look climbing up the middle of the tree, thats the last one i found. 2 almost directly below it and one in bottom right corner
yea probably why the article said they posted that on social media and then after a couple of hours the picture went private. they definitely tried to make a BAMF post about killing a bunch of snakes and probably got a shit load of backlash
Owsley Came out to Lake Oconee last night for the weekend. On my run this morning I was along a trail that as it came up to one of the coves/inlets on the lake had a dock (with part of the trail being boarded up as well). Well luckily I pull up and decide to just walk it and in a split-second I see a Brown 5-8 foot snake. Dude was looking me right in the eyes. He was curled up just straight chilling...I go oh fuck and he hops into the water. Sits right below the surface looking at me, then I proceed and he dives further down. Had a nice girth on him too.
Yes that definitely could be it. Not sure it had the exact same pattern but that shade, shape and size.
yeah the coloring and pattern varies slightly. him resting right below the water indicates it wasn't a cottonmouth
they're mean as fuck. you know this. they are usually the first ones I see every spring. haven't had that privilege yet this year.
This is the last thing you want to see when you pick up your deer blind. According to My San Antonio,a group of Texas hunters in Matador, Texas, discovered 26 slithering rattlesnakes and one they couldn’t identify hiding under their deer blind. Hunter Rusty Hopper posted photos of the scene on Facebook, and the images quickly went viral, but the post has since been made private. going private makes me think they killed them, all of them
ugh. fuck yeah they do. I have never knowingly killed a snake but if one of those fuckers fell into my boat I wouldn't think twice.
fucker was hiding in between the boat lifts, 2 dudes fishing were like come look at this... asshole wont go into the water
I'm surprised I've never heard of those. Are they not in Florida? Or go by a different name? Owsley ?
Just saw the first snake in my new house. Cat ran to the sliding glass doors and I see a 4ft black runner going through the yard.
What's the thought on this one? Saw it driving in a wildlife area a few miles from my house n FL. I was thinking either cane break or Pygmy rattler. I'd say it was almost a foot long. Tough to see in the pic but it had a small button rattle.
I believe these snakes to be black mambas after extensive research. They are trying to kill each other to mate with a female. Full video http://assets.nationalgeographic.co...tml?guid=00000154-e3e0-d51f-af77-f7e2c3450000 http://motherboard.vice.com/blog/tourist-captures-rare-black-mamba-fighting-technique-on-camera
Snakes Slither Out Of Man’s Ceiling In Video That Will Haunt Your Dreams “It’s still in my house, and I don’t know where it is,” the unfortunate resident said of one stray reptile. 06/02/2016 05:33 pm ET Nina Golgowski Trends reporter, The Huffington Post X “It’s the stuff of nightmares” — that’s what a Greenwood, South Carolina man said after finding two giant snakes dangling from his hallway ceiling when he returned home from work on Tuesday. Mark Hyatt had only just passed under his attic door when he returned to find the creepy crawlies “squirming in all their glory” in front of his face. “They were just slithering around. I could see two heads and their tongues flashing,” he told The Huffington Post on Thursday by phone. “Of course, I was in shock,” Hyatt said. “But I thought my dad would really get a kick out of this, so I pulled out my phone and started shooting video.” Mark Hyatt/Facebook Two snakes dangling from the ceiling of Mark Hyatt’s home in Greenwood, South Carolina, during a frightening surprise encounter. Hyatt’s one-minute video has blown up on social media. It’s been viewed hundreds of thousands of times on his Facebook page and millions more through other media outlets. But getting the snakes to go viral was apparently the easy part. Getting them to go was a whole other story. “I propped my front door open and I used my broom to kind of swat them down to the ground. I made a little barricade that would lead them out the front door,” Hyatt said. One of the snakes successfully made it out the door, only to “charge right back into the house” three times, he said. Hyatt had to grab the persistent reptile by its tail and toss it outside to finally remove it. As for the second snake, he said, “It’s still in my house and I don’t know where it is.” “I’m on pins and needles,” he added. “I think they’re black snakes, so I doubt they’re any danger. In fact, I think they’re a benefit to have around your property.” That doesn’t make the situation any easier, however. “It’s the stuff of nightmares,” Hyatt continued. “I’m surprised that I’m laughing about it, because last night I slept in the house and thought, what choice do I have? I left the lights on. I’ll eventually have to go into the attic and look around with a flashlight because there could be a whole den up there.”