Wake n Bake, Nothing Better!

Jeffislovinlife

Well-Known Member
If you haven't already look up your milk snake baby environment hatching areas match that somewhere in your house I'm going to say somewhere in that crawl space that you can't get access to would be a perfect place for a snake to lay eggs undisturbed reasonably safe cool and protected yeah do you have any fire extinguishers that you can spray off in there like a bomb?
 

Rsawr

Smoke and Mirrors
Staff member
It was a mold infestation juuuuuust starting. The smell wasn't too bad after the fog spray. I think I am just gonna hope that 6 weeks and a bucket washing will be enough to get anything that did settle into the tents off the buds. The hallway smells worse than the grow room, the hepa filters must be working. Glad I caught it before it took over the whole wall. Blech. :spew:

Can I trade for the snakes?
 

DarkWeb

Well-Known Member
It was a mold infestation juuuuuust starting. The smell wasn't too bad after the fog spray. I think I am just gonna hope that 6 weeks and a bucket washing will be enough to get anything that did settle into the tents off the buds. The hallway smells worse than the grow room, the hepa filters must be working. Glad I caught it before it took over the whole wall. Blech. :spew:

Can I trade for the snakes?
When my basement crap started happening. I found this product. I haven't used it, but it might be worth a look.
 

Rsawr

Smoke and Mirrors
Staff member

manfredo

Well-Known Member
Industrial endoscope time.
Probably dig out all the dirt near the fireplace, put in gravel.
They are probably following a mole or chipmunk tunnel to get in.

Thats a good idea, and I have an endoscope I bought last year trying to diagnose a septic issue.

There is actually blacktop right up to the fireplace, but it has a pretty big gap now, and I found a snake skin right there this spring. I will fill the gaps with driveway crack filler.
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That little door is the ONLY access into the crawl space, and it is built from cinder block with the brick facing...so snake paradise!!

I think it was an add on and I'm guessing the fireplace foundation doesn't go down as deep as the basement foundation.
 

DarkWeb

Well-Known Member
Thats a good idea, and I have an endoscope I bought last year trying to diagnose a septic issue.

There is actually blacktop right up to the fireplace, but it has a pretty big gap now, and I found a snake skin right there this spring. I will fill the gaps with driveway crack filler.
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View attachment 5179317

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That little door is the ONLY access into the crawl space, and it is built from cinder block with the brick facing...so snake paradise!!

I think it was an add on and I'm guessing the fireplace foundation doesn't go down as deep as the basement foundation.
Dirt bottom on that crawl space?
 

manfredo

Well-Known Member
If you haven't already look up your milk snake baby environment hatching areas match that somewhere in your house I'm going to say somewhere in that crawl space that you can't get access to would be a perfect place for a snake to lay eggs undisturbed reasonably safe cool and protected yeah do you have any fire extinguishers that you can spray off in there like a bomb?
I put snake deterrent in there last year, that smelled like strong mothballs, and left that door open hoping they would leave, but no. I thought about spraying something in there...bleach maybe.
 
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