According to Snopes.com, the good news is that there were no poisonous pythons washed ashore into New Orleans by Hurricane Katrina, contrary to photographs circulating on the web. Nor was there a 21-foot crocodile surfing flooded streets of the former “Big Easy“.
Stay out of the water . . . Now this is a Crocodile! Man, can you imagine what else was swimming around down there in that water? Lord have mercy….. This crocodile was found in New Orleans swimming down the street. 21 FT long, 4,500 lbs, around 80 years old minimum. Specialists said that he was looking to eat humans because he was too old to catch animals. This crocodile was killed by the army last Sunday at 3:00 pm, currently he is in the freezer at the Azur hotel. The contents of it’s stomach will be analyzed this Friday at 2:30pm.
Here’s hoping that the Azur Hotel has electricity to keep that croc frozen — otherwise - phew!
Snopes.com also reports that stories of the offshore oil rigs having been turn into “snake rigs“, by assorted species of poisonous vipers, are also more Internet chicanery. The bad news is there are reports, such as this one from today’s WaPo, that residents are seeing more poisonous water moccasins (cottonmouths) than ever before - inside their homes! Now that is a bummer!
It was the snakes that did in Etonia Alfred, 47, who arrived at the bus depot with her son, Jordan Gray, 4. Although her sister, nephew, brother and father caught buses out of town just before the hurricane hit, she and her son missed the last bus that left from a high school near their home. She rode out the storm, but her house and its contents were destroyed. Jordan’s father, Jackie Gray, welcomed them in after the storm, but the lack of electricity and air conditioning and the snakes inside the house were more than Alfred could bear. A big water moccasin raised its head in greeting when she walked into Gray’s utility room on Monday. (www.washingtonpost.com)
As someone who has spent some years living in the coastal deep South, even along the Gulf of Mexico, I would be fearful of such creatures too. I have seen my share of those frightening serpents, and I am happy that they are not found as far north as I now live in Virginia. However, my granddaughter, Rachel Parselmouth, would probably find them interesting.
“The Rumor Mill” by Anne Applebaum of WaPo has more tidbits. Tracked at WizBang’s Carnival of Trackbacks XXXI and Mudville Gazette.







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