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Conference 7.286::home_work

Title:Home_work
Notice:Check Directory (6.3) before writing a new note
Moderator:CSLALL::NASEAM::READIO
Created:Tue Nov 05 1991
Last Modified:Fri Jun 06 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:2100
Total number of notes:78741

1171.0. "Pests - Snakes" by HOCUS::OHARA (Bronx Bomber) Tue Aug 16 1988 19:24

One of the Cosby Show episodes last year concerned Bill's efforts to
    remove a snake from his basement.  I thought it was funny at the
    time, but soon forgot about it.  Well, deja vu......
    
    I found a garter snake's skin in a corner of my basement, so I assume
    the little bugger found his way in and shed it.  My problem is how
    to determine if its still there (how long can it live without food?
    what does feed on?) and how to get rid of it.  Also, is there any
    chance that it can get upstairs to the living quarters?
    
    Any helpful hints will be appreciated.
    
    P.S. I couldn't find this under discussion elsewhere.
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1171.1Snakes are nice! ... elsewhereASD::DIGRAZIAWed Aug 17 1988 01:5128
	Snakes are neat, though they give me the heebies when they appear
	unannounced.

	I think garter snakes eat bugs and stuff.  They're nice to have around.

	When I lived upstate (N.H.), I found snake skins in the attic and
	amongst the wiring in the basement.  It provides a moment's puzzlement
	to discover a "wire" where before there was none.  I suppose the
	snake found the cables stapled to the floor joists just right for
	scratching off the old skin.

	Snakes used to poke around the utility room, looking for mice.  They
	liked to snooze under the freezer, which tended to keep us from
	loitering with the freezer door open.

	We got into the habit of turning on lights and checking the floor
	before walking around at night.

	Garters are harmless.  I suggest getting into the habit of
	investigating before poking into crannies, like boxes and
	cupboards.

	Incidentally, one year I lugged 66 mice out of the house in
	Havaharts.  The next year, snakes showed up, and I was left 
	with only 7 mice  --  and 4 snakeskins.

	Regards, Robert.
1171.2Thanks....but no thanksHOCUS::OHARABronx BomberWed Aug 17 1988 13:308
    Thanks for the info.
    
    I agree that, all things considered, garters are harmless and might
    even make someone a nice pet.  But you don't know my wife.  She
    would have a absolute FIT if she even THOUGHT a snake was in the
    house.  Cruel as it may seem, I need a way to dispose of it.
    
    Bob
1171.3GUNNER::VEDDERWed Aug 17 1988 13:379
    re: getting rid of snake....
    
    Find any 10 year old boy, tell him you will give him a dollar
    if he gets rid of the snake for you...  No joke.  Most young
    boys love snakes (and dollars).
    
    
    
    Dave Vedder
1171.4HPSMEG::LUKOWSKINat'l apathy week & nobody cares!Wed Aug 17 1988 14:2619
    Re: .0
     
      The only sure way to tell if it's there is to find it.  I suspect
    that if it was in your basement, it had a reason...like catching
    a mouse.  If it caught (ate) a mouse, that meal will last it about
    a month. As stated by others, they really are harmless.
    
    Re:
    >>Find any 10 year old boy, tell him you will give him a dollar
    >>if he gets rid of the snake for you...  No joke.  Most young
    >>boys love snakes (and dollars).
    
      A brilliant idea and one that I'm sure will work.  If you're in
    the area and you find the snake, I'll catch it and let it go for
    you...for free!
    
    -Jim
    
    Dave Vedder
1171.5Here today-Gone tomorrow!SALEM::NOYCEThu Aug 18 1988 19:3116
    I have 7 or 8 that run (crawl!)around my 1/2 acre yard in Methuen
    all the time and once in a while they get in the basement but so
    far they have always found their way back out also.  I have chased
    a couple out the bulkhead in the last 3 years but have never seen
    any when I wasn't expecting it. What I mean is that they always
    seem to find a way out and don't make their homes in my home. 
    Of course, having a cat that prowls the basement/house every day
    and a dog who sleeps in the basement may help the snakes to decide
    that the basement is already crowded.  I would bet the snake is
    no longer around.  He left his skin as a present for you and took
    himself elsewhere!!  You can tell your wife that but she may never
    believe it.  Mine does because of our animals down there all the
    time.  Ever see a cat start chasing a snake across the yard only
    to have the snake turn on him and chase him??  Funny to watch the
    consternation on the cats face!!  Oh well,  good luck!!
                Ken
1171.6I'll take it, alsoCURIE::BBARRYThu Aug 18 1988 20:367
	We have about 6 this year.  They always get into our basement, when I
	leave the bulk head open.  They like to sun on the warm cement.  Some 
	have climbed upstairs into the house.  Granddad which is about 4 ft 
	long suns on our back porch and lets my wife pick him up.  They are 
	beneficial because they eat bugs, mice and frogs.  

	Brian
1171.7Never in living quarters...ASD::DIGRAZIAFri Aug 19 1988 17:3324
	Actually, I've never seen snakes in our living quarters.  They
	loitered in unfrequented parts of the house, like the utility
	area off the kitchen, and the basement along the sill.

	One spent a few days coiled up on the floor behind the toilet 
	in the guest half-bath off the utility area.  Regrettably, the 
	hoped-for incident never came to pass...  I should have given a
	party.

	The nearest to visiting the house was when one 4-foot black-and-white
	poked itself up through an abandoned radiator-pipe hole in the
	kitchen floor.  I noticed it at night, with lights off in the kitchen,
	and I thought I'd dropped a piece of fire wood, with a twig sticking
	up.  It moved when my reach was a yard away.  We can recite
	"harmless" until the cows come home, but if I had grabbed it, I'd
	have fainted dead away.

	Incidentally, I found the same snake a week later dead out on the lawn.
	It appeared to have been almost bitten in half, as if a hawk had got
	it and dropped it.  I left it there.  Next morning it was gone.
	Probably a 'coon or fox got it.  I hope it liked my kitchen.

	Regards, Robert.
1171.8live and let liveAIMHI::BERNARDTue Aug 23 1988 16:0524
    
    I live in a rural area with a brook, woods, stone walls etc.. I
    would be glad to supply garter snakes to anyone who wants them.
    On a nice warm sunny day, I can easily find over a dozen sunning
    themselves in various holes in the stone walls. I think it's great
    that they live so close. Our dog, a german shepard,ensures we get
    no coons, rabbits etc.., but the snakes aren't bothered. In fact
    it's an absolute riot to see the dogs reaction when she finds one
    on the lawn. 
    
    I have 2 young sons (7&8) and they absolutely love them. Everytime
    they find one in the yard, it becomes the pet for the day. It gets
    a name and a nest and really entertains the boys. The rule we have
    is that they can't kill it and must let it go at night. Inevitably
    my wife gets to "meet" the new pet under some sort of unusual
    circumstance. All in good fun I think. (She would disagree)
    
    I would live and let live. The snake won't hurt you, and in fact
    cleans out rodents as previously mentioned. If your wife is really
    afraid of the little buggers, find one and let her "get familiar"
    with it to overcome her anxieties.
    
    JMB