milk snake or copperhead?

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osagebow

Minister of Fire
Jan 29, 2012
1,685
Shenandoah Valley, VA
Fielded this on FB a few times recently, figured I'd do a PSA here. The milk snake is a harmless good guy that will actually eat baby copperheads. Note the "hershey kisses" on the CH and lack of silver grey bands. The triangle solid copper head is a giveaway, also. milk-vs-copperhead.jpg
Baby coppers have a neon tail tip to lure lizards to their doom. Haters gonna hate, but that sure puts the B.A. in " Baby".Copperhead-baby.jpg
 
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I saw a snake come out from under one of my wood stacks two or three weeks ago, and it had a copper-colored head, but I told myself the patterning (as much as I could see, it was in the shadows on a very bright sunny day) was wrong. Now that I look at your photos, I'm convinced what I have living near my barn (it retreated under some doug firs) is a copperhead.
 
Just garter snakes around here. The house we're remodeling seems to have quite a few of them inside it.
Every time we relocate one outside another o one or two or three show up. All over the place outside too.
It's a second home for some people that will loose their cookies when a snake slithers out from under their fridge.;lol
I warned them, husband won't tell wife and says it shouldn't be an big deal. Lol.
 
Yup. Leave them all alone- everybody's got their job to do. I rescued a baby garter from my basement a week or so ago. I had a customer over, and ran to the basement for a bag and there it was trying to get under the washing machine- I bagged him up, hung it on a doorknob, and let it go later... it started going back for the bulkhead. Dumbass.

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We have tons of these around here- hard to misidentify them

Here's one biting off maybe more than he can swallow
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Snakes don't bother me one bit. Spiders on the other hand...
 
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I'm amazed how many people around here assume that anything that isn't a black snake or garter is a copperhead if it's on land or a water moccasin if it's in the water. I've spent a huge chunk of my life in the woods and wading streams and have yet to see a poisonous snake around these parts. I don't generally mind snakes, but I'm also thankful that there's a slim chance that I'll have to deal with poisonous one's around here.
 
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We've been doing pretty well in the snake department for a few years now. The waterfall was turned into a nursery a year or two ago by Northern Water snakes. I had to work pretty hard to believe they weren't copperheads. The water snakes aren't venomous but they're ill-tempered... I've seen perhaps five in the rocks of the waterfall. Had a funny moment in the stacks by the fence where there was a water snake on top of the tarp covering the splitter, and when I moved it, a couple more shot out from underneath. And then there was this one lone garter snake curled up inside a coiled extension cord.

I tell folks that if the kindling tries to get away from you, try a different stick.
 

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Copperheads and rattle snakes were common here, generations ago, but development has done them in. I see snakes or snake skins on a weekly basis all summer, but it's almost always a garter snake. However, I do have two interesting snake stories from my past:

1. A rattle snake bit and killed my great-grandfather. I believe my sister still has the rattle from that snake, which he killed. He died a few days after the bite.

2. My father was working on a construction site when I was a little kid, when an excavator unearthed a copperhead den and killed mamma. A few of the guys on site picked up and brought home the babies, probably not realizing how dangerous they were (1970's / pre-internet). Long story short, they got loose / lost in the house, and mom took my siblings and I to grandma's for a few days, while dad scoured the house looking for these snakes. He eventually found both, one dead and one alive, and set the live one free in a field in the rural part of our town. A half dozen years later, they built a development in that field, and the local paper ran an article about an excavator crew finding a large copperhead while digging for the street sewers. The cycle repeats...
 
Eastern hognoses are the ones that often get confused for copperheads
 
saw this guy in my garden... i believe its a garter, yes?

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Yep
 
Just garter snakes around here. The house we're remodeling seems to have quite a few of them inside it.
Every time we relocate one outside another o one or two or three show up. All over the place outside too.
It's a second home for some people that will loose their cookies when a snake slithers out from under their fridge.;lol
I warned them, husband won't tell wife and says it shouldn't be an big deal. Lol.

depending on where you are in central NH, the timber rattler is an actual possibility. I spent the latter half of the 90's living in rural SE Kentucky.... even now, back in Maine, the copperhead avoidance habits still remain, 15 years later.
 
Timber rattlers in NH are listed as "critically imperiled".
Last I heard on a radio show was there were about 7 of them that were known to exist.
Growing up on the edge of the everglades in FL, I really enjoy the absence of poisonous snakes around here. Not to mention all the other nasty things in FL.
I'm in FL today, saw what looked like a bee climb out of the ground, the size of a humming bird, took off like a harrier jet, don't think my epi pen would do it if that thing attacked me. _g
 
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Heh... somewhere on this forum are the stories of a giant European Hornet (or two) my mom shipped to us from Florida, in a rolled up hand made Turkish rug. Scared the hell out of us, since we originally mis-ID'd it as an African (killer) hornet.
 
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Heh... somewhere on this forum are the stories of a giant European Hornet (or two) my mom shipped to us from Florida, in a rolled up hand made Turkish rug. Scared the hell out of us, since we originally mis-ID'd it as an African (killer) hornet.
Be very glad the rug didn't come from China. They have some very serious sized hornets there.
giant bees.jpg
 
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;lol Better hope she doesn't have friends or it will be more like "bombed".
 
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Begreen, one of the two we found in the house after receiving the rug actually wasn't much smaller than the four you show there. This was springtime, so maybe a hibernating queen? I felt that one under my slippered foot, before I even saw it. Felt like I stepped on a small mouse!

Luckily, the Euro hornets are very docile, not likely to attack, unless provoked. The complete opposite of those damn German yellow jackets that plague us, here.
 
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