I'm in the heart of the Everglades right now, and this is snake country. Since I'm a huge fan of reptiles I'm loving it. We've been out each night we've been here road cruising for snakes. The species we've found most has been the infamous water moccasin or cottonmouth. These relatively small pit vipers have gained a bad rep over the years as aggressive and dangerous snakes. I'd like to dispell that idea.
A hideous, scary, evil monster poised to attack. |
A significant boo-boo. |
Now, the question is, did that green water snake's tendency to strike, and the fact that it did nail me, make it aggressive? No, it made it defensive, which virtually all snakes are. And water moccasins are no exception. We've come across numerous moccasins under high stress situations on this trip and I was at some point or another whithin strike range of each and every one of them (do as I say not as I do, you don't need to get within striking range, or just over the body length, of any snake you suspect might be venomous) and I got struck at once and bit never. So, striking does not equate to aggressive, these were all defensive acts.
What about chasing then? Does chasing constitute aggressiveness? Moccasins are notorious for chasing people down to "get" them, as if they're territorial. This is inaccurate. Cottonmouths do not chase people. Chase constitutes a pursuit. No venomous snake is going to actually pursue you over a distance that can't be outpaced with a couple footsteps. A black mamba, is a big, cocky, fast, intelligent snake, and they probably come the closest to actually chasing a person. But even they have no real intent of catching up with you.
If you are one of the people who claims to have been chased by a moccasin, ask two simple questions. Were you downhill from the snake? Were you between the snake and a place it could use to hide? If you ever think you've been chased by a snake, that answer to one or both of these questions is probably yes. A snake uphill from you may come in your direction to get towards cover. Same goes for any time you are between a snake and heavy brush, water, a stump hole, or a wood pile. This goes doubly for snakes like pit vipers that aren't at all built for speed. More than one of the moccasins we've come across have moved towards not away from us, but that is because we were between them and cover and they were in flight mode. They have a fight mode, but it doesn't kick in until they're being seriously mucked with (miss you Steve) and sometimes not even then. To really hammer it home, check this out:
Until next time,
Fish for the love of fish.
Fish for the love of places fish live.
Fish for you.
Thank you to my Patrons; Erin, David, John, Elizabeth, Brandon, Christopher, Shawn, Mike, Sara, Leo, and Franky for supporting this blog on Patreon.
Be safe.
ReplyDeleteOn a different note, did you fish?
I'm wanting to fish for peacock bass next time I go to Florida, maybe in June.
Take care and I enjoy your posts.
Although I dont regularly post replies to your interesting blog.
Thanks
Of course I fished! Who do you think I am? ;)
DeleteSorry you lost those posts. Snakes are beautiful creatures and they deserve our respect. Hope you are catching some good fish. Be safe!
ReplyDeleteTie, fish, write, conserve and photo on...
Found um.
Delete