[Aztlan] 'Warding-Off' Snakes With Tobacco
Elaine Day Schele
eschele at austin.rr.com
Fri Mar 2 20:39:46 CST 2007
Hi John,
Thanks for that great story. No doubt ancient Native Americans also realized
that they could use tobacco to ward off dangerous snakes. This repellent
would have been a useful alternative, especially useful in repelling the
rattlesnake, since there seemed to be a taboo among all Native Americans
against killing the rattler (Brinton 1896), and by repelling them, they
would not be forced to kill them.
Elaine
----- Original Message -----
From: "john.pastore" <john.pastore at laposte.net>
To: "aztlan" <aztlan at lists.famsi.org>
Sent: Friday, March 02, 2007 5:49 PM
Subject: Re: [Aztlan] 'Warding-Off' Snakes With Tobacco
> Elaine, in part, wrote:
>
> "Even though the part about calming the snake by throwing the tobacco may
seem absurd (and cowardly, no doubt), apparently, snakes are so sensitive
to it that they can absorb it through their skin or possibly through their
forked tongues, which pick up tiny particles in the air. I would suggest
that tobacco was used on snakes to calm them when Mesoamericans were
performing special
> snake ceremonies."
>
> I would think past use of tobacco on snakes would have included present
use of tobacco on snakes which is not, as far as I've ever seen, to "sedate"
them for "special ceremonies" but for the very practical use of warding off
snakes.
>
> Long before Punta Laguna (between Coba and Nuevo Xcan) became a day-tour
destination I would explore the zone, including its caves, with its
caretaker and non-smoker Serapio.
>
> On the very first occasion we explored a cave, Serapio, his eldest son and
I, went to a cave from which Serapio thought he would, from time to time,
hear voices at night. He thought the voices were of long dead Conquistadors.
>
> The cave's entrance was barely more than a slit on the ground. Serapio
macheted a nearby sapling, debranched it into a pole longer than the cave
was deep and then slid it upright down through the narrow entrance. Before
allowing his son to shimmy down*, he asked me for a lit cigarette.
>
> Jokingly I asked why: "To make the mosquitos go away?"
>
> "No," he laughed, "to make the snakes go away."
>
> (*After Serapio's son, also armed with a lit cigarette, shimmied down,
Serapio cut and made a long pole of a second sapling and, along with short
stout branches and rope, dropped it through the entrance and down to his son
who then, from the bottom, lashed the short branches laterally to the poles
and, step by step ascended the ladder-in-the-making to the top from which
Serapio and I could then descend into the now 'snakeless' cave.)
>
> Never did I see Serapio enter a cave without first "borrowing" ("for the
mosquitos" he would then say jokingly) a cigarette from me and puff some
smoke through the cave's entrance---and this at a time when, instead of
being paid in rather useless cash for his and his ejido's services, he'd
rather me give the then still novel flashlight.
>
> Without flashlights Serapio and his ejidotarios would otherwise be pretty
much palapa-bound at night fearing as they did that they could, if venturing
out, tread on snakes.
>
> (*Btw, for reasons unknown to me don Demetrio, Coba's desceased h-men,
insisted in being paid in cigarettes [Alas or Delicados to be exact] though,
in Coba, there were stores which obviously took cash for even tobacco.)
>
>
>
> Envoyez vos cartes de voeux depuis www.laposte.net
> Elles seront ensuite distribuées par le facteur : pratique et malin !
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> Aztlan mailing list
> Aztlan at lists.famsi.org
> http://www.famsi.org/mailman/listinfo/aztlan
More information about the Aztlan
mailing list