Current:Home > MarketsEnough to make your skin crawl: 20 rattlesnakes found inside a homeowner’s garage in Arizona -ProfitZone
Enough to make your skin crawl: 20 rattlesnakes found inside a homeowner’s garage in Arizona
View
Date:2025-04-18 05:52:58
MESA, Ariz. (AP) — An Arizona man called a snake removal company after seeing what he thought were three rattlesnakes lurking in the garage of his Mesa home. He was wrong.
There actually were 20 snakes — five adult western diamondback rattlers and 15 babies. One of the adult snakes also was pregnant.
Snake wrangler Marissa Maki found most of the rattlers coiled around the base of a hot water heater in the unidentified homeowner’s cluttered garage Tuesday.
“That is a lot of snakes. I’m not going to lie. This is crazy,” Maki said in a YouTube video recorded by the company, Rattlesnake Solutions.
The western diamondbacks, with their distinctive triangular-shaped heads, are found throughout the Southwest. And though their venom is far less toxic than other rattlesnake species, they still require care when being handled.
Maki used tongs to pick up each snake before dropping them into large plastic buckets and relocating them to a natural habitat in a desert area.
“This is our record for the most rattlesnakes caught in one call!” said company owner Bryan Hughes.
The number could have been higher. Hughes said several shedded skins were found in the garage, indicating as many as 40 snakes may have lived there at some point.
“We’ll never know how many rattlesnakes have come and gone over time,” he said.
Rattlesnake Solutions made headlines in July when the company successfully removed a non-venomous coachwhip snake from a Tucson home. Their 20-second video showed that 3- to 4-foot (roughly 1-meter) snake being plucked from a toilet bowl and hissing straight at the camera.
veryGood! (5815)
Related
- Meta releases AI model to enhance Metaverse experience
- Is COP27 the End of Hopes for Limiting Global Warming to 1.5 Degrees Celsius?
- 'Hospital-at-home' trend means family members must be caregivers — ready or not
- One Man’s Determined Fight for Solar Power in Rural Ohio
- The White House is cracking down on overdraft fees
- Why Chinese Aluminum Producers Emit So Much of Some of the World’s Most Damaging Greenhouse Gases
- Young men making quartz countertops are facing lung damage. One state is taking action
- A New Shell Plant in Pennsylvania Will ‘Just Run and Run’ Producing the Raw Materials for Single-Use Plastics
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Amazon Prime Day 2023 Fashion: See What Model Rocky Barnes Added to Her Cart
Ranking
- Have Dry, Sensitive Skin? You Need To Add These Gentle Skincare Products to Your Routine
- Why Chinese Aluminum Producers Emit So Much of Some of the World’s Most Damaging Greenhouse Gases
- Herbal supplement kratom targeted by lawsuits after a string of deaths
- Why the Feared Wave of Solar Panel Waste May Be Smaller and Arrive Later Than We Expected
- $73.5M beach replenishment project starts in January at Jersey Shore
- Why Patrick Mahomes Says Wife Brittany Has a “Good Sense” on How to Handle Online Haters
- TikTok’s Favorite Hair Wax Stick With 16,100+ 5-Star Reviews Is $8 for Amazon Prime Day 2023
- NPR veteran Edith Chapin tapped to lead newsroom
Recommendation
Jamie Foxx gets stitches after a glass is thrown at him during dinner in Beverly Hills
Wide Leg Pants From Avec Les Filles Are What Your Closet’s Been Missing
South Korea's death toll from rainstorms grows as workers search for survivors
To Save Whales, Should We Stop Eating Lobster?
Kylie Jenner Shows Off Sweet Notes From Nieces Dream Kardashian & Chicago West
The Poet Franny Choi Contemplates the End of the World (and What Comes Next)
Citing Health and Climate Concerns, Activists Urge HUD To Remove Gas Stoves From Federally Assisted Housing
Study Shows Protected Forests Are Cooler