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HUMOR: Classic Dave on Snakes

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (abennett@MIT.EDU)
Wed Apr 20 16:15:06 1994

From: abennett@MIT.EDU
To: humor@MIT.EDU
Date: Wed, 20 Apr 94 16:11:46 EDT


Date: Wed, 20 Apr 94 12:46:25 PDT
From: ckleinja@Novell.COM (Connie Kleinjans)

Dave Barry - Waging War With Wildlife

 	On the same day that President Bush and his entourage flew down to
 the Earth Summit in Brazil for the purpose of not signing the
 biodiversity treaty, I was sprinkling Dr. T's ``Snake-A-Way'' brand
 snake repellent around our yard.
 	This was necessary because, unfortunately, our yard violates the No.
 1 rule of yard design, which is: ``Never locate your yard in South
 Florida.'' South Florida is smack dab in the middle of a permanent
 weather system that weather scientists call ``The Big Armpit,'' meaning
 that it is hot and humid and prone to producing mutant growths. If you
 want biodiversity, hang around our yard, preferably with a flamethrower.
 	For example, at certain times of the year, our yard features absurdly
 large grasshoppers. I am talking about grasshoppers that could replace
 the dogs at maximum-security prisons:
 	GUARD: Warden! Mass murderer William R. ``The Human Veg-O-Matic''
 Weeberman has escaped!
 	WARDEN: OK, then, release ``King.''
 	GUARD (shuddering): If you say so. Get him, King!
 	KING: SPROINNGGGG
 	GUARD: Look at the ALTITUDE on that sucker. He's gonna land at least
 a half-mile ...
 	VOICE IN THE DISTANCE: AIEEEEEEEE
 	WARDEN: Tell the body-recovery team to look for a motionless lump
 covered with brown spit.
 	X X X
	But I have no quarrel with the grasshoppers. My quarrel is with the
 snakes. Our yard has a large and active colony of a species of snake
 known to snake scientists as ``prank snakes.'' The way a prank snake
 attacks its prey is, it lies down on the lawn directly in the path that
 the prey takes from its house to the little office in the back where it
 (the prey) writes its newspaper column. The snake holds perfectly still
 until the prey is just about to step on it, then YIKES it rears its head
 up and slithers a few feet, causing the prey to flinch violently and
 splash hot coffee onto itself and dance around and make noises like a
 small porpoise in big trouble. Then the snake slithers off to exchange
 ``low five'' tail slaps with its friends.
 	The snakes have done this to me twice, so I am not fond of them. I
 was especially disturbed to learn that the man who constantly repairs
 our lawn sprinklers (everybody in South Florida has lawn sprinklers,
 which are designed to break if they are subjected to abnormal stress,
 such as water passing through them) once gave ARTIFICIAL RESPIRATION to
 one of these snakes. I am not making this up. His name (the man, I mean)
 is Pat Granat, and here is exactly what he told me:
 	``I stepped on this snake, and I think I kind of knocked the wind out
 of him. So I picked him up and put his head in my mouth and blew on him,
 like a balloon, and he woke right up.''
 	WARNING: Do not attempt this with a snake in your area unless you are
 certain that at least one of you is wearing a condom.
 	In fact, you should be cautious when conducting artificial
 respiration on ANY life form. I base this statement on an article from
 the Columbia Basin (Wash.) Herald, written by Michael Wagar and sent in
 by alert reader Rich Clemson. The article states that Grant County
 Sheriff Bill Wiester was in a restaurant when he noticed a man acting
 suspiciously in a car outside.
 	``The man appeared to be snorting cocaine, complete with a red straw
 near his nose,'' states the article. ``The man was dropping his head
 down with the straw for a few seconds.''
 	Sheriff Wiester called for more police, who converged on the suspect,
 who, as you have no doubt guessed, turned out to be giving artificial
 respiration to a piranha. I'm still not making this up.
 	``The man had a fishbowl between his legs with a piranha swimming
 around inside,'' states the article. ``The man was blowing air through
 the straw into the bowl to help keep the tank aerated.''
 	The man was not charged, although the piranha turned out to have
 several outstanding assault warrants.
 	No, just kidding. But I'm not kidding about Dr. T's Snake-A-Way brand
 snake repellent. I got it from reader Gene Watts, who belongs to the
 Marine Corps League, which sent a bunch of this stuff to Operation
 Desert Shield troops to protect them from scorpions; Watts says it
 repels snakes, scorpions and ``big lizards.'' (The League is willing to
 send more of this stuff, free, to armed forces personnel; write to
 Desert Project, P.O. Box 16605, Panama City, Fla., 32406.)
 	I can vouch for Snake-A-Way. The only drawback is that, since the
 main ingredient is sulfur, my yard sometimes smells like a giant
 socially unacceptable intestinal event. But this is a small price to
 pay. Since I sprinkled it, I have not seen a single snake OR scorpion OR
 big lizard.
 	Or, come to think of it, an Iraqi tank unit.
 	
 	(C) 1992 THE MIAMI HERALD
 	DISTRIBUTED BY TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES, INC.



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