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ExpatSingapore Message Board 27 May 2012, 11:19:54 am *
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Author Topic: Snakes in Singapore  (Read 7950 times)
Anna
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« on: 16 March 2001, 11:13:00 am »

Did anyone see that show on the Discovery Channel last night (Thurs) with that English guy (complete nutter if you ask me!) who was travelling the world searching for the biggest pythons?
The second or third largest he found was in Singapore in a storm water drain near an MRT station. It was HUGE - about 4 metres, and it's jaw was massive. Apparently there have been "7 close encounters with these reticulated pythons in Singapore in the last 2 years" according to this presenter.
So, my question is - has anyone out there actually SEEN one of these monster snakes hanging out in the street/drain/dumpster?
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« on: 16 March 2001, 11:13:00 am »



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Rob
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« Reply #1 on: 16 March 2001, 11:23:00 am »

Longest I have seen was I suppose abt 1.5 meters. I was on my bike and the time, so didn't hang around to take accurate measurements. The only ones I have seen in storm drains have been a lot smaller, presumably not pythons, and I suppose venomous
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Dev
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« Reply #2 on: 16 March 2001, 14:10:00 pm »

Take a look at today's Pravda, er sorry, the Straits Times. There's an article about pythons and why they're so common in Singapore. Apparently they can grow up to 10 metres long (about 30 feet in the old language).
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Rob
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« Reply #3 on: 16 March 2001, 14:25:00 pm »

was that Pravda or Prada?
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with my own eyes
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« Reply #4 on: 16 March 2001, 16:18:00 pm »

Six months ago I saw a black cobra about 1.5 metres slithering adjacent to the footpath along 6th Avenue. This was in vicinity of large vegetated patch of land. It was moving pretty quickly just ahead of me so I quickly crossed the road well away from its path.  This was my only sighting of a snake "at large" in 3 years of expat living.
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Angel#1
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« Reply #5 on: 18 March 2001, 10:06:00 am »

There was a loose python - 3m long I am told - in our condo underground car park last year.  Ironically on the day we got married (an omen???).

It appears it got in through storm drains and then was just lying on a ledge having a kip.  Someone called the people from the zoo who got it into a sack using a stick and not much else.  

I didn't see it, but the mgmt told us all about it as they tought it was a wonderful sign that our marriage would be great!!!  (love these Chinese beliefs...)

Not usre about the 3m though, it sounds a bit like "it was thissssss big"

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Teddy

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« Reply #6 on: 18 March 2001, 18:02:00 pm »

Here is the article from the Straits Times (http://straitstimes.asia1.com.sg/singapore/story/0,1870,30040-984779940,00.html)

300 snakes snared yearly, most by police.

The reptiles end up with the zoo, which may keep them, find new homes for them or even put them down.

By Selina Lum.

SECURITY officer Gary Haris was patrolling a condominium on Boon Teck Road when he saw a jogger staring into a drain.

When Mr Haris, 26, took a closer look, he saw a 3.5-m-long python inside. He called the police immediately.

'The snake was just lying there,' he said. 'It must have been very full because its stomach was as thick as a tree trunk.'

Police officers caught the snake and handed it to the Singapore Zoological Gardens on Wednesday.

About 300 snakes are caught and given to it each year. These are snared mainly by the police responding to calls from members of the public.

The Agri-food and Veterinary Authority also hands over snakes it confiscates from those caught smuggling the reptiles.

Mr Robin Goh, assistant manager of corporate communications at the zoo, said that most of the snakes it receives are reticulated pythons, which are indigenous to South-east Asia.

These non-venomous snakes, known to be the longest in the world, can grow up to 10 m in length.

The zoo also receives the occasional cobra and mangrove snake.

Snakes breed easily here because they have no natural predators, such as eagles or mongooses, to keep their numbers in check.

After the reptiles are handed over to the zoo, they are taken to a quarantine area for a thorough check-up, said Mr Goh.

They are then kept for a few days while the zoo goes through its network of local and overseas contacts to find new homes for them.

'Our greatest hope is for other zoos and wildlife institutions to take them in because then they will be well cared for,' he said.

The zoo may also keep the snakes for display, or use them as teaching tools in educational programmes for schoolchildren.

Snakes that are in good health are released into forested areas with help from the National Parks Board, as the zoo cannot keep too many snakes. The not-so-healthy ones are put down.

'It's not that we want to euthanise them, but it's something we have to do, considering the number brought in,' Mr Goh explained. 'We would rather put them down than sell them because this encourages trade in wild animals, which is not condoned by the zoo.'

Snakes help control the population of rats, their natural prey, Mr Goh said. That is why snakes are usually found in drains.

'If you see a python in the drain, just leave it alone and it will slither off after a while,' said Mr Goh.

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