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Reply to: Snakes in a Park
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Previously on "Snakes in a Park"
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A tourist group of visiting Pygmies helped the situation by getting the snakes to form a circle, they called this trick snake and pygmy pi.
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Is there a law against it? If they keep control of it then I don't see the issue.
Snake owners seem like proper nerds who genuinely care about their snakes, unlike the scrotes with pitbulls.
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Snakes in a Park
The question is - Is it ok to take your snakes to the park to sunbathe?
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-65931360
A man who takes his snakes to sunbathe in his local park has sparked an online debate about what animals are - and are not - acceptable in public spaces.
The Friends of Barshaw Park group said it had been contacted by people who were worried about someone taking up to 20 of the reptiles to the Paisley park.
It urged anyone who saw the snakes to immediately call the police.
Far from being horrified, many locals have defended the snake owner, who appears to be a regular visitor.
They said the man was clearly doing no harm and kept his snakes under control at all times, and questioned why the police would need to get involved.
Photos of the man posted on social media show him happily posing with the snakes draped around his neck or standing close to them as they slithered on the grass.
But the Friends group said in a post on its Facebook page that it had been told by the local council that "no-one has permission to bring snakes into Barshaw Park".
It added: "The police request that if you see anyone in the park with snakes, please do not approach the person but call the police on 101 and they will attend".
A woman who responded to the warning said she had met the man a couple of times with her kids.
She added: "Really nice guy, answered the 1,001 questions we had about snakes. The snakes were under control and enjoying a little sunbathe.
"Can we show the same concern for people bringing their out-of-control dogs to the park?"
Another said the snake owner was "really nice and full of smiles" and that any concerns about him were "OTT".
One local wrote that the man only had two snakes when she saw him - one around around his arm and another on the grass - and that she had to warn a passing family not to stand on one of them.
Another pondered what newspaper headline writers would make of the snakes going for a ride on the park's miniature railway, while someone else chose to open up a second front in the debate by claiming to have once seen people with ferrets in the park.
Support for the snakes was not universal, however, with potential safety issues also being raised and one social media user responding simply: "Nope. Ban it. Ban him. No no no."
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