Slashdot Mirror


Money Python: Florida Contest Offers Rewards In 2013 Everglades Python Hunt

Press2ToContinue writes "Dubbed the Python Challenge, the month-long contest will award $1,000 for the longest python and $1,500 for the most pythons caught between Jan. 12 and Feb. 10 in any of four hunting areas north of Everglades National Park and at the Big Cypress National Preserve. Pythons have been spreading through the Everglades for years, posing a threat to the sensitive ecosystem by preying on native species. Some estimates put their number in the tens of thousands. Last year, 272 pythons were removed from the wild, state figures show."

26 of 132 comments (clear)

  1. Cobra effect by andy1307 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Florida should read about the Cobra effect.

    1. Re:Cobra effect by ColdWetDog · · Score: 4, Funny

      WTF is this news? Was it in the 'What Hicks do in their spare time' section?

      What are you about? Python is an important, widely used computer language. Of course discussion of it belongs on Slashdot.

      Oh. Wait.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    2. Re:Cobra effect by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

      Bounties don't always fail; according to my grandfather there used to be all kinds of rattle snake dens, but a bounty on rattlesnakes earlier in the century essentially wiped them out. I think the trick was that the bounties were handled at the township level, and thus it ended up being mostly locals hunting snakes part-time or on weekends. Some random asshat walking in every day with a truckload of snakes would have been figured out pretty quick Plus the local farmers wanted the things dead to make the area safer anyway, so the bounty served more as a way to get people out the door and actually do something about the problem.

      I should qualify these were native snakes, and the terrain was a little more forgiving than I imagine the everglades is. And to finish the story, in the last handful of years our local conservationists had the bright idea to try re-introducing rattlesnakes in the wild. I guess rattlesnakes must be more fun to have around when you don't have to constantly be afraid that the next piece of wood or bale of hay you move is going to reveal an angry poisonous reptile.

    3. Re:Cobra effect by Chris+Mattern · · Score: 2

      Is that where you can't hit anything if you're firing the red lasers?

    4. Re:Cobra effect by dreamchaser · · Score: 2

      It actually does taste pretty good, but I think the large ones would be very tough. You can by meat from smaller pythons in one of the larger 'gourmet' supermarket chains in my area and I've tried it. Not quite the same as rattlesnake; I'd say the latter has a bit sweeter meat, but both are tasty. Then again the store bought python was probably bred and the rattlesnake I've had was wild so maybe it's unfair to compare the taste.

    5. Re:Cobra effect by Dogtanian · · Score: 2

      Does Python taste good?

      It generally tastes much better if you add a lot of mint leaves while cooking it.

      Hence the name, "Minty Python".

      --
      "Slashdot - News and Chat Sites Deviant". (Click "homepage" link above for details).
  2. Bounty on snake heads is the solution. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    They should just put a bounty on the snakes like they used to do for wolves and mountain lions. $10 for each snake brought in would make an industry out of killing them. If we can drive species to extinction for profit surely we can eliminate these snakes. Make=ing it legal to sell snake meat would help too.

    1. Re:Bounty on snake heads is the solution. by PolygamousRanchKid+ · · Score: 4, Informative

      Making it legal to sell snake meat would help too.

      Yeah, but before you chow down on some snake, read the Florida Fish and Wildlife site: http://myfwc.com/license/wildlife/nonnative-species/python-permit-program/

      "Permit holders may sell the hide and meat, thus providing a type of compensation (note: Burmese pythons from Everglades National Park have been found to have very high levels of mercury and may not be recommended for human consumption)."

      --
      Schroedinger's Brexit: The UK is both in and out of the EU at the same time!
    2. Re:Bounty on snake heads is the solution. by michelcolman · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yeah, introduce a bounty so that people can start breeding them for profit...

    3. Re:Bounty on snake heads is the solution. by khasim · · Score: 2

      And then tax the python farms. You're a genius!

  3. The OTHER Python Challenge by sorensenbill · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Made me think of the puzzle website I went through while learning the programing language. Any puzzle lovers out there interested can find it here http://www.pythonchallenge.com/ It can be done with little or no knowledge of the language as long as you don't mind reading the docs.

  4. Pythons are so incredibly awesome. by mirix · · Score: 5, Informative

    They're sort of... living legends... An alpha release snake.

    Later species are much more streamlined, and have dropped some of their dual organs to make room. (Newer snakes only have one lung, for example. well - they usually have a second joke-sized vestigial lung as well). Fat snakes like pythons and boas have two, still.

    Another neat thing about pythons is they have little.. claw like things, near their exhaust pipe. Remnants of their hind legs. :)
    Reptiles lost in time...

    I understand why they have to go in Florida (which seems hopeless at this point, anyhow), though.
    The first time I saw a Burmese Python (like those in Florida) in person I was just amazed at the size of the thing... A snake that weighs more than me.

    --
    Sent from my PDP-11
    1. Re:Pythons are so incredibly awesome. by Grayhand · · Score: 3, Informative

      I used to keep pythons. They're surprisingly intelligent and even have personalities. I had a 10' albino that was my favorite. He'd curl up in my lap while I watched TV. I think they are a terrible pet for the average person but the laws they passed are ridiculous because they force most owners into a situation of either having their snakes put to sleep or releasing them. What people don't realize is Florida is the only state in the union that they can survive in. They are extremely sensitive to cold and don't like dry conditions. Banning the transportation in the other lower 48 is nuts. Ban importation fine, ban the sale in Florida fine. In Florida they need a system where people can turn them in no questions asked and hopefully to wildlife rescues and not to be put down. Owners can grow really attached to them and may foolishly release them so they aren't killed. Also ban the breeding of Pythons in Florida. The problem could disappear as in new releases if they aren't allowed to breed. Unfortunately they should have never been allowed in Florida. Now the situation is nearly impossible to control. Florida is still dragging their feet on the solution. There's hunting restrictions in many areas where as they should be encouraged. It'd be worth putting a bounty on them and it could even be partly paid by the sale of the skins. When I was in New Zealand they were selling items like fur covered notepads made of Opossum fur. They imported a type of Opossum from Australia a 100 years ago to start a fur industry. They population is out of control so they are trying everything to irradicate them. Florida needs to get aggressive. Sell python based products and use the money to fund hunts. It may be impossible to get rid of them but you can seriously reduce the numbers.

    2. Re:Pythons are so incredibly awesome. by turkeydance · · Score: 3, Funny

      weighs more than you? you are not from Florida.

  5. Re:ob Simpson whacking day by jhoegl · · Score: 2

    How dare you bring Bing links onto Slashdot!
    I feel dirty already.

  6. Re:Ex-python by flyneye · · Score: 2

    They're making a flying circus of the whole affair.
    Perhaps it would be wise to involve some mens footwear companies both for recycling and my affinity for gaudy expensive boots.

    --
    *Repent!Quit Your Job!Slack Off!The World Ends Tomorrow and You May Die!
  7. I found their nest.... by mseeger · · Score: 4, Funny

    http://www.python.org/

    Also very long python there ....

  8. MF'n Snakes on the MF'n Grassy Plain! by trout007 · · Score: 2

    Said no one.

    --
    I love Jesus, except for his foreign policy.
  9. What's wrong with a goldfish? by SternisheFan · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Why do people own exotic pets when they're only going to abandon them when they inevitably grow larger? In Long Island, N.Y., we've recently had a couple weeks where alligators have been turning up. http://articles.latimes.com/2012/oct/08/nation/la-na-nn-alligator-new-york-20121008

    "Those beasts paled in comparison to Ming the tiger, who was discovered living in a Manhattan apartment in 2003. Ming's owner, Antoine Yates, unwittingly alerted police to the tiger's existence when he showed up at a hospital with deep bite marks on his leg. Hospital officials didn't believe the story that a dog had caused the bite. When police went to check Yates' apartment, they heard growling through the door." Cops also found (what else?) an alligator in the guy's apartment.

  10. Re:Why the hell is a permit needed? by PolygamousRanchKid+ · · Score: 2

    The Florida Fish & Wildlife site is your friend & helper: http://myfwc.com/license/wildlife/nuisance-wildlife/

    "Gun/Light at Night Permit

    This permit authorizes a landowner or their designee to take depredating wildlife (beaver, bobcat, fox, possum, rabbit, raccoon, or skunk) at night with a gun and light. The permit is not required to take wild hog, coyote, armadillo, black or Norway rat, and house mouse, with a gun and light during non-daylight hours.

    Hunting and trapping wild hogs is not only a popular sport in Florida but a useful tool in man's attempt to control feral populations on private and state lands. Nuisance wildlife trappers that want to shoot or trap feral swine on private lands do not need FWC authorization. Permission of the landowner is all that is required. A permit is not required to take wild hog with a gun and light during non-daylight hours."

    I used to think of Florida as a boring Disneyland vacation place. Now it is sounding like an exciting shoot-the-varmints vacation place.

    --
    Schroedinger's Brexit: The UK is both in and out of the EU at the same time!
  11. Next up: lion fish! by Chewbacon · · Score: 5, Interesting

    They're invading our waters, more importantly reef habitats. The bigger fish haven't recognized them as prey yet as they gobble up all the smaller fish. My local dive shop is paying $5 a head for them and Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation has issued an open season for them, no fishing license required. Good eatin from what I've heard. Tastes like hogfish, just use a paralyzer tip and cut the spines off without poking yourself.

    --
    Chewbacon
    The Bible is like Wikipedia: written by a bunch of people and verifiable by questionable sources.
  12. Re:Whacking Day! by Chewbacon · · Score: 2

    They're cute and cuddly when they're young. Then people flush them down the toilet.

    --
    Chewbacon
    The Bible is like Wikipedia: written by a bunch of people and verifiable by questionable sources.
  13. Re:Bloodthirsty, fucked up sociopaths of Slashdot. by youngatheart · · Score: 2

    [Checked a mirror, yup, canines.]

    I didn't choose, but I am an animal. By most definitions, yes, we are in fact animals. We have all the instincts of carnivores, an urge to stalk, an urge to hunt and yes, an urge to kill prey.

    Now if I stalk around the house and pounce on things, my family looks at me a little funny because of society or whatever. But if I buy a permit and a bow and go after deer, that's totally acceptable.

    If I'm wandering around the savanna in my PJs and get taken out by a pride of lions, then nobody is going to be blaming the lions, calling them gutless cowards, asking them how brave they're going to be when somebody kills them. They're lions, that's what they do and we're perfectly fine with that.

    If anything, it's human hunters that are on the highroad here. We have rules about when and how we're allowed to kill other animals (and each other.) We're at the top of a food chain, and rather than just killing whatever we can, we restrict ourselves. I can't think of any other predator that does that. That's kind of an intelligent thing and telling a bunch of gun toting predators that they have to do things your way kind of takes guts.

    So yeah, pretty much the opposite of everything you said. Wait, were you being deliberately ironic? It'd be funny if you'd included something that actually had ... well humor in it.

  14. Re:Why the hell is a permit needed? by FatLittleMonkey · · Score: 3, Funny

    and a case of beer hunting mice.

    Guess how I first interpreted that.

    --
    Science is all about firing a drunk pig out of a cannon just to see what happens.
  15. Re:Why the hell is a permit needed? by Muad'Dave · · Score: 2

    Ever heard of rat-shot? It's perfect for hunting rats and squirrels in attics. Yes, I have gone squirrel hunting in an attic before.

    --
    Tiller's Rule: Never use a word in written form that you've only heard and never read. You will end up looking foolish.
  16. Re:Bloodthirsty, fucked up sociopaths of Slashdot. by youngatheart · · Score: 2

    Yup. Thanks for agreeing with me.

    Just because people have urges to act like animals, doesn't mean we should. In fact we have rules and laws to keep us from giving into those urges. That was part of my point.

    I suspect that you drew that one phrase from the larger context because you wanted to make the point that hunting and killing animals is bad, but rather you made the point that it is unnecessary because you prefer an honest tone instead of a belligerent one. I'd agree with you on both counts actually in most situations. Personally, I don't own a hunting gun (or bow) or hunt for sport because my environment (urban) doesn't make it a useful activity. But I add the qualifier "in most situations" because it isn't always true. You added the qualifier "most" as well and I suspect for the same reason.

    The featured article is about the attempt to limit the damage of a non-native invasive species. In this particular instance, the only practical method of limiting the damage is to kill as many of the invasive animals as possible. I am not arguing that it is a good thing to kill them, but rather that in order to preserve the environment we treasure, it is an unfortunate necessity. I admit that I can see the appeal of hunting even if it isn't a strong appeal to me personally and therefore I can see how appealing to hunters to participate is a useful methodology.

    I did grow up in a rural environment and was and remain exposed to many hunters. For many hunters, the actual kill is more of a proof of your skill as a hunter than a necessity, but it does provide the benefit of food for many of them. In trade for investments in time, getting a hunting license, requisite training and certification, and the necessary equipment, many of them provide a year's worth of meat for their families with their skills. I can also tell you from personal experience that the challenge of planning a hunt and the process of stalking is something that appeals to most of them. I actually managed to stalk within arms reach of a deer once, and it was thrilling. I had no desire or plan to kill anything because there was no benefit for me, yet the confirmation of my prowess and being able to see them so closely in the wild is one of my fonder memories.

    That's a secondary point though. My first and hopefully less subtle point was that it is absurd to draw the conclusions or make the generalities found in the post I to which I was replying.