A 6-foot alligator was removed from a Sarasota storm drain this morning

"Hey, Georgie! Aren't you gonna say hello?"

click to enlarge A 6-foot alligator was removed from a Sarasota storm drain this morning
Photo via Sarasota County Sheriff's Office


Deputies with the Sarasota County Sheriff’s Department said a 6-foot alligator had to be removed from a storm drain Monday morning.

According to a social media post from the Sarasota County Sheriff’s Department, the gator was stuck in a Cerromar Terrace storm drain in South Venice, and was freed after deputies lifted the cement slab to help it escape. 

The Sarasota County Sheriff’s Office said a trapper was called but didn’t respond, so the gator was released. 


It’s not unusual to find Florida alligators looking for holes in the ground to get warm, especially this time of year, says the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission. When temps get below 70 degrees Fahrenheit, gators will stop feeding, and if temps get below 55 degrees Fahrenheit they’ll go totally dormant. 

“Alligators are dormant throughout much of the winter season,” says the FWC. “During this time, they can be found in burrows (or "dens") that they construct adjacent to an alligator hole or open water, but they occasionally emerge to bask in the sun during spells of warm weather.”  

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