Deadliest Job in America - Snake Milker! REACTION!! | OFFICE BLOKES REACT!!
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The reason that scientists haven't "synthesized" an antivenom is due to there being particular enzymes in it that aren't found anywhere else in the world. Each snake is unique enough that their venom has no cure but using its own venom as a catalyst. Plus its such a niche practice milking snakes and so dangerous that it makes antivenom one of the most expensive medicines in the world.
Plus, they need to keep milking the snakes so that the scientists don’t run out of venom to make it into antivenom
I’m sure an antivenin made from the exact snake that bit you would be ideal, but impractical. You used to know the specific species that bit you, but most small town rural hospitals keep an antivenin that works for all pit vipers which are most venemous species in North America, rattlesnakes, water moccasin and copperheads. The corral snake has a neurotoxin, but fortunately, are rare and not commonly encountered.
@@garyevans3421 also, corral snakes are very even tempered, they will almost never try to bite you. Swim with them all you want, just don’t be doing anything dumb to them.
@@CChissel I’ve heard that corral snakes would have to sort of gnaw on you to inject much venom, which would give you time to shake it off!
@@garyevans3421 that’s the first I’ve heard of it, very interesting! They’re really cool
Coyote Peterson! This dude let all sorts of nasty bugs bit and sting him, like the bullet ant and i think the murder hornet, dude is crazy!
Steve Irwin was a total professional and definitely knew what he was doing. His death was a crazy accident, and coincidentally, involved another type of venom that -due to where he was injured and the age/size -I'd imagine a stingray would need to be to pierce his sternum to the heart, there was very little chance of his surviving. A minor sting from a baby ray can put you down for like 2 months. I'm glad there are ppl like this do research and risk themselves in an effort to save lives and raise awareness for the demand.
It went between the ribs. I belive they can see the electrical signals of the hear muscle and could probably tell where the ribs were.
Well, he did constantly invade animals’ territory and homes because it made good TV. If he just respected their habitats and kept his distance, he would be alive today. Never agreed with his drama infested invasion of animals and their habitats to get a good reaction for his TV shows. People need to respect an animals’ habitat and understand what to do if they accidentally encounter danger. Irwin went too far to create drama.
I'm like you Dave ive owned plenty of snakes so they don't scare me, but a venomous snake is beyond sketchy they turn your blood from a liquid to basically a solid an make you have a heart attack it'd be brutal
Yeah, sometimes, not funny.🙄
"she looks well aggressive".... The understatement of the year...lol
We see all three of those “nope ropes” regularly here in SE Texas. Admire from a distance, and you’ll be good. It’s the pets that usually take a hit.
We have a lot of rattlesnakes here in the foothills of California. My best friend was bitten on her toe back in the 90’s. It was a 45 minute drive to the hospital. The most important thing they did was call the hospital on the way to make sure they had anti venom. Not all hospitals have it on hand.
Interesting rattler fact in south texas and parts of mexico the no longer rattle due to wild hogs and their resistance to the venom and a taste for them.
@@droyal18able Those are some pretty smart rattlesnakes. 😊
Never change blokes. I love the school boy humor every chance you get. Reminds me of me and the boys goofing about over a few brews.
Stay young my friends
I grew up around copperheads, there were so many in the area I lived in, would come across the odd rattlesnake from time to time, but mostly copperheads and black snakes and garter snakes. Used to catch the copperheads all the time, but my dad told me to never try to catch a small one in case it was a baby. I was told they can’t control the amount of venom they pump out, and an give you a fatal dose, not sure if that’s true but I took it to heart and never tried.
It's not true. They have control of their venom right out of the egg.
I vaguely remember talking online to one girl who lived near me, and she had pictures of herself holding a baby copperhead in her hand.
You should watch more stuff of this guy , he let's wasp, and Scorpions and hornets sting him. 👍🍀
My grandparents dog would often come home with several cotton mouth snake bites. He would sleep in his dog house for a few days ready to go back into the woods to get but again.
Coyote is a insane man. he has willingly tested himself against hundreds of insect bites and other creatures. i recommend watching more of him.
He's too obnoxious to watch for very long.
Daz mentioned Rolf Harris. I met Rolf in the 70's when we lived in Malta. He became a good friend of our family. Rolf wrote the song Tie Me Kangaroo and my dad used to sing it to me when I was little. Then meeting the man who wrote it 14 years later was pretty cool. Rolf was one of the most talented people I'd ever met!
Actual most dangerous job is hunting and fishing workers followed by loggers. This job isn't even close.
Please do a couple more coyote Peterson videos of him suffering through painful stings/bites. It's pure gold
I've seen copperheads fairly frequently here in North Carolina. That one was a unit! Daz has a trip coming up in few weeks, maybe he'll run into one. :)
I've killed six of them in my yard this year. Live in Wake County near Wake Forest.
Growing up in the foothills and midstate NC, saw all three of those shown. Mostly cottonmouths, but you never forget running into a rattler. Grandfather always kept black snakes and king snakes around. During spring and summer he’d catch and put them up in his cherry and apple trees and then move them into his shop for the winters. Always a little spooked when they would crawl out of the rafters when I’d watch him woodwork. It worked though, birds wouldn’t eat all his fruits and the rats would stay out of his dog food and wood piles. Wouldn’t see too many venomous snakes around his place either. Folks was rough in Ruffin.
Asheboro is where I’d see a lot of copperheads (blame the old copper mines 😆), Browns Summit had some of the biggest black snakes and in Snow Camp I saw them all.
Remember, even a beheaded snake can still kill. Don’t burn remains, bury them deep enough you don’t accidentally dig them up while gardening or doing yard work. Never touch the head. Use the shovel to move it into hole. I do not miss having to dig in red clay.
@@jlondon1441 king snakes will eat rattlesnakes and other venomous snakes another reason to keep them around
The south is awful when it comes to animals and creatures, everything else is great about the south. Once saw a Diamondback 25 feet away from a playground full of kids in Tennessee.
@@jacket5456 Diamondbacks aren't found in Tennessee. Most likely a timber rattler
My Grandfather had an ashtray in his Pickup filled with Rattlesnake rattlers he had cut off snakes he killed as he worked on his farm in West Texas. But they were none as big as that Eastern Rattlesnake
L grandfather for killing snakes
It's crazy that I see these snakes all the time, but I don't think too much about them when I'm doing yard work or hiking etc...I have even opened up my door not realizing there was a water moccasin curled up on the door mat. Watching videos of these snakes is terrifying to me, but I don't think about them when I go about my daily business.
I've seen several live water moccasins but I've only ever seen one rattle snake that my granddad ran over with the car when it was crossing a road. I've seen countless non poisonous snakes.
You must live in florida lol
@@londonmmc Actually Alabama but not too far away.
I only ever saw 1 rattlesnake b4 I started going out and looking for snakes... now I c several a year along with many other non venomous snakes
@@e-reptiledysfunction2243 Do the rattle snakes mostly like to stay even more hidden than other poisonous ones? It seems like the non poisonous ones come out in the open more than any venomous snakes though.
@@NikkiCox81 I look for snakes by road cruising, so really all depends on the time of day or even year... a coachwhip can b found out at 95 degrees crossing the road when most other snake species r hanging out n the shade bcuz it's to hot for them... hognoses tend to b found on cooler days especially towards the fall seems to b best time to find them... I wouldn't say rattlesnakes stay hidden more than any other species of snake, no snake wants to encounter a human bcuz that often means the end of that snake... if u r seeing more non venomous snakes than rattlesnakes I'd say it's probably bcuz there r simply more non venomous snakes n that area than there r rattlesnakes
My mate used to have a massive python. We used to take it to the park for a slither. And we used to walk his iguana on a leash. The local kids loved it.
When I watch these videos I like to think you blokes are just at the office in the break room during lunch making these videos.
"It would have attracted the wrong crowd"🤣🤣🤣
There's an amazing VICE video called "Getting High Injecting Snake Venom" about a bizarre guy who has now been injecting venom directly into his veins for 30 years and claims it keeps him young and that he never gets sick. It's almost exactly the same length as this video (22-mins) and will give you a LOT to react to.
I'm from the state line between North and South Carolina. My part of the states you'll find Copperheads and Eastern Diamondback as well as pygmy rattlers. Eastern parts of the states you can add Water Moccasin and Coral snakes.
I like that you guys have gotten into Coyote Peterson! I know he's a little dramatic and hams it up a bit, but genuinely he is an excellent educator and he knows his stuff. His goofy personality belies his expertise a little, but remember that his target audience is mostly kids, his goal is to teach young people and get them engaged and involved with animals. I think he does a spectacular job. He's no Steve Irwin or Sir David Attenborough, but I'm just happy there's a knowledgeable, fearless, charismatic guy making learning about animals fun, interesting, and most of all easily accessible/digestible and family-friendly.
Really entertaining upload. You guys were into it and hilarious at the same time. Just woke and barely into coffee, so I'm half-awake and still slightly giddy.
Haven't seen OBike in a while and he was revved.
Be well 👍✌️
Getting bit by a snake is expensive, that anti venom cost a whole lot of money👍🍀
About $100K to treat a Rattlesnake bite last time I checked.
@@LG123ABC that's wild. And I'd imagine it's a rare enough injury that most insurance probably wouldn't cover much of it smh
When I was a little boy we would go into the woods and catch snakes, snapping turtles and bull frogs. Than head down to the river and catch some Catfish.
I worked at a landfill that had thousands of rattlers. Noone has been bit so far and when we were bored we would play with them for entertainment.
Where I’m from in southern New Mexico, we got all kinds of snakes, including rattlesnakes. One time I was woken up at night when I felt something rub against my foot in bed which turned out to be a decent sized garden snake. Took us about an hour just to catch it and throw the dang thing outside but I’m just glad it wasn’t a diamondback
It took an hour to catch a garter snake lol. Takes me like 2 minutes
I know this aint related but I want more boondocks reaction
There are people in Arizona that do this with Black Widow spiders too. Saw a documentary about it on Discovery Channel. It was a family that was doing it.
this isnt the deadliest job in america lol..i mean it is a dangerous job but not the deadliest
Completely agree.....i mean he has anti venom on site so 🤷🏻♂️
@@jimmy_wang_ easy to talk on the other side of your phone screen.. guarantee 8 out of 10 people would rather go serve in a war then get bit by a poisonous snake. Much more likely to live a war as well with the stats
Statistically I think the President is the deadliest
This facility is about 10 miles from my house. I’ve never been, seeing as it’s not an interest of mine, as I’m very wary of snakes and have seen more than I’d care to after growing up here in Florida with so many dangerous ones around but I didn’t realize all this was being done there. And for the record I’m not anti-snake, I just have a real reverence & respect for the potential harm they can cause. As I said I didn’t realize the medical science aspect of the place but I thank and respect them for helping with the production of anti-venom; certainly not a job I’ll be applying for in this lifetime however.
Actually, snake milker isn't even on the "top 10" list of deadliest jobs in America. I just watched that video a few weeks back. Spoiler alert... it's tree cutting. 🙂
My girl used to hold this job title in a Circle K parking lot off Route 56
Nah an angry cat is far more of a problem
I raised black widows for years for a lab in Wisconsin that did this with spiders. I somehow made it out with only seven total bites, and honestly by the seventh, all the bites caused was muscle and stomach cramping.
Black widows aren't nearly as dangerous as we are made to fear them.
I'm Fl here, they live under my outside furniture.. we really don't even think about it.. if I see the web and eggs hanging in it I will kill them all.. but they are always there where you can't know they are there also.
A young child would have the need for medical attention but adults, no.
The deadliest job in the US is actually President of the United States, but the Department of Labor doesn't count how many presidents die on the job a year because its not a yearly event.
Speaking of..one of the greatest shows of all time. Dirtiest jobs with Mike Rowe react maybe?.
I live in Arkansas and both Copperheads and Cottonmouths are common here. Both are venomous vipers. We also have Diamondbacks, Timber Rattlers, and Coral Snakes. Most common by far where I live are Copperheads. Nearly been bitten by them multiple times.
I've seen copperhead and water moccasin in the wild, the copperhead was quite chill but the water moccasin was ready to go. I also used to live on old farm land that had tons of black rat snakes, couldn't go for a walk without seeing one. Over the course of one summer I pulled over 20 of these guys 6 to 7 feet long out of the basement. Very docile, just carried them down to the pond to let them go. The only time one even tried to bite me was when I stepped on it by accident.
I am 242 miles from this place. Florida is funny.
you cant wear armor or gloves because it would damage the fangs of the snake, making any attempt of reusing snakes redundant
FYI a Water Moccassin is the same as a Cotton Mouth
Being from the US I've only dealt with small snakes but once in the woods there was a snake 3x the lady snakes size on this video. To this day I gave no idea wtf it was because it was HUGE and probably a domestic snake at one point. You couldn't pay me enough to fuck with snakes all day long.
drinking snake venom is actually pretty harmless
‘Would you like to touch my copperhead?’ is Dave’s new pick-up line. 😂
Living in Florida I see quite a few snakes, lots of them are pets and lots of people also have Alligators as pets, such a strange place here.
By the look of their housing I bet feeding them & cleaning those boxes is equally risky
I live a few miles from there and didn't even know it. Wow 😳
The pound is now worth $1.15. I went out with a girl wouldn’t surprise me if she handled 50 snakes a day…it didn’t last long
I see all three of those snakes rather frequently in the area I live and work.
Daz looked so mischievous/uncomfortable throughout this video! 🤣
Snakes are no poisonous, they are venomous
You guys should check out some of his other videos. He purposefully lets himself get bitten and stung by some of the most painful insects in the world.
Like many others have said each of the venoms have a particular enzyme that is unique to each species and even affected by area where they are living which means making an artifical antivenom is nearly impossible but like you said it also comes down to cost as on average the process to make antivenom is pretty costly and so to then add the process to make an artifcal venom, reasearch to make sure that it is identical, the medical trials to ensure that it is viable and then to legalise it would increase the cost and time exponentially. This is and many other reasons is why no one is looking into making artifical venom for antivenom.
Australian snakes need milking too. Some similar deadly aussie snakes can breed together, so finding the right anti-venene can be deadly if they get it wrong. A veterinarian needs to check the actual snake if possible.
We have all three of those snakes here in west Tennessee. Copperheads go in and out of my garden all the time. The workers at a state park near me said they have seen 5 and 6 foot Rattlesnakes in the park.
There are no eastern diamondbacks in Tennessee. Most likely timber rattlers which are just about as deadly
@@johngarnergarner6724 Thank you for pointing that out, I always thought they were here, but I was wrong. Google says there are only four venomous snakes in Tennessee. The pygmy rattlesnake which I haven't seen is one of them. Another thing I didn't know that there weren't cottonmouth
in eastern Tennessee. Here in west Tennessee just about anywhere there is water you will find cottonmouth. Some people mistake the brown water snake for a cottonmouth. John garner garner. It just goes to show you never get too old to learn something I just turned 79 and I'm still learning.
I'll put that job in oh hell no category
Cody Peterson takes bites and stings from some crazy things.
Number one reason they keep milking the snakes over and over:
The snakes secretly like it.
I worked at a University that had their own Snake Room with 6 Timber Rattlers in captivity. Only went in there once or twice and did Not F around with those things.
The let go is insane
And Australia beats every snake here with us having the 10 most venomous
The host's occasional high pitch keeps reminding me of Charlie Day.
I have almost been bitten by a rattlesnake twice. They are not as rare as he makes them out to be.
Most dangerous job my ass lol Try being a logger or a commercial fisherman. Hell, even construction. I wouldn't want to be a roofer.
I think they did a King Cobra at one point. Absolutely massive
Should watch more of him, like his sting and bite videos
I got bit by a copperhead once, a young one and so it pumped me good..I just needed electrolytes though and pain killers..it's definitely painful, like a hornet sting hammered into you, but it's not necrotic like that other very serious stuff. You might need a tetanus shot though. Heck a brown recluse it what really scares me. Tagging me in my sleep..that would suck. They'll rot your arm from the inside, I've seen it.
lol i live in Deland....always heard of this place...i never see snakes...lmao
Polar bear milking is a lot more dangerous.
I can already see it. Daz probably makes a joke about milking the snake.
Some animals just look evil, don't they? Speaks toward the likely reality of evolved memory.
You guys should definitely reacto to more of coyote Peterson's videos, the guy is insane and his videos are super entertaining!
I'll say this about their job, better you than me 😀
i live in eastern kentucky we have them
Is that what rolf harris is at these days 😂😂😂
I think a big factor is that manufacturing anti venom is not profitable for drug companies. Also the tested synthetic venom protein particles made from certain species dont always yield a robust antibody response in the test animal or the antibodies are not as effective but people are still working on this problem
I am no expert but I am pretty sure the term is anti venin, not anti venom. It might be even spelled anti venen. I saw a guy who was also a professional snake milker in Florida on a CBS Sunday morning news program.. He was very old and he would regularly inject himself with venom to build up immunity in case he is bitten. He pronounced the word anti venin with a long e sound. Can anyone shed any light on the correct pronunciation?
You guys should react to coyote Peterson getting stung if yall haven't already.
In my limited experience, water moccasins aren't super aggressive. I've shooed them away with nothing more than my voice and a broom, plenty of times. They tend to just shuffle off toward w/e water body is nearby and go about their business. That may be because where I live I'm sure they see people all the time so they might just be more used to ignoring us stupid humans.
My family has a ranch in Texas and I’m terrified of Rattle Snakes but I think this cruel. They basically terrorized all of those snakes and then plopped them down in tiny boxes.
I mean it snot how it seems. They treat the snakes pretty well. Sure they live in smaller sized enclosures, but search up snake breeders. They keep them in small racks. And they feed them good. If they were mistreating these snakes there's no way they would look this healthy.
I wonder if the presenter is someone who really knows what they're talking about like Bear Grylls or just some actor dude hired to put on a crocodile Dundee hat for ratings.
💨
not sure if they mention it or not, they have to do `snake milking ' in a sterile environment.
6:55 Are you a scientist Dave? You seem fairly confident they can "just synthesize it"......
Dave should come up with a cure for cancer.
Reacting to snake content, cool... office blokes react to E-reptile Dysfunction... jk, I don't have anything worth reacting to, but if anybody likes snake videos check out the channel
Love the name lol
I'm calling BS on this being the most dangerous job in America...you would assume of course that on the premises they have medicine to counteract many of these bites so that they don't need to use emergency services or rush to a hospital. And the process seems very straightforward as long as you stay relatively focused and aren't acting stupid. There are jobs which a much higher death rate in America than this. Much much higher.
You should watch more coyote Patterson
FUCK THAT!!!
that's Deland you don't want to visit.
I agree definitely not the most dangerous job. It's still gotta be the guy who has to climb the cell towers
That's an average eastern diamondback. I've seen them far larger.
Wrong, you can't synthesize an antivenom. Each antivenom is unique.
“You’re brown bread” as in you’re dead? Cockney rhyming? I’ve watched too much lock stock.
I’d be a “Mike Milker” in a heartbeat. I bet he’s soo long and girthy😍😍
React to George carlin on abortion and the sanctity of life.
Ayy Coyote Peterson!!