SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Just above the tract homes of Empire Ranch, on a Folsom, Calif., hillside covered in boulders and brown grass, Bruce Ramirez plies his trade: keeping the suburbs safe from rattlesnakes.
Greenbelts and golf courses are particularly hazardous, he said. In the past week or so, he and his brother Len pulled about 50 rattlesnakes from around Northern California homes.
In the foothills, where suburbia and prime snake habitat intersect, homebuilding is picking up again after a long hiatus. That’s disturbing more rattlers. And with summer temperatures lingering into fall, young snakes, whose bite can be the most dangerous, are numerous and active.
“It’s beautiful country," Ramirez said. “People want to live here, too. I guess we have something in common with snakes."
It’s not an easy coexistence.
The slithering of rattlers onto suburban lots — biting pets, frightening children — creates demand for snake catchers such as Ramirez Rattlesnake Removal. The brothers’ clients include homeowners, schools, high-tech companies and hospitals.
The Ramirez brothers have removed snakes tucked behind toilets, coiled in bedrooms and lurking under TVs. More times than they would like, they’ve come face to face with rattlers in the narrow spaces under houses while crawling on their bellies.
“The babies are out in high numbers right now," Bruce Ramirez said.
In Empire Ranch, a new development in Folsom, Calif., homeowners routinely call Bruce Ramirez to rid their yards of snakes. He has traced the creatures to their hillside dens and captured dozens.
On a recent Wednesday, he handed his card to Elisa and Manuel Cordero in the driveway of their Folsom home and suggested some preventive measures, such as sealing garage doors and keeping landscaping clean and open.
The Corderos have lived in Folsom for six years, during which time they’ve had a number of snake encounters. Once, Elisa Cordero killed a rattler with a shovel. Another time, her husband shot one with a BB gun after their 6-year-old granddaughter heard its rattle while playing in the backyard.
One day, they said, their 9-year-old grandson pounded on the front door after school, yelling and frightened. Elisa opened the door and saw a big rattler coiled in the corner, an arm’s length from the boy.
The couple moved from Citrus Heights, Calif.., and were surprised by the number of snakes. They didn’t hear about the rattlers from sales agents. A prospective neighbor told them, “There’s critters," and left it at that, they said.
Northern Pacific rattlesnakes are common in growing suburbs such as Lincoln, Folsom and Granite Bay. The upscale community of El Dorado Hills is the epicenter of snake sightings, Len Ramirez said.
“We call it ‘Snake-orado,’" he said.
Bruce Ramirez told the story of a call to a home in Serrano, a gated community in El Dorado Hills. The family dog had been bitten overnight and refused to come inside. When Ramirez got there, he realized that’s because the snake was indoors with the family, including a 3-year-old child.
“The dog knew better than to go back in the house," he said.
As of Wednesday, the 50 snakes recently removed by the Ramirez brothers were stored in holding tanks at Len Ramirez’ Auburn home. He planned to take them into the mountains and release them, as he does with almost all the snakes he catches.
Patrick Foy, a spokesman for the state Department of Fish and Game, said the department has an informal agreement with Len Ramirez that allows him to distribute rattlesnakes on public wild lands.
Foy said state law gives residents “carte blanche" to do what they will with rattlesnakes — kill them, catch them — with no permit required. The snakes, native to this area, are not protected as either threatened or endangered.
Despite the law’s treatment of rattlesnakes as pests, the Ramirez brothers said they respect their quarry — in part for the vital role snakes play in controlling the state’s rodent population.
“We move onto their property, but we really need them," Bruce Ramirez said.
On that recent Wednesday, Len Ramirez pulled out a bucket of small rattlers, youngsters that were born in late summer or early autumn.
They look almost harmless, and they are much harder to spot than older snakes, he said. But their bite can be the most dangerous, because they have yet to make a kill and cleanse their venom ducts.
“They can discharge more venom," Len Ramirez said.
Children and dogs are especially in danger from the small rattlers, which they tend to approach with less caution.
“You wake up in the morning and your dog’s head is the size of a melon," he said.
