FYI
be careful when you run over REAL sticks too; I have a serious biker friend who did that and the stick somehow got into his spokes and he fell down and broke his collarbone.
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I have (fortunately) never encountered a snake while riding, but I have encountered many while running. Never the most pleasant experience, IMO. I wish I could get over my fear of snakes, but I think it's an inborn thing for me...
Cool pictures, though![]()
FYI
be careful when you run over REAL sticks too; I have a serious biker friend who did that and the stick somehow got into his spokes and he fell down and broke his collarbone.
I like Bikes - Mimi
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Very cool photos! Although, I would never have even thought to get my camera out.
I was hiking once, going down hill, and stepped on what I thought was a slippery rock that almost landed me on my arse. I turned back to look and realized it was a snake that I stepped on and squished. No idea what type, it was reddish, so maybe just a garter snake. I'm not really sure what we have here in New England.
Yikes! I have to admit I'm scared of snakes. All that slithering is just too much for me.
So after reading your post this morning, I went out for a ride and every time I saw a stick or other long skinny object in the road, I wanted to yell "SNAKE!!!". I actually did yell SNAKE! when I came upon a long black and orange striped snake...except it wasn't a snake. It was a piece of rope.
I am not a fan of snakes. Snakes, sharks and motorcycles scare me.
I was out on one of our trails here south of Dallas and saw not one, not two, but 3 rattlesnakes in a 7 mile loop. The first was coiled in an angry, rattling, ready to strike pose in the center of the trail because another cyclist had stopped and tried to move it off the trail by poking it with a stick. I came flying around the singletrack and nearly hit it (no thanks to the guy with the stick, who I didn't see until I came around the corner). It rattled and hissed at me and I went in reverse Fred Flintstone style with a four letter expletive repeated 10 times fast. My husband at the time nearly collided with my in reverse backside.
My husband and the original poker got him off the trail at last and we went on. The next one was slithering across and I again stopped short of running him over. More expletives and again, the almost crash (why was I leading??). After that, he led. He got a little ahead of me and a third was sunning itself half on/half off. My husband never saw him, but I did!! I was, at that point, done. I just wanted off.
And, snake lovers....slightly off biking...I was called out just a bit ago to a house (no animal control on the weekend) on a snake call. The drain plate was not screwed on and a little moccasin crawled up the drain, knocked the plate off, and joined this lady in the shower....slithering over her foot. AAAAGGGGGHHHHHH. Typical suburban home. Can you imagine???
Ugh.
I thought it looked most like the Prairie Kingsnake. I checked with my fellow science teacher who is more knowledgeable about reptiles than I am, and he said it was either a Prairie Kingsnake or Glossy Snake.
I've seen a couple of small snakes this week- one was definitely a Gopher Snake, not sure about the other.
Ok, that's good to know it's not a regular occurrence! I don't mind the non-venomous ones, and I saw plenty of garter snakes on the trails in NY, but I guess I got it in my head that MO snakes are scarier! I will be careful though, and try to avoid anything that looks like a stick![]()
you girls are so brave............ I'd have pooped myself and never to be seen for dust .....
thankfully there are no snakes in New Zealand6 months in rural Australia was enough for me
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People do not decide to become extraordinary. They decide to accomplish extraordinary things - Sir Edmund Hillary
Snakes are ok. I know on trails it's difficult to know which ones are dangerous and which aren't, granted.
Gopher snakes are good. Garter snakes are goodI used to catch them (gopher snakes, that is) when I was young. I grew up with the potential of rattlers but I guess we learned how to tell who was who.
Cool..I don't mind snakes & other wiggly creatures.
I just wish i could say coming accross a snake here in Western Australia is hunky dory. I can't because all of them are venemous. I just know if i'm bitten to not move & lie horizontally. Kind of hard when you're on your own![]()
Here in Oklahoma I see snakes on the trail all the time. Usually if my husband is with me he is stopping to try to catch it. He loves snakes.
My snake story has nothing to do with my bike. Last summer I came home from work and opened the garage door to go into the house. Stretched out in my dining room facing me is a 5 foot long black snake. It doesn't flinch or move a muscle. At first I thought "haha funny". I thought my husband had left a fake snake on the floor to scare me. Then I decided I was too scared to find out if it was fake. I backed myself right back out of the house into the garage. By this time my house alarm is going off and the alarm company is calling. Luckily I have a phone in my garage so I answered and told the lady what was happening. In the meantime my husband is calling me on my cell phone which is in my hand and it starts to vibrate so needless to say I screamed in the poor lady's ear. Freaked me out! My husband sent over a friend and my brother-in-law to get the snake for me. By the time the guys got to my house it had hidden itself under my stove. The guys kept saying "where did you say it was?". I thought I was going to have to go to a hotel until it was caught. LOL Blacksnakes are harmless but I don't want ANY snake in my house.
I still think about it about 50% of the time when I'm the first one home and go walking through that door. We have no idea how a snake 5 feet long and about 1.5 inches diam. got into our house.
I saw a big blacksnake crossing the road a couple of weeks ago but couldn't figure out how to get it home on my bike!
I'd rather have one snake than a whole extended family of mice thankyouverymuch.
I can definitely do without coming across poisonous snakes in my path though.
Speed comes from what you put behind you. - Judi Ketteler
A friend of mine and I like to ride what we call the "flats" out near the fish ponds here in NEA. One day we were riding along and a snake darted (snakes don't really dart but this is the best word I could come up with) in her path. Thankfully the snake timed it right and lived to tell the tale. I am now hypervigilant that every stick I see could be a snake. We have lots of snakes in this part of the state which is why I stick to road biking! I too admire the posters that took the time to take the photos. SOmeday I will tell the tale of my encounter with the three ninja coons!
Add me to the "better off never seeing a snake" group. I saw a black snake on a running path known for having water moccasins (cottonmouths) in the nearby creek. I almost threw up. Couldn't have been a cottonmouth, it was far too mellow. I can't even stand those cheesy little green snakes and poisonous ones are one of my biggest fears. I can go to the exhibit at the zoo though.![]()
Amanda
2011 Specialized Epic Comp 29er | Specialized Phenom | "Marie Laveau"
2007 Cannondale Synapse Carbon Road | Selle Italia Lady Gel Flow | "Miranda"
You don't have to be great to get started, but you do have to get started to be great. -Lee J. Colan
Best not to run over any loose items on the road.
Don't care if it's a frog, squirrel, snake... Bad for the animal and could be bad for you.
I've heard someone hit a german shepard and the person lost control of her bike and crashed into a tree and broke her pelvis.
I also remember during Coors Classic where a Russian rider picked up a stick in his front wheel on a down hill. Lets just say that he was airlifted to a hospital with serious injury. 198?
Sometimes it happens so fast and you weren't expecting it... squirrels scare me because they come out onto the road. look at you. Turn around and go back from where they darted out and then turn around again and run right into your wheel at the last second. ugh!!!
I also hated to ride underneath tree canopy with dancing light on the ground. You can't see loose rocks, pot holes... In one event, I had to place my faith into the riders in front of me as we careened down a narrow winding mountain road. Didn't know if the turn up ahead was just a bend or a full on 180 degree hairpin turn. I figured one of them knew the road. If they went in hot from the outside, then I went in hot from the outside taking the same line. And if they slowed down, then I slowed down...![]()