Page 2 of 2

Mojave Rattlers

Posted: Aug 09 2002 10:00 am
by Kim
Hi! Hope everyone is doing well. I was wandering if anyone might be able to tell me how to distingish a Mojave Rattlesnake (Neurotoxic) from any other breed of Rattler (hemotoxic)? Seems like that would be good info for anyone that spends time in the outdoors. Thanks! :D

Re: Mojave Rattlers

Posted: Apr 19 2010 10:04 am
by Sredfield
jefe wrote:"Fifty to 70% of reptile bites managed by the Arizona Poison and Drug Information Center were provoked by the person who was bitten--that is, someone was trying to kill, capture or harass the animal."
. . . with an elevated blood alcohol content.

Re: Mojave Rattlers

Posted: Apr 19 2010 12:35 pm
by Al_HikesAZ
What's cool is when Diamondbacks elevate up from the coil and wave around. I think they can still strike the same distance as big_load references - 1/3 to 1/2 of their body length. Rattlers are defensive. They don't really "want" to bite you if they don't have to because they know you are too big to eat. As mentioned previously - most bites occur on the hands of males between 20 to 30 years of young with a blood alcohol level in the impaired range. "Stupid is as stupid does" F. Gump

We do have an article on Snake Encounters http://hikearizona.com/article.php?ID=15 Read the comments because it does have an inaccuracy.

Most rattlers hibernate. If rattlesnakes freak you out you might consider snake gaiters. Diamondbacks inject hemotoxins. Mojaves inject neurotoxins which is why this topic was about Mojaves. Mojaves will coil up into that little cinammon bun coil and you can practically step on them in the morning if they've had a good night hunting. They don't even rattle and you're thinking - "that's an interesting rock" right before you elevate about 3 feet into the air.

I've learned to tell my wife that I saw a buzzworm - not a rattlesnake. Somehow she doesn't get as excited. I guess people aren't afraid of worms so a buzzworm doesn't sound menacing. Whereas a rattlesnake must just sound primordial and evil. Not to get too far off-topic but I do have some tips for cooking buzzworm. :) and here are some recipes http://www.rattlesnakerecipe.us/

Buzzworms aren't "poisonous" - they are "venomous".

Re: Mojave Rattlers

Posted: Apr 19 2010 11:41 pm
by nonot
That's the strike distance, but if they get pissed they can move too!

Re: Mojave Rattlers

Posted: Jun 12 2010 8:43 am
by kevinweitzel75
Nighthiker wrote:Only on one occassion was a snake brought in, once they heard it rattle they were not interested in what type.
:sl: :sl:

Re: Mojave Rattlers

Posted: Aug 24 2014 5:32 pm
by SuperstitionGuy
Interesting recent article about Mojave rattlesnakes:
http://www.currentargus.com/carlsbad-ne ... ve-rattler

Re: Mojave Rattlers

Posted: Aug 24 2014 5:39 pm
by Tortoise_Hiker
Interesting. Thanks for the post.