“Boy, they’re hot today,” the veteran snake handler from Texas said as he worked the snake pit.
It was 91 degrees, the hottest day of the year so far in Sharon Springs. The rattlers weren’t happy.
“Come on fellas, cooperate,” White said as he nudged them with his boot, trying to get them to strike. White and three handlers, known as the Fangs and Rattlers, were circling in a pit filled with 135 rattlesnakes gathered from various parts of western Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas for the 13th annual Rattlesnake Roundup in Sharon Springs.
The two-day festival, held May 7 and 8 in Wallace County on the Colorado border, is the only one of its kind in Kansas. It attracts snake hunters, reptile lovers and adventurers looking to spend a weekend with one of the West’s most storied predators.
White, 56, was married in a snake pit in Onaga, and has been handling rattlers for 48 years. He holds a world record for dangling 10 rattlers from his mouth at one time. He’s only been bitten once.
The announcer proclaimed White “the oldest and the best snake handler ever.”
In the early afternoon, groups of snake hunters slithered into the festival sunburned and dehydrated. They had spent the morning chasing rattlers around prairie dog towns, home of the snakes’ favorite meal. Scott Plankenhorn, from Sublette, and his snake hunting buddy Kenny Fields, from Garden City, unloaded their buckets filled with 45 prairie rattlers into the Fangs and Rattlers’ snake pit. They caught the bulk of their snakes near Garden City.
“We hunt rattlesnakes for relaxation,” said Plankenhorn, a foreman in a feed yard.
Plankenhorn and Fields sold their catch to Judie Withers, a local dealer and the roundup’s organizer, for $3.50 per pound. They pocketed about $150. Withers said she planned to sell the 135 rattlers she bought at the roundup to a buyer in Colorado Springs, Colo. The buyer cans the snake meat and makes wallets, boots, purses and other fashion accessories from snake skin.
A few choice rattlers, typically the larger western diamondback species, were taken to a small shed at the festival called the “processing center.” The snakes were butchered and the raw meat sold at a nearby booth. Deep fried rattler was for sale at the booth.
Withers estimated the show drew 2,000 people, more than doubling the town’s population that weekend.
“No vacancy” signs were lit up on all three motels along U.S. Highway 40 in Sharon Springs. Without the roundup, Sharon Springs might dry up and fade away, Withers said.
“We’re a poor county,” she said, “and we didn’t have anything going on here.”
Drought and increasing competition from corporate farming operations have dealt many western Kansas farmers and ranchers a huge economic blow. Withers said residents in Wallace County were seeking ways to reinvent themselves and explore new ways of generating revenue.
“We needed something to help the local economy,” she said.
When Withers was told by a friend about roundups in Texas and Oklahoma, she passed along the idea for a similar event in Sharon Springs to local officials. Led by then-state Sen. Sheila Frahm from Colby, legislation was soon passed in Topeka to allow the commercial harvest of rattlesnakes. The bill enabled the Kansas Department of Wildlife and Parks to issue rattlesnake hunting, dealer and buyer licenses for only the western third of Kansas.
“This is something Kansas City, Topeka and Wichita can’t touch,” Withers said.
The Kansas Herpetological Society, an organization dedicated to conserving and increasing awareness of amphibians and reptiles, opposed the bill. The society called the roundups “cruel, destructive and dangerous.”
Eric Rundquist, an animal science technician at Kansas University, researches prairie rattlesnakes in Barber County, along the Oklahoma border.
“The population of rattlesnakes in western Kansas took a huge nosedive 12 years ago,” Rundquist said. Though the cause for the decline is unknown, he said, the roundups certainly don’t help.
“For them,” Rundquist said, “it’s strictly economics.”
The society still opposes the roundups, but is no longer fighting them publicly.
“We gave it our best shot back in 1993,” Rundquist said.