by arocknoid » Wed May 02, 2012 1:47 pm
You've been lucky to see one of those by casual encounter on the trail, let alone on two occasions. They are not out and about that much during daytime, and unless you are rummaging around in their habitat you'll not often see one.
A glove should give you plenty of comfort, but don't fret too much about venom or being bitten. They tend to be docile, and their weak venom is not injected via hollow fangs, but seeps out at the rear of the mouth along grooved teeth. Think of it more as an extra-strong digestive juice rather than a neuro-hemo-CV toxic weapon for prey or defense.
(of course *exaggerate* the venomosity of the snake when later telling the tale of your snake wrangling ;)
Good to see your concern about not hurting the little fellows, because that is far more likely than vice versa.
With a quick encounter, if you have a hat you can use that along with the other hand to guide or redirect the snake from retreat, and if so inclined can use the hat as a capture aid. You may have only a few seconds for your initial response with a chance encounter, and the hat can buy you time to fish out your glove and camera, for example.
Anyway, cool snake with colorful vivid displays; sounds like you live near an area with healthy population. Thanks for the post.
kind regards,
arocknoid