Are you seeing more snakes? I don't mean those little brownish-green garter snakes. We're talking big, honkin' five-footers. Black and thick through the middle. Here's someone who's seen 'em:
"Three people (and three is a trend!), neighbors and friends, have mentioned to me in the past few days they they've seen more snakes this year. Not just the garden variety garter snakes, but big (5 feet or more) and thick phobia-inducing snakes. A week or so ago there were two big ones in the trees just over the fence at Meadowbrook pool. Apparently they were attracting quite a crowd. Another friend has seen two in the past week at Druid Hill park. They seem to be popping up in more populated areas. Anyway, I thought it might be an interesting story if indeed there are more for some reason this year and if we should fear for our pets and children (as my irrational neighbor tends to believe)."
Well, it seems these folks are not crazy. Ray Bosmans, a professor emeritus of horticulture at the University of Maryland College Park and afficionado of turtles, snakes and other creepy woodland reptiles, says these are likely black rat snakes.
Eastern garter snakes are more typically 20 to 24 inches long, with three yellow or light-colored lines down their bodies. The only thing close to the black rat snake in these parts is the Eastern king snake - black with a yellow chain pattern on its back, but it's not common in the suburbs.
Rat snakes have become part of suburbia. "More and more are showing up in suburban areas," Bosmans told me. There are plenty of rats and mice to sustain them, and "people don't kill snakes the way they used to, which is good."
What's really good about them, aside from keeping down the rodent population, is that black rat snakes are not venomous. While they may bite in self-defense if picked up and handled, the bite won't do much damage. You can avoid the issue entirely by simply leaving them alone.
It's interesting that these people have spotted them in pairs, or groups. "June is mating season for most snakes," Bosmans said. "The females make a scent, and the males often follow them." The female will soon lay her eggs, typically in a mulch pile, compost, or in a hollow log. There may be anywhere from 12 to 40 of them, and they'd incubate in the warmth of summer, hatching in September or October. They hatch gray, with rectangular markings.
Most of the young won't survive. Dehydration, rodents, cars or hawks will get them. Those that do survive will grow to be five feet long, sometimes as big as 6 or 7 feet. They're black as adults, with white undersides.
Mild winters like the last one mean more snakes will survive to mate and reproduce. But that's a good thing, Bosmans insists. "If people see a snake, it's a good sign. A lot of reptiles is ... a sign of a clean environment."
That means turtles, too. Box turtles and snappers are on the move and laying their eggs at this time of year. "Leave them alone," he urges. "Nature will take care of the eggs. If you see [a turtle] on the road, and you can stop safely, move it off the road in the direction it was moving."
He also invites readers to visit his website. Ray is president of the Mid-Atlantic Turtle and Tortoise Society.