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Old 05-29-2006, 12:02 AM   #1
bullsnakes_rule
It's A Bullsnake

Hello, all.

I just want to say that I've fed Draco (my hypo bullsnake yearling) a pinky rat earlier tonight. This will be his 2nd feed since he has been in my possession. So far so good, folks!

By the way, here is a true story which I've found on a website that you might be interested in reading:

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" It's a Bullsnake, But it's no Bull
by Abby Hemingway

I wasn’t even home when the six-foot male bullsnake slithered into my hall from the garage. It was a very warm September day, and as usual, I had been keeping the door between the house and the garage open for my little schnauzer, Rags, to do his thing on papers out there. I kept Rags’ water in the hall, and of course this water dish is what the old bullsnake was after.

A carpenter was to come to the house that very day to build some more shelves for me. The carpenter, Pat, whom I had known for several years, had a key to the house and upon entering, spied the snake stretched out lazily in the hall with his six-foot length and eleven inch (give or take) girth on display. Pat grabbed a broom and was able to coax the snake back into the garage, and after pushing the garage door opener, encouraged it to keep on going outside onto the driveway; he then immediately closed the garage door. Then it began - the pounding on the garage door. Later, Pat said he had never before heard anything like it. The snake would stop for a while, then start up the pounding again.

Pat finished the shelves and loaded his tools into his truck. He has a shell camper that is open to the cab and as he drove away he happened to check his rear view mirror, and there was the bullsnake staring back at him. But, he stayed cool as it just so happens that Pat has a neighbor who is very fond of snakes and knows how to handle them. When possible he likes to keep one or two under his house to keep rats away. Luckily, the neighbor was home when Pat drove up and gladly slipped a noose around the head of the snake and led him under his house.

When I arrived home, I found a note Pat had left for me before he realized that he would be taking the snake home with him. The note read: “A bullsnake got into your house. I chased him out, but keep your doors closed because he wants back in.” Well, how weird was this! Why my house? I immediately called Pat, who was still laughing as he told me the follow-up story and that the snake was under the neighbor’s house. We still were both mystified as to why the snake would uncharacteristically pound on my garage door to get back into my house specifically!

I was pretty relieved, to say the least, that I had not come home and found the snake myself. I wasn’t thinking much about snakes when I went into my bedroom and began to change clothes. I was at the far end of the room pulling open a drawer when I heard a very loud thrashing and beating noise coming from somewhere between me and the bedroom door. I leapt across the room, slammed the door and called Pat back, telling him about the noise. Immediately, he figured everything out: “That must be the old guy’s wife!”

Pat and his neighbor friend came over and finally found the female, hunkered down among my shoes in the closet. They slipped the noose around the female, probably about one-eighth the size of her “husband,” and took her to rejoin her mate under the house. So, a very happy ending.

After that I got sort of interested in bullsnakes (which are often called gopher or pine snakes) and found out a few things on the Internet. They are among the largest snakes in North America, and while six feet is a typical length, they can reach eight feet according to Barron’s Manual on Snakes.

Bullsnakes range in color from cream to various shades of brown with black and brown blotches. Their heads are small with a scale or shield on the tip of the nose that is useful for burrowing or investigating crevices in search of food. Bullsnakes are fond of mice, rats, rabbits, and ground nesting birds, as well as squirrels because they can also climb trees. They suffocate their prey, then swallow it whole. Flexible ligaments that allow for swallowing animals wider than their bodies attach the top and bottom jaws. Strong acids in the snake’s stomach digest the food. After a large meal, a bullsnake will rest for weeks before searching again for food.

The natural enemies of bullsnakes are red-tailed hawks, eagles and coyotes, not to mention man. Therefore, bullsnakes have developed some clever methods of seeming formidable, since they are non-venomous and cannot strike like a rattler. When alerted to danger, a bullsnake can coil up, loop itself into an “s” shape as though to strike, and vibrate its tail, which works particularly well in dry vegetation. The sound closely emulates the rattle of a rattlesnake, hence the “bull” (as in “that’s a bunch of . . .”) in its name. In addition, it can produce a hissing noise by opening and closing an organ in its mouth called the glottis, making a “huff and puff” sound like a pipe leaking steam. A bullsnake can also flatten its head, resembling a rattlesnake even more, and with their six-foot lengths they are often successful in causing predators to back off.

I did not check back with Pat’s neighbor to see if the happy couple has remained ensconced under the house, but because of the general pack rat population in the area, chances are good that they are still there. I like to think so anyway."
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Take care,
Terry
 

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