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Old 10-14-2012, 08:46 AM   #35
gracielove
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Join Date: Apr 2011
Location: NY
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Originally Posted by navillusc View Post
I can see a gator living in a retention pond...IF...the retention pond is generally at least partially filled with water and there's some sort of food source nearby. If it dries out except during excessive rainfall, I'd be somewhat more skeptical. Where you live, there is a lot more water than where I live in Florida. There are plenty of gators...just not in this particular area...our ground is very water permeable in this area as opposed to all the clay basin areas that stay wet and/or swampy.

It is amazing how 'government'...people who may have been laundry folders and grocery baggers yesterday...not that those are bad professions because we need all skills in our world...but since government is made up largely of the hired, general public...today, when they become 'government' suddenly also become experts and know more than those 'governed' by the 'hired, general public's' elected politicians and are then the only ones qualified to relocate gopher tortoises, isn't it?

Oh, and yes...we move them out of the streets and into the woods here, too...qualified or not. That said, when I was a kid in OK, we had them...I'd guess you'd call them 'pets' but really we more 'rescued' them than had them as pets...and there were no laws related. We called them terrapins, though...but I think they were the same critter. They hibernated through the winter months, so we'd soak them for several days in the spring, then feed them food we kids would collect for them, then put them back outside in their natural habitat until fall so they could forage on their own. I don't think they ever left the property. In all the time we had them, only once did one of them not come around after the spring soaking. The one that didn't survive the winter hibernation, we put in a paper bag on the porch while we prepared his final resting place...and when no one was watching, someone SWIPED HIM! I don't think they had any idea what was in the bag!
We have something we call a snapping turtle up here. They hang out in the various ponds that are dotted around the area. They can be deadly and have hurt a lot of kids and animals. Once they clamp down on someone the only way to get loose is to cut the head off. No one is supposed to touch them but I think it is more for the people's protection than the turtles. When it rains they seem to think every place is their territory. I wish the government would clean them out instead of just telling us not to touch them! Not nearly as bad as an alligator but can cause a lot of issues with kids and pets. A lot of ducks and geese have lost feet because of them, too. That kind of critter I would not mind seeing the end of.
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