Snake ID please?

yep, the rat snake seems to vary in color from really black to the "yellow" version with distinct patterning. And I've been told some are lots meaner than others.
 
Apparently they come in different colors. http://www.uga.edu/srelherp/snakes/elaobs.htm . Mine must be the Grey Rat Snake, with the blotches.

Thanks, I skipped over that one because the first picture they showed was mostly black. The head definitely matches.

This place (20 acres, mostly wooded, some low spots) was vacant for a few years, and the wildlife has made itself _quite_ comfortable!
 
Could also be an emory rat snake, or an anery cornsnake
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There are many different type of ratsnakes out there, what you found looks mostly like a black rat (grey rats tend not to get as long) which do vary in color from gray with brown/yellow/black saddles to solid black with white bellies, all depends on where they are found and the genetics being passed around in that location.

All ratsnakes look nearly identical as babies, light background color with darker saddles. Yellow rats (Pantherophis obsoleta quadrivittata) are a dirty yellow color with darker lines running from head to tail and are often considerably more aggressive then blacks. Red ratsnakes (Pantherophis guttatta) are also known as cornsnakes and are probably the #1 pet snake out there and are often rather docile even in the wild. Great plains or emorys ratsnake is like a greyer smaller version of a corn, Everglades rats are like an orangy yellowy version of a yellow rat. Grey rats are smaller and grayer then black rats, Texas rats out west are huge brown and often nasty, along with a few other much less common species out west.
 
Here's a picture of my black rat, whose parents came from Virginia, where they are known to be very black -

From a baby to an adult

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