Surely an omen of future events.
 
Little known but also reported:  Homerville, a small, fat pachyderm has been 
missing from the local zoo since Friday about midnight. Zookeepers heard 
grunting noises and a small voice humming "Orange and Blue".

Sent from my Verizon Wireless BlackBerry

-----Original Message-----
From: JNene <[email protected]>
Sender: [email protected]
Date: Tue, 27 Jul 2010 17:21:58 
To: GatorNews<[email protected]>
Reply-To: [email protected]
Subject: [gatornews] Feeding Frenzy

'Feeding Frenzy'
Local man records gator feeding ritual at Stephen C. Foster State Park
Ray Cason was expecting an ordinary day fishing when he dipped his
boat into the black water at Stephen C. Foster State Park last
Saturday at sunrise.
But the next few minutes proved to be anything but ordinary.
What Cason, of Homerville, witnessed, and caught on video and film, is
a rare phenomenon that some call cooperative feeding, or cooperative
fishing. In this case, hundreds of alligators congregated in the boat
basin at Stephen C. Foster State Park, near Fargo, and the canal from
the boat basin to Billy's Lake, and engaged in what Cason called "a
feeding frenzy." Cason caught the rare sight early Saturday morning,
and again early Sunday morning. The ritual only lasted about 30-to-40
minutes each morning, he said.
"It was unreal," said Cason, who filmed the gators with his digital
camera. "There were 10-foot gators with their entire bodies three feet
above the water. Gators rolling all over themselves. It was foggy that
first morning (Saturday, July 10), but I bet there were 300 gators I
saw in that boat basin and canal."
There were other witnesses as well, but it is believed Cason was the
only one who has the scene on video. Cason sent a copy of his video to
Okefenokee Wildlife Refuge officials in Folkston.
"I saw the video, but haven't been it (cooperative feeding) before
myself," said Refuge Biologist Sarah Aicher. "Others who have been
here longer said they saw it happen once around the (Suwannee River)
sill area, where there were a large congregation of mudfish, and the
alligators had a communal feeding of the mudfish. The alligators
somehow get a signal and congregate and feed. It's a mystery how they
do that."
Cason also posted Saturday's video on his Facebook page – not
anticipating the tremendous buzz it would create.
"I had two million hits on it in one day, and had 200 people I didn't
know with friend requests (so they could see the video)," said Cason.
"I had a guy from AP (Associated Press) offering me money for it. It
was too much. I finally decided to take it down. I had some colleges
call. I'll give them (the videos and photos he took) to a college or
something if they want them, but I don't want any money for it."
Cason agreed to allow The Clinch County News to post the videos on its
website (www.theclinchcountynews.com) in an effort to promote interest
in Fargo and Stephen C. Foster State Park.
There are stories of gators feeding communally in the swamp, but few
recorded on paper or film.  Noted biologist Francis Harper recounts an
instance of cooperative feeding of alligators in the swamp at Buzzard
Roost Lake, as witnessed by Allen Chesser in 1890. In one of Harper's
publications, he quoted Chesser's description of what he witnessed (in
Chesser's dialect): "These alligators, I suppose, they must a drive
all the fish out er this big lake, an' down this road (the outlet). It
'us in between daylight and sunrise. I heard the racket before I got
there. The alligators cared nothin' fer us. There must a been three
hundred uv 'em."
Chesser also tells about witnessing large gators jumping out of the
water, and biting each other.
Cason's account is very similar.
Arriving at sunrise, Cason put his boat in at the basin and heard
splashing, but couldn't see far due to the fog. Once in, he said there
were an estimated 150 alligators in the boat basin. He said a man from
Douglas was behind him, putting his boat in at the same time.
"It looked like they (the gators) were rounding the fish up and
cornering them in the boat basin, and also pushing them into the
bank," Cason said. "I saw one gator with another gator in his mouth.
It was a feeding frenzy. I've never seen anything like it."
Cason said he wasn't scared that the gators would flip his boat, and
went on fishing once he got outside the canal, where the gator ruckus
was happening.
"The water level was low, and I guess something just went off in their
heads that they were going to starve," said Cason. "Male gators don't
like each other, and some of those gators were 12- to 13-feet long, so
they were males. It would be interesting to find out what tripped it."
Despite the image of 300 gators converging in one area for a fish
feast, Aicher said visitors have little reason to fear coming to the
swamp.
"This wasn't a sign that the world is exploding or anything like
that," Aicher said Monday. "It's still safe to canoe through the
swamp, and fish in the swamp. It's just an isolated incident, and a
very interesting one."
 http://www.theclinchcountynews.com/v2/content.aspx?ID=23750&MemberID=1340

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-- 
GATORS: ONE VOICE ON SATURDAY - NO VOICE ON SUNDAY!
1996 National Football Champions   |   2006 National Basketball Champions
2006 National Football Champions   |   2007 National Basketball Champions
2008 National Football Champions   |   
Three Heisman Trophy winners: Steve Spurrier (1966), Danny Wuerffel (1996),
Tim Tebow (2007) - Visit our website at www.gatornet.us

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