Slithery mating frenzy draws crowds

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NARCISSE, Manitoba (AP) -- At first glance it's just a hole surrounded by aspens in glowing spring leaf. Then you notice the ground is moving.

From every crack in the limestone bedrock, snakes slither by the thousands, some tangled into balls, rolling over rocks and tree trunks, starved for love after hibernating through the seven-month Manitoba prairie winter.

Dozens of sex-crazed males wrap themselves around females in hopes of getting chosen to mate, watched by crowds of tourists who have trekked three miles on foot.

"It's a snake ball! It's a bowling snake ball!" yelled Michael Moloney, clutching a handful of serpents on a visit for his eighth birthday.

Resembling mythical Medusa's snake hairdo, the tangles of red-sided garter snakes are one of the more unusual wildlife occurrences of North America, attracting thousands of spectators during the monthlong migration.

"There's nothing else out here but the snakes," said Darlene Herron, who sells snacks from a trailer in the parking lot of the remote region between Lake Winnipeg and Lake Manitoba, 420 miles northwest of Minneapolis-St. Paul, Minnesota.

The crowds start showing up on Mother's Day, she said, though, "I don't know why anyone brings their mother to the snake dens."

Yuck!
 
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