I came home lunchtime and he was still there, hanging out in front of some bushes in what we call our pond yard, a non-grassy part of the yard with a little pond near the back door. I let the dogs meet him and he was cool about that. There he is with Marley.
When Mark came home the tortoise was still hanging around, so Mark called a gopher/wildlife person in Jacksonville who said I had done the wrong thing, in fact, the illegal thing. I could not remove a gopher tortoise, only help to the other side of the road. Obviously this person does not know Dale Mabry Highway as I would clearly only have delayed his death slightly had I simply put him in the parking lot that is either side of Dale Mabry. But Mark started working on a list of possible places we could release him close to where he was found.
By the time I got home from work it was a moot point. He'd found his own way out and I hope a safer home. Hard to find now that they have paved almost all of the gopher tortoise's habitat. In fact, developers have a choice when they are building in a gopher habitat -- move the tortoises to another location, or pave over them and pay a fine. What do you think those developers usually choose?
Think about all the buildings we enter every day in Florida that are built over gopher tortoise graveyards.
3 comments:
You were very brave.
Susan~
I'm proud of you, and glad that you're not afraid to commit sins. Remember, "It is better to ask forgiven than permission." I'm hoping tortoise is happy.
Yesterday Mark found the tunnel the tortoise dug under the fence. He went out the back by the creek. Our hope and belief is that he would have walked around the creek to get to the preserve on the other side (we know he wouldn't have swum across but there's a way to walk across down maybe 1/4 mile). And is living there happily.
Mark filled in the space as it was about the right size for a little dog to wriggle under. Or a little gator.
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