Every
time I
hear someone call
one of our local, miniature
dinosaurs
a gecko, I want to stand up and yell at the top of my voice: THAT’S
NOT A GECKO!
A
constant, almost hourly barrage of television commercials for
a car insurance company with a very similar name that calls their
animated, iconic lizard a gecko has subliminally convinced our
couch-potato, television addicted
civilization all lizards here in Florida are
geckos.
The
effect of the media bombardment has been
astonishing. It seems nobody cares what the brown, sometimes
green, lizard running across the leaves on your hibiscus really is.
Its identity slips slowly into the
complacency that makes existence in today’s
mind-numbing world acceptable. I wouldn’t be
surprised
me if someone asked, “Do they really talk?” Right. And
they drive little red sports cars, too! The
natural instinct to find the quickest, easiest path through our daily
rituals is the culprit for our acceptance
of blissful, inconsequential ignorance.
Oh,
we called them by the wrong names when I grew up in South Florida,
too, but it wasn’t a willing disregard of
facts. It was simply pre-Internet naivete. There was no deluge
of information available at our fingertips back then. We still did
everything in longhand, which today is called
cursive. If I wanted to research what everyone
called them, it meant a bus ride to the library and even then it
might still come out as the colloquial name. We
called them chameleons.
We
called the harmless little lizards that turned from bright green to
brown if you put them on a paper grocery bag chameleons because they
could change colors. My mom told me they
were even sold as chameleons in certain novelty or dime stores back
in the late 30’s and early 40’s, complete with dainty golden
collars and attaching chains. I assumed most of them starved to death
while attached to some lady’s lapel. We allowed them to roam wild
on our backyard screened porch - oh, sorry, today that’s called a
lanai - because they ate bugs.
This
isn’t the first time television has corrupted my Florida culture.
Try to find Dolphin on your sea-food restaurant menu. It’s still
there, but it’s now known as Mahi-Mahi. Why? Because a television
show from years ago convinced the masses they were eating one of the
stars of their show, a Bottle-nose Dolphin known as “Flipper”
instead of the pelagic, deep sea fish the Cubans call Dorado.
Restaurants changed the name to the Hawaiian name,
Mahi-mahi, and the delicious fish has regained its popularity.
Flipper is now safe from hungry seafood
neophytes.
It
has been many years since the Green Anole
dominated the local gardens and shrubs of south Florida. It has been
displaced - but not eliminated - in recent years by its dark-brown
cousin from the Bahamas. They both share size and many physical
attributes, their colors being the obvious difference. Several
variations of the Bahamian Anole develop a ridge along the spine that
resembles a small dinosaur. All males have
the same red neck sack, or fan, boisterously inflated when attempting
to attract females.
The
Green Anoles, sometimes known today as Carolina Anoles, and the now
numerically superior brown Bahamian Anole, and even the latest
newcomer, the relatively large and rather unfriendly Cuban, or Knight
Anole, all share one common trait: They all live here in Florida and
THEY ARE NOT GECKOS!
:)