The kids
are settled at the breakfast table, fiddling with their cereals. I walk over
to the chicken run, to give the impatient, clucking hens their breakfast too. I
stretch my arm to open the door and freeze in my tracks. I am looking right
into the eyes of a giant snake.
The snake
is curled around the fence just next to the door, eye level, neck and tail
sticking out, and the fatter, middle part of his body leaning on the wood
inside. I shrink back, screaming, almost falling over my retreating steps. The
kids come running from their breakfast. ‘Stay back,’ I shout.
It takes a
few seconds before it hits me. Quickly my eyes dart over the hovering chicken.
One. Two. Three. Four. My heart sinks. My eyes go back to the fat part of the snake,
stuck inside the run, the part that he can’t squeeze through the wire mesh. A
snake is stretchy, and can fit through a very small hole. But not a chicken. Nor
a snake with a chicken inside him.
The kids
come out and stare at the python with big eyes, excited by the turmoil. They
have not realised yet what it means when there is a python stuck in the
chicken run. I am pondering how I can explain this, when we hear yelling from
the front patio. Monkeys have snatched our abandoned breakfast and run up the
roof, munching cheese and bread. It truly is a jungle out here!
Back inside
I gather my wits. I call the wildlife rescue hotline. I cuddle Jasmijn, who has
now realised her favourite chicken is not in the run. I try to explain that nature is cruel, that snakes need to eat too, and isn’t chicken rice her favourite dish? I rush them to the bathroom to brush their teeth before the school bus arrives. In the meanwhile the python has given up trying to get his fat stomach through the mesh, and has coiled up for a nap just behind the door. The chicken run around the coop, unperturbed, annoyed at the delayed breakfast. After the school bus has left the wildlife rescuers arrive. Armed with sticks and long tongs they open the door, and bravely grip the python. Moments later it is safely in a carrier cage and I can breathe again.
My relief
does not last long as I find the stiff body of Keetje inside the hen house. I
blame myself, for the last month I have neglected to lock the hens in at night,
allowing the nocturnal predator to get inside. A quick headcount shows that the
lump in the python’s long body has to be Wilhemina. I blink away tears. The
snake got our two most beautiful hens.
‘A medium size
python’ the rescuers say. Reticulated pythons can reach up to seven meters, but
this one, that must be well over three metres, is more than enough for me. We
chat some more, and I learn about these majestic, yet frightful snakes. I
am happy to hear they are not really dangerous to humans, that they won’t bite unless
provoked. That does not help my chicken.
Then, I
learn that snakes can vomit. There are no words to describe the grossness of a
snake vomiting up a chicken, especially if that is your own, beloved hen.
Luckily the bathing of the snake to get rid of the nasty smell before it goes
in the van, is so hilarious that it, mostly, manages to replace that image in
my mind. The snake is popped in a bag and will be taken to the zoo. There, it
will be chipped, and in a few months released again in the wild. I hope, far,
far from our chicken run.
The
remaining hens seem unaffected, they eat, they lay eggs, and cluck away
happily. The kids are sad. And me? I see snakes in each tree root, check under every
bed, and jump if anything brushes past my leg. I shudder to enter the chicken
run. I console myself with my newly gained wisdom that usually only one large
python roams in every square five kilometres. I hope it will be a while before
a new one moves in.
With a big thank you to the good people of
Acres, I wouldn’t have known what to do without their amazing volunteers. Please
consider making a donation via their website, I sure did, you never know when
I’ll need them again.
Yuk, ik vind (kleine) spinnen al niks, om maar te zwijgen over middelgrote pythons. Misschien fijnmaziger draad rondom de kippenren doen?
ReplyDeleteTja. Ik begin maar met het nachthok netjes dichtdoen... is wel veel werk namelijk en ze moeten wel frisse lucht krijgen in de hitte hier...
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ReplyDelete