webfact Posted May 25, 2018 Posted May 25, 2018 Cobra bites seven year old child in bed while she is sleeping Picture: Sanook Sanook reported that a seven year old girl sleeping in a house in Nong Lao sub-district of Ubon Ratchathani had been bitten by a cobra in bed. Reporters spoke to Ing Ing's relative Watcharin, 41, who said he was doing some typing about 11 pm when he heard the little girl scream out from the bedroom downstairs. She said she had been bitten. He looked for something to put on her hand but quickly realized that this was no relatively minor matter such as a scorpion or centipede sting. So he took a better look under in the bedroom and underneath the blanket he saw a meter long snake that he called a "white cobra". He got a stick and beat it to death then took Ing Ing and the snake to the local hospital. She was then transferred to a bigger hospital. She was given antivenin. Pictures of the hand wound were shown by Sanook. The little child was in a great deal of pain at the site of the wound. Watcharin said they had left the door of the house open. He warned people to be careful in the rainy season as venomous creatures are liable to seek refuge in people's houses. Source: Sanook -- © Copyright Thai Visa News 2018-05-25 1
Popular Post worgeordie Posted May 25, 2018 Popular Post Posted May 25, 2018 A friend found a Cobra under some cupboards,and called the local snake catchers,while trying to catch the Cobra, it spit in the face of one of the catchers,and got in his eyes,he had to be hospitalised. Then the other day a different friend reported a Cobra in the garden, maybe it's all the rain that making them move ,in my 30 years here i have seen a lot of snakes,even removing some from neighbours homes, but never seen a Cobra, lucky or not ? regards worgeordie 4
MaeJoMTB Posted May 25, 2018 Posted May 25, 2018 I don't think I've ever seen so many snakes before (in 10 years). The last couple of wet weeks they are all over the roads. 2
Popular Post George Bowman Posted May 25, 2018 Popular Post Posted May 25, 2018 We've had more than usual lately. Here is one that delayed my morning coffee. He ate and left. 7
Popular Post Get Real Posted May 25, 2018 Popular Post Posted May 25, 2018 Good work by the father! A quick reaction that saved his girls life. We need more of those people here. 12 2
Popular Post 4MyEgo Posted May 25, 2018 Popular Post Posted May 25, 2018 (edited) Also haven't seen a Cobra yet, however on the last day of last year, I bent over to pick up the bucket with all the car wash stuff in it, which was at the front and under a bench on the porch, and on top of the bench were about 3 of those straw mats that the wife puts down on the floor when eating outside on the porch with her sister/cousins etc etc As I bent over to get the bucket something lunged forward at my face, I wasn't really looking, but my boxing days of my younger years came back to me as I pulled back to the side and stood up, then I noticed this long tail of something go into the straw mats, I yelled out snake to Superwoman and the Mrs arrived quicker than Superwoman, must have taken her out on the way. She said lift the straw mats quick, so I did, and he took off through some privacy slates and in to her garden, my Mrs took to it like a dog to a bone, I said just shooo it away across the road to the river, NO this snake is dangerous snake, I said how do you know, the colour she said, the colour !!!, me thinking yeh yeh, but tried to reason with her about not killing it, then she turned to me and said listen, we have 4 kids, you want them to get bitten by a snake, that's when I passed her a shovel and said this should help........I later went on the internet and found out that this snake was actually dangerous and as there is no anti-venom, if bitten, I would have died. Pictures below, a week later and a day after that she found two more snakes in her front garden, so the garden has been remodelled not to allow snakes in. Have never been one to want to kill anything, but snakes on now on the top of the list, as are rats occasionally in the roof, followed by geko's who cost me 2,700 baht for short circuiting one of my air conditioning mains board, and yes I feel guilty ever time, but hey, its us or them 555 Edited May 25, 2018 by 4MyEgo 2 1
jak2002003 Posted May 25, 2018 Posted May 25, 2018 31 minutes ago, Get Real said: Good work by the father! A quick reaction that saved his girls life. We need more of those people here. But maybe it was his fault for leaving the house door about 11pm at night! 2 1
Popular Post MaeJoMTB Posted May 25, 2018 Popular Post Posted May 25, 2018 3 minutes ago, 4MyEgo said: .I later went on the internet and found out that this snake was actually dangerous and as there is no anti-venom, if bitten, I would have died Red necked keelback, not really dangerous as it's rear fanged. It'd have to chew on you a while to hurt you. 2 1 1
4MyEgo Posted May 25, 2018 Posted May 25, 2018 2 minutes ago, MaeJoMTB said: Red necked keelback, not really dangerous as it's rear fanged. It'd have to chew on you a while to hurt you. Pull the other one mate: "Red Necked Keelbacks are now considered quite dangerous and potentially deadly". https://www.thailandsnakes.com/venomous/rear-fanged/snake-bite-red-necked-keelback-rhabdophis-subminiatus/
Popular Post MaeJoMTB Posted May 25, 2018 Popular Post Posted May 25, 2018 (edited) 11 minutes ago, 4MyEgo said: Pull the other one mate: "Red Necked Keelbacks are now considered quite dangerous and potentially deadly". They have no delivery system for their venom, which is why they used to be kept as children's pets. First they have to chew on you for a few minutes to abraid your skin, then they have to work their venom into the cut. If you don't attempt to handle them, you won't have a problem. My bread knife could be 'considered dangerous and potentially deadly', and I'm probably more at risk from that. Edited May 25, 2018 by MaeJoMTB 4 1
4MyEgo Posted May 25, 2018 Posted May 25, 2018 3 minutes ago, MaeJoMTB said: They have no delivery system for their venom, which is why they used to be kept as children's pets. First they have to chew on you for a few minutes to abraid your skin, then they have to work their venom into the cut. If you don't attempt to handle them, you won't have a problem. Assuming he got me and locked onto my skin on my face, as that was the direction he was heading, and applied his venom for a few minutes, then what ? 1
Popular Post owl sees all Posted May 25, 2018 Popular Post Posted May 25, 2018 (edited) We were living at the farm and came across this snake attempting to join us. Over 2 metres long. On the menu for next meal; yum yum!! Edited May 25, 2018 by owl sees all 3
Popular Post cornishcarlos Posted May 25, 2018 Popular Post Posted May 25, 2018 19 minutes ago, 4MyEgo said: Assuming he got me and locked onto my skin on my face, as that was the direction he was heading, and applied his venom for a few minutes, then what ? He wouldn't be able to "lock on" to your skin, unless you have very baggy skin ?? As MaeJoMTB says, rear fanged and small mouths as well. Our cat used to play with them all the time.. He's dead now though, not snake bite, flat packed on the highway !! 2 1 2
rumak Posted May 25, 2018 Posted May 25, 2018 2 hours ago, MaeJoMTB said: I don't think I've ever seen so many snakes before (in 10 years). The last couple of wet weeks they are all over the roads. are you forgetting the times you were in Pattaya ? 1
Popular Post Get Real Posted May 25, 2018 Popular Post Posted May 25, 2018 3 hours ago, jak2002003 said: But maybe it was his fault for leaving the house door about 11pm at night! His fault? I wouldn´t say that. Many people have open doors until they go to sleep. It´s more common that the door is open than closed in Thailand. However, that doesn´t take away his good and quick action when something happened. 7 2
darren1971 Posted May 25, 2018 Posted May 25, 2018 4 hours ago, 4MyEgo said: Also haven't seen a Cobra yet, however on the last day of last year, I bent over to pick up the bucket with all the car wash stuff in it, which was at the front and under a bench on the porch, and on top of the bench were about 3 of those straw mats that the wife puts down on the floor when eating outside on the porch with her sister/cousins etc etc As I bent over to get the bucket something lunged forward at my face, I wasn't really looking, but my boxing days of my younger years came back to me as I pulled back to the side and stood up, then I noticed this long tail of something go into the straw mats, I yelled out snake to Superwoman and the Mrs arrived quicker than Superwoman, must have taken her out on the way. She said lift the straw mats quick, so I did, and he took off through some privacy slates and in to her garden, my Mrs took to it like a dog to a bone, I said just shooo it away across the road to the river, NO this snake is dangerous snake, I said how do you know, the colour she said, the colour !!!, me thinking yeh yeh, but tried to reason with her about not killing it, then she turned to me and said listen, we have 4 kids, you want them to get bitten by a snake, that's when I passed her a shovel and said this should help........I later went on the internet and found out that this snake was actually dangerous and as there is no anti-venom, if bitten, I would have died. Pictures below, a week later and a day after that she found two more snakes in her front garden, so the garden has been remodelled not to allow snakes in. Have never been one to want to kill anything, but snakes on now on the top of the list, as are rats occasionally in the roof, followed by geko's who cost me 2,700 baht for short circuiting one of my air conditioning mains board, and yes I feel guilty ever time, but hey, its us or them 555 How do you make an anti-snake garden then?
4MyEgo Posted May 25, 2018 Posted May 25, 2018 12 minutes ago, darren1971 said: How do you make an anti-snake garden then? I didn't say anti-snake garden, I said remodelled her front garden to keep snakes out. The garden before was one metre out from the front wall of the house, she put down two bricks high with pots inside of the brick wall which had plants, the snakes would just make there was into the hollow part of the inside of the brick wall and the house wall, so what she did was fill in the two bricks high with blue metal, bringing the level to the height of the two bricks, therefore no snakes can entering her garden.
wpcoe Posted May 25, 2018 Posted May 25, 2018 5 hours ago, missoura said: We've had more than usual lately. Here is one that delayed my morning coffee. He ate and left. FYI, that looks like a golden tree snake having a snack on a tokay. Basically harmless to humans -- they are mildly venomous, but are rear fanged so it'd have to grab a finger or toe and gnaw on it for a while to inject any venom. Those suckers are fast, too. I had several of them in a home of mine at various times, and the snake catchers (the Fire Department in the case of Hua Hin) had a devil of a time catching them. I personally think they are beautiful. They just don't belong in my house. 1
FitnessHealthTravel Posted May 25, 2018 Posted May 25, 2018 I hope the little girl recover fast. Very nasty and plenty where we live. I have come up on quite a few very large ones on the Mountain bike over the years, very scary.
Backofbeyond Posted May 26, 2018 Posted May 26, 2018 If you would like a fast, accurate ID of a snake anywhere in Thailand, or want to learn about snakes in Thailand, you are very welcome to join our Facebook groups which are specific to each region. Eg: Snakes of Isaan: https://www.facebook.com/groups/1076644525809817/ or Snakes of Hua Hin: https://www.facebook.com/groups/1749132628662306 Snakes of Chiang Mai: https://www.facebook.com/groups/121136308469728/ Snakes of Phuket: https://www.facebook.com/groups/124703794775304/ Snakes of Pattaya: https://www.facebook.com/groups/1690357437927914/ Thesecond snake that 4MyEgo posted is called a Banded Kukri and is very common in Thailand. If you don't kill it but let it live it will eat the gdckos complained about, etc Hope to see some or all of you in our groups :)
Get Real Posted May 26, 2018 Posted May 26, 2018 On 5/25/2018 at 6:45 AM, MaeJoMTB said: My bread knife could be 'considered dangerous and potentially deadly', and I'm probably more at risk from that. Somehow, I do actually believe that you might be right!
wpcoe Posted May 27, 2018 Posted May 27, 2018 As if the OP weren't enough to give you nightmares: https://www.yahoo.com/news/mother-child-die-baby-poisoned-161643366.html ?
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