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#61 |
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On Jun 3, 1:13 am, carlfo...@comcast.net wrote:
> Some recent obstructions remind me not to complain too much about that > annoying traffic light on my daily ride. Most them expand in Explorer > if you click on the lower right. None of them are squirrels or dogs. > > Absolutely limp, motionless, and hoping that it won't be noticed, > stretched across the path:http://i11.tinypic.com/52fvkno.jpg > > Obviously, it _was_ noticed, but my first attempt at one-handed > photography is embarrassingly fuzzy: > > http://i15.tinypic.com/4utq8mh.jpg > > This unharmed idiot was sunbathing on the path a few days later. The > one-handed focus is better, but a more intelligent photographer would > have checked that his automatic shutter had opened all the way: > > http://i15.tinypic.com/6ccz2iw.jpg > > Another unharmed idiot, caught a few minutes later, also sunbathing on > the path:http://i10.tinypic.com/673ty4n.jpg > > This poor foot-long devil was still alive, but couldn't rattle, coil, > crawl, or hiss, so I had to put it out of its misery. (Handling this > kind is foolish--most fatal bites in the U.S. involve the head or neck > and a bizarre religious belief that rattlers won't resent handling.) > At first I thought that a car had hit it, but it was almost undamaged. > The fatal wound, an ugly, unseen gash on the far side of its neck, > probably came from a beak:http://i13.tinypic.com/53rtreu.jpg > > These two camera hogs were too big for one-handed photography. The > first is about three feet long, the second about four feet long:http://i6.tinypic.com/4ztygba.jpght...com/4xqogfs.jpg > > This nitwit was playing why-did-the-chicken-cross-the-road, as they > often do, and finally ran over my shoe. They have a disconcerting > habit of near-sightedly charging at you instead of fleeing:http://i16.tinypic.com/5z6l5y8.jpg > > Here's his little brother, next to a bottle of bug repellant:http://i9.tinypic.com/4uxcfa1.jpg > > These three adults just stood there, while the two recently born kids > ran happily back and forth past them. The second kid is just visible > between the middle and right hand adults:http://i13.tinypic.com/6g1xe1s.jpg > > One kid has already zoomed past the left edge of the picture. The > other is following:http://i14.tinypic.com/5z20k09.jpg > > If you look closely, you can see the other kid, now running back the > other way, its head just past its sibling's tail:http://i7.tinypic.com/4muhbbl.jpg > > And now it's raced back the other way, past all three adults:http://i7.tinypic.com/4yhvh42.jpg > > These two versions of four horns have already been posted, but you > might as well see them again if you've browsed this far:http://i8.tinypic.com/4yjyjvn.jpght...com/4y7cbgx.jpg > > Finally, here's about ten pounds of expectant mother, a bit bigger > than a bike helmet. Inflamed by a thunderstorm, she foolishly dug a > nest this afternoon at the edge of a sandy but poorly drained two-rut > road, fifteen feet from her marsh:http://i12.tinypic.com/6gxpi1g.jpg > > Tails are often broken or truncated, but this tail is pristine, ready > for the show ring. (Yes, I once kept them as pets, but no, there are > no formal best-of-show competitions.)http://i13.tinypic.com/4zvf9nb.jpg > > Excellent shell, little moss, no leeches, no holes:http://i17.tinypic.com/6434ia9.jpg > > The tail has been moved to one side to show to advantage, while the > eye catches the camera flash:http://i8.tinypic.com/5y9huds.jpg > > Cheers, > > CarlFogel The crowd today was sparse and betrayed little enthusiasm, but at least stayed at the edge of the course: http://i16.tinypic.com/4m7j6te.jpg http://i14.tinypic.com/4mv6gpy.jpg A glove dropped nearby for scale caused the crowd to hop into the brush. Later, a thinner spectator was seized and warned not to wriggle across the course in front of the peloton: http://i19.tinypic.com/4kee9hl.jpg Left-handed photography is awkard, so things are fuzzy. Even in focus, the picture would be deceptive, since thumbs are rarely as thick as wrists. Cheers, Carl Fogel |
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#62 |
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On Mon, 16 Jul 2007 20:15:27 -0700, carlfogel@comcast.net wrote:
[snip] A real obstruction, blown down by fierce winds: http://i14.tinypic.com/642i3oj.jpg But the wind had some help: http://i12.tinypic.com/4y79i52.jpg Here's the lumberjack's late relative: http://i15.tinypic.com/54og1vo.jpg Cheers, Carl Fogel |
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#63 |
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On Wed, 18 Jul 2007 20:40:45 -0600, carlfogel@comcast.net wrote:
>On Mon, 16 Jul 2007 20:15:27 -0700, carlfogel@comcast.net wrote: > >[snip] > >A real obstruction, blown down by fierce winds: > >http://i14.tinypic.com/642i3oj.jpg Those were some fierce winds to blow your bike upside down like that. Ron |
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#64 |
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On Mon, 16 Jul 2007 20:15:27 -0700, carlfogel@comcast.net wrote:
[snip] A flash flood left some large puddles and even larger mounds of mud and gravel near my daily ride, along with a handsome gimme-cap. Here's what I first thought might be a small bullfrog when I noticed it out of the corner of my eye, darting away in a big puddle: http://i14.tinypic.com/4pnkokm.jpg As you can see, the claws have as usual grown faster than the body: http://i8.tinypic.com/4lxktht.jpg Here it holds the cap in the air at arm level: http://i7.tinypic.com/662zzbc.jpg I'm _almost_ sure that the claw tip wouldn't penetrate a 700c tire, even if you ran over it at an awkward angle. Cheers, Carl Fogel |
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#65 |
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On Mon, 16 Jul 2007 20:15:27 -0700, carlfogel@comcast.net wrote:
>On Jun 3, 1:13 am, carlfo...@comcast.net wrote: >> Some recent obstructions remind me not to complain too much about that >> annoying traffic light on my daily ride. Most them expand in Explorer >> if you click on the lower right. None of them are squirrels or dogs. >> >> Absolutely limp, motionless, and hoping that it won't be noticed, >> stretched across the path: >> http://i11.tinypic.com/52fvkno.jpg >> >> Obviously, it _was_ noticed, but my first attempt at one-handed >> photography is embarrassingly fuzzy: >> >> http://i15.tinypic.com/4utq8mh.jpg >> >> This unharmed idiot was sunbathing on the path a few days later. The >> one-handed focus is better, but a more intelligent photographer would >> have checked that his automatic shutter had opened all the way: >> >> http://i15.tinypic.com/6ccz2iw.jpg >> >> Another unharmed idiot, caught a few minutes later, also sunbathing on >> the path: >> http://i10.tinypic.com/673ty4n.jpg >> >> This poor foot-long devil was still alive, but couldn't rattle, coil, >> crawl, or hiss, so I had to put it out of its misery. (Handling this >> kind is foolish--most fatal bites in the U.S. involve the head or neck >> and a bizarre religious belief that rattlers won't resent handling.) >> At first I thought that a car had hit it, but it was almost undamaged. >> The fatal wound, an ugly, unseen gash on the far side of its neck, >> probably came from a beak: >> http://i13.tinypic.com/53rtreu.jpg >> >> These two camera hogs were too big for one-handed photography. The >> first is about three feet long, the second about four feet long: >> http://i6.tinypic.com/4ztygba.jpght...com/4xqogfs.jpg >> >> This nitwit was playing why-did-the-chicken-cross-the-road, as they >> often do, and finally ran over my shoe. They have a disconcerting >> habit of near-sightedly charging at you instead of fleeing: >> http://i16.tinypic.com/5z6l5y8.jpg >> >> Here's his little brother, next to a bottle of bug repellant: >> http://i9.tinypic.com/4uxcfa1.jpg >> >> These three adults just stood there, while the two recently born kids >> ran happily back and forth past them. The second kid is just visible >> between the middle and right hand adults: >> http://i13.tinypic.com/6g1xe1s.jpg >> >> One kid has already zoomed past the left edge of the picture. The >> other is following: >> http://i14.tinypic.com/5z20k09.jpg >> >> If you look closely, you can see the other kid, now running back the >> other way, its head just past its sibling's tail: >> http://i7.tinypic.com/4muhbbl.jpg >> >> And now it's raced back the other way, past all three adults: >> http://i7.tinypic.com/4yhvh42.jpg >> >> These two versions of four horns have already been posted, but you >> might as well see them again if you've browsed this far: >> http://i8.tinypic.com/4yjyjvn.jpght...com/4y7cbgx.jpg >> >> Finally, here's about ten pounds of expectant mother, a bit bigger >> than a bike helmet. Inflamed by a thunderstorm, she foolishly dug a >> nest this afternoon at the edge of a sandy but poorly drained two-rut >> road, fifteen feet from her marsh: >> http://i12.tinypic.com/6gxpi1g.jpg >> >> Tails are often broken or truncated, but this tail is pristine, ready >> for the show ring. (Yes, I once kept them as pets, but no, there are >> no formal best-of-show competitions.) >> http://i13.tinypic.com/4zvf9nb.jpg >> >> Excellent shell, little moss, no leeches, no holes: >> http://i17.tinypic.com/6434ia9.jpg >> >> The tail has been moved to one side to show to advantage, while the >> eye catches the camera flash: >> http://i8.tinypic.com/5y9huds.jpg >> >> Cheers, >> >> Carl Fogel The obstruction in this post had foolishly wandered a mile up from the reservoir after a recent thunderstorm and found itself stranded in a bare, dry shale gully. Not knowing what else to do, it wedged itself head-first into a rocky hole the size of a 5-gallon bucket, where there was still some water, and wondered where all the water had gone. Since a new thunderstorm was soaking me and threatening to bury the obstruction alive under the debris of a gully-washer, I took no pictures at the scene. Instead, I pulled and tugged until the obstruction reluctantly let go of its ill-chosen refuge, carried it home, and kept it overnight. Here it is in a 25 X 19 mortar tub with an 18-inch ruler: http://i13.tinypic.com/53sdipy.jpg This shows the well-healed edge of the shell to the right of the tail, where the normal saw-tooth pattern is gone: http://i17.tinypic.com/68bgg47.jpg Here's a coy three-quarter profile, showing the camouflaged eye, tiny nostrils, and absurdly small beak-hook: http://i14.tinypic.com/61w9qmw.jpg As these clips show, the obstruction reacts to being placed in the comfort of shallow water like Eddie Merckx being placed on a trainer: http://video.tinypic.com/player.php?v=4qyfr6x http://video.tinypic.com/player.php?v=4uvpjex The obstruction is ten inches wide at the hips, fond of crayfish, and now living the large pond filling an abandoned gravel pit. Cheers, Carl Fogel |
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#66 |
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On Mon, 16 Jul 2007 20:15:27 -0700, carlfogel@comcast.net wrote:
[snip] The lone spectator at the daily Tour de Pueblo seems unimpressed moments after I swerved around it: http://i12.tinypic.com/53r9nv9.jpg Moments after the next picture, the spectator leapt over the seated photographer's right leg, leaving liquid evidence of what frightened amphibians do to reduce non-rotating weight: http://i16.tinypic.com/4ujthn8.jpg Earlier on the weekend, this familiar obstruction lay motionless in the brush, exercising its first line of defense and hoping that its feeble imitation of a hognose snake would let it escape my notice: http://i9.tinypic.com/6gtbg5s.jpg Its reluctance to wriggle away let me walk around it, take off my gloves, and grab its tail, about four feet from the head. It switched to its second line of defense, hissing and striking and vibrating its tail in my hand in a furious imitation of a rattlesnake: http://i17.tinypic.com/5yvdi6v.jpg It calmed down after I trapped its head gently under one shoe, grabbed it by the neck with my other hand, and gave it something to coil around: http://i16.tinypic.com/6cptwef.jpg Having posed, it was released and fell back on its third set of tactics, slithering off under the nearest juniper: http://i16.tinypic.com/5yhlzqe.jpg Cheers, Carl Fogel |
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#67 |
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On Mon, 16 Jul 2007 20:15:27 -0700, carlfogel@comcast.net wrote:
[snip] Next to the road today, a red-tailed obstruction was perched on one of the stern signs posted to keep terrorists off the dam at the Pueblo Reservoir: http://i10.tinypic.com/4t903tv.jpg The foothills rising to the left turn into Pikes Peak. The obstruction let me approach with my head down, so the next picture looking upward while sitting next to the road includes some of the roadside weeds: http://i16.tinypic.com/6azj37s.jpg When I crept closer, a sunflower crept into the frame: http://i19.tinypic.com/5xxzdlc.jpg Alas, an even closer shot auto-focussed on the damned weeds, with the sunflower up in one corner: http://i18.tinypic.com/5z5c506.jpg Here's one of the items on the obstruction's menu, a checkered whiptail: http://i15.tinypic.com/4l5bo8k.jpg Whiptails skitter off the bike path so fast that it's hard to get a picture of them. Cheers, Carl Fogel |
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#68 |
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On Mon, 16 Jul 2007 20:15:27 -0700, carlfogel@comcast.net wrote:
[snip] The daily 10% chance of afternoon or evening thunderstorms caught and soaked me on the bike path. It also caught Lord Nelson, below, who I hope will serve as breeder stock for the toad herd at Fogel Labs: http://i11.tinypic.com/4l60yms.jpg Why he was sitting on the bike path in the rain with his left hand missing is a mystery. Unlike Hardy, I declined to kiss him; unlike his namesake, he lost his left arm, not his right; and unlike Trafalgar, it all ended happily, with him released in the garden, where his missing limb will be a minor nuisance. Should Lady Hamilton find his honorable wound irresistible (she lives in the corner by the car-port), the back yard may soon swarm with tiny Horatias. Cheers, Carl Fogel |
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#69 |
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On Wed, 15 Aug 2007 21:12:50 -0600, carlfogel@comcast.net wrote:
>On Mon, 16 Jul 2007 20:15:27 -0700, carlfogel@comcast.net wrote: > >[snip] > >The daily 10% chance of afternoon or evening thunderstorms caught and >soaked me on the bike path. > >It also caught Lord Nelson, below, who I hope will serve as breeder >stock for the toad herd at Fogel Labs: > >http://i11.tinypic.com/4l60yms.jpg > >Why he was sitting on the bike path in the rain with his left hand >missing is a mystery. > >Unlike Hardy, I declined to kiss him; unlike his namesake, he lost his >left arm, not his right; and unlike Trafalgar, it all ended happily, >with him released in the garden, where his missing limb will be a >minor nuisance. > >Should Lady Hamilton find his honorable wound irresistible (she lives >in the corner by the car-port), the back yard may soon swarm with tiny >Horatias. > >Cheers, > >Carl Fogel By coincidence, today's obstruction is a distant relative of Lord Nelson, judging by his missing two legs. Luckily, he can afford to lose two legs more easily than most creatures, and eventually crept off the highway into the grass. Here's a view from the bottom, after a wind gust upended him: http://i17.tinypic.com/4ka9q1z.jpg A more normal view from the top: http://i12.tinypic.com/61tgsaw.jpg For anyone wondering if the obstruction's eight-armed mother was involved in a sordid affair with a ten-armed squid, the two small "legs" in the front are not really legs--those are a tarantula's impressive pedipalps. Cheers, Carl Fogel |
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#70 |
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On Mon, 16 Jul 2007 20:15:27 -0700, carlfogel@comcast.net wrote:
[snip] This evening, I was toiling up the road next to the dam at the Pueblo Reservoir about an hour before sunset with no traffic. Half-way to the top of the dam, a large, dark butterfly began pacing me, flying next to me on the other side of the center stripe, a foot or two higher than my head. It was quite large for a butterfly, its flight was a bit heavier than a butterfly's normal airy fluttering, and it was rather dark for a butterfly. After a few moments, I realized that this obstruction was no butterfly and that I hadn't the ghost of a chance of stopping, getting my camera out, and taking a picture. So I just kept pedalling up the road and enjoyed the show until the slowly fluttering predator crossed in front of me, flapped up the slope of the dam, and disappeared into the setting sun. Here's what it looks like when it poses for other people: http://www.azgfd.gov/w_c/edits/images/pipihesp.jpg It looks much darker when it flies because its bare wings are black and much bigger than the blondish body when unfolded. My neck of the woods is the extreme northern edge of the range of Pipistrellus hesperus. It's fond of dams, probably because the shoreline provides a belt of tasty insects, and often flies before dusk. Years ago, I trotted back and forth along the flagstone-lined bank of a much smaller dam, up in the mountains at San Isabel, chasing the same creature. That I could keep up with it on foot tells you just how slowly it flies. That one grew tired and landed several times on the rocks and even let me gently poke at its incredibly tiny hind claws with a twig before it flew off again. Cheers, Carl Fogel |
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#71 |
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On Mon, 16 Jul 2007 20:15:27 -0700, carlfogel@comcast.net wrote:
Someone forgot to clean the course after the hail hit the cottonwoods yesterday, which left the normally bare path up the Arkansas River looking like a feeble wooden imitation of Paris-Roubaix, with branches and inch-thick chunks of bark hiding amidst the leaves: http://i14.tinypic.com/4qsre6s.jpg http://i13.tinypic.com/5yj9w6c.jpg http://i17.tinypic.com/4l62f5s.jpg Maybe the fellows who sweep the route of the Tour de France are idle and willing to work cheap? Cheers, Carl Fogel |
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#72 |
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On Mon, 16 Jul 2007 20:15:27 -0700, carlfogel@comcast.net wrote:
[snip] Only a panic-stricken bunny-hop saved today's obstruction. I wasn't paying enough attention on a cloudy afternoon and mistook it for a branch or some other debris left on the bike path by a recent hailstorm. Cursing the four-foot-long obstruction for lying limp and still across the bike path in hopes of not being seen, I stopped and went back to see if I'd managed to avoid killing it. By the time I got my camera out, it had curled up a bit: http://i11.tinypic.com/4yi2ssm.jpg Honest, it was a lot harder to see when I was coming the other way at about 20 mph. While I swatted mosquitoes and looked for a branch to pin its head, the obstruction curled up more: http://i5.tinypic.com/4z09fcz.jpg I shooed it off the path, where its camouflage makes more sense: http://i15.tinypic.com/4vrd340.jpg Then I pinned it, grabbed it by the neck, and practiced my one-handed photography, but the obstruction was so long that the coils on my elbow and upper arm are completely out of the frame: http://i5.tinypic.com/4xm8eis.jpg And here's the stupid obstruction, off the path and showing that its camouflage works fine against a natural background: http://i9.tinypic.com/61mwqjs.jpg I wish they'd lie length-wise down the path instead of draping themselves across it at right angles. Cheers, Carl Fogel |
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#73 |
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In article <2svmd3l4aooec0944poqtqlenfp2i5rka2@4ax.com>,
<carlfogel@comcast.net> wrote: > Then I pinned it, grabbed it by the neck, and practiced my one-handed > photography, but the obstruction was so long that the coils on my > elbow and upper arm are completely out of the frame: > > http://i5.tinypic.com/4xm8eis.jpg Lotsa questions. Pin it with what? How did you get close enough without the snake striking to immobilize it? There's no rattle, what kind of snake is this? |
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#74 |
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On Mon, 03 Sep 2007 02:22:01 -0400, Luke <lucasiragusa@rogers.com>
wrote: >In article <2svmd3l4aooec0944poqtqlenfp2i5rka2@4ax.com>, ><carlfogel@comcast.net> wrote: > >> Then I pinned it, grabbed it by the neck, and practiced my one-handed >> photography, but the obstruction was so long that the coils on my >> elbow and upper arm are completely out of the frame: >> >> http://i5.tinypic.com/4xm8eis.jpg > > >Lotsa questions. Pin it with what? How did you get close enough without >the snake striking to immobilize it? There's no rattle, what kind of >snake is this? Dear Luke, With a little experience, the snakes around here are fairly easy to catch. This one is a harmless bullsnake, a common sight east of the Rockies, often mistaken for a rattler. I pinned this one with the branch that I mentioned looking for, about two feet long. Like most snakes, bullsnakes don't strike at a branch. They're not terribly bright, but they're smart enough not to attack wooden sticks. You prod and push, the bullsnake tends to curve around the stick, you press the neck gently against the ground, and then you grab the snake, just behind the stick. The larger the snake, the easier you can grab it behind the head. Small snakes are much trickier. Even a short length of free neck may let a small snake turn enough to bite you. I grabbed this bullsnake because it's fun to catch them, because I hope that it scares them enough to stay the hell off the path, and because I had to check it to make sure that my careless bunny-hop had been successful. Fortunately, it was unhurt, so I was able to let it go instead of putting it out of its misery. Alas, I've never interrupted a snake in the middle of a meal. A few days ago, a friend sent me this picture of a garter snake having lunch with a field mouse: http://i8.tinypic.com/4m1zaco.jpg He and his wife happened on the scene while hiking. The bullsnake that I grabbed today does the same thing with the ground squirrels that run back and forth across the bike path. Cheersssss, Carl Fogel |
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#75 |
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On Mon, 16 Jul 2007 20:15:27 -0700, carlfogel@comcast.net wrote:
[snip] This obstruction had the grace to lie in plain sight on a sunny evening and waited while I stopped, walked back, and took a picture: http://i9.tinypic.com/4yj6hlg.jpg It's a good example of just how limp a motionless bullsnake lies when hoping not to be noticed. I put the camera down and grabbed the bullsnake by the tail, which it vibrated in imitation of a rattlesnake, but I had a fearful time avoiding its outraged attempts to bite me with its gaping jaws because its head was only about the size of my little finger. Small snakes are harder to grab. Eventually I won, practiced my one-handed photography, and let it slither off into the weeds, hopefully never to bask on the bike path again. Regrettably, my one-handed photography skills need work, since I cut the head off the bullsnake in both pictures: http://i17.tinypic.com/6g1p828.jpg http://i19.tinypic.com/5zmktiw.jpg A magpie was probably what tried to cut the head off this poor devil, posing next to an 18-inch ruler: http://i3.tinypic.com/5yb74fq.jpg It was a full-grown two-foot smooth green snake, somewhat rare in Colorado. I saw it lying in the gutter close enough to home that I went back and picked it up while walking my dog. In my neighborhood, uneaten snakes with neck wounds like this are usually the work of the magpies that are slowly returning after West Nile virus wiped them out a few years ago. Mapgies are charming birds in many ways, but they kill any snake near their nests, usually without bothering to eat their victims, even though the local snakes neither climb trees nor eat eggs--I've seen magpies kill garter snakes in my back yard, leave the corpses on the walk, and flap back up to their nests. Cheers, Carl Fogel |
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