Our recent warm weather has brought out all kinds of creatures, including Northern Water Snakes (Nerodia sipedon). On Wednesday I spotted my first Northern Water Snake of the day as I was sitting on a rock, taking a break alongside a stream. When I spotted it, the snake was swimming vigorously downstream and the first photo captured some of the sinuous movement of the snake’s body. I lost sight of the snake as it approached a series of cascades and was not able to see how the snake handled them
Later that same day I spotted another snake at a small pond. This Northern Water Snake had hidden its body in the debris at the edge of the pond, with just its head visible above the water. This snake was alert and seemed to be in a hunting mode, so I kept my distance and watched the snake carefully as I took the second shot below. Although I know that Northern Water Snakes are not venomous, I remember reading that their bites are painful and that their saliva contains an anticoagulant that causes bites to bleed profusely.
© Michael Q. Powell. All rights reserved.


Wonderful photos. I love the detail in the second shot and the capture of the sinuous movement in the first shot. I am currently feeling all gross and hot having been working outdoors so that shot looks so inviting and refreshing to me.
Thanks, Laura. I know that you and your boys are not scared of spiders and snakes and enjoy seeming them in my photos. I was fortunate that I was relatively close to the snake in the first photo and initially it was so focused in scanning the water in front of it that is was not aware of my presence.