Washington Post, by Cleve R.
Wootson, Jr. 9/10/17
A great egret rides an alligator
at Gatorland theme park outside Orlando. (Michael DeFreitas/Alamy)
For a series of videos posted by
Gatorland to reassure people things will be OK
So here’s one less thing to worry
about:
The people who run Gatorland in Orlando have promised that their
thousands of alligators and crocodiles — not to mention their venomous snakes
and boa constrictors — will not be making a great escape during Hurricane Irma.
Protecting the people of Orlando
from any reptile-related mayhem, Gatorland officials told their Facebook
followers, are decades of experience and eight-foot fences.
“We’ve been fighting hurricanes
and big nasty storms since 1949 here at Gatorland,” said park president Mark
McHugh, speaking directly to the camera as he crouched next to a dozen or
so sunning gators. “It ain’t our first rodeo.”
The snakes and other animals are
secured via procedures prescribed by the Florida Fish and Wildlife
Conservation Commission. They’re placed in locked cages, boxes or bags, which
are placed in locked buildings. McHugh called the measures “doubly, triply
safe. None of our animals are getting out.”
The alligators and crocodiles,
meanwhile, will stay in their ponds and lakes.
“These critters have been
fighting hurricanes and big old nasty storms for about 65 million years, and
they’re quite good at it,” he said. “We just leave all our alligators in our
ponds and our lakes. They’re on their own. They just take a deep breath and
sink in the water and they weather this thing out.”
Those ponds and lakes are protected
by eight-foot fences. Another eight-foot fence surrounds the entire 110-acre
park.
As an added measure, he said, a
“small team of animal experts” will be riding out the storm in Gatorland,
“monitoring everything, keeping an eye out.”
When Irma’s winds die down,
they’ll walk the park, looking for storm damage and escapees.
“None of our animals are going
anywhere here at Gatorland, so if you see an alligator floating down your
street there at your house, it ain’t ours; don’t call us,” McHugh said.
Gatorland, which has been around
since 1949, is just one of Florida’s many unique, kitschy or just downright
bizarre attractions that try to lure tourists away from the glitzier theme
parks.
For 10 bucks, the park will let
you wrestle a nine-foot alligator. Photos cost extra. But there are
also places that offer live
mermaid shows, a park that will
reenact the crucifixion of Jesus Christ in all its bloody detail, and many, many places where
people can watch manatees do whatever it is that manatees do.
These places, often built around
fantasies, still have to cope with the real-world threats of the Category
3 storm currently churning through Florida.
The Orlando area is under a flood
and hurricane watch and is expected to get winds up to 75 mph, according
to the National Weather Service. The area could also get as much as 16
inches of rain on Sunday and Monday.
Purveyors of the small-scale
entertainment operations don’t have to look far to see how storm damage — real
or imagined — can wreak havoc on their bottom lines.
In Beaumont, Tex., for example,
another alligator-themed establishment flooded by Hurricane Harvey
is fighting a public-relations battle of sorts and trying to ensure the
public that no, its gators did not escape.
Optimistically, Gatorland in
Orlando posted that it would reopen on Tuesday, when parts of Florida will
still be feeling the hurricane’s effects.
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