Viewing post #918057 by Frillylily

You are viewing a single post made by Frillylily in the thread called What is Digging in Your Daylily Beds?.
Avatar for Frillylily
Aug 1, 2015 11:49 AM CST
Missouri (Zone 6a)
I was one of the first 300 contributors to the plant database! Plant Identifier
needrain said:I suppose this thread is headed for the sandbox, but I really think for some of us these are part of gardening just like weeds. They are for me living in the country, for sure. I would note that after being on and around this property for 60+ years, it has been extremely rare for a rattlesnake to supply a warning rattle. That generally occurs after you have disturbed them directly. If you accidently step on one that is quietly trying to stay invisible, the warning rattle is likely to come after the bite. It always makes me nervous when I hear people say they safer than copperheads because of a warning rattle. That's just not true most of the time and rattlesnake bites tend to be more dangerous than a copperhead bite. I have both here and occasionally both are in and around my plants, so I try to pay attention.

See the rattler wrapping at the bottom of the container? I walked by this for about 3 hours before I saw it there. The path goes right by the posts defining the bed.
Thumb of 2015-07-29/needrain/2674d6

This copperhead, which I find more often in the beds, is just resting quietly on the top of the post, but I saw one resting in an iris stalk once.
Thumb of 2015-07-29/needrain/3ee9ee

Smoothing out the damage from an armadillo is when a copperhead nailed me. I know to look and I was, but they really are hard to see and it had sort of snuggled under the loose dirt the armadillo had stirred up. I had trouble finding it even after it bit me. It wasn't a serious bite and I didn't have any serious repercussions, but it cost me a night in the hospital anyway. So life that adapts or even prefers the garden environment is some gardeners should be familiar with. Being allergic to a wasp sting would be every bit as dangerous as the snake bite. Also here are Black Widow spiders who are bad housekeepers making their webs look abandoned. You'd think I'd know that by now, but it still fools me sometimes and I'll use my hand to clear it away. They are particularly fond of stacked stones - and so are the scorpions which only have a wicked sting.




wow I hate Texas Hilarious!

We have all that in MO I guess too, well I don't see scorpions in these parts... but I guess just seeing it ALL in one paragraph pushes me over the edge Hilarious!

« Return to the thread "What is Digging in Your Daylily Beds?"
« Return to Daylilies forum
« Return to the Garden.org homepage

Member Login:

( No account? Join now! )

Today's site banner is by Zoia and is called "White Wedding"

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.