great photos
Taking a semi educated swing at these.....mandevilleag said:
New snek pics from a recent family trip (photos courtesy of my daughter):
from Meeman-Shelby park outside Memphis:
From Cedar Point (Sanduskey, OH) waiting in line for Maverick:
And my daughter just sent this one from Heugh's Canyon trail, SLC, UT:
edit for wrong link.
I'm always impressed at how good everyone is/seems to be at spotting snakes. Maybe I'm just not very observant but when I'm walking trails and such I rarely see anythingmandevilleag said:
Yep. We really enjoyed Meeman Shelby. Lots of trails and the woods are beautiful. We want to go back and spend a couple of days.
The coloration of that northern watersnake is striking. It's tough for a novice or just interested nature lover like myself to learn/understand all of the nuances in coloration. I knew this one at Meeman Shelby was a northern watersnake, and assumed the one we saw at Cedar Point was also, just a darker variation. I wasn't aware of the Lake Erie subspecies. I've learned a lot from these snake threads.
You can bet they are seeing you, waiting to strike.AZAG08 said:I'm always impressed at how good everyone is/seems to be at spotting snakes. Maybe I'm just not very observant but when I'm walking trails and such I rarely see anythingmandevilleag said:
Yep. We really enjoyed Meeman Shelby. Lots of trails and the woods are beautiful. We want to go back and spend a couple of days.
The coloration of that northern watersnake is striking. It's tough for a novice or just interested nature lover like myself to learn/understand all of the nuances in coloration. I knew this one at Meeman Shelby was a northern watersnake, and assumed the one we saw at Cedar Point was also, just a darker variation. I wasn't aware of the Lake Erie subspecies. I've learned a lot from these snake threads.
Go hunt in a place with a lot of copperheads and rattlesnakes, you get good real quick. For me its just being outdoors a lot and always looking. A lot of people I have been around have asked how I can see them so easily, it takes practice.AZAG08 said:I'm always impressed at how good everyone is/seems to be at spotting snakes. Maybe I'm just not very observant but when I'm walking trails and such I rarely see anythingmandevilleag said:
Yep. We really enjoyed Meeman Shelby. Lots of trails and the woods are beautiful. We want to go back and spend a couple of days.
The coloration of that northern watersnake is striking. It's tough for a novice or just interested nature lover like myself to learn/understand all of the nuances in coloration. I knew this one at Meeman Shelby was a northern watersnake, and assumed the one we saw at Cedar Point was also, just a darker variation. I wasn't aware of the Lake Erie subspecies. I've learned a lot from these snake threads.
J_Daddy05 said:
Didn't even need the picture. Caption was sufficient.
Rat snake.
P.U.T.U said:Go hunt in a place with a lot of copperheads and rattlesnakes, you get good real quick. For me its just being outdoors a lot and always looking. A lot of people I have been around have asked how I can see them so easily, it takes practice.AZAG08 said:I'm always impressed at how good everyone is/seems to be at spotting snakes. Maybe I'm just not very observant but when I'm walking trails and such I rarely see anythingmandevilleag said:
Yep. We really enjoyed Meeman Shelby. Lots of trails and the woods are beautiful. We want to go back and spend a couple of days.
The coloration of that northern watersnake is striking. It's tough for a novice or just interested nature lover like myself to learn/understand all of the nuances in coloration. I knew this one at Meeman Shelby was a northern watersnake, and assumed the one we saw at Cedar Point was also, just a darker variation. I wasn't aware of the Lake Erie subspecies. I've learned a lot from these snake threads.
I've heard that a copperhead will smell like cucumbers.AgCWby90CS said:
what about smell? Can some with good sense of smell, smell the snake?
I barely have a sense of smell so I can't rely on that one, unless a water snake musk me I cannot smell it.AgCWby90CS said:
what about smell? Can some with good sense of smell, smell the snake?
That's why he's a radio host in a concrete jungle.TheClaw07 said:
The ticket talking about snakes this morning and A host (George) talked about the evolution of rattlers to not rattle due to hogs.
As a kid growing up in the Mid South, we used to find rough earth snakes in every water meter box in people's front yards. I haven't seen one in years. As an adult, I don't find myself going thru the neighborhood checking water meters though!!agent-maroon said:
Grew up in the Panhandle and with the exception of my years on campus have never lived anywhere but urban areas. I'm sure that there were rat snakes in my current neighborhood maybe 50 years ago but they would have all been killed by now.
Hognose, garter, rattlers, copperheads, and all the various water snakes but never a rat. We even find a rough earth snake every few months in the yard but nothing really interesting. But it's OK. I'm still sufficiently intrigued by trees, liquid water falling from the sky, and rivers that have water in them year round to maintain my appreciation of the miracles of Nature...
ETA - I lied. I've never seen a Texas Rat Snake but after studying some pics of common Texas snakes I'm sure that I've seen several juvenile Great Plains Rat Snakes. Even rescued a couple of them that got caught indoors. The Great Plains coloration is sufficiently different than the pics posted here on the OB that I didn't make the connection that they were a rat snake species.
YepQuote:
Maybe a coachwhip?