Do peafowl kill snakes?

As a rule, the snakes come to the peafowl. The peafowl have feed and the mice find the feed and the copperheads find the mice.. The copperheads do not bother the birds (99% of the time ) and are not after the eggs, just the men and the mice. Some people try sulpher powder,,but .. ?? The best way I have done is to use a bird netting like you cover fruit trees with ( fine thread about 3/4 to 1 inch holes ) I snagged 4 rat snakes in it one time.. they crawl in and get hung up, cant get out > george
 
We have chipmunks running around but thankfully I only seen 1 mouse since I moved into the new home in October LOL. I do not know what I would do if one of my dogs got bit by a copperhead. I have not seen any snakes in my yard yet - knock on wood LMAO
 
At my old house, there were all sorts of snakes including several species of rattlesnakes. We got peafowl because I really wanted them just cuz I admired them- did not know about them being snake killers/repellents at that time. Anyways when my pair became a flock of free range peafowl(never confined, not even for the nights), all of us noticed a major drop in seeing snakes inside our yard. The one neighbor who hated birds and encouraged his young sons to throw things at and chase them out of the yard continued to find snakes (including rattlers) warming themselves up on their front porch. We used to have the same experience(both of our porches were brick/cement and faced east) but not any more after the peafowl....

I got to witness a couple encounters though, what they did with large snakes: went up to them, their behavior attracted other peafowl, so there would eventually a group of several birds surrounding the snake and eventually one or more would get worked up and start biting the snake's tail to 'hurry it out of here'.. if the snake took on a defensive position they would either start biting it or one would give it a 'karate kick' and that was usually good enough to get them moving until they left the yard or were forced out of sight under a rock/structure. Rattlers got big reactions(usually several of the birds would honk or scream- don't recall them doing that with king or gopher snakes), I guess because of the way they raised their heads/necks up high/fast strikes plus of course the noise from their rattles. They would bother them until they moved out(some of the rattlers actually moved away fast without attempting defense)

Now with the permanently penned up peafowl at my current location, for some reason they react much less.. at most a few would be 'curious' but basically do nothing to a snake, even a small baby one 12 inches or less. Friend who lives in the desert(theirs also permanently in pens/aviaries) reports pretty much the same reaction- when a rattler got in one of their aviaries, only one bird tried to check it out, the rest either didn't see or didn't care very much.

Also if the goal is snake repellent, would suggest having a group instead of only one. It seemed more eyes were better at spotting a snake, plus they seemed to 'egg' each other to bother the snake. As for concerns of snake biting a bird, I'm sure it probably happens but never witnessed a snake making contact with any of the peafowl that harassed them.. not even the rattlers. I suppose they have some 'instincts' from their native lands which apparently are full of poisonous snakes- cobras, adders, vipers etc....
 
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This sounds like what mine do to my roosters! My favorite peahen takes a running start at them and stops just short, stands up tall with her neck poofed up and if they don't leave she karate kicks! I have no doubt she'd take on a snake, but we've yet to see snakes around the pea pen, they usually like the barn better... guess that's where most of the mice are.
 
I always herd that peafowl kill baby cobras in India ?
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This sounds like what mine do to my roosters! My favorite peahen takes a running start at them and stops just short, stands up tall with her neck poofed up and if they don't leave she karate kicks! I have no doubt she'd take on a snake, but we've yet to see snakes around the pea pen, they usually like the barn better... guess that's where most of the mice are.

Haha, it is amusing to see.
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That's not terribly different actually, except with snakes they seem more wary and take some more time to 'do something'. I see the above every time there's a new bird introduced to the flock- they run right up to show who's the boss! Immediately!
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There is a picture I have seen of an Indian god ridding on a peacock that is stepping on a snake killing it. I can't find that image on the internet but I found it one day. It was really cool looking. They do say they will kill young cobras.
 
re: minxfox's comment:

Probably was the god Kartikeya. His consort is the peacock (he's not the only god with a peacock consort though).

Page with some info & 2 paintings:

http://hindugodphoto.blogspot.com/2010/03/lord-kartikeya.html

quote from above link:

The Lord's vehicle is a peacock which is able of destroying damaging serpents

Paintings:

Murugan_by_Raja_Ravi_Varma.jpg


Kartikay.JPG


Link to larger painting images:

http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_GkuQDScRK...AAAaA/c3rSe5-HpB8/s1600-h/Kartikeya+Photo.bmp

http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-ycF4rJHGuGI/TZiELI6IbNI/AAAAAAAAAYA/Xxq8qsPHcJE/s1600/9.jpg

Metal sculpture:

http://www.lotussculpture.com/mm5/graphics/00000001/49b16aa.jpg

Staute, this one has peacock holding/killing? a small cobra in beak:

statue

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