oddly enough
oddly enough
Unplayable lie: Turtle lays eggs in golf club’s sand trap
ALLISON PARK, Pa.
Talk about an unplayable lie: A snapping turtle has nested in the sand trap at a Pittsburgh-area golf club, forcing officials to rope off the hazard.
Officials at Wildwood Golf Club in McCandless Township tell KDKA-TV that a golf pro saw the turtle laying the eggs in the sand bunker last week.
Officials don’t want to disturb the buried eggs which, coincidentally, are white, round and about the size of golf balls.
That’s why they’ve roped off the area and are telling players to drop their ball elsewhere before continuing play.
Experts at the Pittsburgh Zoo & PPG Aquarium say the sand trap is a logical spot for the eggs to be laid – sunny, warm and easy for the mother to dig in and bury the eggs.
Moose spotted trotting down suburban Boston streets
WATERTOWN, Mass.
Residents of two densely populated Boston suburbs caught sight of something last week that’s typically confined to the more- rural parts of the state – a moose on the loose.
Police in Watertown and neighboring Belmont posted video on their Facebook pages of the female moose estimated to be 11/2 to 2 years old trotting along sidewalks and streets about 6 a.m.
There are an estimated 1,200 moose in the state, but they live mostly outside the Interstate 495 corridor, said Marion Larson, chief of information and education at the state Division of Fisheries and Wildlife. Moose sightings are unusual in eastern Massachusetts. This one likely was lost and a tad confused, she said.
“This was probably a case of a younger moose trying to find its way and not really knowing where it’s going,” she said.
Young moose seeking new territory tend to move at night, and this one probably didn’t realize it was so close to civilization until dawn.
The moose created a stir for those lucky enough to see it.
“It was pretty neat,” Watertown resident Christine Makarewicz told WBZ-TV.
Belmont Assistant Police Chief James MacIsaac told The Boston Globe he has seen plenty of deer in his 17 years on the force but never a moose.
The moose last was seen in a wooded conservation area in Belmont, where it was being monitored by state environmental police.
The hope is that the animal will leave the area on its own, Larson said. If the moose lingers, state officials will try to scare it away, or even immobilize it and move it.
The last resort would be to shoot the moose if it poses “an immediate public- safety threat,” Larson said.
There were no reports of moose-related damage in either town.
Associated Press
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