20180415_155345

 

 

 

 

so far:

there are 4 kinds of lizards,  this one the largest, maybe 8 or 9" long.  Another with copper eyelids.   A skink.  Each day, more and more butterflies,  caterpillars, one looking like a Chinese festival dragon.  Moths.  Bees, 3 kind,  wasps, earthworms, horsehair worms,  child of the earth, spiders,  squirrels, wild turkeys.  All  manner of birds, songbirds, finches,  woodpeckers.  a Crow passes above.   tree frogs.   More things, still unseen but leaving evidence of their presence.  And,  a snake.  Alyssia and i were choosing the spot for the second Hummingbird vine.   and then,  looking just to the right,  coiled neatly at the base of the fence post,   snake.  We were silent and looked.  Snake was still,  looking back.  We wanted to be seeing a Gopher snake.   We leaned in,  close,  holding the camera as close as we could but the shape of the head was obscured by blades of grass and the coiled position.   Got a stick,  but too short.  With the tip of the shovel, gently touched.   No response.  Alyssia then nudged it.  No response.  But we had the pictures that clearly showed the design of the face…those white stripes at the eye.  Not much conversation and we moved a ways down the line and planted the second vine.   Time for the kids to come home from school and all of the evening activity of Goats and Chickens,  dinner.  Early evening i noticed that Tay was limping slightly.  Left front foot,  i felt it for maybe a thorn,  Alyssia felt it also…nothing.    That was Thursday.  Friday it was swollen,  foot, ankle…some but not a lot.  Not painful to touch.   Maybe a sprain.  Wait and see.  Saturday morning was swollen like a club….a substance oozing from a spot she had licked.   She would not bear weight on it.  The only Oroville vet open with Saturday hours was booked and advised to go to the Emergency Clinic in Chico.   Tay and I set out.

Vet walked in the exam room and stood looking.  Asked if there were rattlesnakes around.  She did the usual vitals check, heart and lungs good,  a fever.  Palpated the pads, all the bones.  normal.  Shaved the area that Tay had licked and there, the two puncture marks.   Because too much time had passed, the antivenom would not work.  She is on 10 days of a HEAVY  Cephalex dose,  Gabapentin for nerve inflammation and pain and an anticonvulsant.  Rovera a general antiinflammatory.  I am to watch for any side effects,  which can be severe.  I am to watch for any discoloration in the shaved skin and between the pads.   It's hard to predict how it will go.  She's healthy and strong.

So.   We are all ummm,  subdued.  Thinking our own thoughts.  

as i was leaving the exam room,  the vet,  a  young woman,  offered that her parents live in Red Bluff and as always,  there are many  rattlesnakes on their farm.   Said there are grandchildren and dogs, cats, livestock.  I said…what do they DO?   She said, remain vigilant.  always vigilant.  Teach the children.

 

 

 

 

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44 responses to “sharing this earth”

  1. Liz A Avatar

    Don recently spotted a coral snake here … not the first. Too often I forget to bring a walking stick with me as I go … your post is fair warning that I neglect that precaution at my peril. Hoping Tay will be well soon … and will remember the learning

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  2. Patty Avatar

    Sobering find. If you could somehow import black snakes to your property, they’d claim it and run off rattlers. There are R.S. down
    the road from us here in Va but never (knock wood) on our property.
    Sending Tay healing thoughts, you too.

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  3. Mo Crow Avatar

    Wow, what a beautiful lizard and observations of the wildlife on your land but yikes about the rattlesnakes,(((Tay))) have everything x-ed for a good recovery.

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  4. Peggy McG Avatar
    Peggy McG

    Yikes! Praying for speedy recovery.

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  5. Tina Avatar
    Tina

    OK that is seriously scary stuff … Very scary but good to know. I will pray that Tay makes a full speedy recovery. It might be good to always wear shoes and leather garden gloves when out digging and or planting. Remain vigilant sounds like the best advice … love to you Grace and all your 2 and 4 legged loved ones.

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  6. Hazel Avatar

    Held my breath reading this, and still am.

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  7. dee Avatar

    Oh poor Tay. I hope he’s fine and better. Will you stock anti venom kits? How terrifying.

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  8. grace Forrest Avatar

    we Share. each of us, no more, no less. To regard this is essential.

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  9. grace Forrest Avatar

    thinking about it all. First might be to mow the grasses there, making it easier to see. Guinea fowl….but they are LOUD. and i think, yes…maybe other native snakes? Maybe.

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  10. grace Forrest Avatar

    the lizards are just extraordinary, and again…are STILL upon discovery…do not run. Stay. Can be touched lightly.

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  11. grace Forrest Avatar

    today the swelling decreaced. You can see her bones of her foot.

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  12. grace Forrest Avatar

    think about that…the protective gear, but am still with the old crocs and just bare hands. Vigilent is the word.

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  13. grace Forrest Avatar

    nope…breathing right along…in/out and on…..
    it’somehow all ok

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  14. grace Forrest Avatar

    Dee…Tay is FEMALE. or, spayed female, so kind of non gender. But not male. There is a vaccination that is available. Not sure about that. Need to educate self. The greatest hope is that she connects what is happening now with her behavior that caused it. Maybe?, maybe not.

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  15. Nanette Avatar

    Lots of snakes here, all venomous, some deadly…..browns and blacks…and are used to Vigilance, but not fearful. I have taught Mirrhi ‘bitey, back away’ from a little pup, and she does. She also gives a sharp distinctive bark that I recognise when she sees a snake and I can shout ‘back away’from the house, then go investigate. I know there are snakes about everywhere, but only occasionally see them, a few times one has been on the verandah,…big, 6-7 ft long, with the cats in a row watching. In the yard, I call out to let them know I’m coming, or make a lot of noise if near long grass areas. And yes, closed in shoes, gloves always when gardening, and never reach into or under anything without checking first. I carry a snake bite kit always outdoors. Some people want to relocate them, but old timers say to leave them, they know your regular movements and adjust, and if you take them away, others will move in who don’t know you. I’m sorry Tay was bitten, these things will be outside her experience…and yours?….hope she keeps doing well.

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  16. Michelle Slater Avatar

    Vital considerations because of kids,cats,dogs who can not always be as vigilant as adult humans can. Dear Tay may she respond well to the medicine. https://thebottomline.as.ucsb.edu/2017/05/southern-californias-rattlesnake-season-is-here
    The birds and lizards! Bountiful beauty.

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  17. joanne Avatar
    joanne

    Yep–welcome to California. Here in Maine it’s porcupines and poison mushrooms.
    I remember poison toads and great tangles of black snakes in Florida when the kids were 3 and 5. Always something. Sending healing thoughts to Tay and you!!!!

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  18. Patricia Avatar

    It was a different type of walking I had to learn—surrounded in the wilds of WV—walking with eyes constantly surveying the earth. Had to learn to stop and survey first…then raise my gaze to view the surrounding vistas. And i found there was a scent, a scent and a sense related to “snake”…and as it developed more acutely, it saved me on many occasions. Copperheads. Timber rattlers galore. Especially in times of drought. We all were vigilant. Dogs barked, a different bark. A certain quality settled over the area…almost like sensing a tornado. Come up behind them. Never head on. They can thrust/lunge forward. Teach the children well. Not to fear but to see. It is good that you know.

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  19. Patricia Avatar

    Yes…the boots…knee high if possible. No bare feet. If possible. You sound like a veteran!

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  20. julie Avatar

    Ugh, I hate thinking of those big liquid-love eyes feeling pain but am so glad she seems to be turning the corner. In Arizona, we read aboutt dog training sessions specificallly for snakes. The only thing poisonous in Pennsylvania is the water. Fracking.

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  21. jude Avatar

    Like ticks here. Has become a big part of life and consideration.

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  22. Marti Avatar
    Marti

    Tay, thankful that the swelling is going down and hoping that she will not have to be in pain much longer. She is strong;probably a bewildering experience for her as she is an explorer so hopefully will come to know…last year was the first time that I encountered a snake here, was in our yard, in the herb border, scared the crap out of me, don’t know what kind, what color, only know that I lost my voice that afternoon after yelling when I saw it…I think I scared it because it quickly slithered away into neighbor’s yard!

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  23. Dakotah Avatar

    Boots! You all moved into their territory. Now it’s a shared space. I would have a conversation with the locals, respectfully request they not harm you.
    Wishing Tay a speedy recovery and learned lesson, if necessary. I wonder what home remedies are readily available? Drinking some apple cider vinegar doses might help neutralize toxins in the body, along with vinegar soaks to assist with healing…in case vets and docs aren’t at hand.
    My ducks love small snakes.

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  24. beth Avatar

    Teach the children. Remain vigilant. Seems like those words are needed for all places, for different reasons, these days. I hope Tay continues to recover.

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  25. Mo Crow Avatar

    the stillness of lizards is about relying on their camouflage to keep safe, like a cloak of invisibility!

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  26. jaime Avatar
    jaime

    Initiation.
    When I lived in Virginia our Toggenberg Cinnamon was snake bit on her teat. It shriveled up on that side of the udder but we were still able to milk the other side.
    When I lived in Maryland the house became “home”to many blacksnakes. I am seriously phobic about snakes. First things to do are to remove food sources. Stake out a perimeter of ten feet around the house with no birdfeeders, brushpiles, trash, rockpiles etc. where mice can live.
    I don’t know rattlers but I always learned to look up in the trees.That branch that is too fat might not be a branch. Birds eggs, chicken eggs are favorites. Chicken feed can attract rodents. Water sources, and heat. Vigilance can mean to think like a snake. You begin to feel a snaky place.
    Healing thoughts to Tay. Love to you.

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  27. grace Forrest Avatar

    and yet…they just hold their presence…allowing touch,
    are unconcerned

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  28. grace Forrest Avatar

    i like that, very MUCH,…the advice of the old timers…to let them learn your regular movements, to learn. The snakes, Us, our regular movements.
    We are new to each other, on this Hill

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  29. grace Forrest Avatar

    EveryThing is here…living.

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  30. grace Forrest Avatar

    There is. isn’t there…?, always something. No ticks
    on humans here…knock on wood

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  31. grace Forrest Avatar

    yes. Tay took the Hit for all of us, showing that it is real, that they are here and are who and what they Are.
    We will learn.

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  32. grace Forrest Avatar

    i asked the vet about that…the training…she wasn’t sold on it. Said maybe. Some dogs learn, some don’t. as with fracking.

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  33. grace Forrest Avatar

    it is. and how to Understand what it is.

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  34. grace Forrest Avatar

    o!!!! and to think of you….are you over it? or does it remain for you?….that snake in the herb border? Knowing you and snakes…oh, eeeeee…..

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  35. grace Forrest Avatar

    is my intention to learn herbal remedies. I still would have taken her to any Vet….am glad i could.
    and it’s interesting to me that i do not seek “medical”
    intervention for my Self, but am ok with it for the four footed….??????

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  36. grace Forrest Avatar

    yes. they do apply. The kids hear this. Be aware. Try to understand what is around you. Go slow. Sense it.

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  37. grace Forrest Avatar

    jaime…i LOVE
    all your words here…and i carry away….Think like a snake. i carry this. think like a snake.
    Love this. so much

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  38. Deb G Avatar

    Hope Tay is continuing to heal well…. So many good thoughts here about living together, how to live together. It’s really all we can do, learn…

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  39. Marti Avatar
    Marti

    Mostly over it but I’ll never be comfortable or unafraid of snakes: Took a few days for me to even want to go and harvest herbs last summer. Last week, reworked the herb area, (cool weather so pretty sure that the “visitor” would not be around.) Added some sage to the herb border, the thyme, oregano and rosemary come back ever year. This year planted lavender in one of the large pots that you gave us; I make a natural air freshener using bottled water, sliced lemon, dried lavender, and sprigs of sage and rosemary so it’s good that I grow most of what I need.

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  40. Liz A Avatar

    Just stopping by to say you all have been on my mind … hoping no news is good news and that Tay is doing well

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  41. Angie Avatar

    So scary. Sending healing light and love to Tay.

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  42. Deb Avatar
    Deb

    this mowing the grasses may be the neighbors reasoning. It looked like a lot of work for mere aesthetics. Changing the neighborhood just by your presence may not be enough. Sometimes we have to say “Move along”. “Not this space”. We have done that for the copperheads here.

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  43. dee Avatar

    I remembered gender after I left the comment… Dogs do remember things — just look at how they react to cats that have snagged claws into their noses… glad she’s doing better

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  44. Angie Avatar

    Would love more detail about putting together your natural air freshener, please 😃

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