Saturday, July 22, 2006

Crusty the Gator Survives!


The calls came from as far away as Hawaii: Spare Crusty. The gator, identified in a South Florida Sun-Sentinel story last week, was one of four who hung around rest stops and boat ramps along Alligator Alley in the Everglades. After being fed by humans, they had become overly friendly -- and potentially dangerous. Having lost their fear of humans, the law said they had to be destroyed.

But public attention, and an anonymous donor, has led to a permanent stay of execution. Three of the four condemned reptiles embarked Friday on a snappy new life in a shady gator pit at an animal exhibit in the Seminole Reservation in Hollywood. Crusty is still on the loose."They've got it better here than they did out there," said Todd Hardwick, the alligator trapper who helped arrange for the reptiles' new home. "They'll be cared for, get fed. They've got some female gators there."

Crusty's plight came to life in a story about officers from the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission citing people for feeding the gators at Everglades rest areas. A total of 13 people have been charged this summer with the second-degree misdemeanor. Feeding gators causes them to associate people with food and increases the danger of attack, experts say. This spring, Florida alligators killed three women, including one in Sunrise. Feeding also means a death sentence for the gators. Crusty and three swamp-mates, whom wildlife officers named Speedy, Boomer and Freddy, were to be caught and destroyed.

But soon "Everybody was getting calls," said Hardwick, who fielded a half-dozen himself. "A lot of people felt sorry for the gators." One of Hardwick's callers was a Broward man who wished to remain anonymous. The man offered to pay the costs, $1,150 in this case, of capturing the gators. Trappers are paid from selling the meat and hides of the animals they catch. Trappers can sell condemned gators to a licensed animal facility at their own discretion, said wildlife agency spokesman Jorge Pino. Some wildlife officials received calls for a reprieve for the gators, but that didn't affect the agency's position, he added. "The process worked," Pino said. "An alligator was deemed to be a nuisance and it was removed. "Hardwick spent hours on the phone Thursday, notifying wildlife officials, resolving license issues and arranging for the Seminole Village to accept any captured gators.

That evening, trappers took to Alligator Alley looking for the four sociable critters. Within two hours, using a treble hook to snag and a noose to snare, they pulled two males and one female ashore. One male had lost part of his left foreleg. None appeared to be the 8.5 foot Crusty, named for a discoloration on his back. Next morning, the cold-blooded captives were sloshing in the pit at the Seminole Village under the care of manager Jimmy Riffle. "We're going to use them for educational purposes, to show what happens when you introduce food to alligators and the danger of it," Riffle said. Crusty may soon join them. Trappers will renew the search for Crusty this weekend.