Author Topic: Snakes are active in town  (Read 462695 times)

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Offline TheSandman

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Re: Snakes are active in town
« Reply #220 on: May 31, 06, 08:04:49 AM »
i don't know.  if i saw what wildman experienced when i opened the front door, i would just wet myself.

then i'd shut the door and sell the house.

Offline Nolena

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Re: Snakes are active in town
« Reply #221 on: May 31, 06, 01:06:53 PM »

Offline Surfer_Dude

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Re: Snakes are active in town
« Reply #222 on: May 31, 06, 01:45:09 PM »
Good link Surfer_Dude.

I especially liked 'Removing Snakes from Dwellings' using rodent glue boards.

http://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/UW037
Then you're going to need gloves and oil again and I don't know if I want to go down that road. ;)

I was golfing and I tried to remove a snake from a green with a sand trap rake.  The darn thing came up the pole towards me.  I threw that rake at least 25yds out of bounds with the snake attached.  Because of this, I would go with the broom if possible.

Offline ChattyCathy

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Re: Snakes are active in town
« Reply #223 on: May 31, 06, 03:29:56 PM »
Having owned many snakes in the past, when they would get loose I would throw a towel over them and grab under their head, or I would hold their head down with some object (broom handle, whatever was handy and depending on size of the snake), then pick them up below their head so they couldn't reach me to bite me.  I did this with snakes found in the wild, too - but never a rattler.  I'd throw a box over it and keep it contained, then call my rattlesnake-expert friends to come get it.  I would never kill a snake.

angiepoo

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Re: Snakes are active in town
« Reply #224 on: May 31, 06, 05:10:00 PM »

Offline Wrightwood

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Re: Snakes are active in town
« Reply #225 on: May 31, 06, 05:47:15 PM »
Quote
I don't think I will go hiking down there anytime soon!

It doesn't make any difference if you're in Lone Pine Canyon, in your yard or in Wildman's living room. Snakes are part of living in this community.

Offline WWMtnGal

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Re: Snakes are active in town
« Reply #226 on: May 31, 06, 05:56:16 PM »
Well then if you here me screaming from your house, you will know why!

 :) ;D :D

angiepoo

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Re: Snakes are active in town
« Reply #227 on: Jun 02, 06, 05:17:17 AM »
I know they can be anywhere up here, Wrightwood.  I was just joking around. ;)

Offline Chuck

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Re: Snakes are active in town
« Reply #228 on: Jun 04, 06, 05:20:11 AM »
We had our first rattler today taking a nap beneath the CR & R Trashcan.  It was a nice healthy looking one 3 1/2' long with 6 rattles.     

angiepoo

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Re: Snakes are active in town
« Reply #229 on: Jun 04, 06, 05:25:09 AM »
Do you live up here Chuck?

Hillbillies

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Re: Snakes are active in town
« Reply #230 on: Jun 05, 06, 12:45:31 PM »

Offline Chuck

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Re: Snakes are active in town
« Reply #231 on: Jun 05, 06, 07:52:51 PM »
Do you live up here Chuck?

Of course, I'm no flatlander!  We get all the critters that come up from the east canyon side.  This year we have seen more rabbits in the last month than we saw in the previous 13 years. 

SteelCommuter

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Re: Snakes are active in town
« Reply #232 on: Jun 06, 06, 06:29:20 AM »
We had our first rattler today taking a nap beneath the CR & R Trashcan.  It was a nice healthy looking one 3 1/2' long with 6 rattles.     

It was only 3 foot.  The next time he mentions it, it will be 5 feet with spitting venom.   ;D

The thing I can't remember is, did we put it in the trash or the recycling bin?  Uh oh...


Offline Nolena

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Re: Snakes are active in town
« Reply #233 on: Jun 09, 06, 01:34:16 PM »
This is interesting from Laughinguy:

The facts;

Size:

Adults 24 - 51 inches long (61 - 129 cm) Most seen are 18 - 40 inches. Newborns are about 10.5 inches.

Appearance:

A heavy-bodied, dangeously venomous pit viper, with a thin neck and a large triangular head. Pupils are elliptical. Scales are keeled. A light stripe runs from behind the eye diagonally to the upper lip behind the corner of the mouth. Usually there are 2 or 3 large scales on the top of the head between the supraoculars.

Ground color varies from greenish gray, yellow, tan, olive green, to brown. Irregular, dark, well-defined, diamond or near diamond-shaped dorsal markings.

Black and white rings surround a thick tail. The black rings are narrower than the light rings, and often offset. A rattle on the end of the tail, consisting of loose interlocking segments. A new rattle segment is added each time the skin is shed.

Similar to and easily confused with the Western Diamond-backed Rattlesnake, though there is little range overlap in California.

Heat sensing pits on the sides of the head help the snake to locate prey by their warmth. Long, hollow, movable fangs connected to venom glands inject a very toxic venom which quickly immobilize prey. The snake can control the amount of venom injected and the fangs are replaced if broken. Bites on humans are potentially dangerous without immediate medical treatment. Even a dead snake can bite and inject venom if the jaws reflexively open when they are touched.

Behavior:

Primarily nocturnal and crepuscular during periods of excessive daytime heat, but also active during daylight when the temperature is more moderate. Not active during cooler periods in Winter.

Prey is found while the snake is actively moving, or by ambush, where the snake waits near lizard or rodent trails, striking at and releasing passing prey. The snake then follows the trail of the envenomated animal and swallows it whole.

When alarmed, a rattlesnake shakes its tail back and forth. The movement rubs the rattle segments together producing a buzzing sound which serves as a warning. Juveniles are born with only a silent button at the end of the tail. 

Diet:
 
Eats small mammals, including ground squirrels, mice, rats, rabbits and hares, and occasionally lizards, snakes, and toads.

Reproduction:
 
Live-bearing; young are born July - September. Male to male combat occurs.

Range:
 
Found in southeastern California from the Colorado river roughly near the San Bernardino County line, west through the Mojave desert, north, east of the Sierras into Inyo County. Absent from the southeastern Colorado deserts, but there are unconfirmed reports of sightings west of the Colorado River in Imperial County. Ranges north into Nevada, east into west Texas, and far south into Mexico.

Habitat:
 
Inhabits grassland, desert scrub, rocky slopes, creosote bush flats, open juniper woodland, and light chaparral.

www.californiaherps.com/ snakes/pages/c.s.scutulatus.html

Offline Nolena

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Re: Snakes are active in town
« Reply #234 on: Jun 09, 06, 01:34:54 PM »
"Male to male combat occurs."

That would be interesting to see.

Offline Chuck

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Re: Snakes are active in town
« Reply #235 on: Jun 09, 06, 02:12:01 PM »
What about the old standby female wrestling?

Offline Nolena

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Re: Snakes are active in town
« Reply #236 on: Jun 09, 06, 05:33:48 PM »
Rattlesnakes don't like mud.  ;)

Offline Chuck

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Re: Snakes are active in town
« Reply #237 on: Jun 09, 06, 07:12:07 PM »

Chesslike

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Re: Snakes are active in town
« Reply #238 on: Jun 09, 06, 07:44:41 PM »
BBob says that oil is alot better anyway.  I don't know what he is talking about.  Do females wrestle in oil?

Boy it just hit me, speaking of snakes and BBob are one of the same.

I just heard from Dolly and she told me she won't be able to make her appointment with you. She does not care for mean people.

Offline Chuck

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Re: Snakes are active in town
« Reply #239 on: Jun 09, 06, 09:09:03 PM »
I'm going to have Kathysc call Dolly because its her that made the snake and oil comment, posting under my name.  I would have never made that reference, Dolly!