carol
Not so new Member
=Carol. Minka = Fool.Carol = Fool
=Carol. Minka = Fool.Carol = Fool
= Carol. Yep. I do agree.I am going to settle this once and for all.
It is quite clearly a Natural Confectionery company snake, someone mixed the red orange and yellows together....it turned out brown
=carol. I don't know where you got your information from, but he does use venemous snakes as well.His snakes are anything but venomous... For a qualified snake handler, you really don't know alot. Does your certificate read 'Qualified Venomoid Snake Handler'? :lol:
Hi Carol
completing a "snake handling course" should be just the start of a very steep learning curve. It takes years to become a skillful handler and fully competant with identification. The course will only give you the very basics.
I think it is very dangerous for people having completed these course to assume they are now qualified to tackle just about anything and unfortunately many people come out of these courses and appear to be instant experts. Handling a snake in a room or on an open grassy area is completely different to dealing with an angry snake in a confined space.
Have a look at some of the recent threads concerning ID's. Many people are jumping in very authoritively IDing snakes and often they are clearly wrong. Anyone can make a mistake but many are so damn adamant that they are correct it is dangerous...and these seem to be all newcomers!
Anyone can key out a snake in the hand or a dead specimen from looking at scales etc but often when catching a snake you wont get a good look at the whole thing...you may just see a part of its body.......or its scales........and you really should be able to tell just from that!
Birdwatchers talk about the "jizz" of a bird......nothing in particular...but perhaps the way it flies or flits around, general size, whatever......after a while you get the same feeling for identifying snakes, at least the common ones.
I would like to do a course some day...I'm sure some of them are very good. However I have heard of some being run by people who are fairly new to snakes and have only been handling for a couple of years.......again completing a course does not make you a fully competant handler. The guy who did your course certainly knows his snakes and has been involved with them a very long time, however from what I have seen of the way he conducts his shows it leaves a lot to be desired!
=carol. And I'm over you and your cheeky comments. What's your claim to fame when it comes to this topic that you are so ready to give an opinion on?Ah well i'm over it. Please don't go giving advice out to anyone.
=carol. TAIPAN. Picky aren't you.carol I dont think you should be giving out the advice seeing that you cant even spell taipan
= Get over yourself and grow up, maybe you might learn something, but I doubt it. It's called mentality, and yours is sadly lacking.Ok i said i was over it but he's making heaps of money...
FROM TAKING ADVANTAGE OF PEOPLE LIKE YOU!!! BAHahahahahahaha!!!!111one ONE
You really aren't a very good poster child for the guy lol, look at what he taught you! An eastern brown and a taipan the same thing :shock: :O?? Or is it that a taipan is a brown and a brown is a taipan?
G'day guys,
I'd just like to add some info to this thread.
One of the most repeated comments in our venomous snake courses is that we are giving everyone a solid base of knowledge to build their own style and skills from. We are definitely not under the illusion that everybody who leaves our classroom with a certificate is just as skilled as those who have been handling wild elapids for years.
We have evaluated the way we run courses many times, and have also considered not doing them at all for a number of reasons. We don't make much money out of them, and it's definitely not our modus operandi.The main reason we conduct them is because I would personally much prefer someone to spend two days with us and have real life exposure to live venomous snakes and provide as much knowledge as we possibly can to them. As most would know, a lot of Queensland references that are handed out privately are done so on a wink and a handshake, rather than someone actually spending time with a new handler and making sure they have the necessary skills.
Luckily for us, our attitude to our courses has paid off ten times over and we have people travelling from all over Australia (including Melbourne) to attend them because of their reputation. We seem to have established ourselves as the premiere course provider of all things venomous.
=Carol. Minka = Fool.
= Carol. Now here is a sensible post. Well Said.G'day guys,
I'd just like to add some info to this thread.
One of the most repeated comments in our venomous snake courses is that we are giving everyone a solid base of knowledge to build their own style and skills from. We are definitely not under the illusion that everybody who leaves our classroom with a certificate is just as skilled as those who have been handling wild elapids for years.
We have evaluated the way we run courses many times, and have also considered not doing them at all for a number of reasons. We don't make much money out of them, and it's definitely not our modus operandi.The main reason we conduct them is because I would personally much prefer someone to spend two days with us and have real life exposure to live venomous snakes and provide as much knowledge as we possibly can to them. As most would know, a lot of Queensland references that are handed out privately are done so on a wink and a handshake, rather than someone actually spending time with a new handler and making sure they have the necessary skills.
Luckily for us, our attitude to our courses has paid off ten times over and we have people travelling from all over Australia (including Melbourne) to attend them because of their reputation. We seem to have established ourselves as the premiere course provider of all things venomous.
Another name for your coastal tiapan up your way is The Eastern Brown. I just finished a venemous snake handling course and the herpetologist mentioned this to us.
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