Giant turtle
"I identify most strongly with the turtle: I patiently plod along till I reach my destination--and occasionally I stick out my neck."
- Paulette Peltan
You can tell the sex of a turtle by the sound it makes, A male grunts, A female hisses.
Giant turtle has a lot of mileage on her  

A 900-pound leatherback sea turtle named Dingle for the   Irish resort town where she was rescued and satellite-tagged   last year is a real traveler.  Eight months ago, the   turtle became snared in lobster pots off Dingle, Ireland.  

She was rescued with out injury, tagged and released.   Scientists from University College Cork and the University   of Wales, Swansea, say the approximately 15-year-old   reptile has since traveled 5,000 miles to the Cape Verde   Islands, off west Africa, and back up the European coast.  

In January, she was off Senegal, where a dive in search   for the turtles' favorite meal of jellyfish took her to   a depth of more than 1,640 feet, The Telegraph reported.  

Leatherback sea turtles do not mate every year and it's   unknown which nesting beach Dingle was born on and will   return to eventually to lay eggs.  In 1980, there were   an estimated 115,000 adult female leatherbacks worldwide,   but now there are fewer than 25,000, the report said. 
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