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2007-05-14 05:44:49 · 8 answers · asked by warren d 2 in Home & Garden Garden & Landscape

8 answers

Depends on the snakes. If it is garter snakes or king snakes then put up with them. If it is a venomous snake or an aggressive snake then you need to keep it away. Here in Texas an aggressive snake might include a bull snake or a coachwhip snake. I have seen some of those chase people before. I have also seen bull snakes that would let you just pick them up. They are hard to figure out sometimes.

First step, eliminate as many hiding places as possible. This requires keeping the yard mowed and keeping clutter away. Also, go around the house and work to patch up or screen any way to get under the house. Look at the plants around your house. Any bushes? Great place for a snake to hide. Keep the ground under the bushes cleaned out. Think like a snake. Is there a big pile of dead tree limbs in the back yard? That makes a pretty decent place to hide. Lots of rocks? There will be some with gaps under them that the snake can get into.

Next up, a snake does not hang around your house because it likes you. It is there for food and shelter. If you have reduced the places the buggers can hide then you need to focus on reducing the food. Snakes that you want to keep away rely on insects, frogs, toads, mice, rats, small birds, and other small animals. You should want to minimize mice and rats anyway. Birds are not a big deal unless they are nesting. Frogs are usually not too frequent unless you live by water. In that case you are probably going to have frogs and snakes from time to time and there is little you can do about it. Toads are common. However, keep those guys if you can. They eat a lot of insects. Insects is an area you can try to control by controlling the night lighting around your place. We had a light on top of a utility pole at our house when I was growing up. It attracted lots of june bugs. That kept a lot of toads in close proximity to the light. The snakes were in close proximity too because they ate the toads. Also, some of the smaller ones might have been eating the june bugs. Possiblly even a cidacia from time to time. You can also try to use insecticides to keep the insect population under control but I would not recommend it. I would rather live with the aggressive snakes that live in a chemical garden.

Even with all of this, you will find snakes around your yard from time to time. If I were you, I would learn as much about the snakes in the area as you can. Talk to a game warden to see if there is any literature you can get for identifying snakes. Learn the snakes and know which ones are dangerous and should be killed or relocated. I would rather not kill the snake but if it is a copperhead close to where kids play, I do not take chances.

2007-05-14 05:59:36 · answer #1 · answered by A.Mercer 7 · 0 0

There is a chemical that you can treat your yard with to keep snakes out of your yard. The only bad thing is that if there are any snakes in your yard at the time you have trapped them in your yard because they won't cross over that chemical.

2007-05-14 05:48:46 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

If you live close to fields, woods, or water (ponds) than it will be hard to keep them out completely, but try keeping your grass cut low also there is a product on the market that you spread just like other pesticides and it will repel snakes. I spread pesticides every year for ticks and Fleas, I spread it heavier than I am instructed to and this works also (haven’t had a copper head in my yard in years). There are also scare crow type deals that look like owls that some say work (I guess they would be called scare snake) but I have personally never tried one.

2007-05-14 05:57:22 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I've heard mothballs work well. I used them last year, and I never did see any snakes in the yard (and I live on 20 wooded acres). They were on the property, but not near the house.

2007-05-14 05:53:32 · answer #4 · answered by phern43 2 · 0 0

If you put powered lime around the perimeter of your yard, snakes that are out there trying to come in with not cross it, then all you have to do is make sure that you don't have any within your yard.

2007-05-14 05:48:32 · answer #5 · answered by cat14675 3 · 0 1

No poisons. they do no longer paintings. the proper way is to get rid of their nutrition supply, specifically mice, and crickets. in case you have a chook feeder, positioned a glance after decrease than it, and empty it on a daily basis. Snakes are no longer fascinated in open areas. This makes them vulnerable to hawks, and different predators. Mow your backyard. sparkling out the underbrush in wooded areas. Snakes are mushy to vibrations, so an anti-mole gadget that vibrates could help. those are battery-powered, and periodically make vibrations that disturb the moles(and the snakes). in need of that, conceal your belongings in concrete, glaze it over to a tender floor, like tile floor, and the snakes won't come there. VERY high priced! sturdy success.

2016-10-05 01:30:49 · answer #6 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

snakes are good - keeps the mice away

2007-05-14 05:46:55 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

coral oil, diesel, bleach, or mouth balls.

2007-05-14 05:47:47 · answer #8 · answered by jack 4 · 0 0

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