Recent News
Azu Beastro: Introducing Arugula and Chef Sam CrewWednesday, July 01, 2015
From the fresh local farm produce, to the fresh herbs being grown right on the café’s patio overlooking Harrington Sound, diners at the Azu Beastro are certain to be delighted with the delectable options being created by the restaurant’s new concession holder, Arugula.
The Trunk Island Campaign: Investing in the Future
Wednesday, July 01, 2015
It was once unusual for the formal education of children to occur anywhere besides within the four-walls of the classroom, but today, there is a broader view on how teaching should occur, taking into account the whole child and diverse learning needs.
Creating Innovative Classes to Enhance School Curriculum
Wednesday, July 01, 2015
There has been increasing interest in educational circles in developing interdisciplinary STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Math) programmes that not only teach students about scientific method in the classroom, but also how it can be applied in real life experiences.
Curator’s Corner
Wednesday, July 01, 2015
Firstly, we’d like to thank you for your patience over the last several months. The replacement of the Aquarium roof has gone very well and we’re extraordinarily happy with the end product.
Scholarship recipient tracking Longtails
Wednesday, July 01, 2015
BZS/Steinhoff Scholarship recipient Miguel Mejias, a Biology student at Memorial University in St. John’s, Newfoundland, has been undertaking some very interesting and exciting research on White-tailed Tropicbirds (Phaethon lepturus catesbyi), better known to most Bermudians as the “Longtail”.
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All the latest updates and news from the Bermuda Aquarium, Museum, and Zoo, one of Bermuda's leading visitor attractions!
Sailing fever is now in full swing at the West End ahead of the opening races of SailGP this weekend.
Behind the scenes at Cross Island, headquarters of the Bermuda Grand Prix, the sailing teams and their technical support are immersed in preparations.
Brad Marsh, technical site team director, said even minute changes in weather factored into the job of readying the vessels for racing.
“I consider SailGP not only the leading-edge sailing event in the world – it’s also an event, with an event village, which comes with setting up the site for it.
“First we set up the site, and then we set up the sailing. The last two weeks have been about setting up the bases.
“All the bases are portable, build-around containers and using tents. Now, in these last couple of days, we’re assembling the boats that we sail.”
The man-made island off Dockyard was abuzz with activity when The Royal Gazette called yesterday, with cranes fitting sails onto the giant F50 foiling catamarans.
Mr Marsh said: “Fine-tuning is the key term. The boats here are configured to a very high degree to the sailing conditions.”
He explained that Bermuda’s unique local conditions, down to the water temperature and the air density, factor into the laborious detail put into every feature of the high-tech boats.
The wing-shaped foils that get mounted to the catamaran’s hulls are mainly carbon fibre with titanium reinforcement, and the intense work put into the hydrofoils was in evidence all around the team bases.
Foils were being wheeled across the grounds with a two-person team: one pushing the cart and the other up front, clutching the hydrofoil to steady it.
The work is delicate: the tiniest design flaw can scupper a team’s chances at the races this weekend on the Great Sound.
Mr Marsh likened the catamarans to “a high-end race car – they’re set for the track they’re racing on”.
Nicolai Sehested, the helmsman leading Team Denmark, said the quick decisions he had to make on that racetrack were “80 per cent focusing on the sailing, and 20 per cent on the area”.
A frequent visitor to Bermuda, starting with the Bermuda Gold Cup, Mr Sehested said the team had been on the island for four days, with yesterday as their third day out on the water getting to grips with how their boats perform.
“It means multiple things,” he said. “It means getting a feel for the area, getting the steering, getting the boats faster.”
For the helmsman, who is “basically driving the boat”, the familiarity with the behaviour of the water and wind is crucial.
Ten teams are set to compete: Switzerland, Canada, Australia, Denmark, France, Great Britain, Japan, New Zealand, Spain and the United States.
With fickle weather throughout this week, everyone involved in the Bermuda Sail Grand Prix has been watching the skies.
“Weather is a lot of it,” Mr Sehested said. “It’s a completely different set-up on the boat whether it’s windy or if there are light winds. We want to go out with the best setting for the day.”
He added: “So far, the weekend looks nice.”
Joel Marginson, head of department for the boat building and machine shop, explained that in the repair and upkeep of the foils, “we use the same process on everyone”.
The standardisation in effect levels the playing field.
Sustainability and environmental impact feature highly in SailGP, which launched its Impact League in season two to track the carbon footprint of each team.
With so much attention devoted to the water and weather, sailors take an interest in the natural environment of places where they compete.
A representative from each team explored Bermuda’s unique marine habitats yesterday with an early trip out to the nature reserve on Trunk Island in Harrington Sound, where seagrass beds are being coaxed back to life.
Cages placed in the shallows there in 2020 and 2021 protect the seagrass from overgrazing by turtles.
Complicated factors play into the decline in seagrass meadows in Bermuda: a successful rebound in turtle populations, a crash in shark numbers, and the relentless human impact on a delicate habitat.
Alison Copeland, biodiversity officer at the Department of Environment and Natural Resources, told the group: “Seagrass meadows are incredibly important as a habitat because of the wide variety of animals they support.”
But she said they had undergone “a pretty spectacular collapse over the last few years – and what’s causing this decline, to put it bluntly, is us”.
The sailing group’s jaunt to explore progress on environmental restoration goes with SailGP’s commitment to make sustainability integral to the sport.
As stated on the SailGP website: “There will be no sport without a planet to play it on.”