(edited for errors)
I definitely take your point about signs not being followed. I think that warning of dangerous wildlife including alligators would likely have better compliance than ones on flash photography.
Huh. I don't. First people have to see them. Then notice them. Then read them. Then not just take a selfie with the cute signs.
There are signs about falling at Yosemite that people ignore. There are signs about falling at the Cliffs of Mohr, and from one side you can see how delicate the cliff is, but people jump over the rocks that were placed as barriers and go to the edge all day long.
People hike in CA despite signs about mountain lions and they often don't notice the signs. Heck, yesterday I totally missed a bright yellow sign that I should have seen, warning me that I was parking in a garage without elevators, which caused my poor mother in law to walk down two flights of stairs while I carried her walker. Bright yellow sign. And I read everything. But sometimes people miss things. Important things. And not everyone reads very thing like I do. (Or thought I did. Driving in Seattle is stressful, is the moral to that story btw)
Most people won't even know about this incident. ....
So much for nothing of the kind never happening at Disney. And of course no one knows about this because Disney sure as hell will make it go away fast, and if you try to talk about it through other outlets, like here, people will blame you, doubt you and defend Disney to the end.
Just from reading this thread I now know about two incidents. And those were just the ones that ended up in the news. Yes, no one died, but do you really have to wait for someone to die to consider doing something about it? And of course, they will only do something about it if they are sued.
Tons of people know about this. This and the British guy incident were in the news. I live in WA. They were in the news.
So much for Disney covering up things, since the incidents were in the news.
Every time someone walks their poodle on a canal in FL and a gator gets it I see it on the news. Of course people being involved will make it national news.
They were doing things about it. People see them often. If you talk to a CM about it you're told the whole thing about if they are under a certain size they are left, etc. No one is hiding anything. Just because they don't have a graphic of a gator grabbing a person (which would, by the way, be ghastly) doesn't mean they aren't doing anything.
...but I honestly would have expected a lake made in the middle of WDW to be safe- especially as I'm pretty sure I have seen photos of people jet-skiing and water-skiing on the lake...from reading this thread and the other one in the Rumours area, which showed a picture of the sign posted, I would have thought the "no swimming" was due to no life guards being present, not due to wildlife. Like some others, I place a difference in walking along a water's edge/wading over swimming/submerging in water. I am from the west coast of Canada, and while I knew there were gators in Florida, certainly not to the extent that I am learning. I haven't stayed on-site (we rented a condo 10 min away) so haven't seen gators around WDW, and didn't know how prevalent they are.
If your rented condo had a backyard and there is water anywhere near (and next time you fly into MCO just look down as you approach...FL has a LOT of water), you might get one in your backyard. If there's a pool in a screened off section, keep the door to the area closed or you might get one in your pool. Manmade pools can easily attract them, let alone a big huge lake that connects to other bodies of water in a swamp.
My grandma lived near Daytona on a river. There's a road between the front of her house and the river. And they would get them in the BACKyard. They would cross the road and meander on through. They can be everywhere.
And just because Disney has a gator size policy doesn't mean they see all of the creatures as they are growing up. The control people can't be everywhere.
(that was an odd juxtaposition of can/can't be everywhere...expect an alligator anywhere, and know that the people can't be everywhere)