Well, I did it

If you haven’t read the post below, nevermind.

If you have, I went ahead and looked for more information on Raz’s snakebit dogs and found it here at this LINK.

Here are a few excerpts:

raz
12th Oct 2005 – 03:22 AM
It sounds very similar, Aurora. One of mine was just about bald but his coat is finally growing with a vengeance and the other one still has very irritated skin. They had blood in the urine for a few weeks, still got puffed after minimal exercise, went pale in the pigment and were incredibly soft in muscle whereas they had both been rockhard prior. One has had a seizure but fingers crossed we’re in the all clear now (just in time for the new season yeah rolleyes.gif ) The puncture wounds took forever to heal and I thought one of the bite sights was going necrotic but both dogs are starting to look good.
t-time
12th Oct 2005 – 04:52 AM
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Hi Raz! What are you doing up at 3.22am??!! eek1.gif Nearly as bad as me laugh.gif

Just wanted to add that I was told there is one thing that slows down neurotoxic evenomation. Electricity. I was told that if you were bitten and were too far from help, the best thing to do is to throw yourself into the nearest electric fence. (emphasis provided by AmeliaJake)

So not only do you have the terror of the snakebite, you have the psychological torture of being bitten by the fence rofl1.gif rofl1.gif rofl1.gif You’d be running to the hospital!

Every reaction in your body slows down when you are electrocuted so buys you more time to get proper medical help.

Also, thankfully, I have never had to try this tongue.gif (but I know someone who has and the doctors reckoned it saved his life).

90 minutes on an animal forum

Sometimes the thoughts in my head are like dominoes. This morning I inadvertently clicked on an ad about Australia on a news page. Australia ; the floods in Queensland,  the book The Thornbirds, sheep, border collies, the Crocodile Hunter, dangerous snakes, dangerous snakes in suburbs . . .

I searched for articles about deadly snakes turning up in suburban yards during droughts and floods; I didn’t want to search for them being there all the time because  sooner of later it would probably lead to my being afraid to look at a picture of the Sydney Opera House.

I happened upon an animal forum by following a link about two Jack Russell Terriers being bitten by a red-bellied snake in the Sydney suburbs. Raz was the poster and I clicked down through the first postings to see if the dogs made it. Only there were side plots. Information on levels of creatine after the bites. Methods to discourage snakes from entering lawns – herbs, special fencing, etc. Stories about near snakebites, snakebites, other animal’s snake encounter stories. Responses from snake advocates. The story about shooting a brown snake in a house and taking out the guitar as well.

And, interspersed with all this were updates on “the boys” who were transferred from one vet hospital to a bigger one. That got me wondering – different level trauma centers for snakebit animals? The dogs got some anti-venom at the first hospital – a 30 minute breakneck speed ride away. The creatine level was 200+ – at the max the test could read there.  And 200+ was not good.

Raz waited for news from the specialized hospital that had more sensitive equipment and other posters offered sympathy and good wishes and information about how to deal with snakes in backyards. The first results were something like 2,000 and 4,000. Later they would climb into the double-digit thousand category. However, the dogs did pull through, although their muscles were weakened and they huffed and puffed at every exertion.

I read more posts about recuperation problems and more snake precautions. Then the boys starting have necrosis around the area of the bites. By this time there were some posts about what to do if your dog sees a snake – do not call his name, it will distract him – and about protected species and more dog vs. snake stories.

Then, after 17 pages of posts, the thread stopped. I don’t know the ultimate outcome for the dogs; I don’t know what they decided to do about treating fence lines – one of the treatments was supposed to affect snakes in a matter that would anesthetize them . . . maybe in neighbors’ yards. It would cost the neighbors $25 each to extend the protection to the outside of their fence lines, a sum they didn’t want to pay.

There, you know as much as I do, with the exception of the detailed anti-snake procedures . . . and, actually, they are an amorphous mass of suggestions in my mind. What I have retained is the “always have a shovel handy” advice and don’t go barefoot.

But, I have not learned any lesson – I know what I am going to do. I am going to put in a few search words and try to find out what happened to Raz’s dogs. Probably, because I have a dogged personality.

SIGH . . . .