La Petite Green Sea Turtle Glass Bracelet
La Petite Green Sea Turtle Glass Bracelet
La Petite Green Sea Turtle Glass Bracelet
La Petite Green Sea Turtle Glass Bracelet

La Petite Green Sea Turtle Glass Bracelet

Regular price $29.00 AUD
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La Petite Green Sea Turtle

Population: 85,000

Handmade with tempered glass & 18K Gold Plated

Your Petite Green Sea Turtlel 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 colors in freshwater (not saltwater, please), 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. 

 

Green Sea Turtles 

Green Sea Turtles are just 2 inches long when they are born and grow up to 5 feet long weighing over 300 lbs as adults, 3x the weight of a human being! They are the second largest sea turtle and eat sea grass and algae, which is why they love nesting in Shark Bay and are colored green! Green Sea Turtles can hold their breadth for up to 5 hours and swim at speeds of up to 35 kph. They saw dinosaurs become extinct and today, 150 million years later, with around 85,000 left, they are at risk of becoming extinct. The heat of the sand in which they lay their eggs determines the sex of turtles, with warmer temperatures producing females, and climate change is creating a shortage of male turtles threatening all species of sea turtles. A group of sea turtles is called a 'clutch' and there are fewer and fewer clutches to be found in the world's oceans as their temperatures rise as your trees absorb 220 kgs of CO2 every year to help cool our planet.