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Najakcharmer -> RE: i am missing a cat (4/12/2007 1:06:21 AM)
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ORIGINAL: Devilslilsister Ty ty ty on the triggers. ::mentally stores - tap gator gently and repeatedly on the nose, side of mouth, ears, and eyes:: But of course, if all else fails triggering a gator to go into a death roll might save your life. Hell no. I think you'd be royally fucked. Gators don't knowingly use the "drag prey to drown it" strategy as far as I can tell. They do retreat to water for various other reasons, but dragging you down isn't really what they're thinking per se. What it looks to me like they're thinking is looking for better leverage and retreating to a safe place away from what they consider alarming or threatening. This can have the effect of drowning a victim, sure. So you're probably better off by not triggering this particular behavioral response. All of the 'handler accidents" I've seen were dealt with via nose tap and all ended in fairly quick and successful extrication. Everyone remained calm and no one alarmed the animal unduly, it was merely stimulated to open its mouth again with light tapping. I suspect that some of the worse horror stories happened because the incidents involved people who didn't know the behavioral triggers and tripped the wrong ones. Struggling, seriously striking the animal, hitting its body or otherwise alarming it would probably trigger either the roll or the retreat to water or both. Calm and professional handling to trigger the desired behavioral responses (eg, opening the mouth) works a hell of a lot better than pitting yourself physically against an animal that is a lot stronger than you and equipped with some nasty weaponry. quote:
Gators usually take their catch under water and drown them right? So if it rips off a limb, technically you'll have the ability to not be drowned and the opportunity to make it to safety. No, that's a decidedly awful idea. That's not how gators work. They don't "think" that way. Pretty much they just try to eat whatever they have, and if they feel threatened they run into the nice safe water to hide with it, or try to detach a portion to run with. I'm a critter wrangler, not an EMT, so I can't answer much about what happens when you get a limb ripped off by an alligator. I can emphatically suggest that you not get yourself into that position in the first place. quote:
I know that one has to climb up past 8 feet to escape a gator, BUT what if there isnt a tree around? AND what if you're walking around and a gator pops out of a bush at you? Not really. Gators can't climb, and the bigger ones can't even heave their bodies up terribly high even with the complete support of a fence. I'd worry most about the agile, skinny, highly food motivated specimens in the 5' to 7' range, since they actually have some speed on them and can do a bit of climbing and heaving when sufficiently motivated. I very seriously doubt they can make it 8 feet up however, and gators can't jump for shit unless they do it directly out of the water. Also it is pretty rare for them to be sufficiently motivated to go that far after a person unless somebody has been hand feeding them. For those lighter weight gators under 8', I engage in a brief but firm discussion with them involving a short stout pole applied with leverage under the lower jaw when they get too close to be polite. It stops them cold and makes them back up. If the gator is too heavy for me to lift and control its head easily, I walk or jog briskly away until it gets tired of moving, which rarely takes very long with the bigger animals. Usually walking is quite sufficient. Generally it collapses out of upright locomotion with a big flomph and eyes me reproachfully. American alligators are pretty slow and rarely require so much as breaking into a run. It's some of the crocs that can run you in circles, but your likelihood of seeing any crocs in the wild North America is pretty low unless you hang out at Turkey Point. The alligator you see is *not* likely to be a problem for you. Walk away. Or run away if it makes you feel better. The alligator that is likely to be a problem for people is the one you don't see and accidentally step right up to - or on. quote:
What if its breeding season and you stumble onto aggressive gators.. or if its birth season and you stumble upon a mommy gator and her babies?? i did that once actually, but the really wierd noise coming from the bushes (and of course the sign that said beware of gators) had me doubling back the way i came..... That could be a problem. About the only thing that can motivate a gator to bother a person, other than some idiot teaching it that human hands mean food, or some other idiot sticking a body part right in its face, is if you screw with a female's nesting mound. But they still aren't that hard to intimidate off the nests if your intent is to steal (or count, weigh and measure) the eggs. The noise little gators make sounds like a cross between a duck and a frog, and it's a lot of fun to imitate that call out in the swamp and see what happens. Er, okay, maybe you shouldn't indulge in this sort of fun. LOL quote:
Thanks for the info again!! A plan of action is always a must. And i guess if a gator gets anyone i'm with, to try the pole thing, eh? I don't know as you can learn to physically manage crocodilians by reading a post on the Internet, so my advice is not to get into such situations in the first place.
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