Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Who You Gonna Call? Alberta Rattlesnake Wrangler Keeps Serpents, Citizens Safe

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 Jun, 2019 05:31 PM

    LETHBRIDGE, Alta. — One rattlesnake got caught in freshly laid tar under someone's stairs.

     

    Others typically get twisted and trapped in garden netting.


    Ryan Heavy Head comes to the rescue of both the vipers and the terrified homeowners.


    "I call myself a rattlesnake wrangler," says the 47-year-old, who runs a rattlesnake mitigation program in Lethbridge, southeast of Calgary.


    He's also on call with the program's rattlesnake hotline, which runs April to October.


    The line gets anywhere from 60 to 170 calls a year, and the number has been rising along with new housing developments on bluffs above the city's river valley.


    Heavy Head estimates there are about 600 rattlers living along the deep ravines and coulees of the Oldman River.


    A deserted area that was once a dump with half-buried slabs of concrete has become a rookery where female snakes gather before they give birth.


    "It's just like snake heaven," says Heavy Head as he carefully walks through the area. He's wearing open-toed sandals, a short-sleeved T-shirt, camouflage shorts and a hat.


    Without hesitation, he approaches one snake with a short stick and lifts it up off the ground. The distinctive sound of its shaking tail doesn't phase him.


    "I've got to be careful because I'm still within the strike range and if she were to pull back — she's coiled tight enough — she could lunge her body at me," he says.


    Heavy Head manages to get the snake into a long, clear plastic tube so he can get a closer look.


    "She's got golden eyes. You see those eyes? They're dragon eyes," he says admiringly.


    Heavy Head, originally from Oregon, says he loves snakes. He got his first pet snake, a boa constrictor, when he was eight.


    After a stint in the United States army and completing a degree in cultural anthropology, he took over the Lethbridge rattlesnake program.


    One recent hotline call came from the University of Lethbridge, where some small rattlers had worked their way through the vents and into a maintenance room.


    Heavy Head put them in a dark case made out of strong plastic that attached to his backback. He then returned them to a den in the area.


    Dogs are most at risk of being bitten. Rattlesnake bites in humans are rarely fatal, he says.


    He recalls how one woman learned the hard way how quickly a snake reacts. She was in her yard with her husband, who was using a lawn trimmer. Because the machine was so loud, she didn't hear the warning rattle of a nearby snake.


    "She reached under a bush and put her hand right on the snake and it bit her," he says. "By the time she travelled to hospital she said her hand was like a lobster claw."


    Heavy Head says the size of the snake doesn't matter.


    "They've got the same venom, so it still hurts."


    So far, he hasn't been pierced with rattlesnake fangs.


    "But I am going to get bit eventually."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Counsellors Help Students At B.C. School After Student Dies During Field Trip

    SOOKE, B.C. — The Greater Victoria School District says counsellors will be at a local middle school to help students and staff deal with the death of a fellow student.

    Counsellors Help Students At B.C. School After Student Dies During Field Trip

    Raptors Coach Nick Nurse Says Meeting In The Works With Prime Minister Trudeau

    Toronto Raptors head coach Nick Nurse says a meeting is in the works with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

    Raptors Coach Nick Nurse Says Meeting In The Works With Prime Minister Trudeau

    B.C. Conservative MP Mark Warawa Dies After Cancer Diagnosis

    OTTAWA — Conservative MP Mark Warawa has died after being diagnosed with pancreatic cancer earlier this year.

    B.C. Conservative MP Mark Warawa Dies After Cancer Diagnosis

    Trump Promises Help With Canadian Detainees In China As Trudeau Visits D.C.

    U.S. President Donald Trump says he will raise the issue of two Canadians being detained in China when he meets with the Chinese president next week, if Prime Minister Justin Trudeau wants him to.

    Trump Promises Help With Canadian Detainees In China As Trudeau Visits D.C.

    Report Finds Many Birds In Decline But Co-operation Works To Rebuild Populations

    Report Finds Many Birds In Decline But Co-operation Works To Rebuild Populations
    The bad news is that the populations of more than one-quarter of Canada's bird species are declining, many rapidly.

    Report Finds Many Birds In Decline But Co-operation Works To Rebuild Populations

    Trudeau Welcoming Raptors, But Trump Uncertain For White House Visit

    WASHINGTON — While plans are underway for the Toronto Raptors to meet Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, a White House visit for the NBA champions is uncertain.

    Trudeau Welcoming Raptors, But Trump Uncertain For White House Visit