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Started by Spitten and drummen, March 27, 2020, 07:01:38 PM
Quote from: sasquatch1 on April 08, 2020, 05:20:13 PMQuote from: LaLongbeard on April 08, 2020, 05:01:41 PMBig Moccasin laying in the trail I walked down in the dark. Coral snake eating another smaller snake when I walked up. Sent from my iPhone using TapatalkWhere the hell did you find a coral snake? I kept having to look and make sure it wasn't a California kingSent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Quote from: LaLongbeard on April 08, 2020, 05:01:41 PMBig Moccasin laying in the trail I walked down in the dark. Coral snake eating another smaller snake when I walked up. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Quote from: Sir-diealot on April 08, 2020, 07:29:38 PMQuote from: LaLongbeard on April 08, 2020, 05:01:41 PMBig Moccasin laying in the trail I walked down in the dark. Coral snake eating another smaller snake when I walked up. Sent from my iPhone using TapatalkI have always thought Coral Snakes were very very pretty. Look a lot like the Milk Snakes we have here in NY I know there is some saying or rhyme to tell them apart, something to do with the rings I think but I do not recall it.
Quote from: LaLongbeard on April 08, 2020, 07:35:09 PMQuote from: Sir-diealot on April 08, 2020, 07:29:38 PMQuote from: LaLongbeard on April 08, 2020, 05:01:41 PMBig Moccasin laying in the trail I walked down in the dark. Coral snake eating another smaller snake when I walked up. Sent from my iPhone using TapatalkI have always thought Coral Snakes were very very pretty. Look a lot like the Milk Snakes we have here in NY I know there is some saying or rhyme to tell them apart, something to do with the rings I think but I do not recall it.Red on yellow will kill a fellow, is the one I've heard. Very rare and mostly stay under leaves or logs so you don't see them much. I've only seen a few in my lifetime. Best to leave them be I've heard the US no longer makes the anti-venom for coral snakes
Quote from: Cut N Run on April 08, 2020, 07:37:54 PMI got bit by a copperhead in my garage. It had rained for a few days and my garage was the closest dry "cave" to the creek behind the house. It hit my rubber boot & went through, but the boot was away from my leg and my skin didn't get punctured.I've run into quite a few copperheads turkey & deer hunting. During bow season I used to hang my lunch in a tree on the way in at a bluff overlooking Parker's Creek in the Big Woods, then sit at the base of a big oak atop the bluff to eat it on my way to my evening stand. One day as I was getting ready to sit down between the roots, something made me look closer. There was a coiled 30 inch copperhead right where I was about to sit. I skewered him with an arrow and had my lunch on a big rock instead. We don't have many rattlesnakes or moccasins in this part of the state, though I had run-ins with pygmy and timber rattlesnakes that sounded off, so I avoided them. I thought the pygmy was some kind of insect buzzing until I saw it. Moccasins are the most aggressive snakes I've ever encountered in the U.S.. They know they're bad@SS and won't hesitate to come at you. I was going fishing with a couple other guys off Currituck Sound up by Knotts Island when we came across a VW bug stopped part way across into the other lane. We got out to ask the woman driving if she'd had trouble. It turned out there was a huge moccasin in the road (probably sunning) challenging the vehicle. We grabbed boat oars, had her drive across the snake, then we wailed on the snake as it tried to escape. It was 5'2" in length, had 2 inch fangs, and was as big around as a motorcycle tire. Definitely the stuff nightmares are made of. I couldn't imagine coming across that dude in the dark in the turkey woods...or any other time really.Watch your step & be safe out there.Jim