Snake bites teen, holds on for almost an hour
A Travis County teenager is recovering after her pet python bit her, then wrapped around her arm and wouldn't let go. EMS dispatched crews to the girl's Northwest Austin apartment early Friday morning after getting a panicked call from her mother.
The ordeal started when the alarm clock sounded, and the girl's sudden movement startled the snake, a ball python named Kyra. The snake sunk its teeth into Melodi Wells' hand.
"I turned my hand around, and all of a sudden she started spiraling around my hand," Wells said.
The snake constricted for 45 minutes.
"It was really hard," she said. "There was blood everywhere, and my whole hand was three times (its normal) size. It was purple. It was really scary."
Wells' mother trickled water down her daughter's arm in an effort to loosen the snake's grip, but Kyra only squeezed tighter. Emergency workers tried putting ice on the snake and putting bleach near the snake, in hopes of forcing it to open its mouth. Emergency workers got help from the public, who heard about the situation on a news radio station. Wells says it was a caller who suggested the ammonia capsules that finally caused the ball python to loosen its grip.
Even though her arm is sore and weak, she thinks she'll heal just fine.
"I was lucky I didn't have to get any shots, because I'm scared of shots," she says.
That's right: the girl who had a python clamped on her arm is scared of a needle. The snake is just fine -- that's what Wells says concerned her most. She and her mother don't blame the snake for reacting the way it did when it was startled. They plan to keep Kyra.
A Travis County teenager is recovering after her pet python bit her, then wrapped around her arm and wouldn't let go. EMS dispatched crews to the girl's Northwest Austin apartment early Friday morning after getting a panicked call from her mother.
The ordeal started when the alarm clock sounded, and the girl's sudden movement startled the snake, a ball python named Kyra. The snake sunk its teeth into Melodi Wells' hand.
"I turned my hand around, and all of a sudden she started spiraling around my hand," Wells said.
The snake constricted for 45 minutes.
"It was really hard," she said. "There was blood everywhere, and my whole hand was three times (its normal) size. It was purple. It was really scary."
Wells' mother trickled water down her daughter's arm in an effort to loosen the snake's grip, but Kyra only squeezed tighter. Emergency workers tried putting ice on the snake and putting bleach near the snake, in hopes of forcing it to open its mouth. Emergency workers got help from the public, who heard about the situation on a news radio station. Wells says it was a caller who suggested the ammonia capsules that finally caused the ball python to loosen its grip.
Even though her arm is sore and weak, she thinks she'll heal just fine.
"I was lucky I didn't have to get any shots, because I'm scared of shots," she says.
That's right: the girl who had a python clamped on her arm is scared of a needle. The snake is just fine -- that's what Wells says concerned her most. She and her mother don't blame the snake for reacting the way it did when it was startled. They plan to keep Kyra.