I learned a couple of interesting things about snakebite yesterday -- was out at the farm (Lacassine area, about 18 miles east of Lake Charles, just north of a major wildlife reserve) -- finished cutting grass and was walking by our pond
with one of our English Setters, Dram -- we have had a lot of rain this spring, so the ditches, ponds, marshes, etc are full as well as the crawfish ponds (flooded rice fields in the area), so lots of snakes around .Usually the only place I encounter water moccasins is in the marsh and I have had to kill a few over the years, including a 5-footer that was in the yard of our duck camp. I can usually smell them if they are over a few feet long (I know that sounds strange, but they have a dank and disagreeable odor that you can smell if close to one) -- I apparently walked right by the moccasin (in some high grass by the pond edge and it struck Dram near the shoulder who yelped. Ran to the barn, put Dram in his crate in the truck, got a heavy duty rake, and was able to find the snake and kill it -- positive ID as moccasin. Rushed to vet -- shave area at bite site -- no swelling, or any other sequelae after several hours (usually there is rapid swelling as the venom is primarily hemotoxic/mucotoxic) -- Found out that snakebites do not always produce envenomation and with water moccasins only about 50% of bites result in envenomation -- (apparently defensive strikes) -- also found out that anitvenin supplies are low and very very expensive -- antivenin serum treatment may run into many thousands of dollars. Thought came to mind that if you spend a lot of time outdoors (as I do), check around and find out what medical facilities in your area keep antivenin in stock -- it may come in handy to know that in advance one day. Dram is fine and I am very relieved.
A doctor friend I talked to yesterday told me that the snake must have known that I was a lawyer and did not bite me as a professonal courtesy -- about the only humor in what was
an eventful and worried afternoon.