A lot later than usual for me, but finally got my first snakes of the year. Several Mississippi green watersnakes (Nerodia cyclopion) basking in an extensive marsh near Houston.
And over the last few years in about a half a dozen various FB posts from all over the country . This picture seems to pop up every spring.AgEng06 said:
The same one it was in the 2017 thread...
Chopper + antiven, yikes. Hope her college fund will recover.Ag by Vows said:
Hope this young girl can make a full recovery.
https://www.today.com/health/5-year-old-texas-girl-recovering-frightening-attack-venomous-rattlesnake-t121529
The article says these ppl didn't even have health insurance and started a Gofundme to pay the medical bill. Doubt there is a college fund.JSKolache said:Chopper + antiven, yikes. Hope her college fund will recover.Ag by Vows said:
Hope this young girl can make a full recovery.
https://www.today.com/health/5-year-old-texas-girl-recovering-frightening-attack-venomous-rattlesnake-t121529
From the angle, it looks like the snake caught her foot head on and managed to pierce the shoe and sock. Is that typical or was the snake maybe bigger than average?Ag by Vows said:
Hope this young girl can make a full recovery.
https://www.today.com/health/5-year-old-texas-girl-recovering-frightening-attack-venomous-rattlesnake-t121529
Would it be fair to say they attack in defense? Or is the snake the real victim here?12f Mane said:
Rattlesnakes don't attack, they defend. Unfortunate story, but the wording only perpetuates misinformation.
REALLY cool looking hognose!12f Mane said:
Drinking beer
BCO07 said:
That looks much darker than most of the timber rattlers I've seen in the past. Would it be considered melanistic?