View allAll Photos Tagged PYTHON!
Missy & Mhina
Missy getting a hug from Mhina. These two could not be more indifferent. Missy is quite simple when it comes to the ball pythons: she has no interest. She'll just chill and enjoy the attention I give her. She's more fascinated by the scampering feet of the bearded dragons - they are far more interactive than the boring snakes it seems to her. And well, Mhina has been around all the sights and smells of the house since she was a hatchling (Spring '02) that the only smell she concerns herself with are rats. Rats are a completely different story. lol
Throughout the whole video Mhina is simply moving away from Missy - she seems to enjoy getting exercise and exploring the environment outside of her own enclosure and Missy is simply an obstacle. I only take her out of her enclosure for no more than thirty minutes at a time and only when she gets active, usually at night. She basically indicates when I fool around with her; this was one of those times. I don't forcefully take them out of their hidebox, unless I'm feeding them or they need a quick soaking during ecdysis, to minimize any undo stress such actions may cause.
Yukio touches her tail in the video, which is basically all he ever does, if ever he gets the gumption. Never aggressive, just curious. Under normal conditions I don't advise tail touching with snakes because it can be a sensitive area and they will often jerk away when this occurs. Mhina does not do this. Mhina doesn't seem to be sensitive in this area. I've tested her tolerance quite a bit because of the household I live in and she has shown what her limits are, which is pretty limitless. However, I do not push my snakes. My other BP, Beau, (hatched Spring '02) does not like the whole social aspect with different stimuli; he can be wary of his surroundings and I don't wish to agitate him. Even though he's never been aggressive, I don't take the chance. I adore my ball pythons and the bitch pom too. lol
The green tree python is a species of python native to New Guinea, islands in Indonesia, and Cape York Peninsula in Australia. Described by Hermann Schlegel in 1872, it was known for many years as Chondropython viridis. As its name suggests, it is a bright green snake that can reach 2 metres in length and 1.6 kg in weight, with females slightly larger and heavier than males. Living generally in trees, the green tree python mainly hunts and eats small reptiles and mammals. It is a popular pet and numbers in the wild have suffered with large-scale smuggling of wild-caught green tree pythons in Indonesia. Despite this, the green tree python is rated as least concern on the IUCN Red List of Endangered species.
Thank you for your visit, kind comments
Have A Great Day, my frıends
Every day i spend my time, drinking wine, feeling fine. . . www.youtube.com/watch?v=VK1OSN8QZ5Q&list=RDVK1OSN8QZ5Q
This is a photo of a Australian native green tree python only found in north Qld. This little one is a baby and is one of my first photos taken on my new Pentax K-3.
Amel Python Sandals - Exclusive for Uber.
Featuring a sky high stiletto heel, ankle straps and a metal toecap detail.
Available in 8 single colours, a 7 colour Metallic Collection and our 19 colour Boutique Collection incorporating our brand new Winter 2020/21 colour palette.
Rigged for Maitreya, Belleza, Slink & Legacy.
A green python at Australian Reptile Park near Gosford, New South Wales. A gorgeous fellow who had no qualms being photographed!
Indian Python
This Python was about 9 feet in length and it is still not fully grown.
Hingolgadh, Gujarat, India
02/01/2016
Canon EOS 7D + 55-250mm
Brown water python (Liasis fuscus) / (Liasis mackloti)
EDIT: Made it less green, hopefully it's not too magenta now
I'm just showing Robbie some neat things on his eMac. I think in this picture I was showing him a bit how to program in this awesome programming language Python (www.python.org). Later that I found perhaps the best text editor in the world. I love it. It's called TextMate and it can do everything (www.macromates.com).
It's hard to believe that this menacing looking creature is actually a rather smallish Green Tree Python at the Toronto Zoo just having a rest. A little zoom, a liitle tonal processing, and voila, you have spooky.
I'm revisiting some of my older shots. This one taken during a trip to the Zoo in 2017.
Python Bridge, officially known as High Bridge (Hoge Brug), is a bridge that spans the canal between Sporenburg and Borneo Island in Eastern Docklands, Amsterdam. It was built in 2001 and won the International Footbridge Award in 2002. The bright red bridge spans 90 meters and was designed by Adriaan Geuze of the architectural firm West 8
www.bing.com/videos/search?docid=607999287602449866&m...
I'm like Stevie Ray Vaughan on the stage, high on music
Teeth grindin', sweatin' under the lights
But then my boss calls and she's crushin' me with a 20 ton weight
Just like in Monty Python
Somebody left on the sink, it's still running
My eyes are gonna overflow
I need a happy hour on sad days (sad days)
I need a happy hour, I can't wait (can't wait)
I'm like Ponce de Leon setting on a ship for the new world
Checking out the birds and flowers
Let's chill out on this island, I've been
Sucking on a lime and coconut, coconut
I think I could stay here for the rest of my life
Please, don't ever make me go home
I need a happy hour on sad days (sad days)
It's my happy hour, I can't wait (can't wait)
Maybe I'll meet a scientist in sweatpants and a hair tie
We'll conversate about rare birds and MIDI keyboards
And we'll slow dance, head on my shoulder
Swing back and forth and my friends are gonna smile
Everything's gonna be alright
It's my happy hour on sad days (sad days)
I need a happy hour, I can't wait (can't wait)
I need a happy hour, to save me
Maybe I'll meet a scientist in sweatpants and a hair tie
We'll conversate about rare birds and MIDI keyboards
And we'll slow dance
I need a happy hour, I can't wait (can't wait)
22.10.2024.
An Autumnal scene on the Chesterfield Canal at Osberton.
The Chesterfield Canal Trust's narrow boat 'Python' is tied up here.
Native to Australia and nearby islands, the carpet python is a non-venomous snake. Even so, handled without training or supervision, the python can become really dangerous.
Though it doesn't have any fangs or venom, what it does have is a set of around 100 small, sharp teeth which can cause substantial needle-like lacerations.
Without venom, carpet python primarily uses constriction to kill their pray. Or the intruder.
Ball Python - there are actually parts from 3 different snakes (all ball pythons) in this shot.
Shot at Jungle Bob's
Centereach, NY
June 2013
What a big surprise to find a big (i would guess 2,5m-3m long) reticulated python on a night walk in a rainforest in Singapore!
In the pond!!! never seen anything like it. He was certainly alive with his head sticking out. Seemed quite comfortable
Individuals of this species have proved to be indisputably the longest snake in the world. Unlike it's rival for the record, the South American anaconda, this tropical Asian monster is active amongst trees.
The python is still persecuted by man for it's skin and few live long enough to reach their maximum potential size.
Reticulated pythons are able to take prey as large as deer or pigs and, very rarely people.
The Burmese Python (Python bivittatus) is a large constrictor originally native to parts of Southeast Asia. The species, capable of growing to over 20 feet long and weighing several hundred pounds, now also call the state of Florida in the Southeastern United States home. The snakes were first imported into the United States due to demand for the exotic pet trade. Wild populations subsequently became established in South Florida from animals that either escaped captivity or were intentionally released. With no natural predators to keep their population in check, it is estimated that over 100,000 of the massive snakes now inhabit the Everglades wetlands. Researchers have documented the pythons preying on more than 70 different animal species, many of which are endangered and found nowhere else. This has placed the sensitive ecology and biodiversity of the Everglades in peril — so much so that local authorities now ask members of the public to participate in annual hunts of the invasive reptiles in order to control their numbers and save native wildlife.
Image caption: An invasive Burmese Python captured in the Florida Everglades. USA.
The green tree python is a species of python native to New Guinea, islands in Indonesia, and Cape York Peninsula in Australia. As its name suggests, it is a bright green snake that can reach 2 m in length and 1.6 kg in weight.