Snake hunters?

Funny true story that is kinda off topic, but relevant to a certain post... It can also be dangerous to pour gas down a hole. Many years back as a young teenager looking to make some bucks a friend and I partnered in a lawn mowing business. We got a clientele built up and would pedal our bikes with push mowers in tow and cans of gas tied on top of the mowers all over town on our route of lawns to cut. We got hired to mow a lawn that hadn’t been cut in awhile, the grass was pretty tall. We set to work and when we got around back suddenly there were snakes all over the danged place. Snakes were slithering everywhere but seemed to be coming from a particular clump of grass. The old lady that lived there was nearly housebound and didn’t get out much. When we told her about the snakes it scared her really bad and she asked us to “do something about them.“

We parted the grass with a rake and after sorting around some discovered an old cement block, the kind with the three holes in it, holes pointed up, and buried just under the ground. There must have been a dozen snake heads poked through the holes peering up at us. To a couple of goofy teens this was now a certifiable adventure of the highest order. My buddy immediately went on a “seek and destroy” mission fetching one of the gas cans and began pouring gas down the holes in the concrete blocks over the snakes. He borrowed a book of matches from the old lady who lived there and after several fumbled tries he finally got a match lit and dropped it down one of the holes. Something told me to back up…

I guess there was an old cistern under the block and the pause while he fumbled getting the matches lit allowed fumes to build up from the gas. When the lit match dropped into the hole there was a loud “BOOM” and the ground seemed to erupt as if a mine had exploded. Turf was thrown skyward along with various pieces and parts of concrete block and sundry snake parts. My bud was standing overlooking the hole at the instant of the explosion. He slowly turned to look at me with a stupefied shocked look on his face. He had pieces of grass, dirt, and snake stuck all over his upper body and face. His hair was blasted back in what would later become a popular punk rock look. His mouth was working slowly but no words were coming out. I stared at first with a hint of worry about his well being, then the giggles hit and I began to laugh so hard I doubled over. That snapped him out of his coma and he threw some obscene remarks my way as he headed for his bike and home. Fond memories of an ill spent youth… LOL.
 
pics_thread.gif


Now that's funny!!! /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/laugh.gif /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/laugh.gif /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/laugh.gif /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/laugh.gif
 
I've been in Arizona for about 28 years, and have done LOT's of snake hunting.

The best method for finding/hunting them is at night while driving in a big wash in the desert.

One guy drives the pick-up, while the other guy stands up in the bed shining a big Q-beam spotlight out onto the wash, while driving very slowley, onto the the trucks path. The snakes will lay across the washes to heat themselves up for an evening of hunting. Their eye's will glint in the light of the spot light, and it makes them very easy to find. Works like a charm! /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/grinning-smiley-003.gif

Once you've found a snake, how you decide to dispatch the critter is up to you.

Just be sure to have a valid Arizona hunting license while your out hunting the snakes, as this is a requirement.
 
/ubbthreads/images/graemlins/laugh.gif /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/laugh.gif And as well Jeff,be prepared for a close encounter of the third kind with ICE and/or Illegals. /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/smile.gif /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/smile.gif
 
A .22,rope with a knot tied at the end,shovel or a .410 are good snake medicine.Well if you want to keep the skin I would leave the shotgun at home.Unless you think one of them Illegals could do any harm then you might take a shotgun.Drivin around out in the desert at night might make me a little nervous Im not gonna lie. /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/crazy.gif
Jeff Mock does make a good point though and I never thought about it.But I've seen alot of snakes on the road after the sun has went down and things start to cool off.Its illegal to kill or even harass anything on the road here so I have to keep on drivin when I see em'.Not everyone obeys that law though cause I see alot of them that dont have rattles anymore.Last year I was drivin down a dirt road by my buddys house and some guys were "grading" the road.One guy was stopped and when I passed I saw that he was killin a coachwhip about 7 foot long.On my way home I saw that they were done workin and the road grader was off in the ditch so I stopped and got that big ol' coachwhip and threw it up on top of there with its head hangin off the side.I wish I could have been there when that guy went to get in it to start workin the next day. /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/laugh.gif
 
I was out hunting them one night and two drunks were trying to dispatch a western diamond back about six foot long with a tire iron. We stopped and volunteered to use our equiptment and killed it for them. Dumb s---ts were almost bitten about five times trying to beat it with the tire iron... My buddy and I were laughing our butts off..
 
Rubernator,

I agree with you. Those guys are crazy - except that I too love to hunt snakes, so I guess I side with them. Don't ask me why. I just do. I actively seek them out. They give me the "willies," but I like it.

I remember one morning many years ago when I was a boy, when a friend and I went on a squirrel hunt as the morning was beginning to dry off from a night's rain. The sun was coming out as we walked along a path near an old abandoned farm place, way back in the mountains. There were rock fences along the road for quite a distance.

We spotted a copperhead coiled up on the rocks, sunning. After that, we turned to snake hunting and forgot all about squirrels. We shot three more before the morning was over. Was a lot of fun and excitement. I've been a snake hunter ever since.
 
I saw a garter snake here last summer!! They should be back out in a month or two or three..... /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/laugh.gif
 
head out on houghton road south of I-10 across from the fair grounds, down in saughrita, or readington pass... there all over. Thins is how i do it...
Take a friend you can trust with you life you'll find out why soon... Drive around at night with a spot light (not connected to the car, makes it hunting from a vehicle) get yourself a frog gig (mini pitch fork) and a machete. shine the ground while driving they will almost glow. When you see one have you friend with the spot light shine the snake and NEVER EVER take the light off the snake!!!!! Stab it just behind the head with the frog gig then cut the head off with the machete... dont mess with the head it will still strike/ poison you!!!
Your friend with the light has the most important job because if you stab the snake and he then takes the light off you, you now have a really pi$$ed off poisonous snake on the end of a 6 foot pole in the dark... NOT FUN!!!! TRUST ME!!!
 
Plenty of snakes in Arizona


[image]http://i107.photobucket.com/albums/m287/bran918/DSCN06851.jpg?t=1238338881[/image]
 
I haven't eaten them before but I have a buddy I used to work with who is filipino and he will take them. Seems like you would spend a lot of time being careful not eating bones. Mostly preserve the skins and make hatbands etc... If people realized how many buzz tails were actually out there they would probably never step foot outside lol.
 
Yeah your right about that.I've eatin it a couple times and the only place there is any meat is right down both sides of the back bone.Unless you got a bunch of em' like ya'll found they aint worth messin with I dont think.I skin them too but I dont keep the meat.But I might cook a few this year just to say I've done it.
I know what you mean though.I know some older guys who say they have never seen a rattlesnake and they've lived here for a long time.They must walk around with their eyes closed or somethin because I see an average of 5 snakes a day in the warmer months.Even when I aint exactly lookin for them either so I dont know what their deal is. /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/confused1.gif /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/smile.gif
 
We hunt them at night with flashlights in the desert. They actually stand out quite well when lit by a flashlight. It's the ones that see me first that really freak me out, I guess that's part of the reason I like hunting them because I almost always see them first. I've never personally had a close call, but some friends sure have. As long as you really comb the area you're walking thru and don't get in a hurry there shouldn't be any close calls.
 
when I was little, I used to catch garden snakes, brown's, and red belly's with my dad. He would flip the rocks and I could grab them.

Then one time I went by myself, and got bit by a eastern diamond back, and ended up in the er for like 5 hours. I had to get anti-venom and another shot.

I didnt even know there was rattlesnakes in NY....

That was the last time I went snake hunting.
 
mog-I've had more close calls than I care to think about but luckily I've never been bitten.For the longest time I hunted for them in Justin shoes but one day I was walkin through chest high weeds and stepped over a 3 foot rattlesnake.Luckily it was'nt coiled up or I probably would have got bitten.I got some Rocky snake boots after that deal but sometimes Im so anxious to get out there I forget them at home.Its easy to have scares like that where we hunt them because its not uncommon to find 5 or 6 of them at a time.Sometimes you'll be lookin down a prairie dog hole tryin to get a rattlensnake out and have another one start buzzin a few feet away from you.Usually followed by a bad word or three. /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/smile.gif
We were rattlesnake huntin around an old foundation where a brick building used to be last year and I had a few close calls there.This was one of those days when I forgot my snake boots so I was tryin to be careful.I was walkin along the foundation because the weeds were as tall as I am around there.I kept lookin at the bottom of the big peices of brick and concrete because holes were all over from rats diggin under them.I hopped up onto a big peice of concrete and jumped off onto a peice of tin on the other side.As soon as I hit that tin 4 rattlesnakes started buzzin right next to me.One crawled right between my legs and went under the tin and the other 3 were already under the tin for the most part.I didnt know which way to go and they didnt either.It gets your heart to racin sometimes Im not gonna lie.But its fun as all get out. /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/grinning-smiley-003.gif
 
Back
Top