H.J. Bender ([info]hjbender) wrote,
@ 2009-05-26 15:43:00
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Current mood:anxious
Entry tags:animals

Snakes on a Pavement
The steam was rolling off the road from yet another hard rain shower as I was making my way home this afternoon. The sun was baking the blacktop, the humidity thick enough to slice. I have no love for this kind of jungle weather. I turned into my neighborhood with disdainful thoughts when I spied a thick black coil in the center of the road. It's a snake was my first thought. Holy shit, he's going to get killed was my second.

I turned my wheel to avoid hitting the snake and pulled into the nearest driveway. The visibility on this part of the road was poor, and the neighbors have a piquant for ignoring the speed limit signs. I couldn't just drive on and hope for the best; I wouldn't be able to live with myself if I saw the snake's carcass in the road the next day.

I got out of my car. It was still sprinkling, hot and muggy with the sun shining through the steam. The snake was lying still, but I could see it was alive and uninjured-looking. It was perhaps 36 inches in length, two inches in girth at the thickest part. I hesitated a second, not so excited about the possibility of handling a venomous animal. I stepped into the road and saw that it was a black snake, or rat snake I think it's called. Non-venomous. I knew I had to act quickly if I wanted to save it--perched on a dangerous hill with SUVs that like going 45 mph is not where I want to be.

I reached down and grasped it gently behind its head, then used my left hand to grip its midsection (I'd seen it done in person often enough and knew enough about snake anatomy to avoid hurting it). It writhed, a good sign, and as I carried it to a small patch of woods on the side of the road, I felt its muscles moving and its bone structure intact. It was a huge snake, though I only remember it upon reflection. If I had spread my arms as far apart as they could go I think I still could have had a hold on it.

I laid it on a bed of wet, warm leaves and stood up. It was then that I noticed the blood on my right hand, the one that had been grasping behind the head. I think the snake might have gotten clipped by a car, though there were no obvious signs of injury, no crushed head or anything. I washed the blood off my hands in the gutter and returned to my car, shaking from the adrenaline.

I've never been forced to rescue a wild animal from the road, certainly not a snake. My brother is the snake handler in the family, not me. I felt like a hero for my good deed, but I worried, thinking about the blood. Where had it come from? I started my car and returned home. Righteous indignation took hold of me. How could anyone be so careless as to destroy a creature like that? I could have cried, but I got a hold of myself after a minute or two.

I later returned twice to see if the snake had moved; it had, and the third time I checked, it was gone. I hope it's okay. My heart doesn't bleed for many things, but animals in the road is one of them.



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[info]quantum_witch
2009-05-26 09:22 pm UTC (link)
Bravo and snakey-god blessings to you for your efforts. If there were no huge, obvious wounds, the snake may well heal, esp. since it was able to get away later. My fingers will be crossed for it.

I'd have done the same thing. Have done, in fact, for various other critters without concern for my own safety. Nearly got attacked by another driver for stopping one time -- he apparently would have helped me had my car been in trouble, but cursed me loudly for what I was actually doing (it was a groundhog that time). I was late one morning to work because I had to block traffic to keep people from splattering an already wounded goose (it no doubt died).

Thinking of black rat snakes... my earliest memory of snakes is of the same species (I'm from down south too, where they live most often). My snake-phobic mother was chopping one to death with a shovel while I screamed at her to stop. I was six years old. I became very snake-sympathetic then, and would catch green garden snakes at every opportunity just to freak her out (they always got released far from her reach).

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[info]quantum_witch
2009-05-26 09:34 pm UTC (link)
Just remembered an interesting factoid (to me anyway). My mother had repetitive nightmares about snakes while she was pregnant with me. I wonder what that could possibly mean. Heh.

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[info]hjbender
2009-05-27 04:08 pm UTC (link)
It's a shame that people are so frightened of creatures that are basically harmless, even the poisonous ones. My current neighbors have about 5 kids and built a playground right next to a creek. I was out walking a long time ago and the parents were gathered by the creek like stupid cavemen, looking for copperheads. I engaged them in conversation briefly before I got too pissed off to continue speaking. In hindsight, I should have said, "If you're afraid of snakes, don't build your fucking house in snake country. Go move to Atlanta, you herpephobic yuppies, and leave the snakes alone."

Rescuing that snake was almost a religious experience for me. I was shaking like crazy, my knee gave out and I almost fell on the way back to my car...blood on my hands, I can still feel it. Either I really like snakes or something cosmic happened that day. Like God or somebody made me take that different route home so that I would arrive in time to get the snake out of the road 60 seconds before one of my asshole neighbors came ripping over the hill at 50 mph in his truck.

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[info]quantum_witch
2009-05-27 05:39 pm UTC (link)
Snakes will always retreat from humans unless humans harass them. Even poisonous snakes don't seek human contact. They're not entirely stupid (unlike people).

I'm sure you did have a guiding force at that moment. But snakey beings are fond you, I'm sure you know.

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[info]deddybear
2009-05-26 09:28 pm UTC (link)
What a wonderful thing you did!

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[info]hjbender
2009-05-27 04:09 pm UTC (link)
Thanks, deddy. I sure hope the snake's alright, wherever it is.

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[info]deddybear
2009-05-27 06:56 pm UTC (link)
I'm sure it is, too. <3

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[info]fae_touched
2009-05-27 04:54 am UTC (link)
Good on you! I used to work at an animal rescue for unwanted exotic pets where we had a number of rat snakes, it's terrible how people treat snakes and other wriggly things different than mammals just because they aren't big-eyed and fuzzy.

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[info]hjbender
2009-05-27 04:10 pm UTC (link)
I know! It's like species-ism or something. Racism toward the non-cuddly.

Pfft. I could cuddle a snake.

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[info]mamboitaliana
2009-05-28 03:52 am UTC (link)
I hate it when people have the misconception of snakes enough to try and intentionally hurt them. They're good things--they keep the rats and mice and other rodents in check and they really don't aim to hurt people. The only time they bite is in defense and that's our own damn faults for being idiotic enough to step into their territory without looking or paying attention to the signs of one inhabiting the area.

I'm very proud of you for doing this, you did a great thing! I found a bullfrog in the middle of the road once on the way back from visiting my then brother-in-law at his EMT/Firehouse and took it back to my house where we had a creek. I knew there was another bullfrog there and I still see their descendants :)

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