BenjaminBoa
Arachnosquire
- Joined
- Sep 1, 2011
- Messages
- 117
Hey guys, so we just moved into a new house next to a creek, we have a massive retention pond (about 30ft by 20ft) that drops down 3 foot, is surrounded by a rock wall, it is broken into three areas, a high land where the soil and plants are dry/normal for our area, mid land where the soil is moist but never pooling and the low land which is all cat tails and 6in-12in of water most of the time. We get a lot of wild birds and hundreds of frogs and toads there, but just recently I started noticing a lot of field mice living there as well. We are already planning on seeding the yard with lady bugs and praying mantids to keep the bug numbers under control and we have plenty of wild bats here as well but the frog and mouse population in the yard is a little alarming. Before winter it was like a toad plague, there were more toads than bugs in the yard ranging from the size of a penny to fully grown toads, they thrive in our yard and I only ever see an occasional crow eat them.
I have a friend who lives on two acres of pond land, he has brown water snakes, garter snakes, and wild rat snakes all over his yard. I was thinking when the weather gets warmer I'll go catch a few adults and some of the many babies and release them in the yard. I might fatten up some of the corn and water snakes since, even though there are plenty of wild mice, I'd worry about the crows picking some of the smaller guys off before they'd be big enough to impact the mouse population.
What do you guys think? Will the snakes work to keep toad and mouse populations down? I love toads but there were literally so many in august that I couldn't even back out of my drive way without running over one. When would be the best time to go hunt for these snakes, I don't know when these guys leave the hibernaculum but I'd assume its near by because his yard is crawling with snakes, every month I get called over to go collect a big angry rat snake who found its way onto the porch and is trying to eat his mom XD. Also is there a place I can just buy some native snakes just like one can buy lady bugs and praying mantids for pest control? Considering how heavily planted our yard is I doubt the snakes would be seen all that much, there is dry and wet land and we live on a pretty big lot so I don't imagine the garters at the least leaving the lot too much, our land is on a hill and the neighbors are more up hill with short grass and dont seem to have many mice or toads in their yard, I think our yard is just infested because of the wet land + being next to a creek+ the huge amounts of available food (wild and bred sunflowers, berries, a small apple tree.) Our township only allows native species in our yard, something to do with the retention pond meeting biological regulations. So the people in our neighborhood living on the creek on the opposite side of the road or the neighbors just next to us, and of course us as well, can not spray certain pesticides, pesticides sprayed can not be on or in the water sources and plants must be native species if put in or around the retention pond and creek.
So the snakes I shouldn't be subjected to any pesticides, and at least the ones in our yard wouldn't be bothered. Everyone in my family loves snakes, my mom doesn't like them but she grew up in trinidad with 20ft + snakes in their yard, as far as shes concerned these little "baby" snakes in Illinois don't count as snakes. My boas however she gets nervous around XD my step brother, sister and step dad all love snakes. I do most of the yard work and like our old house, I would scour the yard, bag any snakes in the lawn, mow the lawn and then release them. I've had snakes since I was seven years old so even wild little garters are precious little gems to me <3
I have a friend who lives on two acres of pond land, he has brown water snakes, garter snakes, and wild rat snakes all over his yard. I was thinking when the weather gets warmer I'll go catch a few adults and some of the many babies and release them in the yard. I might fatten up some of the corn and water snakes since, even though there are plenty of wild mice, I'd worry about the crows picking some of the smaller guys off before they'd be big enough to impact the mouse population.
What do you guys think? Will the snakes work to keep toad and mouse populations down? I love toads but there were literally so many in august that I couldn't even back out of my drive way without running over one. When would be the best time to go hunt for these snakes, I don't know when these guys leave the hibernaculum but I'd assume its near by because his yard is crawling with snakes, every month I get called over to go collect a big angry rat snake who found its way onto the porch and is trying to eat his mom XD. Also is there a place I can just buy some native snakes just like one can buy lady bugs and praying mantids for pest control? Considering how heavily planted our yard is I doubt the snakes would be seen all that much, there is dry and wet land and we live on a pretty big lot so I don't imagine the garters at the least leaving the lot too much, our land is on a hill and the neighbors are more up hill with short grass and dont seem to have many mice or toads in their yard, I think our yard is just infested because of the wet land + being next to a creek+ the huge amounts of available food (wild and bred sunflowers, berries, a small apple tree.) Our township only allows native species in our yard, something to do with the retention pond meeting biological regulations. So the people in our neighborhood living on the creek on the opposite side of the road or the neighbors just next to us, and of course us as well, can not spray certain pesticides, pesticides sprayed can not be on or in the water sources and plants must be native species if put in or around the retention pond and creek.
So the snakes I shouldn't be subjected to any pesticides, and at least the ones in our yard wouldn't be bothered. Everyone in my family loves snakes, my mom doesn't like them but she grew up in trinidad with 20ft + snakes in their yard, as far as shes concerned these little "baby" snakes in Illinois don't count as snakes. My boas however she gets nervous around XD my step brother, sister and step dad all love snakes. I do most of the yard work and like our old house, I would scour the yard, bag any snakes in the lawn, mow the lawn and then release them. I've had snakes since I was seven years old so even wild little garters are precious little gems to me <3