Yeah, I do my turtle’s PR

Harold, basking in his moment in the spotlight. Next thing you know, he'll be asking for champagne and caviar.

As many of you may know — friends that is, or other fans of Harold — my turtle Harold was treated to an article in Toronto’s daily newspaper, The Toronto Star this weekend. It was very exciting.

Since many people have expressed their curiosity as to how Harold achieved such notoriety, it went down like this:

When I saw that the Star had started the Condo Pets column, I thought ‘hey, I live in a condo and I have a pet’ so I wrote in to the email address listed and pitched Harold as the topic of a future column. That was the PR part of it.

The column’s author, Janice Bradbeer, replied and said they would indeed like to feature Harold in the column, as they hadn’t done a turtle before. She sent me an e-interview to fill out, which I did joyously and wrote far too much. Hey, I always do the interviewing, not the interview-filling-out. Which brings me to another point: It was really interesting to be on the other side of the media equation.

It really is a bizarre experience reading your own quotes in a story. I now understand why people will often ask me ‘Did I say that?!?’. Because when your quotes are pulled from the greater point you may have been making, it just sounds weird, even though it’s perfectly correct. It makes you feel a little self-conscious.

So, Harold got his time in the spotlight, and I got to learn what it’s like to be interviewed and quoted in a story. All in all, a successful experiment in pet PR!

Vasco da Gama: Quest for the Spice Trade

This book tells the story of the relentless and at times tyrannical explorer Vasco da Gama who helped Portugal earn its reputation as the leader of the Age of Exploration. By the late 1400s, Portugal’s Prince Henry was looking for a way to expand Portuguese territory and gain access to the lucrative spice trade of the Far East. Vasco da Gama was at the forefront of this pursuit, leading three major expeditions to lands that Europeans had never explored.

For more information about this book, please see the Crabtree Publishing website.

Ferdinand Magellan: Circumnavigating the World

In the Footsteps of Explorers: Ferdinand Magellan

In 1519, Portuguese explorer Ferdinand Magellan took five ships and 200 men on an epic journey around the world on behalf of Spain. This colorful book follows the world’s first circumnavigation by sail through a dramatic passage of disease, starvation, and death…

For more information on this book, please visit the Crabtree Publishing website.