Recent News

Videos/Photos: Start Of ‘Tour De Turtles Race’
Tuesday, August 14, 2012

This morning marked the official start of the race with one turtle being released at Clearwater Beach in St David’s.


Turtles to be released and tracked
Friday, August 10, 2012

At least five green sea turtles with attached satellite transmitters are being released from Clearwater Beach next week.


Tour de Turtles Bermuda: ‘Race On The Rock’
Thursday, August 09, 2012

“Tour de Turtles Bermuda: Race On The Rock” will kick off next week and will see green turtles fitted with GPS satellite transmitters to enable researchers to track their every movement as they “race” across the seas.


Volunteers clean up BAMZ
Thursday, July 26, 2012

​Some 70 students and volunteers from eleven companies participated in The Centre on Philanthropy’s Community Day.


Saving our 'floating golden rainforest' at a local level
Friday, July 13, 2012

FRIDAY, JUNE 13: The Bermuda Alliance for Sargasso Sea formed last June with the intention of supporting a government led plan to protect the Sargasso Sea and the multitude of species that live within it. The Bermuda Sun sat down with four of the BASS member charities to discuss their mission so far.



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Latest News

All the latest updates and news from the Bermuda Aquarium, Museum, and Zoo, one of Bermuda's leading visitor attractions!

Young dad's death devastates family
Bermuda Sun
Friday, September 28, 2012

9/28/2012 9:00:00 AM
Simon Jones

FRIDAY, SEPT. 28: A heartbroken wife has spoken of her family’s devastating loss after the death of her husband from cancer.

Tim Hasselbring — a much loved and respected conservationist, educator and businessman — died last weekend after a two-year-battle battle with cancer. He was 38.

His wife Nadia described him as a “devoted” dad who was “besotted” by their one-year-old daughter, Havilland.

She told the Bermuda Sun: “Tim was utterly besotted with her. It was mutual.

“They could just sit there and beam at each other.

“No one could make her giggle like he could, no one could make as many funny faces, do as many silly voices for her puppets, or console her so reassuringly when she cried.

BS_120928_1a.jpg
Torn apart: Tim Haselbring pictured with
his devoted wife Nadia, in July 2009.

*Photo supplied.

“Tim said that one of the most wonderful things that he had ever done in his life was to rock his little baby to sleep at night. “

Mr Hasselbring was diagnosed with metastatic cancer in late 2010.

But he continued to work tirelessly and live life to the full until the disease spread to his brain in May.

His wife added: “The enormity of his loss is devastating to us, and it is hard to imagine the future without him.

“But a spirit as strong and as well-loved as Tim’s will always be with us, surrounding us like the sea that was so much a part of him.

”Mr Hasselbring was born in northern Japan in 1974 where his father was a teacher at the Department of Defence overseas school system.

And he came to Bermuda at the age of seven when his parents worked at the Chaffee School on the US Base.

BS_120928_1b.jpg
Great Dad: Tim Hasselbring with his baby
daughter Havilland on Charles Island last November.

* Photo supplied.

Mrs Aguiar-Hasselbring said: “He had an idyllic childhood in St. David’s, where by all accounts he spent most of his time peering into tide pools. In almost every childhood picture he’s holding a creature.

“Tim loved Bermuda and, aside from his years at university, where he studied biology, he remained here and has always been deeply, elementally connected with the natural world.”

The popular family man went on to found the Bermuda Shark Project as well as captain the Aquarium ship, taking hundreds of children out on educational tours of the island.

He also ran an alternative energy company that was looking to harness the power of wave energy in Bermuda.

Mrs Aguiar-Hasselbring told the Sun: “Tim moved at speed. He didn’t stroll or saunter, he bounded.

“He leaped from docks onto boats and took stairs four at a time with his great long legs. His mind was even faster than his body.

“He was a prodigious reader and had a wonderful ear for language. He was a cook, a carpenter, a boat captain, an artist, an inventor. A friend once said that he didn’t think there was a single thing that Tim wouldn’t be good at.

“But he was a modest person. His love of learning and the satisfaction he took from work were not tied to ego or ambition—they were pure.

“He was the funniest person I knew, and the best storyteller. He was a generous friend and a profoundly devoted and loving husband.”

• The family has set up an education fund for Havilland in her father’s memory. Donations can be made to HSBC account 002-111136-013 or via PO Box FL 145, Flatts, FLBX.