"They see me rollin', they hatin'..."
My son was leaving for work this morning and when he opened the door to the front porch, the door hit a very large snapping turtle. Now, that snapper had to climb 4 steps to get to the porch and why would he want to do that? I didn't think climbing steps was something turtles did. Anyway he moved down to the first step by the time I was awake enough to go look at it. I looked for him again about 3 hours later and he had left the porch and steps entirely and dug himself into the ground between the porch and downspout.
so that means that Curly is actually Carla. And yes, I did apologize to her for calling her a boy. I'm thinking that also means there's a pretty good chance that Moe is Mary and Larry is Linda. Or would Lois be the female version of Larry?
My Furvivors hat that I ordered on Bonfire a couple weeks arrived today.
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We live about a mile and a half from a river, but most of the snappers we come across just dig in down in a roadside ditch.I'm late to the party, but how close is a body of water like a pond, creek, etc. to you that would support snappers--btw they taste like chicken-- what I suspect, w/o further detail from you, is that you have a she rather than a he looking to build a nest and lay her eggs.![]()
Nesting and Incubation
A female snapping turtle will typically lay her eggs in early summer. Depending on when she mated, egg-laying may extend into autumn. She chooses a nesting site in an area of loose soil, sand, loam, vegetation debris or sawdust, where she digs a nest 4 to 7 inches deep. She will lay 20 to 40 soft-shelled, cream-colored eggs roughly the size and shape of a table tennis ball. Snapping turtles will generally dig their nests during the mornings and evenings; in some parts of their range, however, this behavior only occurs in the morning.
According to former Missouri state herpetologist Tom R. Johnson, up to 84 percent of snapping turtle nests are destroyed by predators such as minks, raccoons and skunks.
The Mating Season and Reproduction of the Snapping Turtle
I've seen a bunch of roadrunners out on my bike rides the last few days, but they keep taking off before I can good picture. I go across a dry wash, and they people live in there, because they're always one side or the other.
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