Swinhoe’s Softshell Turtle is perhaps the most celebrated turtle in all of Vietnam. In January 2016 a large male animal that had lived in Hanoi's Hoan Kiem Lake in Vietnam passed away, this ancient animal was the last surviving individual of the species in the lake and was possibly over 100 years old. The turtles in Hoan Kiem had given rise to a 15th century legend in which a magical sword, used by King Le Loi to defeat an invading Chinese army, was returned to a giant turtle in the lake following the victory. This legend has given the turtle from Hoan Kiem Lake a special sacred, almost god like status, in Vietnam. Despite being a creature of legend, the species has not fared well. Throughout much of its range animals where hunted for local consumption with a price in the trade no different to fish. Since 2003, the Asian Turtle Program (ATP; www.asianturtleprogram.org) of Indo-Myanmar Conservation (IMC), a UK based conservation charity, has conducted interview surveys throughout much of northern Vietnam covering 18 provinces looking at lakes, wetlands, and rivers that were once home to the species. These impressive animals were once found throughout much of the Red River Delta but the large softshell turtles, which can grow to over 150kg in size, were heavily hunted in the 1970's and 1980's, and in its last strong holds until the 1990s.