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This is only for old timers and fans of old herp books. There's an old photo at the end just to keep it on-topic...

jfirneno Dec 13, 2004 08:40 PM

‘Twas the night before Christmas, when all through the rack
not a serpent was stirring, they’d all hit the sack.
The snake bags were hung by my bedside with care
In case an escapee I happened to snare.

The pinkies were frozen all snug in the chest
Since most think that freezing kills cooties the best.
And fuzzies in vacuum and jumbos in bags
Were packed in the freezer with legible tags.

When down in the basement there arose such a clatter
I put down my Kauffeld to see what was the matter.
Away to the staircase I flew like a flash
Tripped on my feet and fell down with a crash.

The stars that I saw as I fell on my head
Made me wish with less haste I more carefully had tread.
When what to my unfocused eyes should appear
But Raymond L. Ditmars in rugged terrain gear.

With a crappy old snake stick so battered and split
I knew in a moment it must be Old Dit.
More haggard than geezers his disciples they came
And he whispered and gestured and called them by name.

Hey Klauber, hey Barbour, shhh Mertens, be ready!
Hey Conant, Yo! Kauffeld, And you Gloyd, keep steady.
When I lift up the rock and before it can fall
Then snatch away, catch away, bag away all!

As young girls that before a half-off sale fly
When met with a bargain, out loud they will cry
So down on the ground the geezers they flew
And bellowed and swore and some giggled too.

And then in a twinkling I heard in the sacks
The rustling around of snake snouts and snake backs.
As they tied up their bags and gathered around,
Back Ditmars jumped and dropped the rock to the ground.

He was dressed all in Khaki from pith hemet to foot
And his clothes were all soggy with mildew to boot.
An obviously dead snake that lay on its back
Ditmars posed as alive (since that was his knack).

His Nerodia was Natrix, his subspecies too many,
His ability to work with DNA was not any.
His Horned Toad (ditmarsi) he claimed you could find
But now we assume he was out of his mind.

He ran the Bronx Zoo and had lots of fun
He played with big pythons, that son of a gun.
He wrote reptile books and now they’re all classic
And I liked his stories better than a Park named Jurassic.

He was definitely great, really top shelf
I still read his books in spite of myself.
But the twitch of my eye and the ache of my head
Soon reminded me then that these guys were all dead.

He spoke not a word but went straight to his work
And filled all my cages with Elaphe then turned with a jerk.
And smacking his staff right upside my head
They all disappeared and left me for dead.

I bounced off the floor and sprang to my feet
I flew up the stairs and ran down the street
I heard him exclaim ere he flew out of sight
"I’m trying to road cruise so get out of my light!".

Replies (10)

lolaophidia Dec 13, 2004 09:26 PM

.
-----
Lora

jfirneno Dec 13, 2004 09:40 PM

nt

Terry Cox Dec 14, 2004 04:50 AM

That poem's a classic itself. Shows I'm in good company here

TC

jfirneno Dec 14, 2004 06:22 AM

At this time of the year I start getting bored so my mind wanders. I think it has limited appeal because of the antiquated subject matter I selected so I'm glad you liked it.
Best regards
John

BillyBoy Dec 14, 2004 06:50 AM

Brings back memories of cruising public libraries as a kid looking for those books. Man I loved to read that old field herpin' stuff. Thanks for the laugh. Billy

>>‘Twas the night before Christmas, when all through the rack
>>not a serpent was stirring, they’d all hit the sack.
>>The snake bags were hung by my bedside with care
>>In case an escapee I happened to snare.
>>
>>The pinkies were frozen all snug in the chest
>>Since most think that freezing kills cooties the best.
>>And fuzzies in vacuum and jumbos in bags
>>Were packed in the freezer with legible tags.
>>
>>When down in the basement there arose such a clatter
>>I put down my Kauffeld to see what was the matter.
>>Away to the staircase I flew like a flash
>>Tripped on my feet and fell down with a crash.
>>
>>The stars that I saw as I fell on my head
>>Made me wish with less haste I more carefully had tread.
>>When what to my unfocused eyes should appear
>>But Raymond L. Ditmars in rugged terrain gear.
>>
>>With a crappy old snake stick so battered and split
>>I knew in a moment it must be Old Dit.
>>More haggard than geezers his disciples they came
>>And he whispered and gestured and called them by name.
>>
>>Hey Klauber, hey Barbour, shhh Mertens, be ready!
>>Hey Conant, Yo! Kauffeld, And you Gloyd, keep steady.
>>When I lift up the rock and before it can fall
>>Then snatch away, catch away, bag away all!
>>
>>As young girls that before a half-off sale fly
>>When met with a bargain, out loud they will cry
>>So down on the ground the geezers they flew
>>And bellowed and swore and some giggled too.
>>
>>And then in a twinkling I heard in the sacks
>>The rustling around of snake snouts and snake backs.
>>As they tied up their bags and gathered around,
>>Back Ditmars jumped and dropped the rock to the ground.
>>
>>He was dressed all in Khaki from pith hemet to foot
>>And his clothes were all soggy with mildew to boot.
>>An obviously dead snake that lay on its back
>>Ditmars posed as alive (since that was his knack).
>>
>>His Nerodia was Natrix, his subspecies too many,
>>His ability to work with DNA was not any.
>>His Horned Toad (ditmarsi) he claimed you could find
>>But now we assume he was out of his mind.
>>
>>He ran the Bronx Zoo and had lots of fun
>>He played with big pythons, that son of a gun.
>>He wrote reptile books and now they’re all classic
>>And I liked his stories better than a Park named Jurassic.
>>
>>He was definitely great, really top shelf
>>I still read his books in spite of myself.
>>But the twitch of my eye and the ache of my head
>>Soon reminded me then that these guys were all dead.
>>
>>He spoke not a word but went straight to his work
>>And filled all my cages with Elaphe then turned with a jerk.
>>And smacking his staff right upside my head
>>They all disappeared and left me for dead.
>>
>>I bounced off the floor and sprang to my feet
>>I flew up the stairs and ran down the street
>>I heard him exclaim ere he flew out of sight
>>"I’m trying to road cruise so get out of my light!".
>>
>>

jfirneno Dec 14, 2004 08:41 AM

I love those old books too. I still skim through them and especially like to read The Keeper and the Kept.

Thanks for the nice comments
John

lolaophidia Dec 14, 2004 04:57 PM

I almost bought a copy of that at the last reptile expo here. Memories of grade school!

>>I love those old books too. I still skim through them and especially like to read The Keeper and the Kept.
>>
>>Thanks for the nice comments
>>John

-----
Lora

jfirneno Dec 14, 2004 06:39 PM

My favorite one is the one that begins in the Arab Quarter at the Philadelphia World's Fair. Very evocative.

My wife's sister used to go with a group from NYC that he took down to the Jersey Pine Barrens in the early '70s for herping. She said he was quite a character. I'm almost glad I never met him. It might complicate the simple pleasure I get from reading his stories.

John

Paul Hollander Dec 14, 2004 07:17 PM

My library has books by most of the guys you mentioned, also Peters and Pope. And they are still good reading.

Paul Hollander

jfirneno Dec 14, 2004 07:45 PM

I really should do a better job so I wouldn't feel so guilty after the fact at the silliness of the result.

Yes Pope! I think about him going to China with Roy Chapman Andrews in the '20s and I can still recall the excitement I felt as a kid reading about that expedition finding dinosaur eggs in Mongolia and fighting off desert bandits. Gee, I feel younger just thinking about it! That man Andrews was like a real life Indiana Jones (without the mumbo-jumbo). But what I really envy Pope for was the chance to examine mandarin ratsnakes in their home range. Thanks for the message.
John

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