the time is near...

miguel camacho!

New member
well, after 6 months of hard work with no break, i finally get some vacation. lo and behold, back to south florida i go. ill be leaving sunday. we'll be hitting up our normal spots for herping thru the glades and the keys, and hopefully ill be able to get some info from a guy who said he could help me find jackson's chameleons, monitors, and caimens. anyone else have any cool spots for exotics? i dont expect much, but it would always be nice to find something new. and ive never bothered to ask, anyone around here from far south florida?
 

JeffG

New member
I JUST moved to Jupiter Fl(N of West Palm) and was looking for the same info. I just ran outside with a flashlight and found 2 H. turcicus and some form of bufo toad.
 

miguel camacho!

New member
oooooh im so excited. every year i get giddy when i know this time is coming. im debating whether to make a photo contest entry now or later...i havent had an opportunity to sit down for a good photo shoot lately, which kinda sucks...but i know ill get some nice shots of some wild geckos on this trip...i really look forward to finding more giant day geckos like we always do. such beautiful creatures to find in the wild. but i think ill play it safe and make a photo contest entry just for the hell of it, cuz i know i dont have a winning photo this time. :(
 

Reptiluvr

New member
JeffG: Are you sure they are H. turcicus? I live in Boynton Beach (just south of WPB and really only on breaks from school nowadays) and we have H. mabouia here. I haven't found H. turcicus south of Orlando. I'm sure there are some in Miami I haven't found.
 

miguel camacho!

New member
ok, so heres the results, although i by no means got pics of everything interesting we encountered. so we'll start with the inverts first:

some mantises/manti/whatever
mantis2.jpg

mantis1.jpg


weird lil caterpillars
caterpillars.jpg


giant wolf spider
wolfspider.jpg


myself being stupid while holding a florida bark scorpion
barkscorp.jpg


and now some amphibians:

the rampant cuban treefrogs
cuban3.jpg

cuban2.jpg

cuban1.jpg


squirrel treefrogs
squirreltreefrog3.jpg

squirreltreefrog2.jpg

squirreltreefrog1.jpg



on to the reptiles:

racer
racer.jpg


rosy rats
rosyrat1.jpg

rosyrat2.jpg


our most commonly encountered snake in the keys, the salt marsh mangrove water snake
normal phase
normalmangrove2.jpg

normalmangrove.jpg

buddy ross in an action shot
rossmangrove.jpg

red phase
redmangrove.jpg


florida cottonmouth
floridacottonmouth1.jpg

baby
youngfloridacottonmouth.jpg


brown water snake
brownwater.jpg


florida scarlet snake
floridascarlet.jpg


garter
garter.jpg



and now just a few of the more notable snake of the trip
first, a mammoth burmese python (we got 2 within maybe 15 minutes)
arborealburm.jpg

this big one i am holding we estimated to be roughly 10+ feet in length
mikeburm.jpg


a lifer and evidently rare snake in the glades, a beautiful coral
coral.jpg


a large DOR dusky pygmy (ive found so few of these, and never in the glades like this one!)
duskypygmyDOR.jpg


this lil neonate banded water snake wasnt found in florida at all, we decided to swing by our research site in south carolina before making it all the way back home, and good thing too. we got the first record of a snake being out in december. so that was one record we broke, and on top of that, we got a record for the lowest air and road temps for a snake on the road at the research site. needless to say, it made for a nice end to the trip.
bandedwater.jpg


this yellow(~75%) x black (~25%) rat intergrade was our first find of the trip, and also came out of south carolina. my first live yellow (mostly, at least) rat snake.
yellowrat.jpg



and next, a shot of the ever-present gators...this one with lil babies all around big mama!
gatorbabies.jpg



and now, for the best of all, lizards!

many brown anoles, some bark anoles, no green anoles :(
brownanole2.jpg

brownanole1.jpg


many iguanas out and about. this youngster was all-over lime green with some turquoise speckling around its mouth when we first caught it. pictured are its stressed colors (still very pretty).
iguana.jpg


then theres a gargantuan resident tokay at one of our aquaintances' house in the keys...this guy is seriously monstrous, im just sad he's always hiding when we show up.
tokay.jpg


and my all-time favorite find in south florida, the giant day geckos!
grandis2.jpg

grandis1.jpg



and last, but not least, another one of our cooler finds. although i dont condone collection of native wildlife, this guy was tempting me. i dont know if it was an anomaly or what, but we think it was a striped mud turtle. we found it crossing the road. it seemed to be losing most of its pigment with age. i dont know if this is common or not, but it was definitely a cool find. i had a friend tell me that florida law allows collection of mutants, whether or not this turtle would fall in that category i do not know. we snapped our pics, removed it from the road, and let it on its way nonetheless. so here it is.
stripedmudanomaly2.jpg

stripedmudanomaly.jpg



well, that basically sums it up. it's sad to think it might be another whole year before i make it back, but for any serious herper, id strongly recommend making a nice week-long trip to the keys and everglades at some point. it's just unbelievable, and each trip bring something new and exciting. thats all my pics for now, my friends might get me some pics sometime soon, so i may have some too add. hope everyone enjoys, and sorry for the lack of a dialup warning!
 
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