Beautiful and how lucky to see both. SO happy to that you left them alone and let them live. Hopefully more people will start doing the same.
I have yet to see a single Diamondback since we moved to Georgia, only Timbers. Which is cool, Timbers seem really laid back compared to Diamondbacks.
I did not know that, thanks for the info. I grew up in Fla, and have seen my fill of Diamondbacks and Pygmies, so it is cool that there is something less obnoxious as DBs.Couple of very beautiful snakes. Canebrakes are some of the prettiest snakes in the world to me. Love the variety they can display.
If you are up around Tennille, you are just a little too far north and west for the most common EDB range in Georgia. I grew up one a couple counties SE of Washington and timbers are still far more plentiful.
Couple of very beautiful snakes. Canebrakes are some of the prettiest snakes in the world to me. Love the variety they can display.
If you are up around Tennille, you are just a little too far north and west for the most common EDB range in Georgia. I grew up one a couple counties SE of Washington and timbers are still far more plentiful.
Our mountain timbers add more variations too. Most are olive-yellow with a black tail, and I've seen a couple that were completely black.
I have never seen a live wild eastern diamondback, always wanted to.
Compared to these Timber snakes, Eastern Diamondbacks are really uppity. I had a room mate who collected snakes. Part of his "herpitarium" included at least a dozen EDBs. It was always fun cleaning out their cages.
It doesn`t take much to make a diamondback fly hot.