La Petite Kemps Ridley Sea Turtle Glass Bracelet
La Petite Kemps Ridley Sea Turtle Glass Bracelet
La Petite Kemps Ridley Sea Turtle Glass Bracelet
La Petite Kemps Ridley Sea Turtle Glass Bracelet
La Petite Kemps Ridley Sea Turtle Glass Bracelet
La Petite Kemps Ridley Sea Turtle Glass Bracelet

La Petite Kemps Ridley Sea Turtle Glass Bracelet

Regular price $29.00 AUD
/
79 in stock

La Petite Kemps Ridley Sea Turtle

Population: 8,000

Handmade with tempered glass & 18K Gold Plated

Your Petite Kemps Ridley Sea Turtle band is hand made by skilled artisans using tempered glass beads with 18K gold plated findings and lobster clasp.

The bracelet measures 15cm / 6 inches with extensions to 17cm / 6.7 inches and 19cm / 7.5 inches. 

Your band plants 10 Mangrove trees to provide a home for marine and land animals & recycles 3.08 tonnes of CO2.

Your Personalized Gift Cards

Your Band of Courage comes with an Endangered Animal gift card and a 10 Tree Planting Certificate, both of which can be personalized. They tell you all about your Endangered Animal, your Mangrove trees, and your CO2 recycling. 

Every band comes in a drawstring fabric pouch. 

Your bracelet & care

The tempered glass beads will hold their colours in freshwater (not saltwater), and should not be exposed to perfumes, chemicals, cosmetics and the like. 

Shipping

Your order will be processed within 2 business days of receipt. Shipments are tracked and details for the delivery service you choose are shown at checkout. 

 

Kemps Ridley Sea Turtles

Kemps Ridley Sea Turtles are the smallest of the 7 species of sea turtles. They grow to just two feet long and weigh less than 100 pounds as adults. Being so small makes them vulnerable to just about everything humans can throw at them - discarded fishing nets and plastic bags which they eat or get caught up in, the many threats posed by climate change damaging their nesting grounds - eroding beaches - and up setting the gender mix of their population (hotter sand temperatures mean eggs hatch as females not males), and they are hunted for their meat. But their story is one of success at least so far! Numbers of Kemp Ridley Sea Turtles dropped to around 200 females in the 1980s and since then have recovered to a few thousand! Kemp Ridley sea turtles remain endangered but show what can be done when we put our minds to it. Your trees each absorb 22 kgs of CO2 a year for life, they cool our planet combating rising sea levels, protecting nesting habitats like beaches and feeding grounds like coral reefs.