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W von Papineäu
at Sun Oct 12 09:30:41 2008 [ Report Abuse ] [ Email Message ] [ Show All Posts by W von Papineäu ]
TAMPA TRIBUNE (Florida) 11 October 08 Rattlesnake In Mailbox Bites Letter Carrier (Valerie Kalfrin) Tampa: Forget rain, sleet or snow: The bite of a venomous snake didn't keep mail carrier Efrain Arango from his appointed rounds. What authorities think was a diamondback rattlesnake latched onto the 66-year-old's left index finger Friday morning after Arango surprised it in a New Tampa mailbox. Arango said he shook his arm and thwacked the small snake against his car door to break its grip. Then, with his fingertip bruised and bleeding, he delivered packages for about 30 minutes before seeking help at the New Tampa Post Office, where a supervisor called 911. "I finished my route. I have to do my job," Arango said Friday afternoon, resting in the emergency center of University Community Hospital. "I have lots of bills to pay." Joe Pittman, a registered nurse at the hospital and a snakebite specialist for the Florida Poison Control Center, administered pain medication to Arango but no antivenin because Arango's symptoms weren't severe. He considered keeping Arango overnight to ensure he was in good health. Arango said he kept working immediately after the bite because his symptoms developed slowly, which Pittman said is common. By the time Arango returned to the post office, "my arm was like a fire inside," he said. His hand swelled, and he couldn't move his fingers, he said. "I thought I was going to die." Arango said he has worked as a contractor with the Postal Service for about 11 months, delivering about 150 packages daily. He uses his own car. Arango said he was in the 20000 block of Merry Oak Avenue at about 11 a.m. when he opened a mailbox and saw a small parcel inside. "When I tried to remove the package, I saw something move," he said. He jumped, and the snake bit him. "In that moment I was scared. I shake and I shake," he said, waving his hand to describe trying to knock the snake loose. Pittman said Arango identified the snake that bit him - brown with yellow spots - by indicating a photograph of an eastern diamondback rattlesnake. In Florida, bites from these snakes cause the most fatalities, he said. "It's not the first time I've heard of a snake in a mailbox," Pittman said, noting that snakes will seek a high perch after rain. "Snakes can get into amazing places. They'll flatten their bodies right out." They're not the only creatures that like mailboxes. Pittman said he has heard of people being bitten by stowaway black widow spiders, Florida scorpions and wasps. Rattlesnake In Mailbox Bites Letter Carrier
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- FL Press: Rattlesnake bites Mailman - W von Papineäu, Sun Oct 12 09:30:41 2008
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