Rattlesnake Season: Watch Your Step!

The rumors started late last week–rattlesnakes are active at Chatfield State Park.  I heard a dog got bit, and, while he survived, it was expensive to treat him.

Prophet at Chatfield

Snakes or no, we love Chatfield

Now, I love my daily walks with Prophet to Chatfield. We go in good weather and bad, cold temperatures and warm.  In the almost seven years we’ve been walking the park, I’ve only seen one snake. And while I didn’t stop to ask the creature what kind of snake it was, nor did I go close enough to check markings or underside colors as the guide books suggest, I think I encountered a bull snake

. The snake was a large creature about four feet long. This species is without venom in its bite, but creepy enough for me to keep both me and my dog clear.  That was about two years ago, so even with snake rumors, Prophet and I will go to the park.

Then, on Sunday, a group of us ran into Mark, another regular dog walker.  It was one of his labs, Duke, who was rumored to have been bit.  Mark confirmed our worries.  Duke had made no unusual noises. There was no drama. Mark had no idea his dog had even been bit.

“He jumped right into my truck when we were going home,” said Mark. “He acted normally throughout our walk.”

It was a few hours later, when Mark was closing a real estate deal that his wife contacted him by phone and let him know Duke was in trouble.  They rushed their dog to the emergency vet and got him treated with anti-venom.  A week and a few thousand dollars later, Duke is on the mend.

Dogs walk at Chatfield State Park

Regular dog walkers take in Chatfield

Mark told us that while he was getting treatment for Duke, the vet said that two other dogs from Chatfield had been bitten in the last two weeks.  Our group of dog walkers shook our heads and looked around at our dogs that played near-by in the total bliss of doggie-pack-partyhood.  Who could imagine we or they could be in such grave danger?

Rumor has it that the construction going on at Chatfield might have something to do with the recent spate of rattlesnake encounters.  They are widening the road near the Owl Glenn parking lot, scraping a lot of earth away, making incredible, vibrating noise that would sure want me going in another direction, if I were a rattler.

It could also be that this is high season for the creatures to be out and about.  Weather has a lot to do with rattlesnake activity.  They are ectothermic by nature and seek the moderate temperatures afforded by early morning and late afternoon and evening for being most active.  But anyone who’s lived as long as I knows that snakes can be found sunning themselves anytime.

No matter the reason, there is no doubt the rattlers are active.  I’ve talked to total strangers who take me seriously, thank me for the warning, and walk in another direction.  Interesting that in our cynical age, the use of the word “rattlesnake” still gets attention and serious consideration fast.

One thing is for sure. I’m not wearing sandals or shorts to Chatfield this summer.  While dogs’ treatment for bites can run from $1,000 to $3,000, treatment for humans can run as high as $140,000 dollars.  Talk about a nasty bite!

 

7 thoughts on “Rattlesnake Season: Watch Your Step!

    • Thanks Linda,
      The snakes kind of give a nice little edge to life, right? Very few people die of rattlesnake bites any more, but my cheap side says, why bother with the pain and cost. Hope you saw the video attached to the $140,000 link. Take care. A quick web search confirmed you have the little rascals too.

  1. Every spring we watch for the king snakes in our yard because when they appear we know we have a better chance of avoiding rattlesnakes (they are the snakes that kill rattlesnakes, but are not themselves poisonous). I feel so helpless in an area with a lot of rattlesnakes and no protection.

    • Yesterday, I walked Prophet at the park and he went poo in thigh-high grass! I stomped around like an idiot trying to make as much vibration as possible to avoid those snakes. It reminded me of the movie “The Parent Trap” with the bad-girlfriend looking ridiculous out in the wild. I figure better to LOOK silly, than to prove the point in an emergency room visit. 🙂

      • OK, now I can’t get that Parent Trap image out of my head. hahaha Yup, you sacrificed your image for Prophet!

  2. Rattlesnake bites didn’t look that bad in the cowboy movies I watched when I was a kid!

    • Yeah, and the good guys always wore white hats! You really need to click on the $140,000 link above. It shows a bite from start to finish. Eew! Thanks for reading, Catherine.

Comments are closed.