*Good* snake

26 06 2025

A warning if you’re squeamish about snakes: Pix below. Very good snakes, these (Colorado Parks and Wildlife info says they’re an “invaluable species to have around homes and in gardens” for rodent control (and, some say, for rattlesnake deterrence, though I have no experience to back this up, and some experience to negate it)), but still, if you’re looking for a pic of a mustang this morning, a scaly slitherer might be a bit of a shock. …

Ready?

Here we go:

This is (I think) a bullsnake (one word, says Colorado Parks and Wildlife), found very close to sunset, very close to the basin’s western fenced boundary above the rimrock. I was following a band of mustangs toward lower ground when I caught sight of the movement of this little guy or gal, far enough away from my path through the shadscale, sage and bunchgrasses that my world-renowned (or maybe that’s just me) ability to levitate did NOT engage.

Actually, though, according to Colorado Parks and Wildlife: “While all snakes of this species are called bullsnakes in Colorado, they are actually subspecies of gophersnake. There are two species of gophersnake in Colorado: the Pituophis catenifer sayi, or bullsnake, and the Pituophis catenifer deserticola, or Great Basin gophersnake. The bullsnake is mostly found on the eastern plains of Colorado and the Great Basin gophersnake is on the western slope, but they do intermix in southern central Colorado, especially in the San Luis Valley.”

So technically, according to the above, what we have here is a Great Basin gophersnake. (Again, I think; my pix of my little friend don’t look exactly like the pic on the CPW website.)

Is it just me, or is there a smiley face on top of this critter’s head?

S/he was completely uninterested in either me or the mustangs, and we went our separate ways with respect and appreciation (at least on my side).





Subtle slither

11 07 2024

As I was following a couple of bands as they grazed their way through a grove of pinon-juniper trees on their way to an open area, I caught sight of this bull snake, slithering into the safety of a hollow trunk.

Maybe it didn’t like the activity, or maybe it was searching for a place of coolness on a hot day. Maybe it had its own snakey priorities in mind. … Just a little reminder that as we follow the obvious, littler critters are following their own, slightly more subtle lives in Spring Creek Basin.