The Georgia Department of Natural Resources Wildlife Resources Division says one of their wildlife technicians found more than what they were looking for during a survey in southeast Georgia.
It’s a snake-eat-snake world out there, and the Georgia Department of Natural Resources has the photos to prove it. Those squeamish photos show a burly, 4-foot-long eastern indigo snake that had eaten ...
Planning a Georgia lake trip this spring? A report from World Atlas highlights several lakes where snake sightings are more ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Rat snake is most common in or near forested areas, forest edges with old fields, and abandoned buildings. It is most active in ...
Juvenile Black Rat snake. Courtesy of Talena Chavis. In more terrifying snake news for Georgia, it seems that some of the 46 species can climb, and this includes trees, fences, and sometimes even ...