Maybe time to invite a friend with a dog/dogs to come around for a visit... sure they will locate or at least scrae it off for you... unless of course you suspect it is a love bite and intend keeping it around!
Must be the week
Minime had a saw left foot on Saturday evening, swelled up some thing horrible so 8pm off to medical. spider bite they reckon. all came good on its own
then blow me down i pick him up from daycare yesterday and he limping a bit on the other foot. 7 pm its all swollen up again, of to medical again, another spider bite.
hes a little bugger with nature, curious as a cat, sticks his nose in to any thing. funny thing is he has handles one of the 5 blue tongues that live around our house, how he caught it i have no idea, but it seems quite happy in his hands until i turned up.
Pete - a garden fork how close to the toad were you, you need to invest in some golf clubs
Thanks All for the comments, the bite itself didn't hurt - more just a fright. The snake is fine, as said I'm sure that me standing on it is not going to hurt it. We have snakes round here quite often and fairly sure this one lives under the verandah
And Pete it was 2 members of the GCLRO in hospital in 1 day. Hapenned monday night for me also
98 Harvey the tractor - 300 tdi Defender Wagon
84 Alfetta GTV
Hey mate....look at it this way...at least you have some company now....wow chicka bow wow,
Regards
Stevo
Hmmm - I don't like snakes at all. Lucky it wasn't a poisonous one.
How keen are you to go back into the study.......?
Hi,
Foolishly, I once tried playing Harry Butler with a large carpet python, trying to get his head out of the shadows to get a photo.
Eventually the snake spat the dummy and bit me on the hand for my troubles.
Well the old ticker went into palpitations, the hands got cold and sweaty and I felt cold and listless.
Yep - classic shock symptoms.
I kept telling my self "it ain't venomous, it's a python, snap out of it or you will be in serious trouble".
Checking the wound on the hand was reassuring, yep, no fang marks, just a row of needle sharp holes from about 3 bites in one swipe in a fraction of a second.
Man! was he fast.
Wiping the blood away, I was rewarded with several small delicate and razor sharp teeth still embedded in the flesh of my palm - "Yea! definitely a non venomous python - I feel better already."
I'm a little less bold and demanding with my slithery friends now.
cheers
People do still die from snake bite.
It is less than a decade ago that my uncle was bitten by a snake, a brown, I think.
He got to hospital pretty quickly and a bit later, his wife was rung by the hospital to say he would be home soon.
Then just 10 minutes or so later, she got a call to say he was being transferred to another hospital. Very soon after that she got a call to say he had died.
I couldn't believe that someone who had made it to hospital had died from a snake bite.
Apparently the problem was he was on some sort of medication for blood pressure and the effect of the venom combined with the effect of the medication was fatal.
1973 Series III LWB 1983 - 2006
1998 300 Tdi Defender Trayback 2006 - often fitted with a Trayon slide-on camper.
typically emergency units in hospitals have low exposure to snake bite cases and are sometimes mishandled.To reassure you all, if you follow the compression bandage technique and dont run a marathon and absolute worst case scenario, you are unlikely to succumb to the venom of any Australian elapid in under 8 hours.Allmost all snakebite deaths in this country are the resut of poor treatment or no treatment, following the bite.Antivenom is just as likely to kill you as the snake bite itself, so if bitten AND showing symptoms of envenomation, ensure you have an IC unit available before letting any doctor administer antivenom or remove your compression bandage.Venemous snakes can actually control their venom output and the majority of defensive bites are probably "dry" and pose no threat.However, treat all bites as serious until proven otherwise.Your best defence to this largely insignificant threat (more people die from beestings) is to know what species bit you as IF you require antivenene, the species specific job is better than the polyvalent.So get studying and stop being so terrified of something that is part of the furniture in the great outdoors of this country and if you use some basic commonsense really have no need to fear at all.
The Ugly Duckling-
03 Defender Xtreme, now reduced by 30%.
a master of invisibleness.
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