Alligator Pulled From NYC Lake Had Swallowed Bathtub Stopper – AP News
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I’m such a sucker for cartoony animation in games. I’ll play anything that looks like it’s been lovingly hand-drawn and bonus points if the animation is deece. Later Alligator is one such game I picked up for that very reason as the goofy gators in the game’s trailer and screenshots initially caught my attention. The animation is great for sure, but one thing I was not expecting is how funny and utterly charming this point-and-click adventure is.
A MAN who hid in a swamp for three days after an alligator bit his arm off has told how he thought he was dead.
Eric Merda, 43, wrestled with the reptile and was dragged underwater three times before it suddenly vanished again.
Eric Merda miraculously survived his grapple with an alligator before getting lost in the wilderness for three days[/caption]
The beast tried to drag him into a death roll before yanking his arm off[/caption]
It had gone away with his arm, up to just above the elbow, in its jaws in July.
Eric, who was visiting Lake Manatee Fish Camp in Myakka City, Florida, desperately tried to escape by swimming back to where he’d entered the water.
But he soon realised he had got lost in the huge lake and was very far from wherever he entered and his days-long survival mission began.
Eric admitted he was not in a fit state of mind when he got in the water, and officers found cannabis and a bottle of whisky in his van after the ordeal.
He had been in the water for several hours before he was attacked. He had also stripped off because his clothes clothes were weighing him down.
He then saw the eye of an alligator which was moving silently alongside him on his right. Before he could do anything his jaws clamped down on his arm and snapped his elbow.
He told The Daily Mail: “Everything turned black for half a second. It was like lightning striking. I thought I was dead for sure.
But he managed to wrap his other arm around the alligator and kicked as it tried to pull him under. When it suddenly left, he desperately tried to find a way out.
He said: “I was scared to death. All I was thinking was that it was coming back for me.
“Every time I felt my feet touch colder water, I would just lose it because it meant this was deeper water where the alligator might be.
“I remember thinking ‘There’s no way that this is real. My arm is gone. I don’t have an arm anymore! I have to be dreaming or something’.”
He desperately tried to find the shore but it was hours until he made it to an area of thick swamp grass where he could sleep for a night.
He then climbed a tree to try get some higher ground and spend hours waving at any plane overhead.
He said: “It would have been really easy to just lie there and die.”
But he kept working his way around the edge of the swamp trying to find where he entered from with his raw, red stump.
It had stopped bleeding by flies were clustered around it and red ants were attacking his back.
And at times he saw an alligator’s head rise above the surface of the water before sinking again. He said: “I felt it was waiting for me.”
He slept on a small slab on concrete on the water’s edge the second night. And the next day he carried on trying to get out of the swamp before he realised he was going in circles.
He estimated he had covered just 100 yards by the fourth day. He said: “It was really hard. I was buck naked, beat up and cut up.
“There were a lot of times I couldn’t keep going . . . but I just kept pushing and pushing.”
He eventually found an empty beer bottle that meant he was near civilisation, and soon enough he saw his van and a man parked nearby.
Within half an hour emergency services arrived. He spent three weeks in a local hospital and had to have more of his arm amputated from where it became infected.
An alligator trapper later caught two specimens in the lake, six and nine feet long.
Merda, who is now considering a career as a motivational speaker, said: “Fear is a good thing.”
He had been visiting Lake Manatee Fish Camp in Florida when he took a fateful swim[/caption]
UKRAINIAN marksmen are using one of the most powerful rifles ever made — the Snipex Alligator.
It can fire a 14.5mm bullet over ranges of more than four miles.
And the target is struck with almost 12 tons of energy — a force powerful enough to obliterate body armour.
The Ukrainian-made weapon, used against Russian troops and helicopters, can also penetrate vehicle armour over an inch thick at closer range.
The rifle only came into use with the Ukrainian Army in 2021 and British special forces have been teaching recruits how to use the weapon in combat.
Ukrainian troops are using the weapon to target enemy soldiers and light-armoured vehicles, communications equipment, and ammunition and fuel dumps.
READ MORE ON THE UKRAINE WAR
The soldiers equipped with the rifle, some of whom are women, have also been used to target helicopters in flight and aircraft parked on the ground.
Reports have suggested that the rifle was used with deadly effect by soldiers from the Ukrainian Azov brigade during the defence of the city of Mariupol earlier this year.
To reduce the enormous recoil, the rifle has been fitted with a muzzle brake, a device usually found on tanks and artillery field guns.
The rifle has also been fitted with a recoil isolator to dampen the kick back so that it does not damage the sniper’s shoulder.
The current standing world record for a long-range sniper kill is 3,540 meters, made by a Canadian special operations sniper in Iraq in 2017.
The Alligator could achieve a similar distance but most shots taken between 3,500 and 7,000 meters would likely be harassing fire or directed against a large area target, like a communications or logistics unit.