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Rare two-headed snake is surprisingly thriving. The second head breathes, flicks its tongue, and allegedly can get mad when provoked. By Margherita Bassi. Published May 16, 2025 1:22 PM EDT.
One hatchling born at East Bay Vivarium turned out to be a two-headed snake. They're male California kings with a fused spine, named Zeke and Angel, and their birth was a one in 100,000 occurrence.
“Dragon head, snake tail” describes something that initially appears wonderful or amazing, but ends disappointingly. 蛇に睨まれた蛙 — Hebi ni niramareta kaeru .
One hatchling born at East Bay Vivarium turned out to be a two-headed snake. They're male California kings with a fused spine, named Zeke and Angel, and their birth was a one in 100,000 occurrence.
One hatchling born at East Bay Vivarium turned out to be a two-headed snake. They're male California kings with a fused spine, named Zeke and Angel, and their birth was a one in 100,000 occurrence.
One hatchling born at East Bay Vivarium turned out to be a two-headed snake. They're male California kings with a fused spine, named Zeke and Angel, and their birth was a one in 100,000 occurrence.
One hatchling born at East Bay Vivarium turned out to be a two-headed snake. They're male California kings with a fused spine, named Zeke and Angel, and their birth was a one in 100,000 occurrence.
One hatchling born at East Bay Vivarium turned out to be a two-headed snake. They're male California kings with a fused spine, named Zeke and Angel, and their birth was a one in 100,000 occurrence.
One hatchling born at East Bay Vivarium turned out to be a two-headed snake. They're male California kings with a fused spine, named Zeke and Angel, and their birth was a one in 100,000 occurrence.