<h2 id="c22">AS TO ALLIGATORS.</h2>
<p>The alligator generally impresses the
mind as a reptile so dangerous that he
should be given a wide berth on any and
all occasions, yet it is really peaceable and
harmless unless aroused to the defensive.</p>
<p>Anywhere south of the Mason and
Dixon line, among the rivers, lakes and
marshes, are found the alligators, but
Florida, because of its great area of such
places which the alligator delights in,
may almost be termed the home of the
alligator.</p>
<p>In traveling through the dense hammocks,
where for miles and miles the sun
scarcely penetrates through the heavy
timber and the rank vegetation beneath,
one may often meet with the huge saurian
as he travels from one cave or mud
hole to another. Tease or wound him,
and he will show fight, and woe to him
who then comes within reach of his
vengeance. And it matters little to him
with which end he must fight. He can
crush equally well with his tail as with
his jaws—or, to end the matter more
speedily, he may use both. But if you
go on about your business his ’gator-ship
will do the same, and not notice
you so much as ever to wink. Come upon
him as he is lying asleep or sunning himself
on a mud bank, if he is aroused and
finds you between himself and the river
he will sweep you aside as you yourself
would a fly from the sugar bowl, and
then slide into his native element, and
he does this so quickly as to allow you
little time to explain that you just happened
there and had no designs on him
whatever.</p>
<p>At other times you might think you are
stepping out onto a sunken log imbedded
in the mud, but find that the log suddenly
gets very much alive, for under
that slimy mud and grass an alligator
was taking a sitz bath. You might have
walked all around him with impunity,
but walking on him is an indignity he
resents quickly—so quickly that it is a
question whether you get back to safety
or are served up for the alligator’s dinner.
Sometimes you may see an alligator
lying motionless just under the surface
of the water, with his long snout protruding.
His jaws are open far enough to
allow the flow of the current through
them, and when a stray fish or other
tid-bit comes along with that flow, the
jaws snap down on it. He can be seen
keeping his trap thus set for hours at a
time. Should you row near in order to
watch him, he will not seem to pay the
least attention to you if you behave yourself;
but if you drop an oar or shout at
him he will drop down out of sight and
lie low waiting to see what you are really
up to. Now, if you will remain perfectly
quiet as to motion, but will imitate the
barking of a puppy, the squealing of a
pig, or the caw of a crow, although there
was not an alligator in sight, you will
soon see several snouts appear, and gradually,
if you keep up the call, the alligators
will come near and nearer, in
curiosity as to what the call means. A
half dozen or more will be nosing about
the boat, and you have a good chance to
observe them closely—if your nerves can
stand it. This sport is exceedingly dangerous,
for if the boat should bump an
alligator on the nose, straightway all
would make common cause and reduce
the offending boat into splinters; and that
the occupant of the boat should escape
would be next to impossible.</p>
<p>When the female alligator wishes to
build her nest, she selects a dry place,
open to the rays of the sun, yet near to
water. She commences her nest by scraping
together a lot of dry leaves, grass or
other trash, until she has a round, compact
bed as large as a cartwheel. On this
she deposits her eggs. This done, she
proceeds to cover them up by going
round and round the nest and, with her
body pushing more leaves and trash over
the eggs. A well made nest is of the
shape of a hay-cock, and very nearly so
large. The nest completed, the alligator
goes off to the nearby water, and leaves
the sun to do the hatching. Many differ
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">232</span>
as to the time it takes for the eggs to
hatch, as much depends on the construction
of the nest, and also on the heat of
the sun. So, also, many differ as to
the number of eggs a female will lay in
one season. Some aver that eighty is
the average number, but the writer has
never found more than forty in one nest.</p>
<p>Alligator eggs are white, oblong in
shape, about three inches and a half in
length, and have a ring around the middle.
When first hatched the little fellows
are red and black spotted and
striped. They are exceedingly lively,
and, as soon as hatched, make straight
for the water—apparently in search of
the protecting care of their mammy—but
they often come back to sun themselves
about the old nest.</p>
<p>The male alligator is a cannibal, and
will eat his own young if he finds them.
For this reason the female selects a
place far from the usual haunts of her
spouse when she prepares for maternal
cares by building her nest. And she
stays with her babies until she thinks
they are capable of wiggling away from
dangers themselves.</p>
<p>When in Florida many of the winter
tourists secure these little alligators and
take them North to keep them as pets.
As they are exceedingly slow in growing,
they make “little” and “cunning” pets for
many years. When they get to be “big
fellows,” they had best be dispensed with.</p>
<p>Although the alligator has long been
considered one of the despised species
of animals, or reptiles, it is far from
being a useless one—though its use is
only practical after it has been killed.
One may say that there is no good alligator
but a dead one, but one may qualify
the remark by adding that the dead one
is very good, indeed, for commercial purposes.</p>
<p>There is a great demand for alligator
hides, and good prices are being paid
for them. Consequently the hunting of
alligators for the sake of their hides, and
the preparing of them for shipment is a
profitable industry. Then the tanning of
these hides and, finally, the making of the
leather into trunks, valises, purses, etc.,
makes three distinct industries due to the
alligators.</p>
<p>Those making a business of hunting
alligators generally take the night time
for it, and the darker the night, the better.</p>
<p>Two men, provided with a light, easy-going
skiff, a good rifle, an ax, and a
bull’s eye lantern fastened to the forehead
of one of the hunters, start out together.
One man—the one with the lantern—sits
in the bow of the boat; it is
his business to “shine the eyes” of any alligator
who might come within the radius
of the light. The eyes of the game will
shine like two balls of fire, and if the
man is careful to make no unnecessary
movements, and his partner is careful
to scull the boat steadily and silently, they
can get so near the game as to almost
touch it.</p>
<p>The man in the bow holds, from the
very start, the rifle ready for a quick shot.
This shot comes so suddenly and so unexpectedly
to the alligator, that, quick
as he generally is, he falls a prey to his
prolonged curiosity as to the nature of
that approaching light.</p>
<p>The hunters must be so expert at their
trade that as soon as the shot has been
fired the man who did the shooting must
lean over and grasp the alligator by the
tail, pull him half way over the gunnel
of the boat and hold him there for the
quick cut with the ax in the back, which
his partner must be, by this time, prepared
to strike. All this is done far
quicker than it can be told; so quickly
is it done that often the alligator is
killed by the ax only, and it is found that
the bullet had never struck him, and he
had only been either stunned, or so demoralized
as to forget his own power.</p>
<p>This cut in the back, severing the vertebrae,
places the alligator entirely hors
de combat. There is even no flopping
about in the bottom of the boat where he
is then thrown. Now the hunters are
ready to proceed on to their next capture.</p>
<p>The morning generally finds the hunters
with their boat loaded, and they are
glad of a short rest and—breakfast.
There then remains but the task of skinning
their game and salting the hides
down in barrels, ready for shipment.</p>
<p><span class="lr"><span class="sc">Leo L. Stratner.</span></span></p>
<div class="fig"> id="fig8"> <ANTIMG src="images/i12507.jpg" alt="" width-obs="500" height-obs="697" /> <p class="caption">DANDELION. <br/>(Taraxacum taraxacum). <br/><span class="small">FROM TRIMEN’S MEDICINAL PLANTS.</span></p>
</div>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_235">235</div>
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