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Snake in the Cache Traditional Geocache

Hidden : 3/9/2004
Difficulty:
3 out of 5
Terrain:
2 out of 5

Size: Size:   regular (regular)

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Geocache Description:

Parking is at the trailhead at 33 13.946N / 083 56.921W. Trails are closed when wet, call ahead to make sure they are open - (770) 775-6798. Be off the trails by 10pm. If the parking area is closed when you get there, try another day. You'll have about a 3 mile trek, or bike ride, from the parking area to the cache and back. Stay on the trails, they will take you to within about 350 feet of the cache. Only then will you need to go off trail. See the advisories below and enjoy!

This cache is not for the squeamish! A fairly easy to find cache, yet you may be hesitant about opening it, especially if you are the sensitive type or brought along your citified kids on the hunt.

Snakes are reptiles characterized by elongated bodies and a lack of limbs. Distributed through most parts of the world, they range in length from 5 inches to more than 30 feet. They are closely related to lizards, but do not have external ears or eyelids.

The skin of a snake is dry and scaly, not slimy like some people believe. Snake scales are made of keratin, the same substance that makes up your fingernails.

A snake has a forked tongue that is used to “sample” microscopic particles from the air that are then put into a special organ in the roof of the mouth. This structure, called the Jacobson’s organ, is highly sensitive to chemicals, like the nose of a bloodhound. But rather than smelling, as we do, snakes “taste” the air. A snake flicking its tongue at you is merely trying to figure out what you are.

Breeding occurs during spring or fall. Some species lay eggs in early summer; embryonic snakes develop in about two months and hatch in late summer or early fall. Snakes that give birth to live young also tend to have their young in late summer.

Outside temperatures affect the activity of snakes. Because they cannot generate their own body heat like mammals and birds can, snakes remain relatively inactive when it is too cold. They also cannot tolerate extremely high temperatures; therefore, most snakes are active during mild temperatures. During the spring and fall, most snakes tend to be active in the daytime; during the summer, activity may be restricted to warm nights, especially after a rain.

All snakes eat animals, not plants. The primary food items of most snakes are insects, fish, amphibians, birds, rodents, eggs, and other reptiles. Some species are selective feeders, whereas others eat a broad range of food items.

The most common form of defense by snakes, like other reptiles, is avoidance. At the first sign of danger, they usually flee. Any other defensive behavior by a snake, such as biting, striking, and so on, is usually a last resort.

This cache contains information on poisonous snakes in keeping with my theory that you only need to identify the dangerous snakes native to Georgia and keep clear of them. The harmless ones are, well, harmless, and not to be feared. There are also representatives of the species in the cache. Please "take a snake leave a snake" if you can, but no live ones; or corpses for that matter.

Congratulations to the First to Find!

Red Clover

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