Monday’s Music On A Sunday Evening

WARNING! Psychodilic features a Psycho Kitty, a Western Diamondback Rattlesnake, a Black Mamba, and colorful psychedelic patterns and holes that move in a regular, irregular fashion. The lyrics are nonsensical, as well. If you have tendencies toward Ailurophobia Psychopathesis (Fear of Psychopathic Cats), Ophidiophobia (Fear of Snakes), Trypophobia (Fear of clustered patterns of irregular holes), or Emetophobia (fear of vomiting), you might want to take a pass on viewing the above music video, and simply enjoy the photo of the sunset below.

Psychodelic
Lyrics and Music by Timothy Price

[Chorus]
Psycho Kitty
Psycho Kitty

Spunk Kitty
La la la la
Spunk Kitty
La la la la
Spunk Kitty
La la la la
Spunk Kitty
La la la la
Spunk Kitty
La la la la
Spunk Kitty
La la la la

Psycho Kitty
Psycho Kitty

[Verses]
Psycho kitty drives me crazy
Psycho colors are so hazy
Psychopathic’s normal say
How can we live this way

Psycho kitty drives me crazy
Psycho-spastic, I’m not lazy
Psychopathy’s here to stay
How can we live this way

Shaking like a rattlesnake
I don’t even hesitate
Feeling how it resonates
I bite the viper’s tongue

Shaking like a rattlesnake
You know I hallucinate
How it makes me salivate
I bite the viper’s tongue

[chorus]
Psycho Kitty
Psycho Kitty

Spunk Kitty
La la la la
Spunk Kitty
La la la la
Spunk Kitty
La la la la
Spunk Kitty
La la la la
Spunk Kitty
La la la la
Spunk Kitty
La la la la

Psycho Kitty
Psycho Kitty

[Bridge]
See, Black Mambas are
biting on my legs
I’m still alive how can that be
Their snaky licks, oh, how they tickle
Keep your fangs to yourself
I don’t want to die this way

Psycho Kitty
Psycho Kitty

[Guitar Solo]

Psycho Kitty
Psycho Kitty

[Verses]
Psycho kitty drives me crazy
Psycho colors are so hazy
Psychopathic’s normal say
How can we live this way

Psycho kitty drives me crazy
Psycho-spastic, I’m not lazy
Psychopathy’s here to stay
How can we live this way

Shaking like a rattlesnake
I don’t even hesitate
Feeling how it resonates
I bite the viper’s tongue

Shaking like a rattlesnake
You know I hallucinate
How it makes me salivate
I bite the viper’s tongue

[Chorus/Outro]
Psycho Kitty
Psycho Kitty

Spunk Kitty
La la la la
Spunk Kitty
La la la la
Spunk Kitty
La la la la
Spunk Kitty
La la la la
Spunk Kitty
La la la la
Spunk Kitty
La la la la

Psycho Kitty

Snake In The Grass

Tristan walked out to her car to go to work and discovered a large Diamond Back Rattlesnake beside her car. She when back inside, got her snake stick, and a 5-gallon bucket with a lid, put the snake in the bucket, put the lid on the buck, carried the buck with the snake in it out to the Petroglyph Park, and let the snake go. She said the snake was very calm the whole time.

A dazed Lesser Goldfinch sitting on Tristan’s thumb.

Bullsnake at Desert Harbor

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While I was sitting on a rock in the canyon at Desert Harbor Retreat looking at the landscape, watching the birds in the distance, and observing the various insects crawling around my feet, this large bull snake (about six feet long) crawled by just a few feet away. He got defensive when I got close with the camera, but then he settled down and let me get to within less than an inch of him with the camera’s lens.

If you don’t know your snakes, you might confuse this bullsnake with a rattlesnake. The markings are similar to a rattlesnake’s, and with his defensive postures, he mimics a rattlesnake by raising his body into a striking position; he flattens his head to make it more triangular, hisses, and vibrates his tail like a rattlesnake (if there are dried leaves to vibrate his tail against, he will sound somewhat like a rattlesnake). But that’s where the similarities end. A bullsnake is slender, and has a thin, round head compared to a rattlesnake. Bullsnakes are non-venomous constrictors, with round pupils. A Western Diamondback rattlesnake the same length as this bullsnake would have a girth at least four times larger, and its head would be three or four times larger than the bullsnake’s head. Rattlesnakes have raised plates over their cat-like eyes, triangular heads, and pits on the sides of their faces (you can see a Western Diamondback rattlesnake in my blog from July 2, 2013).

After a while, the bullsnake decided we were no longer a threat and continued his hunting. We followed him around, observing him for about 45 minutes as he seemed to be following a scent trail. We walked beside him, behind him, observed him closely, and he simply went about his business as if we were not even there. I was thinking that he might flush out a field mouse, grab it, constrict it, then eat it, and I could document the hunt, the kill and the meal, but he was still hunting when we parted ways.

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Defensive position acting like a rattlesnake

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Settling down

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OK! The paparazzi isn’t so bad after all

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I think I look rather dashing in the round mirror (taken with a 17mm lens almost touching the snake)

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He goes back to hunting

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His happy hunting ground. You can see the snake in the foreground just above the “2014” if you look carefully

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The snake is sniffing the grass while Laurie checks him out

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Smells something interesting on the grass

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Laurie walking with the snake

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Sniffing a patch of piñon needles

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Happy snake face

 

Western Diamondback

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If you have never had the opportunity to meet a western diamondback rattlesnake up close and personal, meet Button. My sister called me after she left the office to tell me there was another rattlesnake in her garage, and she was not successful herding it back out to the mesa like the last one. She had found the rattles, which it had shed in the garage, and then she found the snake. Since the snake only has one button for a rattle on his tail, we named him Button.

I drove by on my way home from work, and Dede had managed to get it in the opening of a large box. I tried to set the box up on end, but the snake crawled out  before I could get it upright, and coiled up under a small bush. I noticed it was really skinny for it’s length (it should be 3 times thicker in the middle part of its body), and I called Tristan to see how long it would take her to thaw out a small rat, so we could see if it would eat before we moved it back out to the mesa.  She had a couple of small rats already thawed out to feed her ball python, so she and David brought them over.

Dede noticed the snake seemed lethargic — he was not at all aggressive, hardly flicked his tongue out at all, and he allowed me reposition him into more photogenic positions with a broom stick several times while we were waiting for Tristan. The passivity was probably a combination of the hunger (he probably hasn’t had anything to eat since last year), heat, stress, fatigue and being outside of his territory.

Button was very interested in the rat we offered it and started to eat it several times, but he spat it out each time. We don’t know if the rat was not warm enough, not the right size, or that is was not wild, but he finally refused to eat it. I got Button back in the box, which was about 2 feet high, but he was able crawl right back out once I set the box upright. So we got him to crawl into a large trash can, snapped the lid on and took him to Tristan’s, where we set up a secure terrarium outside, and transferred him to it.

Once we got Button into the terrarium, he became more alert and territorial. In the last photo he is in the aquarium checking out the air with his tongue and watching Tristan, David and me as we observed him and talked about him. Snakes can’t hear, but Button is so sensitive to vibration that he would turn his attention to whoever was speaking like he was listening to and participating in the conversation. Rattlesnakes are very advanced reptiles, and appear to have more reptilian-type intelligence than other snakes (King cobras are reported to show a sense of intelligence as well). Once Button was in the terrarium, he changed his attitude, which could be because it was cooler and starting to get dark, but apparently he is content to be in the terrarium with a bowl of water, a nice hide box, and food after the trauma of being shooed out of a garage, photographed, herded into a into a box, and then a trashcan, and shaken around in my car on our way back to Tristan’s.

 

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