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Love & hisses

Snakes In The City season 8: Mbali Mtshali’s wild journey from snake hater to snake saviour.

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Mbali Mtshali from reality show Snakes In The City, Wednesdays on National Geographic (*182) at 18:00, saw her first snake when she was about six years old. And her granny warned her: Look a snake in the eye and you will die. “I think I must have been like six and living at my grandma’s place. It was big, green, slender and elongated; it must have been a green water snake,” says Mbali. But it didn’t matter if the snake was venomous or a friendly vermin eater. “My granny was my best friend then, and she told me that snakes are evil. If you think you’ve seen one, don’t even keep eye contact, because if your eyes and the snake’s eyes connect, you’re going to die. They are a sign of witchcraft.” And Granny had backup. “It’s even in the Bible – because my grandma was my Sunday school teacher. Everything she taught me, I had to register in my head and record every time,” Mbali recalls.

Now Mbali is on a mission as an apprentice to Snakes In The City team Simon Keys and Siouxsie Gillett, to undo Granny’s teachings and to not only look those snakes dead in the eye, but to pick them up and save their lives.

SSSSPEAKIN­G OF SSSSSNAKES What do you remember about your first time handling a snake?

I was turning 20, it was 2012. And it was at an animal rehabilita­tion centre where I volunteere­d at the time. I don’t actually remember my first time… I had to do it twice! The first one was too brief. I was so scared that I was squinting my eyes. I gave it a second attempt, and that’s when I could make out it actually felt like it was silky and smooth. Touching it for the first time, it just hit everything that I was taught before because I was told you don’t even want to touch them because they’re cold and slimy and gross.

You’ve had plenty of experience with snakes since then, have you been bitten?

So many times. I’m careful and I decide if I’m keen to handle even a non-venomous snake. If it’s going to be a python, for example, there might be more than just one puncture on my flesh. They have shorter teeth, you’re not going to feel it as much. My last bite was last year. This year already I have removed four snakes from my neighbours’ dwellings and I haven’t been bitten at all.

How did you come to be involved with Snakes In The City?

I got the opportunit­y to host Snakes In The City through a friend of mine, who is a hepatologi­st. He was the first person who made me some of my snake handling gear, and he taught me everything that I know about snakes. His name is Carl Schloms (the Senior Herpetolog­ist at SAAMBR, The South African Associatio­n For Marine Biological Research). Every snake handler knows him.

What was one of the most important discussion­s you had with the Snakes In The City production team?

It’s something that came up every day: “Just be yourself. You’ve got our support, we want for

you to be loved for what we saw in you”. Even on my briefing docs, it stated that I need to bring out my personalit­y, so I shouldn’t be shy. I hardly ever felt homesick. It was like I’d found my second family when I was there.

One thing that I kept being reminded of, which I did appreciate, is: “Mbali, do not feel pressured. Once we get to the call-outs and we have confirmed what snake it is, don’t stick your fingers where you can’t see. And please, please, please make sure that we have given you a go-ahead before you can even put your hands on a snake, because if you get bitten, that’s going to be the end for that particular filming day.” It was about not being ego-driven, like, “Yay, I’m on TV. I’ve got to show that I’ve got this!” It was trusting Siouxie and Simon for allowing me to shadow them first.

What was one of the most physically challengin­g positions that you had to be in to deal with the snakes this season?

I can’t think of any, because I’m such a physical person as it is. Doing squats is my game, doing deadlifts is my thing. Twisting, jumping… it was like I was getting a (workout) session that wasn’t even planned. I can’t even think of one that was tricky, except Simon has this habit of making us run. I didn’t want to think about getting bitten by a black mamba, but that thought wouldn’t leave my head whenever Simon made us run!

What’s one of your favourite bits of knowledge that you got to share?

I had to have it drilled into my skull for years that snakes are more scared of us than we can ever be of them. Simply by being present in the space, before you can even notice that there’s a snake somewhere in the corner or on the roof, they are already scared that you are in their space. Your job is to protect them, not abuse them. And whenever I got to visit townships, it was reassuring to be able to share those one or two facts, and see that people understood that there’s nothing special about you that’s going to cause the snake not want to bite; that they only bite if they need to defend themselves, and that’s when they feel cornered.

When you say a snake is scared, how do you see that in how it’s moving?

First, it’s looking, like, “Where can I escape from here?” They hardly ever hiss or puff if you haven’t approached them too closely. In most cases, you can tell they have become skittish. They are wiggling their heads because they are trying to see where they can escape. Once they start swirling their tongue, left and right, that’s done to learn what kind of creature is surroundin­g them, or if it’s the only one. And this is another fact that I enjoyed sharing: Since they’ve got a forked tongue, they can smell in four different directions, so it’s the top section, it’s the bottom section, and the sides, which is amazing!

Do they specifical­ly recognise people, or do they just see us as a big animal?

I’ve been wanting to keep a snake pet for years, but my mom just won’t allow me, even now! And I was taught that even if you keep one as a pet, they cannot identify you as Mbali, my keeper, whatsoever. But they are aware that you are a human creature, because of our scent, and they can kind of make sure that you are not related to any of their prey items (so don’t hand-feed your snakes, kids).

 ?? ?? Siouxsie (left) and Simon (right) welcome Mbali to the Snakes In The City team for the first time this season.
Siouxsie (left) and Simon (right) welcome Mbali to the Snakes In The City team for the first time this season.
 ?? ?? Mbali is wary of even non-venomous snakes like pythons.
Mbali is wary of even non-venomous snakes like pythons.

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