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He casts his weighted, hooked line into the water, just over where the gator is believed to be, and yanks hard, snagging the reptile's scaly skin. Then comes the hard work of reeling in the beefy animal, pulling it close enough to shore to get a noose-like rope around its neck and wrangling it onto land. The gator is then bound, its toothy mouth clamped shut, and loaded into the back of a truck. The process is repeated until the waters are safe for divers. As part of his payment, Burlew gets to keep the gators he catches to sell for meat and hides. Once the water is clear, Updike's job begins. On one such day, that entails installing submerged devices to measure the velocity of water flowing through the canal system's culverts. "If a gator should invade our territory while we're in the water, we'll come out ... and the trapper will take the alligator out, and then we'll get back in the water and finish our job," says Updike, who is in constant radio contact with team members on the canal banks. They have rifles nearby in case an unseen gator attacks, but they've never had to shoot. No diver has ever been seriously injured. Still, after 32 years in the water, Updike says "there's no telling what you might see in a day's work out here."
[Associated
Press;
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