As soon as I got closer, it coiled up and made the most amazing continuous backwards movements onto itself. According to Gary's CA Herps (linked in the scientific misnomer above), this Northern American racer is not a constrictor, and it bites aggressively. I didn't know that at the time, but I'm always a bit cautious around snakes I don't know. Chris, who stayed with the car should another car come barreling around the corner, shouted for me to get video. Ha! As if. I was just hoping I could get at least one non-blurry photo, because so often these opportunities are fleeting. Little did I know the snake wasn't too keen on moving anywhere. It held its ground and watched me closely. I didn't want it to get run over by a car, so I tried herding it to the side of the road with a nudge from my boot and then a stick to pick it up. That's how I got the yellow belly picture. It was extremely reluctant, but once it decided to go, it went in a flash.
After I got home and looked at my pictures, I noticed the oozy stuff here and there on its back. Click second picture above for closeup. It was my first shot out of the car before I molested it with my picture and herding activities. What is that shiny stuff? Did it already get run over? Was it in some mammal's mouth and dropped? Is it some kind of defensive secretion? Is it the result of a twisted mating position? Hmm...
Ken @ Nature of a Man has an excellent blog post on Coluber mormon. Some view this snake as its own sp., not a ssp.

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