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Im gonna say it looked much more like this as far as brightness.
Still cant confirm that those are the colors, I guess they could have been just seem plain jane compared to what I remember.
“There’s an inconsequentiality to our lives that living in the wilderness shows up. Mountain are real, they set their limits, they set ours. They expose us, make us vulnerable and strong at the same time. “ --Alison Wat
I was bitten in the ankle by a snake at the Morganville Falls when I was a teenager. The people with me at the time said it was a milk snake. All I remember about that snake was that it hurt and I ran. I think I must have stepped on it while climbing down the gorge.
Yuck, I was hoping for far fewer snake stories...I will often bang my tripod on the ground as I walk to help let the snakes know I am coming....I have been fortunate so far.
Cucumber Falls in Ohiopyle State Park is famous for copperheads.
Snakes are one reason I really enjoy winter photography.
Kyle, that's a beautiful kingsnake! Unless it was an escapee though, you wouldn't find it in NY. (Note the black bands adjacent to the red bands, thus the children's rhyme.)
That's not a milk snake? I googled milk snake and got that image and had a dozen+ more images that looked the same.
“There’s an inconsequentiality to our lives that living in the wilderness shows up. Mountain are real, they set their limits, they set ours. They expose us, make us vulnerable and strong at the same time. “ --Alison Wat
They are from the same genus, Lampropeltis. The snake in my photo, is an eastern milk snake. Your photo could well be a species of milk snake, but I don't think that it's one that is native to our area. When I see that snake, I automatically think king snake. Here's a good page: Lampropeltis