to see, and hear more rattlesnakes along trails and their property, and that's good business for James McCloskey.
"Rock walls are pretty notorious for juvenile rattlesnakes, even large ones," said McCloskey."They like to hide in the crannies and create a safe space from birds, hawks and coyotes." "I always tell clients if you have critters, mice or rodents on your property, then you have snakes," McCloskey said. "My wife thought it would be cool to get some video and footage of it," he said."And it is a good educational tool to help people to identify them, and it is also fun to get up close and personal to snakes.""Well, first you will likely hear them before you see them. It will surprise you with the sound of a water hose leak," said McCloskey.