• Happy World Emoji Day! 🌎🌐🗺️

Don't be ((afraid)) of Ontario's one venomous snake

Glenn MacGrady

Administrator
Staff member
Joined
Oct 24, 2012
Messages
6,957
Reaction score
14,324
Location
NW Connecticut
There are those who are righteously afraid of or disgusted by everything in the animal kingdom except for dogs and a few homo sapiens. Everyone else need not fear Ontario's one venomous snake—the massasauga rattlesnake—so "experts" and government bureaucrats say.

"In the 1960s, when hippies were singing about free love and protesting the seal hunt, Ontario’s provincial park officials were clubbing massasauga rattlesnakes to death. But today, Kenton Otterbein, the head naturalist at Killbear Provincial Park, says campers are learning to live peacefully with Ontario’s only venomous snake, a species he describes as 'darn cute.'"

"Most people wouldn’t think of massasauga rattlesnakes as cute. But then, most people don’t know much about them. They are less than three feet long with a dark and light blotchy pattern."

". . . persecution by humans has relegated massasauga rattlesnakes to only a few pockets of habitat in Ontario, the most notable being the eastern shore of Georgian Bay."

"Seven people were bitten by massasauga rattlers in Ontario last year."

"Most human rattlesnake bites are associated with the consumption of alcohol (by the human, not the snake)."


Offhand, when on canoe trips, I can't readily think of anything beneficial done for me by snakes or any member of the entire class of insects. Birds are okay. Mammals are rarely seen; and of those that are, most are pestiferous or scary, while others are interesting. I don't fish or eat them, so all the clades of fishes are irrelevant to me.

While canoe camping, I've only seen two rattlers up close and threatening, none in Ontario. I liked the headless one better, and thanked the old guy with a machete. Now, I'm the old guy . . . with four machetes.
 
"Most human rattlesnake bites are associated with the consumption of alcohol (by the human, not the snake)."
Good thing because I don't carry enough for both of us.

I've never worried too much about snakes, particularly the rattlers. They're rattling to let you know they're there & he already knows that he can't eat you... as long as you don't step on him, you just need to move away.
 
We have encountered these snakes several times in Killarney PP, especially on the rocky shore of Georgian Bay of Lake Huron. They are not threatening and easily run off. The park has posted signs about them and asking visitors not to bother them.
 
I have seen at least one of these snakes every time I have been to the Georgian Bay since I was 7 years old (15+ trips). The problem with these little guys is they like to hang out in blue berry patches and then sun themselves on the rocks covered in dark circular patterned lichen. They can be hard to separate from the lichen unless you are really looking for them.

Their rattles aren’t nearly as loud as their larger southern cousins, and I’ve encountered some that make more of a clicking sound than a true rattle. I think I made a post about this before (and I’ll try to dig it up) but a few years ago I had a massasauga that I didn’t see strike at me and it hit the side of my Chaco sandal leaving two perfect puncture marks. I wore boots the rest of that trip.
 
Back
Top Bottom