Nahimana222 wrote:I was wondering what would be a safe distance?
For you or the snake?

The more you understand rattlers, what they can and can't do as well as their habits, the closer the safety margin. For me, well, it's probably within a foot.
Nahimana222 wrote:Has anyone ever been bit while photographing a rattlesnake?
Probably someone, somewhere has, but it was probably an 18-24 year old male after downing more than a few Bud Lights. As close as I've been photographing as well as shooting videos, I'm not worried about it. I may purposely get very close at times, but never to provoke an attack.
Nahimana222 wrote:Would using some kind of shield or blind to photograph through make it less likely the rattlesnake would know I was there?
They sense predators and prey by infrared light, so something as large as a person throws off a significant heat signature, so you might have to be pretty creative so it wouldn't know. Even if you were to set up a blind, where would you set it up hoping a rattler would slither on by? It you tried to set one up close to one you already see, it would already know you were there. So I'd say dispense with a blind and just take the photos.
BTW, if you were to get bitten, the older/larger the rattler the less likely it will inject venom in defense. They save their venom for prey, and as I mentioned before, when it sees your large heat signature, it KNOWS you aren't it's prey, and knows it can't swallow you whole, so it just wants you to go away.
Now if you are climbing slowly and you reach a hand up over a rock and it only sees the small heat signature of your hand, then it very likely will inject a full dose of venom.
While I have a significant amount of respect for rattlers, I have no fear of them. Having grown up in South Africa I had plenty of snake encounters-of-the-stepping-on-kind

with puff adders, pit vipers and black mambas yet I was never bitten. (I didn't say I wasn't struck at, just never did they connect)
Here's a few shots of just
one of my closer encounters in the last year:
http://hikearizona.com/photo.php?ZIP=173034
http://hikearizona.com/photo.php?ZIP=173035
And here's a nice closeup video of an Arizona Black Rattlesnake:
http://www.changephoenix.com/10/videos1 ... attler.swf
While I have some rattler photos here on HAZ, I have many more photos and a number of videos on my website.
http://www.changephoenix.com/funstuff.html
Here's my rattlesnake-specific page:
http://www.changephoenix.com/10w/10rattlesnakes.html