Thursday, October 19, 2006

A Long Summer Part 1

As posted on Hampton Terrace ... I guess I'm on break because I'm still mourning. Imagine that!

I agree gators are not terribly social, but a male can, or will, wander at times looking for a mate, hopefully not in a local pool or spa. Happy hour if you will and if he hits Nebraska, he will probably get run over. Thus, I am guessing we had a female. Had a nice smooth tummy and a sexy smile, but the corpse gave no obvious clues. While I don’t have a long history watching the goings on at the lake, so far, I don’t think the gator ate many, if any, ducks or ducklings. It probably got a few moorhens, but he ducklings very seldom go, or went, into the middle. Turtles, toads and frogs must make a good buffet.

Bigger problems for the lake are weeds, runoff and poop. Dog and duck poop, yard fertilizer and things like that. Some of the turtles are scary big. The Mallards tend to leave on their own, the Muscovies tend to stay. I suspect many of the ducks get their feet (flippers, paddles ????) chomped by hungry turtles, thus, almost always, limping ducks hobble around. Could be loose dogs chasing them too.

Two other duck predators are cars and (I’m guessing) humans. I suspect there is a lake vigilante at work here. Pairs of Muscovies, a Pekin, the gator and several other critters have up and mysteriously disappeared. Here one day, gone the next. Maybe it’s a well meaning person, or maybe a hungry person, I don’t know. I do know the pair of male Muscovies, which dominated here for years, vanished one night. I do think somebody intentionally killed the gator, likely with poison. I do know somebody mutilated the gator. “Who knows what evil lurks in the hearts of men?” Plenty I don’t know about that too. Seems a terrible way to go for a relatively peaceful creature. I liked watching him cruise the bank or work on that suntan.

Most of the duck types that stay and die get hit by cars or simply vanish (see above). So I don’t think the gator controls them much. The herons tend to go after some of the ducklings. The hawks eat the toads (with great effort, toads must be made of rubber). If the community would watch for Muscovy nests and shake eggs then we can keep the population small. Check your yard if you live on the lake. They are nesting NOW, so go look. That’s not so difficult to do is it? I like the Pekins and frankly want a few more. Sadly, I am told that after somebody turned loose a couple large colorful koi, one was toted off at the end of a fishing pole.

This is an unusual lake because it’s in a fairly hostile area. By hostile, I mean street runoff, car traffic, invasive weeds, and lots of people. Think of the many retention ponds that support only turtles then look at the range of creatures calling lake Roberta home. I like them all. I only wish the City of Tampa was more interested.

My vote is we are best off trying to undo the stupid human tricks (hydrilla, dog poop, killing things) and let the lake sort things out. Objectively, to me, this is not a good place for a gator because somebody will get afraid, hungry or mean and take action. So, while my vote is indifference, I will always be concerned some well meaning idiot will kill the next one. I liked em there otherwise, especially after coming to believe the gator was a very minor threat to the lakes other inhabitants. Loose dogs and apathetic dog owners are a much bigger problem than that gator ever was. Loose cats kill birds, I guess cats are cats. All that said, nobody has any real control because all it takes is one drop-off and we have a new cat, duck, dog, gator, etc. in the hood. And, if it winds up in your yard, you can probably deal with it any way you choose, as only the Shadow knows.

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home