I was the one that cast ALL snakes back to the fire pits of hell, but now, because of this thread, I cringe and shoo the non-venomous ones away.
J.D. c/o 05 said:
Diamondback Water Snake is my guess.
J.D. c/o 05 said:
Diamondback Water Snake is my guess.
Mississippi greens look similar to diamondback watersnakes but will have quite a few more bands and usually a less contrasting pattern. Sometimes they have a green wash on their head/cheeks. They are almost exclusively a marsh specialist in Texas and more aquatic than any of our other Nerodia (minus clarkii, maybe). They are more common along the coast in fresh/brackish marsh but turn up in inland marshes as well, like Brazos Bend State Park.J.D. c/o 05 said:
What can the experts tell me about the Mississippi Green Water snake? I see them pop up on different snake ID sites and I always miss that one.
Per the interwebs it looks like their range actually does creep into SETX? Any way to really differentiate them from other water snakes?
Prognightmare said:
Dammit
Prognightmare said:
YBWS?????
There's some irony in this postBobcat-Ag said:
How would I remove a rat snake from my chicken coop if I'm too chicken to reach in and grab it?
Man I can't wait to get a place like thisMouthBQ98 said:
Yep, all those snakes came off my 10 acres, and really just the 2 acres around the house is the only part I search. I let them go at the fence line and figure there's 50/50 odds they go play with my neighbor's vermin, and all my neighbors have bigger properties than mine. I think I just get a lot because much of my pasture is fallow and largely going back native...better habitat.
Diamondback watersnaketxags92 said:
From neighborhood next door...cottonmouth?
Probably. Upload to a host site (flickr, etc), post link on herevander54 said:
If I posted a pic of some eggs would y'all be able to tell if they are snakes or not?
Also I have never posted an image so what's the way?