Quote:
Originally Posted by Mako19
My dad is remodeling my grandmother's house, which is about 40-50 years old. My grandmother passed away last year so he has spent the last 6 months getting it ready to be rented (if anyone is interested in renting a ~3,000 square foot house on 6 areas of land with the nearest house more than 300 yards away in Milton let me know. all new appliances and a lot of remodel work doNe. House is in the country in Milton.)
Anyway, I was crawling around the attic Dropping RG6 cable lines in each room for him, on my knees and elbows all up in the insulation, when I noticed a 5' long snake skin. Scared the **** out of me!
I started looking closer and could see where snakes were burrowing through the insulation to get under AC unit In attic. There were snake scales built up around perfectly round holes in insulation where the snakes were crawling Under AC unit.
I finished the job of dropping cables but I was pretty scared **** less each step that I took up there.
Has anyone else ever heard of snakes living in attics?
How do you recommend we get rid of these snakes that have made the attic home?
Poison?
Moth balls?
I have more electrical work to do up there and would feel a hell of a lot better if I knew those ****ers were gone before I crawled my *** back up there!
Thanks in advance.
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DO NOT PUT POISON for the snakes or the mice because poisoned mice might kill the snake and good god, you just don't know how bad rotten decaying snake smells like (worse the road kill)
if you have snakes in the attic it is only because you have a large mouse population to support them living up there. snakes might go in the attic to shed skin then leave but they don't stay unless there is a ready food supply for them.
its amazing how and where snakes and mice get into but I once found a 4 1/2 ft rattle snake skin inside a refrigerator door while I was replacing the gasket. no matter how much I assured the lady it was gone I got a free 2 year old refrigerator and got paid for replacing the gasket on it. it took me about an hour of my time I didn't charge her for because she insisted I search the whole house for the snake before I left lol.
the snakes go under the a/c unit because its a warm dark spot and the mice come to the a/c unit to drink water so the snakes are living under the watering hole for the mice and a perfect ambush spot to catch food.
once the food source is gone the snakes will leave on their own since there is nothing in the attic for them to live on other then the mice. if they ate all the mice they may have already moved on and its a tough call weather to let the insulation stay or replace it but its better to replace it since its smelly with rodent and snake feces and all that.
it will be more then just under the a/c unit since the mice will have nests who knows where all over the attic and you should carefully check the wiring to see if they are chewing the insulation off the wires. also mice love to chew holes in the a/c ductwork and sometimes use it as roadways and places to life so there is a good chance the a/c ductwork has mouse feces in it and "should" be replaced or cleaned professionally.
have all of the insulation sucked out and vacuum up the feces left behind then have all new insulation blown in then (if its not brand new) have new a/c ducts installed and the a/c unit cleaned out in case there are dead dried up mice are in it (very common) then the house will smell fresh again and there are no "surprises" when trying to rent or even sell the place.
I suggest you get it all pulled out and vacuumed then finish all your work while its less itchy and easier to see everything, then blow in new insulation only after everything else is completed.