IF they don't rattle it is a King Cobra !!
I guess every country has this "variety". It's hard to imagine politics without it.You do have the variety known as politicians.![]()
We had a very large king snake which lived under the porch of the house we lived in, between Juliaetta and Kendrick. He made himself known one day when he slithered across the back of my sunbathing wife. We had known each other for a half dozen years and been married for two, and I never knew she could levitate!There are some 26 species of Kingsnakes in the US (genus Lampropeltis) in a variety of sizes and colors. Several are referred to locally, especially in the Eastern US, as Milk Snakes, and are often colorfully patterned like Coral Snakes.
Kingsnakes often prey on other snakes, and out West the large, dark-colored California Kingsnake is particularly fond of rattlesnakes, so I leave them alone.
Decades ago I lived on a friend's small 2.5 acre "ranchette" in Washoe Valley, NV, raising goats and rabbits. One day his young daughter carried into the house a cute little wormlike baby snake she had caught, which turned out to be a just-born rattlesnake. That triggered a fire drill but by then the snakes were out of the den, so nothing to do but shrug it off as country life.
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I'll bet you had skunks, though. That Potlatch River road always had scent hanging over it.It was an old farmhouse, yet we had no mice, no rats, and no rattlers. WH
No. My last name is Leeper, I just use the first two on here. WH (L)Will, I had a teacher at Lewiston HS named Jay Henry. Any relation?
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Thanks, because my next question was to be "Any relation to John Henry? You know, the chap with the hammer."No. My last name is Leeper, I just use the first two on here. WH (L)
All around, stream on property, a couple of ponds and a lot of marsh across the road from me,It looks like a typical water snake found here in Pa. They can
be aggressive but harmless. Any wet lands nearby ??