Zolfo Springs cousins wrangle 300-pound, 16-foot Burmese python on family property

Aaron Brown was driving down Parnell Road when he spotted something on his family's property that required a second look. 

"I drove past it and said, 'That's a big snake.' I had my mother with me and she said, 'Well, get out and get it.' I said, 'You get out and get it. If that joker catches me, you can’t help me,'" Aaron recalled. 

That big snake turned out to be a 16-foot Burmese python. 

Aaron called his cousin, William Wilkinson, for help. 

"I told him. 'Man, watch that thing; I’m on my way. We are going to catch that thing,'" said William. 

After it slithered into a culvert, Aaron, William, and William's son Hunter went to work. 

"We were trying to pull him back and pull him back but he got back on us," said William. 

The family didn't give up. After hooking and shooting the snake, the fight was over. 

"Once we got him pulled out, it was like, 'My God! What a snake!'" William recalled. 

And it's the biggest snake ever reported to be found in Zolfo Springs. 

"We measured him and laid him down and the two kids down beside him to get a rough idea and ended up finding a tape measure," said William. 

It measured in at 16 feet, 4 inches and weighed 300 pounds. 

"We've run these woods and run barefooted in and out and never seen anything like that big," William said.

The family called in area wildman and snake hunter Dusty Crum

"We are down in the Everglades trying to stop these pythons from migrating further north in all directions," said Crum. 

He took the snake to have it skinned and examined. Inside he found 100 eggs. 

Pythons are appearing in other places than the everglades. On Monday, FWC officers worked with the Charlotte County Sheriff's Office to capture a 9-foot python near Rotonda/Englewood in Charlotte County. 

"Hopefully this is a rogue snake and they haven't migrated this far north. These boys stopped an invasion by eliminating a big breeding snake like that," said Dusty. 

With the snake now gone, Aaron and William are keeping their eyes open, just in case. 

"I've been watching every ditch on the way to and from work hoping I see another. I have people asking me to take them snake hunting now," they said. 

If you come across an invasive python you can call the FWC's Exotic Species Hotline at 1-888-Ive-Got1 (1-888-483-4681) to report nonnative animals.

FloridaWild Nature