Posted on 10/13/2009 7:33:19 PM PDT by mnehring
Pit bulls are always earning notoriety as fighting dogs, attack dogs and all around vicious canines, but East Lincoln's Phil Hemby has one specimen of the square-headed breed earning a new name for itself. And that name is lifesaver. Well, not quite ...
Shortly after 2 p.m. Thursday, Hemby stepped out to take Slim, his 2-year-old pit terrier, for a joy ride in his Yamaha Rhino ATV around the Hemby Farms chicken houses off Townsend Drive. But the normally docile dog was in a rage - barking, snarling and driving him back - and wouldn't let him approach the machine. Hemby said he thought the pit had turned on him, but then the reason for the commotion became clear.
Slim wouldn't let Hemby approach the ATV because coiled beneath the vehicle's rear end was a nearly 4-foot Copperhead, Hemby said. The snake made a run for it and Slim was on him, taking the viper in his mouth and performing the classic canine kill by shaking it violently from side to side.
"Today was my lucky day, buddy," said Hemby, 44, a former minister at Union Baptist Church. "When I went to let the gate down, I would have stepped right on top of that thing. It may not have killed me, but who wants to be snake-bit?"
Advertisement Hemby said he was proud of Slim, whom he described as a playful yard dog who loves chasing balls and rolling in the grass with the Hembys' nieces and nephews. Hemby raised Slim from a puppy, when the dog was given to him by his stepdaughter, 18-year old Copiah-Lincoln Community College student Tara Paden.
With pit bulls having such a poor reputation and being seen as unsafe, killer dogs, Hemby said he felt compelled to tell the story of how Slim protected his master. The sour news about the breed almost got to Hemby, who grabbed a shovel off the porch and was about to strike Slim down during his fit over the snake before he realized the dog was just looking out for him.
"There's nothing ever good that comes out in the news about these dogs," he said, sitting on the back of the Rhino holding a happy Slim with one arm. "He protected me. He killed the snake. I couldn't get him away from it. It took me 10 minutes to get him off of it.
"I love the Lord, and I believe he worked through this dog today."
While Slim may be the most faithful pit bill in Lincoln County and he surely saved Hemby from a terribly painful snakebite, calling the dog a "lifesaver" may be a stretch.
Mississippi snake expert Terry Vandeventer said the Copperhead, a member of the pit viper family, delivers a painful, venomous bite, but those bites are very rarely fatal to humans. In fact, among the venomous vipers common in the state, the Copperhead's venom packs the least punch.
Still, the bites are painful. Copperhead venom is hemolytic and destroys red blood cells, releasing hemoglobin into the body fluid and causing hemorrhaging. Copperhead venom does not attack the nervous system.
"Copperhead bites are serious and can ruin your day, but they're not fatal," he said. "There are some stories that go way, way back of people who have died of Copperhead bites, but we really have no evidence in the U.S. of people ever dying from a Copperhead bite. We've had small children, 2 or 3 years old, bitten by Copperheads, and they just kind of work their way through it."
Hemby was worried that Slim was bitten by the defeated Copperhead, but the dog showed no signs of sickness Thursday. Even if Slim had been stricken, Vandeventer said it probably wouldn't matter.
"Generally, dogs are highly resistant to snake bites," he said. "Generally, the dog gets wimpy for a couple of days and wants a lot of attention, but then they get better. Some dogs get bitten all the time - some attack snakes all the time, they just can't leave them alone. A big, muscular dog like a pit bull, if he did get bitten, he may not have even noticed it."
Copperheads are one of the most common species of snakes in Mississippi, Vandeventer said, especially this time of year.
"Almost every Copperhead you find this time of year are males, and often they're fairly good-sized," he said. "This is just a little past the breeding season, and we see lots and lots of males crossing roads in the middle of the day, 90 degrees, looking for a date."
Somebody ping Chet. We`can’t let this go unanswered. :)
chalk one up for the good guys !
((((((((paging Chet99)))))))))) Where are you, Chet? This is a good pitbull story. Chet?
As one who has posted things before against the breed... let me be the first to say: Good boy.
See, even though it turned out ok this time, the owner was open to the possibility that a friendly pit bull can turn on a person without warning:
“Hemby said he thought the pit had turned on him...”
Saved him for later?
LOL
Ping. Out of the thousands of articles posted, a few ‘good pit bull’ stories are bound to occur.
You got that right.
Chet? Paging Chet......
Chet is a good person.
Ya know?
At times you agree and disagree.
Because he obviously didn’t know his dog very well. Most people in-tune with their dogs can tell their dog is acting strange and trying to tell them something, and know to pay attention. This lucky guy almost killed the dog who was trying to alert him to danger.
To the OP, thanks for posting this story.
And because he believed the media line that pitbulls have some kind of demonic predeliction towards ‘just snapping’, he nearly attacked the dog (who was trying to save him) with a shovel. Wouldn’t that have been hilarious.
The media has very little to do with innate inbred characteristics of the breed.
Right. Like no other dogs ever attack people.
I get sick of vicious dogs being called “pit bulls” when they are clearly another breed. Lazy reporting.
What a load.
Not true at all.
Keep doing some research.
What isn’t true?
Breed was not bred for violence.
Idiot peole made some of the offspring bad.
Most of these animals are great family pets.
So were Mastiffs, Dobermans, Rottweilers, Kuvasz, Whippets, Cane Corsos, Akitas, Tosa Inus, Beaucerons, American Bull Dogs, English Bull Dogs, English Bull Terriers, Tervurens, etc, etc, etc...
No dog breed has been bred to ‘just snap’ and start attacking everything in sight. It would be counter-productive.
And what’s with the almost total lack of pictures? Are these rampaging, snapping pits actually vampires, and can’t be captured on film?
I had a Whippet, miniature grey, there is no comparison.
Because as everyone knows, whippets were bred to be soft, loveable lapdogs that only eat peaches and marshmallows, right?
It was bred for violence. That’s why they snap at people’s necks and faces. Other breeds generally rip legs and arms.
They were not bred to kill.
Tell that to the rodents they dispatch so efficiently. The point is, a dog can be ‘bred for violence’, but that doesn’t automatically make them unstable biting machines.
Clueless, lazy, or cruel owners make a dog unstable, and right now those owners want pit bulls. In the eighties it was dobermans; in 2020, it’ll probably be mastiffs.
Yeah, what’s a pitbull thread w/o Chet?
This was pretty interesting - a lot of information.
A shadow of itself it seems...
Thanks, I think.
I respect my dog, and I know what he needs to make him a good pet. Thinking of him as my ‘lovely little pit bull’ isn’t it.
Yep, propaganda is persuasive.
Kaching! (Another $50 to pit bull rescue.)
Chay Yet!!!!!
That’s your choice to live with it.
The “pit” comes from the act of chasing a bull into a pit and the dog would latch onto it’s neck and not let go until the bull bled to death.
And to spread the good word. :-)
A gentle ribbing and nothing more. I like Chet. Because I felt he was being singled out by certain FReepers on a certain PING list several months ago, I asked to be removed from that list after expressing my disgust and outrage. I never looked back.
Apparently, some wisea$$ thought it would be cute to solicite donations based on Chet's reaction to pitbull threads. There was nothing cute about it.
You got a link?
Indeed. :)
I know it’s a fact. If you want proof go look it up. Do you think the word “pit” makes them appear to be mean thus people will buy them? Surely, you jest.
I’ve seen several Bulldogs called “pit bulls”.
American BDs, especially; White boxers... I’ve even seen a sharpei mix succesfully passed off as a ‘full blooded’ pitbull.It’s a hit or miss identification, even among the registered dogs; A pull dog and a flashy dog are miles apart; the ones bred in the city can be even harder to identify.
I think they avoid publishing pictures because they know most of them don’t fit people’s image of a pit bull.
You mean chet didn’t post this? LOL
I guess he’s busy. ;)
I would't call copperheads harmless and have no problems calling this dog a lifesaver.
Good dog, had a friend who’s dog hated snakes, killed every one he found. The dog was a mutt, but a great snake killer...killed the same way, snapped the back with a whip like shake. This was in upper Michigan, country with lots of critters and snakes....When my father first bought our place on Mullet Lake he called it the Snake Ranch. Had oddles of them...Thats the area the dog lived in...
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