Dryfly24
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- George
- Joined
- Feb 7, 2019
- Threads
- 47
- Messages
- 1,426
- Reaction score
- 4,157
- Location
- Las Cruces, NM
- Vehicle(s)
- 2020 Gladiator Rubicon, 2016 Indian Springfield
- Occupation
- Retired and loving it
When I first moved to this area from the great frozen wastes, the prior owner of the house we ended up buying was an absolute landscape freak. There were so many plants in the back yard you could barely walk through the property. And this in a dry desert environments. I did not like that at all for a multitude of reasons - one among the many being that it gave the creepy crawly critters many places to hide in ambush and reproduce.I believe that is MOSTLY a myth. To my knowledge, most insurers will cover it, but it may come with some hefty copays/deductibles. I recall something to do with people in certain jobs having problems because their insurance wants to consider it a work related injury.
One of the problems with killing rattlesnakes is we typically kill the noisy ones because they are the ones we find. They don't want to waste their venom on a human, so they warn us. The ones who are shitty at warning tend to be the ones that survive near humans and reproduce to create more rattlesnakes that are shitty at warning, leading to more humans being bitten rather than just freaked the fuck out at the sound of the rattle.
One bush in particular was in the way of some bird feeders I needed to replenish often. Every time I did, I would have to stick my leg inside of it in order to reach over for the feeders behind it. Soon after moving in, I hired a landscaper to come in and clean house on a good percentage of the plants in the yard. One of the first being the aforementioned bush.
That afternoon I got a call from the landscaper, that while cutting the bush back in preparation for removal he had found this little guy curled up underneath. Don’t know how long it had been there but like I said. I would stick my leg in there every time I messed with those feeders.
My understanding is that the small ones are more dangerous because the larger ones can regulate how much venom they release and generally won’t release much in a defensive bite Whereas the small ones will give you every thing they got.
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