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Video shows invasive python fight back after hunter grabs its tail in Florida swamp

Lasting just under 2 minutes, the recording shows what amounts to a dance, with the ”feisty” snake whipping and twisting its body in the air while trapper Mike Kimmel twirls to dodge its snapping jaws.
Lasting just under 2 minutes, the recording shows what amounts to a dance, with the ”feisty” snake whipping and twisting its body in the air while trapper Mike Kimmel twirls to dodge its snapping jaws. Python Cowboy video screengrab

A hunter sitting in his truck spotted a conspicuous shadow in a Florida swamp and did something a little crazy: He jumped in the muddy water and grabbed it.

The shape proved to be exactly what he suspected — an invasive Burmese python — and video posted Jan. 30 shows it was angry and vicious.

Lasting just under 2 minutes, the recording shows what amounts to a dance, with the ”feisty” snake whipping and twisting its body in the air while veteran wildlife trapper Mike Kimmel twirls to dodge its jaws.

“I was eating cookies In the truck when I spotted this python trying to sneak away,” Kimmel says.

“I don’t like to go right for the head when they’re in the water, just cause it’s easy to miss and they’re gone. I can grab their tails and once I got their tails, they ain’t going nowhere.”

The snake was 8 to 9 feet long, but qualified as small in Florida. The longest documented in the state is 19 feet, according to the Conservancy of Southwest Florida.

Kimmel, known as the Python Cowboy, is a wildlife trapper participating in the ongoing struggle to bring the invasive snake population under control in South Florida.

The python qualified as small. The longest documented in Florida is 19 feet, according to the Conservancy of Southwest Florida.
The python qualified as small. The longest documented in Florida is 19 feet, according to the Conservancy of Southwest Florida. Python Cowboy video screengrab

Burmese pythons are native to southeast Asia, but were introduced to Florida as part of the exotic pet trade, experts say. Some of the snakes were freed by their owners while others escaped, leading to a breeding population in the Everglades.

Surveys of python stomachs at the University of Florida have revealed they are eating more than 24 species of mammal, 47 species of bird and three reptile species in South Florida, the conservancy of Southwest Florida reports.

The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission advises humanely killing pythons caught in the wild.

Kimmel did not give a location for where he caught the python, but noted it was a stroke of luck that he spotted it in the dark.

“I’ve spent days out there and not found anything,” he wrote on Facebook.

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This story was originally published February 1, 2024 at 8:59 AM with the headline "Video shows invasive python fight back after hunter grabs its tail in Florida swamp."

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Mark Price
The Charlotte Observer
Mark Price is a state reporter for The Charlotte Observer and McClatchy News outlets in North Carolina. He joined the network of newspapers in 1991 at The Charlotte Observer, covering beats including schools, crime, immigration, LGBTQ issues, homelessness and nonprofits. He graduated from the University of Memphis with majors in journalism and art history, and a minor in geology. 
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