Went to look at Bonnet again this past weekend after the workshop, didn't see a gator, but we did clearly see a beaver swimming around underwater. So for those canadians that are afraid of beavers....
Printable View
Went to look at Bonnet again this past weekend after the workshop, didn't see a gator, but we did clearly see a beaver swimming around underwater. So for those canadians that are afraid of beavers....
So... let me get this straight- cave divers are all about "conservation" and "preservation" as long as it only applies to rocks, mud and water. But when it comes to a contest between cave divers getting to dive in a particular site vs. relocating (or as one poster has suggested) exterminating the native wildlife, the cave divers want their access, wildlife be damned. Have I got that right? Because that sure is what it sounds like from perusing this thread.
There are no springs or other natural gator habitats in back yards (usually).
The fact is, the gators are there, and always have been. If you've been diving the the Florida springs more than a handful of times, you've been in the water with them. Just because you didn't see them doesn't mean they weren't there. The ocean has sharks; the springs have gators. It's a fact of life. This is nothing to get excited about.
Brian
soooooo
clear water and the gator is gone. who do I talk to to get in the water? used to be janet didn't it?
Apparently the gator hides, but I dunno if anyone has actually spent any time actually confirming the gator is indeed hiding at this point, or has moved on...