Don, I guess you can get snake chaps or snake guards, but I think just plain old rubber boots that you can slip on when you go outside are the easiest and safest method of protection. People often talk about how snakes can bite through boots, but how many actual reported instances of that happening have you ever seen? Most of the time a snakebite comes from wearing low-cut or open-toed shoes and/or a bite on the hand/finger. My cousin was bitten by a copperhead when she went out to pick peas late in the evening and only wore flip-flops. /forums/images/graemlins/shocked.gif /forums/images/graemlins/crazy.gif
I have a set of snake guards that I used a couple of times and they were so much of a pain in the butt that I put them away permanently. I'll be happy to donate them to you if you want to give them a try. Just PM me if you want them. They are made of a thin semi-rigid plastic and just wrap around your lower leg. I used to wear them when I walked through high grass, but I don't do that much anymore. When I do, I'm worried a lot more about chiggers than snakes and I just wear my rubber boots with plenty of OFF! applied. /forums/images/graemlins/smile.gif
Hey! Check out this fiesty little (4-1/2 ft) Texas rat snake. I'm gonna post several pictures in another thread, but this one I'll donate to your thread just to show the Texas snake with probably the most unfriendly attitude. When you make them mad, they will chase you and just keep trying to bite you over and over. This fella must have struck at me over 25 times while I was trying to get a good photo. I had to keep pushing him away with a stick because he wanted a "piece of me" really bad. /forums/images/graemlins/laugh.gif The funny thing is that when they do bite you, they have no jaw strength and can't hurt you at all. /forums/images/graemlins/smile.gif This one could strike at least 18" in an arc that was about a foot high at most.