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Ah glad the witch hunt or should I say hobbit hunt has been called off for a while.
I actually used to have a snake growing up. It was a garter snake and I called it streak cos it had red white and yellow streaks running from head to tail.
It was a very pretty snake I thought, and completely harmless.
I neglected him though I'm sad to say. When I bought him the guy at the pet center said they could go without food for two weeks so I only fed him once a fortnight.
I used to give him earth worms and very occaisionally little guppy fish.
He wasn't very big but he was quite loveable in his own way.
I think he lived about 6 years, not sure if that was a good lifespan for him or not?
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Mick, the smallest, most venomous snake would have to be the Saw Scaled Viper. Curiously, it kills about 20,000+ people every year. They are found in Africa, Israel, Palestine and other parts of the middle east. Also India, Pakistan and Sri Lanka. Word is that those 20,000+ people that die are ones bitten mostly in India and the island of Sri Lanka. Mostly it has to do with the fact those people walk around with no shoes and there is little antivenin available.
They have a powerful hemotoxic venom that causes massive internal bleeding. They average about 2 feet, maybe a little larger. Small heads, small venom glands, but one bite can kill probably 6 or 7 people.
The most toxic snake in the world is the Inland Taipan. 1 milligram can kill a grown man, or several thousand mice. 1 milligram is an M&M cut into 1000 pieces, and one of those pieces is 1 milligram!! One bite from an Inland can kill 150 men over 200pounds. Pretty potent
Damn I'm a geek![]()
Last edited by LEGION; 04-04-2008 at 01:03 AM.
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I was bitten a couple of times by some native species here in the states; but was lucky they were dry bites and no venom was injected. I've had a couple of real close calls with some cobras. Got grabbed one day on my sweatshirt and was lucky, as she had let loose alot of venom. Also been grazed by a fang, which was scary.
Cobras are pretty predictable in their movements and the way they attack, so it is pretty routine with them, though you always have to watch them closely. Cobras always hood up before they strike, and the weight of their hoods forces them to strike in a downward position, though some will jump at you. Forest cobras, cape cobras and egyptian cobras are notorious for their aggression, and will chase a person and strike repeatedly, so it can get pretty intense working with them. I have 2 cape cobras, one adult and one juvenile. The adult male is a close relative of Satan
Here is a guy that gets bit all the time. He almost died 2 months ago from an eastern diamondback rattlesnake. Scroll down and you'll see him in the hospital several times. Cool guy; but kind of crazy
Hunter Serpentology / MedFlash
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I gotta tell ya Legion Bro, I work with some CRAZY Ferrel cats and aggressive rabid "shockie" dogs all day, every day But two words on what you do and that video for me ......F!!K THAT.You got me and all the power to you.Nerves of steel Indeed my man. Just be careful chief,serious!!
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