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Venomous Snakes on Live TV with Steve Ludwin

1 posted on 12/13/2017 5:44:47 PM PST by nickcarraway
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To: nickcarraway

>He believes that the injections boost his immune system and keep him young.

Fine by me as long as I do not have to pay for it for him.


2 posted on 12/13/2017 5:46:48 PM PST by soycd
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To: nickcarraway

He speaks with forked tongue.


3 posted on 12/13/2017 5:47:54 PM PST by Old Yeller (Auto-correct has become my worst enema.)
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To: nickcarraway

>Snakebites still exact a high toll in Africa.

Okay, let’s make sure africa creates a few billion more breeders soon to compensate.

The civilized world needs more afican immigrants to slide it back to prehistoric days...


6 posted on 12/13/2017 5:50:36 PM PST by soycd
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To: nickcarraway

Is he the one with the long tongue?


7 posted on 12/13/2017 5:53:48 PM PST by G Larry (There is no great virtue in bargaining with the Devil)
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To: nickcarraway

A friend from elementary school through high school was bitten by a copperhead. She was treated with a horse antivenin serum and died from anaphylaxis without any previous allergies to horses. This article shows an interesting alternative. Weird but interesting.


8 posted on 12/13/2017 5:57:38 PM PST by T-Bird45 (It feels like the seventies, and it shouldn't.)
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To: nickcarraway

Teddy Roosevelt wrote extensively on poisonous snakes and their characteristics in his book on his travels in the amazon.

Excerpt from “Through the Brazilian Wilderness, by Theodore Roosevelt

“Before I followed them I witnessed an incident worthy of note from the standpoint of a naturalist, and of possible importance to us because of the trip we were about to take. South America, even more than Australia and Africa, and almost as much as India, is a country of poisonous snakes. As in India, although not to the same degree, these snakes are responsible for a very serious mortality among human beings.

One of the most interesting evidences of the modern advance in Brazil is the establishment near Sao Paulo of an institution especially for the study of these poisonous snakes, so as to secure antidotes to the poison and to develop enemies to the snakes themselves. We wished to take into the interior with us some bottles of the anti-venom serum, for on such an expedition there is always a certain danger from snakes. On one of his trips Cherrie had lost a native follower by snake-bite. The man was bitten while out alone in the forest, and, although he reached camp, the poison was already working in him, so that he could give no intelligible account of what had occurred, and he died in a short time.

Poisonous snakes are of several different families, but the most poisonous ones, those which are dangerous to man, belong to the two great families of the colubrine snakes and the vipers. Most of the colubrine snakes are entirely harmless, and are the common snakes that we meet everywhere.

But some of them, the cobras for instance, develop into what are on the whole perhaps the most formidable of all snakes. The only poisonous colubrine snakes in the New World are the ring- snakes, the coral-snakes of the genus elaps, which are found from the extreme southern United States southward to the Argentine. These coral-snakes are not vicious and have small teeth which cannot penetrate even ordinary clothing. They are only dangerous if actually trodden on by some one with bare feet or if seized in the hand. There are harmless snakes very like them in color which are sometimes kept as pets; but it behooves every man who keeps such a pet or who handles such a snake to be very sure as to the genus to which it belongs.

The great bulk of the poisonous snakes of America, including all the really dangerous ones, belong to a division of the widely spread family of vipers which is known as the pit-vipers. In South America these include two distinct subfamilies or genera—whether they are called families, subfamilies, or genera would depend, I suppose, largely upon the varying personal views of the individual describer on the subject of herpetological nomenclature. One genus includes the rattlesnakes, of which the big Brazilian species is as dangerous as those of the southern United States. But the large majority of the species and individuals of dangerous snakes in tropical America are included in the genus lachecis. These are active, vicious, aggressive snakes without rattles.

They are exceedingly poisonous. Some of them grow to a very large size, being indeed among the largest poisonous snakes in the world—their only rivals in this respect being the diamond rattlesnake of Florida, one of the African mambas, and the Indian hamadryad, or snake-eating cobra. The fer-de-lance, so dreaded in Martinique, and the equally dangerous bushmaster of Guiana are included in this genus. A dozen species are known in Brazil, the biggest one being identical with the Guiana bushmaster, and the most common one, the jararaca, being identical, or practically identical with the fer-de-lance. The snakes of this genus, like the rattlesnakes and the Old World vipers and puff-adders, possess long poison-fangs which strike through clothes or any other human garment except stout leather.

Moreover, they are very aggressive, more so than any other snakes in the world, except possibly some of the cobras. As, in addition, they are numerous, they are a source of really frightful danger to scantily clad men who work in the fields and forests, or who for any reason are abroad at night.

The poison of venomous serpents is not in the least uniform in its quality. On the contrary, the natural forces—to use a term which is vague, but which is as exact as our present-day knowledge permits— that have developed in so many different families of snakes these poisoned fangs have worked in two or three totally different fashions. Unlike the vipers, the colubrine poisonous snakes have small fangs, and their poison, though on the whole even more deadly, has entirely different effects, and owes its deadliness to entirely different qualities. Even within the same family there are wide differences.

In the jararaca an extraordinary quantity of yellow venom is spurted from the long poison-fangs. This poison is secreted in large glands which, among vipers, give the head its peculiar ace-of-spades shape. The rattlesnake yields a much smaller quantity of white venom, but, quantity for quantity, this white venom is more deadly. It is the great quantity of venom injected by the long fangs of the jararaca, the bushmaster, and their fellows that renders their bite so generally fatal. Moreover, even between these two allied genera of pit-vipers, the differences in the action of the poison are sufficiently marked to be easily recognizable, and to render the most effective anti-venomous serum for each slightly different from the other. However, they are near enough alike to make this difference, in practice, of comparatively small consequence. In practice the same serum can be used to neutralize the effect of either, and, as will be seen later on, the snake that is immune to one kind of venom is also immune to the other.

But the effect of the venom of the poisonous colubrine snakes is totally different from, although to the full as deadly as, the effect of the poison of the rattlesnake or jararaca. The serum that is an antidote as regards the colubrines. The animal that is immune to the bite of one may not be immune to the bite of the other. The bite of a cobra or other colubrine poisonous snake is more painful in its immediate effects than is the bite of one of the big vipers. The victim suffers more.

There is a greater effect on the nerve-centres, but less swelling of the wound itself, and, whereas the blood of the rattlesnake’s victim coagulates, the blood of the victim of an elapine snake—that is, of one of the only poisonous American colubrines— becomes watery and incapable of coagulation.

Snakes are highly specialized in every way, including their prey. Some live exclusively on warm-blooded animals, on mammals, or birds. Some live exclusively on batrachians, others only on lizards, a few only on insects.

A very few species live exclusively on other snakes. These include one very formidable venomous snake, the Indian hamadryad, or giant cobra, and several non-poisonous snakes. In Africa I killed a small cobra which contained within it a snake but a few inches shorter than itself; but, as far as I could find out, snakes were not the habitual diet of the African cobras.

The poisonous snakes use their venom to kill their victims, and also to kill any possible foe which they think menaces them. Some of them are good-tempered, and only fight if injured or seriously alarmed. Others are excessively irritable, and on rare occasions will even attack of their own accord when entirely unprovoked and unthreatened.


10 posted on 12/13/2017 6:02:41 PM PST by Rome2000 (SMASH THE CPUSA-SIC SEMPER TYRANNIS-CLOSE ALL MOSQUES)
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To: nickcarraway

I remember a serpent in the garden telling Eve that she could live forever as well . . . with her it was from the fruit of a tree - with this guy a different route.


11 posted on 12/13/2017 6:02:56 PM PST by Pilgrim's Progress (http://www.baptistbiblebelievers.com/BYTOPICS/tabid/335/Default.aspx D)
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To: nickcarraway

I remember a serpent in the garden telling Eve that she could live forever as well . . . with her it was from the fruit of a tree - with this guy a different route.


13 posted on 12/13/2017 6:03:23 PM PST by Pilgrim's Progress (http://www.baptistbiblebelievers.com/BYTOPICS/tabid/335/Default.aspx D)
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To: nickcarraway

Snake rattle, and roll


17 posted on 12/13/2017 6:20:45 PM PST by So Circumstanced
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To: nickcarraway

Poisonous snakes and needles, no and heck no.


23 posted on 12/13/2017 6:32:04 PM PST by Stevenc131
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To: nickcarraway
Did someone say "snake"?


24 posted on 12/13/2017 6:33:20 PM PST by Flag_This (Liberals are locusts.)
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To: nickcarraway

Has Keith Richards heard of this?


28 posted on 12/13/2017 6:52:16 PM PST by AFreeBird
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To: nickcarraway

SSSSssss starring Strother Martin, Dirk Benedict and Heather Menzies...


30 posted on 12/13/2017 7:15:08 PM PST by RedMonqey (“Better to die on your feet than living on your knees”)
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To: nickcarraway

Does he play Whitesnake cover songs?


31 posted on 12/13/2017 7:24:01 PM PST by Kazan
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To: nickcarraway

Turn it up to 11 bro...


35 posted on 12/13/2017 7:44:19 PM PST by DesertRhino (Dog is man's best friend, and moslems hate dogs. Add that up. ... we.)
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To: nickcarraway

I didn’t know that you could inject Lisinopril...


38 posted on 12/13/2017 8:02:55 PM PST by matthew fuller (Out with Jeff- In with Rudy!)
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To: nickcarraway

The article won’t come up for me. Is there a picture of him someone can post?


39 posted on 12/13/2017 8:13:05 PM PST by Bellflower (Who dares believe Jesus?)
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To: nickcarraway
Bill Haast, who founded the Miami Serpentarium, and was bitten 172 times by a wide variety of poisonous snakes, also injected small amounts of snake venom into himself to build up immunity.

Haast lived to almost 101 years old, but on several occasions he stated he did not know if snake venom had anything to do with his very long life.

41 posted on 12/13/2017 9:38:17 PM PST by zeestephen
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To: nickcarraway
Sounds like a great plot point for a TV Detective.

"The suspect has been injecting himself with low doses of snake venom for years! Therefore he was able to drag the victim into the snakepit with no harm to himself."
44 posted on 12/14/2017 3:03:51 AM PST by \/\/ayne (I regret that I have but one subscription cancellation notice to give to my local newspaper.)
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To: nickcarraway

And herre I thought it wold be Keith Richards :-)


45 posted on 12/14/2017 6:49:53 AM PST by KosmicKitty (Waiting for inspiration)
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