In April 2000, our friends Don and Kris joined my wife Monica and me on a long weekend
trip out to the Mojave Desert for our annual quest to see a desert tortoise
in the wild. We had yet to be successful at this sadly difficult goal, but
this year all signs were looking good as we climbed into the rented Toyota
4Runner and headed south and east from our home on the California central coast.
We decided to take a route that would take us through the Carrizo Plain Natural
Area, a remote and nearly untouched area that may soon be a national monument. The
Carrizo Plain is one of the last refuges of the endangered
blunt-nosed leopard lizard, and we searched a reported leopard lizard hangout for an hour or two.
But it was a little too cold for much lizard activity and nary
a blunt-noser was to be found.
The gopher snake pictured here
was stretched out on the dirt road basking in the late afternoon as we drove
back out to the main road from our failed leopard-lizard search. This snake's skin was
particularly shiny and clean, probably due to a recent skin-shedding. It was also
pretty chubby, probably due to recent consumption of one of the numerous ground
squirrels in the area. We were soon to discover that it was not the only
rodent-chomping serpent around.
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