Thread: The snake
View Single Post
  #10   Report Post  
Old 18-04-2007, 09:04 PM posted to rec.ponds.moderated
Gail Futoran Gail Futoran is offline
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Jan 2007
Posts: 115
Default The snake

"Galen Hekhuis" wrote in message
...
I am not particularly afraid of snakes, but I'm not an extreme snake
lover either, and I don't keep any snakey pets. Sure, I know some
of
them can hurt you, but by far most of them are quite harmless. I
can
positively identify the relatively few venomous snakes that live in
this part of northern Florida. Anyway, this wasn't one of them. It
was 3-4 ft long, and it was in the water. About the only thing that
was dangerous would be a cottonmouth, and it was too sleek for that.
A
cottonmouth big enough to be that long would be rather fat also.
Besides, as I got closer the head was all wrong and the snake was
uniformly black except for it's white chin and throat and brown lips
which made it most likely a southern black racer, but not being any
sort of snake expert, this is only a guess. I stopped to watch it,
but it seemed to want to play a game of who could stay still the
longest, and it won when I got bored and went inside. Later that
afternoon I was fussing around the pond again, and saw the snake
again. It had made it about a quarter of the way around the pond
(25-30 feet), but was still pretty intent on remaining mostly
motionless, a game I didn't find too exciting. This morning to my
surprise it was still there, head above water by the edge of the
pond.
Now I'm not especially worried about snakes, and I don't have any
fish. There are some pretty big tadpoles, and some large swimming
beetles I've seen, but it has got to be pretty slim pickings for a
snake that size. The question is, if it hangs around, what do y'all
suggest I name it?
--
Galen Hekhuis
Illiterate? Write for FREE help


You could name it Kurt. (movie ref).

I'm not a snake expert, either, and I'm ashamed
to admit I once killed a harmless rat snake
(well, harmless to humans) before I could
ID it. I've since saved quite a few rat snakes
so maybe my karma has equalized... (but
the Barn Swallows would disagree).

Anyway, google is our friend. There are a
few good sites for snake IDing that I've
accessed previously. Based on your
description, it looks like you are close on
the ID:
http://www.flmnh.ufl.edu/natsci/herp...onstrictor.htm

The really helpful guide starts he
http://www.flmnh.ufl.edu/herpetology...nakekey.htm#31

I've used it to ID Texas snakes.

Gail
near San Antonio TX