Sunday, November 12, 2023

Florida Snake Hunters Wrangle 17-Foot Burmese Python with Deer Hooves in its Stomach.
The giant python goes down as one of the biggest invasive snakes ever captured in Florida.

Mike Elfenbein was driving through Big Cypress National Preserve with his son late at night on November 4 when they spotted the giant snake crossing the road. “It was headed for the canal on the other side of the road,” Elfenbein, who serves as the Conservation Chair of the Cypress Chapter of the Izaak Walton League of America, tells Field & Stream. “We happened on it at the same time as another vehicle coming the other way.”
A trio of snake hunters from Tampa jumped out of the other car, Elfenbein says. One of them grabbed the giant snake by the tail before Elfenbein’s son jumped in to help. “She didn’t like what was pulling on her so she turned and came right back up on her body at full speed,” he recalls. “I ended up grabbing her by the head, which was like grabbing hold of a football.”
Elfenbein and his son stretched the giant snake out while the other hunters jumped on its back. “It took everything we had to keep her pinned down,” he says. “Even with five guys on top of her, she was able to lift us off the ground and keep moving.”
According to an Instagram post from one of the python hunters in the other car, the hunt took place during a recent cold snap. Cold weather is known to make reptiles lethargic and hole up in secure areas. “This beast of a python [is] the second biggest … ever caught in Florida,” Holden Hunter wrote in the Instagram caption. “It’s crazy that these things are all over Florida now, but no expects to see one this big.”
The snake weighed in at 198 pounds and was 17-feet, 2-inches long, which nearly puts it in record territory. This summer, a group of Florida python hunters wrangled a 19-footer, the longest on record in the Sunshine State. An 18-footer was then captured in August. 
Elfebein says the snake’s girth measured a whopping 23-inches in circumference, and a necropsy turned up months-old deer remains inside its stomach. “She had been eating really good. There were hooves and bones still in her stomach, and she had several eggs in the early stage of development,” he says. “The folks that cut her open said the deer remains had been in her stomach for about two months.”
New Rules Could Restrict Python Hunting in Big Cypress
Elfenbein says he’s worried about a proposal to turn the Big Cypress National Preserve into a federally-protected Wilderness Area. If designated as Wilderness, Big Cypress would no longer be open to vehicles, he says. And a ban on vehicular travel would severely limit the public’s ability to catch pythons, since the snakes are usually spotted by motorist traveling the road with powerful spotlights.
If the proposal goes through, Elfenbein says, scientists and government contractors would be barred from using vehicles to hunt pythons and conduct python-related research in Big Cypress as well. “We’re trying really hard to stop these snakes from destroying our native wildlife, and the government’s about to make a rule that will make it much harder for us to tackle this problem,” he says. “Why would we create a law that limits our abilities to manage the resource knowing that these are the types of things that the resource is up against?”
According to the Florida Fish and Wildlife Commission, invasive pythons are primarily found in and near the Everglades, where they’re wiping out native furbearers and other wildlife species. The snakes are native to Southeast Asia and have few natural predators other than humans. Recreational and paid python hunters play a crucial role in limiting the spread of and damage caused by the big constrictor snakes. 


https://www.fieldandstream.com/conservation/forida-snake-hunters-capture-17-foot-burmese-python/

Florida python hunters bag 17-foot, 198-pound Burmese serpent that's one of biggest ever caught in Sunshine State.

It took the combined strength of five Florida python hunters to subdue a colossal Burmese python - as the species threatens native wildlife and continues to disrupt ecosystems within the state.
Mike Elfenbein, Carter Gavlock and three other hunters - including Elfenbein's teenage son, Cole - caught the python at Big Cypress National Preserve on Friday night.
At 17 feet, two inches long and 198 pounds, she was the second-heaviest reported to be caught in the state.
The remains of a deer, including its hooves, were found in her stomach.
'A new personal best,' Elfenbein proclaimed on Facebook. 'This snake ate a lot of native wildlife to get this big. She ate her last meal!'
The catch was the culmination of a team effort including Amy Siewe, a real estate broker-turned hunter who was called to euthanize the animal.
'She killed so many of our animals. Never again,' Siewe wrote on Facebook.
The self-dubbed 'Python Huntress' caught a 17-foot snake herself back in 2020 - an achievement that seems to be a rite of passage.
Elfenbein expressed his support for the group that helped subdue the slithery giant.
'We were definitely not prepared for a python this big,' he wrote. 'Until you’ve got your hands around one like this it’s hard to comprehend.'
The longtime sportsman is the Executive Director of the Cypress chapter of the Izaak Walton League of America, a national conservation organization.
Elfenbein himself was in Washington, D.C. last year to discuss restoration initiatives for the Everglades.
'Our dedicated Executive Director and his son had an intense encounter last night in Big Cypress National Preserve,' the nonprofit posted on social media.
'This encounter is a stark reminder of the relentless battle against invasive species that threatens our native wildlife populations. We are committed to managing these invaders to protect our precious natural habitats.'
Friday night's catch was not enough to usurp the record-setting 215-pound python caught last June.
That snake weighed 215 pounds and was captured by the Conservancy of Southwest Florida, an environmental group in Naples that has been fighting to remove invasive species for a decade.

 

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-12721299/Florida-python-hunters-bag-17-foot-198-pound-Burmese-serpent-thats-one-biggest-caught-Sunshine-State.html

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