Re: History of Snake Keeping
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Bogertophis
You might enjoy reading about Grace Olive Wiley- she was way outside the box (as bad examples go), but hey? :cool:
just looked her up on wiki and ja i wouldn’t be bare handling mambas but she sounds like a hoot def want to find more about/from her!
Re: History of Snake Keeping
Quote:
Originally Posted by
YungRasputin
just looked her up on wiki and ja i wouldn’t be bare handling mambas but she sounds like a hoot �� def want to find more about/from her!
Just googling her name brings up many articles about her- I thought you'd enjoy-:cool: She was fired from her job as curator @ the Brookfield Zoo (Chicago); they said that letting her go was necessary as otherwise their insurance company would raise their rate well above her yearly salary. :D All things considered, it's impressive that she lived to age 65 doing that stuff, but yeah, I don't care to be cuddling mambas & such either. I have a strong inclination for pain aversion & self-preservation.
By the way, she started off NOT in snakes, but with a degree in entomology. What an interesting woman she was. I get a kick out of seeing her in photos- you'd never have guessed what she was into- it just shows you that appearances can be so deceiving. ;)
Re: History of Snake Keeping
Quote:
Originally Posted by
jmcrook
Stolen World is a must read
I'll second that, tks.
Re: History of Snake Keeping
Raymond L. Ditmars: His Exciting Career With Reptiles, Insects and Animals by Laura Newbold Wood
People to check on:
Laurence Klauber (The Rattlesnakes), Clifford Pope (Snakes alive and how they live), H. B. "Bern" Bechtel (first bred amelanistic corns), Carl Kauffeld (Snakes and snake hunting), Ross Allen
Somewhere I read that the spotty distribution of aesculapian rat snakes in Europe could be correlated with temples to Aesculapius in the Roman Empire.