
Campfires are permitted in fully contained barbecue grills.Fines for damaging the mudflats are heavy, due to their sensitive nature. Mudflats are also important habitat for invertebrates that are an important food source for many of the park's bird species. The upper layers of the mud dry first, giving the appearance of solid ground, but the mud underneath is soft, enabling vehicles to become stuck. Driving in the mudflats surrounding the campground is not permitted.Look for the kiosk and fill out the form to display in your windshield. A camping permit is required and is available at the entrance to South Beach.The nearest amenities from the park entrance station on Park Road 22 are about 12 miles away, so please come prepared. No food, firewood, or fishing licenses are sold in the park, and the park does not have a gas station.
Weather padre national seashore update#
Please call the visitor center at 361.949.8068 ahead of time for an update on weather and driving conditions.Īmenities: Primitive camping is available here with no facilities. Please use caution when crossing to avoid flooding your engine or exhaust. Be aware that the road through the dunes is sometimes filled with exceptionally deep and soft sand in which even 4-wheel-drive vehicles may occasionally become stuck. If driving, follow the road approximately one to two miles to the campground. Access to this campground is possible only through the 4-wheel drive area of South Beach and by boating down the Laguna Madre.


Look for a notch in the foredune ridge and turn right. To find the campground, drive to the 15-mile marker and backtrack approximately 100 yards. Call ahead to check on driving conditions and use good judgment.įees: No fee is charged for use of this area, but a fee is charged to enter the park.ĭescription: Yarborough Pass is located in the Laguna Madre, 15.5 miles south of the visitor center. The hotline is also used to report nesting or stranded sea turtles.Accessing Yarborough Pass can be challenging due to soft sand. If you come across a sea turtle wrapped in marine debris anywhere along the Texas coast, park staff ask that you report it 1-866-TURTLE-5. They also suggested participating in beach cleanups and reducing the use of single use plastics. To help protect marine wildlife from entanglement, park staff are asking that broken fishing gear and trash are properly disposed of. "All marine organisms are at risk for injury or death by entanglement." "For air breathing marine creatures, like sea turtles, getting entangled will most likely cause death by drowning," officials wrote. If turtles can't get untangled, marine debris can cause injury or make it difficult for turtles to forage for food, officials said.

Their primary threat is their unintended capture in fishing gear, which can result in drowning or injuries that can lead to death or debilitation. Green sea turtles are classified as endangered, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. "Entanglement can occur when a turtle swims into a net, fishing gear, or other marine debris." "Entanglement is a serious issue that threatens sea turtles and other marine wildlife," officials wrote. The technicians were able to remove the fishing line from around the turtles and took the aquatic reptiles to the Amos Rehabilitation Keep (ARK) at the University of Texas Marine Science Institute in Port Aransas, Texas for treatment, according to the post.

Photos shared on Facebook show the sea turtles' necks and flippers tightly wound in yellow threads. On Friday, Padre Island National Seashore (PINS) announced that seasonal biological technicians patrolling for nesting Kemp's ridley sea turtles encountered two tangled adult green sea turtles-one male and one female-who they suspect were mating at the time. Texas park officials are urging beachgoers to properly dispose of fishing gear after a pair of endangered sea turtles were found tangled up in a braided fishing line along the Gulf Coast shoreline. Two adult green sea turtles-one male and one female-were found tangled in a yellow fishing net along the Texas coast on Friday.
