Poor critter! Clearly he wasn't a Plumber's Snake!
Found this in our pool pump.. was curious as to what type of snake it was. (SoCal)
Poor critter! Clearly he wasn't a Plumber's Snake!
Carl
EEWWWWW! Will make me look carefully before I open my pump basket!
I have little kiddies.. imagine if they had saw that swimming amongst them when it decided to drop in. lol.
Looks like a "racer". Google "snake identification in California" and you will find site that will walk you through the identification process. Depends on where you are. As long as it doesn't have a rattle . . . We killed every snake we encountered until we figured out which ones were dangerous and which were beneficial.
In-ground gunite 16 x 30 13,000 gal. Full screen enclosure. 120 sq ft. Filter cartridge, 1-1/2 HP pump. Master Pools In-floor cleaner. Taylor K-2006.
King snakes aren't venomous, and eat other snakes ( including venomous ones), as well as rats and other vermin.
Carl
I was also thinking a King snake. I'm more familiar with the local species here in VA. I can tell you that one is non-venomous. All venomous species in the US have triangular heads except for the coral snake, which looks very different from that one. Also, I don't think coral snakes are native to CA.
Edit: took a quick look online, not a King snake. Looks like a racer as mentioned in the earlier post or a juvenile rat snake.
22'x40' Grecian Lazy L 20K gal IG vinyl pool; Aqua Rite SWCG T15 cell; Hayward Pro Grid 6020 DE filter; Hayward Superpump 1hp pump; 12 hrs; Taylor K-2006; city; PF:6
Hey, Jim. Hijacking here. No need to be specific, but in what part of VA do you live? I am SO a fan of VA!
Last edited by FormerBromineUser; 09-13-2014 at 12:21 AM. Reason: Added fandom :-)
I didn't mean to imply it was a king snake, only that king snakes are beneficial, not pests.
Carl
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