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Fishing with Alligator

HangOutdoors

Jetboaters Fleet Admiral
Messages
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Location
Royal Oak, MI
Boat Make
Yamaha
Year
2020
Boat Model
AR
Boat Length
21
I mean seriously, I would probably stroke out.....

Do you think the alligator is fast enough to get out of the water and up the culvert to grab someone? Looks like a decent size one.

 
You'd be surprise how crazy people here in florida (to me at least), couple of years ago we were at everglades national park and bunch of people launching canoes and kayak and you can see gators 30 ft from the launch site. Made me cringe lol but apparently there is no known case of a kayaker getting attacked by gators, I still wouldn't dare do it lol.
 
I go kayaking and canoeing with gators all the time. It comes with the territory here in Florida. Most of the time the gators want to stay away from you and I've only had one instance where a gator was aggressive and I couldn't scare it off. I just paddled away from it and gave him some room. I do have someone that I work with that was bitten on the foot by an alligator while kayaking but he was dangling his feet in the water. Definitely not a behavior that I would endorse. I'm more worried about water moccasins than alligators though. If you're looking for a reptile to be worried about, they are the top of my list!
 
In the south, if there is a body of water you assume it had alligators. Most southerners learn to peacefully coexist with gators.

It's not until you reach the northern or western part of North Carolina that the weather is too cold to be a natural gator habitat.

Yet another reason we have decided to retire in the mid-atlantic. ?

Jim
 
I'm way more concerned with dangerous amoeba in warm stale bodies of water than alligators. Usually people only get bit when doing stupid things like messing with a nest or babies. (Sometimes unintentionally)

Don't splash around near shore when it's dusk and you'll be fine.

A local lake has one of the densest populations of alligators in the state (Which most likely makes it the most in the world). I won't go on that one.:p

You'll probably see more gators golfing in Florida than when you're on a lake. The rivers will definitely have more activity though.
 
People from out of state seem to think you see alligators like you see birds around here. I never see them. Though the local putt putt place has about 50 baby gators.
 
I see alligators all the time. There was a decent size gator (5 or 6 feet) in the pond right by the school when I dropped my kids off this morning. They are in pretty much every body of water in my area which is about 3 miles from the St Johns River.
 
I see alligators all the time. There was a decent size gator (5 or 6 feet) in the pond right by the school when I dropped my kids off this morning. They are in pretty much every body of water in my area which is about 3 miles from the St Johns River.
Nope, no thank you.
 
As others have mentioned, gator attacks are pretty rare and most of the time can be avoided with a little common sense. I wouldn't swim in gator infested water, especially in the spring when the males are territorial, don't mess with nests or baby alligators or you might have to deal with momma gator. I don't sit there with my hand in the water reviving fish either. If they are being released they are on their own. The thing I worry about most is getting one caught in a cast net. I get nervous sometimes when cast netting shiners that there could be a submerged gator. I'd hate to be tangled up with this guy with a rope wrapped around my wrist.
20201221_143740.jpg
 
Don't fear the gators that you can see! Just a part of life down here but almost all gators are harmless until provoked.
 
A bunch of my family lives in FL, and we used to canoe all the time in rivers. My brother and his friend fell out of there canoe with a 15 foot or so gator like 10 feet away. Never went back again...lol
 
Don't fear the gators that you can see! Just a part of life down here but almost all gators are harmless until provoked.
So you are saying we should fear the gators we can't see?
 
So you are saying we should fear the gators we can't see?
Yes. If you are near a body of fresh water in South Florida, you can assume there is a gator lurking somewhere. They like the element of surprise so one must be vigilant. But once they are seen there is minimal risk unless you are a dumbass.
 
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