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Student gets
slithery summer assignment
By Danna Webster, KP News
Fourth grade at Vaughn Elementary
was more than reading, writing, and arithmetic for
Bailey Sullivan. It was the year of science with a
specialty in snakes. The discovery that the classroom
corn snake laid eggs kick-started Bailey into an
emersion in herpetology. “I was the first one to notice
(the eggs),” Bailey says.” I skipped a whole week of
recess or free time just to study. But since we didn’t
have the right stuff, the eggs died. I never had a
chance to examine one of the eggs. I could have opened
it to see how they formed in it.”
Bailey Sullivan with his summer guest. Bailey
and his mom
said “snake-sitting” the python has been a treat
for the family.
Photo by Mindi LaRose |
According to Bailey, it was after
this extra effort that his teacher, Doug Smith, talked
to him about a special assignment. Smith asked Bailey to
take care of the classroom python over summer vacation,
and cautioned him not to tell any of the other students.
A note was sent to his home with the news.
During the last days of school,
when Bailey’s mother, Kasey Sullivan, came to pick up
the python, Mr. Smith told her he had a wonderful
surprise. He was going to let Bailey baby-sit the
tarantula, too! Sullivan says with a laugh, “You know
the only reason was (that) we’re the only ones that
would take him.” Tarantula is an easy pet to care for,
she says: “Just pour in water and give him a cricket
every couple of weeks.”
The giant spider is a Red Shield
Tarantula. Bailey says, “The cool thing about tarantula
is, instead of sucking blood out of food, it eats the
whole thing.”
Feeding the python is not such a
simple matter. Frozen mice are stocked in the Sullivan
family freezer for python dinners. “He eats frozen mice.
To thaw out, we put them into hot water, then leave it
out (to cool) and dry it. He eats always from head
first, otherwise it’s too hard to eat,” Bailey says,
adding that the python’s teeth are just like sandpaper,
a fact he learned from Internet research.
Both Bailey and his mother give the
python high scores on a pet personality scale. “It’s
very nice; you can put him around your neck. It won’t
squeeze,” Bailey says.
“It’s going to be hard to give up
Snake. We just hold him. He likes it,” his mom ads. “You
just fall in love with these creatures.”
Kasey Sullivan appreciates that
Smith selected Bailey for the summer baby-sitting job.
“Mr. Smith is so wonderful with these children,” she
says. “Bailey has three sisters and my husband works
away on a tugboat. This is boy stuff. What a treat.
Thank God for Mr. Smith.”
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