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Living in snake-country


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Hi,

recently I saw something on TV about a hospital in California which is specialized on snake bites. For me it´s a terrible idea that maybe there are some animals in your frontyard laying in the gras who can kill you...

How is living in a "snake-contry"? No walking barefoot? Always be aware that something could be in your boots before putting them on?

Here in Europe we don´t have many snakes. Most of them are in front of the gasoline stations :D just bevore rising up the prices for gas (1 liter is about 1.21 EUROS now).

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They aren't a big deal if you pay attention. You just make lots of noise when you hike around in the bushes and they tend to stay out of your way :) Snakes are generally shy. It is much easier to kill them than it is for them to kill you.

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Most rattlesnakes (out in California at least) are pretty timid. You don't see them very often hiking or fishing. I might see one every other year, and they're not that fast (moving). The Australian vensmous snakes, scare the hell out of me....

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Got a friend who lives in Cuero Tx. He has a shotgun match every year. Two years ago I went and slipped into his house to look at his African trophies. On the foyer table was a 2 gallon fish bowl about half full of rattle snake rattles. I asked where he got all those. The reply was that those are the ones that they killed on the patio....

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My sister's place in SoCal has them all over. They might have gotten one or two of her cats. (Well, either them or the coytoes.) My father stepped on one in her garage and miraculously avoided getting bitten.

I'm not sure what's going to happen with all the rattlers after the fires destroyed much of their habitat (and that of their food source). Maybe they'll move into garages.

A couple years ago I shot the Linea de Fuego match just up the road. On one stage, they had a sign about eight feet from the start position, it read: Do Not Disturb the Rattlesnake, or words to that effect. If you looked closely, you could see a copper-colored rattler curled up at the base of a bush. I swear it was as thick as my wrists... it was not a little two-foot snake!

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We've got snakes by the truckload out near here. The local rattlesnakes are very timid creatures. I've walked past a hundred of them in a day and never so much been buzzed. Don't interpret that as meaning the snakes won't bite. Boots that cover the ankle are an absolute necessity when you're in snake country here. There's a lot of places that are rugged enough, that getting bit will pretty much mandate a helicopter ride out.

The level of aggressiveness of the snake is very regional. I think that southerners will give you a rather different story, especially in regards to water moccassins which have been known to flat-out chase people.

IIRC, I think the only snakebites that are deep-shit-right-now life-threatening are from the mojave rattlesnake and possibly if you get nailed by a huge diamondback.

You shouldn't let any of this bother you. Deaths due to snakebite in the US are EXCEEDINGLY rare. I forget the exact number, but it's in the neighborhood of 20 or less. Hospital visits and driving are vastly more dangerous endeavors than visits to snake country.

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On the TV show mentioned ("Snakebite E.R." or something on TLC), there was a 50-something-year-old man bitten by a California rattler. He was in good spirits and seemed OK, but they kept giving him vial after vial of anti-venom. When I surfed back from the commercial break, his bed was empty. He had died from the snake bite.

One of the victims brought in was a woman who killed the snake that bit an earlier victim. She had bagged it up to bring it to the doctors for identification (so they could give the right antivenom) and a fang poked through the bag into her finger. DOH!

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We have many poisonous snakes here in Texas. Rattlers, copperheads, cotton mouths, and coral snakes. I have seen them all. Never been bitten. You just have to watch what you are doing. I have caught several rattlers. I like snakes. My mother almost killed me when she found out the snake I had in my rooom wasn't a bull snake, but a rattler. :P I stepped in the middle of a diamond back in Feb. in West Texas while quail hunting. I soiled my undies. Luckily he was very cold. :wacko: TXAG

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Grew up here around copperheads, have hunted plenty of places with rattlers. Closest I have come to being bitten was walking into a dark shop in the summer, my constant companion blue heeler Andy (God rest him) dived in front of me and snapped the snake...which he lived to do. Got some guts on me and a scare, but 14 year olds need a good scare now and then :D

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I've always had a stupid fear of wild snakes, but I love captive ones. Crazy I know...

It amazes me when the alligator hunter guy grabs a very deadly snake by the tail and talks into the camera like it is nothing!!!

I've always thought that a snake that bites someone in the wild only did so because that was their only option. My goal is to not make that an option, ever!!!

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We almost tripped over a nice three-foot rattler coming out of match registration at Paper & Iron a few years ago... had to hunt up a .22 so somebody could have snake fajitas that night.

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I've had some exciting moments wandering around the delta after the local farmers flooded their fields and the mice, rabbits, and snakes that feed on them in these thousand acre fields are suddenly confined to a levee about twenty feet wide. I even managed to get myself bitten once when I was a kid and didn't bother to look before I sat down, but all of the snakes in state are no problem when compared to Mississippi's dominant preditor, the mosquito. It was bad enough when we just had to deal with insects the size of chickens but now they're carrying the West Nile virus. At least snakes you can kind of watch out for.

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The only ones that really concern me in So. California are the Mojave Greens they can be a little agressive, the rest will slither away (if I let them) as long as they are not cornered. A good buzz from one when you are up to your waist in scrub brush will disprove the theroy that white men can't jump! :D

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I concur with the aggressiveness of water moccasins (cotton mouths). I once had one chase me while I was canoeing. I swear it stayed with us for at least a mile.

Texasag93 -- what is it with rattlesnakes in February? Don't they hibernate? My cousin was bitten while quail hunting in the hill country outside of San Antonio.

The worst was when the wife found a small cooperhead under my son's swing set. I had finally talked my wife into letting my son go outside and play in the back yard (see reference to Patches post about mosquitos and west nile). I thought my son was never going to get to play outside again.

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Merlin, that thing looks like it could eat Hogzilla!

:lol: Actually hogs are nearly as good as a mongoose as to killing and eating snakes. - Near direct quote from the Discovery Channel.... :D

The same guy caught this one as the one circulated around the net last November.

What posseses a guy to crawl around rocks looking for 60+ lbs snakes...And you do know this was caught in Tx.

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