The Phnom Penh Post

Craftsman makes masks from Florida python skin

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A CRAFTSMAN from the southeaste­rn US state of Florida has come up with a novel way of tackling both the coronaviru­s pandemic and the problem of invasive pythons and iguanas that damage the state’s fragile ecosystem.

Brian Woods, the 63-yearold owner of All American Gator Products, has turned his hand to designing face masks made out reptile skin.

“I took something that’s very serious and turned it into a fashion statement,” he said at his workshop in Dania Beach, 40km north of Miami.

Woods got his inspiratio­n from a curious source – a meme he saw of a horse wearing a woman’s bra as a face mask. He asked his wife if he could borrow one of hers to test i f the concept would work.

He now sells python skin face masks on his Facebook page for $90.

Snake hunter Amy Siewe arrived at Woods’ home with a giant python for skinning.

Woods sells the python skin face masks on his Facebook page for $90.

“They’re wreaking havoc on the Everglades,” she said, referring to the vast wetlands that occupy much of southern Florida.

“They get to be between 18 and 20 feet [5.5 to 6m] long and they eat everything from rats to deer.”

The pythons were probably introduced to Florida as exotic pets toward the end of the last century and released into the Everglades, where they have no predators.

The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conser vation Commission pays hunters a bounty to capture the snakes.

Iguanas likely also came to Florida as pets before being released into the wild, where they thrive in the balmy climate.

 ?? AFP ?? Brian Woods makes snake skin face masks inside his workshop in Delray Beach.
AFP Brian Woods makes snake skin face masks inside his workshop in Delray Beach.
 ?? AFP ?? Cricket stock is created by cooking thousands of crickets.
AFP Cricket stock is created by cooking thousands of crickets.
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