Python puu-puus anyone?

La Diva thinks the 'gator is winning this round with the Burmese python! Clickety-click to see more snake 'n' 'gator action!

Darlings, as you all know, La Diva loves living in Southern Florida and tries to enjoy all of its natural plenitude. However, I was struck by an interesting story about our fair and balmy land in the Miami Herald this past Monday. It was about Burmese pythons.

Did you know that there are approximately 150,000 of the repitiles in Florida, surviving and thriving mostly in the Everglades? Tossed away like trash from owners no longer able to feed them, plenty a python has found a welcoming new habitat in the swamp and grasslands of Southern Florida. And, like so many other "introduced" species, they have no predators and are spreading and at an alarming rate!

Since the snakes are much too prolific to be captured and culled, what the heck do you do with 'em? Miami Herald reporter Fred Grimm has an idea:

"In the Philippines, they're rubbed with spices, stuffed with leaves from the palongpong vine and served as cinafa'y feclat.

Cinafa'y feclat not only packs more menu appeal than ''hot roasted python,'' it offers a culinary solution to the infestation of giant snakes threatening to overrun, or rather over-slither, South Florida.

And beyond. Apparently, there's no biological reason keeping Burmese pythons -- now copulating in the Everglades like prom dates -- from striking out for Disney World and other points north. The U.S. Geological Report concluded that "roughly a third of the contiguous United States lies within the python's range.''

But I suspect it was the specter of 18-foot baby-gulping constrictors lurking in the pool at the foot of Splash Mountain that prompted state wildlife officials last week to propose paying a bounty for each Burmese python hunters extracted from the Glades.

BARE CUPBOARDS

Unhappily, the state treasury is tapped out. Unless snake hunters can be persuaded to wade into the swamps for discount tickets to the Miss Tallahassee Beauty Pageant, a bounty won't staunch Florida's python population. (Now estimated at 150,000, though one wonders who the hell has been slogging around the Everglades counting snakes. We can't get an accurate count for our human immigrant population in South Florida, yet we've got a handle on the number of swamp water creepy crawlies?)

Well-meaning wildlife managers can't save us from the giant snakes that threaten wading birds, pets, toddlers and Korean SUVs. Chefs, however, can. The restaurant industry has shown it can simply rebrand an unappealing creature and send it the way of the dodo (a huge flightless bird devoured into extinction by human predators with hearty appetites).

Chefs rechristened a once-abundant South American fish with a snaggly grin apt to give children nightmares. Lately, the creature formerly known as Patagonian toothfish has been so overfished that it's now considered unseemly for high-minded diners to order Chilean sea bass.

A slimehead, as catch of the day, had limited allure. As orange roughy, it's worth $25.95 a filet. Disgusting little invertebrates that fishermen called (I swear) ''whore eggs'' now show up in sushi restaurants as "spicy sea urchin.''


A Cambodian woman sells snakes for snacks at the market...mmm, mmm!

SHELL GAME

Dog fish, under the restaurant witness protection program, are marketed as ''rock salmon.'' Stumpknockers as ''spotted sun fish.'' Mud crabs, under the auspices of California cuisine, become yummy "peekytoes.''

Sea turtles have been pushed to near extinction by misguided males in search of the turtles' mythical aphrodisiac properties. Surely then, a phallic creature that grows more than 20 feet long can be sold on South Beach as "pan-seared Burmese Viagra.''

Passenger pigeons were once our most common native bird. Until we decided to eat them. By 1914, they were goners.

Pythons can't even fly. They'd be much easier to fry, broil, bake or sauté into gastric memories.

We'd still have to contend with that other monstrous reptile fast spreading across the Florida peninsula -- the Nile monitor. In the Philippines, roasted monitors appear on the menu as cinafa'y fanias."

By Fred Grimm of Miami Herald.com June 1, 2009

Ahhh...python stiletto pumps by Christian Louboutin

Personally, La Diva LOVES THE IDEA of corralling up the critters for lovely handbags and shoes as you know I certainly don't believe "it tastes just like chicken!" What do YOU think, darlings? Take a 'mo and vote!


What should we do with all those Burmese pyhons?
Fry 'em up and eat 'em!
Mama needs a new pair of shoes!
Leave the poor creatures alone!
Free polls from Pollhost.com



5 comments:

  1. I've started out with a vote for shoes and handbags, naturally!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Gosh, I was going to heap praise upon you and suggest you get this published! But, I missed the part about Fred Grimm until the end.

    We need to start giving serious jail time to cretins who release their "pets" in Florida.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Thanks Troll,except how do you catch the gutless ba$tards?

    ReplyDelete
  4. 1) All exotic species required to have an ID chip installed at owner's expense.

    2) Police called to the trailer for the 18th time because Billy Bob is whomping on Billy Sue can simply ask to see the Chip Certificate for whatever exotic species they have. No chip? Animal confiscated and jail-time.

    3) Animal found in the wild with chip? Jail-time.

    4) Police go to trailer (on an unrelated mattter) and find animal missing? Unless Billy Bob can produce the dead body, he gets Jail-Time.

    This won't do anything about asshats who release dogs and cats and such. And it won't STOP Billy Bobs from obtaining animals they can't handle. But it will put a dent in it.

    ReplyDelete
  5. That's a great, simple and cost-effective idea!

    ReplyDelete

Tell La Diva ALL about it!