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Spotsy girl recovering from foot-long copperhead's bite

Nine-year-old gets bitten by poisonous snake, but will recover


Date published: 5/21/2008

By DAN TELVOCK

Nine-year-old Katie Davis might miss her SOL test today, but it's not because she doesn't want to take it.

It's because a venomous copperhead snake bit her.

The Chancellor Elementary School student was playing with her twin brother, Kyle, at their home in Pipe Run in Spotsylvania County Sunday when she felt a sharp pain in her left hand.

Next to her was a small pile of leaves and mulch, where her father, Mark Davis, eventually found the foot-long snake.

"It felt like my hand was on fire," Katie said from her bed at Mary Washington Hospital hospital, surrounded by "Get Well" balloons, flowers and stuffed animals.

Katie said she jumped after the bite and ran inside. She had no idea what had happened.

"We had thought it was a bee sting," Mark Davis said. "She's screaming that it's burning and stinging real bad. We saw it get worse in minutes and it started to turn blue or black."

Snake bites are rare. About 7,000 people are bitten by venomous snakes in the United States each year, according to the University of Virginia.

Katie's mother, Jeani Davis, drove her daughter to the local firehouse. They suggested she go to the urgent care center. When they arrived, she said the doctor told her that Katie needed to be at the emergency room.

"He called an ambulance," she said.

Katie will be fine, her parents said. The middle finger on her left hand is bruised and swollen from the bite, but doctors said she will regain full mobility.

She was in good spirits, and was getting a lot of attention. Even her school principal, Shawn Hudson, called to check on her.

"He wanted to know how I was feeling. He was worried also," Katie said.

Dan Telvock: 540/374-5438
Email: dtelvock@freelancestar.com


The emergency room at Mary Washington Hospital sees about 20 snakebite victims each year.

About two-thirds of those victims have been bitten by venomous snakes, almost always copperheads, said Dr. Charles G. Penick, an emergency-room physician.

Penick advised that if you are bitten by a snake you know to be venomous, the important thing to remember is not to panic.

"There's no super rush," he said.

A venomous bite requires medical attention but is usually not life threatening.

Penick said he's been told by poison control experts that in the past 10 years they could not recall a single fatal snake-bite in Virginia.

At the hospital, the staff will offer pain medication and give the victim an injection of antivenom if the bite appears serious.

A bite by a nonvenomous snake should be cleaned but does not require a trip to the hospital.

If you're not sure about the snake, wait about 15 minutes to see if the wound site becomes unusually painful. If it does, the snake probably was venomous, and you should seek help, Penick said.

If it does not become painful, the snake was probably not venomous, and the injury can be treated at home.

As with any puncture wound, a snake bite also may require a tetanus shot, said Dr. Thomas G. Franck, local health director.

--Jim Hall

Jeff Cooper, a non-game biologist with the Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries, said the northern copperhead is the only venomous snake in the Fredericksburg area.

"It is a pretty common snake," he said. "It likes forests and old farms, and they even live in neighborhoods."

The cottonmouth and timber rattlesnake also are prevalent in Virginia. Cooper said both of these snakes have diamond-shape heads and vertical pupils like a cat's eye.

The northern copperhead is reddish-brown, so it hides well in forest leaf litter. It has an hourglass pattern on its back.

The rattlesnake's rattler is one easy indicator, Cooper said, but sometimes they lose them. The timber rattlesnake is typically yellowish with some dark on the back. Usually, this snake is found in mountainous areas and in southeast Virginia.

A cottonmouth usually is dark. If its mouth is open, the inside is a cottony color. It is a thick snake. Usually, this snake is found in southeast Virginia.

The local department, at 1320 Belman Road, Fredericksburg, has snake guides for $2.

--Dan Telvock



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Date published: 5/21/2008


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is this still going on? (posted by mikester , June 9, 2008 4:02 pm)   
Everyone still fighting over the existence of snakes or not?

eastern cottonmouth (Agkistrodon piscivorus piscivorus (posted by fredtalkinmofo , June 8, 2008 9:35 pm)   
"This is a large, venomous, semi-aquatic snake." From the Virginia Dept. of Game and Inland Fisheries... so yes, there are, check your facts before you post

VA Snakes (posted by Gnhntn , May 27, 2008 8:50 am)   
Let me start out by saying what no one else has....I am very glad to hear the little girl will be fine and make a full recovery. Yes I know Copperheads are the poisonious snake you will see the most in this area. If the snake is not poisonious I will let it be, but if it is poisonious and in my yard i kill it, as I have 2 children and a dog that play in that yard. I have killed a few copperheads, and yes 1 cottonmouth (and I know what they look like having and fished in FL), they aren't very numerous but th

Wow...your sympathy is staggering (posted by buffcajun , May 27, 2008 7:12 am)   
Not one person gave thanks that the child is okay. It could have been yours, you know.

Sorry, if I feel threatened by a snake, even due to (posted by lifeisbeautiful , May 26, 2008 9:02 am)   
ignorance, it's going down. I'd rather be laughed at then cried over. Mikester - must have been the Whitesnake (band) tee shirt you were wearing!

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