i didn't know FL had a big python problem. or that people hunted python. what does python taste like? everglades residents and snake lovers pls discuss.
7/17/2009 7:15:49 PM
keeping pets that wouldn't hesitate to kill you is ALWAYS a good idea.
7/17/2009 7:17:15 PM
what a let down.
7/17/2009 7:19:17 PM
got a pants python 4 u
7/17/2009 7:20:09 PM
well now he is DEAD. so he is probably really let down too.
7/17/2009 7:20:24 PM
POSTWHAT'S GOING ON ITT????
7/17/2009 7:23:35 PM
all i'm saying is that i'm confused on how hunting pythons in an FWC wildlife area will help prevent people from being strangled by their pets!it just seems mean.
7/17/2009 7:26:46 PM
hunting pythons seems meanbut some documentary I saw said they weren't even supposed to be there in the first placeso they could eat little babiesBABY CHILDREN KHCADWALLITTLE FUCKING BABIESLOL!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!THEN WHAT????THOSE BABIES WERE IMPORTANT TO THE FUTURE OF OUR SOCIETY AS A WHOLE!!!11
7/17/2009 7:28:07 PM
well yea i guess because they are burmese pythons so they didn't originate there but that is what happens when someone gets a pet and then they're like "shit this thing is scary" and they just let it out the back door.ok fine i found a wikipedia reference to help me out. no thanks to TWW
7/17/2009 7:30:56 PM
i heard snakes taste like chicken also heard that people taste like chickenalso heard tales of people smelling burning human flesh and their stomach rumbled like they were hungry for it
7/17/2009 7:32:22 PM
8 of my last 9 threads have been in all capstrue storytake that one to the bank
7/17/2009 7:33:37 PM
i just feel like this python has suffered a great injusticehe didn't kill anyone!!! but someone still killed him just because he was a python!
7/17/2009 7:34:28 PM
python owners where you at!!!
7/17/2009 8:09:15 PM
i heart our 2 balls.....pythons that is
7/17/2009 8:14:05 PM
^^ That second one just swallowed a punching bag apparently[Edited on July 17, 2009 at 8:15 PM. Reason : ^^]
7/17/2009 8:15:31 PM
wtf?[Edited on July 17, 2009 at 8:18 PM. Reason : oh the url of the img explains it.]
7/17/2009 8:18:13 PM
7/17/2009 8:20:24 PM
That's effing nuts. I want to see a gator fight a python. I can probably do it in my backyard. Boo Florida.
7/17/2009 8:23:57 PM
I'm going to open up Pythonland to compete with Gatorland in Florida. Except instead of displaying gators, it's just going to be another stereotypical gay strip club in south beach.
7/17/2009 8:26:50 PM
lol
7/17/2009 8:29:22 PM
Ahahahaha! Best idea ever. I am stealing you biz idea. I know some men who would be interested in work.And Clamland would be the neighboring lesbo bar.
7/17/2009 8:30:56 PM
all of these invasive species screw everything up. we need to kill all of the wild kittens while we are at it!
7/17/2009 9:36:16 PM
wild kittens dont kill 10 foot alligators
7/17/2009 9:42:59 PM
Well, I've "hunted" snakes in south Florida, and I don't know how they really expect this to do anything for their invasive python problem. Crotalus, Firebreather, adder, Nshepard and I go down there pretty regularly and have caught quite a few. The largest was somewhere around 12ft 3in, and we found it right after it had been hit by a dualie towing a decent sized boat. That fucker barely had a trickle of blood in its mouth, and we know it survived the hit(s), because it was turned over to one of the people who does research on them in the Everglades, and they implanted a transmitter and track(ed) it. When we go down to the Everglades during the summer, we find an average of about 2 Burmese pythons a night.The problem with the Everglades python population is that there is no good way they can get rid of it. There is too wide of an expanse that is not easily accessible to humans to control them. There are not only Burmese pythons established in south Florida, ball pythons, red tail boas, and anacondas occasionally show up, too (not to mention there are very many invasive species of flora and fauna established in Florida).All I can really say is that the only place they can control the spread of pythons is outside of the Everglades, where man has a hold of the land. The thousands of acres that make up the Everglades are going to remain home to the pythons, no matter how many taxpayer dollars they throw at it.So I leave you with a picture of the 12'3" python we caught.and another big'n I caught with Crotalus and Nshepard.and a whole mess of other smaller ones.And for the record...I want the invasive pythons gone, but I'm scared about telling the public to go out and kill the ones they find. Snakes have it bad enough as it is, and I feel with all the hysteria regarding these pythons, native species may get targeted more than usual because joe dumbass "python hunter" probably can't tell different species apart.[Edited on July 17, 2009 at 9:50 PM. Reason : .]
7/17/2009 9:44:04 PM
yes! you! you are who i wanted to hear from (though i know there are other snake lovers, i feel like there is a snake lover thread i couldn't find)but how does hunting pythons in the everglades help? isn't that protected wildlife. i mean i get that they are eating endangered species, so i guess that is a problem.but how is it helping the human population that is scared of getting attacked by pythons?? or is it?this is serious, i really want to know.
7/17/2009 10:48:36 PM
pyhon, monty
7/17/2009 10:55:20 PM
From what I've gathered though these pythons aren't a native species. It's the amalgam of people who keep them as pets and then get tired of them or decide they are too big so they figure a nice swampy canal will be a suitable home. The bad part is that it is too good of a home. I am probably the biggest proponent here for the sanctity of non-human life and even I agree that if these pythons are an invasive species brought on by humans than they should be hunted/removed before they cause severe ecological imbalance. Hell, when the Florida alligator has trouble keeping something in check then you know you have a problem.
7/17/2009 10:57:00 PM
7/17/2009 11:17:09 PM
First of all, alligators aren't there to keep anything in check.The only thing that hunting pythons helps is to keep the fearful people happy. They hear another python was killed, they feel happy. On the other hand, they find out that a python shows up close to their neighborhood and the hysteria perpetuates. Yes, wildlife in the Everglades National Park is protected. But that's where the core of the problem is located. There is a huge uninhabited expanse where the pythons reside. Unlike us, they don't need cars or boats to get where they need to go.Of course, when I refer to the snake "hunting" that I do, 99.9% of the time, it doesn't involve me killing the snake. The only snakes I have purposely killed in the past few years were Burmese pythons. The biggest ones get sent to researchers in the Everglades. Snake hunting, to me, means going out and catching snakes for fun, sometimes photographing them, and always releasing them.As I mentioned, there are native species that can be confused with pythons if you don't know shit about snake ID. Eastern Diamondbacks exist throughout Florida and get pretty large (though nowhere near as large as burms). They have a pattern, and burms have a pattern, which could lead to misidentification. It happens with other snakes all the time (see: water snakes always misidentified as copperheads or cottonmouths). Eastern indigo snakes are very large snakes as well, and federally endangered. Also found in the Everglades (very rarely). There could be people who get into the python hunting thing for the sake they just want to kill snakes, and I feel that's the wrong reason. I think there should be strict regulations on who is/is not permitted to trap/kill snakes. It should be left to specialists, not John Q. Public.In my opinion, Florida is repeatedly failing at control of invasive species. Just because these snakes are large doesn't mean they'll be easy to control. Cuban treefrogs have taken over Florida and nearly butted out native treefrog species. The brown anole has displaced the green anole just about everywhere it is established. They're nowhere near the size of burms, but they've caused a lot of damage to native wildlife. Pure and simple, the issue at play with the Burmese pythons is the fact that they could be a threat to human life. But I'd be willing to bet that in the next ten years, if any human deaths result from these pythons, it won't be more than 1 (not including this escaped captive shit). It's to late for me to keep going on with this...
7/17/2009 11:45:02 PM
right. so there are a lot of "invasive species"??? ie: not just the burmese python? (though they look really scary in pictures!!!)!but aren't burmese pythons considered protected species/endangered species in other parts of the world??again, serious question. probably only umop-apisdn can answer.
7/18/2009 2:49:29 AM
Maybe in Burma, no idea.But there's no reason for them to be protected here. If I get a pack of dingos and release them in NC, should they then be protected because there aren't many of them?Hell no, they don't belong here anyway!
7/18/2009 3:56:15 AM
You can come hunt my python
7/18/2009 4:27:50 AM
7/18/2009 4:29:27 AM
what about that king cobra that got loose in fayetteville a while back
7/18/2009 4:49:54 AM
glad to see yall took Mclovin along with you
7/18/2009 9:25:18 AM
^^I do believe that that "king cobra" was never confirmed, and was actually probably something like a large coachwhip...kinda like this, a big one but not the biggest I've caught:Yes, there are many many many invasive species in Florida. Check out the number of introduced lizards in Florida: http://www.flmnh.ufl.edu/herpetology/FL-GUIDE/Flaherps.htmWhat we refer to as "Burma" is now considered Myanmar. They used to suffer a lot of pressures in their native home (which extends beyond Myanmar, actually covering much of southern Asia), but now not so much. Captive breeding takes a lot of the pressure of the native wild population, but thenagain that's what brought them here. They have been hunted for various reasons, and the Burmese pythons that remain in their native land are currently listed as CITES appendix II (which essentially limits the export of those animals from their native range, so there is a quota although I have no idea what the cap on export is).
7/18/2009 9:41:03 AM
This issue has become a very political one. First of all, the idea of the Everglades Burmese pythons being a result of discarded pets is NOT supported by any evidence. It has become the excepted idea because the political organizations campaigning against animal ownership in general (API, PETA etc.) have flooded public perception with poorly written articles like the original one. The fact of the matter is the genetic work done on the everglades population points to the introduction all happening at once and a more likely occurrence is an escape incident from an importer or a zoo during a hurricane. This evidence is ignored because the animal rights organizations see reptile ownership as an easy place to start because of the ignorant publics irrational fear of snakes.Next issue:The rash of "cobra" sightings in NC (there were 3) happened right around the time when a bill was being pushed through by API to ban ownership of a bunch of reptiles (including venomous snakes). The first instance was a redneck driving a lawnmower and seeing a possible snake "stand up" no reliable evidence at all of a cobra. The second one happened a couple days later and consisted of flyers claiming 2 lost albino monocle cobras the law enforcement mentioned API involvement on this one (API= Animal Protection Institute).
7/18/2009 10:00:38 AM
I think you meant "accepted".But yea. Many exotic reptile/amphibian species established in Florida should be blamed on hurricanes and irresponsible animal DEALERS more than anything else.But when it comes to the management of the problem, I'll always say what they're doing is too little, too late.
7/18/2009 10:32:52 AM
^^when I hear reports of cobra sightings in NC, I immediately assume that some idiot saw an eastern nognose flare their head at them and just assumed that it had to be a cobra.
7/18/2009 12:00:02 PM
^ Yeah, the hognose and the coachwhip both do that. I could easily see people confusing the two (or just not knowing the differences).And I seriously heard someone on Nat Geo say 'poisinous snake' a few months ago.... I immediately changed the channel. Poeple's problems with snakes, and many animals in general, is not being properly educated about the issues. Just like those idiots in Winston Salem freaking out over a black bear sighting and shooting a cub... its just been a matter of time till they get in central NC anyway! We have them to the east and to the west, did you really not think they would show up here with all the habitat destruction going on? They have to move somewhere, just like us humans do! When one subdivision fills up, what do we do? We build another one somewhere else.[Edited on July 18, 2009 at 12:31 PM. Reason : ]
7/18/2009 12:27:55 PM
7/18/2009 12:29:45 PM
def snakes print "I got a snake may-un"
7/18/2009 12:43:55 PM
paging Samwise16
7/18/2009 12:47:20 PM
hah, reticulated pythons are mean as shit! Gorgeous, though.My brother had up to 30-35 snakes at one point, including a 14ft burmese python, Sampson.I miss my snakes He now has a BEAUTIFUL morph of garter snake: I think umop-apisdn summed up pretty damn well what I was going to contribute about the invasive species part, and then some! Neat pics dude[Edited on July 18, 2009 at 1:02 PM. Reason : .]
7/18/2009 1:01:40 PM
this thread made me lift my feet up off the floor
7/18/2009 3:05:14 PM
7/18/2009 3:41:29 PM
7/18/2009 8:49:30 PM
Its hard to control a population, plant or animal, that is alreadey way ahead of the game as far competing with indigenous speciesand to be honest, it is difficult to manage period. its not a matter of sitting on your heels until its too late. If u see it, pretty much the population is already established, especially if the specimen is mature.espcially in florida with its long growing season and its consistent climateits unfortunate really, but you cant blame it all on pet trade, a lot of it is just natural migration also
7/18/2009 9:02:51 PM
7/18/2009 9:10:13 PM
set em up
7/18/2009 9:51:41 PM