vgabndo
Ultra Nomad
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Location: Mt. Shasta, CA
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Mood: Checking-off my bucket list.
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It's great fun to watch this guy do his trick.
Can you name this guy? The locals call him Coralito, but that is a misnomer. A beautiful little animal, and trippy to watch in his natural habitat.
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gringorio
Senior Nomad
Posts: 812
Registered: 4-10-2004
Location: Tucson, Arizona
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Chilomeniscus
Hmmmm. Maybe genus Chilomeniscus? A sand snake but what species I don't know. It looks more like the C. savagei from Isla Cerralvo...
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Bob and Susan
Elite Nomad
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Location: Mulege BCS on the BAY
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For the rest of us simpletons....
Sand Snake?
http://www.toddshikingguide.com/FloraFauna/Fauna16.htm
ps
Snakes are creepy YUK
[Edited on 11-16-2004 by Bob and Susan]
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Bruce R Leech
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Striped sand snake?
Bruce R Leech
Ensenada
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vgabndo
Ultra Nomad
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Gringorio: You da man! Commonly Variable Sand Snake or Banded Sand Snake. I understand that several which were previously thought to be seperate
species have been joined together as:
Chilomenscus Stramineus.
In the silty sand of the San Nicolas arroyo they can move almost as fast just under the surface as they can on top. They are beautiful little
creatures, feared by some of the locals, confused with Coral Snakes.
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gringorio
Senior Nomad
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Location: Tucson, Arizona
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Cool! I remember seeing kids in Bahia de los Angeles play with one. They had caught it near the beach. Fearless, the kids were. Isn't there
something to the stripes disorienting predators as the snake burrows into the sand?
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JESSE
Ultra Nomad
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We call it coralillo over here.
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Mexray
Super Nomad
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Location: California Delta
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...Well....
I've heard of SAND SHARKS, now we also have SAND SNAKES...what's next, I suppose you're going to tell me there are also....SAND DOLLARS!...
...or SAND FLEAS,
...or SAND SCRIPT,
...or SAND ---------------------.
According to my clock...anytime is \'BAJA TIME\' & as Jimmy Buffett says,
\"It doesn\'t use numbers or moving hands It always just says now...\"
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David K
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Can you ID this snake?
This fellow was southeast of Mision San Borja near old Rancho San Gregorio. Someone ID'ed him for me when I first showed this photo on Amigos de Baja
a few years ago. Let's see if you snake-ologists give me the same answer!
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Debra
Super Nomad
Posts: 2101
Registered: 10-31-2002
Location: Port Orchard Wa./Bahia de Los Angeles BC
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Are those things poisonous?
Brendan (age 11) has decided he wants to catch one on our next trip to Bahia...
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Neal Johns
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Nope, not poisonous, well maybe if you eat too many.
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