There are two members of the animal kingdom that I'm not especially fond of. That would be rats and snakes.
While the federal and state government have spent billions of dollars to restore the Everglades, pythons have decimated native birds, rabbits, and deer since they were documented as an established population in 2000. (Source: Boston Globe)
And so the state of Florida is going after those nasty old pythons.
They hold annual python hunts, which attracts both amateurs and professionals:
This year’s Python Challenge drew 1,035 hunters and netted 209 pythons. The winner caught 20 snakes and received $10,000; [Amy] Siewe won a prize for catching a python that measured 10 feet, 9 inches.
And throughout the year, the state hire pros.
State agencies pay about 100 contractors to keep hunting throughout the year, giving them access to levees that are closer to the human-made canals running through the Everglades — closer to the snakes. Since 2000, more than 19,000 pythons have been removed from the Florida outdoors, a little more than two-thirds of those by contracted “python removal agents,” according to the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission."Python removal agents?" I'm sure there are worse jobs, but none of them are leaping to mind at the moment.
They couldn't pay me enough become a python hunter.
And they wouldn't even if they could.
The program, which began in 2017, is not especially lucrative, paying up to $18 an hour, plus $50 per foot for the first 4 feet of snake and $25 for each subsequent foot. Remove a python nest? $200.
I don't care what the bonus is. $18 an hour??? Minimum wage in Massachusetts is $15/hour - increasing to $16 in 2024.
And not that working fast food, or as a home health aide, or as a Walmart greater, is an easy job, any of these jobs has to be a ton easier than hunting pythons. After all, it can take up to 12 hours to catch one. A lot more daunting a task than getting a shopping cart for a Walmart shopper.
But for some folks, it's a dream job.
Amy Siewe used to sell real estate in Indiana. Now she's a hunter, guide, and trainer. Siewe and her fellow pythonesers
...have created a cottage industry around an invasive species that has been so successful at adapting to Florida that it appears here to stay, despite years of efforts to eliminate it.
Part of Siewe's contribution to the python cottage industry is being a maker. She skins the pythons she captures, has them dyed, and turns them into "python-leather products, including Apple Watch bands." And sometimes, Siewe is a first-responder:
In July, she helped pull a record 19-foot python off the torso of a college student who was hunting with his cousin.
If that doesn't give you the willies...
Python hunting may be a job, but it's sure on my No Me's Need Apply list. Even if I were to find myself in Florida and needed work, I'd rather be a cashier at Publix.
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