Wandering Manatee Going Back to the Beach

Sea cow Ilya being released into ocean in Miami

Ilya the manatee is going free.

The tough sea cow who survived a long, cold trip from Miami to New York then had to be flown back to South Florida is set to be returned to his ocean friends.

The Miami Seaquarium, where Ilya has been recuperating for the past month and a half, will let him go back into the wild later today.

The 9-foot, 1,300-pound Ilya led wildlife officials on quite a chase earlier this year, traveling over 1,200 miles north along the Atlantic coast. After stops in Maryland and Massachusetts, Ilya had seemed to have taken to the waters of New York harbor, settling in a spot near a oil refinery in Linden, New Jersey.

As the waters up north got colder, it became too dangerous for Ilya to stay. Manatees generally need water temperatures to stay at or above 68 degrees, but the New York waters were dipping into the lower 60s and 50s in late October, and Ilya was in danger of dying of hypothermia.

Officials decided his Jersey trip was over, so they loaded Ilya into a C-130 cargo plane and brought him back to Miami, where he's been recuperating ever since.

It's not clear why manatees like Ilya are leaving the sunny shores of Florida and wandering so far north, but a handful do so each year.

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