BPR 49 | 2022
Just east of Pascagoula, The Gator Ranch sign 
blares, “Take a Walk on the Wild Side,”
 its red arrow pointing down a gravel track
 off Highway 90, where a machine
 with giant whirling blades has lopped off 
 branches of pine trees lining the shoulder, 
limbs torn as though by some huge beast. 
In the back seat, my granddaughter fidgets 
for swamp life, and when I park
 in front of the garish pink gift shop, I see
 the spread is in fact more swamp than ranch.
We get tickets and stroll on the boardwalk 
to inspect the snouted reptiles in a fenced, 
algae-covered pond. I buy a bag
 of food pellets. Wired, she tosses them 
toward the mouths that surge
 and snap when morsels pepper
 the murky water. We board an airboat, 
careen and swirl through the swamp, 
slowing to see creatures crouched placid 
in the gloom of palmettos. The driver 
jolts them into action with marshmallows.
Later, a man hands my granddaughter
 a baby gator, jaws bound
 with a rubber band, tail ticking
 back and forth. In the shop we find
 t-shirts, stuffed animals, plastic snakes, 
 shot glasses, postcards, and in one corner,
 an electric chair, relic from the old prison, 
 arm and leg straps hanging like tongues 
 from timeworn wood. I stop her
 just as she veers over to sit in it,
 hold her close, and feel her shudder
 as we choose ice cream bars
 from the humming freezer by the door.
