Gator tale beats any local yarn
Sure, we’ve had our share. We’ve had the invasion of the giant squid,
the attack of the black jellyfish, the honking sea lions, and a rabid
bat in West Newport.
But in the strange animal stories race, Harbor City wins going
away. You would probably have a hard time finding Harbor City, and
I’ll bet it’s been quite a while since you’ve been there, as in,
never. If you must know, Harbor City is not a city but an area of Los
Angeles just off the Harbor Freeway (110), about halfway between the
San Diego Freeway (405) and San Pedro.
On August 12, some folks relaxing near Machado Lake in Harbor
Regional Park noticed something in the water that looked a lot like
an alligator. After a lot of double takes, pointed fingers and
nervous jokes, everyone agreed the thing gliding around the edge of
the lake was definitely an alligator.
The first people notified of the big thing in the lake were two
park workers, who took one look at the alligator and said this was a
job for the park ranger, who took one look at it and said this was a
job for animal control.
The people at animal control disagreed. Michelle Roache, who
supervises the Harbor Animal Shelter in San Pedro and is also in
charge of understatement, told the Daily Breeze, “Our animal
regulation department does not have this kind of expertise.”
Kristi Navarro, a technician at a shelter, was more candid.
“They called me up like I’m going to catch it,” she said to a
Daily Breeze reporter.
As hours became days, the alligator wasn’t just attracting
attention -- he was attracting a crowd.
Harbor City is very bilingual, and the gator was quickly given two
names -- Harbor Park Harry or Carlito. The media turned out in force.
People started showing up from far and wide, some from other states,
which creates the biggest danger in these types of situations. There
were T-shirt vendors, who were selling “You’ll Never Catch Me”
T-shirts in English and Spanish. With a crowd in the hundreds camped
out in lawn chairs and sleeping bags around the lake, the city put up
a temporary fence, to protect the alligator as much as the people.
Prior to that, Carlito’s fans had been tossing him tortillas, French
bread, popcorn and a few jelly doughnuts.
Getting desperate, the city put out a call for an alligator
hunter, which can be hard to find in L.A.
They found one in Colorado named Jay Young, who was pretty cocky
when he blew into town. Young, 31, was all over the news for days,
sporting a Crocodile Dundee hat and lecturing reporters about
alligators versus crocodiles versus caimans (smallish alligator types
from South America) and how he was the premier alligator wrangler in
the country.
For two days, with the world watching, Young and his partners
scooted around the lake in powerboats, dangling raw chickens behind
them and trying to set out fishing nets just so. Not only was Carlito
unimpressed, he looked a little amused, at one point chewing through
the net like a hot knife through butter.
“We had him in the net,” Young said, according to a KNBC-TV,
Channel 4, report. “But the boats weren’t able to pull the net around
to close it off to get him trapped.”
Yeah, that’s it.
Young said he had to head home for a prior engagement but hoped to
be back. Answer me this: If someone is the premier alligator wrangler
in the country, what are they doing in Colorado?
Getting more desperate, the city moved on from Colorado to
Florida, hiring Tim Williams and his crew from a reptile theme park
in Orlando called Gatorland. Williams was even cockier than Jay
Young, referring to himself as the “dean of gator wrestling” and his
crew as the “alligator A-Team.”
“We’re not going anywhere till we got a gator on us,” Williams
told a Los Angeles Times reporter.
Apparently, Carlito missed that part, because Williams and the
A-team packed up and headed back to Florida on Saturday afternoon
when the city called off the search.
“We are considering this halftime,” Williams told the reporter
from The Times. “He’s won the first half.”
Yeah, that’s it -- halftime.
For the time being, the city says the fence stays up and park
personnel will watch the lake around the clock. So far, the tab has
come to $50,000, between overtime, fencing, and the lizard pros from
Colorado and Florida.
Now what? We’re done with the experts, send in the politicians.
“My goal is to as quickly as possible catch him safely and alive,”
Los Angeles Councilwoman Janice Hahn, whose district Carlito is
dissing, said to The Times. “I need to return the shoreline back to
the people.”
I’m sorry, Janice, I was distracted. I think I see Carlito in the
background basking in the sun and gesturing for more chicken.
So where did Carlito come from? Colorado Springs? Boca Raton?
Adventure Land? No, no and no.
He came from right next door. Wednesday, following up on a tip,
police arrested two San Pedro men, Anthony Brewer, 36, and Todd
Natow, 42, on suspicion of possessing illegal exotic animals. At
Brewer’s house, police allegedly found two snapping turtles, three
small alligators, four piranhas, one rattlesnake, three desert
tortoises, six desert tortoise eggs, one scorpion and six marijuana
plants.
Apparently, Carlito was eating the two men out of house and home,
and the turtles, the piranhas and the rattlesnake weren’t too crazy
about him either. They all took a vote, with the three small
alligators abstaining to avoid even the appearance of a conflict, and
the big boy had to go.
The final irony is that the alligator’s name isn’t Carlito. It’s
Reggie. His feelings are hurt over being dumped in a city lake like
an old beer bottle, and he’s too upset to discuss it right now. But
he did enjoy the alligator experts from Colorado and Florida and
hopes they’ll be back.
It all reminds me of something my grandmother must have told me a
thousand times: “The animals are our friends, but don’t get too
chummy with an alligator named Carlito from Harbor City.”
I gotta go.
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