Invasive Burmese pythons feed heavily on whitetail deer in the Florida Everglades. Konnor Ross.
A hunter from Islamorada, Florida, kicked off the state’s early muzzleloader season with a bang earlier this month by accomplishing a rarely-seen feat. Twenty-one-year-old Konnor Ross, who works as an inshore fishing guide, managed to bag a nice 8-point marsh buck and a 16-foot Burmese python during the same morning hunt.
Ross tells F&S that he was on his way to a remote stand location inside south Florida’s Big Cypress National Preserve when he spotted the giant python crossing the road. “It was 4 a.m., and I was half asleep when I saw it,” Ross says. “I’ve been hunting pythons for a long time, and that’s the biggest one I’ve ever seen.”
Ross put the python in his cooler before poling his canoe out to his deer stand.
With help from a friend, he wrangled the invasive constrictor, killed it, and stashed it away in his cooler. Then he dropped his buddy off at a deer stand and continued on to his own spot in marsh.
“I parked the truck and poled my canoe back to my deer stand,” he recalls. “Once the sun came up I could hear that buck sloshing through the water, walking my way.”
At first, the buck was about 150 yards out, Ross says, but it kept coming in on a string. “I just sat there, and, when he got to within about 80 yards, I put a shot on him that went right through the shoulder and out the other side,” he says. “He kept coming, so I reloaded my muzzleloader, and shot him again. He dropped right there—about 30 yards from me.”
Related: Florida Snake Hunter Bags 16-Foot Burmese Python Loaded with 60 Eggs
It’s only the second buck that Ross has shot in five years of hunting public land inside the Big Cypress preserve. He says the 2023 has been unique due to unseasonably high water. “It’s a tough place to hunt. Usually you can’t canoe in during muzzleloader because the water’s not high enough,” he says. “This year we haven’t had a cold front big enough to push the water out, so I’ve been able to sneak up on deer in a canoe while they’re trapped out on the islands.”
As for his snake, Ross estimated the python’s weight at approximately 140 pounds and says it measured 15 feet, 11 inches without the head. With the head on, he says, it would have measured at least 16 feet. “I think it was a big female coming off a late nest,” says Ross. “They just finished a python challenge over there in that exact same WMA the week before. I was surprised to even see a snake like that out there after that.”
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