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Re: Snakes and other Aussie lovables
Originally Posted by TiddlyPom
(Post 8497229)
Are you kidding? 3 snakes in 18 months and you would want to avoid it? :rofl:
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Re: Snakes and other Aussie lovables
Originally Posted by brissybee
(Post 8497201)
Yeah yeah I know... they don't mean us any harm blah blah. They'll just bundle us off to hospital if we accidentally bump into them. Don't get me wrong, I'm not completely anti-snake. I used to like English snakes. Quite happy to handle and study them... but the big, venomous suckers here are a whole different ball game.
The big ones are a different ball game, but like I said, the more you know, the better off you are. You just keep still. Even the most venomous of snakes can't 'see' you when you're still. They're mostly blind and half deaf. They can't go faster than you and they rarely inject venom on the first bite... it's usually a warning shot. So there you go, more blah blah blah.
Originally Posted by Lord_Farquar
(Post 8497210)
Big snakes are a handful.
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Re: Snakes and other Aussie lovables
Originally Posted by brissybee
(Post 8497239)
In the back yard where we walk in bare feet and children play. Yes.
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Re: Snakes and other Aussie lovables
Originally Posted by brissybee
(Post 8497239)
In the back yard where we walk in bare feet and children play. Yes.
But then you live up North. They don't wear shoes up there do they? :p |
Re: Snakes and other Aussie lovables
Originally Posted by Lord_Farquar
(Post 8497050)
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Re: Snakes and other Aussie lovables
Originally Posted by TiddlyPom
(Post 8497252)
Then I would suggest if you're so worried you'd put shoes on them and yourselves. :confused:
But then you live up North. They don't wear shoes up there do they? :p |
Re: Snakes and other Aussie lovables
My cats are refusing to go into the garage at night. So this means there's something in there the cats know about, but I don't.
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Re: Snakes and other Aussie lovables
Originally Posted by Lord_Farquar
(Post 8497216)
Was it an Adder?
http://iberianature.com/britainnatur...rs-in-britain/ But you have to watch the cows.... http://iberianature.com/britainnatur...ls-in-britain/ |
Re: Snakes and other Aussie lovables
Originally Posted by Burbage
(Post 8497272)
My cats are refusing to go into the garage at night. So this means there's something in there the cats know about, but I don't.
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Re: Snakes and other Aussie lovables
Originally Posted by ABCDiamond
(Post 8497287)
Yep. There have been 14 reported deaths caused by adder bites in the UK, with the last death in 1975. I was bitten in the 1960's
http://iberianature.com/britainnatur...rs-in-britain/ But you have to watch the cows.... http://iberianature.com/britainnatur...ls-in-britain/ |
Re: Snakes and other Aussie lovables
Originally Posted by brissybee
(Post 8497030)
I have just come inside from "trying" to hang out the washing. I am in the suburbs of an Australian capital city and have just narrowly avoided stepping on a yellow-bellied black snake sunning itself by the washing line. It is not the first time my family and I have encountered snakes on our suburban plot. Actually, it's the third time in eighteen months. I just want to mention this as there are those out there who tell people who are considering the move to Australia that the spiders and snakes tales are exagerated. They're not.
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Re: Snakes and other Aussie lovables
Not dangerous but very very annoying: portuguese millipedes. How can I get rid of them? I live on a rural property and for 3 years after the first rains they came in the hundreds, crawling into every little crack and crevice to come into the house. What they tell you on the net about them (attracted to light) is not true. They crawl day and night. :frown:
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Re: Snakes and other Aussie lovables
omg, that would have freaked me out completely:eek: The only time I've seen a snake is in a zoo. Haven't come across any spiders here either. I hope there aren't too many of these lovables in Melbourne:unsure:
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Re: Snakes and other Aussie lovables
Originally Posted by brissybee
(Post 8497030)
I have just come inside from "trying" to hang out the washing. I am in the suburbs of an Australian capital city and have just narrowly avoided stepping on a yellow-bellied black snake sunning itself by the washing line. It is not the first time my family and I have encountered snakes on our suburban plot. Actually, it's the third time in eighteen months. I just want to mention this as there are those out there who tell people who are considering the move to Australia that the spiders and snakes tales are exagerated. They're not.
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Re: Snakes and other Aussie lovables
I think coming into close contact with a snake it still not that common - though some can be unlucky. Mostly you just see them crossing the road at night, or occasionally crawling through your backyard tree's - dog barking at it is what often alerts you to it. Sometimes they are in pool baskets.
Even though I know it happens I don't hear of someone almost stepping on one in their backyard in big city suburbia very often - in Brisbane they are mostly just harmless tree snakes that slide through the trees at night. Of course exceptions exist, but I am talking about the "norm", after listening to talk about it from colleagues, friends and family over decades. Living close to bush land obviously changes the odds. |
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