Snakey bastard

in #australia3 years ago

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The world of men is dreaming, it has gone mad in its sleep, and a snake is strangling it, but it can't wake up.

D. H. Lawrence


I'm a reasonably outdoorsy fellow and spend a lot of my time away from built up areas camping, off-roading, hiking, hunting, kayaking and so on; it energises me and I feel more at home out there. I love the solitude and feeling of peace I find away from people.

I'm fortunate to have a very large scrubland area over the road from my house, some twenty five kilometres of hiking trails full of peace and quiet and some of Australia's most iconic animals: The kangaroo, koala and kookaburra. It's a nice place to be...But there's bastards there too and sometimes I see one and...Well, me no likey snakey.

Living in Australia means one becomes accustomed to things that bite and sting, some which leads to death. In truth they probably don't want to kill it's just what they do naturally; it's not their fault.

Crocodiles, sharks, spiders, cassowary, razorbacks, irukandji, box jellyfish, blue ring octopus, blue bottle, reef stonefish, ticks, ants, scorpions, centipedes, snakes...I think you get the idea; all come with their own set of issues for a human. Having said that, I believe it's safe to say that besides spiders most Australians have rarely seen any of the others. They're there though, and they kill, although it's really only sharks and crocodile deaths that might make the mainstream news anyway.

Creepy bastards

Snakes give me the creeps; spiders too for that matter.

I've had a lot of snake encounters though and even picked one up once, a crocodile too actually. It was a controlled environment though, in the wild? Hmm, nope I'd not be picking them up. I understand that snakes are incredible creatures and all but, nah, we don't get along so well.

Being in the outback and wilderness one is bound to run into one some eventually. The one you see in this image is only about five hundred meres from my front door in a residential suburb. The outback and wilderness areas are full of them and one must be careful to avoid getting into trouble.

The one in this image is an Eastern Brown snake, the worlds second-most venomous snake behind Australia's Inland Taipan. Both bastards, trust me. It didn't trouble me too much but I gave it some respect of course. I've had many other encounters, some a little more serious than this one though.

Snakey bastards

Most of the encounters I've had were through bad timing. Generally a snake will hear a person and slither away unseen but occasionally that doesn't happen and people and snakes meet.

I recall one occasion when I was pig hunting, being stealthy, on an estuary running off a main river and I was hugging close to the waters edge which in hindsight was stupid. I took a step and right at that moment an Eastern Brown exited the water [expert swimmers] right where I was. I stopped dead and so did it. The snake must have seen me as a threat and raised it's head and about fifty or so centimetres of it's body off the ground and sort of coiled it back, mouth slightly open; a warning display.

I stayed still as the snake was only about two or three feet away, but wondered if I should blast it. I had a rifle but figured if I missed it might have made it angry so I just stayed still keeping an eye on it. Eventually it decided that biting the old G-dog wasn't worth the trouble though and moved away along the bank behind me. I watched it go - Never take your eye off a snake, especially the bitey end.

I saw four or five others that day, big ones, but they seemed more intent to get out of my way. I've seen many other varieties over the years; Inland taipan, Red bellied black snake, Tiger snakes, pythons and the like but, by far my worst encounter was at a remote place called Ceduna about 800 kilometres from Adelaide. Not my best moment.

Snakey bastard stepping

I was there for work, investigating a massive parcel of land a client owned with a view to developing it. I'd flown in and met with a local real estate woman and we drove out there. She stayed near the car and I went for a walk around to recce the location.

What I didn't know was that for years the land had been used to dump everything; an unofficial junk yard: Car bodies, machinery, building products and just about everything else. It was graded over and looked ok to walk on so there I was wandering about.

About a hundred metres in my right leg sank to the knee in a hole that caved in beneath m weight and immediately I felt a thrashing and hard repeated banging on my lower leg. I looked down and saw a massive Eastern Brown snake going crazy. Clearly I was in trouble.

Remove leg was my only option of course. If I stayed there the snake would work loose, I think I was stepping on its head, and strike no doubt. But removing my leg could cause the same result. I wasn't in a good place.

I took stock, realised that with my right leg in the hole and left higher up on ground level I'd not have a good purchase to spring away but I had to act so braced on my left and took the most almighty leap into the air pushing off with the left leg and retracting the right at the same time to try and add additional distance between the snake and myself.

As I leapt I looked down into the hole figuring I'd rather see it coming if I was going to get bitten. The snake was released, a big, big snake, bunched itself up, a knot of scales, muscle and deadly venom and buggered off deeper in the hole somewhere. I hit the ground and kept running and didn't look back.

The encounter was all of 15-20 seconds in duration but I had nightmares for a few months and even writing this I can feel that thrashing on my lower leg. I was lucky.

Had I been bitten I would have made my way back to the other person and she'd have taken me to hospital, about 15 minutes away. One gets an hour before death comes from an Eastern Brown snake bite, not a pleasant hour, but time nonetheless. I would have been given antivenom at the hospital and probably would have had to stay for a week or so, but I would have lived. Luckily that didn't occur of course, but it wasn't a nice event.

It was a very unpleasant experience and one I'd like not to be repeated but here in Australia it's always a possibility. Not so much in the cities and larger towns although it's incredible where these Eastern Brown snakes have been found and my city has eight to ten snake catcher-businesses so there's enough work to keep them all active I guess.


I'm not one to hold back from doing something because of the potential danger; life's to short for that, although it's always calculated; the risk and reward. Its the same when I'm in the outback and wilderness.

At the moment the Eastern Brown's are coming out of hibernation to mate; they can be aggressive but usually try to avoid humans. I was safe from the one in this image, it moved across my path and away, unhurried but clearly it had somewhere to be; entangled with a sexy snakey babe making sweet, sweet love I imagine. Had I stepped on it there might have been trouble, but I felt no threat at its passing.

So, calculated risks...I hiked today. Boots on course, but I added my gaiters to help mitigate the potential for snake bites.

Every country has it's deadly creatures, even if they're of the human variety. Living in Australia is safe, it's an amazing country, but some care must be taken. You want to swim in the ocean? Ok, there's sharks there and they can attack. Want to take a dip in a river, billabong, ocean or estuary in the north of the country? Crocodiles. People die. But with care it's possible to co-exist as I did with that snakey bastard in this image.

If you're interested I grabbed this video of some guy messing around with an Eastern Brown. Just a word of warning, I think this dude is bonkers but knows what he is doing. At no time should a person do this without the correct training and understanding.


Design and create your ideal life, don't live it by default - Tomorrow isn't promised so be humble and kind

Discord: galenkp#9209

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You photographed him on his good side! Well done!

The guy in the video is nuts! The snake all but bullwhipped him to make him run the other way. And yet, his brilliance kept him there. What drives them? Is it a macho thing to challenge a poisonous snake? Say what you want, I still think that although Australia is one of the coolest countries, you have very challenging environments.

Confess! You think so too!

You photographed him on his good side! Well done!

Yeah, if he was facing me I might not have got the photo...It's good to see the back end of a snake for sure.

Australia is one of the coolest countries, you have very challenging environments.

We have some very challenging, brutal aspects to the country indeed. It's unforgiving. Sure, Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane rank as some of the most affluent and livable cities in the world, but that's only a small part of the country. The bulk of it is just brutal. It's not just the animals either, the land itself wants to kill you. It's a land of extremes and there's not much out there for the average person to sustain oneself, certainly not without training and knowledge. So yeah, I agree with you.

I would of caught that snake LOL.

Yeah, I know many other crazy bastards like you. I admire people with that lack of fear and in truth snakes probably don't deserve my derision and distrust. They're not for me though. Snakes. Creepy bastards.

I was gonna tag you so You would not miss this one. But say the word Snake, and HWG will hear it...

Good Stuff.

Would You really chance it with that 2nd most deadly venom injector..?

@hippie-witha-gun taking a bath...

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DUH!!! If I can catch a Cotton Mouth I can catch ANY snake.

Alllllll Righty Then..!

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Hey G-Dog

That's one scary encounter you had there - I would not like to have been in that precarious situation and I think you handled it immensely well - probably the best way possible actually, you got out untagged!

While I like snakes now, I am still not sure that I'd want to be a full time snake catcher, it's a good business but it comes with a huge amount of risk and while I did it for many years, that was a long time ago now, I don't think my reflexes are quite as sharp now lol, so I agree, rather just avoid them if possible.

Hope your hikes going forward are snakey-bastardless - but not a bad idea adding your protective gear.

Cheers

Andy

Thanks andrastia, I don't always react to things well, I'm human after all, but in this case I was pretty happy with the thought process and speed of it which ran through the possible actions and outcomes rapidly, and then I acted. It was not a good situation for me and didn't help my distaste for snakes. Bastards.

I'll hike again today and hope to see none...But first I'm off to the range to shoot.

Happy weekend to you. May you devour many Chomps.

Yeah, that guy is a bit crazy but did give helpful information.

I have ran into rattlesnakes before but they usually give enough warning they are around to avoid them. They are not as deadly as what you have so there is that as well.

Typical crazy Australian bastard. I suppose he has some form of training though as that's not something one would want to undertake without it. Far too dangerous.

I saw a video of a den of rattlesnakes where a guy dropped his GoPro in there. It's on YouTube as he got the camera back. Gave me the creeps.

I once had a Tiger snake chase me while slowly going past it on a quad bike😵

He probably wanted a ride.

I used to have pet boas. I grew up in Brazil and in general we'd kill any snake we happened to meet but the boas I liked. Mainly because they could bite me and I wouldn't die.

I had to act so braced on my left and took the most almighty leap into the air

Pretty cool how adrenaline works eh? :)

Pet boa constrictor? Don't they grow pretty big?

I'll be honest, I don't care what sort of snake and how harmless it might be, I'd not have one for a pet.

The adrenaline thing is quite amazing really, ai guess developed over many years to help us survival situations. It certainly worked for me on this occasion.

Yes, they do grow rather large. I only kept the young small ones as pets. Because at some point they get big enough to kill you, without venom :)

Lol yeah that's what I thought. I'd say a human wouldn't have much hope against one if it got wrapped around with the intent to crush. Incredible creatures really, but give me the creeps.

Interesting video! The snake seems to be conveying that it does not want to bite him. It clearly gives plenty of warning.

Even the snake you had suddenly stepped on (egads!) just wanted to get away. They do not want to do harm to anything.

Good stuff to know.

I think they don't wake up in the morning and say to themselves, I wonder how many humans I can kill today. They're more intent on eating I guess, and reproduction. The Eastern Brown will not attack, it's a more defensive stance really, but they will aggressively defend and that means a bite, which kills most often than not.

They have a fairly good tolerance as you may have seen in the video. They are happy to posture and give some warning. That's when it's prudent to stay still, back away very slowly. The snake is most likely to do the same.

snake😥

Yeah, not my favourite things.

galenkp im posting in your community why nobody gives me. any vote 😥
i try my level best but nobody gives me vote😔

Getting vote-support here on hive is very dependent upon the relationships you build. Posting something on the blockchain doesn't entitle you to votes automatically.

I would suggest you begin to build some relationships by commenting with validity and relevance upon other people's posts which, over time and if done well, may entice them to view your account. If they like what they see they may offer you a vote and comments in turn. Over time that relationship may grow, and when nurtured, could be lasting.

Feeling entitled to votes doesn't mean they will happen. There's many posts daily and one needs to compete for attention rather than post then sit back expecting a return.

You may like to get involved with a few concepts and initiatives here in the platform that will help you build relationships, I run one myself in fact.

All the best.

thank you much for guiding me :) ❤

I have a phobia of snakes, I don't see myself residing in areas where they possibly exist.

Trust when it comes to snakes my running shoes are always on. I will run for Life!

Lol, yeah I'm the same but here in Australia they're everywhere and are largely unavoidable. Most of our snakes won't actively attack which is a good thing. Most will use their threat-display in a bid to scare you away I guess, and it's only when stepped on or they perceive an attack where they'll strike. (Generally). I have a respect for them and will leave them well alone, that's for sure.

Honestly I was very afraid of snakes, and I was disgusted to see them. Sometimes when I am in the forest, I feel very tense and very sensitive to the bushes.

Snakes have a way of bringing fear. Maybe the fact they can be so dangerous and are slithery creepy bastards.

It's scary to me, just looking at the pictures makes me amused !

No GOOD to step on someone's head when they are running for some ssegggsy time after a tiring day at work 😂
I am scared of them. I remember days when I had to walk in Indian forests at night. Every second I was walking in the woods seemed like an hour. I could hear my heartbeat and every object that my feet touched would feel like a snake. Crazy times.

Lol...Yeah, I'd probably not feel so good if someone did it to me. I'd probably bite someone.

I can picture your night-walk scenario and wouldn't enjoy it too much. Snakes and spiders. You ever walk through a spiders web at night? I'm not a dancer but the moves I manage to pull off when that happens? Nothing short of spectacular. 🤪

I am not that scared of spiders though. May be I have not seen big enough spiders that are out there in Australia. Snakes send me chills through my bone :D

You have to come over and get acquainted with some of our spiders. 😁

Must be a day for snakes!!!

Yeah, those slithery bastards are everywhere. Well, not quite everywhere, but they're certainly moving about looking for hanky panky.

Shoot them, hehehe😜😝

Yeah, it happens sometimes I guess.

This one not near as nice as your silver one!

Great Creepy Post.

I agree with all, but must add humans to that creepy animals list. You know the ones. Politicians mostly. Control freak authoritarians like the ones turning both our countries into penal colonies. Soon down under will be North Korea light. And we are well on our way here to be the western Communist China light.

So please add the humans known as politicians (species: dictatorus subhumanus) to the list of deadly animals to avoid at all cost.

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You have to take it to DEFCON 1 and combine clowns and fucking spiders. You must really hate me!

By the way, I would have been way more freaked out if you combined Ronald McDonald and Spider Man.

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Snakes absolutely give me the chills. There is just something about the crawling nd slithering around that gets to me. Plus you see over here, I doubt we have anything resembling anti-venom. I could be wrong though but definitely not willing to find out.
Nice to know you left unharmed and safe..

Hmm, yeah I'd say knowing there's antivenom available prior to getting tagged by a deadly snake would be smart. Or better still, don't get snake bit. 😊

Snakey bastards is right!! 🤣

I can't bring myself to watch that video or it'll frighten the bejesus out of me!

Haha, yeah it's a but like that. No bueno.