View Full Version : Re: snake in pond.
Reel McKoi
July 20th 05, 03:53 AM
"Gary John" > wrote in message
...
> Hi all, hope i am in the right group as i have a outdoor pond.
$$ There is a pond group called rec.ponds.
> My worry is that tonight, I have noticed a snake in the pond. Is this
> anything to worry about and will it be of concern to my goldfish.
$$ Yes. All water snakes will eat fish small enough for them to swallow. I
know from experience. :-(
> I live in the south west of England.
--
McKoi.... the frugal ponder...
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Gary John
July 20th 05, 07:50 AM
Hi group,
I have been recommended to post here from a fellow member.
I have a goldfish pond in the back garden here in the south west of England
and found a long snake in there last night.
Will this scare or harm my goldfish and, if so, what can I do about it
please?
"Reel McKoi" > wrote in message
...
>
> "Gary John" > wrote in message
> ...
>> Hi all, hope i am in the right group as i have a outdoor pond.
>
> $$ There is a pond group called rec.ponds.
>
>> My worry is that tonight, I have noticed a snake in the pond. Is this
>> anything to worry about and will it be of concern to my goldfish.
>
> $$ Yes. All water snakes will eat fish small enough for them to swallow.
> I
> know from experience. :-(
>
>> I live in the south west of England.
> --
> McKoi.... the frugal ponder...
> EVERYONE: "Please check people's headers for forgeries
> before flushing." NAMES ARE BEING FORGED.
> My Pond Page http://tinyurl.com/cuq5b
> ~~~ }<((((o> ~~~ }<{{{{o> ~~~ }<(((((o>
>
>
>
>
2pods
July 20th 05, 08:10 AM
"Gary John" > wrote in message
...
> Hi group,
>
> I have been recommended to post here from a fellow member.
> I have a goldfish pond in the back garden here in the south west of
> England and found a long snake in there last night.
> Will this scare or harm my goldfish and, if so, what can I do about it
> please?
Sounds like like a Grass snake. Is it green ?
If so, they eat frogs and toads and fish.
Adders (or Vipers) which are poisonous are shorter and fatter, and have
black markings.
If you're not sure seek help
Peter
Gary John
July 20th 05, 11:58 AM
Peter,
Thanks for the reply. The snake is silver/yellow has black hoops and is
quite long, approx 12/14 inches, any ideas - Where do I "seek help"
Thanks
Gary
"2pods" > wrote in message
...
>
> "Gary John" > wrote in message
> ...
>> Hi group,
>>
>> I have been recommended to post here from a fellow member.
>> I have a goldfish pond in the back garden here in the south west of
>> England and found a long snake in there last night.
>> Will this scare or harm my goldfish and, if so, what can I do about it
>> please?
>
> Sounds like like a Grass snake. Is it green ?
> If so, they eat frogs and toads and fish.
> Adders (or Vipers) which are poisonous are shorter and fatter, and have
> black markings.
> If you're not sure seek help
>
> Peter
>
Gill Passman
July 20th 05, 01:04 PM
"Gary John" > wrote in message
...
> Peter,
>
> Thanks for the reply. The snake is silver/yellow has black hoops and is
> quite long, approx 12/14 inches, any ideas - Where do I "seek help"
> Thanks
> Gary
>
>
> "2pods" > wrote in message
> ...
> >
> > "Gary John" > wrote in message
> > ...
> >> Hi group,
> >>
> >> I have been recommended to post here from a fellow member.
> >> I have a goldfish pond in the back garden here in the south west of
> >> England and found a long snake in there last night.
> >> Will this scare or harm my goldfish and, if so, what can I do about it
> >> please?
> >
> > Sounds like like a Grass snake. Is it green ?
> > If so, they eat frogs and toads and fish.
> > Adders (or Vipers) which are poisonous are shorter and fatter, and have
> > black markings.
> > If you're not sure seek help
> >
> > Peter
> >
>
>
Certainly doesn't sound idigenous to the UK....I'd suggest calling the RSPCA
or a local zoo....sounds like an escapee
Gill
2pods
July 20th 05, 02:47 PM
"Gary John" > wrote in message
...
> Peter,
>
> Thanks for the reply. The snake is silver/yellow has black hoops and is
> quite long, approx 12/14 inches, any ideas - Where do I "seek help"
> Thanks
> Gary
>
I'd try RSPCA, or local vet.
What I meant was for you to get help, as I wouldn't want you bitten :-)
Might be worse, could have been a very large spider <shudder>
Peter
Reel Mckoi
July 20th 05, 04:10 PM
"Gary John" > wrote in message
...
> Peter,
>
> Thanks for the reply. The snake is silver/yellow has black hoops and is
> quite long, approx 12/14 inches, any ideas - Where do I "seek help"
> Thanks
> Gary
======================
Don't you have a wildlife service there in England? What about calling
your local zoo for recommendations?
--
McKoi.... the frugal ponder...
EVERYONE: "Please check people's headers for forgeries
before flushing." NAMES ARE BEING FORGED.
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John Maddock
July 20th 05, 04:27 PM
In article >,
"Gary John" > writes:
>Peter,
>
>Thanks for the reply. The snake is silver/yellow has black hoops and is
>quite long, approx 12/14 inches, any ideas - Where do I "seek help"
>Thanks
>Gary
You could try http://www.petsnakes.co.uk/ - you might find it in the
photo galleries. There's also a mail address for questions.
John.
Reel Mckoi
July 20th 05, 08:50 PM
"Maxx Pollare" > wrote in message
.. .
> A fat Koi named "Gary John" jumped up from his pond and laid on me
> the following lesserwords of wisdom...
>
> > Peter, Thanks for the reply. The snake is silver/yellow has black
> > hoops and is quite long, approx 12/14 inches, any ideas - Where do
> > I "seek help" Thanks
>
>
> I'm still not sure...
> Prehaps if it was discribed diffrently:
>
> http://www.flmnh.ufl.edu/herpetology/FL-GUIDE/colorpattern.htm#stripes
>
> Then we could try to look it up. };8)
========================
We get snakes here called black racers that are over 5' long. Some people
call them chicken snakes. The only ones we haven't seen in our ponds are
those small green garden snakes. Most of the snakes we see are well over
24" in length. Unfortunately by the time I go inside for the book to
identify them, I can't remember exactly what marking they had. :-(
--
McKoi.... the frugal ponder...
EVERYONE: "Please check people's headers for forgeries
before flushing." NAMES ARE BEING FORGED.
My Pond Page http://tinyurl.com/cuq5b
~~~ }<((((o> ~~~ }<{{{{o> ~~~ }<(((((o>
Reel Mckoi
July 20th 05, 11:00 PM
"Maxx Pollare" > wrote in message
.. .
> http://www.flmnh.ufl.edu/herpetology/FL-GUIDE/colorpattern.htm#stripes
=================
The ones we have have mainly blotches and diamonds, except for the large
black racers.
--
McKoi.... the frugal ponder...
EVERYONE: "Please check people's headers for forgeries
before flushing." NAMES ARE BEING FORGED.
My Pond Page http://tinyurl.com/cuq5b
~~~ }<((((o> ~~~ }<{{{{o> ~~~ }<(((((o>
Geezer From The Freezer
July 21st 05, 10:44 AM
Get the snake out and take it to the nearest river.
Martin
August 2nd 05, 06:34 AM
Geezer From The Freezer wrote:
> Get the snake out and take it to the nearest river.
really bad advice, this could well be illegal. The RSPCA will come out
and take care of it for you.
Geezer From The Freezer
August 2nd 05, 11:34 AM
Martin wrote:
>
> Geezer From The Freezer wrote:
> > Get the snake out and take it to the nearest river.
>
> really bad advice, this could well be illegal. The RSPCA will come out
> and take care of it for you.
Why would it be illegal? Would it be illegal taking frogs that have found
their way to a pond back to where they originated?
You may be right. I honestly don't know if its illegal or not?
Gareee©
August 2nd 05, 02:42 PM
"Martin" > wrote in message
...
> Geezer From The Freezer wrote:
>> Get the snake out and take it to the nearest river.
>
> really bad advice, this could well be illegal. The RSPCA will come out and
> take care of it for you.
Actually, this is exactly what our local animal control people told us. If a
snake is NOT poisonous and a threat, they will not come and remove it, but
they told us to catch him, and relocate him into a nearby stream or lake.
If it is a animal not native to the area, I can see that being an issue, but
if it something native to the area, and not a threat, then I don't see an
issue at all.
--
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Martin
August 2nd 05, 02:54 PM
Geezer From The Freezer wrote:
>
> Martin wrote:
>
>>Geezer From The Freezer wrote:
>>
>>>Get the snake out and take it to the nearest river.
>>
>>really bad advice, this could well be illegal. The RSPCA will come out
>>and take care of it for you.
>
>
> Why would it be illegal? Would it be illegal taking frogs that have found
> their way to a pond back to where they originated?
>
> You may be right. I honestly don't know if its illegal or not?
The snake was not identified (could have been a grass snake with a bit
of imagination) the release of non-native wild animals into the wild is
illegal (Wildlife & Countryside Act). Same goes for some frogs which are
imports, some shrimps, assorted escaped exotics, some exotic fish.
Infact it's strongly recomended never to release any wild animal back
into the countryside because of the possible transmission of disease.
"The Act also makes it an offence to deliberately release any non-native
species into the wild. This includes releasing any of the non-native
species already established in the wild in the UK.
A number of species are listed in a schedule to the act as being
established in the wild. Release of these species is an offence in the
same way as release of any other alien species. These taxa are:....."
http://www.threadnaught.net/~caleb/uklaw.html
including your frogs/toads
Midwife toad Alytes obstetricans
European tree frog Hyla arborea
Marsh frog Rana ridibunda
Edible frog Rana esculenta
African clawed toadXenopus laevis
Yellow-bellied toad Bombina variegata
Martin
August 2nd 05, 03:25 PM
Gareee© wrote:
> "Martin" > wrote in message
> ...
>
>>Geezer From The Freezer wrote:
>>
>>>Get the snake out and take it to the nearest river.
>>
>>really bad advice, this could well be illegal. The RSPCA will come out and
>>take care of it for you.
>
>
> Actually, this is exactly what our local animal control people told us. If a
> snake is NOT poisonous and a threat, they will not come and remove it, but
> they told us to catch him, and relocate him into a nearby stream or lake.
Are you in the UK?
> If it is a animal not native to the area, I can see that being an issue, but
> if it something native to the area, and not a threat, then I don't see an
> issue at all.
How do you know whether it's native or not unless a good identification
has been made? Equally whether or not it's poisonous? The poster said he
lived s/w England and had an unidentified snake.
The RSPCA will come and shift it for you, or at the very least come and
identify it and tell you what the law is regarding it. Again, it could
well be illegal to move it out to the countryside.
From the act "Further protection is offered to the rarest species. Any
form of deliberate or reckless disturbance to these species is a
criminal offence, as is possession of these species at any life stage.
Licences may be granted for the handling of these animals, for
scientific or conservation purposes."
If you try to move one of these protected species you can be prosecuted
for it, whether you want it in your pond or not. Draining the pond would
also be illegal, fencing it in, cleaning or most other things if it
disturbs the protected species.
Courageous
August 2nd 05, 03:33 PM
>If you try to move one of these protected species you can be prosecuted
>for it, whether you want it in your pond or not. Draining the pond would
>also be illegal, fencing it in, cleaning or most other things if it
>disturbs the protected species.
Green politics run amuck! Property rights trump all this environazi
invasion into your property. Send the snake packing, I say, just don't
tell anyone... even if it's "protected". Meanwhile, send the environuts
packing out of your local congress, if they're passing laws that make
it so that you can't maintain your own pond and land!!!
C//
Martin
August 2nd 05, 04:16 PM
Courageous wrote:
>>If you try to move one of these protected species you can be prosecuted
>>for it, whether you want it in your pond or not. Draining the pond would
>>also be illegal, fencing it in, cleaning or most other things if it
>>disturbs the protected species.
>
>
> Green politics run amuck! Property rights trump all this environazi
> invasion into your property. Send the snake packing, I say, just don't
> tell anyone... even if it's "protected". Meanwhile, send the environuts
> packing out of your local congress, if they're passing laws that make
> it so that you can't maintain your own pond and land!!!
>
> C//
>
Wait until we start talking about bats! lol
Harry
August 2nd 05, 09:30 PM
Martin > wrote:
>Courageous wrote:
>>>If you try to move one of these protected species you can be prosecuted
>>>for it, whether you want it in your pond or not. Draining the pond would
>>>also be illegal, fencing it in, cleaning or most other things if it
>>>disturbs the protected species.
>>
>>
>> Green politics run amuck! Property rights trump all this environazi
>> invasion into your property. Send the snake packing, I say, just don't
>> tell anyone... even if it's "protected". Meanwhile, send the environuts
>> packing out of your local congress, if they're passing laws that make
>> it so that you can't maintain your own pond and land!!!
>>
>> C//
>>
>Wait until we start talking about bats! lol
>
>
Hello,
It will soon want to come on land to sun itself, and it probably does it
every day at about the same time. Place your kitty in her kitty-carry-box
so that she can see the snake coming out to sun itself. Do this everyday
for about a week or until kitty knows about the snake and its regularity.
If this isnot a pond in which your children swim etc. why do you want the
snake to leave? Snakes eat bad bugs and things . . . Killing a snake is
as killing a mosquito eater. Your snake may be eating mosquito larva, and
this could save a family-member's life if the mosquitoes in your area are
infected with dangerous disease. Save a life (it may be your own) let the
snake alone. Let him do his job.
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Harry
August 2nd 05, 09:46 PM
Martin > wrote:
>Gareee© wrote:
>> "Martin" > wrote in message
>> ...
>>
>>>Geezer From The Freezer wrote:
>>>
>>>>Get the snake out and take it to the nearest river.
>>>
>>>really bad advice, this could well be illegal. The RSPCA will come out
and
>>>take care of it for you.
>>
>>
>> Actually, this is exactly what our local animal control people told us.
If a
>> snake is NOT poisonous and a threat, they will not come and remove it,
but
>> they told us to catch him, and relocate him into a nearby stream or lake.
>
>Are you in the UK?
>
>> If it is a animal not native to the area, I can see that being an issue,
but
>> if it something native to the area, and not a threat, then I don't see
an
>> issue at all.
>
>How do you know whether it's native or not unless a good identification
>has been made? Equally whether or not it's poisonous? The poster said he
>lived s/w England and had an unidentified snake.
>
>The RSPCA will come and shift it for you, or at the very least come and
>identify it and tell you what the law is regarding it. Again, it could
>well be illegal to move it out to the countryside.
>
> From the act "Further protection is offered to the rarest species. Any
>form of deliberate or reckless disturbance to these species is a
>criminal offence, as is possession of these species at any life stage.
>Licences may be granted for the handling of these animals, for
>scientific or conservation purposes."
>
>If you try to move one of these protected species you can be prosecuted
>for it, whether you want it in your pond or not. Draining the pond would
>also be illegal, fencing it in, cleaning or most other things if it
>disturbs the protected species.
>
>
Hello,
Having the snake in his private pond constitutes trapping, holding and being
in possession of a "protected species"?
He better not call the RSPCA or they will throw him in jail.
As soon as "kitty" finds out about the snake, snake will leave of his own
volition.
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Derek Broughton
August 3rd 05, 04:23 PM
Harry wrote:
> Martin > wrote:
>>
>>How do you know whether it's native or not unless a good identification
>>has been made? Equally whether or not it's poisonous? The poster said he
There _are_ only three native species of snakes in the UK -
http://www.herpetofauna.co.uk/identification.htm#native (and of course none
in Ireland). It's not that hard to identify them (and which one is
poisonous).
>>lived s/w England and had an unidentified snake.
>>
>>The RSPCA will come and shift it for you, or at the very least come and
>>identify it and tell you what the law is regarding it. Again, it could
>>well be illegal to move it out to the countryside.
They're all protected under the Wildlife & Countryside act.
> Having the snake in his private pond constitutes trapping, holding and
> being in possession of a "protected species"?
It could. Stranger things have happened.
--
derek
Logic316
August 4th 05, 10:06 AM
> Courageous wrote:
>
>>> If you try to move one of these protected species you can be
>>> prosecuted for it, whether you want it in your pond or not. Draining
>>> the pond would also be illegal, fencing it in, cleaning or most other
>>> things if it disturbs the protected species.
>>
>>
>>
>> Green politics run amuck! Property rights trump all this environazi
>> invasion into your property. Send the snake packing, I say, just don't
>> tell anyone... even if it's "protected". Meanwhile, send the environuts
>> packing out of your local congress, if they're passing laws that make
>> it so that you can't maintain your own pond and land!!!
Indeed. In the U.S. these days, you can't even move a pile of dirt or
drain a mosquito-infested puddle on your own property without possibly
risking heavy fines and a jail sentence. Well, I say we humans didn't
evolve to the top of the food chain and prosper by sacrificing our needs
for the good of some damn species of vermin! It's not like they give a
damn about OUR survival, do they? I always thought conservation of
natural resources and wildlife was a noble goal, but ever since the fall
of the Iron Curtain the environmentalist movement became a haven for all
the old socialists/communists seeking to abolish private property and
collectivize everything under authoritarian government control, and the
most radical groups are a bunch of misanthropic liberal-guilt-ridden
earth-worshiping eco-terrorists who actually believe that humans are
some kind of an unnatural infestation of the planet. Eco-nazis have also
infiltrated and become nearly indistinguishable from the animal rights
movement, which once upon a time simply fought for the welfare and
humane treatment of animals, but now seeks to put the needs of animals
on the same (or higher) moral level as humans. These are sick, sick
people on the left wing who are equal to the worst religious extremists
on the right wing.
- Logic316
"Private property began the instant somebody had a mind of his own."
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-- Calvin Coolidge
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must be sacred or liberty cannot exist.
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