That's a damned fine pair of baby Coon Tails...........
The Western Diamond Rattlesnake is the largest, boldest and has the most potent venom of our southwestern desert rattlers. An average adult is around five and a half feet long with some records of over seven feet. It is the only local rattler that can swallow a full grown Cottontail Rabbit. Contrary to most other rattlers, this snake will hold it's ground and defend itself. Last fall we were out in my Jeep in the desert north of Yuma in a wash near Picacho Peak and I spotted a big one maybe five feet long out in the open exiting a Pack Rat heap under an Ironwood and heading fifty feet or so out in the open to another one. I stopped and got out with my snake stick just to mess with him/her a bit and instead of boot-scootin it stopped, coiled up and reared it's head up sixteen inches or so. It was buzzin it's fifteen or so rattles and slowly lashing it's black forked tongue at me. I slowly approached when it made a strike my way and came for me at high speed. I jumped back into the Jeep, backed up and the sucker kept on coming! My wife was screaming as I told her to chill since it couldn't possibly get up into the Jeep. Well, the bad-assed thing continued after us for another ten feet or so as we reversed before stopping and continuing it's quest for the next rat nest and potential big meal.
Last spring we were in the same area when I spotted a big adult male Desert Iguana on it's back out in the open writhing in a death fit with two puncture marks on his side. I took a little reconnoiter and spotted a baby Coon Tail in the shade of a Kangaroo Rat burrow nearby. A few hours later we stopped at the spot on the way home and the Iguana was gone along with a very well fed rattler. The biggest concentration of Western Diamond Backs that I have ever seen was maybe fifteen years ago at the shrimp farms west of Gila Bend off of Spot Road on I-8. A friend of mine was the manager of the operation and asked me if I wanted to see the harvesting in process. With thoughts of an ice box full of twenty or thirty pounds of fresh Peruvian Jumbo Blue Shrimp I said "why not!"
They had scraped up a bunch of rectangular ponds not far from the Gila River with dirt access roads along the tops of each pond. One corner of each pond had a deeper area so that when the pond was drained the shrimp became concentrated in a sort of water filled pit. They had special trucks with big, maybe 24" pipes with a screw inside that sucked up the shrimp and deposited them in four or five hundred gallon plastic bins. Once the bins were full to a certain level they topped them off with blown in shaved ice. Once full, the trucks split down to the border where they took them to El Golfo where they were processed and became a final product as a kilo block of "Mexican Wild Caught Fresh Shrimp" SCAM SCAM SCAM!! Anyway I did get my thirty pounds of fresh shrimp but I couldn't leave to head back home until four in the morning. So I got my flashlight and did a little hunting so as to see what kind of nocturnal critters were attracted to this totally unnatural obscene scene. There were of course hundreds of rodents, mostly Kangaroo Rats and Pocket Mice, a lot of Wood Rats and Cottontail Rabbits, Racoons and a lot of Great Blue Herons making a score on the rats as well as the shrimp stranded in the mud. As I scouted around I realized that the powder fine dusty silt of the dirt roads were criss-crossed with hundreds of large snake tracks. I started looking into the Cattails and Reeds on the banks only to see a big Diamond Back quietly coiled up every ten feet or so awaiting an easy meal. I've never seen so many rattlesnakes concentrated like that. I asked my bud if he was aware of them and he said yes, I asked him what about his Mexican workers? He said they didn't have a problem with them as they either stayed in the trucks or in the water in the ponds.
All of that operation is long gone now as of two years ago the last time we were out that way. Pobrecito rattlers, no mas Rattas y Ratones en el desierto.
BTW they are not correctly known as Diamond Backs they are Diamond Rattlesnakes.
JJ