carpet snake

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Liz
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carpet snake

Post by Liz »

We had a 9 foot carpet snake living under our house for two weeks. We also had two traumatised pussies. They were terrified of it & would not go down stairs. We did catch it one night & put it in a bag tied up with rope meaning to take it up to the environmental park the next morning. It had done a houdini by morning. We finished up having to get the snake catcher. Best $50 we had ever spent. Cats still wouldn't go downstairs & a couple of nights ago a car kept running backward & forwards & slamming on it's brakes just outside our house. We thougfht it was some hoon doing wheelies but in the morning there was a dead carpet snake on the road. Not sure if it had been coming or going but at least it is not here & the moggies are much happier. They are protected but the guy in the car didn't worry about that.

There are quite a few snakes around this year. A friend had a king brown in her house which was a bit of a shock & a red bellied black ran across our back steps just as I was about to go down. They say that if you have red bellied blacks you won't get king browns which is sort of comforting but not quite.
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Post by harma »

Hi Liz, very interesting to read about snakes under your house, does that mean there are in the crawl space. Poor cats!! You are not afraid of snakes or doesn't give you the oeaahhh feeling? I have no idea how I would react knowing there were snakes in, near or around my house, but it something else than the mice in my kitchen last fall.
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Post by starfire »

Looks like a big one. I don't blame the kitties. I had to look up carpet snake. The site said you couldn't have a better rat catcher. Without rats, I wouldn't want one around.

Love, Shirley
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Post by Polly »

Hi Liz!

When I saw your post just under the one from Gabes about drop bears, I thought it was another Aussie spoof! Until I saw those photos. Beautiful snake (I'm a snake fancier - I'll stop my car to help one cross the road). Are any Aussie snakes poisonous?

And, we still haven't been told about hoop snakes? WHAT are THEY?

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Polly
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tex
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Post by tex »

Hi Liz,

Yep, big snakes and cats don't get along together very well.

I'll bet all the rain and flooding is making the snakes move to higher ground. We had the same thing happen here, a couple of years ago, when we were having a lot of flooding during the summer. We haven't seen many snakes since then. We've had more flooding here, recently, but since it's winter here, the snakes are mostly denned up, and haven't been moving around.

Regarding the one on the road, snakes usually show up in pairs, (of course, we only see a fraction of the snakes that are around, so when we happen to see one, we usually don't see it's mate).

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Wayne
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Post by Polly »

Well, I'll be danged!

Didn't know they travelled in pairs. Next time I help one across the road I'll look for its mate! It IS amazing what knowledge pops up here on the Board.

Love,

Polly

Love,

Polly
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Post by tex »

Polly,

Maybe I'd better issue a disclaimer on that one. :lol: Actually, that's not a fact, (as far as I'm aware), and I'm certainly no herpetologist. I was just expressing my own experience, over a lifetime of "snake-watching". It may be species-specific, or maybe it's peculiar to this part of the country, for all I know, but around here, if someone sees a snake, they tend to count on seeing it's mate, usually within a day or so.

That's a standard assumption for rattlesnakes, in particular, and considered to be general knowledge, around here. IOW, if you find one in your flower garden, you'd better keep your eyes open, until the other one shows up. Thinking back, though, I can't think of a singe species for which that isn't true, in this area. If I see a snake raiding bird's nests, in the spring, for example, a quick look around will usually turn up it's mate, usually in a nearby tree.

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Tex
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Post by Mars »

Same thing for deer in these parts. If you see one crossing the road you better look for the ones following or pray it's the "last" one crossing the road!

Deer crossing signs are standard in these here parts of Ohio! LOL

Love and hugs,
Mars
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Liz
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Post by Liz »

Hi All,

Carpet snakes or more properly python are not poinonous bit they can give a nasty bight & they love small animals & chooks & their eggs. We used to keep ducks & there was usually a snake or two around. I didn't mind so much then but that was before we got our beautiful moggies.

Red bellied blacks are poisonous as are king browns. They are often more froightened of you than you are of them & in most cases take off if they see you. It is only if disturbed or trod on that there could be problems. then you need to get to hospital pretty quickly.

Our eldest daughter is on acreage & she gets plenty. It was the snake catcher who told her that red bellied blacks eat baby king browns so she should feel lucky that she had the black. She was not so happy to find one in her son's toybox though. She still has brown ones though.

Liz
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Post by Gabes-Apg »

one of the feared poisionious snakes in Australia is the eastern brown.

i have the delight (insert sarcastic tone for the word delight) of working in a semi industrial area, near the major airport in Brisbane, it is on reclaimed swamp land.

so aside from planes taking off and landing all day, the smell of fertilizer plants and oil referineries, we have the pleasure of also dealing with Brown snakes, they can be in the car park, or near the entrance of one of our buildings

Brown snakes are fast moving and quite aggressive so you dont tend to hang around them...

our facilities management people (delightful team - yes sarcasm again) sent out this email.....

Hi All,
A timely reminder to you all that as summer approaches we are likely to see an increase in snake sightings, as was the case this afternoon at the front doors of Building C. As such, please be on the lookout for any of our reptilian neighbours and exercise caution particularly around the vegetated areas of the buildings (and I am not referring to the facilities section).

If you do happen across any snakes or wildlife that maybe endangering to staff or if the animal is injured please
-stay well away from harm
-contact facilities immediately on ext# 666 or notify reception
-keep watch on the position until facilities arrives and
-if possible get a photograph of the culprit so we know exactly what it is that we are dealing with.

Do not attempt to capture the animal yourself; facilities will engage handlers to do that so no harm will come to you or the animal.

Thanks for your cooperation.


I can assure you that most of us that read this were like, "YEAH RIGHT as if we are going to hang around and take a photo of the thing, get ripped" a few of the people that go jogging at lunchtime have also seen them on the side of the road.

to date my only incident with wildlife out here is a brush turkey chasing me when i tried to get my car one afternoon,
( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Australian_Brush-turkey )

I have lived semi rural and had carpet pythons in the laundry and the garage....

its fun to be an aussie......
Gabes Ryan

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Post by starfire »

That was an interesting article. Certainly different behavior from Turkeys in the northeast. They leave in a big hurry at any indication that a human might be near but they are brave (ie: hungry) enough to come into our yard for food left for them (mainly whole kernel corn). If they even see you move (through a window) they are gone.

Love, Shirley
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Australian Slang

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Joan
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Post by starfire »

:grin: I grew up with "Chew the Fat" and "Reckon" but that was it. HaHa

Thanks Joan.

Love, Shirley
When the eagles are silent, the parrots begin to jabber"
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Liz
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Post by Liz »

It is a pity that the old Aussie slang is sort of dying out, in the younger set anyway, & being replaced with a language all of their own. A lot of it comes from the USA through movies and such.

I would hate to see our unique Aussie vernacular die out & be replaced with a generic jargonthat could come from anywhere.

Some of the old sayings are going too, like rhyming slang "trouble & strife" for Wife & "Rubbidy Dub" for pub, which is a bit of slang of it's own.

Gabes, maybe you & I could set up a "Retain the Aussie Slang" society.

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Post by starfire »

I agree with you Liz. "new" certainly isn't necessarily "better".

Love, Shirley
When the eagles are silent, the parrots begin to jabber"
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