Are you saying there are no snakes surviving in Northern Ohio because we have cold winters. There used to be rattlesnakes in Ohio. The Massasauga rattler is still here in small numbers. A guess pythons are tropical whatever that means.No not at all but to make a statement like that insinuates I am a totally irresponsible person with no regard to the environment.
The media would have you believe that the entire problem is from individuals who released animals into the wild but in reality part of the problem arrised from when the hurricane went through and properties were damaged that had allowed the snakes and reptiles to get loose.
So in fact it was a combination of the 2.
The snakes I bred averaged 5-6 ft in length so are little threat to anything bigger than a small rabbit and even if I did turn them loose here in SC the would never survive any winter Temps.
So clearly you and the other poster know little to none about reptiles other than what you've heard from the media.
Are you saying there are no snakes surviving in Northern Ohio because we have cold winters. There used to be rattlesnakes in Ohio. The Massasauga rattler is still here in small numbers. A guess pythons are tropical whatever that means.
Between the tropics of Cancer and Capricorn, lines of latitude 23 degrees North and 23 degrees South of the Equator. A resident between those areas would be classed as from the 'Tropics'Are you saying there are no snakes surviving in Northern Ohio because we have cold winters. There used to be rattlesnakes in Ohio. The Massasauga rattler is still here in small numbers. A guess pythons are tropical whatever that means.
Pretty good deer country!I'm out in Telegraph Tx which is pretty much in the middle of nowhere. It's too far to a hospital to take a chance. I feed every one of them I see a helping of fire breathing 12ga. I do not discriminate due to the color of their skin!!
My friend and neighbor Greg was the herpetologist at lion country safari for several years. He has a group of snake rescuers and when they get a call the run to the scena and do their thing. They got a call in one of the western suburbs of Miami. somehow got there first and he and his crew pulled a python for under a house that the news and FWC said was 18 feet long. Neighbors had said many dogs and cats had gone missing for the past several years. I saw Greg's pictures if I had to guess I would say it was at least 18 feet and huge in diameter. Hurricane or not the FWC issued permits and collected fees and provided zero oversite after collecting the fees. The prevented proper hunting of the snakes, believing the snake hunters would be using the snake hunt as a way to really allow them to hunt deer (FWC believes deer hunters have a blood lust that they cannot control) out of season. For many years they ignored the issue till it is totally out of control. I have property northwest of Daytona and am glad to know it is safe, put that does nothing for the state south of there. FWC may not have released the pythons, but they have been pitiful in their response and have made a fixable problem into one that is unfixable.
Wow! I had a similar experience but it was just 1 female with a batch.Under a bushhog
OMG.Under a bushhog
Uh, huh.No not at all but to make a statement like that insinuates I am a totally irresponsible person with no regard to the environment.
The media would have you believe that the entire problem is from individuals who released animals into the wild but in reality part of the problem arrised from when the hurricane went through and properties were damaged that had allowed the snakes and reptiles to get loose.
So in fact it was a combination of the 2.
The snakes I bred averaged 5-6 ft in length so are little threat to anything bigger than a small rabbit and even if I did turn them loose here in SC the would never survive any winter Temps.
So clearly you and the other poster know little to none about reptiles other than what you've heard from the media.