INSANITY Hero neighbor saves friend from certain death by driving over 11ft alligator that had clamped onto his legs and was dragging him by the feet into a po

Macgyver

Has No Life - Lives on TB

Hero neighbor saves friend from certain death by driving over 11ft alligator that had clamped onto his legs and was dragging him by the feet into a pond​



A heroic Florida man managed to save his friend from an 11ft alligator by driving over it at speed after it clamped down on his leg and nearly dragged him into a lake.
Rick Fingeret was walking his two dogs by the lake on Quarry Drive, Collier County, on Friday night when the monster reptile surged out of the water, trapped his legs and began dragging him into the depths.
His neighbor, Walter Rudder, was driving down the road as the horror incident took place on Friday evening.

He told local media: 'I was driving and we saw a man lying on the ground, waving his arm. We pulled over and I got out of the car and saw that an alligator had him by the leg.'
Thinking quickly, Walter ran over the alligator with his car, which forced it to release its grip on Rick's legs: 'We backed the car out, and I drove over the alligator. It got loose, let go of the leg and ran off towards the pond. Then [my wife] Paula, she called 911.



Rick Fingeret was walking his two dogs by the lake on Quarry Drive, Collier County
Rick told a reporter he forced his fingers into the gator's eyes and nose, and kicked it several times to free himself.
Walter added: 'I got out of the car and I took my shirt off and wrapped it around his wound, which was near his thigh. The second wound was the calf area. He had two big dogs, which were labs, with him.

'I took a leash off of the one labs and made a tourniquet out of it, and waited for the EMT to arrive. They finally did arrive which was great, and they did a wonderful job, and that’s what took place.'
Rick, who is currently recovering in hospital and hopes to be released soon, said his two Labradors never left his side during the entire ordeal.
Floridians have been forced to deal with more and more gator attacks in recent months, with experts warning residents that as mating season approaches, they may become more aggressive and less fearful of humans.


Rick (pictured at a previous event) told a reporter he forced his fingers into the gator's eyes and nose, and kicked it several times to free himself

The attack took place on Quarry Drive in Collier County
On Sunday, a Florida MMA fighter used his bare hands to subdue an eight-foot alligator that was crawling along the streets in Jacksonville's Northside.
Mike Dragich, 34, known as the 'Blue Collar Brawler, was at a nearby hockey game with his family when he received a nuisance alligator call from the sheriff's department.

A licensed alligator trapper and military veteran, Dragich didn't have his trapping equipment with him at the game, but he responded to the call anyway, driving to a local shopping plaza, where he saw the snarling creature.
A video taken at the scene shows the alligator lumbering across the road while the trapper walks behind it in pursuit.
Dragich could be seen stalking up behind the alligator before pouncing on its back and pressing down on its neck. The irate alligator's jaws popped open, and it appeared to hiss.
The veteran then pressed the alligator's head down, applying great force until the creature's snout was flat on the ground.

Alligator encounters and attacks have increased in recent years across the US, especially in Florida and South Carolina
Pulling the gator's jaws up, Dragich deftly wrapped its mouth shut with a special tape.
After subduing the 8-foot giant, the 'Blue Collar Brawler' hoisted up the alligator and marched down the highway with the thrashing creature in his arms.

Although there has been an increase in some areas, alligator attacks in the US are still relatively rare and only a fraction of them are fatal.
Florida is known to be the home of alligators - over the last 10 years it has averaged eight fatal bites per year.
However, the number of attacks has increased by 66 percent in recent years, from six a year between 1971 and 1986, to 10 a year between 1987 and 2017.
The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC) keeps a record of 'unprovoked bite incidents' - between 1948 and November 2021, there were only 442 attacks, 26 of which resulted in human fatalities.
303 people received major injuries and 139 suffered minor injuries over this time period.
The likelihood of a Floridian being seriously injured as the result of an unprovoked attack is roughly one in 3.1 million, according to the FWC.
Experts say the recent spike is due to the drive throughout the state in recent decades to push construction developments and population - causing an inevitable increase in interactions between people and gators.
 

FNFAL1958

Senior Member
This reminds me of me of my first occurrence with a gator right after I had moved to Myrtle Beach SC, I'm from the Mountains of NC, I had walked up to a runoff pond on a job site I was visiting, and one of the workers hollered to me there's gators in that pond, I didn't believe him because I had just looked at the water and didn't see anything that even resembled a gator, another feller walks over and said step back I'll show you, he threw a hand full of gravel at the water right where I had been standing and that dang gator busted up out of that water and came up on the bank part way, he had buried himself in the mud where I couldn't see him. I learned a new thing that day, just cause you can't see it don't mean it ain't there. After that I always conceal carried a pistol when going out to jobs sites and yeah I stayed away from runoff ponds too.
 

Macgyver

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Serious question from a Prarie Dweller:

How come hunters don't just kill em all and be done with it?
I had an old coworker move to Florida. He was from the Midwest to begin with and a marine.
He hated them with a passion.
Used to plink them in the eyes with a suppressed 22. Said shoot them out in the water awaze so the floated away.
 

packyderms_wife

Neither here nor there.
At one time alligators were nearly extinct and they need to hunt them back to those levels again.

It is not just a problem in Florida check anywhere in the southeast.

I was watching a reel on FB that had been ported over from TikTok, someone had a run in with one in southeastern Oklahoma last week, not far from Texarkana, AR, and it was a big one. DNR is saying it was someone's pet, don't know if it was or not but it sure looked hungry.
 

Publius

TB Fanatic
The gator may be dead from being run over by a car, but having gone off into the lake they may not know unless the body is seem floating later.
 

Raggedyman

Res ipsa loquitur
Serious question from a Prarie Dweller:

How come hunters don't just kill em all and be done with it?
HUGE fines in FL to pop one. also protected behind a very short season, strict limits and a lottery to get your tag. we used to sit on the dock behind the house in the evening with a .22 . . . toss some cheap kibble in the water and pop the gar fish that came up for it . . . the occasional gator was ALWAYS permitted a pass. simply too big a risk

back in the day I had a deer lease just off of Okeechobee. several in the ponds down there. those didn't seem to fare so well and several of them succumbed to 168gr BTHP's . . . after all - they had to be kept from snatching our piggies.
 

momma_soapmaker

Disgusted
Serious question from a Prarie Dweller:

How come hunters don't just kill em all and be done with it?
It's illegal to hunt them here in Arkansas without a special permit, if memory serves. Louisiana has gator season, but you have to get tags. Once they're filled, you're done. Hefty fines for taking one otherwise.

Watch " Swamp People" on the History channel for more information.

Choot 'em!
 

FMJ

Technical Senior
Texas needs to import them for the water that separates them from Mexico. It would help Florida ya know!

Shadow
Now that right there is a really good idea. Add anything about an endangered species or improving habitat and it would fly. Gators might get awful big with a never-ending food supply like that. I heard they never stop growing, they just level out with the available calories.
 

Alligator Shoes For Blonde​


A young blonde was on vacation in the depths of Louisiana. She wanted a pair of genuine alligator shoes in the worst way, but was very reluctant to pay the high prices the local vendors were asking.
After becoming very frustrated with the “no haggle” attitude of one of the shopkeepers, the blonde shouted, “Maybe I’ll just go out and catch my own alligator so I can get a pair of shoes at a reasonable price!”
The shopkeeper said, “By all means, be my guest. Maybe you’ll luck out and catch yourself a big one!” Determined, the blonde turned and headed for the swamps, set on catching herself an alligator.
Later in the day, the shopkeeper was driving home, when he spotted the young woman standing waist deep in the water, shotgun in hand. Just then, he saw a huge 9-foot alligator swimming quickly toward her. She took aim, killed the creature, and with a great deal of effort hauled it on to the swamp bank. Lying nearby were several more of the dead creatures. The shopkeeper watched in amazement. Just then the blonde flipped the alligator on its back, and frustrated, shouts out, “Damn it, this one isn’t wearing any shoes either!”
 
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