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I don't believe that at all.
My daughter comes in the coop with me several times a day to get eggs and to give treats. I do NOT want a snake hanging around in there with us.
It's a non-poisonous snake. In order to be bitten by that snake, you would almost certainly have to be handling it. If it did bite you, it is like the pricks from a rose bush, not particularly dangerous at all. Some snakes only have bony plates that can just pinch you. Even poisonous snakes use a bite as a last line of defense, and when possible will try to run from you and get away. Trust me, I know a lot about how wild snakes behave because I routinely relocate rattlesnakes and have done so for about 20 years, and it is actually difficult for me to even illicit a strike or coiling in rattlers, as they are running for thier lives as I try to capture them. I also have captured more non-toxic snakes than I could even count, and when handled, you could be bitten, but only if you are playing around with it, and the bite isn't as serious as a bee sting, or a dog or cat bite. I have been bitten by many, many non toxic snakes, and it's at the most the kind of bite that makes you say "ouch" and almost never draws blood. I have been bitten by a cat, dog and pig. All of those bites were painful and required medical attention. My goose has bitten a few family members, and compared to a snake bite, the wounds he inflicted were quite serious. My brother recieved massive bruising and bleeding from a goose bite even through jeans. If a non poisonous snake bit you thru jeans, his teeth would not penetrate, and would only snag the jeans. You shouldn't be scared of something with so little bite force. No real danger from an animal of that size with puny teeth. No snake bite I have recieved has needed any more than being washed with betadine.