Blue Iguana Recovery Program

Here we go again…

Nov 6th, 2008 | By | Category: Captive Facility Blog

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Here we go again. Securing the facility for another tropical storm, Paloma, and she’s predicted to become a Cat 1-2 by the time it reaches the South shore of Grand Cayman by Friday rush hour. This is hitting us while we’re having a 10 day rain streak. Water is already everywhere! It’s late in the storm season but that’s life in the tropics. Not only has it been non-stop rain, but the temps in the facility have only been over 83 degrees F (23c) a few days during this span.

We will be ok, I hope, we have the help of international volunteers, Doug bell and Stacy Whitaker, both multiple return volunteers, and a vital help with the Salina population. Along with some local volunteer help we should have the place battened down by the time the heavy stuff starts.

The total count for ’08 hatchling that have made it to this point is 119, as stated before this is the largest group of babies we have taken on in one breeding season. The new iguanas are doing fine and many of them have had their first shed. All are eating regularly, including the twins we had from free-roamer BBB.

This weekend, storm permitting, the Wildlife Conservation Society Veterinarians will be arriving. Doctors Paul Calle and Kate McClave will perform the annual health checks and pre-release animal heath screenings. And the week following and into December we will be releasing these iguanas into the wild to join other re-introduced genetically diverse breeders


Hurricane Paloma, a category 4 hurricane with sustained winds of 140 miles per hour, smashed into the Cayman Islands Saturday morning. Reports of flooding, power outages, fallen tree limbs and scattered debris were reported throughout Grand Cayman, although the Sister Islands, Cayman Brac and Little Cayman received the full force of Paloma leaving severe damage island-wide.

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