Sea Turtle Rescue Charity Makes Oshkosh Debut
General/business aviation charity Turtles Fly Too is looking for volunteer pilots and aircraft owners to help transport some aquatic hitchhikers.
Animal care workers unload crated sea turtles from a business aircraft at a Florida airport. The creatures, weakened by their exposure to cold Massachusetts fall weather, will recuperate for several months before they are released back into the wild.

After several years of rescuing hundreds of sea turtles that wash up on New England beaches each fall as temperatures drop, the general aviation conservation charity Turtles Fly Too (TF2) is exhibiting this week at EAA AirVenture in Oshkosh, with a booth in the Federal Pavilion.


The organization is looking to introduce and recruit volunteer pilots and aircraft owners to the program, which relies on private and corporate aircraft to shuttle the endangered marine reptiles from the Boston area, where their numbers overwhelm the resources of the New England Aquarium, to sea turtle rehabilitation centers along the southern Eastern Seaboard, where they are nursed back to health and then released.


The turtles can range in size from several pounds to more than 100 pounds, and they are delivered to the airport in a carefully choreographed schedule, packed in boxes and ready to fly.


At a series of forum talks on Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday this week, TF2 members will describe how the cold-stunned turtles, many swept north by the Gulf Stream, become stranded and would otherwise die, if not for the efforts of conservation workers who collect them and care for them, and for the pilots and aircraft operators who agree to transport them south. Over the past year alone, TF2 arranged transport for 122 of the creatures. Some corporate aviation pilots who participated in the program have said that the turtles were generally less troublesome than their usual human passengers.