Misslizard wrote:
I'm so HAPPY to see that other people try to save the snakes! !Where I live there are lots of timber rattlers and copperheads and cottonmouths.I've never had a problem and I see them regularly.I respect them and enjoy getting a chance to observe their place in nature.Only an average of nine people a year die of snake bite,you are way more likely to die by drunk driver.Most people get bit trying to kill the snake,you'd accomplish more if you hit the drunk driver with the shovel.I saw a cool bumper-sticker that said " Give Snakes a Break".But if you get me started on reptiles I'll never shut up.They are my trains if you know what I mean.
Don't forget that snakes also eat mice. I'd much rather have the rattlesnakes that, as you correctly note, kills very few people a year so that they can eat mice and maybe save some people from hantavirus.
By the way, I fell on top of a rattlesnake once when I was a kid, but it didn't bite me. My father said that he couldn't tell which of us was in a bigger hurrier to get out of there, me or the rattlesnake.
I probably did save someone from being bit on their fingers by rattlesnakes once. I think it was a cousin from Houston, but it was 40 years ago and I'm not positive about that. We needed to load an empty stock tank out in a pasture (for cattle to drink from) onto a trailer so that we could move it to a different pasture. There was a fair sized prairie dog town in the pasture making it a prime location for rattlesnakes.
The other guy walked up to the first tank and started to bend over and pick it up from the bottom. I suggested that might not be such a good idea.
Instead, we both grabbed the top of the tank, dragged it our way about three feet and then from the top of the tank without putting our fingers underneath the tank, we picked it up high enough that we could see under it. Under the tank in the area where he was going to put his fingers there were three rattlesnakes near each other, the closest about three inches from where he would have stuck his fingers to pick it up.
So we dragged the tank another thirty feet or so, completely away from the rattlesnakes, picked it up again, and loaded it on the trailer.