Sunday, July 15, 2012

An Alligator and a Kid with Spunk

A spunky 17-year-old who had his right arm partially torn from his body during a vicious alligator attack near Fort Myers in Florida. But don;t count this kid out. His positive attitude, quick thinking and survival instincts kept him alive. Now he wants the alligators head!

"I'm going to use it for a prosthetic armrest," Kaleb Langdale said in an interview. “I want his head."

The Florida teen lost his right arm below the elbow during the alligator attack. He said he survived by offering the 11-foot alligator his arm, and used the skills he learned by watching TV shows like "Swamp People" to survive the brutal attack.

"I'm glad the alligator attacked me, because if it was any of my friends, they probably would have died," he said.

Langdale said the alligator lunged at him as he tried to swim away on the Caloosahatchee River near Moore Haven. He felt the pressure of the alligator clamping down on his arm and knew the alligator had a locked grip when it started to perform a death roll. Bones cracked like twigs and all that remained of his arm was what he described as a dangling tendon.

"I still couldn't break free because I was still attached to the tendon," he said. "Then the gator did another death roll and I kicked my way out of it."

Gary Beck, a friend, said Langdale popped out of the water, screaming "call the paramedics, my arm is gone."

Langdale, who said adrenaline was flowing, managed to get to the other side of the river. His friends called 911 and he stanched the bleeding by squeezing what was left of his arm between his legs. He said when he tried to walk, he fell into a cactus. "It was there that I found spider webs that I also used to stop the bleeding,” he said. “I kept telling myself that people die when they start hyperventilating. So I kept telling myself to breath.”

He said rescuers were at the scene within minutes. He was rushed to a Fort Myers hospital, but the arm couldn't be reattached.

A Florida Fish and Wildlife spokesman said the teen's arm was still inside the 11-foot alligator when it was hunted down and killed Monday evening. Officials say it's alligator mating season and attacks are not uncommon.

Langdale, meanwhile, said he hopes to track down the alligator trapper and make an arrangement to receive its head. "You can't do this to me and get away with it," he said.

Man, that is one teenager with a hell of a lot of spunk!


Margaret, are you home?

Live Long and Prosper...

No comments: