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That is a lot of territory.

Delighted to hear that: the world is my oyster.
Might it also mean this decreases my chances of getting bit?

Ah, a trick question. Your chances of getting bit by a human are pretty good where ever you go, I therefore recommend a place with fewer humans. The ones in business suits are deceptively lethal.

Ah, yes the snakes in suits.
It is not easy to decide where to take me in my snake-suit to then.
Just learned S.Korea has a “harmful preferential tax regime,” (harmful to whom exactly? Not to my snake-suit budget - have you any idea what fake-snake is going for these days!) Along with American Samoa, Bahrain, Barbados, Grenada, Guam, Macau, Marshall Islands, Mongolia, Namibia, Palau, Panama, Saint Lucia, Samoa, Trinidad and Tobago, Tunisia and (UAE). Maybe the Cape Verdes, removed from the blacklist, after last minute reforms....

Maybe the Leeward or the Windward Islands? A book dropped on my foot the other day - full of butterflies from these places. Since everything always means something to me, I wonder what it means. Can't be very crowded area with all those (ferocious) winds? I am surprised butterflies can be counted at all, it sounds so windy there that they surely must be scattered to the wind or blown out to sea rather than into lepidopterist's nets?

I'd be the wrong person to ask as my statistics lag behind the times due to a lack of interest, attention span or both. The winds in a hot climate actually provide a welcome, albeit dusty, reprieve from the heat and would actually encourage people to move there rather than some windless place at the bottom of a valley, but I suppose the butterflies would be found there; away from people.