HERPING FLORIDA'S BROOKSVILLE RIDGE

Dedicated exclusively to field herping.

Moderator: Scott Waters

Post Reply
User avatar
Daniel Parker
Posts: 84
Joined: June 14th, 2010, 8:47 pm
Location: Central Florida
Contact:

HERPING FLORIDA'S BROOKSVILLE RIDGE

Post by Daniel Parker »

I have been pouring over old photos and frequently adding new ones and have finally gotten them organized enough to make my first original contribution to the new incarnation of the forum. I will probably make a series of long posts on specific regions to “catch up.” I used to post here as “Mudsnake6,” but see that I followed the trend of using my real name from now on.

I recently moved to an area that I have been interested in for years. I have made many visits to the area and worked on some projects here over the years, but still haven’t seen all that it has to offer. I hope that living there will enable me to familiarize myself with this region that doesn’t give up its secrets easily.

The Brooksville Ridge is an area of raised elevation running inland of the Gulf Coast from near the Tampa Bay area almost to Georgia. Though the actual city of Brooksville is on the ridge, it stretches miles beyond the city that it is named after. Like the Lake Wales Ridge to the east, the Brooksville Ridge is made up of ancient dunes that were exposed in times of higher sea levels when surrounding areas were inundated. Unlike the Lake Wales Ridge, the Brooksville Ridge is made up of mostly yellowish soils and clays. In areas of well drained soil, sandhill habitats once dominated.

Historically, lightning-produced fires maintained open savannah-like sandhills. This fine example, typified by big, widely spaced longleaf pines (Pinus palustris) and lots of low grassy and shrubby cover, is probably what much of the area looked like at one time.
Image

Without frequent burning, the turkey oaks grow tall and shade out the grassy understory. Grass, being the base of the food chain, provides food for insects, rodents, gopher tortoises (Gopherus polyphemus) and numerous other herbivorous animals. Insects and rodents provide food for herps, while gopher tortoise burrows provide shelter.
Image

In the final stage of succession, scrub oaks create nearly impenetrable xeric hammocks. While these oak hammocks are not the most productive habitats, the shady environment is favorable for some amphibians and provides cover for many herps. Oak hammocks are not usually penetrated by fire and require tree removal before burning to be converted back to sandhill. Wiregrass is not known to recolonize the areas.
Image

While plant diversity is not as high, cleared areas, pastures, and olefields on sandhill soils actually can provide quite productive environments for herps.
Image
Image

In areas where higher clay content in the soils reduces drainage or areas where fire is naturally excluded by water features, mesic hammocks with large hardwoods form.
Image
Image

The landscape is also shaped by geological features like sinks and springs. Deep sinks in sandhill areas like this one hold clear water.
Image

Numerous springs flow from the porous karst limestone of the Florida aquifer and create beautiful runs like this one.
Image

The Withlacoochee River drains the Green Swamp to the east and slices through the Brooksville Ridge on its way to the Gulf of Mexico.
Image

The gopher tortoise is the cornerstone species and emblematic herp of the area. It is actually one of the easier herps to find. Any drive or hike around sandhill or pasture areas usually produces a few.
Image

Many animals depend on tortoise burrows for shelter and some are only found alongside tortoises. It is thought that there are several undescribed species of gopher crickets (Ceuthophilus sp.) that inhabit tortoise burrows. This one was caught in a bucket trap on a drift fence study.
Image

Florida gopher frogs (Rana capito aesopus) probably eat a few gopher crickets.
Image

Another tortoise commensal is the Florida mouse (Podomys floridanus) a species endemic to Florida. It is considered a species of special concern and occurs in xeric habitats in the peninsula and an isolated colony in the Carrabelle scrub of the panhandle (which probably won’t stop any more development there).
Image

I’ve gotten to observe some interesting tortoise behavior in the last few years on some of my field work in the last few years. I came up on these two males combating while heading to check a drift fence trap.
Image
Image

We had a pretty bad drought a few years ago. Everything was pretty parched. I had the pleasure of being out in the field when the drought broke. This tortoise came out to drink as puddles formed.
Image

This one is actually from the Lake Wales Ridge, but I thought it fit well while we are showing tortoises doing things. Dave Justice and I drove up on this tortoise eating a mockingbird (Mimus polyglottos).
Image

A few years ago, everyone was worried about upper respiratory tract disease (URTD) wiping out all of the tortoises. It turns out that some individuals in most populations have URTD and it does kill a few of them, but it hasn’t really wiped out any populations. The worst-case predictions did work to scare up some grant money for research.

Imagine that…researchers garnering funding with apocalyptic predictions…

In any case, there wasn't much hope for this particular tortoise.
Image

But yet, the species carries on.
Image

One creature I have become very familiar with is the gopher tick (Amblyomma tuberculatum). As adults, these ticks are tortoise specialists. I and others who have worked with exotic tortoises have notices that they gladly latch on to not only the wild gophers, but also captive tortoises in outdoor enclosures. As juveniles, these pesky critters readily eat mammals, including humans. Though they don’t burrow in like adults, they do leave chigger-like itching bumps after sucking your blood. After a day of work in the sandhills, the standard protocol is to pat your legs with duct tape to remove the hundreds of baby ticks. Here is an adult tick attached to a gopher tortoise.
Image

Herpers dream of sandhills with visions of glorious serpents dancing in their heads. Sandhills aren’t crawling with snakes though. In fact, finding snakes can be quite a daunting task at times. If you just want to find lots of snakes, road cruise a swamp at night. Road cruising in the sandhills at night may not produce anything at all. The best way that I have found to hunt snakes in the Florida sandhills, short of trapping, is to roadcruise during the day. Prepare to waste lots of time and gas. Racers are pretty common, but other than those, if you average more than one snake for six hours of cruising you are doing pretty well. That means you might see three snakes in one morning, but get skunked on several other trips.
Image

The payoff is that you will eventually see some good snakes.
Image
Image

Adult southern hognose snakes (Heterodon simus) are on the move looking for mates in May and June.
Image
Image

This one started its defensive routine soon after being confronted.
Image

Occasionally you get lucky and see multiples. These ones died soon after being placed together.
Image

Eastern coachwhips (Masticophis flagellum flagellum) are fairly common, but good luck getting a hand on one. Here are a couple we managed to slow down for pics.
Image
Image

Rough green snakes (Opheodrys aestivus) are fairly common, even in the heat of the day.
Image

Having lived on the Lake Wales Ridge and never finding yellow rat snakes (Elaphe obsoleta quadrivittata) in that scrubby area, I was surprised to find rat snakes to be pretty common on the Brooksville Ridge. They are probably more common now as many former sandhill habitats are overgrown into hammocks. I saw this snake shining in the distance as it crossed a sandhill road late in the afternoon. I was sure I had a pine snake.
Image

With the adrenalin still pumping from finding the rat snake, I was even more thrilled to see this beauty on the next pass. A young adult eastern diamondback rattlesnake (Crotalus adamanteus)
Image

A little ways down the road, I saw just the head of this five foot beast coming on to the road. As another car passed, it turned around and raced off the road as fast an EDB can go. With great difficulty I was able to persuade it to settle next to a tree for a few pics. It never struck or assumed the classic coil, but its nervous nature made it very difficult to deal with.
Image

Eastern coral snakes (Micrurus fulvius fulvius) might be the most abundant venomous snakes on the Brooksville Ridge, especially in hammocks. They can be seen crossing roads early in the morning or at dusk.
Image

Anthony Flanagan, my wife Lisa, and I cruised up this indigo (Drymarchon corais couperi) in June, an unusual find for that time of year.
Image

Indigos typically move to tortoise burrows in the sandhills in the cooler months. They restrict their home ranges to mere hundreds of acres during that time and breed while they are concentrated in the uplands. Most move off into lowlands for the summer, where food is more abundant. The females lay eggs in tortoise or pocket gopher (Geomys pinetis) burrows and may be seen at the burrows later in the spring than the males.
Image

This big male was found basking near a tortoise burrow in the winter.
Image

This attractive eastern slender glass lizard (Ophisaurus attenuatus attenuatus) was seen crossing in the late afternoon.
Image

A peak under the bark on a dead pine revealed this cute rodent, the southern flying squirrel (Glaucomys volans).
Image

Here is a winter time view of a bend in the river.
Image

Here is the same bend (slightly different view) in the summer.
Image

What is that turtle out on the log?
Image

A closer look revealed it to be a Florida chicken turtle (Deirochelys reticularia chrysea), in a river!
Image

I investigated a potential study site in an area with sandhills, flatwoods, and depression marshes.
Image
Image

Unfortunately, in the time it took to drive to the end of the road and back, I missed this:
Image

Bill Love and I were attempting to photograph a pasture full of pocket gopher mounds, but we were blocked by a strange creature.
Image
Image
Image

I finally got the shot.
Image

We figured with so many pocket gophers around, we had a good shot at a southern pine snake (Pituophis melanoleucas mugitus). We walked an olefield with lots of gopher burrows, both the rodent and the tortoise kinds. It was a cool February day with a high around 70 F.

Our first find was not spectacular, but interesting nonetheless. We found a nicely colored southern fence lizard (Sceloporus undulatus undulatus)
Image
Image

It was afflicted by some nasty ticks!
Image

Around midday, I saw a medium size snake with its head just in view in a tortoise hole. I did what my mother told me never to do and reached down the hole as quickly as I could and was lucky to come up with a lovely snake. For some reason it didn’t dawn on me exactly what it was when I first saw it. I thought it might be a corn snake. Of course, a baby pine snake is the same size as a young adult corn snake.
Image
Image

Gray rat snake (E. o. spiloides) influence makes it way down the Gulf Coast in the form of the Gulf Hammock intergrade (E. o. “williamsi”). However, just a few miles inland on the ridge in Levy County, yellow rat snakes still prevail.
Image

The rat snakes near the northern end of the ridge are pure gray rats, like this one from Suwannee County.
Image

Nick Mesa and I made a particularly unfruitful snake hunting trip to the area. This juvenile coachwhip was one of our only finds.
Image

A more interesting find was this Central Florida crowned snake (Tantilla relicta neilli), a snake which primarily occurs in north Florida.
Image

On one of our turtle research trips, Chris Lechowicz and I took a slight detour to hunt for southern hognose snakes at a locality known to produce outstanding examples. To our surprise, we found this baby eastern hognose snake (Heterodon platyrhinos) instead. It did not play dead.
Image

Lisa and I joined some friends for a day of turtle hunting in a spring run.
Image

Before we shoved off, someone shouted “Snake!” so I went over to investigate. It was the expected culprit:
Image

We dug the big brown water snake (Nerodia taxpilota) out of the rocks and I cheesed with it for a minute before releasing it.
Image

Now it was down to the serious business of the trip: Finding turtles!
Chris has an underwater housing for his camera and got this pic showing the eel grass (Vallisneria americana) that carpets the bottom.
Image

The big cooters love to eat eel grass and the smaller turtles use it as cover and forage for snails among the green stalks. Here is Chris’s photo of one of our targets, the loggerhead musk turtle (Sternotherus minor).
Image

Male loggerheads are aptly named.
Image
Image

The female’s head is smaller by comparison.
Image

Here is a male/female comparison shot. The male on the left has a longer and thicker tail.
Image

Lisa had her typical bout with hypothermia in the cool 72 degree water and waited the rest of the trip out in the boat.
Image

The turtle I really wanted to photograph today was the Suwannee Cooter (Pseudemys concinna suwanniensis). Chris told me it was the most abundant cooter in this run.

My first cooter was a Florida redbellied turtle (P. nelsoni). They are reportedly the least common of the three Pseudemys here.
Image

This view shows the cusped jaw characteristic of the species.
Image

The next ones we found were peninsula cooters (Pseudemys floridana peninsularis).
Image
Image
Image

The P. floridana cooters lack the cusped jaw.
Image

Chris teaches his son Marrick about cooters.
Image

Cara shows off a nice cooter.
Image

We finally did see a few of the turtles I wanted to photograph. Randy Thomas got these basking shots.
Image
Image

I finally managed to secure one for myself to photograph.
Image
Image
Image

I was fortunate enough to have the opportunity to work with Ray Ashton at the Ashton Biodiversity Research and Preservation Institute. The main focus of the Institute was research and conservation of the gopher tortoise. Ray did more for herp conservation in Florida than just about anybody. Other people have written papers and made comments, but Ray got stuff done.
My work was based at the Ashton Preserve.
Image

On my first trip, I was not disappointed as I saw several tortoises crossing the dirt road on the way into the Preserve.
Image
The Preserve was a wonderful example of sandhill reclaimed from old pasture. Longleaf pine (Pinus palustris) was replanted sparsely.
Image

Ray and Pat Ashton ran the Gopher Tortoise Conservation Initiative to provide biologists, land managers, and environmental consultants with information and hands on experience in managing tortoises. One of the activities in the GTCI class was to demonstrate proper burrow excavation technique for instances where tortoises must be relocated. For the class, we used an inactive burrow.
Image

When run by a skillful operator, a backhoe is the most efficient way of excavating tortoise burrows. Here, Ray explains proper backhoe technique.
Image
Image

One of my main duties was to curate a captive collection of rare tortoises. We did the same research and data collection on the captive tortoises that we did with the wild gophers. Here I am with one of our cute radiated tortoise (Geochelone radiata) hatchlings.
Image
It got really cold in the winter here, especially for tropical tortoises!
Image
Image
Image

Here is the feed bucket on the pond, which stayed frozen for several days. I know you northerners are scoffing at this, but this just isn’t supposed to happen here!
Image

I did a little bit of drift fence trapping on the preserve. I was here in the cooler months of the year and the herps were somewhat sparse, though I did make a few interesting finds.
Image

One of my first serpentine finds in the traps was a Central Florida crowned snake.
Image

Here is another one, found under a rock in the tortoise enclosure.
Image

Here are a few other snakes from the area. This is a typical Brooksville Ridge corn snake (Elaphe guttata guttata). They are not overly colorful here, but are interesting nonetheless.
Image

An impressive eastern coachwhip (Masticophis flagellum flagellum) with a cool banded pattern
Image

A juvenile southern black racer (Coluber constrictor constrictor)
Image

One of my more surprising finds on the preserve was this Florida softshell turtle (Apalone ferox) that seemed lost. It was walking along the drift fence in the sandhills, possibly trying to reach the pond a few hundred yards away. We moved it to pond, which already contains several other softshells. The drought is forcing many animals to search for water as many small ponds and wetland dry up.
Image

In the fall, the baby southern hognoses appear. The first chill of October seemed to put them on the move.
Image

I have heard that southern hogs are more reluctant to play dead than easterns. I have not found this to be the case as everyone that I have seen has done it.
Image

Here is a baby that I found with Ray and Pat on our way back from lunch.
Image
Image

Here is another one spotted by Ray.
Image

I worked with two awesome tortoise-catching dogs, which is very helpful when you need to round up a bunch of cold-sensitive tropical tortoises in large outdoor enclosures before a cold night. They occasionally barked at wild tortoises crossing the driveway to the lab. As I was working in the lab, they started barking. I took a peek out of the door and saw the dogs circling an angry, hissing pine snake. The dogs kept it in place until I arrived.
Image
Image

This one measured out at exactly five feet SVL with nine inches of tail.
Image
Here is another pine snake that Anthony walked up nearby on a cool November day. The pines here tend to have indistinct patterns.
Image

Box turtles are not common in the sandhills, but do occasionally show up. This is a pretty typical example of the Florida subspecies (Terrapene carolina bauri).
Image

I was amused in watching the behaviors of the numerous squirrel tree frogs (Hyla squirrella) that gather under the lights at night to feast on various hapless bugs.
Image

I caught this one in mid leap.
Image

I did a tortoise relocation with Ray on a development site down in southwest Florida. It was disappointing to have to remove gopher tortoises from the place they had lived all their lives, however it was better than having them plowed over by bulldozers. I made the grab of the day when I jumped off the backhoe to secure these two that were trying to jam down the same hole.
Image

We released the tortoises in a fenced area of several acres. They establish a home range after six months or so and the fence is taken down. Most will stick around in the new area, which will be protected.
Image

Here is the old gopher tortoise himself. Thanks for all you did for wildlife conservation Ray!
Image
User avatar
BillMcGighan
Posts: 2362
Joined: June 7th, 2010, 9:23 am
Location: Unicoi, TN

Re: HERPING FLORIDA'S BROOKSVILLE RIDGE

Post by BillMcGighan »

Super stuff (as always), Daniel. :thumb: :thumb: :thumb: :thumb:
Wonderful place, wonderful story.

I can't ever see or think of the central Florida spring runs without thinking about how close we came to losing it all in the early '70s with the Cross Florida Barge Canal!!!
In fact, finding snakes can be quite a daunting task at times. If you just want to find lots of snakes, road cruise a swamp at night. Road cruising in the sandhills at night may not produce anything at all. The best way that I have found to hunt snakes in the Florida sandhills, short of trapping, is to roadcruise during the day.
You got that right,,, I burned a huge amount of gas to finally realized night time is limited; Dusk, dawn. and rainy days payed off for me.
.
Finally, I was very sorry to hear about the passing of Ray...
Regards, Bill
Paul White
Posts: 2288
Joined: June 7th, 2010, 9:52 pm
Location: Amarillo, Texas

Re: HERPING FLORIDA'S BROOKSVILLE RIDGE

Post by Paul White »

I need to get in on a gig like that :-) The short week's version I did as an undergrad was freaking awesome, doing it long term would rock.
User avatar
Nick
Posts: 291
Joined: June 7th, 2010, 9:15 am

Re: HERPING FLORIDA'S BROOKSVILLE RIDGE

Post by Nick »

Wow! This post really captures the essence of herping on the ridge!

Long and boring! :lol:

Nice pines! ;)
KevColubrid
Posts: 77
Joined: June 7th, 2010, 2:04 pm

Re: HERPING FLORIDA'S BROOKSVILLE RIDGE

Post by KevColubrid »

That was great! Very informative. Love all those pines, indigos, and coachwhips :thumb:

Kevin
User avatar
Steve Atkins
Posts: 744
Joined: June 7th, 2010, 5:14 pm
Location: Asheville NC

Re: HERPING FLORIDA'S BROOKSVILLE RIDGE

Post by Steve Atkins »

Aesome post, great pics, and I had no idea there was a ridge in Fla. :D
User avatar
Josh Holbrook
Posts: 2196
Joined: June 7th, 2010, 8:11 am
Location: Western North Carolina
Contact:

Re: HERPING FLORIDA'S BROOKSVILLE RIDGE

Post by Josh Holbrook »

Awesome! How common are southerns in that neck of the woods? You make em' seem easy.
User avatar
monklet
Posts: 2648
Joined: June 7th, 2010, 4:44 pm
Location: Ventura, CA
Contact:

Re: HERPING FLORIDA'S BROOKSVILLE RIDGE

Post by monklet »

When I saw your name I knew it would be an exceptional post and of course it is! Thanks for the hard work putting it together. :thumb: :thumb: :thumb:
User avatar
monklet
Posts: 2648
Joined: June 7th, 2010, 4:44 pm
Location: Ventura, CA
Contact:

Re: HERPING FLORIDA'S BROOKSVILLE RIDGE

Post by monklet »

When I saw your name I knew it would be an exceptional post and of course it is! Thanks for the hard work putting it together. :thumb: :thumb: :thumb:
User avatar
kcmatt
Posts: 372
Joined: June 7th, 2010, 8:38 am
Contact:

Re: HERPING FLORIDA'S BROOKSVILLE RIDGE

Post by kcmatt »

Very nice, Daniel. Thanks for the post.
User avatar
dezertwerx
Posts: 809
Joined: June 7th, 2010, 4:05 pm
Location: So Cal

Re: HERPING FLORIDA'S BROOKSVILLE RIDGE

Post by dezertwerx »

nice shots!
User avatar
Kerry Nelson
Posts: 50
Joined: June 7th, 2010, 12:11 pm
Location: Savannah, GA

Re: HERPING FLORIDA'S BROOKSVILLE RIDGE

Post by Kerry Nelson »

This is my favorite post since the forum got back online. I remember some of this stuff from before the crash, glad to see it over here, too. I love posts like this that give you a real feel for the habitat.

I was on the very northern end of the Brooksville Ridge last year, but without replicating your success. Couple easterns, racer or two, finally got a sweet red simus at a last ditch stop off the ridge on the way home, near the Georgia line. You definitely have me wanting to go back, though. I love that area of Florida. Very strange state - despite being way more threatened by development than Georgia, it seems like the undeveloped tracts are in much better overall condition, I guess because Georgia's been getting messed with for longer. The sheer numbers of pocket gophers blew my mind when I was down there - they're effectively extinct across much of their former range in Georgia.
User avatar
pinesnake
Posts: 52
Joined: June 12th, 2010, 1:58 pm
Location: The Ruhr Area of Germany
Contact:

Re: HERPING FLORIDA'S BROOKSVILLE RIDGE

Post by pinesnake »

Hello Daniel

So many pretty pictures of herps ... Marvelous!

First I was afraid about your more than 1/10 thousand pictures - but at the end I was satisfied. Complete satisfied :thumb:

My favorite are again - the Florida pine snakes! Pretty pictures of this special snakes, in habitat!. But my world is not so narrow minded ;)
So many herps, so many good (!) pictures.

Thank you!

Bernd
User avatar
Greg Theos
Posts: 162
Joined: June 7th, 2010, 11:42 am
Location: Panama City Beach, FL
Contact:

Re: HERPING FLORIDA'S BROOKSVILLE RIDGE

Post by Greg Theos »

Good content and commentary. I have exhaustively herped some sandhills here in Florida this spring and can say that snake activity was good-excellent on most days in June. I was about to do a big FL post but after seeing yours I am going to have to hold off for a little bit.
User avatar
Tim Borski
Posts: 1855
Joined: June 7th, 2010, 7:28 am
Location: FL Keys
Contact:

Re: HERPING FLORIDA'S BROOKSVILLE RIDGE

Post by Tim Borski »

Outstanding! Thanks for taking the time. I love the habitat shots (animals too of course) and will look at this again whenever I feel the urge to daydream...
Thanks for a GREAT post!
Tim
millside
Posts: 586
Joined: June 7th, 2010, 6:22 pm

Re: HERPING FLORIDA'S BROOKSVILLE RIDGE

Post by millside »

daniel,
I very much enjoyed that post. very informative.
thanks for taking the time
User avatar
wayne_fidler
Posts: 165
Joined: June 7th, 2010, 11:50 pm
Location: onslow co NC

Re: HERPING FLORIDA'S BROOKSVILLE RIDGE

Post by wayne_fidler »

epic post the fl chicken turtle and flying squirrel were my favs.
User avatar
Daniel Parker
Posts: 84
Joined: June 14th, 2010, 8:47 pm
Location: Central Florida
Contact:

Re: HERPING FLORIDA'S BROOKSVILLE RIDGE

Post by Daniel Parker »

Thanks for all of the nice comments everyone (except Nick).
I love that area of Florida. Very strange state - despite being way more threatened by development than Georgia, it seems like the undeveloped tracts are in much better overall condition, I guess because Georgia's been getting messed with for longer.
It is a totally different experience to herp Georgia. There is a lot of agriculture there and you can get big numbers of a small diversity of species. We kind of have that in the sugarcane fields.
When I started traveling all over the southeast I was amazed at rural most of it was, yet how few natural areas were left.
An area in Florida can go from being pristine to a parking lot in no time at all!
I have exhaustively herped some sandhills here in Florida this spring and can say that snake activity was good-excellent on most days in June.
What did you find?
How common are southerns in that neck of the woods? You make em' seem easy.
Awesome! How common are southerns in that neck of the woods? You make em' seem easy.
They are fairly common, but I couldn't just conjure one up on demand. They seem to be moving at certain times and you might see a couple in a morning, plus a few DOR's, and then not see them for awhile. Late April through early June and October seem to be the best times. You generally see them in the morning, but can see them into the early afternoon. I have never found one in the late afternoon.
Long and boring!
Just like a conversation with you!
Aesome post, great pics, and I had no idea there was a ridge in Fla.
Our ridges don't make the cut by your standards! A hundred feet above sea level is a big deal in Florida.
I can't ever see or think of the central Florida spring runs without thinking about how close we came to losing it all in the early '70s with the Cross Florida Barge Canal!!!
We drove across that the other day and I was talking about the disaster that could have been. It's hard to imagine, but hey, look at what we did to the Everglades!
Dave
Posts: 40
Joined: June 7th, 2010, 8:00 am

Re: HERPING FLORIDA'S BROOKSVILLE RIDGE

Post by Dave »

Daniel,

Makes me want to convince Ant to take a little trip back up to the ridge. lol
Besides, he needs to get to the finish line first with a (live) short tail! (Unless there's something I don't know yet. ;) )
User avatar
Nick
Posts: 291
Joined: June 7th, 2010, 9:15 am

Re: HERPING FLORIDA'S BROOKSVILLE RIDGE

Post by Nick »

Daniel Parker wrote:
Long and boring!
Just like a conversation with you!
Whatever. I can't believe you made this post before finding one of these:

Image
Kfen
Posts: 413
Joined: June 17th, 2010, 5:51 am
Location: CT

Re: HERPING FLORIDA'S BROOKSVILLE RIDGE

Post by Kfen »

Excellent post! I loved all the info and habitat shots you included. Thanks
User avatar
Nigel Smith
Posts: 268
Joined: June 8th, 2010, 10:52 am
Location: Lexington Kentucky

Re: HERPING FLORIDA'S BROOKSVILLE RIDGE

Post by Nigel Smith »

This post was awesome. So many beautiful animals. I really enjoyed the the pine snakes, Indigos, and hognose. Not to mention the Gopher Tortises and the habitat shots. You are blessed to be able to herp habitat that many of us herpers dream about. :thumb: :thumb:


Two thumbs up!

Nigel Smith (melanistic)
joeysgreen
Posts: 523
Joined: June 11th, 2010, 9:09 pm
Location: Edmonton, Alberta

Re: HERPING FLORIDA'S BROOKSVILLE RIDGE

Post by joeysgreen »

Thanks for the incredibly diverse post. Love the aquatic shots best!

Ian
Josh Vandermeulen
Posts: 28
Joined: June 14th, 2010, 9:11 pm
Contact:

Re: HERPING FLORIDA'S BROOKSVILLE RIDGE

Post by Josh Vandermeulen »

Excellent post - good variety, excellent storytelling and photography, and some damn cool herps. Nice indigos, and I loved the Rana capito! Do you encounter a lot of them?

Josh
User avatar
Carl Koch
Posts: 435
Joined: June 7th, 2010, 7:45 pm
Location: West Milwaukee, WI

Re: HERPING FLORIDA'S BROOKSVILLE RIDGE

Post by Carl Koch »

Fantastic! Thanks for taking the time to put together such a fascinating post. As someone already said, excellent photos AND commentary.

Carl
User avatar
Nshepard
Posts: 377
Joined: June 7th, 2010, 12:08 pm

Re: HERPING FLORIDA'S BROOKSVILLE RIDGE

Post by Nshepard »

Awesome snakes, awesome turtles, awesome habitat - all aspects of a great post which you have have here my friend, nicely done! Thanks for sharing, great post!
User avatar
Ross Padilla
Posts: 2666
Joined: June 8th, 2010, 6:29 pm
Location: I love L.A.
Contact:

Re: HERPING FLORIDA'S BROOKSVILLE RIDGE

Post by Ross Padilla »

Awesome post! I remember a lot of those shots. I hope to see more from the past soon. :thumb:
User avatar
Fundad
Posts: 5721
Joined: June 7th, 2010, 7:11 am
Location: Los Angeles County
Contact:

Re: HERPING FLORIDA'S BROOKSVILLE RIDGE

Post by Fundad »

I remember much of this post..

It was and is one of the best Florida posts.

Outstanding herps and photos.

Fundad
User avatar
Bill Love
Posts: 169
Joined: June 7th, 2010, 7:33 pm
Location: Apache Junction (near Phoenix), Arizona

Re: HERPING FLORIDA'S BROOKSVILLE RIDGE

Post by Bill Love »

Wow - massively nice summary! Great to bring back many 'lost' shots, plus fresh ones from your cool, new country hideaway. Can't wait to see the place in person!
User avatar
Daniel Parker
Posts: 84
Joined: June 14th, 2010, 8:47 pm
Location: Central Florida
Contact:

Re: HERPING FLORIDA'S BROOKSVILLE RIDGE

Post by Daniel Parker »

Thanks for all the compliments everyone. You can thank Chris Lechowicz for the underwater shots.

Gopher frogs can be fairly common in the right areas, though I don't see a lot of them because I don't specifically seek them out. They are most common in sandhill or scrub areas near ponds. I have walked after a rain through areas with lots of tortoise burrows and seen the frogs one after another bailing back into the burrows. You can also flip them under a.c.
User avatar
NeatoLizardGrrrl
Posts: 12
Joined: June 21st, 2010, 4:29 pm

Re: HERPING FLORIDA'S BROOKSVILLE RIDGE

Post by NeatoLizardGrrrl »

How did the hognose snake die? Did it have those ticks like the pretty blue belly lizard? :(
BradB
Posts: 80
Joined: June 9th, 2010, 4:10 pm

Re: HERPING FLORIDA'S BROOKSVILLE RIDGE

Post by BradB »

Unfortunately, the downfall of catching most hognoses is that they tend to die soon after capture! :D

The only way to avoid killing them is to never even stop and look at them, just let them on their way.
User avatar
NeatoLizardGrrrl
Posts: 12
Joined: June 21st, 2010, 4:29 pm

Re: HERPING FLORIDA'S BROOKSVILLE RIDGE

Post by NeatoLizardGrrrl »

Hognose snakes are notorious for their acts of thanatosis, or playing dead. It is a defensive strategy.
So like a possum? That's crazyness. :crazyeyes:
User avatar
NeatoLizardGrrrl
Posts: 12
Joined: June 21st, 2010, 4:29 pm

Re: HERPING FLORIDA'S BROOKSVILLE RIDGE

Post by NeatoLizardGrrrl »

Unfortunately, the downfall of catching most hognoses is that they tend to die soon after capture!

The only way to avoid killing them is to never even stop and look at them, just let them on their way.

Are you making fun of me? I was just asking a question.
TimCO
Posts: 891
Joined: June 7th, 2010, 11:27 am
Location: Colorado

Re: HERPING FLORIDA'S BROOKSVILLE RIDGE

Post by TimCO »

Another stellar post Daniel.
BradB
Posts: 80
Joined: June 9th, 2010, 4:10 pm

Re: HERPING FLORIDA'S BROOKSVILLE RIDGE

Post by BradB »

John Vanek wrote:
NeatoLizardGrrrl wrote:
Unfortunately, the downfall of catching most hognoses is that they tend to die soon after capture!

The only way to avoid killing them is to never even stop and look at them, just let them on their way.

Are you making fun of me? I was just asking a question.
I don't think he's making fun of you, just a little forum humor.
He's right, just a little humor, not trying to take a stab at you. I'm just a smartass!
User avatar
NeatoLizardGrrrl
Posts: 12
Joined: June 21st, 2010, 4:29 pm

Re: HERPING FLORIDA'S BROOKSVILLE RIDGE

Post by NeatoLizardGrrrl »

Oh ok. I understand the funny now.
s0nnia
Posts: 2
Joined: August 24th, 2010, 1:47 pm

Re: HERPING FLORIDA'S BROOKSVILLE RIDGE

Post by s0nnia »

Wow! That was awesome! I have not been field herping much since I moved from Tallahassee back to the Tampa area, so seeing your post and all the wonderful photos was like coming home, and made me very happy. Thanks for sharing!

That said, I would love to join anyone in west/central Florida for some herp trips! I visit Chass NWA sometimes, and cruise the Gulf Hammock area too, but I'll go just about anywhere within a 2-3 hour drive from Pinellas county.
User avatar
Jordan S.
Posts: 90
Joined: June 6th, 2011, 5:03 pm
Location: Gainesville
Contact:

Re: HERPING FLORIDA'S BROOKSVILLE RIDGE

Post by Jordan S. »

Cool post Daniel, I need to take advantage myself of living on the Ridge and get out and herp in right places more! This post really captures the herps living in my area!
-Jt
User avatar
ahockenberry
Posts: 362
Joined: June 7th, 2010, 6:46 am
Contact:

Re: HERPING FLORIDA'S BROOKSVILLE RIDGE

Post by ahockenberry »

A+
Awesome post !
User avatar
Daniel Parker
Posts: 84
Joined: June 14th, 2010, 8:47 pm
Location: Central Florida
Contact:

Re: HERPING FLORIDA'S BROOKSVILLE RIDGE

Post by Daniel Parker »

Thanks for the compliments (an reviving an old post) guys! :thumb:
Post Reply