| The Spring Egress: Moments with Georgia’s Denning HorridusDaniel Dean Duff II (Peter84Jenkins)
                       
                
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		July 27, 2011View comments about this article!
 
		The Spring 
Egress: Part One 
 
By: Daniel Duff 
 
 My annual quest to get to know a little 
known and little explored jewel of Georgia’s 
herptofauna, began in 2006, shortly after my 
discharge from the US Navy, at 22 years old. 
While enlisted I had the privilege of being 
stationed in Whidbey Island, Washington, 
where I developed a passion for the nearby 
mountain country – A passion I would carry 
home to Georgia, and where I was anxious to 
begin anew the hobby I put on hold while 
enlisted. Now, since 2007, I make annual 
excursions to many of Georgia’s denning 
Horridus locations, and I observe them, and 
dwell among them during different stages of 
their spatial life. One of my favorite times 
is during the youthful season of spring. 
 Crickets gathered and basked where the 
path I walked was bathed in rays of warm, 
mid-May sunshine; and as I shuffled through, 
they hopped and popped, making a sound 
similar to the first heavy raindrops of a 
summer storm hitting the dry leaf litter. My 
path was narrow, stick and stone laden, 
hardly suitable for a vehicle, and it was 
also covered over in all sorts of weeds 
including poison ivy. As I marched on, eyeing 
every plant and high stepping like a German 
soldier, I could almost feel the burning oil 
of Toxicodendron blistering my skin. When it 
was time to leave the path and follow a 
branch to the top of the mountain, one of a 
multitude of creeks and streams which thread 
the forest; I felt an unabated excitement 
swelling in my chest and all thoughts of 
poison ivy vanished from mind, as do black 
clouds after a rain storm. 
   
 On the ascent, I passed familiar stone 
structures including a wall that was this 
winter sheeted in a glistening capsule of 
ice, but now it resembled more an ancient 
ruin covered over in a green veil of 
vegetation. Some rocks were draped in frilly 
gowns of moss, which adorned the natural 
curves of the stone as accurately and as 
beautifully as any well shaped woman in 
dainty attire. I also passed where water 
seeped, or slowly bled from the ground; where 
during winter it was a frustrating and 
dangerous ice slick, and now it was no less 
frustrating as a giant sucking mud hole. 
 Soon I could see the sunlight breaking 
through the darkness of the wood from over 
the horizon signaling the summit was near, 
which was a relieving sight since my heart 
beat with such violence from the long, steep 
climb. At nearly 3,690 feet above sea level, 
this is one of the highest dens in elevation 
that I frequent. My last few feet through the 
woods was fraught with saw toothed brambles, 
and thorns nearly an inch long, which 
scratched at my arms and tore at seemingly 
every inch of cloth on my body. 
 After an hour or more of fairly hurried 
and intense climbing, I sought out a safe 
flat spot to sit and cure the hunger that I 
had worked up. These quiet lunches 
overlooking some of the earth’s oldest 
geologic masterpieces are always enchanting; 
the glacial swirls in the grey stone all 
around me interpret like some bygone language 
of Oros. Then the romance of my heavenly 
perch was suddenly shattered as a fat gnat 
flew directly into one of my eyes! I dug the 
corpse from my tear duct, cursed some - 
cursed some more, and then readied myself to 
search for timber rattlesnakes. 
  
 
 With my eyes wide I gazed intently into 
every crack and crevice, and at every flat 
shelter stone which could possibly be refuge 
to rattlesnakes. This day was an unseasonably 
cool 67 degrees, and so I knew most of the 
snakes here would be basking in the most sun 
exposed places of the den. For a half an hour 
I looked all over and found nothing; when 
suddenly, my raking gaze caught sight of a 
fully coiled, black phase timber rattlesnake, 
sitting at the edge of a shelter stone the 
size of a car hood. 
 She did not move as I approached for 
observation, and when I dropped my pack to 
remove my camera a yellow phase timber in 
neighboring stones began to rattle angrily, 
causing my heart to skip several healthy 
beats. Still the snake in front of me stayed 
motionless and ever silent, and so I 
continued with my intentions of photographing 
her. As I clicked away I could hear the other 
rattle grow muffled as the snake slid under a 
stone. I then backed away and took a seat in 
the grass nearby. 
 As I was writing my observations in my 
thinking book my ears caught a curious 
rasping sound. I looked up to see the female 
uncoiling and slowly sliding beneath her 
shelter stone. A few more minutes passed and 
I heard the same sound again, she had 
slithered through some tunnel under the 
shelter stone and her head was now poked out 
of the opening just two feet from my crossed 
legs! I sat still and silent, she made 
several tongue flicks, and then slid over in 
the direction of the yellow phase that 
rattled earlier. I was entranced by her 
graceful movements and watched fixedly as she 
slithered through the vegetation. Another hour passed without any notable 
events, and so I began to retrace my steps 
back to the top of the den. However, as I 
did, I noticed an area through a fragmented 
patch of woods that I had not looked over. It 
was now strangely colder in the afternoon 
than it had been earlier in the morning, and 
I had little expectation. But to my delight 
the one beam of sunshine hitting the basking 
knoll was illuminating a coiled timber 
rattlesnake. From my vantage point it looked 
to be male, it was in tight coil with the 
rattle rested against its head, and it made 
neither a single movement nor sound as I took 
several photographs. 
  
 Like earlier, I took a seat about ten feet 
distant and began to take notes, and the 
whole time the snake gave not one single hint 
that it was even alive. I felt honored to 
share the warmth of the basking knoll with 
such a magnanimous creature, and I felt a 
small sense of sadness when it came time to 
leave his company. I had no idea that only 
moments later I would meet another of North 
Georgia’s impressive mountain beasts. 
 I was making my slippery and awkward 
descent from the den, still soaring 
emotionally from the day’s events, when 
through a wall of dark green I suddenly heard 
the piercing, scratching sound of claws 
against a tree slice the dead silence. I have 
heard this sound before, but never so near, 
so lucid, and never with the blunt and heavy 
thud that came after. Then came a rapid and 
fearsome stir along my flank, and foolishly I 
waddled toward the source of the raucous to 
investigate. 
 A great big bruin had taken the high 
ground and was staring directly down at me. 
The bear’s tremendous hulk literally dwarfed 
the recently felled tree at its side. I stood 
there looking at him, admiring his healthy 
black sheen and careful not to make any 
sudden or offensive gestures. 
 I removed my pack and stooped to retrieve 
my camera, but as I did so, he gave a 
bellowing snort and feigned a short charge. I 
quickly rose to my feet, my breathing 
hastened, my pulse quickened, and I gripped 
tightly the only object I had to defend 
myself - my snake hook. I could go nowhere 
amid the sticks and stones on the hill side, 
and so all I could do was wait and saturate 
myself in fear and awe of the beast. We 
stared at each other for what felt like an 
eternity before he finally sauntered off 
confident that I was not a threat. I on the 
other hand, did not turn my back until his 
black hide disappeared from sight. 
 
          
        | The Spring Egress: Moments with Georgia’s Denning | Reply |  
        | by Medic162 on August 1, 2011 | Mail this to a friend! |  
        | Thanks very much for sharing this story.  I'm glad the events at the end had a positive outcome!  I truly enjoyed reading this. |  
        |  |  
          
        | The Spring Egress: Moments with Georgia’s Denning | Reply |  
        | by questionaire on August 4, 2011 | Mail this to a friend! |  
        | This is a wonderful story. I held my breath as I read about the bear. 
 The first timber photo is absolutely beautiful. The colors are so rich and vibrant.
 
 Thanks for sharing,
 
 June
 
 |  
        |  |  
          
        | The Spring Egress: Moments with Georgia’s Denning | Reply |  
        | by zeplin on March 13, 2013 | Mail this to a friend! |  
        | Very amusing. You "cured" your hunger? How can you cure it when it always returns? Why not just state what it is-----you ate lunch. You may know something about snakes, but you certainly do not know anything about writing. |  
        |  |  
          
        | RE: The Spring Egress: Moments with Georgia’s Denn | Reply |  
        | by JCreighton on May 1, 2013 | Mail this to a friend! |  
        | Zeplin, what is wrong w/ you? What a petty criticism. "...cure the hunger" It's hyperbole, a figure of speech. If you're not familiar w/ hyperbole, the definition is in any dictionary. It was an enjoyable article. |  
        |  |  
          
        | RE: The Spring Egress: Moments with Georgia’s Denn | Reply |  
        | by Flannelmouth on February 24, 2018 | Mail this to a friend! |  
        | Zeplin, You may know something about manners----but no you don't. Rudeness is the weak person’s imitation of strength
 |  
        |  |  
          
        | Copperhead Snake Dens | Reply |  
        | by SouthernWildlifeMgmt on March 23, 2018 | Mail this to a friend! |  
        | Hi.  We provide snake removal services & snake control services here in North Georgia.  On a recent call we removed 30 copperheads from rotten railroad timbers.  We have pictures posted on our website. http://animaltrappingremoval.com/snakeremoval |  
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