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View Full Version : Has anyone heard of any dogs encountering venomous snakes?


Spectreron
07-20-2013, 03:27 AM
Has anyone heard of any dogs encountering venomous snakes?

mulligan
07-20-2013, 05:42 AM
It has probably happened, but hasn't shown up here on TOTV yet.

karostay
07-20-2013, 05:46 AM
If the dog encounters a venomous snake.
Shouldn't it's handler also encounter a venomous snake
the pet would be leashed

rubicon
07-20-2013, 06:14 AM
If I had a dog on a leash and if I encountered a snake then my dog may still be leashed but no one would be holding it:D

asianthree
07-20-2013, 06:16 AM
If I had a dog on a leash and if I encountered a snake then my dog may still be leashed but no one would be holding it:D

:1rotfl::1rotfl:

zcaveman
07-20-2013, 06:19 AM
If the dog encounters a venomous snake.
Shouldn't it's handler also encounter a venomous snake
the pet would be leashed

Not necessarily. Since the dog on the leash is usually in the lead, the snake could jump out and bite the dog and be gone by the time the owner can react.

Z

keithwand
07-20-2013, 07:22 AM
1 of our 2 dogs hunts down geckos and tried to catch a garter snake while leashed. Glad it wasn't venomous.

KARENNN
07-20-2013, 07:39 AM
My dog and I have had snakes cross in front of us on the walk, but they slither away from him, they aren't aggressive.

In awe of TV
07-20-2013, 08:11 AM
If I had a dog on a leash and if I encountered a snake then my dog may still be leashed but no one would be holding it:D

Ha, ha, ha. :BigApplause:

senior citizen
07-20-2013, 08:21 AM
What I'd like to know...

Would it be wise to have a home checked for "insects" and critters such as snakes and such prior to buying........if one bought a gently used resale home.....esp. if it was near a golf course? Meaning : Check for any entry holes or whatever would point to the possibility of a critter being able to get in...........not necessarily that the house is over run with anything.

I've seen news stories about people finding snakes in their laundry rooms (not in The Villages, but in Florida and even up north).........under their beds, etc.

One never knows what could be transported into your home on a moving truck.

When we returned to Vermont back in 1995.......I ordered a new chair for next to the fireplace..........it had only been in the living room for a day when a huge tarantula type spider was spotted. They said it arrived during transport. Double yikes.

I think it came from Georgia.

Better safe than sorry.

GatorFan
07-20-2013, 09:18 AM
My brother lost his dachshund to an encounter with a coral snake. The dachshund killed the snake and by the time he realized what had happened his beloved baby could not be saved.

njbchbum
07-20-2013, 10:14 AM
What I'd like to know...

Would it be wise to have a home checked for "insects" and critters such as snakes and such prior to buying........if one bought a gently used resale home.....esp. if it was near a golf course? Meaning : Check for any entry holes or whatever would point to the possibility of a critter being able to get in...........not necessarily that the house is over run with anything.

I've seen news stories about people finding snakes in their laundry rooms (not in The Villages, but in Florida and even up north).........under their beds, etc.

One never knows what could be transported into your home on a moving truck.

When we returned to Vermont back in 1995.......I ordered a new chair for next to the fireplace..........it had only been in the living room for a day when a huge tarantula type spider was spotted. They said it arrived during transport. Double yikes.

I think it came from Georgia.

Better safe than sorry.

that is something that our home inspection included...since it is a manufactured home on a crawl space, you can imagine how pleased i was to find that there were no critters in residence in that crawl space!...a good reassuring feeling. and before we moved in we had a housekeeping team come in and they worked their mops and dust rags off so that even the inside of the kitchen cabinets sparkled!...and then the pesticide guys came and put that paste stuff down in all of the damp kitchen/bath areas as a deterrent barrier and sprayed around the outside of the house. we have been pest free for the 5 yrs we have been there [except for my husband occassionally - but that's for another thread ;)]

Suzi
07-20-2013, 10:41 AM
What I'd like to know...

Would it be wise to have a home checked for "insects" and critters such as snakes and such prior to buying........if one bought a gently used resale home.....esp. if it was near a golf course? Meaning : Check for any entry holes or whatever would point to the possibility of a critter being able to get in...........not necessarily that the house is over run with anything.

I've seen news stories about people finding snakes in their laundry rooms (not in The Villages, but in Florida and even up north).........under their beds, etc.

One never knows what could be transported into your home on a moving truck.

When we returned to Vermont back in 1995.......I ordered a new chair for next to the fireplace..........it had only been in the living room for a day when a huge tarantula type spider was spotted. They said it arrived during transport. Double yikes.

I think it came from Georgia.

Better safe than sorry.

Seriously? Total body shiver here.

janieb
07-20-2013, 01:25 PM
If I had a dog on a leash and if I encountered a snake then my dog may still be leashed but no one would be holding it:D

we need a like button on here like Facebook has

kittygilchrist
07-20-2013, 01:32 PM
:1rotfl::1rotfl:

:agree: lmfannyo

rubicon
07-20-2013, 01:41 PM
When we lived in Memphis it was common for people to find snakes in their homes

An opening is an open invitation so we make certain that our doors etc are always closed and our landscaping away from the house and open to reduce hiding by critters. Brown recluse were a big problem when we lived in Memphis.

Thankfully I am only afraid of four kind of snakes o spiders big, little, alive and dead:D

kittygilchrist
07-20-2013, 01:44 PM
snakes and dogs.
mostly in fl when a dog is bitten it's a rattler. often the dog survives even if we don't find him for awhile.
I think we mostly scare ourselves thinking more than other things scare us, at least I know that describes me.
I really hate rattlesnakes. Mama taught me that and she did a good job of it. As a child, I nearly picked one up in the bushes trying to find a good stick.

A few years ago during the time I was in class for my carry permit, I was on a country road going to my boyfriend's house when I saw a huge (guys, he was 3.5 inches thick) rattler skittering across the road. I was thinking that Allan had had four dogs bitten by rattlers and lost one of them.
Two boys had stopped their pickup to watch the snake and not wanting to startle them, I said, "Do ya'll mind if I shoot that?" "Nope".

I can't tell the rest of this because I don't want to be unpopular with snake lovers. I'd way rather toss a coral snake out of the house with kitchen tongs than mess with a rattler. but that's another story. Just be sure you can tell a king snake from a coral snake.

blueash
07-20-2013, 05:50 PM
I just want to give a big thumbs up to everyone for using venomous instead of poisonous. One of my favorite trivia questions... What is the most poisonous snake in North America? Of course the answer is none. Poisonous means you can't eat the snake. I know, pedantic.

tommy steam
07-20-2013, 08:41 PM
I have seen people letting their dogs way out on the leash,sniffing in bushes and high grass. That's a great place for snakes to hide.

senior citizen
07-20-2013, 09:54 PM
that is something that our home inspection included...since it is a manufactured home on a crawl space, you can imagine how pleased i was to find that there were no critters in residence in that crawl space!...a good reassuring feeling. and before we moved in we had a housekeeping team come in and they worked their mops and dust rags off so that even the inside of the kitchen cabinets sparkled!...and then the pesticide guys came and put that paste stuff down in all of the damp kitchen/bath areas as a deterrent barrier and sprayed around the outside of the house. we have been pest free for the 5 yrs we have been there [except for my husband occassionally - but that's for another thread ;)]

Glad to hear all of the above. Thanks for the information.

Could you share the name of that housekeeping team please???

Ditto for the pesticide guys. Appreciate the info.

batman911
07-21-2013, 11:00 AM
Snakes in the laundry area and bathrooms usually come in the house through the open vents on your roof or wall. Installing a screen over these openings will usually prevent entry. Dryer vents should not be screened but should have a working flapper.

gomoho
07-21-2013, 03:26 PM
In the desert southwest:

1) You never kill a rattlesnake 'cause they kill the desert rats. And the roadrunners kill
the rattlesnakes.
2) We vaccinate our dogs against rattlesnake bite - doesn't work in all dogs, but it is
an additional layer of protection.

Kitty - I almost picked a rattler up in the desert thinking it was a piece of hose - DUH - what would a piece of house be doing in the desert. Ran the rest of the way home 'cause I was sure he was chasing me!