. Handbook of nature-study for teachers and parents, based on the Cornell nature-study leaflets. Nature study. THE MILK SNAKE, OR SPOTTED ADDER Teacher's Story The grass divides as with a coinh, a spotted shaft xs seen. And then it closes at your jeet, and opens farther on. —Emilv Dickinson. I HIS is the snake which is said to milk cows, a most absurd beUef; it would not milk a cow if it could, and it could not if it would. It has never yet been induced to drink milk when in captivity; and if it were very thirsty, it could not drink more than two teaspoonfuls of milk at most; thus in any case,
. Handbook of nature-study for teachers and parents, based on the Cornell nature-study leaflets. Nature study. THE MILK SNAKE, OR SPOTTED ADDER Teacher's Story The grass divides as with a coinh, a spotted shaft xs seen. And then it closes at your jeet, and opens farther on. —Emilv Dickinson. I HIS is the snake which is said to milk cows, a most absurd beUef; it would not milk a cow if it could, and it could not if it would. It has never yet been induced to drink milk when in captivity; and if it were very thirsty, it could not drink more than two teaspoonfuls of milk at most; thus in any case, its depredations upon the milk supply need not be feared. Its object, in frequenting milk houses and stables, is far other than the milking of cows, for it is an inveterate hunter of rats and mice and is thus of great benefit to the farmer. It is a constric- tor, and squeezes its prey to death in its coils. The ground color of the milk snake is pale gray, but it is covered with so many brown or dark gray saddle-shaped blotches, that they seem rather to form the ground-color; the lower side is white, marked with square black spots and blotches. The snake attains a length of about three feet when fully grown. Although it is called commonly the spotted adder, it does not belong to the adders at all, but to the family of the king snakes. During July and August, the mother snake lays from seven to twenty eggs; they are deposited in loose soil, in moist rubbish, in compost heaps, etc. The egg is a symmetrical oval in shape and is about one and one- eighth inches long by a half inch in diameter. The shell is soft and white, like kid leather, and the egg resembles a puffball. The young hatch nearly two months after the eggs are laid, meanwhile the eggs have in- creased in size so that the snakelings are nearly eight inches long when they hatch. The saddle-shaped blotches on the young have much red in them. The milk snake is not venomous; it will sometimes, in defence, try to chew th
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