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Bitten by Snakes or Snapping Turtles while Swimming?



 
 
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  #1  
Old August 29th, 2006, 05:14 AM posted to sci.bio.herp,rec.pets.herp,rec.ponds,rec.outdoors.fishing,alt.folklore.urban
qquito
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Posts: 1
Default Bitten by Snakes or Snapping Turtles while Swimming?

Hello, All:

I am located in southern Virginia. This afternoon, I saw a small snake
in the water near the edge of a pond while taking a walk there. The
snake swam near the edge and, for a few moments, got further away from
the pond edge and deeper into the water; then it was trying to get out
of the water and stopped half way out of the water. It then returned
back to the water and disappeared---maybe because it noticed that I was
approaching.

There are also quite a few turtles in the pond, and I have seen ones of
maybe 6 to 8 inches in size. Could these be snapping turtles?

Two years ago, I also saw otters showing up in the pond.

My question is: If one swims in such a pond, can one get bitten by
either snakes, or snapping turtles, or even otters? Are there any real
cases of swimmers who got bitten by these animals?

--Roland

  #3  
Old August 29th, 2006, 12:21 PM posted to sci.bio.herp,rec.pets.herp,rec.ponds,rec.outdoors.fishing,alt.folklore.urban
Stephen Henning
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Posts: 2
Default Bitten by Snakes or Snapping Turtles while Swimming?

"qquito" wrote:

My question is: If one swims in such a pond, can one get bitten by
either snakes, or snapping turtles, or even otters? Are there any real
cases of swimmers who got bitten by these animals?


I am in SE PA. A college student here was leading a high school science
class on a ecology trip down a local creek. While he was wading waist
deep in the creek, all of a sudden something made a beeline toward him
"like a torpedo". He fought it off with his fists, but it managed to
bite him in the back side. Another student was bitten trying to help
him. They both had to get rabies shots. They think it was a muskrat,
either rabid or defending its young. The game commission said that they
do get rabid because sometimes a fox will attack them when they are
smaller.

Rabies shots today are different. No shots in the stomach. He got a
series of shots getting shot in both arms, both legs and the buttocks.
They are not pleasant, but less unpleasant. The other young man had to
be held down to get his shots.
--
Pardon my spam deterrent; send email to
18,000 gallon (17'x 47'x 2-4') lily pond garden in Zone 6
Cheers, Steve Henning in Reading, PA USA
  #4  
Old August 29th, 2006, 03:27 PM posted to sci.bio.herp,rec.pets.herp,rec.ponds,rec.outdoors.fishing,alt.folklore.urban
TOliver
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Posts: 2
Default Bitten by Snakes or Snapping Turtles while Swimming?


"qquito" wrote...
Hello, All:

I am located in southern Virginia. This afternoon, I saw a small snake
in the water near the edge of a pond while taking a walk there. The
snake swam near the edge and, for a few moments, got further away from
the pond edge and deeper into the water; then it was trying to get out
of the water and stopped half way out of the water. It then returned
back to the water and disappeared---maybe because it noticed that I was
approaching.

There are also quite a few turtles in the pond, and I have seen ones of
maybe 6 to 8 inches in size. Could these be snapping turtles?

Two years ago, I also saw otters showing up in the pond.

My question is: If one swims in such a pond, can one get bitten by
either snakes, or snapping turtles, or even otters? Are there any real
cases of swimmers who got bitten by these animals?

Snapping turtles are found in Virginia waters, but unless you chance upon
some sleeping giant the size of a 15" auto wheel (or bigger), recorded
attacks are few (but then, it's the unrecorded attacks which might raise
concerns, the attacked not around to file for the record). The snakes?
Having once been bitten by a teeny' little one while "gilling" for catfish,
in the Southern US, the "Cottonmouth" (for the bright light mucosa inside
wide-open mouths as they strike) water moccasin certainly is found in
Virginia, and a big one will ruin your day. A little one certainly
discomforted mine, and the legend in which snakes can't bite underwater is
only legend.

Snakes and turtles are desperately people-shy. Most ponds can be "safed"
for routine swimming by arriving with a lot of noise, carrying on and
popping beer cans, the mild screams of dates in insufficiently sized bathing
wear being groped, etc., but wise swimmers have been known to cut a branch
with which to beat the water before entering, sending snappers and snakes
a'flying.
Moccasins have ahabit od sunning themselves on limbs and dead brush
over-hanging creeks and ponds, waiting for the occasional meal-sized
wanderer to show up below. Most folks never see them. They are there, just
as Rattlers abound in the woods of Virginia, most unheard and unseen, since
the snakes will have long before heard the human invaders and attempted to
depart/hide. That's the danger of copperheads, hiding instead of moving,
and on occasion right where you're stepping/reaching.

Rumor has it that alligators are returning to some rivers in Southern
Virginia, but the return of beaver in substantial numbers has not been
accompanied by many frenzied beaver assaults on unwary swimmers.

TM "Doesn't taste much like chicken, either." Oliver



  #5  
Old August 29th, 2006, 05:58 PM posted to sci.bio.herp,rec.pets.herp,rec.ponds,rec.outdoors.fishing,alt.folklore.urban
[email protected]
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Posts: 1
Default Bitten by Snakes or Snapping Turtles while Swimming?

In alt.folklore.urban qquito wrote:
Hello, All:


I am located in southern Virginia.


Two years ago, I also saw otters showing up in the pond.


My question is: If one swims in such a pond, can one get bitten by
either snakes, or snapping turtles, or even otters? Are there any real
cases of swimmers who got bitten by these animals?


Well, just in today's Roanoke Times we have a report of an otter
biting a woman, though the game officials say it's rare.

http://www.roanoke.com/news/roanoke/wb/80246

Bill "otter know better than to swim in there" Ranck
Blacksburg, Va.
  #6  
Old August 29th, 2006, 10:32 PM posted to sci.bio.herp,rec.pets.herp,rec.ponds,rec.outdoors.fishing,alt.folklore.urban
Rodney Long
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Posts: 600
Default Bitten by Snakes or Snapping Turtles while Swimming?

TOliver wrote:



Snakes and turtles are desperately people-shy. Most ponds can be "safed"
for routine swimming by arriving with a lot of noise,


Contrary to popular belief

Snakes "can't" hear, noise is a worthless means of trying to run them off

Look it up, they have no ears, or means of detecting sound, they can
feel vibrations, but not at the sound levels.

One day I was canoeing and a big Cotton Mouth was just 20 feet away on
the bank, I pulled out the trusted 22 automatic pistol to dispatch it.
The trouble was my wife was squirming and rocking the canoe, I missed 6
times, that snake never moved,( the sound of the 22 going off did not
even wake it up) until I finally hit it, then it moved, but just for a
couple of seconds :-)





--
Rodney Long,
Inventor of the Mojo SpecTastic "WIGGLE" rig, SpecTastic Thread,
Boomerang Fishing Pro. ,Stand Out Hooks ,Stand Out Lures,
Mojo's Rock Hopper & Rig Saver weights, and the EZKnot
http://www.ezknot.com
  #7  
Old August 29th, 2006, 10:45 PM posted to sci.bio.herp,rec.pets.herp,rec.ponds,rec.outdoors.fishing,alt.folklore.urban
Don Freeman
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Posts: 6
Default Bitten by Snakes or Snapping Turtles while Swimming?


"Rodney Long" wrote in message
...
One day I was canoeing and a big Cotton Mouth was just 20 feet away on the
bank, I pulled out the trusted 22 automatic pistol to dispatch it.


Reason being?


  #8  
Old August 30th, 2006, 12:12 AM posted to sci.bio.herp,rec.pets.herp,rec.ponds,rec.outdoors.fishing,alt.folklore.urban
Bermuda999
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1
Default Bitten by Snakes or Snapping Turtles while Swimming?


qquito wrote:
Hello, All:

I am located in southern Virginia. This afternoon, I saw a small snake
in the water near the edge of a pond while taking a walk there. The
snake swam near the edge and, for a few moments, got further away from
the pond edge and deeper into the water; then it was trying to get out
of the water and stopped half way out of the water. It then returned
back to the water and disappeared---maybe because it noticed that I was
approaching.

There are also quite a few turtles in the pond, and I have seen ones of
maybe 6 to 8 inches in size. Could these be snapping turtles?

Two years ago, I also saw otters showing up in the pond.

My question is: If one swims in such a pond, can one get bitten by
either snakes, or snapping turtles, or even otters? Are there any real
cases of swimmers who got bitten by these animals?



"If you're swimmin' in the creek
and something bites you on the cheek,
that's a moray."

  #9  
Old August 30th, 2006, 02:04 AM posted to sci.bio.herp,rec.pets.herp,rec.ponds,rec.outdoors.fishing,alt.folklore.urban
Rodney Long
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Posts: 600
Default Bitten by Snakes or Snapping Turtles while Swimming?

Don Freeman wrote:

"Rodney Long" wrote in message
...

One day I was canoeing and a big Cotton Mouth was just 20 feet away on the
bank, I pulled out the trusted 22 automatic pistol to dispatch it.



Reason being?




They, and man, have no place together, a cotton mouth does not fear man,
and will attack, non provoked, I've had it happen to me more than once,
but I have always been able to avoid the strike, because I saw the snake
before it got in range. I even had one try to get in the boat with me,
because I was anchored across his path, I could not even beat him away
with a fishing rod, he kept fighting it and me, I ending up shooting
him, although he was in an area where he would not have harmed anyone
else,, he just would not leave, and would not keep from trying to get
into the boat with me, and I couldn't move the boat with the two anchors
out, I couldn't get them in and fight the snake off at the same time

I "NEVER" kill non poisonous snakes, (and I know the difference) and
only kill the poisonous ones when they are a threat, by just their
location, sometimes. a cotton mouth within 50 yds of a swimming area,
house, or area where people frequent, DIES ! It's not worth the chance
of someone getting bitten. If they were rare, perhaps I would catch and
transplant those that are on the bank in these areas, if it hits the
water, there is no catching them, and you will get bitten trying

--
Rodney Long,
Inventor of the Mojo SpecTastic "WIGGLE" rig, SpecTastic Thread,
Boomerang Fishing Pro. ,Stand Out Hooks ,Stand Out Lures,
Mojo's Rock Hopper & Rig Saver weights, and the EZKnot
http://www.ezknot.com
  #10  
Old August 30th, 2006, 03:35 AM posted to sci.bio.herp,rec.pets.herp,rec.ponds,rec.outdoors.fishing,alt.folklore.urban
TeaLady (Mari C.)
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Posts: 2
Default Bitten by Snakes or Snapping Turtles while Swimming?

"TOliver" wrote in
:

Snakes and turtles are desperately people-shy. Most ponds
can be "safed" for routine swimming by arriving with a lot
of noise, carrying on and popping beer cans, the mild
screams of dates in insufficiently sized bathing wear being
groped, etc., but wise swimmers have been known to cut a
branch with which to beat the water before entering,
sending snappers and snakes a'flying.


When young, I had occasion to play in a lo cal creek and small
pond (really an old over-flow depression, slightly dammed up
to make a watering hole for larger farm animals, back when
there was a farm there) bordering several neighbors' yards and
mine, and an old 'pig waller' where we kept various carp, too
pretty to plant with the corn, caught out by a damn some miles
away. We had snappers, large-ish and small, in all three
watery places.

By the pig waller lived one old and ornery snapper, easily the
size of a volkswagon tire, which took to eating our pretty
fishies. That snapper would lurk on the edges of the waller,
looking like an old and mossy rock. Several times he was trod
upon by unwary or inattentive youths, and turned a neat trick
of lifting his backside while bending his head and neck up and
back, to catch the unsuspecting prize for supper. No matter
that the child was too large to consume - a good chunk of a
foot would have removed, enough for a good snapper snack.

In the creek bed lived another large snapper, prone to the
same trick, which we dug out one summer (my sis and I,
reminiscing about our sordid childhood while on vacation the
week before last, agreed that the official reason lay with a
neighbor's youngest child being just of an age to wander into
the creek but not understand about rocks that are really big
hungry snappers - the real reason was, well, 'cause it was
there) with some assistance from a parental unit once the
snapper was freed from its rocky and muddy embrace. I believe
the snapper was consumed for supper by the family of the
parental unit who attended the undertaking.

An old snapper, lazy and embedded in a snug mud-hole or rocky
stream bed, will not flee. It will just wait for something to
happen by, and, be it fish, stick or foot, will bite what it
can reach, in hope of a meal or morsel.

--
TeaLady (mari)

"The principle of Race is meant to embody and express the
utter negation of human freedom, the denial of equal rights, a
challenge in the face of mankind." A. Kolnai
Avast ye scurvy dogs ! Thar be no disease in this message.
 




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