To my dear visitors and commenters

Hi, everybody! I've noticed with lots of joy and happiness, that thousands of comments have been written in my posts. It's wonderful that so may people around the world appreciate my work. Therefore, I want to thank you for that and ,at the same time I want to ask you to be this blog's followers. It's fast and easy! Make it be even more visited and spread all over the world! I'm a woman, a teacher of English in Portugal, and I've been away for quite a long time because of my father's health. Unfortunately he died from Covid19 a few months ago. Now I felt it was time to restart my activity in this and other blogs I owe. I've recently created a new one in a partnership with a street photographer, Mr. Daniel Antunes. He's fabulous! https://pandpbydandd.blogspot.com I'd like you to visit it and, who knows, become our followers. The poems, chronicles and thoughts are all mine. Thank you so much! Kisses :-)

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Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Frozen turtles

Amazing how nature protects these small and fragile beings!


Newly-hatched painted turtles are in an underground nest in North America. It is late in the year and cold outside so if the hatchlings climbed out of their nest now they would find nothing to eat. Instead, they stay where they are. As winter comes, the temperature falls to -10 degrees and ice crystals form around - and inside - the babies. But their tissues are protected by a kind of anti-freeze. For six months the turtles remain in a frozen state that would kill any mammal or bird. When spring comes, the ice around and inside them melts, and they slowly come to life. It takes a while for them to be fully-functioning but eventually they are ready to dig themselves out of their nest and find the nearest pond. Meanwhile the parents are already preparing to breed again, with the male courting the female by gently strumming her cheeks with his long claws... and she responds.

 From BBC Nature Wildlife

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