00:00Dangerous Wildlife Encounters, Navigating West Virginia's Wild Spaces Safely
00:05West Virginia's forests, rivers, fields, and backyards hold animals that can injure careless visitors.
00:13Timber rattlesnakes bask on Appalachian rocks shaking thick rattles when hikers step too close to warm ledges.
00:21Copperheads hide under leaves near wooded yards where copper-colored heads blend with brown forest litter.
00:26Black bears roam Monongahela National Forest following food smells from campsites, trash bins, and picnic tables.
00:35Coyotes cross West Virginia fields at dusk, hunting rodents while nervous pets bark behind backyard fences.
00:41White-tailed deer leap across mountain roads causing crashes when headlights catch eyes at the shoulder.
00:47Black widow spiders hang in sheds, wood piles, and garages showing red hourglass marks on glossy bodies.
00:55Snapping turtles wait in muddy ponds and creeks, using strong jaws when hands reach too close.
01:01Raccoons dig through trash cans near porches, and sick animals can stagger, bite, or act unusually bold.
01:09Rocks, leaf piles, campsites, highways, sheds, and creek banks create the risky places people actually meet these animals.
01:16A hiker steps back from a rattlesnake while the trail disappears into green West Virginia trees.
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