Snakes are reptiles they love heat. Make a trap using heat , a heated rock from the pet store. Use a compound bucket with like a net opening like a lobster trap. You'll catch more snakes then you'd believe.
When we relocate our copperheads, (caught with tongs & 'stored' in a garbage can) we take the entire 33 gallon garbage can for a 'ride' in the back of our Kawasaki mule & then dump the snakes directly out of it onto the ground. With them, the less handling/transferring the better. With our Nessie, I caught her with the snake tongs & put her in a covered 5 gallon bucket. Then we took her over to our community fishing pond & dumped her out. I've never had any success with snake traps & fortunately our Nessie was a one & done (at least so far...)I grab the snake with a snake grabber, stuff in pillow case, tie shut.
The garbage can is deep enough it can not lunge out. They sure try.
When dumping open door, untie, dump snake out. Big enough case no way can the snake get close to my hands.
A lot easier then taking trap and opening, or transferring to another bucket etc.
NO kidding! So far, no pythons in my pond! (no gators, either.) Knock on wood.I’ll take “info I pray I never need” for $500 Alec!
When you do something often enough, you get the technique perfected!Oh I also take the lock off the minnow trap, ie locked hook, pick up carefully, put in the trash can. Encourage the snake to leave the trap.
Then remove the trap put back in the pond lid on trash can until pillow case transfer.
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