Awesome! Coachwhips will take on anything.
Several are constrictors, but I THINK (don't know) Coachwhips rely on speed.Brush Country said:
Seems like there are a lot of videos of a snake eating another snake, like carpe said, a lot of times a non venemous eating a venemous, but never videos of how the eaten succumbed to the eater.
How does a snake like a coach whip subdue and eat a diamondback? Doesn't seem like that part ever gets captured.
Robk said:
I will just leave this here.
Lampropeltis alterna - Jeff Davis County
LOL,ursusguy said:
A Robk appearance.
Here you go. An ode to the best snake found in Texas (though I am sure 12thmane might disagree)ttha_aggie_09 said:
And I am pretty sure the first ever on either thread.
Negativechiken said:
Are they venomous?
Rocky Top Aggie said:
I came up on this guy yesterday not long after he was run over. In fact, he buzzed at me and tried to lift his head. I'm guessing he was 3-3.5 feet long. Been a while since I've seen one. I hate that he was hit. Very rural, wooded backroad with no houses nearby.
Located in western Middle Tennessee.
They're listed as statewide, but their habitat actually prevents that in truth. They prefer rocky, steep wooded slopes (or, that is where I have found them).MemAg92 said:
zooguy, do you know if we have rattlers over in the Memphis area? I've been out in the woods and fish a lot in remote lakes/areas around woods and have seen copperheads and cottonmouths as well as many non-venomous species but never a rattler...Memphis is more delta flatland and it doesn't start to get rocky/hilly until you go east past the Tennessee River. May be a terrain thing that we don't have timber rattlers over here or very rare...