Is that a hognose?
Is that a hognose?
Yes it is a hognose. If the "I'm a big, dangerous venomous snake!" ruse doesn't work, it will writhe around for a few seconds and turn on its back with its tongue hanging out. It will be as limp as a rope if you pick it up. If you set it down on its stomach, it will turn over on its back again. Apparently its limited programming says that all dead snakes must be on their backs.
Those are Copperheads pictured. The DNR info on the Cotton Mouth is correct. Contrary to popular opinion, they are only found in one county in Indiana. Most people see a water snake and assume it is a water moccasin.
I see it all the time. At our local swimming hole I had a family rush their kids out of the water when a "water moccasin" swam by. Being way up north here, I tried to convince them that we were FAR out of range, but all they did was pull up a pic on their phone and insist it looked just like that. Didn't bother to check a range map or do any research or trust me, who actually works there every day.I don't see how anyone could confuse a famously thick bodied snake like a moc/mouth with almost any other NA snake. The only snakes at heavy are outside the US and look nothing like cottonmouths.
And if you have to be bitten by one, you would MUCH rather be bitten by a copperhead than a cottonmouth.
Up here we primarily have the Northern Water Snake. They don't get very big or heavy bodied, but down south in GA, they pretty much have a 12 month growing season and numerous species. There are plenty of harmless water snakes that are as heavy bodied as a Mocassin. Unless you really know the difference, they are very similar, by design.I don't see how anyone could confuse a famously thick bodied snake like a moc/mouth with almost any other NA snake. The only snakes at heavy are outside the US and look nothing like cottonmouths.
And if you have to be bitten by one, you would MUCH rather be bitten by a copperhead than a cottonmouth.
I don't know snakes. I have seen snakes in Indiana. Snakes are why my wife will no longer Geocache with me. One was sunning itself ~6' up in a tree near a cache. We stopped and looked at it. It didn't like us looking at it. It jumped at us with it's mouth wide open & scared the crap out of her.
I found this website that shows Indiana snakes. It was all black, pointy nose, lighter underbelly, no stripes. The racer is the only think that looks close but this site says it's not around central IN.
https://owlcation.com/stem/How-to-Identify-the-Snakes-of-Indiana
I don't see how anyone could confuse a famously thick bodied snake like a moc/mouth with almost any other NA snake. The only snakes at heavy are outside the US and look nothing like cottonmouths.
And if you have to be bitten by one, you would MUCH rather be bitten by a copperhead than a cottonmouth.
Up here we primarily have the Northern Water Snake. They don't get very big or heavy bodied, but down south in GA, they pretty much have a 12 month growing season and numerous species. There are plenty of harmless water snakes that are as heavy bodied as a Mocassin. Unless you really know the difference, they are very similar, by design.
I believe you did. Most of the milk snakes I spied were banded like coral snakes then the eastern milk showed up and bingo.I'm guessing albino eastern milk snake.
Did I win?
Looks like a water snake of the genus Nerodia with some duckweed or Wolffia on its back. From the size, probably her.http://i647.photobucket.com/albums/...1459679_2965646029937967104_o_zpsemiinhud.jpg
View attachment 77890
Found this fellow on Pop's dock. Later it was him and three of his pals.
Looks like a water snake of the genus*Nerodia*with some duckweed or*Wolffia*on its back. From the size, probably her.