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-   -   Effing Rattlesnakes (http://forums.pelicanparts.com/off-topic-discussions/431984-effing-rattlesnakes.html)

DARISC 09-24-2008 09:33 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by GothingNC (Post 4198695)
Found this in my garage last year

King snake?

Burnin' oil 09-24-2008 09:36 AM

Don't feel bad, Hugh, alot of people are scared of snakes - nothing to be ashamed of . . .

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1222274165.jpg

Heel n Toe 09-24-2008 09:43 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DARISC (Post 4198719)
King snake?


Black Rat Snake... aka Pilot Snake ...I used to keep 'em as pets when I was a kid.

http://www.wildwnc.org/education/animals/black-rat-snake-elaphe-obseleta-obseleta

http://www.dnr.state.wi.us/org/caer/ce/eek/critter/reptile/blackratsnake.htm

Heel n Toe 09-24-2008 09:45 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Hugh R (Post 4198714)
...can't seem to get her act together to keep the sliding door in her room close for her rat dog.

LOL... that's what I call "those dogs" too.

The doggie door sounds like a good idea. If you're lucky, one of those rattlers in the area will sink its fangs into the rat dog.

onewhippedpuppy 09-24-2008 11:51 AM

You missed a prime opportunity to teach the MIL to shut her door.:)

Rick Lee 09-24-2008 03:00 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Hugh R (Post 4198714)
It got in because my 79 y/o mother in law, who lives with us can't seem to get her act together to keep the sliding door in her room close for her rat dog. I think I'm going to get one of those doggie doors for the sliding door.

A decent sized snake, venomous or not, will make short work of a rat dog. Dogs don't grow up around snakes and have no fear or knowledge of them. Snakes, if not full of food and not shedding, will kill anything they think they can swallow. They are the most efficient killers on Earth. All of them. That rat dog is gonna be someone's dinner if he tangles with a sizeable snake.

Dan in Pasadena 09-24-2008 03:10 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by onewhippedpuppy (Post 4198414)
Snake in house = dead snake. Last time I checked, they're not exactly endangered.

I am SOLIDLY with Matt on this.

It actually take three pages of OT to come to THIS conclusion?:rolleyes:

Hugh R 09-24-2008 03:19 PM

Rattler or not, like I said it was under the bed and I wasn't going to inspect it, go the internet and post a pic on Pelican to get a consensus of what kind of snake it was before I took action.

Rick V 09-24-2008 03:34 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Dan in Pasadena (Post 4199341)
I am SOLIDLY with Matt on this.

It actually take three pages of OT to come to THIS conclusion?:rolleyes:

I think I mentioned this on page one.:D

RWebb 09-24-2008 04:46 PM

every one should know the venomous snakes -- it can save your life

Normy 09-24-2008 05:49 PM

Southern black racer I found in my garage in Orlando. Black racers are beneficial animals- they eat mice and rats. I chased him out with a broom...

Before he left, he said to me: "Normy, I don't know about all those stone chips you've got on your front clip...but those Borla exhaust pipes are making me horny!"

:p

Nhttp://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1222303777.jpg

Tobra 09-24-2008 08:45 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DARISC (Post 4198388)
Oh, really?

yes really, never saw copperheads that big, ever, and I have seen plenty of them

DARISC 09-24-2008 09:35 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Tobra (Post 4200018)
yes really, never saw copperheads that big, ever, and I have seen plenty of them

My post was in response to your statement:

"Copperhead does not have big triangular shaped head."

Those are photos of copperheads and they clearly have triangular shaped heads (all vipers do). I've also seen plenty of them - when I was a kid in PA.

Whether or not their heads are "big" I guess is relative.

I'm puzzled by your statement regarding the snake's "big" size, because I don't see anything in the photos to scale the snakes to. How do you know that they are "that big", however big that is?

onewhippedpuppy 09-25-2008 07:44 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by RWebb (Post 4199558)
every one should know the venomous snakes -- it can save your life

Not if you kill them all equally dead.:D

nynor 09-25-2008 09:42 AM

obviously a gopher snake. not sure how anyone could mistake that for a rattler. i just grab those guys and put them in the garden. i used to keep one as a pet, a big five footer, and let him run about my bedroom loose, except for feeding. there weren't any bugs or rodents in the house as long as i had him.

RWebb 09-25-2008 12:48 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by onewhippedpuppy (Post 4200565)
Not if you kill them all equally dead.:D

untrue

you will break your neck getting help - worth the risk only if bit by a venomous snake


ps - for vipers re head shape above, read "pit vipers"

scottmandue 09-25-2008 12:58 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by 9dreizig (Post 4197990)
Did you ever think about keeping a sharpened garden hoe around ?

I keep a hoe around the house... she handles all the snakes.

scottmandue 09-25-2008 01:05 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by vash (Post 4198428)
i heard that rattle snakes are not rattling anymore. some don't even have the rattles. evolution or something.

This is the way I heard it is happening... people go walking and as they pass a rattle snake hidden in the brush the snake rattles to scare off the perceived danger. People freak out, hunt down the rattle snake and kill it. Thus by (un)natural selection rattle snakes that do not rattle survive to breed.

DARISC 09-25-2008 01:34 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by RWebb (Post 4201227)
ps - for vipers re head shape above, read "pit vipers"

I used a google (the one on the innernets) and found this:

"While it is true that pit vipers (which include all our venomous snakes except the Coral Snake) do have heads suggestive of arrowheads, there are many nonvenomous species which have broad heads are also suggestive of the arrowhead shape."

Eh?

Rick Lee 09-25-2008 02:05 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by scottmandue (Post 4201274)
This is the way I heard it is happening... people go walking and as they pass a rattle snake hidden in the brush the snake rattles to scare off the perceived danger. People freak out, hunt down the rattle snake and kill it. Thus by (un)natural selection rattle snakes that do not rattle survive to breed.

There goes my belief in creationism. Whew! That was easy.

kimlangley7 09-25-2008 04:57 PM

snakes... OK war story>>

I lived in upcountry Thailand [Lopburi] as a kid [1964-1966]- my Dad was the US Army advisor to the Thai Special Forces, Infantry and Airborne schools...

We had snakes .. lots of snakes in Lopburi... I think in the two years we were there.. killed about 4 cobras and a couple of vipers.... Distinctly remember my brother wasteing a cobra as it crawled across the front yard with the .22....

was the best of times over there

RWebb 09-25-2008 05:05 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DARISC (Post 4201329)
I used a google (the one on the innernets) and found this:

"While it is true that pit vipers (which include all our venomous snakes except the Coral Snake) do have heads suggestive of arrowheads, there are many nonvenomous species which have broad heads are also suggestive of the arrowhead shape."

Eh?

simple - in us: if arrowhead = true .then. unknown

if arrowhead = false .then. SAFE
exception case: bright colors
if bright colors, then goto poem

elwood-914 09-25-2008 05:25 PM

[

I doubt a cat will keep snakes away. Any snake that feels hungry or threatened would make very short work of a house cat. There's a photo floating around out there of an Anaconda swallowing a Cheetah. And wild cats are far more alert in the wild than house cats are around the house.[/QUOTE]

I disagree. I have had cats up here for 20 years and No they won't keep the snakes away but they will agitate a rattler enough and keep their distance. They have alerted me to about 6 snakes over the years.

DARISC 09-25-2008 06:16 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by RWebb (Post 4201691)
simple - in us: if arrowhead = true .then. unknown

if arrowhead = false .then. SAFE
exception case: bright colors
if bright colors, then goto poem

Whoa (Alto!)! Muy elegante! Gittin' medieval on us witcher razor sharp lojick, Br'er Ockham? :D

onewhippedpuppy 09-26-2008 10:31 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by RWebb (Post 4201227)
untrue

you will break your neck getting help - worth the risk only if bit by a venomous snake


ps - for vipers re head shape above, read "pit vipers"

I don't see how beating the hell out of it with a shovel breaks my neck.:D My biggest fear isn't finding a snake in the house, it's my wife finding a snake in the house. "Deathly afraid" doesn't even begin to describe it.

RWebb 09-26-2008 10:33 AM

i mean if you are out hiking, camping, fishing, etc.

i have some suggestions for practical jokes on your wife...

one involves the infamous white snake...

onewhippedpuppy 09-26-2008 10:40 AM

She always runs away from my white snake. Ever since we got married........:p

RWebb 09-26-2008 01:39 PM

it needs to sneakily slither up on her

campbellcj 09-28-2008 03:49 PM

We have encountered at least 4 on our property this summer. This tiny one got into the living room on 9/3. I wasn't home so the housekeeper smashed it with a metal mop head.

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1222642034.jpg

gassy 09-28-2008 05:35 PM

http://www.ebaumsworld.com/video/watch/966567/

Taz's Master 09-28-2008 06:05 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rick Lee (Post 4201388)
There goes my belief in creationism. Whew! That was easy.

Rick, I love the idea of a rattlesnake, because snakes are deaf, they can't hear, why would they rattle? Do they know that even though they are deaf, that other animals aren't, and would then be alerted by the rattle? Then you have black snakes who are also deaf that imitate the sound that rattlesnakes make (which neither snake can hear) by vibrating their tails in leaves to warn other animals that they cannot know can hear the warning. Crazy. I don't know if this is an argument for or against evolution, but it makes me smile to consider it.

nynor 09-28-2008 06:20 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Taz's Master (Post 4207019)
Rick, I love the idea of a rattlesnake, because snakes are deaf, they can't hear, why would they rattle? Do they know that even though they are deaf, that other animals aren't, and would then be alerted by the rattle? Then you have black snakes who are also deaf that imitate the sound that rattlesnakes make (which neither snake can hear) by vibrating their tails in leaves to warn other animals that they cannot know can hear the warning. Crazy. I don't know if this is an argument for or against evolution, but it makes me smile to consider it.

where did you get the information that snakes are deaf?

AND that is not how evolution works. its not like a snake would have to hear a rattle sound in order to develop a rattle sound. that would be teleological evolution.

Rick Lee 09-28-2008 06:43 PM

Yes, I know snakes are deaf. But even non-venomous ones, even snakes not remotely related to Rattlesnakes, often shake their tails violently when agitated. I don't know much about the evolution of the Rattlesnake, but my guess is that the early rattles were some mutation of their newly shed skin being stuck on their tails. Snakes don't usually eat when they're about to shed and they're usually pretty irritable, sort of their "time of the month", if you will.

Taz's Master 09-28-2008 06:56 PM

nynor, snakes can sense vibrations, but they cannot hear. Rick, my post was really not about evolution, just something that I find fun to think about. My family is rather pro-snake, they know about pupil and head shape and would have no problem identifying a poisonous snake, and understand how beneficial snakes are.

nynor 09-28-2008 08:41 PM

this thread has become odd....

SXSMAN 09-29-2008 04:25 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by onewhippedpuppy (Post 4203063)
She always runs away from my white snake. Ever since we got married........:p

Did you get married in a small club in NJ ???

RWebb 09-29-2008 12:06 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Taz's Master (Post 4207106)
nynor, snakes can sense vibrations, but they cannot hear....

right.

they cannot hear in the conventional sense. snakes rest their lower mandible on the ground and can hear extremely well in that manner.

so their hearing is a matter of which medium the vibrations are in & the freq. range to be detected

btw - pit vipers can see in the dark - esp. mammals - the pits are actually infrared detectors

so stay cool

Taz's Master 09-29-2008 01:00 PM

Are you saying that sankes can listen to sounds, that they can sense the vibrations in the air transmitted into the ground? Is it necessary for the lower jaw to be on the ground? I understood the jacobson's organ received vibration input detected by the ribs.

I think its fantastic that nature equipped rattlesnakes with an audible warning while giving them excellent visual camoflage. Reptiles are just cool.

RWebb 09-29-2008 01:38 PM

both

i'll bet there a whole book or symposium on this

if you want i'll ask my snakologist friend -- he's a boxster driver too

Taz's Master 09-29-2008 03:24 PM

Absolutely I'd like to know, ask that snakeologist (although I'd feel more comfortable referencing his/her wisdom if he/she had a more oficial sounding title).

From what I understand about rattlesnakes, their decline in population is not really from hikers hunting down the noisy examples, but construction caused habitat destruction. Roads are probably the biggest problem for the rattlers, 1st by destroying the denning sites, then by the vehicles squashing the snakes.


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