Apparently cats, dogs and parrots are not the only ones who
have the right to benefit from a cozy home. Who says that alligators must not
walk around a house? Maybe that’s what the 8-foot, 8-inch alligator weighing
about 230 pounds was thinking when it entered Sandie Frosti’s house on 20 Evelyn Court
near Oldsmar. The reptile was seen by Frosti walking around her kitchen
At first, she thought she was hallucinating, but after
taking a second look she realized that her house was invaded by an enormous
alligator. She immediately locked herself in her bedroom and called 911. As it
was obvious, the operator also thought that this couldn’t be true and asked
Frosti whether she was sure that the reptile was not an iguana. "The lady
thought I was crazy," Frosti said.
20 minutes later the sheriff’s deputies arrived at the scene
and saw the dark green alligator. It was only after about one hour that the animal trapper
from Animal Capture came. It was quite hard to catch the alligator that had
knocked over a few things in the 12-by-8-foot kitchen, including the cover to
the garbage compactor and a heavy plate that fell from a counter and apparently
left the creature injured and bleeding.
Fortunately, nobody was injured. Sandie realized that
something was fishy after hearing some scratches from somewhere near the
kitchen. "I thought that scratching sound was much too loud to be my
cat," Frosti said. When she went in the kitchen she saw the alligator’s
head. Apparently, the reptile broke through a porch screen, crossed about 10
feet to the open door and entered the house. It traipsed across the living
room, through the dining room and into the kitchen. "The police told
me it may have been interested in my cat," Frosti said.
For a while Sandie didn’t even know whether her cat, Poe was
all right or not. Finally, while waiting outside for the trapper to arrive,
Frosti saw Poe hop on a piece of furniture in the living room.
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