That looks a lot like the snake I posted above hidden in the brush, which I assumed was a garter?
What was said above, but the other thing was this guy was pretty massive. About on par with darker colored rat snakes I've come across around here. It was in no hurry to get away either. These bushes are 10-15' tall and had a ton of dead honeysuckle vines in there so it's a decent place for a snake to go looking for bird nests in.oragator said:
That looks a lot like the snake I posted above hidden in the brush, which I assumed was a garter?
WTF, not cool guys, not coolmoses hall ag said:
My wife's uncle sent me this phone pic last year. He lives in Pelham Alabama and was doing yard work in the back yard. He noticed a squirrel harassing a snake. After a while he went back to work and forgot about the snake. He came across this scene shortly thereafter.
Didn't realize what the issue was then I saw the user name. Makes perfect sense now.agsquirrel97 said:WTF, not cool guys, not coolmoses hall ag said:
My wife's uncle sent me this phone pic last year. He lives in Pelham Alabama and was doing yard work in the back yard. He noticed a squirrel harassing a snake. After a while he went back to work and forgot about the snake. He came across this scene shortly thereafter.
Not far off. In Texas their sister species is called the great plains ratsnake12th Man Ag said:
Corn snake?
Rufnek said:
What kind of snake is Steve Bott's?
vander54 said:
If you had to tell someone that knows nothing about snakes a way to identify if a snake is venomous or not what would you tell them?
SteveBott said:
I know the experts here will cringe at this but triangular head is a good start. Add the red touching yellow kills fellow. And yes I know that includes harmless hog nose and is not bullet proof.
There is another thread on the first page right nowvander54 said:
If you had to tell someone that knows nothing about snakes a way to identify if a snake is venomous or not what would you tell them?
Did you not post a picture of a snake at 29 minutes past the hour? It's a few posts above mine.SteveBott said:
I have no idea what you are talking about.
vander54 said:
If you had to tell someone that knows nothing about snakes a way to identify if a snake is venomous or not what would you tell them?
There's only 4 venomous in the US. Learn them well & ignore all the others.vander54 said:
If you had to tell someone that knows nothing about snakes a way to identify if a snake is venomous or not what would you tell them?
Friend "saw a red snake" this morning in Ft Bend Cty. My first thought was corn, but what little they saw was clearly red - with no obvious pattern. Red coachwhip like this was my only other guess...txags92 said:
Looks like maybe a Red Racer? Also known as western coachwhip.
JSKolache said:There's only 4 venomous in the US. Learn them well & ignore all the others.vander54 said:
If you had to tell someone that knows nothing about snakes a way to identify if a snake is venomous or not what would you tell them?
3 are very easy to ID:
1) rattler - obvious it has rattles
2) copperhead - very distinct color pattern
3) coral - very distinct color pattern /w a neat little rhyme every boy scout learns at age 10
So that leaves #4 - water moccasin - which is the trickiest to ID I think. This one gave me fits until I learned to look for the black eye bar. A thick black eye bar is dead giveaway for a moccasin.
There you go & ignore the rest.