Reptile & Amphibian Forums

Welcome to kingsnake.com's message board system. Here you may share and discuss information with others about your favorite reptile and amphibian related topics such as care and feeding, caging requirements, permits and licenses, and more. Launched in 1997, the kingsnake.com message board system is one of the oldest and largest systems on the internet.

Click for 65% off Shipping with Reptiles 2 You
Click for ZooMed

WA Press: Decapitated Rattler Bites

Aug 09, 2007 10:37 PM

TRI-CITY HERALD (Kennewick, Washington) 09 August 07 Headless rattlesnake sends man to Richland hospital (Andrew Sirocchi)
When Danny Anderson went hunting for rattlesnakes with his dad outside Quincy, his father always told him to never touch a snake.
But Monday night, when a 5-foot rattler slithered onto his Yakitat Road property while the 53-year-old was feeding his horses, failing to heed his father's advice came back to bite him.
But it isn't as simple as all that. The snake that bit Anderson should have been dead.
He and his 27-year-old son Benjamin pinned the creature with an irrigation pipe and cut off its head with a shovel.
In fact, after hitting it with the shovel several times, the snake's head measuring about half the width of a tube of toothpaste ended up under a pickup.
"When I reached down to pick up the head, it raised around and did a backflip almost, and bit my finger," Anderson said. "I had to shake my hand real hard to get it to let loose."
The snake head ended up in the bed of his pickup and Anderson landed in Kadlec Medical Center until Wednesday afternoon.
"I was mad that he scooped that out with his hand, and I was scared because I didn't know what to do," said his wife, Linda Anderson.
At first, Danny Anderson didn't want to go to a hospital but his wife insisted.
And by the time they raced the 10 minutes to Prosser Memorial Hospital, his tongue was swollen, and the venom was spreading from his index finger to the rest of his body.
"It felt like someone was holding my hand in a fire pit," said the repairman for Rowand Machinery. "It was one of the worst pains I ever had."
But it didn't end there.
After finding that Prosser didn't have the full series of six antivenin shots he needed, an ambulance rushed him the 30 miles to the Richland hospital.
Linda Anderson said the rattler was the first they'd seen since moving onto their property five years ago, and she believes a recent fire caused the snake to make its way toward their home on the five acres.
"We've seen quite a few bullsnakes out there at Yakitat but we're kind of wondering if the fire didn't just destroy their habitat," she said.
Mike Livingston, a Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife biologist in the Wildlife Program, said the area where the Andersons live is near prime snake habitat and it's reasonable to think that a recent fire displaced the rattlers.
But Livingston said he had never heard of anyone being bit by a decapitated snake before.
"That's really surprising but that's an important thing to tell people," he said. "It may have been just a reflex on the part of the snake."
It's also possible the snake still had the ability to use the heat sensors to make one last attack.
Livingston suggested that if snakes are a good distance from a home, people should allow them room to pass through and they likely won't see them again.
If the snakes are threatening, though, Livingston said people should call the Washington State Patrol, which likely will send a wildlife officer to move the snake to another area.
The rattler that bit Anderson already has been buried by his son but Anderson said he wants to exhume it to collect the rattle.
And if another rattlesnake comes along, Anderson said he'll likely try to kill it again.
"I'm going to grab a shovel and bury it right there," he said. "It still gives me the creeps to think that son-of-a-gun could do that."
Headless rattlesnake sends man to Richland hospital

Replies (3)

azatrox Aug 10, 2007 09:44 AM

I swear, some people aren't smart enough to learn from their mistakes...

"It's also possible the snake still had the ability to use the heat sensors to make one last attack."

So let me get this right...man cuts off the snake's head with a shovel...picks up the head and is bitten...and the snake has ATTACKED him? Can someone PLEASE provide the definition of "attack" to this journalist? Mr. journalist, had the fellow simply left the snake alone, there would have been no such "attack" and both parties would have left the situation unscathed...

"Livingston suggested that if snakes are a good distance from a home, people should allow them room to pass through and they likely won't see them again."

Good advice, but not likely to be heeded by those that don't wish to be educated about such things...(see below)

"The rattler that bit Anderson already has been buried by his son but Anderson said he wants to exhume it to collect the rattle."

Well, if I were Anderson I certainly wouldn't want a "prize" symbolizing my completely unnecessary mistake. I imagine the scar resulting from the bite might be "prize" enough...

"And if another rattlesnake comes along, Anderson said he'll likely try to kill it again."

Some people never learn I guess...I wonder if Mr. Anderson knows that the vast majority of snakebites (like his) are the result of a person INTENTIONALLY interacting with the snake. You used a shovel the first time Mr. Anderson...and were still bitten...get a clue. If you see an "evil rattlesnake" LEAVE IT ALONE...I assure you that it has no interest in "attacking you" (despite any claims made by journalists). If you leave it alone, it'll leave you alone. If you go trying to chop it's head off and playing with it, it'll bite you. Is that REALLY such a surprise?

Cordially yours,
Kris Haas
Kris | 08.10.07 - 7:45 am | #

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

yoyoing Aug 10, 2007 10:57 AM

The journalist may also want to note that the decapitated snake caused no harm. The discorporated head of the snake was another matter.

wolfpackh Aug 10, 2007 01:46 PM

serves him right for killing the snake. people who kill snakes are morons-- natural selection at work

Site Tools