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In Jefferson, snake bites the hand that tries to save it -- PETA freak alert
Star-Ledger Staff | Wednesday, August 17, 2005 | BY BILL SWAYZE

Posted on 08/23/2005 11:43:23 AM PDT by girlangler

In Jefferson, snake bites the hand that tries to save it Wednesday, August 17, 2005 BY BILL SWAYZE Star-Ledger Staff Stephen Sodones spotted it along the edge of Route 23 in Jefferson, a snake just starting its precarious slide to the other side of the highway.

So the 62-year-old animal lover picked it up, hoping to carry it to safety. But in doing so, Sodones quickly learned one of nature's more important facts: Snakes bite.

What bit Sodones three times on the arm Monday night was a copperhead, which can grow to 4 feet and have fangs like hypodermic needles. No one is quite sure how big this one was.

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Sodones, who lives in the Newfoundland section of Jefferson, remained hospitalized last night in the intensive care unit at Chilton Memorial Hospital in Pompton Plains. His condition was listed as critical, but improving, a hospital spokeswoman said.

Sodones was given an antivenin intravenously, and is expected to be fine, said Steven Marcus, medical director at New Jersey Poison Information and Education System.

Some say Sodones could have fared much worse.

"If you had to be bit by some venomous snake, you'd want it to be a copperhead," said Joe Abene, venomous snake expert at the Bronx Zoo. "Most people do not have to go to the hospital."

Copperheads get their name from the copper-like hue of the head and are fairly common in the Jefferson area. They account for more cases of venomous snake bites than any other snakes, but their venom is the least toxic of the species, according to the Web site snakesandfrogs.com.

What prompted Sodones to pick up the snake in the first place remains a question to police, authorities said.

But to those who know Sodones, his actions made perfect sense.

A animal lover, Sodones lives alone with a white long-haired cat named "Old Cat." He likes to feed bears and stop traffic so ducks can walk across the road. Not too long ago, he tried to revive a bumblebee, keeping it in the palm of his hand with some water until it buzzed away two hours later, said John Bross, a friend and neighbor.

"One time, I stepped on a spider and he wouldn't talk to me for two days," Bross said. "Steve's got a problem with animals. He loves them too much."

Friends said Sodones routinely takes walks along Route 23, not far from his house. At about 8:30 Monday night, he spotted the reptile in the road. When he picked it up, it attacked him, police said.

At first, Sodones didn't think much about the bites. But about four hours later, when he felt woozy, Sodones called 911, police said.

By then, the snake was long gone.

"It was a good thing to do, but the wrong way to do it. I wouldn't recommend anyone touch a venomous snake unless they know what they are doing," Abene said. "What the heck was he thinking?"

Staff writer Jordan Doronila contributed to this report.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: animalrights; darwincandidate; idiot; nutjob; peta; whackjob
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To: girlangler
I will tell you a story. I went to graduate school in Beaumont, Texas. I took Herpetology with some real snake lovers. There were about 7 of us who were in the same graduate program and we were full of ourselves and we took a lot of field trips. Once we went to Sour Lake and were on a research property owned by Texas A & M. We were snake hunting. Now, Gary and Debbie were married (now divorced), but they were fanatics about snakes. Had many herpetariums with mostly nonvenomous snakes. We came across a cottonmouth watermoccacin. Gary had a pinning cane and he knew well how to handle snakes. So he grasped him behind the head and now he controlled him. Right? Wrong. The snake is venomous, but all snakes can constrict. So this rather large 4 foot long, 2" diameter moccasin began wrapping around his forearm. As he constricts Garys forearm, Gary cannot "unwrap" the snake, so he asks me and Joe and Bill to unwrap the snake. We did not unwrap the snake at first. Now Debbie, the wife, is crying...we are 5 miles out in the field, if this large snake bites the fellow he will do so repeatedly and could be very dangerous. Finally we made it to the research center and used ice to uncoil the snake. We dropped him in the freezer and he quickly "hibernated". They later put him in a jar of formalin for a collection specimen.

These people collected live aligators, desert tortoises, all sorts of lizards, anoles, and skinks, and had at least 15 snakes in herpetariums in the house they lived in with their youngest child. They were very nice people.

But Gary would do some really dumb things,...but so did I.

81 posted on 08/23/2005 1:45:40 PM PDT by Texas Songwriter
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To: Blurblogger
LOL! Will they ever learn?
82 posted on 08/23/2005 1:46:07 PM PDT by Victoria Delsoul
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To: girlangler
Remember the PETA story a few years ago??

Some anti-hunters were protesting the start of hunting season in a certain southern state -- they were interviewing each other on video for the local MSM....

Right in the middle of the sentence about the peace, tranquility and harmony of the natural order -- a barred owl swoops down about 20 yards behind the interview scene -- and skewers an adult cottontail with its talons --

The MSM reporterette and the on-duty PETA spokes-animal tried hard to ignore the disturbance..... BUT

The brief on-scene dust-up, the commotion of the takeoff that followed, and especially the awful screams of the doomed hare as the owl carried it away... were a true slice of poetic justice for the fuzzy-wuzzy tree-hugger enviro-weenie jihadis.....

It was a scream -- to say the least....

83 posted on 08/23/2005 1:50:11 PM PDT by Wings-n-Wind (The answers are out there; Wisdom is gained by asking the right questions)
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To: girlangler
*sniff* I love a happy ending.

He's still alive?

*nevermind*

84 posted on 08/23/2005 2:00:30 PM PDT by null and void (Pssst! Suicide bombing causes eternal impotence. Pass it on...)
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To: ABG(anybody but Gore)
Actually, I've always found it the opposite. Cottonmouths will actually try and avoid you unless you step on them, which I've done a couple of times, and even then, if they have an avenue of escape, they'll take off like a bat out of hell.


When I was 8 years old I got chased by a cottonmouth ... up my yard, down 3 houses, and into the next house's backyard, where I proceded to climb on a fence.

Funny, but up until that point in time I collected snakes.

Now I collect dead snakes....
85 posted on 08/23/2005 2:04:09 PM PDT by StoneGiant (Power without morality is disaster. Morality without power is useless.)
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To: Malsua
One "Weekend only" neighbor used to put food out Sunday Night before he left.

You were never tempted to put food out on his porch Thursday and Friday night?

86 posted on 08/23/2005 2:06:46 PM PDT by null and void (Pssst! Suicide bombing causes eternal impotence. Pass it on...)
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To: kenth
"He likes to feed bears and stop traffic so ducks can walk across the road. Not too long ago, he tried to revive a bumblebee, keeping it in the palm of his hand with some water until it buzzed away two hours later, said John Bross, a friend and neighbor."

I can just see it, one day his neighbors will come across a bear feeding on his bee-stung and bloated carcass in the road where he was hit after trying to stop traffic for some ducks.

 

 

 

 


87 posted on 08/23/2005 2:08:26 PM PDT by StoneGiant (Power without morality is disaster. Morality without power is useless.)
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To: Texas Songwriter

Whew, you guys are a lot braver than me. I'm an outdoors type person -- have been quail, turkey, deer, bear, dove and even alligator hunting once, and I love to fish.

But I am terrified of snakes and spiders.

Look at one of my former comments on
this
thread and I mentioned living in Woodville Texas and finding several copperheads in my yard. One day was picking up some pine needles and a baby copperhead fell out of it.

I've been all over that part of Texas, used to live on a lake there.


88 posted on 08/23/2005 2:14:21 PM PDT by girlangler (I'd rather be fishing)
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To: Petronski
Actually, HE will be the pic-a-nic basket.
89 posted on 08/23/2005 2:14:35 PM PDT by Cheburashka
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To: weegee

Do you think this clown would taste funny to bears?

---

Only the brain, which is obviously spoiled.


90 posted on 08/23/2005 2:16:44 PM PDT by Cheburashka
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To: Cheburashka

"Yuck! I hate mush!"
91 posted on 08/23/2005 2:26:55 PM PDT by weegee (The Rovebaiting by DUAC must stop. It is nothing but a partisan witchhunt.)
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To: Wings-n-Wind

I would have LOVED to have seen that.

One of my mentors, who was an accomplished outdoor writer in his day and my editor at one time, was covering the story when they opened back up the alligator season in southwest Louisiana in the early 1980s.

He was in the swamp on a boat with a bunch of members of the press and environmental organizations, many opposed to opening the season back up, and he happened to catch a photo that won a National Wildlife Federation award.

He said they came around a bend and all the AR wackos and press were oowing and aweing over an egret. He JUST HAPPENED to have his camera on the bird when a big old gator suddenly came crashing out of the water and ate the dang egret.


92 posted on 08/23/2005 2:27:21 PM PDT by girlangler (I'd rather be fishing)
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To: Howlin; Victoria Delsoul

"Well, what else could happen?"


We could give the guy a hammer and see if he knocks some sense into his head.

...I VERY nearly sprayed some iced coffee when I saw that graphic in post 82!


93 posted on 08/23/2005 2:28:57 PM PDT by The Spirit Of Allegiance (SAVE THE BRAINFOREST! Boycott the RED Dead Tree Media & NUKE the DNC Class Action Temper Tantrum!)
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To: DJ MacWoW; Darksheare
Boy they're stooopid in them parts ping.

Umm, wanna send your local bear to his house? I hear soup's on...

94 posted on 08/23/2005 2:32:41 PM PDT by NoCmpromiz (Deja Moo - The feeling you've heard this bull before...)
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To: Blurblogger

LOL! I love those little emoticons. They're sooo cute.


95 posted on 08/23/2005 2:33:04 PM PDT by Victoria Delsoul
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To: girlangler
So the 62-year-old animal lover picked it up, hoping to carry it to safety. But in doing so, Sodones quickly learned one of nature's more important facts: Snakes bite.

Well it probably wasn't the picking it up as much as the guy talking baby talk to the snake that pissed it off

96 posted on 08/23/2005 2:35:30 PM PDT by tophat9000
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To: AxelPaulsenJr
And Jefferson is where.............

Morris Coujnty, NJ.

Jefferson Twp. is roughly bordered by State Rt 23 on the North and State Rt 15 on the South, the Sussex Co. line on the West and Kinnalon on the East...

(There, I bet it's now plain as day, eh?)

97 posted on 08/23/2005 2:39:07 PM PDT by NoCmpromiz (Deja Moo - The feeling you've heard this bull before...)
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To: girlangler

When I was about 10, I captured a garden snake and kept it in a milk carton for a few days. It soon became apparent that snakes were even less affectionate than cats, so I released it back to the vacant lot were I found it. Was this guy never ten years old? (BTW, I managed not to get bitten.)


98 posted on 08/23/2005 2:40:22 PM PDT by Lonesome in Massachussets (Lonesome's First Law: Whenever anyone says it's not about the money, it's about the money.)
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To: null and void
You were never tempted to put food out on his porch Thursday and Friday night?

I only found out after the fact. The Community newsletter listed it after his 3rd conviction. His house is only about 1/8 mile away, but we're heavily forested here and I can hardly see my neighbors house 100 feet away much less that wanker's. Not to mention this whole area is on the side of a mountain so from one lot to the next it may rise or fall 30 feet

99 posted on 08/23/2005 2:54:06 PM PDT by Malsua
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To: Malsua

For future reference few things attract bears better that burnt honeycomb...


100 posted on 08/23/2005 3:21:32 PM PDT by null and void (Pssst! Suicide bombing causes eternal impotence. Pass it on...)
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