A fanciful look at the establishment of Burmese pythons in Florida. |
Python snakes of the Burmese kind, an Asian species growing 23 feet long, are now in Florida! It’ll blow your mind. They’re not native; they don’t belong. Yet, entrenched in the Everglades and now recently encountered in the Keys, these giant snakes threaten to expand their range wider in Florida by degrees. Released by, or escaped from, their pet owners, these pythons feel right at home in Florida’s marshes and mangroves. Get busy, people; don’t let them freely roam. They’re invasive creatures with voracious appetites. Neither man nor beast will be safe to go in the waters. A quite tenacious campaign to control them is needed, all agree. From rats to alligators, native fauna all are pythons’ prey. No one can relax, be at ease with giant snakes slithering about. Bizarre, but their spread needs “cutting off at the knees”. [Note: This poem was inspired after reading the article "Python Patrol" by Jill Austin in Nature Conservancy magazine, Autumn, 2008 issue, page 13.] Please check out my ten books: http://www.amazon.com/Jr.-Harry-E.-Gilleland/e/B004SVLY02/ref=ntt_dp_epwbk_0 |