.New house.
.New wood stove ( this comming winter will be the first time using it)
Due to the layout of the back yard and such i had to put the stacked wood piles on 60X120 or 48X96 pallets with a pc of 48X96 OSB plywood on it to keep the wood off the ground. We get a bit of standing water in the spring as some of our proporty is swamp but drys up in the summer.
I have 4 cords stacked on the edge of the woods (still in our yard to catch the sun and wind all day) and the garger snakes have seemd to make one ( possibly more) of the stacked piles there home. None of my wood is hollow, so the cant live “in” the wood but they are obviously amongst it. When I approach the wood pile there laying on top soaking up the sun and if I try to scare them off they just hide down inside the wood pile so I know they’re making this their home.
I’m wondering if Michigans cold winters are enough to make them leave the wood pile when the snow starts to fly? Any opinions? I wasn’t sure if I wanted to kill them yet as they will help keep the spiders ticks and mosquitoes out of that area. But the last thing I want us to bring in a pile of wood in the middle of the winter and bring some snakes in with me.
If there’s absolutely any concern that you guys think the snakes may stay in the woodpile during the winter I’m going to start killing them. I guess with my pellet gun or .22 shot shells. Any other gun seems like overkill.... pun intended.
Thanks for your input
.New wood stove ( this comming winter will be the first time using it)
Due to the layout of the back yard and such i had to put the stacked wood piles on 60X120 or 48X96 pallets with a pc of 48X96 OSB plywood on it to keep the wood off the ground. We get a bit of standing water in the spring as some of our proporty is swamp but drys up in the summer.
I have 4 cords stacked on the edge of the woods (still in our yard to catch the sun and wind all day) and the garger snakes have seemd to make one ( possibly more) of the stacked piles there home. None of my wood is hollow, so the cant live “in” the wood but they are obviously amongst it. When I approach the wood pile there laying on top soaking up the sun and if I try to scare them off they just hide down inside the wood pile so I know they’re making this their home.
I’m wondering if Michigans cold winters are enough to make them leave the wood pile when the snow starts to fly? Any opinions? I wasn’t sure if I wanted to kill them yet as they will help keep the spiders ticks and mosquitoes out of that area. But the last thing I want us to bring in a pile of wood in the middle of the winter and bring some snakes in with me.
If there’s absolutely any concern that you guys think the snakes may stay in the woodpile during the winter I’m going to start killing them. I guess with my pellet gun or .22 shot shells. Any other gun seems like overkill.... pun intended.
Thanks for your input