Airboat captain: Don't blame Disney for gators
Goblet's Cove in Lake Tohopekaliga, Florida (CNN)Susie,
a 7-foot female alligator, hissed menacingly as the airboat pulled
alongside the reedy refuge where she lay cooling herself, the top of her
head protruding from the water.
"It's
like throwing a warning shot at somebody," the captain, Scott Vuncannon
of Marsh Landing Adventures, said before translating the ominous noise
for his passengers: "You're getting too close, and you're about to
aggravate me."
Vuncannon said he
felt horrible when he learned an alligator had snatched 2-year-old Lane
Graves from a lake beach at Disney's Grand Floridian Resort & Spa,
about 30 miles northwest of his home in St. Cloud.
At the same time, he said, the family presented that alligator with...
He cut himself short, not wanting to be insensitive.
The sad fact of the matter
is, just like Orange County Sheriff Jerry Demings said hours after the
gator absconded with Lane, "This is Florida, and it's not uncommon for
alligators to be in bodies of water."
The boy died, of drowning and traumatic injury, just after 9 p.m., which Vuncannon said was an alligator's "prime feeding time."
'Feed it once...'
Vuncannon,
who has operated airboats for 26 years and has provided alligator tours
for the last 12, said he feels certain "somebody at some point in time
fed that alligator." It could've been years, even decades, ago.
Alligators
are generally more afraid of humans than humans are of them, he said,
and despite millions of years of evolution and conditioning, they have
tiny brains -- about the weight of a gumball -- so they're not the
brightest creatures.
Related: Alligator kills 2-year-old boy
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- The response: Resort to add warning signs
- A father remembers: 10-year-old boy killed in 1993 attack
- Online outrage: Conversations compare gorilla shooting with alligator attack
- Airboat captain: Don't blame Disney
- Orlando's tragic week
"Feed
it once, and he'll associate all humans with food," he said, before
again translating, "One of them fed me before, one of them will feed me
now."
Tourists need to understand
this, he said. You might feed an alligator and go home thinking
everything is OK. Nothing happened. Everything was fine.
But, Vuncannon admonished, "You have changed that alligator's mindset."
As
the airboat roared through maidencane, lily pads and bulrush reeds,
cranes and a blue heron took flight. Along with Susie, the 7-footer, the
boat came across some babies, likely Susie's, another larger female and
a massive male named Brutus.
Brutus
is the only male alligator in his general vicinity, Vuncannon said,
explaining that the 12-footer, like all males, is extremely territorial.
What should Disney have done?
Two
debates have raged since Lane's death, one over whether Disney should
eradicate alligators at its resorts and one over whether there should
have been better signage at the beach where the boy was taken.
The
latter poses an interesting argument. Roughly a 10-minute walk from the
Grand Floridian, at a vacation center for the U.S. military called
Shades of Green Resort, there is a small pond next to a golf course.
There, a sign warns visitors to stay away from alligators.
Adjacent to the Grand
Floridian is another beach with a sign warning visitors not to swim. It
also says, "Please do not feed the wildlife. Feeding changes their
natural behavior and may be harmful to their health."
Yet
while the signs at the Grand Floridian warn visitors against swimming,
there was no mention of wildlife, let alone alligators. A senior Disney
source told CNN on Thursday evening that's changing, and alligator warnings will be posted on all resort waterways.
As
for the second argument -- that Disney should rid its abundant waters
of the dangerous reptiles -- Vuncannon said that one's a nonstarter.
It
goes back to Brutus. While female alligators tend to stay in a
territory if they feel comfortable there, males like Brutus want their
own territory, which can be as large as 2 square miles.
They
will travel to find it and defend it until they lose a limb or die at
the jaws of another gator. It would be no problem for an alligator like
Brutus to make his way 30 miles to the Seven Seas Lagoon at Disney.
They've been known to travel farther, Vuncannon said.
'Think of it as a criminal'
Getting
rid of all the alligators on Disney's sprawling property, he said, is
"an impossibility." Disney could hire a fleet of boats with trappers
tasked with nothing but snaring alligators, and "you're never going to
get rid of them," he said.
Florida
is rife with tributaries and waterways, sure, but a male alligator is
also content to travel on roadways, scoot through canals and drainage
pipes, and even climb chain-link fences to get to its destination, he
said.
You'd be hard-pressed to keep one out of your swimming pool, let alone a 27,000-acre property like Disney.
"Kind
of think of it as a criminal," Vuncannon said. "If a crook wants to get
in, a crook's going to get in. ... There's nothing any theme park can
do to stop (an alligator) from getting in."
Complicating
matters is that they're clever at cloaking themselves, he said. While
visiting Yellowstone, you might see feces or a torn-up garbage pit
indicating a bear had been in the area. Not so with alligators.
Fewer than 10 feet from Susie and Brutus, CNN reporters needed Vuncannon's keen gator-spotting eyes to pinpoint the beasts.
Tourists need to be vigilant
when visiting bodies of water in the Southeast, especially in Florida
and Lousiana, and remember to never approach an alligator if they see
one, the airboat skipper said.
As
for visiting one of Florida's myriad theme parks, he said, the attack on
young Lane was anomalous. It shouldn't dissuade anyone from visiting.
"All the theme parks do the best they can to make sure things are safe," he said. "This is how we make a living."
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