Topic: Maryland- We Are Rattlesnake Eaters :-) | |
---|---|
If Maryland is that low on timber rattlers, we can spare quite a few...come and get em! i'm surprised Maryland even has any rattlers... We are technically The South. We are below the Mason Dixon Line. We are having an increase in last 2-3 years of Southern wildlife do to warmer weather. Insects, reptiles, amphibians. (I forget what else). We have mountains, farm, sea coast, bay coast..& metro (Baltimore). All different dialects. Plus the Yanks & people from further south here. Say what? ![]() We have them in Jersey too.. which surprised me because the winters are brutal. The snakes stay up in the north western part of the state.. Pocono Mtn. area. I have never seen one, but then again I don't go walking around up there either. I guess they are a hearty species to survive the winters.. even underground. |
|
|
|
I remember a few years ago hiking up the side of a mountain in order to take a picture - when all of a sudden a large "fallen branch" about 10 or 12 feet away started moving of it's own accord. That (of course) got my attention, & when I looked over, I saw that it was actually a snake that was about 5 feet long... ![]() ![]() ![]() I moved a few feet to put a bit more distance between myself & the snake, then took a few pictures. Researching it later, I found that it appeared to be a prairie rattlesnake, at the western edge of it's normal territory. I was really glad that he started moving before I got too close, since I was probably 100 miles or more from a hospital - given the size of that rattler, I would've been a goner for sure... ![]() ![]() In Florida we had cottonmouths and copperheads. Both are very aggressive, and as they develope new areas for housing and business they find more and more in the cities |
|
|
|
I remember a few years ago hiking up the side of a mountain in order to take a picture - when all of a sudden a large "fallen branch" about 10 or 12 feet away started moving of it's own accord. That (of course) got my attention, & when I looked over, I saw that it was actually a snake that was about 5 feet long... ![]() ![]() ![]() I moved a few feet to put a bit more distance between myself & the snake, then took a few pictures. Researching it later, I found that it appeared to be a prairie rattlesnake, at the western edge of it's normal territory. I was really glad that he started moving before I got too close, since I was probably 100 miles or more from a hospital - given the size of that rattler, I would've been a goner for sure... ![]() ![]() In Florida we had cottonmouths and copperheads. Both are very aggressive, and as they develope new areas for housing and business they find more and more in the cities |
|
|
|
I remember a few years ago hiking up the side of a mountain in order to take a picture - when all of a sudden a large "fallen branch" about 10 or 12 feet away started moving of it's own accord. That (of course) got my attention, & when I looked over, I saw that it was actually a snake that was about 5 feet long... ![]() ![]() ![]() I moved a few feet to put a bit more distance between myself & the snake, then took a few pictures. Researching it later, I found that it appeared to be a prairie rattlesnake, at the western edge of it's normal territory. I was really glad that he started moving before I got too close, since I was probably 100 miles or more from a hospital - given the size of that rattler, I would've been a goner for sure... ![]() ![]() In Florida we had cottonmouths and copperheads. Both are very aggressive, and as they develope new areas for housing and business they find more and more in the cities i see more of them than rattlesnakes in Texas, they are everywhere... and they will chase you, rattlesnakes won't |
|
|