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As one might suspect, on a wide open North Dakota prairie, when the work
is done for the day, its time for stories. Sometimes, when the facts
were a little skimpy, old timers of the area would improvise.
One of these more interesting improvised stories comes from
Emmons County, in central North Dakota in the spring of 1886. It tells
of one of natures strangest creatures, the Pump Snake.
Fully grown, the pump snake measured sixteen feet in length and about
three inches in diameter. If dissected, one would find a two inch diameter
rubber-like tube, running the length of its body.
Unlike other snakes, the pump snakes ran in herds, and on one occasion
a herd of 300 was observed slithering across the North Dakota prairie.
Also unlike other reptiles of their family, Pump Snakes can be easily
trained to answer the call of man.
Upon hearing a whistle from their trainer, the Pump Snakes would slither
off to the nearby creek, always following their leader. All Pump Snake
herds had a leader.
Upon reaching the creek, the lead Pump Snake slithers into the water,
leaving only a portion of its tail on the bank. Another pump snake then
takes hold of the lead snakes tail in its jaws. Then a third snake
takes hold the second snakes tail. Before long, there is one continuous
snake, measuring over 300 feet long.
The lead pump snake starts to rapidly swallow water, passing the water
through each of the snakes behind him, like water passing through a hose.
The result is a steady stream of water coming out of the last snakes
tail!
As the story goes, one day while tending to yard work, the farmer was
shocked to see that his shed had caught fire. Wild with excitement, yet
helpless to stop the flames, the farmer watched as the flames grew higher.
Suddenly, the herd of pump snakes slithered into action. Within minutes
they had formed a continuous line from the creek to the shed. The last
snake, standing on its head, waved the long flexible tail end of his body,
and began squirting water on the flames. Within about twenty minutes the
fire was extinguished. Needless to say, the snakes were exhausted.
No one from Cat Tail Creek knows when the last Pump Snake died out, but
the story thats a little skimpy of facts lives on.
by Dave Seifert
Berg, Francie B., North Dakota, Land of Changing Seasons,
Flying Diamond Books, Box 1089, Hettinger, ND. Pump Snakes, pg122.
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prior permission from North Dakota Public Radio.
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