The cost of being bitten by a rattlesnake

The friendliest place on the web for anyone with an RV or an interest in RVing!
If you have answers, please help by responding to the unanswered posts.

DonTom

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 21, 2005
Posts
15,311
Location
Auburn, CA or Reno, NV
See here.

"The antivenom alone accounted for $213,278 of the total $297,461 bill,"

-Don- Gila Bend, AZ (Rattlesnakes have been seen in this RV park many times--use a flashlight if walking around in the dark here at the Sonoran RV Park).
 
A Mojave Rattlesnake. The best way to tell it apart from the Western Diamondback is by the extra width of the white bands just above the rattle as shown in your video at 2:30 where it shows the white bands double the width of the black bands. With the WDB, the white and black bands are very close to the same width.

These two snakes are among the most dangerous in the USA and are difficult to tell apart. And it is important to know if getting bit because of the antivenom--very different. The Mojave venom is closer to the way cobra bite works--on the nervous system. The WDB works on the respiratory system.

Nevertheless, here in this RV Park they catch them alive and relocate them farther out in the desert, they do not kill them, and neither would I.

-Don- Sonaran Desert RV Park, Gila Bend, AZ
 
Ouch. They had to use a drill
Yeah, also what I was thinking, but there was probably no pain at all, the way things are done these days.

But the pain from the WDB rattlesnake venom will make just about anybody wish they were dead. It burns as it destroys tissue. While the WDB is more painful, the Mojave Rattlesnake is probably more likely to kill a person if all else is the same. The venoms are very different. The Mojave venom will paralyze a person in a few minutes.

-Don- Gila Bend, AZ
 
My ex-mother in law was bitten by a Copperhead in her back yard when she was about 67 years old, and ended up spending nearly 5 weeks in the VA hospital recovering afterwards.
 
A Mojave Rattlesnake. The best way to tell it apart from the Western Diamondback is by the extra width of the white bands just above the rattle as shown in your video at 2:30 where it shows the white bands double the width of the black bands. With the WDB, the white and black bands are very close to the same width.

These two snakes are among the most dangerous in the USA and are difficult to tell apart. And it is important to know if getting bit because of the antivenom--very different. The Mojave venom is closer to the way cobra bite works--on the nervous system. The WDB works on the respiratory system.

Nevertheless, here in this RV Park they catch them alive and relocate them farther out in the desert, they do not kill them, and neither would I.

-Don- Sonaran Desert RV Park, Gila Bend, AZ
If they are that dangerous, why not kill them. The entire species should be exterminated.
 
My ex-mother in law was bitten by a Copperhead in her back yard when she was about 67 years old, and ended up spending nearly 5 weeks in the VA hospital recovering afterwards.
While copperhead bites are the most common venomous snake bites in the USA, they cause almost no deaths. IIRC, the total number of deaths is five people out of the many thousands of copperhead bites.

-Don- Gila Bend, AZ
 
If they are that dangerous, why not kill them. The entire species should be exterminated.
We could say that for the human species. The most destructive animal that has ever lived on earth.

With only very rare exceptions, snakes are not dangerous if we don't try to invade their territory.

In the USA, around five people are killed from the venomous snake bite per year.

In the USA, around 50 people are killed by bees every year. Ten times the number killed by snakes. Should bees also be exterminated, IYO?

-Don- Gila Bend, AZ
 
These two snakes are among the most dangerous in the USA and are difficult to tell apart. And it is important to know if getting bit because of the antivenom
I would posit most folks suffering snake bites cannot identify the snake.
We could say that for the human species.
Then why kill anything; ants, roaches, spiders, mosquitoes, ticks.
 
If they are that dangerous, why not kill them. The entire species should be exterminated.
Just snakes being snakes.

One day Mr. Frog needed to swim across a wide lake. He thought about it for a bit then realized it was too far across. Just then Mr. Snake came by and offered Mr. Frog a ride to the other side. "I have to go over there anyway and you can hitch a ride on my back." "No way!" said Mr. Frog "You're a snake and will eat me!" Mr. Snake replied "I just ate and I promise I won't eat you. You'll be OK." Mr. Frog, really needing the ride agrees and gets on the snake's back. Mr. Snake takes him all the way over the lake and says "See, now you're on the other side." "Gee thanks, Mr. Snake!" Mr. Frog gets off the snake's back and take a few hops on the other side thinking what a good day it's been! Just then he feels Mr. Snake's fangs sink deep into the flesh of his back. "But Mr. Snake, you said you wouldn't eat me!!" Replies Mr. Snake "Fool. I'm a snake."
 
Then why kill anything; ants, roaches, spiders, mosquitoes, ticks.
The original comment was about exterminating the species.

Humans are notoriously bad about the impacts of what we do. Taking out an entire species could easily haxe negative consequences. For all we know that snake might be incredibly valuable. Maybe they can make some lifesaving drug only from that venom.

If i was threatened by that snake i would have no problem killing it. But i wouldnt want to take them all out
 
. . . here in this RV Park they catch them alive and relocate them farther out in the desert, they do not kill them, and neither would I.
I believe there's plenty of evidence that shows removing a snake from its territory is as good as killing it.
 
With only very rare exceptions, snakes are not dangerous if we don't try to invade their territory.
Right before we killed the rattlesnake on our porch we tried to ascertain with the snake if we were invading its territory. But he just kept rattling. ;)

Actually, it was our dog who found the snake. He didn't speak snake.
 
Back
Top Bottom