Discovering Louisiana Alligator Tour Near New Orleans

By Laura Smith


When visiting New Orleans, there are a lot activities, sight-seeing tours and awesome restaurants. Whereas, party lovers often love to make an annual trip to Mardi Gras each year. While this is the case, a ghostly Louisiana Alligator tour can also be a lot of fun.

One way to plan one of these tours is in association with other events going on in the city. For, while the tours are exciting, most run an hour and a half to two hours. As such, there is a lot free time left to explore the area once the tour comes to an end.

For most people, seeing an alligator in the wild signals danger. However, despite this feeling, alligators rarely attack unless provoked. At the same time, these reptilian creatures do posses the strongest bite of any animal alive on the earth.

Louisiana currently has an abundant and large alligator population though there have been drops in population in the past. Most believe these drops were due to poachers killing the reptiles for skin which the poachers would sell to the fashion industry. While the population of alligators has gone up, the number of poachers in the area appears to have gone down.

The poaching has now been stopped and conservation programs are helping to ensure the ongoing survival of the species. In one case, alligator ranches now incubate eggs found in the wild, then release fourteen percent of the alligators born from those eggs back into a natural habitat. As a result, there are now over three million alligators in the state, up from 300,000 in 1985.

In most cases, alligators have a bite that would feel like a small car crushing down on a person. While somewhat ironic, alligators have difficulty when it comes to grabbing and eating prey due to the pointed round shape of their jaws. Regardless, most compensate by swallowing anything surrounding the targeted food, whole and without hesitation.

Alligators also have strong stomach acids which allow easy digestion and the consumption of metal. Sensors inside the jaws allow these reptiles to detect motion in all depths of water. The sensors purpose, to allow the reptiles to locate food quickly and easily when in the area. As such, most operators do not allow food or drink on the boat as if any were to be dropped or thrown overboard, it could create a negative experience for the alligators and potentially, those aboard the boat.

The Crescent City area offers several different alligator and swamp tours in different cities. One operator, Cajun Pride Swamp tours in Laplace provides a viewing opportunity in an area where alligators generally stay underwater save for popping up their eyes and snouts. Whereas, Cajun Encounters which departs from Slidell, Louisiana provides an evening sunset tour of the Honey Island Swamp, an area in which sightings of the Honey Island Swap Monster run rampant, either of which can make for an interesting and exciting experience.




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