologists and veterinary teams who catch them in the future!