Pine Strip
Gold Member
USGS Multimedia Gallery: (Video)--Record-Breaking Burmese Python (17 feet, 7 inches, 87 eggs) Captured by The USGS, B-roll over 17' long and can eat anything ! :licking:
That "Booger" is huge. Thanks for posting.Finally the Country is united about something :cool2:...." ridding the Everglades of a harmful invasive species".
Now how about the Crocodiles in the Philippines !
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I used to go fishing on Lake Okeechobee in Florida with a friend of mine, whose father had a home adjoining one of the canals. When I used a balloon as a float with a Shiner on the other end, the Pythons would attack the balloon. They were are over the Lake. Burmese pythons in Florida - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A popular animal in the exotic pet trade, a Burmese python (as of 2005) could be purchased for as little as $20. The number of Burmese pythons imported in the U.S. jumped from 17,000 (1970?995) to 99,000 between 1996 and 2006.[7] The first Burmese python was observed in Everglades National Park in 1979, but no more were found until 1995.[10] Between 2001 and 2005, however, the number of pythons observed by workers in water management or ecological restoration efforts or killed by farm machinery in and near Everglades National Park rose to 201, and doubled to 418 between 2006?007, at which time a nest of eggs was also discovered, causing national park staff to determine that pythons had begun breeding in the wild.[7] In 2009, the South Florida Water Management District estimated between 5,000 to 180,000 Burmese pythons were living in South Florida.[citation needed]
I fished Okeechobee for around 30 years. I was living in Florida when Andrew hit but we didn't even get a drop of rain in Manatee County. Although Andrew was predicted to cut across Tampa Bay, it headed and tuned southward across Homestead. The last time that I fished Okeechobee was around about 5 years ago. The Pythons were everywhere. They were skimming and swimming in the reeds and cattails. One even brushed against our boat. A game warden told me that the pythons were threatening the deer population, especially the "Key Deer". The Pythons would lay on a tree branch and drop on the unsuspecting deer.What year(s) were you seeing the snakes on the lake? Sounds like that should be the title of a movie, "Snakes on the Lake!" :shocked::laughing::laughing::laughing:
I spent quite a bit of time out in the Everglades aka Water Management Districts, during the day and night, and never saw a non native snake. Saw plenty of native snakes though. This was around 1990. Wikipedia said,
Which is accurate from what I saw. or shall I say, did not see.
What I have read, and which makes perfect sense, is that snakes escaped after Hurricane Andrew. I am sure some people released the snakes when they got too large and other's escaped from their owners but I think Andrew at least started this mess. A neighbor kept a python of some kind and I remember when the snake escaped, maybe to the lake. :laughing::laughing::laughing: That kid was really upset the snake was gone and so was my mother!We had a very large and dense hedge around the back and side yards. The snake was in a pen right next to the hedge so it was almost certain he started his escape in our hedge. Mom does quite a bit of gardening and the idea of that snake in her hedge was not comforting to her. :laughing::laughing::laughing:
Later,
Dan
I once came across a python nearly that big close to 30 years ago just west of Miami. This was before Hurricane-Andrew. Lots of exotic snakes,fish,birds etc in S/Fla.
Boone
I fished Okeechobee for around 30 years. I was living in Florida when Andrew hit but we didn't even get a drop of rain in Manatee County. Although Andrew was predicted to cut across Tampa Bay, it headed and tuned southward across Homestead. The last time that I fished Okeechobee was around about 5 years ago. The Pythons were everywhere. They were skimming and swimming in the reeds and cattails. One even brushed against our boat. A game warden told me that the pythons were threatening the deer population, especially the "Key Deer". The Pythons would lay on a tree branch and drop on the unsuspecting deer.