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	<title>Okeene Diamondback Rattlesnake Hunt &#187; Humorous Articles</title>
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		<title>The Day it Rained Rattlesnakes in Okeene</title>
		<link>http://www.okeenerattlesnakehunt.com/the-day-it-rained-rattlesnakes-in-okeene/</link>
		<comments>http://www.okeenerattlesnakehunt.com/the-day-it-rained-rattlesnakes-in-okeene/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 09 Dec 2007 18:25:49 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Jim Smith</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Humorous Articles]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[The following story appeared in Joe Durhams entry in Blue Skies and Prairie and is well worth reading. I have no idea about how true it is but it is rather funny even if it was a potentially deadly situation. Seems as if Joe and a fellow named L. V. Irwin were given the job [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The following story appeared in Joe Durhams entry in <a href="http://www.aussieokie.com">Blue Skies and Prairie</a> and is well worth reading. I have no idea about how true it is but it is rather funny even if it was a potentially deadly situation.</p>
<p>Seems as if Joe and a fellow named L. V. Irwin were given the job of mapping the best areas for their fellow snake hunters to look for rattlers during Okeene&#8217;s upcoming Rattlesnake Roundup. Joe had never been snake hunting with Irwin, and Irwin had never been flying with Joe, so they were both going a lot on faith. It being April, the roads were muddy, so Joe and Irwin decided to fly out to Salt Creek Canyon, a spot known for good snake hunting. When they got to the airport, they found only one plane available, an old homebuilt Stewart biplane with a 90-horse Gypsy engine. A slight drawback like that doesn&#8217;t discourage avid snake hunters, however, so Joe cranked it up and they took off.</p>
<p><span id="more-23"></span>Arriving in the Salt Creek Canyon area, Joe set her down on a road on the Cargill Ranch and they struck out on foot for the canyon a mile away. They found several dens where rattlers were holed up and noted them on their maps. It was still early spring and most of the snakes were in hibernation yet. This Irwin guy was a practical joker type and had one of those wind-up buzzers. Every time he caught Joe not looking, he&#8217;d touch him with the buzzer and Joe would jump out of his skin because the thing sounded like a big rattler that was mad. Joe decided to himself he&#8217;d fix Irwin, once he got him back in the plane. As it turned out, this was a big mistake, but it seemed like a good idea at the time.</p>
<p>They climbed to the rim rock, crossed over to Ruby Canyon and were walking down a creek bed when Irwin suddenly yelled and jumped back. He had almost stepped on a huge diamondback that was well camouflaged on the rocks. Gathered around the six and a half foot rattler were about 10 smaller ones four feet long. They had found Big Mama and her family. She was a locally notorious rattler that many hunters had tried unsuccessfully to catch through the years. Big Mama weighed about 20 pounds and was about four inches thick in the middle. She had 14 rattlers on her tail.</p>
<p>Irwin was a seasoned snake hunter so he was anxious to bag Big Mama and her brood. Her presence could assure plenty of interest and attendance for the big Rattlesnake Roundup.</p>
<p>Joe wasn&#8217;t sure they could bag her, they hadn&#8217;t really come prepared for hunting. Big Mama was too large for the little loop snare they had, but they decided to try anyhow. Joe found a forked tree limb, and tried to hold the rattler down while Irwin. slipped the snare over her head but Big Mama bucked .and wiggled and broke Joe&#8217;s tree limb like a match stick&#8217;. Joe got a bigger limb and tried again, jumping back time after time as she struck at him, knocking bark off the limb with her sharp fangs. If Joe had been hit he&#8217;d have been S.O.L. because Irwin couldn&#8217;t fly the plane to get him back to a doctor. They struggled with Big Mama for about fifteen minutes more, until Joe finally maneuvered her head in the right position and Irwin slipped the noose over it. Even then she was a handful, thrashing around as they tried to lift her into the sack. By the time they got her in the sack they had choked her pretty good and were afraid she was dead. They were afraid she was now merely a candidate for the taxidermist. but like Mark Twain, the reports of her death were greatly exaggerated. Bagging Mama&#8217;s offspring was easy and they soon started back with a whole sack full of snakes. Finally back at the plane, they put the sack of snakes on the floorboards between the two cockpits and took off. The neck of the sack was tied with wire-securely, they thought.</p>
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		<title>Why would someone want to buy a rattlesnake ?</title>
		<link>http://www.okeenerattlesnakehunt.com/why-would-someone-want-to-buy-a-rattlesnake/</link>
		<comments>http://www.okeenerattlesnakehunt.com/why-would-someone-want-to-buy-a-rattlesnake/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 09 Dec 2007 16:34:49 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Jim Smith</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Humorous Articles]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Neither the original date of this article or the publication it appeared in are known although it obviously came from Associated Press and may have been published in the Kansas City Star. However, you have to wonder about some people and their reasons for buying snakes! KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - To cook it, to [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>
<a href="http://www.okeenerattlesnakehunt.com/wp-content/gallery/snake-photographs/closeup.jpg" title="Close up and personal. Note that in this photo the pit organs are clearly visible. These indentations of the upper jaw between the nostril and the eye are about 5 mm deep, with an outer and inner chamber separated by a thin membrane.  The pits are heat sensing organs that help detect warm blooded prey." class="thickbox" rel="singlepic53" >
	<img class="ngg-singlepic ngg-left" src="http://www.okeenerattlesnakehunt.com/index.php?callback=image&amp;pid=53&amp;width=160&amp;height=120&amp;mode=" alt="Close up of a western diamondback" title="Close up of a western diamondback" />
</a>
Neither the original date of this article or the publication it appeared in are known although it obviously came from Associated Press and may have been published in the Kansas City Star. However, you have to wonder about some people and their reasons for buying snakes!</p>
<p>KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) -<br />
To cook it, to breed it, to make a pet out of it, or to pit it in a fight against another rattlesnake, a chicken or a bear.</p>
<p><span id="more-20"></span></p>
<p>Those were some of the reasons people gave Benjamin Roberts in responding to Sunday&#8217;s classified ad he placed in the Kansas City Star reading &#8220;Rattlesnakes for sale.&#8221;</p>
<p>Roberts, 38 scoured the Glass Mountain range near Okeene, Okla., a week ago to search for the elusive Western Diamondback rattler. He said the<em> </em>trip netted seven snakes, ranging in size from 3 feet to 51/2 feet. The latter was sold for $35, the remainder for $10 each, Roberts said.</p>
<p>One snake, measuring 4 1/2 feet, was kept for the Roberts family to eat, he said.</p>
<p>&#8220;We did a poor job of cooking it,&#8221; Roberts said. &#8220;We conked him on the head, then put him in a pan and shoved him in the oven But the body popped out of the pan&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;I smelled something burning,&#8217;. Roberts recalled. &#8220;I looked in the oven and the body was wound around the shelves, and his tail was sticking in the pilot light.&#8221;</p>
<p>Roberts said his ad drew many callers, some serious, some questionable.</p>
<p>&#8220;One guy wanted snakes that would fight,&#8221; Roberts recalled.&#8221; He said he was tired of bingo and wanted to see a snake fight. I told him rattlesnakes don&#8217;t fight among themselves, and he asked if they would fight a chicken. I told him the chicken would fly away. Then he asked if it would fight a bear. He asked if I had a bear.&#8221;</p>
<p>Roberts said it was the first time he had caught any rattlesnakes; and he planned to return to Oklahoma next spring on another hunting trip.</p>
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