So I've embarked on a untamed wilds/joyous wilds map, and my 'randomly plop cage traps every where and pray for unicorns' plan resulted in capturing a couple of rattlesnakes. I had my animal trainer train them, and then locked them both in 1 tile nestbox/breeding chambers to see if I could raise a collection of delightful venomous pets for my dwarves.
Unfortunately the female reverted to her wild state before laying any eggs. The male has been safely moved back to a cage in the animal training chamber, but I'm unsure what to do about the female.
I've deployed some military dwarves, and they are all standing around staring at the now unlocked door to her chamber in shifts, between snacks and naps.
This is the layout
|~~~...
|~~~...
|~~~...
|+|+|+|
|S|N|N|
|||||||
| = Wall
+ = Door
. = floor
N = nestbox
~ = farmplot
S = SNAKE
My poultry share space with a few farm plots and a seed stockpile. (Theoretically to keep vermin numbers under control, regardless of whether or not poultry actually kill vermin)
The dwarves are standing a few tiles from the door to her chamber, or sometimes wandering into the chamber next to hers, but not opening the door or attacking, and she hasn't come out yet.
I had two thoughts.
1. I could get a civilian to remove the door, and hope that leads to bloody death on the part of the snake, but not the civilian.
2. I could cancel the squads kill order, remove the closest farm plot and put a cage trap just outside the door, and then hope the snake leaves of its own accord - into the cage trap, ready for retraining.
Anyway, the lesson I have learned from this is that venomous, potentially dangerous creatures should not be kept in the chicken coop. I should make special trap-laden breeding chambers all special like for them.
Anyway, I was wondering if anyone had any idea why my dwarves wont just open the door and hit the snake on the head with a hammer? I mean, my dwarves aren't usually the holding back type. Most of the civilians have racked up kills from being attacked by wildlife and then retaliating with their axes, picks or fists. My head miner killed an ocelot when it interrupted his trip to the creek for a wash, and my woodcutter killed two honey badgers and a rattlesnake between tree-cutting.