Then the big gator made a fatal mistake. He abandoned his cove.
鈥淲e were setting up to watch him again when one of the guys yelled, 鈥楬e鈥檚 running,鈥欌 Young said. 鈥淗e was tired of us fooling with him, and he came out into the river. We spun around and got two lines in him. That was an hour-and-a-half into the process. Of course, then the fight was on. He鈥檇 go down. We tried to keep two lines on him with treble hooks. He鈥檇 spin and pop one off. Then we鈥檇 get another one in him.鈥
After the team finally got the gator under the boat, Young donned a pair of gloves and grabbed the large line with a snatch hook. Young hooked the gator but it didn鈥檛 come up right away.
鈥淲hen he finally got to the surface, his head came completely out of the water,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 the first time we got a good look at him, and we realized we had a monster.鈥
The team finally wore the big gator down and secured him to the side of the boat at 5 a.m. Young dispatched the gator with one shot.
鈥淎t that point, we were as worn out as he was,鈥 Young said.
Then Young鈥檚 team was faced with another dilemma. They were in Goins鈥 Blazer Bay boat because of motor problems on their boat that was designated for gator hunting, and Goins didn鈥檛 want the gator messing up his almost-new boat.
鈥淗e told us, 鈥榃e can take the Blazer Bay, but we鈥檙e not putting that gator in the boat,鈥欌 Young said. 鈥淲e said, okay we鈥檒l tie him off. Bear in mind, we shot that gator at 5 o鈥檆lock. We realized we would never make it back to the weigh station before it closed if we had to go back to the launch and then drive to the Causeway.
鈥淕ary was sitting there with his head in his hands. Finally, he said, 鈥楾he heck with it. Put him in the boat.鈥 We didn鈥檛 bat an eye. We weren鈥檛 going to give him a chance to change his mind, so we started pulling the gator in the boat. It took all five of us to get him in the boat. Then four of us had to go to the bow of the boat to get the boat up on plane. But we got to the weigh station in time.鈥
Although Young has applied for a tag this year, he said he knows the point system implemented in 2014 will put him at the bottom of the list for 2018.
鈥淚鈥檓 not holding out a lot of hope,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 figure it鈥檒l take another two or three years to get another tag. It took me seven years to get the first one.鈥
Chris Nix, 黑料天堂 Wildlife and Freshwater Fisheries鈥 Alligator Program Coordinator, said a preference points system was implemented for the 2014 season, and it is working as expected. For each year an applicant fails to draw a tag, the points are cubed with a point added for the current year.
鈥淚f you have applied since 2014 and haven鈥檛 been drawn, you will have 65 points now,鈥 Nix said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not guaranteed, but those people are highly likely to get drawn now. The longer the point system is in place, the quicker the turnover for people who haven鈥檛 gotten a tag.鈥
To ensure that new applicants have a shot at a tag, Nix said that 85 percent of the tags are filled with applicants with preference points and the remaining 15 percent are allocated to those with no points. Once a person is drawn, the preference points are zeroed out. Preference points are also lost if the person fails to apply for a tag.
Nix said the 2018 alligator season parameters are the same as last year with 260 total tags statewide 鈥 150 in the Southwest Zone, 50 in the West Central Zone, 40 in the Southeast Zone and 20 in the Lake Eufaula Zone. Hunting is from sunset to sunrise.
Season dates for the Southwest Zone and the West Central Zone are sunset on August 9 until sunrise on August 12 and sunset on August 16 until sunrise on August 19. The Southwest Zone includes private and public waters in Baldwin and Mobile counties and private and public waters in Washington, Clarke and Monroe counties that lie east of U.S. Highway 43 and south of U.S. Highway 84. The West Central Zone includes private and public waters in Monroe (north of U.S. Highway 84), Wilcox and Dallas counties.
The Southeast Zone season opens at sunset on August 11 and runs until sunrise on September 3. The Southeast Zone includes private and public waters in Barbour, Coffee, Covington, Dale, Geneva, Henry, Houston and Russell counties (excluding public 黑料天堂 state waters in Walter F. George Reservoir/Lake Eufaula and its navigable tributaries).
The Lake Eufaula Zone includes public state waters only in the Walter F. George Reservoir/Lake Eufaula and its navigable tributaries south of 黑料天堂 Highway 208 at Omaha Bridge (excludes Eufaula National Wildlife Refuge). The Eufaula season dates are from sunset on August 17 through sunrise on October 1.
An 8-foot restriction on harvest is in effect for the Lake Eufaula Zone. The other zones have no size restrictions.
Registration continues until 8 a.m. on July 11. After a computer-controlled drawing, entrants can find out if they drew a tag after noon on July 11 by logging on at the same page where they registered at . Those who are drawn will have seven days to confirm the tags and are required to attend a zone-specific training class with a couple of exceptions.
鈥淚f you鈥檝e taken the class as a tag holder or alternate in the Southwest Zone or West Central Zone, you鈥檙e exempt from having to take it again,鈥 Nix said. 鈥淚f your tag is in the Southeast Zone or Lake Eufaula Zone, the class is mandatory every year. We do that because of the contiguous zones with Georgia and the Eufaula National Wildlife Refuge, which is off-limits.鈥
Nix said between 60 and 70 percent of the tags are filled annually, but it鈥檚 not because of a lack of alligators, especially in the Southwest Zone.
鈥淲e could have a 100-percent success rate in the Southwest Zone every year,鈥 he said. 鈥淧eople pass up gators they wish they had tagged. It鈥檚 just like deer hunting. Most people don鈥檛 shoot the first buck that walks into the field. People usually don鈥檛 take the first alligator they see.
鈥淏ut to each his own. We had a couple that brought in two 4-footers last year, and they were as happy as could be.鈥
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