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I planted some Holly Hocks and am scared to get near them as we live in the country and snakes are popular in the summer time. My niece said she heard they attract copper head snakes.

2007-06-01 15:13:28 · 4 answers · asked by lacenroses_us 1 in Home & Garden Garden & Landscape

4 answers

No. Snakes are not attracted to plants.

Any old plant, though, might provide "harborage" for various pests, like rats and mice and whatnot, if the plants create a thick expanse.

But snakes don't really like occupied areas to hang out in, and if you should happen to see one in such an area, it is just passing through.

By and large, you will see snakes where there is food for snakes. So just keep your area neat and tidy, cover the garbage, and food for snakes won't show up to eat it, so snakes won't show up to eat the garbage dippers.

And don't worry about the Hollyhocks.

2007-06-01 15:25:42 · answer #1 · answered by sonyack 6 · 0 0

I grow holly hocks all the time and am growing some right now and I live in florida and I have never heard of this and could be an old wives tale . Just put down some moth balls around them unless you have a cat or dog then dont do it cause they are poisonous . but the moth balls keep the snakes away . good luck .

2007-06-02 01:03:03 · answer #2 · answered by Kate T. 7 · 0 0

distinctive venomous snakes have distinctive outcomes as their poison make united statesare distinctive. A Copperhead has a hemotoxin and reasons excruciating soreness, tissue harm and bleeding on the chew website and you'd be very ill yet deaths are very uncommon. A Rattlesnake has variety of a mixture as they're section hemotoxin and section neurotoxin. They reason intense soreness as properly yet are conventional for intense swelling and on occasion lancing is mandatory to avert over swelling and tissue harm and likewise influence respiratory yet deaths at the instant are not basic with them the two as long as scientific interest is had at as quickly as. in case you get fortunate, surprisingly with the Copperhead, 60% of the time the 1st chew is a dry chew yet there must be residue from an formerly stumble upon that could reason ailment and nevertheless be fantastically painfull. an entire grown Copperhead could have fangs a million/2" long and Rattlesnakes a million" so think of two hypodermic needles on your arm pumping venom,,,, no longer friendly in any respect.

2016-12-12 08:50:46 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

It depends on where you live, I don't know if they do... but if you do not live in an area that is known to have copper heads don't worry. Also don't be afraid to go near them just be aware of your surroundings

2007-06-01 15:23:36 · answer #4 · answered by klr878 3 · 0 0

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