Also this
time of year I warn readers that copperheads, and cottonmouths and rattlesnakes
are more dangerous at the close of summer than they are in the spring, because
this is the time they are molting and moving. At night as it cools, they come out onto surfaces that hold
the days warmth, like sand, concrete, gravel and asphalt. Beware when you are out at night. Do you know why there are no poisonous
snakes in the Ozarks? It’s because
they are ‘venomous’—not poisonous.
Living creatures which kill with a bite or sting inject venom into their
prey, not poison. Things that are
poisonous are certain plants and certain mushrooms, and man-made chemical
compounds. But truthfully, poison ivy is not poisonous!
As
you may have heard they found a two headed timber rattlesnake down in Arkansas
recently and it is now alive and well in a Game and Fish Commission nature
center at Crowley’s Ridge, near Jonesboro. It is not a small one, obviously has lived through a few
winters. I got to thinking that if
one rattlesnake head could be really dangerous in the amount of venom it could
inject, think how awful it would be to be bitten by two different rattlesnake
heads… four fangs and twice the venom.
And
then I got to thinking, what if one head ate one rat and the other head
swallowed another rat at the same time.
Two rats in one snake belly might present a problem. I say that because
no snake I ever heard of eats more than one rat or one rabbit or one gopher at
a time. True, they will often eat
several eggs at one visit, but an egg ain’t a rat. Rats have legs that stick out and claws and teeth and hair. So if they each ate a rat at the same
time, which head would suffer if the body developed a case of indigestion.
Because
of my scientific background I am forced to think of things like that and
answers are not easy to come by.
But if I came across a rattlesnake like that I wonder if I cut off one
head if it would kill the whole snake.
Or would the other head crawl off with the body and live out it’s life
thanking me for getting rid of the other head, or would it get mad and try to
get revenge. I guess it depends on
the personality of each head. I
have seen a pair of brothers, or a brother and sister, get along very well
their whole lives, but then there are those who have been at each other’s
throats since they were big enough to walk.
Whoever
found that snake, or those snakes, whichever the case may be, sure passed up a
golden opportunity by giving it away.
He could have taken it to fairs and carnivals around the Ozarks in the
summer, set up a tent and charged a quarter to anyone who wanted to go in and
see it. Then he could just put it
out in the shed in the winter under a pile of rocks and not have to worry about
spending anything on it in the way of snake food until next April.
My
daughter Christy is a science and biology teacher who followed in her ol’ dad’s
footsteps, working several summers as a park naturalist in a Missouri State
Park. She roams the woods up here
on Lightnin’ Ridge looking for mushrooms, and this is a good late summer-early
fall for mushrooms. There are many
that are edible, and many which are very,very poisonous. I think if we’d get a good rain that we’d
soon have lots of coral mushrooms, which I really like to cook with venison or
other wild meat. Christy has found
an assortment of mushrooms so variously and vividly colored that they make a
good rainbow. Every color you can
imagine is out there. If you would
like to see a couple of her photos of them, go to the end of this column and you can see them. You will be amazed!
The
fall issue of The Lightnin’ Ridge Outdoor Journal is coming up soon. I would love to get you a subscription
fixed up before it does, but you need to arrange that before the first of the
October because if your magazine doesn’t get mailed out with the whole big
bunch of them mailed then, the post office charges four times as much to mail
one individually. Isn’t that a
heck of a note? The Post Office makes more money out of my magazines than I
do! So does the printing company! If you want to subscribe, or order one
of my books, just call me at 417 777 5227. But if you are wanting to talk about fishing, I have to
limit the calls to one hour. You
can also email me at lightninridge@windstream.net
or write to me at Box 22, Bolivar, Mo 65613
Bright-colored mushrooms, all found by my daughter, Christy, on Lightnin' Ridge
Fly Agaric - Amanita muscaria |
This poisonous mushroom is called Fly Agaric (photo by Christy, found on Lightnin' Ridge)
This is an edible mushroom... the Coral mushroom. (photo by Christy, found on Lightnin' Ridge)
Amanita arkansana buttons. The Yellow Caesar. |
These two photo are of The Yellow Cesar. The second, is one that hasn't fully opened. (Photos by Christy, found on Lightnin' Ridge)
This beautiful white mushroom is called White Brain.
White Brain - Tremella fuciformis |
The Golden Ear - Tremella aurantia is an orange parasitic fungus of the shelf fungus Stereum hirsutism or False Turkey Tail.
No comments:
Post a Comment