you haven't been listening to me, have you, Bud?Fence.
People may just want to pick a different state for their vacations. Gators are not going anywhere in FL. They're here to stay.
you haven't been listening to me, have you, Bud?Fence.
Sorry, I didn't quite have my coffee yet when I posted this. Allow me to explain, as stated a fence without removing the gators from a single pond will end up in starvation for the gators and PETA and animal rights would be all over it. In the water, on the bank, it doesn't matter - several gators can't be restricted to a few acres of water and expected to survive. They COULD be relocated, however as stated, there is no guarantee they wouldn't return via interconnected waterways unless everything was blocked off - even THEN, digging under the fence would still be very possible as this is how they aestivate, spending their winters in "gator holes" to shield themselves from the cold.you haven't been listening to me, have you, Bud?
People may just want to pick a different state for their vacations. Gators are not going anywhere in FL. They're here to stay.
Fence.
If you mean at the water's edge then that sounds about like the best thing to do in order keep humans and gators separated.
isn't swimming and wading when the sign said "NO" also a blatant disregard for the rules also?No way anyone could enter a body of water on that property with out full knowledge that their were crocs in them and they had to climb a fence to do so which would be blatantly breaking the rules
There are over 1,000,000 just in the state of FL, probably 3,000,000 total in all states they are native combined. We're talking about controlling Mother Nature the strongest force on Earth. That didn't work out too well when New Orleans tried doing it, yet we didn't learn.I agree with a lot of your pointsFrank Castle and can respect gators and virtually all other living beings for their ecological niche or at least I try to(yes i hunt/fish and squish bugs on occassion). There does come a time when conflicts with humans may require removal of these dangerous animal, at the same time I think there should be ample habitat set aside for them where conflicts with humans aren't likely to occur. In my mind, the root of the problem is too many humans, i cant comment on the specifics of gator population as i havent researched...The state of Florida does actively eradicate mosquitoes by the way
Yep and if some third world resort can afford it then certainly Disney can damned sure afford to do so eventhough they are in the middle of a giant swamp.Was at a resort in mexico years ago and they did exactly that. Fenced off all the bodies of water on the resort had signs up too. Anything off their property was fair game
isn't swimming and wading when the sign said "NO" also a blatant disregard for the rules also?
And that fence was just working out of dumb-luck. Without a concrete footer all the way around, there's nothing stopping them from digging their way under that fence. I've seen it before.
You're thinking like a Parent, which is fine......now try thinking like a Scientist or a Lawyer. Time to get technical
I agree with a lot of your pointsFrank Castle and can respect gators and virtually all other living beings for their ecological niche or at least I try to(yes i hunt/fish and squish bugs on occassion). There does come a time when conflicts with humans may require removal of these dangerous animal, at the same time I think there should be ample habitat set aside for them where conflicts with humans aren't likely to occur. In my mind, the root of the problem is too many humans, i cant comment on the specifics of gator population as i havent researched...The state of Florida does actively eradicate mosquitoes by the way