Righto. I should point out that these encounters were in swampy deer-hunting woods. I agree that one found in your yard is a different matter. I've had 3 german shepherds bitten in the face over the years. All in the yard. I leave the vipers in the woods alone. Copperheads are way more common here than the rattlers.Well, I am in disagreement. it is OUR territory/neighborhood...the snakes and us..I am not ceding them everything outside of my house. If they would leave me alone, I will leave them alone. But they don't. I have had one hung in my pant leg, another bounce off the toe of my boot, several strike at me and fall short and they have bit several of my dogs and innumerable sheep. Thankfully I have never been hit.
So they get killed when I meet them. And I don't care if you don't like it, so save it for someone who cares.
OK, I tested my recent idea:Stop and think about it: we are training the rattlers not to rattle. Every time one rattles some cowboy runs over and hacks off its head. Not great for reproductive success. The better tactic is to bite first, rattle last.
I wish I had found these shin guards last time I went shopping. The ones I bought are more expensive, hard to put on and have plastic panels sewn in with fabric gaps between panels, probably OK for most bites, but a lucky strick might get between the panels.
For years I used knee high rubber boots wnen wandering about in snake country. Not snake proof, but a darn sight better than just jeans (never got to test it). I tried to find suitable plastic sheeting that I could simply tuck into my boots for protection but couldnt find it... now that I think about it I have just that sitting in my recycling bin right now: an empty cat litter container!
As for bites on the hands; I once had a lecture from the LA County doctor responsible for snake bites. He had his 40% list: about 40% of the bites he treated were males, about 40% were under the age of 30, about 40% were inebriated, about 40% were non-accidental (handling the snake) and about 40% were on the extremeties. So, when he got a call at 3 AM his response was: "Don't tell me, drunk kid bitten on the hand while picking up a snake....".Glad other folks have run into rattlesnakes that didn't rattle. I think a high percentage of bites are on hands. Be carful picking up shot birds, etc.
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