Yeah except for the fact that the guy is lifting a gator out of the water. He should not be doing that and has since ran into trouble or at least one of his Captains has. I go to another company right next to this guy Doug. Great story about the turtles in the second link, they just don't have the capacity to recover so we have to protect them. Recently Debbie destroyed some loggerhead nests here and all the eggs were saved and watched over until they hatched and made the Gulf.
I am hoping to find a story to post for you about this guy and what happens when you feed a gator...and pay the price....
EVERGLADES CITY -
An Everglades airboat captain lost his hand after an alligator bit it off Tuesday, according to officers with Florida Fish and Wildlife.
Officials we spoke to say the victim, 63-year-old Wallace Weatherholt, works for Captain Doug's Everglades Tours in Everglades City.
An FWC spokesperson says Weatherholt put six other people's lives in danger when the attack happened just before 4 p.m.
Witness Judy Chroniak-Hatt says Weatherholt was hanging a fish over the side of the boat, and the nine-foot alligator jumped up and grabbed it, then went back into the water.
The gator jumped up again, this time getting its two front feet inside the boat, according to Chroniak-Hatt. She said she thought the reptile was going to tip the boat, which was carrying herself, two other women, two young children and Weatherholt.
She says the guide lost his hand when he was patting the water, trying to get the alligator to come up again.
"I was sitting there in the seat thinking, is this thing really biting him or is he playing a game," she says.
Chroniak-Hatt said Weatherholt stayed calm while they waited for help to arrive.
FWC crews caught and killed the alligator, then retrieved Weatherholt's hand from the animal's stomach.
The hand was sent to Naples Community Hospital, where Weatherholt was taken, but employee's at Captain Doug's said they were told the hand could not be reattached.
Weatherholt was later transferred to Tampa General Hospital.
FWC says this unfortunate incident is a reminder of why it is illegal to touch, harass or feed alligators.
"I was kind of freaked out about that because that's kind of weird," said Everglades City resident Sarah Goff. "You don't feed them. They can get used to that and get aggressive."
Weatherholt could be charged with second degree misdemeanor and face up to six months in jail if found guilty. FWC says the incident is being investigated as a criminal act.
Locals who say they know the victim told us he is a very kind man.
http://www.nbc-2.com/story/18770750/2012/06/12/airboat-captains-hand-bitten-off-by-gator