The other thing materializing that is a sure sign of spring are the Eastern Fox Snakes.
They've thawed-out, emerged from their dens and have taken to sunning themselves at every opportunity.
Allow me to introduce you to Pantherophis vulpina – the Eastern Fox Snake. This is a valuable animal to have around your yard as they dine principally upon rodents. If you are a gardener they are your ally. Belonging to the family of snakes that are constrictors - upon seizing their prey they coil around it to suffocate the animal. After which they swallow it whole. Their lower jaw is unhinged allowing this critter to swallow a rodent or bird five times the diameter of their head. Yum!
This snake has many large reddish-brown, chocolate brown or black mid-dorsal blotches along its back and other smaller blotches on its sides on a background color of yellow, tan or olive-gray. The head of adults is usually a dark copper, rust or orange color. They live in a variety of open habitats including marshes, sedge meadows, prairies and old fields.
Their diet consists primarily of rodents and ground-nesting birds. Young fox snakes will occasionally eat amphibians. This species is the most frequently encountered snake in people's homes, especially if the house has an old rock foundation where the snake(s) may be hunting for food or hibernating in the basement. The fox snake is often mistaken for the venomous copperhead due to its head color and subsequently is often killed.
Copperheads do not live in or near Wisconsin. Fox snakes are also often mistaken for rattlesnakes, as they often "rattle" their tails in dry leaves, grasses or against objects when disturbed. Their pointed tail distinguishes them (and all other Wisconsin snakes with pointed tails) as a non-venomous species in Wisconsin.
Doggo is still trying to figure out if they are friend or foe....
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