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Florida Python Challenge™ 2020 Python Bowl Kickoff Event 1/10/20. The competition runs Jan. 10-19 and supports the delicate Greater Everglades Ecosystem.

The event includes:

•Sponsor Bass Pro Shops on site with one of two grand prize 570 Tracker Off Road ATVs.

•State experts on nonnative fish and wildlife available for media interviews.

•Live Burmese pythons and a live catching demonstration

•Pre-registered members of the public take part in a training to gain first-hand experience capturing a wild Burmese Python.

•A limited number of field bags free to participants registered for the Python Bowl who are present at the event.

 

FWC Photo by Carli Segelson

#Python Way To Success

This python had been been rescued from the home of a person who was a hoarder. It had scars from being burned while in the home.

Na een verblijf van elf uur in de Efteling met de 3 kleinkinderen zijn de batterijtjes bij ons allemaal leeg . Wel een geslaagde dag !!

au fond de la grotte un python attend sa proie

The green tree python is a species of python native to New Guinea, islands in Indonesia, and Cape York Peninsula in Australia. Living generally in trees, the green tree python mainly hunts and eats small reptiles and mammals.

And this is just a yawn!!!!

 

Baby python. Practising with my zoom lens when I first got my camera

 

The Burmese python (Python bivittatus) is one of the five largest species of snakes in the world (about the third-largest as measured either by length

or weight). It is native to a large variation of tropic and subtropic areas

of South and Southeast Asia.

 

They are often found near water and are sometimes semi-aquatic,

but can also be found in trees. Wild individuals average 3.7 m long,

but have been known to reach 5.74 m .

 

Burmese pythons are mainly nocturnal rainforest dwellers. When young, they are equally at home on the ground and in trees, but as they gain girth, they tend to restrict most of their movements to the ground. They are also excellent swimmers, being able to stay submerged for up to half an hour. Burmese pythons spend the majority of their time hidden in the underbrush.

 

Like all snakes, the Burmese python is carnivorous. Its diet consists

primarily of appropriately sized birds and mammals. The snake uses its

sharp rearward-pointing teeth to seize its prey, then wraps its body

around the prey, at the same time contracting its muscles, killing

the prey by constriction. It is often found near human habitation due

to the presence of rats, mice, and other vermin as a food source.

 

Burmese pythons are often sold as pets Although this species has a reputation for docility, they are very powerful animals, capable of inflicting severe bites or even killing a keeper by constriction.

This is Midas with Keiths huge Burm, just shows how big she really is! Hoping she is gravid to him!

The Burmese python (Python bivittatus) is one of the five largest species of snakes in the world (about the third-largest as measured either by length

or weight). It is native to a large variation of tropic and subtropic areas

of South and Southeast Asia.

 

They are often found near water and are sometimes semi-aquatic,

but can also be found in trees. Wild individuals average 3.7 m long,

but have been known to reach 5.74 m .

 

Burmese pythons are mainly nocturnal rainforest dwellers. When young, they are equally at home on the ground and in trees, but as they gain girth, they tend to restrict most of their movements to the ground. They are also excellent swimmers, being able to stay submerged for up to half an hour. Burmese pythons spend the majority of their time hidden in the underbrush.

 

Like all snakes, the Burmese python is carnivorous. Its diet consists

primarily of appropriately sized birds and mammals. The snake uses its

sharp rearward-pointing teeth to seize its prey, then wraps its body

around the prey, at the same time contracting its muscles, killing

the prey by constriction. It is often found near human habitation due

to the presence of rats, mice, and other vermin as a food source.

 

Burmese pythons are often sold as pets Although this species has a reputation for docility, they are very powerful animals, capable of inflicting severe bites or even killing a keeper by constriction.

My first attempt at custom minifigs. Yes, I know its been done before, but wanted to make my own. Designed in the style of the classic castle themes, I hand-drew all of the designs and am happy with the way they turned out.

Florida Python Challenge™ 2020 Python Bowl Kickoff Event 1/10/20 at Bayfront Park, Miami, Florida. The competition runs Jan. 10-19 and supports the delicate Greater Everglades Ecosystem.

The event includes:

•Sponsor Bass Pro Shops on site with one of two grand prize 570 Tracker Off Road ATVs.

•State experts on nonnative fish and wildlife available for media interviews.

•Live Burmese pythons and a live catching demonstration

•Pre-registered members of the public take part in a training to gain first-hand experience capturing a wild Burmese Python.

•A limited number of field bags free to participants registered for the Python Bowl who are present at the event.

 

FWC Photo by Avery Bristol

This python was over 5 meters long. It was in the rain season and, cause the heavy rain it was quite cold that day. The snake was a bit torpid but it acted very aggressively when I approached.

Questo pitone superava i 5 metri. Era la stagione delle piogge e, quel giorno, la temperatura era più bassa della media ed il serpente era un pò intorpidito. Tuttavia reagì aggressivamente quando mi avvicinai di più.

Ready for action. See story on www.wildcast.net

Rosamond Gifford Zoo

Charlie Dachton's submission into Python Challenge.

 

FWC photo

Reticulated python (Python reticulatus). This snake had been rescued by Bali reptile rescue centre. It had been held overnight and then released back into the wild, were it belongs :-)

I found this fresh skinned Python on a treen on Tioman Island in Malaysia. I was on my way to the Dive Resort and I wonder why all people where looking upwards on that small little Bridge. When I came there and looked up in the tree I saw this wonderful Snake. She is just a beauty, isn't she? I love this Pic, maybe you love it to :-)

Quick badminton game prior to the Python Madrid Meeting in the awesome office space from Kaleidos.

An African Rock Python coiled up in typically python fashion on a tree branch. Python sebae, commonly known as the African rock python, is a large, nonvenomous snake of Sub-Saharan Africa. Africa's largest snake and one of the five largest snake species in the world (along with the green anaconda, reticulated python, Burmese python and amethystine python), specimens may approach or exceed 20 ft in length. The southern subspecies is generally smaller than its northern relative. The snake is found in a variety of habitats, from forests to near deserts, although usually near sources of water. The African rock python kills its prey by constriction and often eats animals up to the size of antelope, occasionally even crocodiles. The snake reproduces by egg-laying. Unlike most snakes, the female will protect her nest and sometimes even her hatchlings.

(Emirates Park Zoo, Samha, Abu Dhabi, Jan. 2015)

Spotted python in Australia

Fossil was kind enough to give me a MetaWatch prototype, and my Python client library is now correctly sending images over Bluetooth.

A great talk about Python iCamp, an indepedent, agile Python education program in China. The subject matter was interesting, the slides and content was clear and the talk was given in Chinese with an excellent simultaneous translation by Wong Jiang Fung (sitting on the right of the desk).

 

Unfortunately, I don't know the speaker's name.

Pythons, because why not?

le python est fermement tenu à la gorge

Florida Python Challenge™ 2020 Python Bowl Kickoff Event 1/10/20 at Bayfront Park, Miami, Florida. The competition runs Jan. 10-19 and supports the delicate Greater Everglades Ecosystem.

The event includes:

•Sponsor Bass Pro Shops on site with one of two grand prize 570 Tracker Off Road ATVs.

•State experts on nonnative fish and wildlife available for media interviews.

•Live Burmese pythons and a live catching demonstration

•Pre-registered members of the public take part in a training to gain first-hand experience capturing a wild Burmese Python.

•A limited number of field bags free to participants registered for the Python Bowl who are present at the event.

 

FWC photo by Carli Segelson

  

A Burmese Python sleeps in his enclosure. The Burmese python (Python bivittatus) is one of the five largest snakes in the world, native to a large variation of tropic and subtropic areas of Southern- and Southeast Asia. They are often found near water and are sometimes semi-aquatic, but can also be found in trees. Wild individuals average about 12 ft in length but have been known to reach even 19 ft and more. Like all snakes, Burmese pythons are carnivorous. Their diet consists primarily of appropriately sized birds and mammals. The snake uses its sharp rearward-pointing teeth to seize its prey, then wraps its body around the prey, at the same time contracting its muscles, killing the prey by constriction. They are often found near human habitation due to the presence of rats, mice and other vermin as a food source. However, their equal affinity for domesticated birds and mammals means that they are often treated as pests. Exceptionally large specimenss even eat larger prey such as antelope, pigs or goats, and are known to have attacked and eaten alligators and adult deer in Florida, where they are an invasive species. (Emirates Park Zoo, Samha, Abu Dhabi, Jan. 2015)

Drugo srečanje Python uporabnikov 22. marca v Kiberpipi.

 

19:00 Uvod

19:15 Gamedev with pygame (Anže Pečar)

19:30 Speeding up algorithms in python (Miha Zidar)

19:45 Binary deployment of your Python projects, NOW! (Rok Garbas)

20:00 Finding similar images with Python (Jernej Virag)

20:15 Load testing with FunkLoad (Andraž Brodnik)

Python cupcakes for my husband (sorry for the quality of the pictures)

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