Mockingbird Song

(avery) #1

Theodore Roosevelt, blasting away at Amazonian fauna from a big, comfort-
able river cruiser.) As early as the s, alligators had become rare on the
St. Johns north of Lake George. Trophy hunters traveled a bit farther, then.
In  George Herman ‘‘Babe’’ Ruth descended to Florida and ‘‘bagged a
gator’’ for himself. ANew York Timesphotographer recorded the triumphal
coda: It is daytime, and Ruth, his shoes and lower trouser legs muddy
from the hunt, cradles his rifle in his right arm and stands beside his tro-
phy, an eight-and-a-half-footer, perhaps, which is hooked and roped from
its snout and suspended from a tree limb. Another man, probably Ruth’s
guide, stands on the other side, and he and Ruth hold the dead ’gator’s hind
feet outward, spread-eagle style.^13 Sad business.
It was market hunting, however, more than potshotting and the getting
of trophies that drove alligator populations nearly out of sight through-
out the South Atlantic and Gulf states by about . Tail meat is edible
by humans as well as dogs, when properly prepared, but alligator hides
were the prize commodity, for shoes and boots, belts, luggage, and hand-
bags. One December in the s, Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings’s second hus-
band, a St. Augustine hotelier, begged Marjorie for suggestions of a Christ-
mas present. She offered only one, a bag, and related later to a friend that
her husband went to ‘‘the Alligator Farm’’ (presumably the same Anastasia
Island attraction that persists today) and purchased an enormous alliga-
tor case for her gift. Rawlings, who early in her writing career in effect paid
tribute to alligators in aSaturday Evening Poststory titled ‘‘Alligators,’’ was
complicit, then, in a world market, as were millions of others. Florida at
last protected alligators by law in , and their population recovered to
an estimated  million by . Some of these are bred in captivity and dis-
played as tourist attractions in such institutions as the venerable ‘‘Farm’’ in
St. Augustine, yet others are bred for meat and hides in a market that has
revived with the amphibian population.
Most of Florida’s alligators live not in captivity yet not quite in the wild,
either. The  federal census recorded more than  million people in
the state, and demographers predicted at least another  million by .
Nearly everyone alive, it seems, Florida natives and newcomers alike, cov-
ets a home by the water. The ocean and gulf strands are more-or-less taken,
so the shores and banks of rivers, creeks, lakes, and canals—alligator habi-
tat—grow crowded. Alligators have become the problem with paradise,
and the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, which takes
complaint calls, is the stalwart mediator. Between  and , the com-


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