Oh, I love them!
I used to hate them, but some friends had a few snakes as pets and after handling the most gentle snake one day, I changed my mind about them.
Here is a good snake story - we lived in Calvert County, MD. Winter was ending and and I was raking leaves out of the flower beds. I found a snake that looked like a worm (turns out it was called a worm snake!) I didn't think it was dead, so I placed it on the deck in a sunny spot to see if it would warm up and wiggle away. I leave the deck and moments later hear DH say, "What's this?" I look up as he FLINGS this poor little snake into the woods (I'm sure it hit a tree). I searched and searched for it, but never found it. DH is cracking up because he had no idea I was trying to revive the poor little snake. When he was throwing it into the woods, I felt like I was watching it in slow motion.
We see tons of snakes here. When we're out walking, we see lots of little black snakes (and not so little ones) the occasional coral snake and I even saw a pygmy rattlesnake once.
I was out hanging the laundry a few weeks ago and saw a coral snake burrowing into the mulch not far from the clothesline. Needless to say that flowerbed is growing weeds like crazy and I don't plan to dig in there dirt there any time soon!
We were clearing out the wooded area in our back yard over the winter and my husband saw a very fat, not too long, snake in the leaf litter. It was a chilly day, so this guy was not moving at all. My husband said, "Hey, a snake!" and my sister, who was about 2 feet from him, screamed bloody murder and bounded out of the wooded area in about three steps (she must have covered 30 feet in nanoseconds).
Ok, SSB, you are probably sorry you started this thread now!
I used to hate them, but some friends had a few snakes as pets and after handling the most gentle snake one day, I changed my mind about them.
Here is a good snake story - we lived in Calvert County, MD. Winter was ending and and I was raking leaves out of the flower beds. I found a snake that looked like a worm (turns out it was called a worm snake!) I didn't think it was dead, so I placed it on the deck in a sunny spot to see if it would warm up and wiggle away. I leave the deck and moments later hear DH say, "What's this?" I look up as he FLINGS this poor little snake into the woods (I'm sure it hit a tree). I searched and searched for it, but never found it. DH is cracking up because he had no idea I was trying to revive the poor little snake. When he was throwing it into the woods, I felt like I was watching it in slow motion.

We see tons of snakes here. When we're out walking, we see lots of little black snakes (and not so little ones) the occasional coral snake and I even saw a pygmy rattlesnake once.
I was out hanging the laundry a few weeks ago and saw a coral snake burrowing into the mulch not far from the clothesline. Needless to say that flowerbed is growing weeds like crazy and I don't plan to dig in there dirt there any time soon!
We were clearing out the wooded area in our back yard over the winter and my husband saw a very fat, not too long, snake in the leaf litter. It was a chilly day, so this guy was not moving at all. My husband said, "Hey, a snake!" and my sister, who was about 2 feet from him, screamed bloody murder and bounded out of the wooded area in about three steps (she must have covered 30 feet in nanoseconds).
Ok, SSB, you are probably sorry you started this thread now!
