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just kidding, I really can not tell from this picture. IT could be a pine but It could be a young one but Pines tend to have bigger heads.. more gurthier.
At first I thought it was a rat snake But I can not tell from these pictures. Heck, if this snake was in my hands, i could tell you right off the bat.
He says it's six feet long. If I could handle it, I could tell too. Coachwhips are smooth, pines are keeled. He assures me it doesn't want him to pet it. I told him it was bluffing- that's what pines do! The coachwhip would just bite the *&^% out of him.
Well, the coachwhip has 17 dorsal scale rows at mid-body, and the pine has 29. I think I can count eight in the pictures, on one half. Maybe he's a coachwhip.
Coachwhip, if I had to say... I have seen coachwhips without dark colored heads, and that appears to be what it is... But like you said coachwhips tend to be aggressive and bite the #$@$ of of you.....
I am fairly certain it is an Eastern Coachwhip. If it is a pine snake you better pick it up as that is one of the nicest patternless animals I have ever seen and the Pitouphis gurus would love you for it!
I don't know. He was just out in my friend's yard- he didn't catch him or anything, just took pics while he was there. Thankfully, he didn't choose a snake-hater to move in with. The snake, if he's now living there in the yard.
While I was working on the turtle enclosure and not riding my bike with the bike club, they saw a CORN SNAKE while riding. Sure would like to see one of those, too!!
Neat-O! It's really beautiful! I would totally want it on my porch, and I would grab it and get the &^@$ bitten out of me. But I wouldn't care; I'd have to hold it. I LOVE the way its scales look!