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No reason to fear the snakes in your garden | The Gazette-Democrat

Fri, 05/07/2021 - 5:57pm admin Please read this. Geof Skinner .the “snow snakes” that were created on the hood of the world’s ugliest pickup truck were able to make their appearance thanks to a fake snake. Your writer dropped the plastic python on the April snow which had fallen somewhat unexpectedly in our little corner of the world.  The pseudo snake comes with a bit of a story, too. .about 10 years ago, back in what I heard referred to as “The Before Times,” as in the good days before the pandemic, your intrepid scribe/staff photo person was motoring home after attending a local photo opportunity on a very cold December evening.

Keep them around; Snakes eat pests that eat your plants

April 22, 2021 DeKay s Brownsnakes are 9 to 13 inches in length and don t travel far from their home. Extension photo by J.G. Palis. URBANA, Ill. – As spring progresses, many will have our hands in the dirt in our backyards, pulling out weeds and breaking up soil to prepare for the ultimate tomato patch. Coming across a snake in the grass or in the dirt may startle even the bravest person and could result in a failed garden for the fainthearted gardener. But there’s no reason to fear the snakes in your garden, says Joy O’Keefe, University of Illinois Extension wildlife specialist. Most are harmless, and many are providing valuable ecosystem services, eating the pests you loathe even more than the snakes.

Providing Suitable Woodland Habitat for Secretive Animals – Bats, Snakes, and Salamanders | Forestry Spring Webinar Series

Providing Suitable Woodland Habitat for Secretive Animals – Bats, Snakes, and Salamanders | Forestry Spring Webinar Series
illinois.edu - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from illinois.edu Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Hot houses: the race to save bats from overheating as temperatures rise

Wed 24 Feb 2021 05.30 EST Last modified on Mon 1 Mar 2021 10.24 EST Steve Latour and his wife were enjoying their usual early morning coffee in the sun outside their lake house in the Kootenay region of British Columbia when they heard noises coming from the bat box attached to the side of the house. Every summer, about 150 Yuma myotis bats return to the box, using it as a maternity colony to give birth to pups and take care of them until they are ready to leave for hibernation in the autumn. An awning has been installed to protect bats from the heat at Steve Latour’s house in Kootenay, British Columbia. Photograph: Susan Dulc

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