Auckland Apple iPhone 15 Pro Repair and iPad Pro Unlock. 1 Huron St, Takapuna, Auckland. 0800 429 429 www.drmobiles.co.nz
Showing posts with label victim. Show all posts
Showing posts with label victim. Show all posts
Friday, April 17, 2009
Pygmy Rattlesnake Bites Man At Wal-Mart , Pembroke Pines, Florida, USA
PEMBROKE PINES, Fla. -- A man is recovering after he was bitten by a snake inside a garden center at a Wal-Mart Supercenter.
"An individual was at one of the local garden centers and was buying plants and in doing so, picked up a plant and got bitten by this pygmy rattlesnake," paramedic Capt. Ernie Jillson said.
The 42-year-old man was taken to the hospital on Sunday for treatment, where he r More..eceived antivenin for the pygmy rattler bite, according to authorities. His name has not been released.
Jillson said the snake bit the man on the right hand. He said the team was contacted about the bite and responded.
Pygmy rattlers are one of six venomous snakes in Florida.
Officials said bites from pygmy rattlers are painful but rarely fatal.
Blog Flux Scramble - Email Encryption and JavaScript Protection Submit Blog Add to Technorati Favorites Add to Google Top Personal blogs
Amzing News: Two survive month at sea in ice box!
Two Burmese fishermen have survived almost a month in shark-infested waters in an ice box after their ship sank.
The men, both aged in their 20s, had been on a 12m Thai wooden fishing boat with 18 others when it sank in heavy seas off Australia's north coast on December 23.
Australian Maritime Safety Authority spokeswoman Tracey Jiggins said: "They had no safety equipment, no beac More..ons, no means of communication and they'd been drifting for 25 days.
"For them to have even been spotted in a huge body of water is amazing."
The men were spotted by an Australian coastal patrol aircraft on Saturday and were winched onto a rescue helicopter and taken to hospital on Thursday Island, off Australia's northern coast.
"They were desperately keen to get on. When they got up they skolled (drank) 2 litres of water each, within seconds," helicopter pilot Terry Gadenne said.
A photograph taken by Customs aircraft showed the pair standing in a high, red-sided ice box used by commercial fishing boats and desperately waving at rescuers.
Hospital officials said the pair were hungry and dehydrated after surviving cyclonic storms in the region, but were recovering well and would be released soon.
The pair would then be questioned by immigration officials and police, who had not yet determined how the pair survived and what they did for food and water.
Ms Jiggins said the others on board the boat would certainly have perished and no search for other survivors was planned.
It was also unclear where the Thai-based fishing boat, crewed by Thais and a handful of Burmese, sank and how far the pair had drifted before they were picked up 60 nautical miles northwest of Horn Island.
Australia has one of the longest coastlines in the world and the country's search-and-rescue patrol zone covers a tenth of the world's surface, or 20 million square miles of the Indian, Pacific and Southern Oceans.
The Torres Strait, between Australia and Papua New Guinea, is infested by sharks and the area is regularly fished by both licensed and illegal fishing vessels, many from Asia.
The men, both aged in their 20s, had been on a 12m Thai wooden fishing boat with 18 others when it sank in heavy seas off Australia's north coast on December 23.
Australian Maritime Safety Authority spokeswoman Tracey Jiggins said: "They had no safety equipment, no beac More..ons, no means of communication and they'd been drifting for 25 days.
"For them to have even been spotted in a huge body of water is amazing."
The men were spotted by an Australian coastal patrol aircraft on Saturday and were winched onto a rescue helicopter and taken to hospital on Thursday Island, off Australia's northern coast.
"They were desperately keen to get on. When they got up they skolled (drank) 2 litres of water each, within seconds," helicopter pilot Terry Gadenne said.
A photograph taken by Customs aircraft showed the pair standing in a high, red-sided ice box used by commercial fishing boats and desperately waving at rescuers.
Hospital officials said the pair were hungry and dehydrated after surviving cyclonic storms in the region, but were recovering well and would be released soon.
The pair would then be questioned by immigration officials and police, who had not yet determined how the pair survived and what they did for food and water.
Ms Jiggins said the others on board the boat would certainly have perished and no search for other survivors was planned.
It was also unclear where the Thai-based fishing boat, crewed by Thais and a handful of Burmese, sank and how far the pair had drifted before they were picked up 60 nautical miles northwest of Horn Island.
Australia has one of the longest coastlines in the world and the country's search-and-rescue patrol zone covers a tenth of the world's surface, or 20 million square miles of the Indian, Pacific and Southern Oceans.
The Torres Strait, between Australia and Papua New Guinea, is infested by sharks and the area is regularly fished by both licensed and illegal fishing vessels, many from Asia.
Tuesday, December 16, 2008
Man attacked by shark at Auckland beach (New Zealand, Monavid)
(Source: NZ Herald)9:38AM Saturday Dec 20, 2008, Auckland, New Zealand:
A man believes he is lucky to be alive after a shark attack at a popular beach near Auckland.
Keen fisherman Ken Lindberg says he was checking his net at Maraetai, when he felt something clamp around his leg.
He waded back into shallow water to take a look and found a big gash in his leg.
";Doctors and nurses held my leg right up to stop the bleeding. On the outside of the left leg there are eight to ten stitches in that gash. Underneath the Achilles tendon is severed and I';ve got about four stitches in that.";
Mr Lindberg says he has not been out to set his net since he was bitten.
Source: Newstalk ZB
A man believes he is lucky to be alive after a shark attack at a popular beach near Auckland.
Keen fisherman Ken Lindberg says he was checking his net at Maraetai, when he felt something clamp around his leg.
He waded back into shallow water to take a look and found a big gash in his leg.
";Doctors and nurses held my leg right up to stop the bleeding. On the outside of the left leg there are eight to ten stitches in that gash. Underneath the Achilles tendon is severed and I';ve got about four stitches in that.";
Mr Lindberg says he has not been out to set his net since he was bitten.
Source: Newstalk ZB
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)