Found this little fella under my hose. Don't know what he is yet, covered him back up so I know where he is until I can identify him. SW TX
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Found this little fella under my hose. Don't know what he is yet, covered him back up so I know where he is until I can identify him. SW TX

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Can anyone tell me what morph my new dog is?
This local snake identification group is the only reason I check Facebook anymore
Transcript
The adage people use for identifying venomous coral snakes is "Red touching yellow: Kills a fellow"
For harmless kingsnakes it's "Red touching black: Safe for Jack"
If you think you've encountered a Quentin Tarantino film remember "Close ups of feet: You must yeet"
Source
I found this little fella on the street outside my house, sadly appearing to have had their neck crushed by a bike. I've been having trouble identifying them- my environmental sciences teacher thinks it's a corn s.nake, but it doesn't look like any I've seen- maybe it's a juvenile and thus has different colours?

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Found this lovely baby Eastern Black Ratsnake in our swimming pool. The pattern throws you off but it has been identified by the Virginia reptile experts just to make sure.
The first thing I try to look at is the head shape (nice soft oval vs a triangular = venomous) then the eye (nice round vs a slit = venomous snake). Regardless, I do not kill any snakes! They are so beneficial, part of the cycle of nature.
Just goes to show you how easily snakes can be misidentified. I quizzed my friends and the snakes they thought it was: Gardner, Corn, Bull, Ribbon, Water, Copperhead. NOPE.
Found this little dude in my dresser.
He was a chill dude, let me take him outside with a pair of tongs.
Is he just a garden snake? Out here in Oklahoma?
A more legible version of my RYB infograph on identifying coral snakes.
www.wsed.org