The Standard (St. Catharines)

Bangkok’s snakes keep catchers busy despite virus surge

Urban sprawl eating into natural habitats blamed for rise in sightings of slithering creatures in recent years

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BANGKOK — Bangkok parkgoers looking for relief from renewed coronaviru­s restrictio­ns got a slithering surprise Thursday when a python as long as two of the Thai capital’s ubiquitous motorbikes was spotted in one of the city’s most popular green spaces.

The reticulate­d python was only the latest big serpent to turn up in the dense centre of Bangkok, where urban sprawl eating into natural habitats has been blamed for a rise in snake sightings in recent years.

This one was found in Benjasiri Park, which is flanked by towering hotels, apartment buildings and several high-end shopping malls now largely off limits due to restrictio­ns put in place this week to stem a surge in virus cases.

The curbs have shuttered non-essential businesses and limited restaurant­s to takeout only, leaving parks among of the few public places still open.

As parents pushed strollers and joggers rounded a nearby running path, firefighte­rs called in to corral the snake started by trying to capture it with a ladder from the ground up.

The python plotted its escape by heading out on a limb, bound for a building on the edge of the park that houses the World Fellowship of Buddhists.

Other firefighte­rs were waiting for it on the roof of the building. While one used a stick to grab the python by the neck, another man tried to cut the branch it was on. They soon coaxed it into a sack, tied up the bag, and carried it away.

Firefighte­r Somchai Yoosabai said the snake measured 3.5 metres long and weighed about 35 kilograms.

As coronaviru­s cases rise, so do the risks.

“If any houses ... have COVID-19 cases, we have to go to catch the snakes anyway,” he said. “Plus, wherever we go to catch a snake, the crowd is always there. We cannot avoid that.”

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