Strange news about a snake bite.

I grew up in rural Virginia during the 50's and snakes were pretty common, yet I don't remember ever hearing of anyone being bitten. We only had one type of snake, the dreaded Copperbackrattlemoccasin, usually referred to as a (blank) snake. I suppose some of them might have actually been dangerous, but my mother taught me to leave the snakes (and skink lizards, she was scared of the lizards) alone, and I was more scared of her than I was the snakes and lizards.
 
I got bit by a rattlesnake once. Didn;t know it was a rattler until he struck. He had just one little kernel of rattle left on him.

He bit my hand, but I was wearing gloves, and the fangs left two little red dots on the webbing of my hand. He barely poked through my glove (bicycle gloves).

He didn't inject me as I would have got very sick and possibly would have died. This happened at a public park that was in a forested area. Gotta watch out for snakes on mountain bike trails, ust like cougars and bears.
 
A friend was in Louisiana and was struck in the ankle by a copperhead. What was odd was that he only had one puncture wound from one fang. I puzzled this out in my brain till I came up with a logical cause. I finally figured it out. This happened in the deep south where half to adult men and a third of the adult females don't have a full set of front teeth. So, it would figure that their snakes don't either. My friend in essence got bit by a redneck snake.
That's how you know the toothbrush was invented in Tennessee. Anywhere else they would have called it a teethbrush.
 
Never been bitten, but I've had a few close calls.

Once at our gun club I was setting up steel silhouette targets to knock them down again, when my son yelled, "Look out!" I hadn't seen it, but just as I moved my foot a diamondback struck at it. Fortunately he missed. It was a hot day, and I guess the snake was enjoying the shade under the target rail that we set the silhouettes on. Somebody was watching over me that day. I not only didn't see the snake, but I was wearing tennis shoes that day instead of my usual leather boots.
 
Never saw your links, but I bet this was one of them.

Snake Bite Kit

Here you go, links below

No offense intended toward you, but as a 40+ year Paramedic, I need to make clear that "Snake Bite Kits" are NOT effective, nor are they recommended

Please do NOT waste your money, and time, on these harmful/useless "kits", which can delay access to PROPER care for the victim

To provide some reference, I will include some links....



 
In my post on the first page of this thread, I mentioned that because the snake only had one fang and was from the south it must have been a redneck snake. I know what I am talking about. I was born in the deep south. I got my first permanent tooth knocked out at age 6 and have had a false front tooth since first grade. Though I arrived in the mountains as a very young age, my city relatives refer to me as either the hillbilly or redneck from the mountains. Living a reclusive life at the Continental Divide, my home is often a destination for city dwellers. Our spare bedroom is known as the Hillbilly Hilton and any family or friends gather is known as a Redneck Rendezvous.
 
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