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Something prehistoric does arise approaching Mother Gator's birthing mound. Reptilian brain, primordial pair of eyes see naught but food or danger looking 'round at local parents, tourists, kids, and I as we stare back in awe.  We hear the sound of striped-back alligator babies' cries, seeking out the warmth of higher ground. We move to see them better. Her cold stare and shift in murky water lets us know that not by grace of boardwalk are we there, but her ancestral patience.  As I go, I turn once more to see her lying where she has been since a million years ago.
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Jan 23, 2011
Jan 23, 2011 at 8:28 PM UTC
Sawgrass Lake
Something prehistoric does arise approaching Mother Gator's birthing mound. Reptilian brain, primordial pair of eyes see naught but food or danger looking 'round at local parents, tourists, kids, and I as we stare back in awe.  We hear the sound of striped-back alligator babies' cries, seeking out the warmth of higher ground. We move to see them better. Her cold stare and shift in murky water lets us know that not by grace of boardwalk are we there, but her ancestral patience.  As I go, I turn once more to see her lying where she has been since a million years ago.
I have dinosaurs living a quarter-mile from my house...how cool is that? 1/24/2011 JMF
joel-m-frye
Written by
American
Jan 23, 2011
Jan 23, 2011 at 8:28 PM UTC
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