A bright spot for turtles: Olive ridleys are recovering in India, but still at risk
Diaa Hadid
Omkar Khandekar
November 28, 2025 / 3:00 am
VELAS, India — Little kids giddily squeal as a baby sea turtle, flippers flapping, lurches toward the water with the grace of a drunk lunging for a cab at closing time. Tourists applaud as about a dozen more palm-sized hatchlings stumble into the sea.
The tourists had gathered at daybreak on an April day for the Velas Turtle Festival, on the western Indian coast, where volunteers invite visitors to watch them release baby turtles from a hatchery — like an animal pen on the sand.
The volunteers collected the eggs from turtle nests on the shore, effectively holes that females dig with their flippers, and where they lay dozens of eggs at a time. Th

KUOW Public Radio

The Conversation
HowStuffWorks Animals
The Des Moines Register
Fashion Network business
Arizona Daily Sun
CNN Health
Raw Story
The Babylon Bee
NBC10 Philadelphia Entertainment
House Digest