How To Keep Snakes Out Of Your Yard
- Author Dennise Brogdon
- Published August 25, 2007
- Word count 614
Most snakes are harmless, but that doesn’t matter to those who have a fear of snakes. For those to whom snakes make their skin crawl and their bodies uncontrollably shutter, here are a few ways to keep them away from your home.
Habitat – your yard
An ideal snake-free yard would have a large span of low-cut grass with no shelter for a snake to hide. However, a yard with nothing in it is usually pretty dull. Snakes like places to hide under and they will choose anything close to the ground to avoid potential predators and to escape the elements.
Without pulling up the shrubbery and eliminating all of your landscaping, there are some things you can keep out of your yard to reduce the number of hiding places for snakes. Do not leave boards, tin, or plastics lying flat on the ground that snakes can crawl under. Do not pile up wood logs, sticks, rocks, leaves, or pine straw in your yard for extended periods of time. Keep in mind that anything you leave lying around on the ground, can become a potential hiding place for a snake.
Although, snakes don’t like cats and dogs, having a pet will not reduce the chance of a snake basking in the sun in your yard. They will avoid your pet whenever possible, but sometimes, snakes are simply out looking for a meal and a place to hide when they enter your yard and are just passing through.
Products on the market
Snake repellents can be useful in keeping snakes out of your yard. Snake repellents emit an odor that snakes don’t like and some products affect the sensory system of snakes which helps keep them away. The repellent will not kill the snake. Applying a band around your yard eight to twelve inches wide can keep snakes from passing over the perimeter and entering the yard. If you know you have a snake in the yard, get it out first or you will trap the snake in the yard with the treatment.
Natural repellants
Marigolds are known to distract snakes. Planting marigolds in your yard is a natural deterrence that will not harm the snake. You may want to plant the flowers around buildings and in areas where you have seen snakes in the past. You can also grow your own natural border to keep the snakes from entering the yard.
In your home
If you find a snake has entered your home, you can try to catch it yourself. However, if the snake is venomous or if you are not sure it is venomous, you should call animal control. In areas where snakes are prevalent, animal control is usually accustomed to removing snakes from homes. If you know the snake is harmless and it is relatively small, you can place a glue board near the area the snake was last seen. Drawing the snake out with the heat from a light can help draw the snake to your board. Just be careful that you don’t create a fire hazard with a heat lamp or a light bulb to close to other objects. Once the snake is stuck to the board, a little cooking oil applied outside will loosen the snake from the board. If you try to catch a small snake with your hands, be sure you have on thick work gloves. Snakes will bite, venomous or not.
Keeping a clean lawn with limited spaces for snakes to hide will not completely guarantee you will never cross a snake’s path, but it will help reduce the chance. When you need to get rid of snakes, browse www.pestproductsonline.com
Dennise Brogdon is the managing editor of the Hughston Health Alert, a quarterly, patient-information newsletter, and she is an editorial assistant for the National Athletic Trainers’ Association’s scientific journal, the Journal of Athletic Training. She is a member of the American Medical Writers Association and the Georgia Writers Association. www.pestproductsonline.com
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