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Gray rat snake infestation

Rich Z

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Saturday Connie comes into the den to tell me that there is a gray rat snake at one of the hummingbird feeders. She's all worried that he's going to snag one of the hummingbirds that we now have as dependents. So I go on out there, and sure enough, there he sits, looking hopeful that one of the little birds won't notice him hanging down looking like a twig. He didn't move much the whole time I was taking photos of him, probably thinking "Man, GO AWAY! I'm trying to get some lunch here!"

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He apparently thought my hand was prey as he tagged me when I reached up to grab him, but as soon as I had him in my hands, he acted like nothing was wrong. He squirmed a little bit but didn't get very excitable about being handled. Didn't even musk me. So I walked him down to a section of our land near some bamboo where there was a pile of bush Connie and I had been clearing, and released him there.

So this morning I'm looking out the side door of the house at the same hummingbird feeder and I noticed what looked like a twig laying on the feeder. At first I thought a storm had just knocked a twig there, and I was thinking it was probably scaring off the hummingbirds thinking it was a snake. Hey, wait a minute! It WAS a snake. He was coiled up in the center depression of the feeder, and as best I can tell, it's the same one I caught and released two days ago.

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How in the heck he figured out how to get back to the same exact spot is pretty baffling. It's not like it was a straight path to where I released him, and it's not even close, nor direct line of sight.

Anyway, one of the hummingbirds actually buzzed him, so I'm glad he didn't wind up a meal for the gray rat snake. But I rushed on out there before his luck would change and I'd have Connie screaming bloody murder.

So I grabbed him up again. He didn't even try to bite this time, so I guess he's gotten used to the routine pretty quickly. Took him back and released him but a little further away this time. He seemed to enjoy being carried, so I can see where this is going....

I expect he'll be back. We had another larger one a couple of years ago at one of the other feeders that I had to catch and release 5 or 6 times. I finally had to bag him up and drive him out into the forest to release him so he would stay gone for good.

And then when I was walking from the old reptile building to the house, I spotted ANOTHER gray rat snake laying around a wagon under the carport. This one is different looking, so it's not the pest having made his way back already. He was a little bit larger, too, and a but paler colored. He went and climbed up into another wagon with some of Connie's pineapple plants on it, so I left him be. No sense slicing my arms to ribbons trying to get him out of that stuff. I'm sure he'll turn up somewhere else soon enough.

So apparently we have a few gray rat snakes prowling around here. These two are approximately the same size, so I guess they are probably siblings. Too bad we don't have the mouse colony any longer or I'd toss them a meal for their troubles before sending them on their way.

But I do hope they don't snag one of "our" birds at the feeders. Connie would be REAL upset to find one with a big lump in him sitting in one of the feeders one morning.
 
I know this is a problem for you two, for the reasons stated, but I would love to see this!

Up here in Michigan, in the city, I never see any snakes. It's gotten so built up around here, that I have to drive quite a while to do some decent herping, and I haven't found much the last couple of years.

Kathy
 
He sure is a pretty guy! I'll be interested to see if he turns up again, but I do hope he doesn't get the hummingbirds.
 
Well, the gray rat snake found his way back and was hanging at the feeder again this morning. So Connie found an old snake bag over in the other building and we caught him and bagged him up. He didn't even flinch when I grabbed him, so apparently he's getting used to this routine. We then took a drive out to the edge of the national forest and sent him on his way. Hopefully he won't find his way back from there too. That's about three-quarters of a mile he'll have to traverse to find us again.
 
Saw another one, somewhat larger, on the other side of the house this morning. Near the other bird feeders we have over there that we can see from the bedroom window. He got underneath the porch before I could get out there to grab him. So got to keep an eye out for him as well. Not sure if this is the same one I saw under the carport several days ago, but he looked about the same size.
 
Well, this morning I looked out the bedroom window and there was another gray rat snake sitting in one of the lower branches of the fringe tree next to the hummingbird feeder on that side of the house. He was trying his best to just look like a tree branch so a hummingbird wouldn't notice.

Well I had to bag him up too. He didn't kick up any fuss except being a little squirmy when I grabbed him. The gray rats around here rarely ever try to bite unless they mistake your hand for what the meal they have been waiting for. He was maybe 3 ft long, so maybe he was the one who crawled under the house the other day. But anyway he's now out at the edge of the Apalachicola national forest.
 
Found a young gray rat snake in the garage the other day. He was about 3.5 ft long. Lucky I found him otherwise he would have dehydrated and died in there. I have a dehumidifier running 24/7 and even with a small AC unit running, it still gets around 95 degrees in there during these hot Florida days.

He only squirmed a little bit when I picked him up but calmed down quickly. The following day we drove him out to the national forest and set him on his way. I'm surprised we haven't seen any of these critters haunting the bird feeders lately.
 
Was walking out by the old reptile building and something odd caught my eye by the generator. Well, well. A good sized gray rat snake was crawling out of it, hopefully on patrol for those danged rodents that have been chewing up the wiring in the generator. Still haven't gotten that fixed, btw, as the yellow flies have been pretty fierce and I didn't want the technicians to have to get chewed up rewiring the thing for me. They probably would have charged me double.

By the time I called Connie over to show her the snake, he was all the way out, laying there in front of the generator just watching us, not really acting all that concerned about it. And by the time I went to the house to grab my camera, he decided to go back into the generator to have another look around....

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I gave him a talking to, telling him he was welcome to prowl around looking for rodents, but the bird feeders were strictly off limits. I think he was around 5 ft long, so he could easily snag and eat our cardinals. Not that I think he would purposely ignore me, but I'm going to be keeping an eye around the bird feeders anyway. If I catch him there, he gets to take a ride out to the nearby national forest to live among the other exiles.
 
Been keeping my eye on the bird feeders in case the big guy decided to stake them out for a meal, but haven't seen him around lately. But this morning I was watching a humming bird near one of those feeders and he acted pretty strange. Tail feathers all fanned out and not landing on the feeder, weaving all around it instead. Sure enough, a small gray rat snake was perched on a tree branch close to the feeder. So had to go out and pull him out of the tree. He's only about 3 ft. long. Only musked a little bit but beyond that didn't seem at all perturbed about being handled. Got him in bagged up and will run him out to the national forest later today or tomorrow.
 
Hmmmm ? I'm starting to get the feeling that I paid to much for my grey rat snake :(

Exotic snake in the North is a pest in the South LOL
 
Ah, had to evict that big gray rat snake shown tucked in the generator. We found him prowling on the porch today, and we have way too many birds roosting there to allow that. We have a whole herd of young carolina wrens hanging out around the porch and there are signs of new nests in any opportune area as well.

He didn't much like being picked up but didn't try to bite. Just thrashed around and musked. So we took him out to the national forest and set him on his way there. Too bad, as I was hoping he would take my advice and limit himself to where the rodents tend to hang out. He could even have snagged a squirrel or three and been OK with me too.
 
Wow I am late to the party but I found this thread amazingly interesting... This is something else.. They sound kinda cute though, what you really should do, take a little bit of a natural nail polish, or something that might stick to them for a while and dot it on the head or tail so you can see who's who! You can write a snake child book about their adventures in your backyard.. maybe not the feeding part but finding the machine and investigating, interaction with the people etc..
 
I had bird feeders where I used to live, and I love birds; but I'm just in awe of how beautiful those snakes are. It's good they stalked feeders of someone who knows how to handle them. I can only imagine their sad fate with someone else. It is fascinating to see the pictures of them doing what they do.
 
This is pretty hilarious to read. We have problems with black rats here, I usually gather them up and take them out to the country. But of course Ive been looking to get a baby for myself and so we havent seen a one this year.
 
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