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-   -   October 25, 2008: Aussie Spider (http://cellar.org/showthread.php?t=18526)

Aliantha 10-28-2008 05:41 PM

lol...well fortunately I didn't get any bites. It could have been a lot worse though. I imagine 12 bites would put even a healthy adult in hospital.

eta: here's another funny story about the redbacks at that house. My other half at the time was telling me he felt sick and woozy and was going to lie down for a while. When I asked him what he thought he was sick with, he said he didn't know. Later on that evening he was feeling better and told me he'd been bitten by a redback that morning...

Ahuh...dickhead.

footfootfoot 10-28-2008 08:05 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by xoxoxoBruce (Post 497504)
... it sort of jars our reality.

Luckily, I also keep an octopus handy for just such occasions...

ZenGum 10-29-2008 07:26 AM

:lol:

If this thread ever comes up on the SDRTP, people are going to wonder what the hell footfootfoot is talking about. :p Suckers.

ZenGum 11-02-2008 08:06 PM

1 Attachment(s)
This seems to be a bad time to be a bird in Northern Queensland.

Attachment 20263

Carpet Python 1. Cockatoo 0.

ZenGum 11-02-2008 08:12 PM

1 Attachment(s)
Meanwhile, about 2500km south:

Attachment 20264

[from here].
Quote:

AN elderly woman has been forced to have her leg amputated after it became infected and then gangrenous when she was pecked by a pet magpie.
The woman, 84, went to a hospital emergency department in Newcastle, NSW, with pain, swelling and redness to her lower left leg, near where her daughter's magpie had attacked her 11 days before.

She was admitted to hospital and prescribed antibiotics and anti-fungal drugs, but continued to worsen. Gangrene set in and her leg was amputated above the knee.

Infectious diseases physician Paul Wilson reported the case in the latest Medical Journal of Australia.

He said infections following pecking injuries were rare.

"Serious infections relating to trauma involving a bird have included septic arthritis of the knee after a chicken bite and a fatal brain abscess in a child caused by a rooster peck," Dr Wilson wrote.

In the Newcastle case, he said pre-existing circulation problems in the woman, a former smoker, may have contributed to the aggressive course of the infection.
I've had these buggers swoop me when I was riding my bike. With helmet and sunnies I was pretty safe and it could be a fun game trying to headbutt the guy at speed.

spudcon 11-02-2008 08:16 PM

I imagine a big can of Raid would work on magpies just as well as those icky spiders.

Aliantha 11-02-2008 08:20 PM

I've had pieces of my scalp removed by magpies as a child. It farking hurts.

My son complained the other day because a maggie managed to get it's beak inside the gaps of his bike helmet and give him a bit of a nudge.

Those creatures can be nasty. I still think they're beautiful birds though. I love the sound they make in the morning when the sun's coming up.


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