We've been to Florida for many trips, Disney and otherwise. We've seen a snake one time. It was on Disney property, crossing a path, but quite easy to see out in the open like that, and simple enough to avoid. They don't want to see you any more than you want to see them.
Stick to well lit, wide paths and you should have no trouble avoiding any close encounters.
Have a great trip!
I don't mean to scare you, but there was a post on the DIS a few years ago by a mother who's son was bitten on the hand by a water moccasin. The boy was in the hospital a few days and this incident happened at...wait for it...Caribbean Beach Resort. I believe they were walking down one of the paths at the resort and the boy dropped his toy into the bushes and before the mom could stop him, he stuck his hand into the bushes where the water moccasin was waiting.
We marvel while at Disney about the parents oblivious to the fact that there are deadly snakes on property and allow their children in places that they really shouldn't be.
This kind of creeps me out....I think they see us more than we see them.
It's official. I am NEVER going to the water parks. EVER.We visited both water parks in the last two weeks. I can't remember which water park, but we were in the lazy river and I felt something "flutter" against my arm. It was a snake. I stopped and walked back a little bit to inform the lifeguard. We continued on and by the time we got to the next lifeguard, there were a few more CM there. We watched a CM grab the snake out of the water with one of those grabber things.
Southern ring neck. They roll over and have a reddish orange belly. See them all the time. Harmless very tiny.The snake I saw at HS was black with a red stripe around it's neck. It was tiny, I thought it was an earthworm at first until I saw it slither. Realized it was a baby. Is this a coral snake? My anxiety reaction is too bad I can't look at pics on google!
heard they called off the search for the cobra....wonder if he knows how to use FP+?Central Florida has 4 native poisonous snakes: the coral, water moccasin, pygmy rattlesnake, and eastern diamond back ( not counting the cobra that escaped the idiot in Orlando a couple weeks ago.). Plus many nonvenomous ones. WDW is smack in the middle of a huge nature reserve/swamp. So snakes are possible anywhere on property. When sighted and reported, animal control will try to find them and relocate them. But since they serve a purpose in nature, they quite rightly do not attempt to eradicate them.
And yes, if you saw a juvenile snake, siblings were probably around. Female egg laying snakes do not usually sit on a nest and "mother" their offspring. But rattlesnakes, who bear live young, are known to hang around until the offspring shed their first skin.
We've seen snakes quite a few times in different places in WDW. But since we've been going regularly since 1975, I wouldn't describe them as frequent.
I was wondering when someone would bring up the snake in the curtains in the Garden Wing.LOL! I didn't want to mention this to the OP!! Or the "incident" at the CR with the snake in the valance......
I was wondering when someone would bring up the snake in the curtains in the Garden Wing.![]()
The snake I saw at HS was black with a red stripe around it's neck. It was tiny, I thought it was an earthworm at first until I saw it slither. Realized it was a baby. Is this a coral snake? My anxiety reaction is too bad I can't look at pics on google!
I saw a snake driving to work this morning, it was a very large black snake trying to cross the road.
We visited both water parks in the last two weeks. I can't remember which water park, but we were in the lazy river and I felt something "flutter" against my arm. It was a snake. I stopped and walked back a little bit to inform the lifeguard. We continued on and by the time we got to the next lifeguard, there were a few more CM there. We watched a CM grab the snake out of the water with one of those grabber things.