Quote from: ChrissyRyan on May 12, 2025, 05:35:01 PMEven the head recently removed from a snake can bite. Be careful!
My father told me a story about a guy he worked with when he worked for NASA. The guy was out deer hunting and stepped over a log. A rattlesnake struck the back of his boot, but he didn't notice. When he started feeling sick, he went home. He did not get care fast enough and died from a snake bite.
His oldest son was going to do some hiking and put on his dad's old boots. He began to get sick and rushed to the hospital. It turns out that the snake fangs were stuck in the leather of the boot and had broken off, so they were not noticeable. The doctor at the Emergency Room recognized the symptoms and found two scratches on the boy's heel caused by the embedded fangs. The boy survived.
Not only is the head of the snake still dangerous, but the fangs can still contain enough venom to be deadly for months.