LIFE / ENTERTAINMENT
Hunting Burmese pythons, species that damages Florida’s wetland ecosystem
Published: Aug 25, 2022 06:44 PM
Pythons are seen during an international animal fair in Pasay City, the Philippines, Feb. 27, 2022. (Xinhua/Rouelle Umali)

Pythons are seen during an international animal fair in Pasay City, the Philippines, Feb. 27, 2022. (Xinhua/Rouelle Umali)


Enrique Galan is seldom happier than when he disappears deep into the Everglades to hunt down Burmese pythons, an invasive species that has been damaging Florida's wetland ecosystem for decades.

When not working at his job staging cultural events in Miami, the 34-year-old spends his time tracking down the nocturnal reptiles from Southeast Asia.

He does so as a professional hunter, hired by the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC) to help control the python population, estimated to be in the tens of thousands. 

At night, Galan drives slowly for miles on paved roads and gravel tracks, his flashlight playing on grassy verges and tree roots, and the banks of waterways where alligator eyes occasionally glint.

He charges $13 an hour and an additional fee per python found: $50 if it's up to 4 feet (1.2 meters), and $25 more for each additional foot. But on this August night, he has an extra motivation.

The FWC has been holding a 10-day python-hunting contest, with 800 people participating. The prize is $2,500 for whoever finds and kills the most pythons in each of the categories - professional and amateur hunter.

And Galan would love to win that money to celebrate the arrival of Jesus, his newborn baby.

Burmese pythons, originally brought to the US as pets, have become a threat to the Everglades since humans released them into the wild in the late 1970s. 

The snake has no natural predators, and feeds on other reptiles, birds, and mammals such as raccoons and white-tailed deer. 

Galan has a trained eye, as well as the courage and determination needed for the job. After two unsuccessful nights, he spots a shadow on the shoulder of Highway 41: He jumps out of his truck and lunges at the animal, a baby Burmese python.

Grabbing it behind the head to avoid being bitten, he puts it in a cloth bag and ties it with a knot. He will kill it hours later with a BB gun. 

AFP