ScottM
Taxi to Parking
- Joined
- Jul 19, 2005
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- 42,530
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iBazinga!
Went to put away the airplane this morning and found this little guy sitting right at the edge of the hangar door.
I have seen a bigger one near my hangar, I wonder if that is this guys mama?
Thats what she said!Oh Geez.................. What is it.... 5" long.....
I've not seen a milk snake in the wild in about 40 years... I was thinking they were about extinct (kinda hard to be sure from the picture, but it does look like one).This guy was in the wrong place at the wrong time (under the hangar door when it came down) and I didn't see it.
We get rattlesnakes battling the squirrels on the sidewalk around here now - the squirrels are completely immune to the venom and the snakes still think they can be killed and eaten - damn they both make a racket. and since this is Calleeforneeah you can't just go outside with a shotgun and put 'em both of of their misery. You gotta call the cops who call animal control and by the time they get there they've both retreated to their respective corners. . .
Thats what she said!
That snake may be about full grown. Lookup brown snake. No not that kind. I had one for a while growing up. It ate earthworms and slugs.
You can zoom in on it here https://picasaweb.google.com/113074946255891896082/N222gn#5661297932467759938I've not seen a milk snake in the wild in about 40 years... I was thinking they were about extinct (kinda hard to be sure from the picture, but it does look like one).
Almost stepped on this guy last week at my house
I was walking out to my car turned around and came right back. He had slithered out in that 10 seconds. 6' rat snake. Better than rats. And you can see he's well fed.
We get rattlesnakes battling the squirrels on the sidewalk around here now - the squirrels are completely immune to the venom and the snakes still think they can be killed and eaten - damn they both make a racket. and since this is Calleeforneeah you can't just go outside with a shotgun and put 'em both of of their misery. You gotta call the cops who call animal control and by the time they get there they've both retreated to their respective corners. . .
Wow, never knew squirrels are immune to rattle snake venom. That's odd given that they eat rodents.
Animals can develop resistance to toxins over time under the right circumstances. Down in South Texas the feral hogs are so bad hunting the snakes, that the rattlers down there have stopped rattling as a warning when they are threatened. Nature adapts to changing conditions.
What a cute little serpent. During the spring I have toads come around to the hangar every so often. I always consider it a sign of good luck when I find one. One of the bad things about living in the city is I don't see so many critters.
We get rattlesnakes battling the squirrels on the sidewalk around here now - the squirrels are completely immune to the venom and the snakes still think they can be killed and eaten - damn they both make a racket. and since this is Calleeforneeah you can't just go outside with a shotgun and put 'em both of of their misery. You gotta call the cops who call animal control and by the time they get there they've both retreated to their respective corners. . .
Squirrel got attacked by a non-venomous serpent. Even the smallest rattler can easily envenom a squirrel. To develop immunity you need to be inoculated. Squirrel gets inoculated with snake venom it gets dead.
You'd think that, wouldn't you? However, from a Google search, it seems the University of California (and many other references) don't agree:
That's not a snake ..... These are snakes
Is that a dead dog in there?
Umm... what rattlesnake?