Posted on 05/30/2013 9:55:26 AM PDT by Clint N. Suhks
WASHINGTON - They're not on a plane, but snakes in a tree could still be scary -- especially when they're spotted in D.C.
DCist says an email in an Adams Morgan Yahoo Group by a D.C. police sergeant discussed snakes falling out of trees at Walter Pierce Park in Northwest.
The posting was reported by the website PoPville and reads:
"On Thursday, May 23, 2013 around 11:40am a call came in about a couple of snakes that fell out of the trees. When the snakes fell they scared the children, and everyone fled. This was in the playground area. I responded but found no snakes. I caught one small enough to fit inside an empty water bottle I had. It was probably a black rat snake. They are indigenous to trees and the warm weather is drawing them out."
Albimar Cuadrasleal, a painter who sometimes does work at a building near the park, tells WTOP the snake sighting occurred around the time when he was parking his car last Thursday.
He says he heard a commotion at the park, and helped remove about six children from the area. He says women at the park said the snake came out of a tree, and he took this cellphone video of a snake in a playground at the park:
Cuadrasleal estimates the snake was about 4 feet long, and says he saw a smaller snake come out of a tree at the park about a week earlier.
The police officer who responded to the park for the snake sighting also tells WTOP he took the smaller snake he found to the National Zoo, where it was identified as a northern brown snake.
PoPville notes that the National Zoo says black rat snakes tend to be shy and will avoid confrontation if possible. They are not venomous, kill their prey by constriction and often will climb trees.
The zoo says some of the adult snakes also will "attempt to protect themselves."
"They coil their body and vibrate their tails in dead leaves to simulate a rattle," the zoo says. "If the snakes continue to be provoked, they will strike."
The Northern brown snake, meanwhile, also is non-venomous. Its prey includes worms and slugs.
OMG, nuke those suckers from orbit! We all gone die!
Uh, Coppers are live-bearers and Black Rats are egg layers.
Hybridization is physically impossible.
And Black Rats delight in eating Coppers.
Doubly impossible.
*Grossly* misinformed
http://www.venomousreptiles.org/forums/Experts/38793
[if somebody mentions “Hoop Snakes” or Coachwhip snakes rolling after them, I’ll scream]
Okay, makes sense.
I can still go out to watch the blacksnakes!
Enjoy the rodents who will be flooding your property when bird mating season ends.
You should see the locals stroke out every time a Corn Or Milk snake slithers by...or heaven forfend, a Hognose or brown water snake.
I promise you that they will not form themselves in Hula Hoops and chase you down.
[OMG...I’ve heard everything now]
;]
LOL
Visualizing....pretty cool, actually
We always had a few Rat Snakes hanging out in the warehouse, they are gentle critters unless you're on the menu. They really don't like to bite, their mouth isn't made for biting big stuff and they can lose teeth.
There are always a few around the yard, I welcome them.
A black rat snake lived in my walls until the jerk up the ridge ran over him in front of my house.
[nearly hitting my car in the process]
He was the one who curled around my feet when my Ball Python was lost.
I still think he was telling me to get that big yellow idiot snake-wannabe out of his territory.
:D
He didn’t freak out whenever I’d pick him up and carry him outside.
[probably because he knew he’d just come back in later]
Well, there’s this one who keeps offering me apples. I’m not so sure about him...
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