What it means to you Tracking inflation Best CD rates this month Shop and save 🤑
NATION NOW
The Everglades

Python hunt fuels fashion for Fla. business

Chad Gillis
The (Fort Myers, Fla.) News-Press
Brian Wood, the owner of All American Gator Products based in Hollywood, Fla., displays Burmese python skins that captured in the Everglades.  He makes wallets, belts and purses from the skins.

IN THE EVERGLADES, Fla. — Brian Wood grabbed an 8-foot Burmese python by the tail, lifted it off the ground and went for a semi-choke hold — a move in which snake handlers hold the invasive reptiles just behind the skull.

He missed by a few inches, allowing the snake to twist to the right and latch onto his hand.

"Heeee, heee, heeee," Wood screamed as the snake dangles from his hand.

Wood pulled at the snake, trying to free himself from the constrictor.

Python hunt snakes its way through Florida

The problem with that technique: Pythons have curved teeth. Pull the snake and you only make the wounds worse.

"I've been bit," Wood said while his friend and fellow hunter, Leo Sanchez, gave him medical advice.

"Check your hand. It might get a little swollen," Sanchez said while gaining control of the snake. "It depends on the (amount and types of) bacteria (in the snake's mouth)."

Wood, owner of All American Gator Products in Hollywood, Fla., eventually will have the last laugh. The snake that sunk its teeth into him will be euthanized, gutted, tagged and sent back to Wood — who will either make the skin into a pair of lavish, $1,000 boots or send it to high-end fashion designers in Europe.

He's been making clothes, jewelry and accessories out of alligator hide for 27 years. Now Wood is trying to create a market for Burmese pythons killed or captured in the Everglades.

"We’re trying to help the hunters, help the Everglades and help the situation," Wood said on a recent day at his leather and clothing store. "On the sales end, people buy them just because it’s an Everglades snake. They want to help, so it’s kind of a little twist we can use to promote (a python-skin industry)."

Burmese pythons have been growing in population and range in South Florida for the past two decades. The snakes eat and compete with endangered and threatened species, and they're considered a top ecological threat.

Native to Asia and now likely a permanent part of the South Florida wilderness, these pythons can grow to 20 feet long and eat prey as large as adult alligators.

Python Patrol trainees wrangle writhing reptiles

They're almost impossible to find in the wild because their skin looks like camouflage clothing. These ambush predators don't move often, which makes spotting them even harder.

Wood started working with python skins in 2010 when the state created a program that allows permitted hunters to remove the snakes from certain preserves and parks.

Leo Sanchez holds onto a just-captured 8-foot Burmese python he caught Feb. 10, 2016, on a dike in the Everglades in Dade County, Fla.

Now he makes everything from python Chuck Taylor-style tennis shoes to purses and $1,800 full-length pants.

In 2013, the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation had its first python hunt with 1,600 hunters killing just 68 snakes.

That hunt drew worldwide attention with media from across the USA, Canada, Europe and Australia following people toting everything from rifles to machetes, paint rollers and even cordless electric screw drivers. ("You just scramble their brains around a little bit, and that's it," a hunter said to The News-Press in 2013.)

Florida also took a public image pummeling in editorial cartoons, columns and letters to the editor — most of which depicted the hunt as a way to gather slack-jawed, machete-wielding rednecks in what looked like a Bass Pro Shops traveling circus.

No hunts happened in 2014 or 2015.

This year the hunt is back, and Wood's team is taking part.

In previous years he would buy skins from hunters, as he has done with alligators for more than 20 years. This year Wood is an active hunter in the 2016 Florida Python Challenge, which is about slaying one of the most damaging invasive species living in the Sunshine State.

Like a virgin: Python births 6 sans mate

For material, Wood relies heavily on Sanchez, a seasoned hunter who said he has captured about 70 giant constrictors.

"A 12-footer bit me in the chest once," Sanchez said while showing photos of a python attached to his right pectoral muscle. Helpers pulled at the snake, and Sanchez's skin went with it — looking like some sort of circus torture display. "It was the best day of my life."

Sanchez isn't a blood-thirsty man intent on killing. Rather, he loves the snakes to the point that he refuses to kill them.

"It’s the same rush," he said. "It doesn’t change. I’m like a kid in a candy store with these snakes."

While most hunters carry machetes, guns and big sticks, Sanchez uses his hands to subdue the snakes.

His only weapon is a bright headlamp, which he uses to find and catch the animals.

"I’m a reptile lover, and I’m never going to get to travel to Asia to put my hands on these," said Sanchez, his hands shaking from the adrenaline rush. "So I come to the Everglades (to catch them). And at the same time I’m helping the get rid of these invasive (species), helping the ecosystem try to bring the native animal back — give them at least a fighting chance."

Wood brought two snakes to his shop earlier in the day, pulling them from white plastic bags packed in a blue cooler.

Fla. aims to snare invasive species with amnesty day

He opened one bag, and a gutted 7-foot python plopped onto his lowered tailgate.

“They typically leave the head on unless it was blown off,” he said while unraveling the dead snake.

Head lamps illuminate a Burmese python captured in the Florida Everglades before it is placed into a bag.

Captured pythons first go to the University of Florida, where scientists record the location the snake was killed, its length, weight, gender and stomach contents.

From there Wood skins the snakes and sends the skins to a tannery in Sebring, Fla., where chemicals are applied make the material both durable and supple.

Several months later — tanning is a long process — the skins come back to his shop

"Sometimes we’ll make something for ourselves," Wood said. "And other times we’ll process them for the hunters and (make them) purses, wallets, whatever the person wants to make from their own snake."

He can even take lengths of reptile skins and shape them into complicated forms like that of a motorcycle seat.

"It's protecting the Everglades," said son Jake Wood, a former Florida Gulf Coast University student who now works for the family business. "That's essentially why (the end product) exists."

Follow Chad Gillis on Twitter: ChadGillisNP ​

Related:

Burmese python killed in Florida Everglades

Invasive species for dinner? Add a grain of salt

U.S. to test new trap to catch Fla. pythons

Miami man catches Florida's longest ever Burmese python

Final results from Florida's python hunt

Featured Weekly Ad