San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

SNAKES • Wrangler and his group captured and relocated 304 reptiles last year

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dry, not slimy. Baby rattlesnak­es are not more venomous than adult snakes. Snakes don’t chase people, they just rush to escape past humans when cornered. Snakes don’t jump, either.

“Snakes don’t have legs,” Ireland said. “They strike, but they don’t have any interest in biting humans. They save their venom for their prey.” In his 47 years of collecting and rescuing the scaly reptiles, Ireland said he’s never been bitten by a venomous snake, though he has been nipped many times by frightened nonvenomou­s snakes. “It’s a hazard of the job.”

On April 11, Ireland got a call from a family in the San Elijo Hills community of San Marcos, who found a harmless gopher snake trapped in some landscapin­g fabric behind their fence. The agitated snake bit Ireland several times as he was trying to free it, but once the snake was pulled to safety, it became friendly and curious. By the end of his visit to the home, Ireland said the family’s young daughter was holding and playing with the snake.

Last year, the Snake Wranglers captured and relocated 304 snakes in North County. This year’s snake season — which runs roughly from late March to Thanksgivi­ng — is off to a banner start, so Ireland said he expects the 2022 tally to exceed last year’s total. The calls come in for snakes of all varieties, including nonvenomou­s gopher, garter, king, racer, rosy boa and rat snakes. The wranglers also get many calls for rattlesnak­es, particular­ly the common Southern Pacific rattler and the rare red diamond variety.

At lunchtime on Thursday, Ireland hiked into the hills in an unincorpor­ated part of the county carrying a black plastic bucket with the logo of a coiled snake on the side. He was taking two freshly captured Southern Pacific rattlesnak­es to their new homes far away from people.

One by one he lifted the snakes out of the bucket with long metal hooks and then walked them into brush areas far away from each other to give them each their own hunting grounds. As Ireland placed the first snake in the dirt, it slithered slowly back toward him and quietly nestled itself between his boots in the shade.

The second snake was more eager to escape into the brush, but neither of the snakes was using their rattle or exhibiting any aggressive behavior.

“This is what people don’t realize about rattlesnak­es,” he said. “They don’t want anything to do with people. They just want to be left alone.”

The son of an oilman, Ireland grew up in England and Connecticu­t before settling with his family in a remote part of Texas at age 10. With no other kids to play with, he spent most of his free time hunting for “critters,” especially snakes, which he would capture with a forked stick, bring home in a pillowcase and keep in a large tank that his father set up in their home.

Thirty years ago, he got a job in sales in San Diego, where he has always enjoyed hiking and searching for snakes. With his wife of 15 years, profession­al photograph­er Holly Cruikshank Ireland, and their two daughters, Addy and Brooke, Ireland has adopted four pet reptiles: a Florida king snake, an African ball python, a bearded dragon and a panther chameleon.

Ireland said he started capturing and relocating snakes on his own about four years ago when he saw neighbors posting on the Nextdoor app that they’d found a snake in their yard and called the fire department to remove it. Because fire officials don’t have the tools or time to relocate snakes, they usually are forced to kill them, even snakes that are nonvenomou­s.

To save these doomed creatures, Ireland began offering his free snake collection services on Nextdoor and quickly became overwhelme­d by calls. In 2020, three other North County men who Ireland met on Nextdoor volunteere­d to help and the Snake Wranglers group (snake-wranglers.com) was born. Ireland’s daughters, Addy and Brooke, are also now training as apprentice wranglers.

The website offers tips on identifyin­g snake breeds and details on when and how to call for relocation services. In snake-prone areas, Ireland recommends people put his name and number in their cellphone’s address book, (619) 204-5117, so they can keep an eye on the snake while they call. Ireland posts all calls on a wranglers text loop and whichever man is available closest to the caller will go out. The wranglers limit their pickups to the coastal North County area where they live.

There are numerous businesses in San Diego County that offer snake removal for a price. But in Poway, handyman Patrick “Trapper Pat” Brady offers free training on how to safely remove snakes, lizards, spiders and gophers. He can be reached by phone at (858) 449-7050.

pam.kragen@sduniontri­bune.com

 ?? CHARLIE NEUMAN PHOTOS FOR THE U-T ?? A Southern Pacific rattlesnak­e moves between the boots of snake wrangler Bruce Ireland this month. He had removed it from a San Marcos yard and released it in a rural North County area.
CHARLIE NEUMAN PHOTOS FOR THE U-T A Southern Pacific rattlesnak­e moves between the boots of snake wrangler Bruce Ireland this month. He had removed it from a San Marcos yard and released it in a rural North County area.
 ?? ?? Bruce Ireland holds a captured rattlesnak­e before releasing it.
Bruce Ireland holds a captured rattlesnak­e before releasing it.

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