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Thursday, May 17, 2012

Outside Help

Well, I wish I had some mousy news to report but we have been given a large amount of outside help with our small infestation.  The weather has warmed up and most of our reptilian friends who were happily sleeping winter away have emerged from their holes.  As a result, our mice have become nice meals for hungry snakes.  In one week we say no fewer then five rattlesnakes and three gopher snakes. Growing up out in the country, seeing a snake is not as shocking as one might think, they are simply part of our existence.  We all learned at an very early age how to tell the difference between a poisonous snack and a non-poisonous snake.  Now we are teaching our kids.  
If you have never needed this knowledge, let me enlighten you in case you encounter one of our slithering friends.  A rattle snake is a viper, meaning they contain venom.  The key to recognizing them is the letter V.  A rattlesnake's head is in the shape of a V or a diamond.  
Here you can see the V or diamond shaped head (image found on redorbit.com)
Some people think you can tell they are rattlers by how they shake their tails.  There are two problems with this method:
1) Baby rattlesnakes do not have rattles and are highly poisonous AND
2) Gopher snakes also shake their tails as an intimidation tactic (pretending to be the poisonous rattlesnake)

A gopher snake's only real defense is that they look a lot like rattlesnakes and sometimes they act like rattlesnakes.  However, gopher snakes are very useful and non-venomous.  They eat all sorts of rodents and that helps people like me who do not want mice running through my house.  A gopher snake has a more stream-lined head, no V, and should be left to go about their business.
He just looks a lot less scary, doesn't he? (image found on buzzle.com)

One last observation about our snake population, we are seeing LOTS of them and they are BIG.  We have seen two gopher snakes that were easily 3 1/2 feet long.  One stretched across the road beyond the width of my wheel base.  My dad and husband had to deal with a rattlesnake in our barn whose body had a circumference of about 6inches.  The good news is that they are easier to spot but wow, if any of them took you by surprise, it would be a heck of a strike.  But again, no mice - I just love how nature can be used to our advantage. Slither on snakes!!

2 comments:

  1. This post brings back memories of Mom and I at a local theater watching the Disney film about nature and the survival of the fittest. I was enthralled! We have rattlers here and Coral Snakes, along with a couple of other poisonous snakes like Cotton Mouths in the pond behind our house although I haven't seen any of those.

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  2. I still remember walking over a rattlesnake and thinking it was a bee buzzing near my ear. So scary! But yes, let the gopher snakes live!

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