
Forget the Alligators – Beware of Anacondas at Claremore Lake!
As I watched, I noticed the tube move and instantly realized that was no inner tube but actually a huge snake camouflaged by the foliage. I couldn’t see the entire monster but could easily see its girth at approximately 3 inches to 5 inches in diameter – almost the size of my lower forearm! The beast was only 10-15 feet away from us at the time of the “alert”.
Well, we went to buy tickets for The Bullet Train yesterday but when we got to the movie theater, it was closed. So, we did what any prudent red-blooded human residents of Northeast Oklahoma would do in similar circumstances and went to McDonalds, bought food and drinks, and headed out to Claremore Lake for a picnic.
It was a beautiful day for being outside! We found a picnic table close to the water and with plenty of shade. We ate our burgers, munched on fries, and swigged our carbonated drinks with much gusto and then went for a little walk along the lakeshore, of course we were probably 15 – 20 feet above the water on huge sandstone boulders and could see intermittent paths to get access to the lake for fishing.
Walking on these huge rocks was pretty cool! While I was walking my little dog, Sabrina, along the top of one of the boulders when I noticed her go on alert, which meant that she stopped abruptly, her ears went up, head tilted sideways, and was very intently watching something at the bottom of the boulder. I also looked to where she was watching and noticed a bicycle inner tube laying in some underbrush at the bottom of the boulder.

As I watched, I noticed the tube move and instantly realized, what I thought was an inner tube, was actually a huge snake camouflaged by the foliage. I couldn’t see the entire monster but could easily see its girth at approximately 3 inches to 5 inches in diameter – almost the size of my lower forearm! The beast was only 10-15 feet away from us at the time of the “alert”.
The snake was well concealed* in the shrubbery and would have gone completely unnoticed if we had been at the same level. However, the orientation of the serpent was the opposite from what I had initially suspected because its head was facing us and its tail was closer to the water.
The whole incident was terrifying and really cool at the same time. I think this is the actual textbook definition of “sublime” and luckily, I was far enough away from harm to be able to watch safely. It was truly creepy to watch the movements of the snake over the next few minutes because it would move ever so slowly and then for only a few inches at a time.

The good part about it is that when it did move, it moved, or retreated rearward, toward the water and never advanced forward, or toward us.
I think I should explain here that mistaking a snake for a bicycle inner tube on the ground of the shoreline is pretty common in more remote areas of public lakes where garbage from the surrounding landscape leeches into the larger body during spring flooding and intermittent rains.
Similarly, many discarded automotive tires can be seen in some shallower areas during times of low or little rainfall and the lake’s water levels are lower. It is also interesting that this is the same lake that a seven-foot alligator was discovered and euthanized last year. Robin and I then discussed the absence of alligators in Claremore Lake but now the presence of Anacondas!

Photo byngfieldscopeonflickr|Water moccasins are common in the wetlands and are identified by their muscular bodies and triangle-shaped heads.
These kinds of things are, not only disturbing at a visceral level because I can see the thing, but also because of memories of my childhood and family outings where swimming in Lake Hudson was the norm.
Sometimes we would see giant snakes *around our favorite swimming hole but trusted that they were either non-venomous water snakes or would be more afraid of us.
Yes, so this is another reason why I do not swim in the lake anymore and reserve my summertime bathing for clear spring water or a public pool. I grew up on the lake and have seen sights floating in the water that still make me cringe when I think about it – Ugh! There is no way I would routinely swim in a lake any more.
Most lake water in this area is so murky that you can’t see more than a foot around you in any direction and totally oblivious of what’s lurking around you - at least until something slithers across your arm or bumps into your thigh.
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