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oliver2-44

Rat Snake Currently in the House

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The Freightliner Guy

I would just burn the house down :laughing-rofl: 

Snakes in our house ain’t uncommon mostly because my little brother brought a dead snake inside the house man that thing stunk so bad but what I would do is use a stick to lift it up and CHUCK THE DARN THING IN THE RIVER. Anyways hopefully that danger noodle gets removed and you guys can sleep again :handgestures-thumbupright:

 

Kollin:D

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stevasaurus

Rat snakes and Garter snakes are great for the environment.  They eat varmints like mice and rats.  When I lived in Wisconsin, my brother and I would carry them in our pocket...we were like 5 or 6 years old old.  Our Aunt Florence would freak out, but we loved the reaction.  :occasion-xmas:  Now days, I do not like snakes like I used to, but they are more my friends then rats building nest in my horses.  :confusion-confused:

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stevasaurus

You did know that they taste like chicken???  :occasion-xmas:

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stevasaurus

I am finding it good to laugh again...tonight.  Thanks guys...we need more of this.  :banana-dance:

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ebinmaine
1 hour ago, oliver2-44 said:

So what would you be doing?

Looking around outside for more snakes to bring in??

 

 

 

39 minutes ago, stevasaurus said:

Rat snakes and Garter snakes are great for the environment.  They eat varmints like mice and rats

Thank you for posting that. 

There's way too much negativity toward a creature that does incredible amounts of good for us. 

 

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JimSraj

Thank you Horse Newbie!  I got a great chuckle reading you prescribed method of removal. 

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ebinmaine

Glad to hear you folks got the snake out safely without having to move or remodel.  

 

:lol:

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SylvanLakeWH

:clap:

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Horse Newbie
6 hours ago, oliver2-44 said:

The poor "Snake Specialist" guy was laying on the floor working the grabber and camera and really had to scramble out of the way

He’s a “Specialist”… wonder why he felt like he needed to scramble to get out of its way ?… if he knew it was non-poisonous…

:lol:

Edited by Horse Newbie
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sergeant
13 hours ago, stevasaurus said:

Rat snakes and Garter snakes are great for the environment.  They eat varmints like mice and rats.  When I lived in Wisconsin, my brother and I would carry them in our pocket...we were like 5 or 6 years old old.  Our Aunt Florence would freak out, but we loved the reaction.  :occasion-xmas:  Now days, I do not like snakes like I used to, but they are more my friends then rats building nest in my horses.  :confusion-confused:

Another Arliss from Old Yeller Like Myself . Never allowed to have them as Pets  But I occasionally had a snake or Two In My Pocket Just to scare my older Brother . We usually had Blue Racers in the Garage after the river flooded the House which the flooding was an annual occurrence

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8ntruck

Blue racers are neat.  They are a good looking snake and you can play chase you, chase me with them.

 

One of the other engineers I worked with did not like snakes one little bit.  One day he was in my office and one of the production guys showed up with a Starrett box.  He handed it to Lou and asked what that gage was for.  Lou opens the box to find a dead garter snake in it. 

 

Lou was up and out of the chair he was sitting in and clear of my office before that box hit the floor!

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sergeant

Back In 1981 Was going through OSUT One station Unit Training for Infantry, we were doing  react to In-direct fire is a swampy area anyways when I got down I was face to face with a Cooper-head Maybe 3-inches off My Nose  Just Ignored me  and went on into the swamp  I though I was going to get bit because the Guy Next to me Panicked and Ran Back into the Swamp

 

 

 

 

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Horse Newbie
1 hour ago, sergeant said:

face with a Cooper-head

 

1 hour ago, sergeant said:

Just Ignored me  

1 hour ago, sergeant said:

I though I was going to get bit

 

Copperheads are not really quick to bite… especially the adults…

 

The biggest reason they are the most common biters reported in the US is their wide range of habitats, and the fact that they can stand to be in urban areas more than other snakes…

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ebinmaine
43 minutes ago, Horse Newbie said:

 

Copperheads are not really quick to bite… especially the adults…

 

The biggest reason they are the most common biters reported in the US is their wide range of habitats, and the fact that they can stand to be in urban areas more than other snakes…

 

Don't forget about the fact that the humans are becoming more and more oblivious to their surroundings. 

Just like the old adage that some people should never pick up a tool, or that so-and-so don't know the working end of a screwdriver, there are people that should not be in outdoor wild areas without assistance or guidance.

I don't necessarily mean that in a negative way. It could be the environment that you're accustomed to.

A perfect example is this:

Up here in the Northeast you NEVER step on a log in the forest because there's a better than fair chance that it could be rotted and you'll slip and break your ankle or something else.

On the other hand if you're in a dry arid country such as much of the South you ALWAYS step on that log because there's a better than fair chance that if you step down on the other side of it there may be something waiting there to bite your ankle.

Purchasing hiking boots doesn't make you a hiker any more than purchasing cowboy boots makes you a cowboy.

 

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davem1111
4 minutes ago, ebinmaine said:

 

Don't forget about the fact that the humans are becoming more and more oblivious to their surroundings. 

Just like the old adage that some people should never pick up a tool, or that so-and-so don't know the working end of a screwdriver, there are people that should not be in outdoor wild areas without assistance or guidance.

I don't necessarily mean that in a negative way. It could be the environment that you're accustomed to.

A perfect example is this:

Up here in the Northeast you NEVER step on a log in the forest because there's a better than fair chance that it could be rotted and you'll slip and break your ankle or something else.

On the other hand if you're in a dry arid country such as much of the South you ALWAYS step on that log because there's a better than fair chance that if you step down on the other side of it there may be something waiting there to bite your ankle.

Purchasing hiking boots doesn't make you a hiker any more than purchasing cowboy boots makes you a cowboy.

 

 

Well said. :handgestures-thumbupright:  And there are places where you need to frequently look UP because things may drop down from above to bite you.

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ebinmaine
6 minutes ago, davem1111 said:

 

Well said. :handgestures-thumbupright:  And there are places where you need to frequently look UP because things may drop down from above to bite you.

Yes!

And I would never even THINK of that... 

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OldWorkHorse
29 minutes ago, ebinmaine said:

purchasing cowboy boots makes you a cowboy.

 

Aw-shucks, now I gotta return my cowboy hat & and I was just beginnin to like it. :eusa-dance:

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ebinmaine
8 minutes ago, OldWorkHorse said:

Aw-shucks, now I gotta return my cowboy hat & and I was just beginnin to like it. :eusa-dance:

🤠🤠🤠🤠🤠

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sergeant
17 hours ago, Horse Newbie said:

 

Copperheads are not really quick to bite… especially the adults…

 

The biggest reason they are the most common biters reported in the US is their wide range of habitats, and the fact that they can stand to be in urban areas more than other snakes…

I wouldn't Call  Fort Benning exactly Urban 9 Years Later I was a Drill Sergeant  There.  I had a few Recruits get bit  myself  284 square Miles of the Back woods

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Horse Newbie
10 hours ago, sergeant said:

I wouldn't Call  Fort Benning exactly Urban 9 Years Later I was a Drill Sergeant  There.  I had a few Recruits get bit  myself  284 square Miles of the Back woods

Yes @sergeant… that’s what I was saying. 
Copperheads are definitely in the woods…

they are also fairly common in city environments…

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sergeant
1 hour ago, Horse Newbie said:

Yes @sergeant… that’s what I was saying. 
Copperheads are definitely in the woods…

they are also fairly common in city environments…

Down in the Carolina's Yes they're More common in Urban areas.  The southern 1/3rd of Illinois Has Copper Heads.  We do Have the Massasauga & Timber Rattlesnakes,    which are Not very common here is Northeastern, Illinois anymore. Though I did Have a Pet Massasauga as a child for about a week Until Mom found out, and we Had to contact the wildlife center and return it to it Habitat which they're Not even found there anymore In the Morton Arboretum.

 

I had enough encounters with Venomous snakes from one end of this earth to the Other. Malaysian Tracking school was the worst encounter, We Had some Australian soldiers In the school with us and one thought it was fun to keep a Baby Cobra In his ammo pouch (and take it out and Play with it) I don't think any of us slept for 3 night In a row until we made him let it go in the Jungle with a threat of Bodily Harm if He didn't. That's when I realized England didn't send it Prisoners to Population Australia, England sent there Insane people to Populate Australia:lol:

 

 

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