He is making the rattle sound if you listen but hiding his tail. I think is may be a bullsnake.
You nailed it.ttha_aggie_09 said:
I think most people have a flow diagram similar to this:
Was it found near water?
- yes, it's a cottonmouth
-no, proceed to next question
Does it have dark coloration?
- yes, it's a cottonmouth
- no, it's a "Garden Snake"
Yeah, if it is that long, probably not a shrike. May have been a small hawk, or it may have been a rat snake climbing it to go after birds and got itself wedged.Zacharybherring said:
Ahhhh that may explain it better. Now before it started decomposing this snake was over four feet long. It's so far up there I have no idea what species of snake it is. A bird of prey might have placed it there
ttha_aggie_09 said:
Close - DBWS
ttha_aggie_09 said:
Close - DBWS
I was just going to post about anaphylactic reactions. Had a guy I worked with get bit on the hand by a rattlesnake in his backyard in Denver. They ended up life flighting him and doing an emergency tracheotomy in the helicopter because of the severity of his reaction.Badace52 said:
Most of the time just driving is fine within an hour or so of a hospital. That is unless the person is having an anaphylactic (severe allergic) reaction. In that case minutes mean life or death.