...and in your hands and in your ass and in your feet, (just speaking from experience)Be more concerned about cactus in your knee.
And they stay in for weeks and months, a few surfacing each day !! One year in September during an Antelope hunt I put my forearm down on a Wyoming Cactus and was setting in a deer stand in November still pulling them out !...and in your hands and in your ass and in your feet, (just speaking from experience)![]()
Same here, had some in my knee once and it festered for months.And they stay in for weeks and months, a few surfacing each day !! One year in September during an Antelope hunt I put my forearm down on a Wyoming Cactus and was setting in a deer stand in November still pulling them out !![]()
I could just be lucky, but I've only ran into one rattlesnake in all my years of antelope hunting in Wyoming.yeah those cactus needles are a literal pain in the ass!!! I hate snakes as much as the next guy if not more. by September I wouldn't be worried about the snakes so much. those snake boots aren't real comfortable anyway and I really don't know if they really even help that much. I just got the damn cold shivers thinking about those things!
I've bet you've been by several more. Usually they get out of your wayI could just be lucky, but I've only ran into one rattlesnake in all my years of antelope hunting in Wyoming.
I had one in my right knee in 1998. I thought nothing of it until on a Bear hunt in Ontario, where it suddenly festered. I ended-up in a Canadian hospital with a full blown staff infection. My leg/knee swelled up like a football. They (Canadian doctors) were going to amputate my leg after 5 days. I was rushed to a hospital in Fargo N.D. where they operated on my knee and put me on anti-biotics.Same here, had some in my knee once and it festered for months.
I think that's probably about average. I am at two accidental run-ins, but if you go looking for them they are out there. In the BHB growing up they weren't hard to find if you went looking, but kindof like bears they tend to leave you alone if its possible I think. Elmer's glue helps to get the little tiny cactus needles out, I have used duct tape (what can't you use it for) also. Luckily I haven't had the amputation threat, that is scary. Its just the glue and duct tape take any hair and sometimes a layer of skin with it, which kindof hurts a lot so do it in a private place where no one can hear you scream. I have more wood glue on hand now-a-days, but I am still a clutz, so still need to use it occassionally.I could just be lucky, but I've only ran into one rattlesnake in all my years of antelope hunting in Wyoming.
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I have posted this picture before on another thread but I have hunted antelope for about 15 years in Wyoming and had not ran across a rattler until this one in 2013 while hunting around New Castle. This was after the big snow storm that came in and killed a lot of livestock.
It was different seeing it moving across the snow ! With that being said I wonder how many I have walk past and never seen while hunting I am sure more than I want to know !