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Alligator captured in Charles River

Posted by Martin Finucane  September 10, 2010 01:41 PM
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alligator_on_Charles_091010.jpg

Topher Cox Photography


A sight that could spice up any trip down the Charles River. Look closely and you'll see the 4-foot-long alligator on the log.

Ah, the pleasures of canoeing on the majestic Charles River. The splash of the paddle in the water, the geese flapping through the air, the turtles and fish finning their way through the water, the alligator sunning itself on a log.

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PHOTO GALLERY

Whoa, hold on there. An alligator?

Yes, an alligator.

An alligator spotted Thursday by a canoeist paddling on the Charles River was captured this morning, state officials said.

The reptile was captured at about 6:30 a.m. by a specialist from Rainforest Reptile Shows in Beverly, said Wendy Fox, a spokeswoman for the Department of Conservation and Recreation.

Topher Cox, 38, of Needham, an advertising photographer, said this morning that he had bought a canoe on craigslist.org and was taking it out for a spin Thursday afternoon when he saw the alligator, which he estimated was about four feet long, on the river off of Needham Street in Dedham near the Needham line.

Cox took a picture with his cellphone, then maneuvered closer.

"I thought it was fake at first. ... But I bumped the log and, sure enough, it jumped on into the water," said Cox.

Cox admitted he was a little bit afraid. "Of course," he said. "There's an alligator in the water, albeit not huge."

Cox called 911 on his cellphone and once people figured out that he was serious, the Dedham police dispatched officers, and the Needham animal control officer also responded. An expert from Rainforest Reptile searched Thursday afternoon, then returned to the spot this morning, eventually grabbing the animal with his bare hands, Cox said.

Michael Ralbovsky, herpetologist and general curator for Rainforest Reptile, said his company does educational animal demonstrations for children and adults and works with the state Environmental Police when animals like this need to be retrieved from the wild.

He said there had been sightings of the animal as early as Saturday, but previous searches had been unsuccessful. On Thursday, after Cox sighted it, the Needham animal control officer kept her eyes on it until he arrived on the scene.

The animal slipped away, but Ralbovsky knew it would return, seeking warm sun this morning, so he was out on the water at daybreak, he said.

"He set up house right in that area. I knew we were going to be able to find him," he said.

Ralbovsky said he reached into the water and grabbed the alligator by the neck. The animal didn't fight much because it was cold.

Ralbovsky said somebody who owned the alligator had turned it loose illegally. The animal was healthy and will now be used in Rainforest Reptile shows until it gets too large -- it's expected to grow to 12 feet long -- when it will be transferred to an alligator farm in Texas or Florida, he said.

For Cox, who will be shooting a bank ad in Maine next week, it was a unique experience.

"I certainly wasn't expecting to see an alligator that day and I don't know that I'll ever be paddling down the Charles and see one again," said Cox. "So I feel pretty honored to have seen this animal close up."

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