For hognoses, the males tail is fairly long. The females tail is very short.
I know a lot about a little, and a little about a lot.
I can remember seeing a sidewinder rattlesnake in the 60's in Shackelford County. I chased and caught numerous mountain boomers all over the Big Country, but I haven't seen one in years.Quote:
I miss the Big Country sometimes. Worked at the Abilene Zoo for 6 years. But, love East Tenn. far more. No hot temps. Reptile-wise - it's not quite West Texas.
I have seen many massasauga rattlesnakes. They are mean little aggressive snakes.12f Mane said:
No sidewinders in Texas but I'm guessing you found a massasauga, which is a very cool species.
zooguy96 said:
For hognoses, the males tail is fairly long. The females tail is very short.
Burdizzo said:zooguy96 said:
For hognoses, the males tail is fairly long. The females tail is very short.
Every snake looks all tail to me.
Deerdude said:
I don't notice it but my wife swears she has metallic taste in her mouth for several days after she gets a scorpion sting.
I was stung by a scorpion recently while handling some shredded mulch. I had almost instant throbbing pain. It hurt for days, until I discovered and removed the tip of the stinger which was still embedded in my finger. The tip, under a 30 power magnification, was really wicked looking with the numerous serrations along one side.watty said:
Interesting. After reading about the tarantula hawk, I'm thinking that wasn't it, as the Internet says that pain subsides after a few minutes.
Maybe some different type of scorpion than I've ever been stung by before? Previous scorpion stings I've encountered barely bothered me. But I know there are different types.