Saturday, June 18, 2011

Snakes! Life mimics"creature" movies in Idaho home

Family's Purchase of 'Snake House' Leads to Foreclosure, Bankruptcy and Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder
And now for a story that nearly caused my snake-hating wife to have a breakdown.

The Associated Press reported earlier this week on the plight of the Sessions family, who in 2009 purchased a five-bedroom house in the Idaho countryside for about $180,000. They were required to sign a document at closing acknowledging that the house had a snake infestation, but were "assured by their real estate agent that the snakes were just a story invented by the previous owners to leave their mortgage behind."

Wrong! It turns out that the house is, as advertised, infested with hundreds of garter snakes. How bad could it be, you ask? Here are some of the slithery details from the AP article:

The ground surrounding the home was so thick with snakes it "appeared to move at times."
Many snakes lived beneath the home's siding, and at night the family could hear the snakes slithering inside the walls.
The house's well water had a foul musk smell caused by the chemical that snakes release as a warning to predators.
To protect his pregnant wife and two small boys, Mr. Sessions conducted a "morning sweep" each day inside the house to make sure none of the snakes had made it inside.
At the height of the infestation, Sessions killed 42 snakes in one day. That was the day he decided that the snakes had won, and the family fled the home.

More (including a video clip): http://legalblogwatch.typepad.com/legal_blog_watch/2011/06/purchase-of-snake-house-leads-to-foreclosure-bankrupty-and-post-traumatic-stress-disorder.html

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