One of my previous blogs focuses on some rattlesnakes that I have encountered while doing geologic field work in southern California. This present blog focuses, however, on two non-venomous snakes that I encountered while I was walking along a little-used dirt road in Towsley Canyon, just south of Santa Clarita, in northern Los Angeles County, southern California.
The first of the two species I encountered is the:
California King Snake
Family Colubridae
Genus Lampropeltis
Species californiae
I encountered this snake while it was on the dirt road. The snake was inert for awhile, but before I could get a measurement as to its length, the snake quickly sped off into the weeds. Typically, king snakes are 2.5 to 3.5 feet long. Their coloration is variable, ranging from black and white to black and yellow.
On the same day, later in the afternoon while hiking on the same road (in the same general area of the previous snake I saw), I came across a "Pacific Gopher Snake:"
Pacific Gopher Snake
Family Colubridae
Genus Pituophis
Species P. catenifer
Subspecies catenifer
This kind of snake is active during the day, thus it is one of the most commonly seen snakes.
The first photo shows the head and the typical two to three rows of spots on the sides of this gopher snake.
The second photo shows how its body can be “kinked.”
The third photo was taken just before the snake (now "unkinked") turned around and “took off” like a “rocket” for the nearby weeds. Just before it did, however, I was able to get a measurement of its length (about 90 cm) by placing, parallel to the snake, my "Jacob Staff" (= a common tool used by field geologists for measuring the thickness of rock layers; each red or white segment is 10 cm long). The Jacob Staff is also a great hiking “stick.” The head of the snake, which is on the left side of the photo, is obscured by rocks in the road. The posterior of the snake is obscured by vegetation on the side of the road.
You never know what you might see when being in the field: that is one the alluring aspects of doing field work. By the way, I encountered both snakes near dwellings along a small stream. It is apparent that wherever a human builds a structure (especially near a stream), rodents will eventually find it to be good place to live. And, of course, snakes eat rodents.