I think you ought to take the head put in in one of those mailing boxes and send it to someone you don't like.
Great shot!! No sympathy for rattlers here. I hate them things! We live in the country and over the years rattlers have bit my horse, several cows, killing one cow, dogs and my Dad spent 3 days in the hospital and was very sick because of a bite. As was mentioned above: the little ones are very dangerous. My Dad was bitten by one less than a foot long, only one fang got him on the finger, they have no rattles to warn you. His arm swelled up 3 to 4 times normal and turned black.
As the nurse mentioned above, dispose of the head by smashing and burning as a neighbor was bitten by a dead snake after he had killed it and spent a couple days in the hospital.
I got this one the day before yesterday with my 9mm while mowing, 42 inches long with 14 rattles.
Take care!
Rod
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When a human is in danger or a pet, kill the snake. When it's just
crawling along not hurting anything, leave it alone. I am glad your
son is OK. Goose
Judging by the pictures you lawn doesn't need too much mowing! Maybe a little water would help?![]()
That snake was doing just what comes natural to him, did you have to kill it? Couldn't you have shooed it away with a stick or stamp you foot or thrown a rock in its direction to get its attention away from your son? Seems people needlessly kill snakes without question because they fear them out of ignorance and cultural malice. They are, after all, one of God's creatures just trying to make their way in a dangerous world.
Okay, I nearly gagged after writing the paragraph above, good shooting! I'm impressed you got it with one shot, it would have been in four or five pieces had I been there.
Had me going for a few seconds. Out in the wild I let them go, around the house, well they don't get a last minute call from the governor.....
Somone should post about coral snakes, of which we have two genera in N. America. Others occupy tropical America, and do not have the same color patterns as do ours.
The usual phrase about the colored rings touching (in USA examples) is red and black, friend of Jack. (King Snake) Red and yellow, kill a fellow. (Coral)
I think of them as sort of New Word kraits, and both are indeed elapids. Fortunately, our corals have small mouths and short fangs. But if they get you, you have been seriously gotten!
I almost stepped on one in East Texas. Fortunately, looked down and saw its vivid colors in time. I had a .22 pistol, but this was out in the woods, so I just watched the colorful little snake for awhile and left. It was about a foot long.
I had a buddy who was a Border Patrol Agent. He worked his whole life around rattlesnakes on the SW border. He retired in Montana. Less than a year after retirement he got bit by a rattlesnake and died 3 days later. The universe loves irony.
I think of them as sort of New Word kraits, and both are indeed elapids.