March 12, 2010
By QMI Agency
PETERBOROGH, Ont. - An Ontario man was treated in hospital and released after he was attacked by a three-foot California king snake while he was working at his computer just after midnight Thursday.
The snake, believed to be a neighbour's pet that had managed to slither its way into the man's Peterborough, Ont., apartment through a water pipe or a heating vent, was not venomous.
According to Bry Loyst, the curator of the Indian River Reptile Zoo, the man didn't know the snake was there and he likely startled it while working at the computer.
When the snake bit his hand, the man managed to fling it off and trap it in a garbage bin before rushing to hospital.
At about 2 a.m., the hospital called Loyst, who is also the founder of the Ontario Antivenin Bank, which provides antivenin for emergencies.
It turned out the snake was not dangerous, "but it was a scary situation," Loyst said. "If I was typing on my computer and a snake latched onto my hand in the middle of the night, I'd be frightened too."
The man did not want to be identified or speak to the media.
The snake was badly injured and was euthanized. Its owner is still unknown.
"It's not unusual for people to have pet snakes that escape but it's unusual for snakes to bite like that," Loyst said. "Snakes only bite in self defence."
http://cnews.canoe.ca/CNEWS/WeirdNews/2010/03/12/13203971-qmi.html
Saturday, 13 March 2010
Man working on home computer bit by stray snake
Labels:
attacks,
escaped animals,
exotic pets,
reptiles,
Snakes
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This case clearly shows once more, why nobody should be allowed to keep snakes (or other reptiles)as pets.
ReplyDeleteThey are not and never can be domesticated. It matters not at all if they are venomous or not, given the opportunity they will escape and cause problems to unsuspecting humans and danger to both people, other pets, the indigenous wild life and the natural environment.