Men catch 15-foot-long, 144-pound python in the Florida Everglades

Florida snake wranglers catch 144-pound, 15-foot python

Snake wranglers Nick Banos and Leonardo Sanchez had a career-making catch during a hunt in the Florida Everglades on Saturday when they wrestled a 15-foot, 144-pound python into submission.

The pair spotted the snake in the brush on the side of a levee where the trees meet the water. It quickly bolted into the bushes and trees when Sanchez jumped to grab it.

“We had to fight it in those trees to get it out,” Banos, 24, told CBS News. “This snake can easily take out a 170-pound man.”

After a few minutes, the hunters were able to take control of the python. One man grabbed the top of its neck, the other carried the tail.

“You have to make sure you have it stretched out,” Banos explained. “Otherwise it’s going to be hard to keep control.”

Nick Banos said he caught a 15-foot, 144-pound python in the Florida Everglades. Facebook/Nicholas Banos

The men were working on behalf of the South Florida Water Management District, which created a pilot python elimination program to help protect the Everglades and eliminate invasive pythons from public lands.

“The Governing Board has approved a pilot monetary compensation program that will incentivize a limited number of public-spirited individuals to kill pythons,” the organization explained on its website. “The program will give participants unprecedented access to SFWMD lands in an effort to remove these destructive snakes, which have become an apex predator in the Everglades.”

Every capture of a python 4 feet long or under is worth $50; every foot after that is an extra $25, Banos explained.

Nick Banos and his partner Leonardo Sanchez catch a python as part of south Florida’s pilot python elimination program. Facebook/Nicholas Banos

Unfortunately, Banos says, the pythons have to be euthanized, which isn’t easy for most snake wranglers.

“I have never had to kill one and have always chosen not to, but we have to look at the bigger picture,” he said. “The situation has gotten to the point where everything is getting eaten and the pythons keep multiplying. We’re trying to save as many native species as possible from these invaders.”

Banos has been catching pythons for more than five years and says his experience has grown exponentially over that time, which is why he was one of 25 people chosen to participate in the unique python program. If you spot a python in your area, Banos recommends leaving it to the professionals.

“With a snake of that size, if you don’t know what you’re doing the safest thing to do is call someone,” he advised.

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