Journey To A Timber Rattlesnake Den

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 9 фев 2025
  • Timber rattlesnakes are threatened through much of their range. While these venomous snakes are dangerous if they bite you, they are not aggressive. Their den sites are very important for the health of their populations, as they are used annually, and as birthing sites for their live young. When we find one, we keep it's location a closely guarded secret. On this journey, Michael and Matt set out to visit a known timber rattlesnake den, and end up discovering a new one they had no idea was there! The den contained at least 20 individuals that they could see, possibly more hidden in the rocks. This can make exploring them a bit risky if you step too closely to one unseen under a rock. But they did their best to get their cameras in close so you can get an intimate look at what one of these den sites looks like, and some close up footage of the residents. Perhaps, if we are lucky, they wil visit it again in the fall to see the snakes as they are giving live birth to their young!
    #rattlesnakes #herping #wildlife

Комментарии • 24

  • @jacobspencer7
    @jacobspencer7 3 месяца назад +1

    Man alive so cool!! Timbers are soooo awesome!!!

    • @SharingTheOutdoors
      @SharingTheOutdoors  3 месяца назад

      @@jacobspencer7 we’re still trying to organize a trip back to see if there are young this fall, but if we can’t find time, no harm done. Less disturbance of this den is better

  • @willieeversole390
    @willieeversole390 7 месяцев назад +1

    Cool video

  • @DOUBLEO_ObsessionOutdoors
    @DOUBLEO_ObsessionOutdoors 6 месяцев назад +1

    awesome!! cant agree more about finding snakes under natural cover VS artificial and on top of that the mountains just have a whole different atmosphere thats so much more addictive than coastal herping to me! Matt, remember the spot i pinned for you to check out for smooth greens/mountain earths? if you take that clear cut all the way down towards the river (about 3 miles) there are 3 separate areas towards the end that have 10-15 rattlers everytime we go! check it out next time you go! looking forward to the next vid!

    • @SharingTheOutdoors
      @SharingTheOutdoors  6 месяцев назад

      @@DOUBLEO_ObsessionOutdoors natural habitat is so much better. Having to provide a/c to be able to find good numbers is a testament to degraded habitat

    • @DOUBLEO_ObsessionOutdoors
      @DOUBLEO_ObsessionOutdoors 6 месяцев назад +1

      @SharingTheOutdoors i agree for sure aside from certain species (especially fossorials) that thrive in areas that don't realy have much to flip, then your only option to find them is to place cover unless you just get suuuuuper lucky and happen to see one out on the crawl

  • @bobseldestagain
    @bobseldestagain 7 месяцев назад +1

    I grew up picking up ringneck snakes out in Baltimore County. In fact, when my 9th grade biology teacher started a unit on reptiles and other non-mammals, I took a ringneck to class, carrying it in my shirt pocket! Not joking! When I finished my degree in Biology with secondary ed minor, I got my first teaching job at that same school. And my science teacher has become department chair!!!

    • @SharingTheOutdoors
      @SharingTheOutdoors  7 месяцев назад

      That's awesome! Kind of like a welcome back Kotter moment. Taking a ringneck to school was way more cool than Vinnie Barbarino though! Thanks for watching!

  • @smetlogik
    @smetlogik 7 месяцев назад +1

    "Deforestation at its finest" 🤣 Good to see a healthy timber den like that.

  • @steveashworth6707
    @steveashworth6707 7 месяцев назад +1

    Here in Southern Ohio we dont have many left, researchers have put chips in a few and they come back several times a year to check on them. People have spotted some a little farther north and east and it makes you wonder if they are actually coming back a little!. But some kill them off for no reason even when its illegal. I feel like everything has a purpose!.

    • @SharingTheOutdoors
      @SharingTheOutdoors  7 месяцев назад

      @@steveashworth6707 they do have a purpose for sure. They pit tag them in Maryland as well. While we won’t go to a den we’ve found often, folks sometimes tell us we will cause the snakes to leave if we disturb them. But if capture, surgical tagging and monitoring doesn’t, I don’t think a passing encounter once or twice a year would. As far as population status goes, I think education efforts are starting to make people realize they don’t have to kill every snake they see. We are seeing more rattlers and copperheads now too.

  • @bkbowhunter1
    @bkbowhunter1 7 месяцев назад +1

    😳😳😳 i look for snakes when I’m in the woods but NOT like that 😂😂

    • @SharingTheOutdoors
      @SharingTheOutdoors  7 месяцев назад +1

      LOL Gotta keep your eyes open, that’s for sure!

  • @thomass.johnson8324
    @thomass.johnson8324 7 месяцев назад +1

    First of all, I wouldn't be sitting not knowing that you would have found that meant that many rattlesnakes in that relatively small area and find you sitting in the amongst them. That's not a smart move guys

    • @SharingTheOutdoors
      @SharingTheOutdoors  7 месяцев назад

      Situational awareness is quite necessary in these areas

  • @Kurtdog63
    @Kurtdog63 7 месяцев назад +2

    My friend only kills poisonous snakes. He has never seen one that wasn't poisonous.

    • @SharingTheOutdoors
      @SharingTheOutdoors  7 месяцев назад +3

      I liked your comment, but not really the content. I know what you mean though, I’m on a Facebook snake ID page, and every snake someone finds they think it’s a copperhead. Such a shame. Snakes, even venomous ones, serve a vital role in the ecosystem

    • @hit47n
      @hit47n 7 месяцев назад

      Your friend doesn’t understand the role snakes play on this planet. Even flies serve a purpose. Much more than I can say for a lot of human beings.

    • @Kurtdog63
      @Kurtdog63 7 месяцев назад

      @@hit47n I don’t either

    • @hit47n
      @hit47n 7 месяцев назад

      @@Kurtdog63 yep

  • @tomatkinson6996
    @tomatkinson6996 7 месяцев назад +1

    The more you continually check these hibernaculums the more the snakes are being pushed out to other den locals. Timbers are NOT like Copperhead den areas where they can live in close proximity to man. Spent many years secretly wondering the woods and the rest with my dear late friend "Marty" Martin, he was known as the "godfather" of Timber Rattlesnakes

    • @SharingTheOutdoors
      @SharingTheOutdoors  7 месяцев назад

      Which is exactly why we stated in the caption that we keep these locations a closely guarded secret and visit them infrequently