Primitive Archer
Main Discussion Area => Around the Campfire => Topic started by: Zuma on November 07, 2017, 02:26:57 pm
-
Is this another wildlife spending Bugaboo??
Snake hunters from India are the latest weapons in Florida’s war on pythons (http://Snake hunters from India are the latest weapons in Florida’s war on pythons)
-
there are some serious bow backing in that pythons (A)
(https://img.washingtonpost.com/wp-apps/imrs.php?src=https://img.washingtonpost.com/news/animalia/wp-content/uploads/sites/56/2017/01/irula.jpg&w=1484)
-
They work cheap. The rest of us have a real job.
-
And what do they do with once it's caught? Is it relocated? :laugh:
-
They gotta be killing them, right? I think this is the time to reinstate government hunters. Get these guys from India to train them. A quick shot in the head with a 12 gauge and leave them for the gators. Either that or a bounty system. That seemed to work for other predators.
After that rant unless they can come up with a disease that only targets Reticulated Pythons there is little to no chance to eliminate them now. Like hogs. We've built this new nature, now we have to live with it.
-
Might as well utilize the skins and possibly the meat.
-
True. Python leather should be nice. I can't see steaks being a big favourite though.
-
Need a trend that the hides are a must have item and the meat is a delicacy and watch have fast they disappear. Beaver hides are at a all time low as far as fur prices, and an all time high for populations, A few yrs back beaver brought $40 avg. per hide. I can hump a lot of swamp and skin beav for $40. Don't under estimate your avg Fla. cracker, put a $100 price tag on them pythons and they will be screaming about them goin extinct. :o -C- Bob
-
I think they have been declared an invasive species by USFWS, and they are, as well as being rather dangerous. The meat is probably edible, rattlesnake is considered a delicacy, and seeks for a hellacious price. A pair of imported Python cowboy boots probably will set you back about $300. Hand made, of course!
Hawkdancer
-
Hawk, the meat maybe a delicacy and boots expensive but how much are the python hunters getting? I say up the ante and watch em disappear. Bob (=)
-
I agree with that! Don't know much about snakes, but the hunters would be out there after them, with a sizable bounty! Especially with a fair price for hides and meat! It would probably work with hogs, too, although a lot of folks are very leary about wild pork. More liberal hunting policies would help the hog problem. Out of state hunters are not going to pay ridiculous fees to hunt a problem animal!
Hawkdancer
-
Glis
thanks for the photo. It illistrates how silly the need for dogs
or foreigners are. Unless Floridians are blind or don't give a crap.
Mark, no info as yet on that. Perhaps some government program will pay to
send them back with the Indian folks.
DC Simplicity is not a way with beureaucrats.
Pat I agree an auction perhaps
Bada bing bada bang Bob
Don't under estimate your avg Fla. cracker, put a $100 price tag on them pythons and they will be screaming about them goin extinct. :o -C-Bob
Dancer I agree with your post 100 percent
On a search I learned a FL python had like 4 times the lead in it's body than a FL gator
They didn't say how many gators the snake ate. Most likley 4 lol
Garden stuffed deer, stuffed into gator by predation. Deer gator stuffed into Python.
Redneck heaven
-
Got to teach them gators to like snake meat >:D! Not sure but I think they are mutual predators. There was a news release a while back that showed a python trying to swallow a gator - they both lost!! The chaps from India are probably professionals, wonder how many other pythons they've caught! A lot, I hope!
Hawkdancer
-
Unfortunately the pythons are eating the gators. Maybe they will help control the hog population. (-_)
-
Had the students reading about them in class.
The population ecologists are stating that since python introduction the whitetail population has decreased down here 94%.
They are turning the biomass into baby pythons. Shoot, hire an army of Indian hunters and kill 'em all.
I wish them good luck in making any actual progress...there will still just be a steady supply of new breeding stock from the dolts that think reptiles make for pets. ESPECIALLY in S Florida! ??? ::)
Can't fix stupid.
-
Up here they trap and relocate nuisance Bears to another area, that way they can go bother someone else :OK. You know the old saying, out of sight out of mind
Looks like there's a lot of meat in one of those snakes -C-
-
Haven't done any research on the hunters, but they probably are trained to recognize the nests and destroy the nest, as well as capturing and killing more mature snakes. The dumb a$$(s) who buy one and releases or let's it get away is the cause. Watch all hell break loose when one gets a hold of a person, and they don't have any fear. They have been reported in populated areas. Now to develop the market, and the demand!
Hawkdancer
-
I would like to volunteer my services in helping reduce the snake population. That's as long as I get to keep any snake parts that I want.
-
They are not relocated. You can keep the hides and meat after the state runs test, measure and weigh them.The Indian trappers are getting a little above minimum wage. A university study has found that the snakes are adapting to cold weather so good that in the next ten years they expect to see them with established colonies as far north as North Carolina.In the last year a Cobra got loose for a week in Orlando before someone blasted it in their garage and a mamba is still n the loose in Ocala National Forest. Also, the meat is tough and chewy. We BBQ'ed a 14' a few years ago. You can see the hide at Twin Oaks, it was gifted to Pappy.
-
They are not relocated. You can keep the hides and meat after the state runs test, measure and weigh them.The Indian trappers are getting a little above minimum wage. A university study has found that the snakes are adapting to cold weather so good that in the next ten years they expect to see them with established colonies as far north as North Carolina.In the last year a Cobra got loose for a week in Orlando before someone blasted it in their garage and a mamba is still n the loose in Ocala National Forest. Also, the meat is tough and chewy. We BBQ'ed a 14' a few years ago. You can see the hide at Twin Oaks, it was gifted to Pappy.
Put it through a meat grinder, that will fix it :OK
-
Unfortunately the pythons are eating the gators. Maybe they will help control the hog population. (-_)
This one bit off more than it could chew. The gator busted out of the snake. :o
-
You guys don't realize how rugged the 'Glades are and part of it is Reservation with another set of rules and then some is Federal land with their own set. If it was all under Redneck rules they would be gone pretty quick. )P(
-
You guys don't realize how rugged the 'Glades are and part of it is Reservation with another set of rules and then some is Federal land with their own set. If it was all under Redneck rules they would be gone pretty quick. )P(
Amen!
Zuma
-
take all the invasive and non-native plants and animals out of here and the State would have a different look.
Bone
-
This Floridian knows how to handle pythons... and chameleons for that matter :D
(https://i.imgur.com/SSuJWsh.jpg)
-
Hope you squished them all when you got through playing with them?
-
Fantastic Tim Thanks for stoppin by
Zuma
-
Those are fake chameleons!! they didnt turned gray on Tim vest !!!! ;D ;D ;D ;D ;) ;)