Six weeks after Biscuit's bite, I was in a dog owners forum at 11pm.
Someone mentioned their Lab had been struck near their back fence.
The replies filled up fast.
Granules didn't hold. Sprays didn't last. Fencing cost thousands.
But one comment stopped me cold.
A woman named Donna wrote:
"Nobody told me this either but snakes don't choose your yard because of what they see or smell. They choose it because of what they FEEL through the ground. Your yard is completely silent underground. And to a snake's nervous system, that silence is a welcome mat."
I read it three times.
Because it was the first thing that made every single failure make complete sense.
Here's what I learned that night:
Snakes don't navigate the way we think they do.
They have no ears. They can't hear you.
Instead, they feel the world through their jawbones and the length of their body pressed against the ground.
Ground vibration is their entire nervous system.
When an area has no vibration no predator activity, no threat signals their nervous system registers it as a safe zone.
Safe zones get explored. Safe zones get visited again. Safe zones are where snakes hunt.
And here's the part that made my stomach drop:
Every repellent spray, every granule, every cedar oil I spread none of it changed the ground signal at all.
The snake didn't care about the smell.
The ground was still silent.
The ground was still saying: safe zone. Come in.
That's the one piece of information nobody had ever given me.
And it explained everything.