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[pct-l] snake bites...?
- Subject: [pct-l] snake bites...?
- From: Bighummel at aol.com (Bighummel@aol.com)
- Date: Sat Mar 19 17:20:04 2005
Okay Bulltaco, I have been in the mountains and wilds quite a bit over my
lifetime and I do love to be there as often as I can. It comes down to what
you fear and the reasons for fearing those things. I don't fear snakes of any
kind and have found that they are just like you and me. If an intruder
enters my house I try first to scare him out of the house before I strike.
Striking at an intruder is my last resort UNLESS aggressively attacked. Then I
will strike without hesitation in order to protect myself, my family and my
home. Snakes are no different. If you don't step on one, attack one,
accidentally grab one, they are very unlikely to want to have anything to do with an
animal that outweighs it 400 to 1.
In the warm / hot deserts of Southern California rattlers will come out
during the colder parts of the day in order to soak up the heat radiating from
rocks and ground and roads. At these times of the day you have to be careful
what you step on (most PCT hikers don't climb much so they are generally
putting their hands on a rock that they can't see what is on top).
A habbit of mine, generated in youth from looking for all of those things
that you can find on the ground if you just keep looking down, is to look down
directly in front of where I am walking. I am VERY careful what I step on
and where I step. If you are hiking the PCT then you should too, for
statistical purposes if not safety purposes, as you are going to take, let's see . . .
2,658 miles x 2640 average steps per mile = ~7,000,000 steps! Odds are
that you will step on something or somewhere along the way that you wished you
didn't.
Do I carry a snake bite kit? No. I do carry a pretty good first aid kit
that includes many things that could help to alleviate the common problems
associated with a snake bite; antibiotics, alcohol wipes, anti-inflamatories, etc.
What do I fear most on a PCT hike? That my determination and drive is not
what it once was when I was younger. Snakes? Nope. Lightning? Nope. Cars?
Yep. Sprained ankles? Yep. Bears? Nope. Mountain Lions? Nope. Death?
Nope. Not getting to hike the PCT again before I die? Yep.
I agree with you whole heartedly that everyone should be well prepared.
Greg
In a message dated 3/19/2005 12:23:16 PM Pacific Standard Time,
n.ruiz@verizon.net writes:
Greg, lets talk about you, you said it well yourself ,45 years in the
hills,you sound like a very intelligent person,and your mountain broke-in you know
what to do,its the average person that dont know what to do,do you carry a
snake bite kit ? I have a first aid kit in my truck,van,and one in the house
,with a snake bite kit,last year I got stung by a ground bee, you know the one
one that come around every time your going to eat,I swear I saw them an
intire rattler poison and all, well two hours later my hand started to swell,by
9:pm it started to worrie me,So I took the first aid kit out and lanced it
and put the suction on the bite and in 30 minutes I felt reliefe,and slept
good,and I am not pulling you leg,I think every should have a kit and know how to
use it,,,! "the bulltaco"