|
"This has kind of kept me attached," she says in a quiet moment. "It's helped with the grief." She said she still hears Billy's voice in her head: "Be careful. Treat every alligator like it was the first you ever caught." She's never been bitten nor even had a close call, she says. The same day Harter was called to rescue the garbage-truck guys, she didn't even change out of her flip-flops to snag a 4-foot alligator from a woman's front doorstep. This one apparently wandered away from a neighborhood pond in one of the many newer subdivisions that sprawl north of Tampa. At the next stop, Melissa Ainsworth nearly hugs Harter just for showing up. An alligator has been crawling out of the pond in back of her house and sunning in the yard. The other day, Ainsworth's 5-year-old daughter wandered outside and there it was, just a few feet away. "I've been living it, sleeping it, dreaming about it," Ainsworth says. "You could say I'm paranoid." After catching the gator on a hook baited with beef lung, Harter drags it ashore, tapes the mouth shut, binds the legs and drags the thing by the tail out to the truck.
This one is 6 feet, 3 inches -- "a nasty teenager," Harter says. Before she puts it in the cage with the others, she chats with folks who have gathered with their cell phone cameras. She lets some of the kids touch the alligator's rough black hide. Ainsworth hugs her and calls her a hero. "Girl power!" Ainsworth shouts as Harter climbs back in her truck. The alligator lady, inspecting her freshly pedicured toenails for damage as she exchanges work shoes for the preferred flip-flops, just smiles.
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
News | Sports | Business | Rural Review | Teaching & Learning | Home and Family | Tourism | Obituaries
Community |
Perspectives
|
Law & Courts |
Leisure Time
|
Spiritual Life |
Health & Fitness |
Teen Scene
Calendar
|
Letters to the Editor