Back in 1970, while scanning a pricelist from Hank Molt, the name Mt. Kenya bush viper,
Atheris desaixii, caught my eye. I was familiar with several species in the genus, but
A. desaixii was one that I didn't know.
In those days there was no Google to turn to for information. Even the word computer was seldom heard and if heard it was not thought about as belonging to a magazine-sized entity that would reside in average homes, schoolrooms, backpacks, and vehicles.
But we did have telephones. And back then we dialed the number of the person we hoped to talk with. Since there was no caller ID to alert them that it was a pest calling, they almost always answered the phone. So I called Hank. Hank answered, and a few moments later he was describing a Mt. Kenya bush viper to me. It seems that the snake was primarily black, had yellow tipped scales, and its venom composition was basically unknown. Hank said it was a beautiful snake, really, really pretty.
Sounded pretty to me, so I asked Patti "Do I need a Mt. Kenya bush viper?" She looked at me like I had just stepped off a spaceship, and said "no" (and it was an emphatic no).
So I called Hank back, told him that Patti couldn't wait to see the viper, and to ship it ASAP. Two days later I was getting acquainted with my first Mt. Kenya bush viper.
And Hank had been right. It was a beauty.
An adult Mt. Kenya bush viper.
Neonate
Atheris desaixii lack the brightness of the adults.
Author, photographer, and columnist Richard Bartlett is one of the most prolific writers on herpetological subjects in the 20th century. With hundreds of books and articles to their credit, Richard and his wife Pat have spent over four decades documenting reptiles both in the field and in captivity. For a list of their current titles, please visit their page in our bookstore. |
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