Usually headlines like that are followed by a story detailing how miraculously no one was hurt before the snakes were inevitably removed or killed. This is not that story.
Initially, this couple wanted the rattlesnakes gone. As usual, that old strategy wasn’t a solution to the perceived problem: translocated snakes returned and new ones showed up. In rural Arizona, their lush yard offers food and water for wildlife (including snakes) and an old adobe structure used for storage provided the best overwintering den around for Western Diamond-Backed Rattlesnakes, what we would come to call the “Snake House.”
Nowadays snakes are only moved if they’re hanging around immediately outside the couples’ house, a hundred yards back to the Snake House. The homeowners have become snake stewards, greeting them when encountered and offering apologies to them when disturbed. In short, they treat rattlesnakes like the good neighbors they are. So what happened?
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