Are those bullet wounds I see in those pythons? That kills the yield for wallets and belts a little! Like the problems with wild hogs, I've often wondered why the state doesn't hire or employ a cadre of people whose only job is to hunt these things down and shoot them.
If I were a bite sized rodent living in Florida, think I would move to the frost belt. My God, how long is that snake?
Speaking of wild hogs I was driving about 20 miles east of Naples a few years ago on the way back from Marco Island and saw a herd of 'em just over the outer fence of a huge tract of land. Gipper..... hit one into the weeds.... better to just let it go..... :wink:
Yes sir, we will have fruit at Walmart, Winn Dixie and Whole Foods at this point. The problem is everything is worked by the distribution centers of the given retail store and since we are located in the bottom half of Florida, we tend to see our fruit allotted from Tampa south. Depending if we are earlier into the market than our fellow farmers to the north of us will dictate if we make it into the markets Tampa north. As you know most of the population is in Southern Florida which means it is mainly shipped to their direction. I will try to let you know where it will be as we get closer. Unfortunately Walmart is already contacting us which means daily updates and non-ending reports into them. They are a major pain in the ass and are the worlds worst for sending demands by email at 2:00 pm in the afternoon and wanting answers by the end of the day. Last time I looked it is hard to grow a crop sitting in the office so we take great pride in consistently pissing them off...
Okay Terry, more sneaky snake news.... Coyote tangles with snake in the Everglades ... but is it real First, it was the python vs. alligator. Then it was bobcat vs. shark. Now, a new encounter has been captured — or maybe created? — in the Florida wilds: Coyote vs. constrictor. A photo sent to the Herald by a reader appears to show a coyote with a large snake wrapped around its neck. William James, 34, of Boynton Beach, said he took the photo Tuesday when he and his family pulled over at a rest stop at mile marker 63 on Alligator Alley. With his wife and year-old baby in tow, James said he started down the trail. About 20 minutes into the walk, James said he heard rustling in nearby shrubs, expected to see a wild hog and instead encountered the coyote with what he thought was a Burmese python wrapped around its neck. “It’s probably not something that’s not uncommon since there’s such a snake problem,” said James. But state wildlife officials are skeptical, pointing out that boa constrictors are far more rare in the wild than Burmese pythons, the exotic snake that has spread across South Florida, wiping out populations of small mammals. “After reviewing the image, we believe that it may have been altered,” Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission spokeswoman Carli Segelson said in an email. “While it is possible that boas and pythons eat canines, we do not have an established population of boas in this area.” James, who delivers appliances, said he watched the snake release its grip from the coyote, then try to bite the animal’s back before his wife “freaked out” and demanded they return to the car. He said he had time to take only the one shot. “I only got one picture,” James said. “I don’t know if you’ve ever seen a wild animal, but you’re lucky if you have only a moment.” James’ photo joins a recent batch of weird animal photos coming from Florida and greeted with a good deal of skepticism. In April, a Fort Pierce man emailed a picture he said he’d taken of a bobcat carrying a shark out of the surf near Sebastian Inlet. The picture quickly went viral, launching a furious debate over whether it was real or Photoshopped. University of Florida wildlife biologist Frank Mazzotti, who looked at a copy of the picture sent by the Herald, correctly identified the snake as a boa constrictor. Constrictors can eat canines and vice versa, he said. But he could not vouch for the authenticity of the picture. The Burmese python is the target subject of Florida’s on-going Python Challenge, a hunt hosted by the FWC, which is entering its second week. As of Tuesday, 61 Burmese pythons had been captured.