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Sea turtle festival in Port St. Joe focuses on safety and conservation

Sea turtle festival in Port St. Joe focuses on safety and conservation

Yahoo26-05-2025

GULF COUNTY, Fla. (WMBB) – George Core Park in Port St. Joe was buzzing with excitement Sunday as locals and visitors gathered for the ninth annual Sea Turtle Festival.
The free family-friendly event featured dozens of local art and crafts, vendors, live music, food trucks, and plenty of education about our aquatic neighbors.
'We are just kicking off a nesting season here on our beaches in Florida, and we're also kicking off tourism season. So, we want to remind all of our visitors who are coming from far and wide to visit our beaches that our sea turtles are also using our beaches, and the things that they can do to help ensure a successful nesting season,' Florida Coastal Conservancy director Jessica Swindall said.
Visitors of all ages got a chance to learn how they can make a difference. From learning the nesting process to understanding the vital role coastal habitats play in the ecosystem.
Lifeguard Ambulance recognizes their EMS professionals with community barbecue
'By turning off lights or using turtle-safe lighting, filling in holes, leveling sandcastles, and also removing any beach gear at the end of the day,' Swindall added.
With a strong turnout and positive community response, organizers say the festival continues to grow each year.
When the festival began, there were 15 vendors. This year, there were around 70.
'When we moved here six years ago from California, we had nothing like this in California. And when I got here and I walked out on Cape San Blas and saw the turtle nests, I thought, what a great thing to do. So, I got a hold of Jessica from the Turtle Center, and I've just been doing turtle patrol since,' Forgotten Coast Lavender owner Nancy Lucia said.
Sea turtle nesting season runs through October. So be sure to give these animals the space and care they need.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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Sea turtle festival in Port St. Joe focuses on safety and conservation
Sea turtle festival in Port St. Joe focuses on safety and conservation

Yahoo

time26-05-2025

  • Yahoo

Sea turtle festival in Port St. Joe focuses on safety and conservation

GULF COUNTY, Fla. (WMBB) – George Core Park in Port St. Joe was buzzing with excitement Sunday as locals and visitors gathered for the ninth annual Sea Turtle Festival. The free family-friendly event featured dozens of local art and crafts, vendors, live music, food trucks, and plenty of education about our aquatic neighbors. 'We are just kicking off a nesting season here on our beaches in Florida, and we're also kicking off tourism season. So, we want to remind all of our visitors who are coming from far and wide to visit our beaches that our sea turtles are also using our beaches, and the things that they can do to help ensure a successful nesting season,' Florida Coastal Conservancy director Jessica Swindall said. Visitors of all ages got a chance to learn how they can make a difference. From learning the nesting process to understanding the vital role coastal habitats play in the ecosystem. Lifeguard Ambulance recognizes their EMS professionals with community barbecue 'By turning off lights or using turtle-safe lighting, filling in holes, leveling sandcastles, and also removing any beach gear at the end of the day,' Swindall added. With a strong turnout and positive community response, organizers say the festival continues to grow each year. When the festival began, there were 15 vendors. This year, there were around 70. 'When we moved here six years ago from California, we had nothing like this in California. And when I got here and I walked out on Cape San Blas and saw the turtle nests, I thought, what a great thing to do. So, I got a hold of Jessica from the Turtle Center, and I've just been doing turtle patrol since,' Forgotten Coast Lavender owner Nancy Lucia said. Sea turtle nesting season runs through October. So be sure to give these animals the space and care they need. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

LakeFest brings family fun to DeFuniak Springs
LakeFest brings family fun to DeFuniak Springs

Yahoo

time25-05-2025

  • Yahoo

LakeFest brings family fun to DeFuniak Springs

WALTON COUNTY, Fla. (WMBB) – Lakefest began in 2014 to bring more activities to Lake DeFuniak, located in Chipley Park. 'We have such a beautiful gem in the middle of our town. This lake is perfectly round. And we were not utilizing it. So I came up with a proposal to see if we could have some activities, family day here, and the city took it and ran with it,' Lakefest Volunteer Coordinator Marie Hinson said. It is in the heart of downtown Defuniak Springs, bringing more visitors to the area. 'A lot of people will come to this event, have never seen this lake before. And so it's always a big part of the conversation,' Defuniak Springs Mayor Bob Campbell said. Lakefest was supposed to be held two weeks ago, but it was rained out. Lifeguard Ambulance recognizes their EMS professionals with community barbecue 'If the weather is a little iffy, then it's going to be mighty skimpy,' Campbell said. The new date didn't stop visitors from showing up for family fun. This year's celebration included duck races, a cardboard boat competition, a car show, and a skydiving performance. There were also food vendors, bouncy houses, and swimming. Students from Walton Middle School were there to promote their effort to build a tractor museum. 'We have actually $5 million worth of John Deere and Caterpillar tractors that are fully restored, and they're willing to sell it to us for only $1.2 million. And so we're out here trying to get donations right now to try and get a type of ag center here in Walton County, because normally you have to travel somewhere to get something for agriculture. But it would be nice to have something here, right here in Walton County,' Walton Middle School FFA President Hailey Caldwell said. Defuniak Springs' next celebration will be their 4th of July parade and fireworks show. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

She's obsessed with baby pygmy hippo Moo Deng. So she flew across the world to see her
She's obsessed with baby pygmy hippo Moo Deng. So she flew across the world to see her

CNN

time06-10-2024

  • CNN

She's obsessed with baby pygmy hippo Moo Deng. So she flew across the world to see her

CNN — When baby pygmy hippo Moo Deng appeared on Molly Swindall's social media feed for the first time, it was love at first sight. 'I thought she was absolutely hysterical, and had a lot of fun energy,' Swindall, 30, tells CNN Travel. 'She's just a little bright spot in the world at the moment when there's so many things going on… Her rosy little cheeks, she's precious.' Moo Deng's viral fame began not long after she was born, when her keepers at Khao Kheow Open Zoo started posting clips of her escapades online. Soon, the baby hippo was an internet sensation, a status cemented last week when Moo Deng became the subject of a skit on Saturday Night Live. While most of Moo Deng's international fans are happy to keep tabs on her from afar, when Swindall fell for the hippo, she immediately started Googling flights to Thailand. New Yorker Swindall knew she wanted to see Moo Deng in person. 'I just love animals, and I love adventure, and so I made it a goal to go,' says Swindall. 'My dad passed away kind of unexpectedly six years ago, and at that point, I was just like, 'You know what? I'm always going to live my life to the fullest. I'm always going to have a sense of adventure.' And that's why I decided to do what I did.' Flying across the globe Once Swindall committed to flying to Thailand to see Moo Deng, she knew she had to go ASAP. 'I wanted to see her while she has that spunk and the energy that comes from being young,' explains Swindell, noting the hippo's already grown a lot since the early viral videos. Swindell could only get a couple of days off work – and she had weekend gig tickets – so she booked to spend a mere 30 hours in Thailand, flying out of New York via London on Tuesday, and returning via a layover in Amsterdam on Friday. 'It was very short, but it was totally worth it,' says Swindall, who traveled solo. The whole trip cost Swindall 'somewhere between $1,000 to $1,100.' 'I have a lot of points and miles from old, past jobs,' explains Swindall. 'So I was able to go pretty inexpensively, and I also got some discounts on travel.' Given the short length of her trip, Swindall decided it had to be a Moo Deng-only odyssey. She'd love to see more of Thailand, but decided she'd have to 'go back and do a proper trip' on another occasion. This time round, she had just one destination: Khao Kheow Open Zoo. 'The queen and icon' Swindall chronicled her experiences traveling from New York to Bangkok via TikTok. On Swindall's account – @1989vinyl – she usually posts about Taylor Swift (The Washington Post called her 'Taylor Swift's biggest fan' in 2023). Pivoting from the world's most famous pop star to the world's most famous baby hippo was an easy switch, says Swindall, especially as she sees a parallel between the two. 'They're both absolute icons,' says Swindall, who decided to wear one of her favorite Taylor Swift shirts to the zoo, because she wanted to get Swift on Moo Deng's radar. 'I think queens and icons recognize queens and icons,' she adds. Swindall's first TikTok from her trip – in which she invites her followers to 'fly 18.5 hours with me to Thailand to see Moo Deng' – has been watched over 1.9 million times and counting. Many commentators were enthusiastic, cheering along Swindall's quest. Others were confused, assuming Moo Deng was a music artist or a long-distance partner. Swindall made it to Bangkok on Wednesday and hired a driver to take her to the zoo. On the ride over, Swindall was nervous – what if she couldn't see Moo Deng? What if things didn't work out? Then suddenly she was at the hippo's enclosure. And in person, Moo Deng was absolutely 'the queen and icon' Swindall dreamed of. 'Oh my god, she's so cute,' gasps Swindall in her TikTok capturing the moment she saw the hippo for the first time. Over the next few hours, Swindall enjoyed watching Moo Deng go from sheltering from the rain to running around excitedly after feeding. 'She's so cute and fun, you can't not love her,' says Swindall, who bought quirky Moo Deng merch, including a cap and pajamas, while at the zoo. Swindall enjoyed seeing the other pygmy hippos too. 'I have a new love just for the species as a whole, because Moo Deng's mom was just as amazing, and I hope she starts to get more love as well,' says Swindall. A Swiftie moment While watching Moo Deng in action, Swindall was reminded of the Taylor Swift song 'Who's Afraid of Little Old Me.' (As a Swift superfan, the singer is never far from her mind.) 'That's the song that encapsulates Moo Deng the most,' says Swindall, who posted a video of the hippo overlaid with this track. 'I think she thinks she's so much scarier than she is – when she has her mouth open and she runs after her mom or runs randomly in the crowd and all her little zoomies. I feel like she has this big energy, but she's such a small, little being, and in an ironic way that song kind of relates to her.' Still, it was another Swift track, ' All Too Well (10 Minute Version)', which Swindall chose to play for Moo Dang. 'She sat there loafing on the ground, so I think she liked it,' says Swindall. 'But of course, I didn't play it very loudly because I didn't want to actually disturb her. So I don't know if she actually heard it, but I did play that one for her, just because I think it's a great song, and I thought it'd be a fun one to play.' Finding joy Swindall's posted over 15 TikToks about her Moo Deng travel adventure so far, and she says she's been flooded with enthusiastic comments and messages from people across the globe. 'I love to tell stories, and I love to bring people along on adventures, and I love to entertain,' says Swindall. 'So it's been really magical that people have been having such a good time with it as well. It's been very, very fun to be able to connect with all these different people over it.' Since her Moo Deng adventure, Swindall's follower count has ballooned, with one Moo Deng TikTok garnering over 5 million views. Swindall insists she didn't embark on the trip in a quest for viral attention. 'I don't think I really thought about it much,' she says, adding that while she enjoys content creation, it's more 'for fun' than anything else. She has a fulltime job which is her primary source of income. 'My first thought was just getting to Thailand. I just knew that I loved Moo Deng,' says Swindall. 'I wanted to share what I was doing online. But it wouldn't have taken away from it had I got zero views either, because that's not what I was there for.' 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'What's meant to be is meant to be,' she says. 'I was meant to see Moo Deng. It ended up occurring, and it was really special. And I'm just happy that I got to share that joy with everybody.'

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