My best answer to me could be: One snake that are cat-snakes, with two heads.
I think that you might be on LSD or something man
It turns vicious because you are chasing it.
you talk to herculles he'll pull it out he thinks its a snake but its medusa she turns him to stone.
Snakes Lay eggs just like birds Im unsure of how long the time is of until the hatch.
That depends. Some people think of her as a beautiful woman with snakes for hair, and some think of her as a completely ugly hag (with snakes for hair). Either way, looking at her turns you to stone.
In the book "Chasing Vermeer" by Blue Balliett, Fred is one of the main characters along with Petra and Calder. Fred is their teacher who helps guide them on their mission to solve the mystery surrounding a stolen Vermeer painting.
This is a really good question, and I had it too... As it turns out the snakes' natural habitat is on the Lake Erie Islands Ohio. Rocky beachfront and shallow waters provide habitat for these endangered snakes. They have the smallest geographic reaches of any vertebrate in the world.
Medusa is a character from Greek mythology, not a folktale. She is often depicted as a monster with snakes for hair, whose gaze turns people into stone.
Some animals chase others outflank, when hunting they take turns chasing to tire their prey. The Lead female (alpha female) will let/require other females to suckle her pups.
yes,snakes do need water.they could live a little while without it,but not very long.Yes they do.Desert snakes are specially design to retain the water they encounter, and they also get moisture from their prey, and probably they, in the wild, know the vegetation and spots where water can be found.All snakes do need water to survive. If you're thinking of keeping a desert species, do some careful research first to determine how much they should be given and when.
#1) Seriously stealthily stalking of some silly Serengeti deer. #2) Springing from camoflaged cover to catch their breakfast in its tracks. #3) Chasing down breakfast at breakneck speeds. #4) Using their long tail to negotiate very sharp turns while chasing down breakfast. #5) Abandoning breakfast to hyenas in the interest of personal safety.
A leader of a coven in London it's on page 331-332 in twilight
Medusa grows live snakes from her head, not hair. So, she doesn't cut her "hair". According to Greek Mythology, looking upon the face of Medusa turns the observer to stone.