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TABLE OF CONTENTS
GATORS
Page 1 (You are on Page 1): Crocodile Postcards, TOOTH NECKLACES, PAINTED gator TEETH, TOE necklaces, Mardi Gras gator head necklaces,
Tooth EARRINGS, Gator photos (#G-110 to G-190) Page 2 Gator skulls, Nile Crocodile skulls, Saltwater Crocodile skull, Gator taxidermy heads; SOLD Gallery: taxidermy Nile Crocodile heads, Monster gator skull, Baby and Preemie Gator skulls (#Lot-100 series, #G-LOT-85 to G-207) Page 3 Loose gator tooth sets, Gator hat bands, Loose gator teeth for sale (#G-370 to G-376) Page 4 Gator Taxidermy Full Body Mounts, Vintage Caiman alligator taxidermy; gator hide rugs (as shown above), Gator backs, Gator skeletons, Gator tongues, Gator hide scraps, Gator cloacas, Gator vertebrae bones, Gator jawbones, Wall mounts, photos Golf gator mounts, Gator skeleton display, Photos(Internal #G-400 to G-499) Page 5 Gator Skutes, Gator Oosik (penis) key chains (#G-500 to G-555) Page 6 Gator foot pouch, Gator foot backscratchers, Gator feet, Gator claws/toes, Gator foot coffee mugs, Gator tail arrow quivers, Gator skin knife sheaths & knives, , Gator jaw pens (#G-607 to GK-618) Page 7 Deformed Gator Head Collection for sale, Weird Gators Photo Gallery; Virtual Tours of Louisiana & Central Florida gator processing areas Page 8 Virtual tour of ALLIGATOR ADVENTURES, Myrtle Beach, SC Page 9 SILVER CAP gator tooth PENDANTS, Gator tooth keychains |
GATOR GATOR GATOR Jewelry Genuine American Alligator parts jewelry, entirely made in the USA.
The American Alligator is monitored by the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service, and CITES, in an effort to manage the wild and farm grown populations of this species. Licenses are issued to farming operations to legally buy eggs to raise alligators for food & hides. The heads, feet and teeth, etc. that would normally be thrown away are now made into collectible jewelry and souvenir items you can own, as a way to 100% recycle the entire animal. |
CROCODILE POSTCARDS3D postcards from Hartley Crocodile Adventures, in Wangetti (near Cairns), Queensland, Australia
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Modern Croc Crap from Australia now available - Click link to follow the trail Series #PP550 - page 5 Poop Fossils |
AUSTRALIAN SALTY CROCODILE TAIL LEATHER KEYCHAINS RINGS
Beautifully tanned brown Crocodile leather from the taiI |
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#G121-7 $20 SOLD |
Yikes! Could there be a worse place to land?
Okay, yes it's been manipulated, one photo is a parachutist, the other is of a Louisiana gator farm. It was an entry in the Unlucky Day 5 of the Photoshop Contest. Gotcha!
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Loose gator teeth on Gators page 3 Teeth start at #G-370 |
THE REPTILE WRANGLER
Updated photo August 2019, re-worked the necklace for him. https://www.reptilewrangler.net/ He commissioned this HUGE, SPECTACULAR multiple (17) gator tooth necklace from Glenn, who outdid himself as usual. Ken's comment: "Absolutely Incredible and fabulous craftsmanship, Glenn!" $750 SOLD |
Original painting by Kim Clayton, Black Water Gallery, Conway SC |
Gator dreams |
ALLIGATOR HEAD NECKLACES
EXTREMELY RARE, Extra Small 3-1/2" ALLIGATOR "Hide-On" Taxidermy HEADS necklace now available, most have iridescent glass eyes that are scary! Others are yellow or red glass eyes. Gator head has a strong steel hook on top of head, all come on a 20" black anodized aluminum chain NECKLACE, how weird is that? (see just taxidermy heads available on page 2) |
#G181-Q $49 SOLD |
MARDI GRAS GATOR HEAD NECKLACE |
#G181-100 Gator mardi gras necklace 40” long, Plastic beads in pearl, gold, purple and green Four gator heads (plastic) (13 available) $16 ea. |
GIANT FOSSIL CROCODILE HEAD
My what big teeth you have! Gavialosuchus Americanus, 5-7 million years old, excavated from the Bone Valley Formation, Phosphate Mine, Polk County, Florida. It is the LARGEST and most COMPLETE skull ever found of a crocodile, measuring 53" long x 19" wide. Here you see it at a North Carolina show with Glenn beside it. |
PRECIOUS, THE TAIL-LESS ALLIGATOR
Good customer Chelle shared with us the fact that she owns an alligator named Precious who was born with only part of a tail (due to environmental pollution that caused the birth defect). She writes: I will include an attachment that shows her when I have had her out educationally. She is currently sleeping in her winter house. I will try to go out and see if I can get any good ones.
A little about Precious (stumpy) the alligator. She was obtained by a group that received federal permission to gather some eggs from a known nesting location due to fear of illegal dumping. From what I was told they gathered 60 eggs. She was one of three born with a deformity that she could live with, although she would not have survived in the wild. Most of them were dead, others where missing parts, parts not formed or in the wrong place. There was a large company located in the area and they were dumping and were fined.
She then went to a educational Reptile organization that at the time I volunteered for. The man that "owned" her needed a place for her to go for the winter. That is where I really came into the picture. I offered to take her. When I got her it was apparent she had been not only neglected but abused. When I worked with her before he took her I could rub her head and she would make baby calls then fall asleep. She now comes to me and is lunging and trying to bite then blinking her eyes waiting to be hit. I basically told them to put a price tag on her head because they were not getting her back. That was at least nine years ago. She is now living peacefully here with us in Oklahoma.
Chelle
Tulsa County Conservation District
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RUN FOR YOUR LIVES - A GIANT GATOR HAS GOTTEN LOOSE! Is it from Lake Placid? Afraid not..this one is part of the Trading Post in Cherokee, NC. Gee we could use this at our shop! |
CROC CHOMPS ON SHARK
THERE'S no need to be scared of sharks when you're in the
Paul van Bruggen snapped these amazing pictures of a 2.5m saltie dining out on a shark on the banks of the
"We went past one section of the river and we heard some splashing. We looked across and saw a shark's tail coming up out of the water and then a crocodile's head came up and grabbed it.''
Mr van Bruggen said the crocodile knew exactly what it was doing, dragging the shark on to unfamiliar dry land before finishing off its prey. "How smart is the crocodile? It if was you or me it would be dragging you in to drown you, but it takes the shark up on dry land,'' he said. The fisherman, who was on the |
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