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Thursday, June 16, 2011

I thought I would not make it.

The evening before my fourty-eighth birthday, my boyfriend asked me what I wanted to do the next day. I wanted to go on a hike that we had been planning for quite some time. Several times we had almost gotten everything worked out to do this; but it seemed like something always came up to change the plan. So we decided that we would get an early start the next day.

The next morning we managed to get all our stuff together for the hike. Plenty of water, picnic lunch, rain gear, and a few odds and ends. We studdied the map again and made sure of the way we wanted to go. Knowing that we would be crossing the river several times we wore shorts and tennis shoes. Soon we made our way down the road where we would park the truck.

Armed with our supplies and walking sticks we are thankful for the beautiful day as we begin our hike. I am so excited. The hike was going to be around three hours. The river was down and was going to be easy to cross. In places we would end up actually walking down stream a little ways.

Eagles, hawks, falcons, and blue herons favored us with their presence. There were old homesteads that had wonderful rock foundations. Crossing the river every now and again to keep on the old trail kept us from getting to hot. Around long curves in the river we came to see amazing cliffs that seemed to go on forever. We took pictures, had our picnic, and decided to head back toward the truck.

What a great birthday. It was so awesome to have finally accomplished this hike and discovered some great places. Now we would be able to mark it on our map of places we had been.

The trail we were following had rather tall grass on either side. Michael was walking in front of me using his walking stick to beat the grass back a little, keeping an eye out for things that tend to live along the river banks. I was doing the same thing about ten feet behind him. We had walked through some pretty grown up places over the last several years just like this.

Suddenly, I saw something coming out of the grass, right over my right foot. I knew in that instant that if I put my foot down I was in trouble. I thought if I kept the step in motion, but kicked, I could get away. As I made the effort of kicking forward, I felt a stinging sensation like a greenbriar going into my ankle. When I put my foot down I felt as if I had encountered an electric charge. Now I had a three foot long copperhead laying between my feet!

As I was pounding at the snake with my walking stick, I looked at my ankle and realized I had been bitten. I started screaming. "I've been bit, I've been bit!" Michael turned and saw what had happend. He took a couple strides and grabbed my arm to get me away from the snake. He tried to stab the snake with his treking pole and it slid off to cover. He returned to my side and put my arm around his shoulder and his around my back holding on to the waist of my jeans shorts. Then he commanded, "walk, just keep walking!" At that point it was all I could do to remain conscious. I just wanted to lay down. "Keep walking", he said. "I can't". The pain was incredible. I just wanted to let go and pass out so I wouldn't feel any thing. My leg was on fire. I wanted nothing so badly as to be at the truck and on my way to the hospital. My mind was trying to comprehend what had happened. I didn't think I could go on. In and out of the present, some how hanging on to Michael's voice, I manged to stay on my feet enough for him to get me to the truck.

As we made the last river crossing I was pretty much passed out. Michael sat me on a big rock so he could get the truck open. Then he lifted me into it and we started up the road to the hospital. I really do not remeber much of the ride. Several times I heard Michael telling me to stay awake, to stay with him.

While I can not remember all the details; actually not many at all, I do know that I have never felt that kind of pain in my life.

After about a nineteen minute drive; that should have taken at least thirty-five or more,we arrived at the emergency room. Since Michael had taken just long enough to stop at home and call ahead they were waiting for us. A woman met us at the door with a wheelchair and wisked me an examination room that had been prepared.

The IV's were ready along with the anti-venin. While I was being hooked up, the bite marks were measured and marked. As the pain meds started to work I finally just let go and passed out. I guess my mind was at the point that I was in as safe a place as I could be.

I remember waking occassionally to nurses and staff coming and going. At some point I was moved to the intensive care ward. The next twenty four hours are a complete loss to me.

When it was decided that I was going to be ok, I was moved to general observation. There were employees from all over the hospital coming to ask if they could see the bite marks. I remember the first time I really had the nerve to look myself. I didn't even recognize my own leg. It seemed like I was looking at some one else. I had seen a lot of wounds and injuries as an EMT. But when I looked and saw that my leg was horribly swollen and discolored I was shocked. I rang for the nurse who measured the ankle to see if there was a difference in the swelling to find that it was eleven inches around. My leg was black up to my hip. She called the doctor in and he ordered more blood work to see what was going on. That was when we found that I had a secondary infection. That earned me a couple more days in the hospital.

Finally on Friday I was allowed to go home. I had antibiotics, pain medicine, and orders to keep the leg elevated as much as possible, and bed rest.

After four week of rest I was incredibly bored. I told Michael I was ready to go out and do some hiking and climbing. The doctor had said it would be at least six weeks before I would even be able to put my boots on. But I had tried them on and even though that boot didn't lace as tight as the left, I could get it on.

So, we started off on a slow hike with the climbing gear. When we got to the crag, I was a little tired but the ankle didn't seem any more swollen. I managed a little climbing and felt pretty good. But not wanting to over do any thing, we hiked out and came home to rest and ice.

To this day, I am always on the look out for any thing that might be creeping along the paths and trails we hike. I am still a little nervous on the occasion of high grass and damp conditions. But that will not keep me from being in the great out doors I love so much!

2 comments:

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  2. I honestly believe that most people, regardless of age or sex or physical fitness, would have just given up- surrendered to the shock and fear and the incredible pain of an enormous copperhead's bite. The snake that struck Cindy was nearly 3 feet long, and as thick as my wrist- no exxageration here, my estimate of size was supported by the width of the bite marks- one of the biggest the attending surgeon had ever heard of. In the end, he said that Cindy was lucky not only to have lived through the shock and pain, but to have not lost her leg to the venom and infection.

    I guess God knew just how much I needed her in my life... just how much she IS my life.

    Some mistakes we made were:

    1. Relaxing our vigilance at the end of the hike as we thought about dinner and the evening to come- we were still in snake country.

    2. Not changing into boots for the short hike to the next river crossing. I was hiking in river shoes and Cindy was wearing low canvas sneakers.

    3. It was late August- Dog Days, in fact, when snakes shed their skins and lay their eggs. During this season, they are particularly nasty in temperment... think post-partum depression combined with poison ivy and armed with fangs.

    4. We got too far apart, whch is my fault. Had I waited for Cindy just a second or two, I would likely have seen the snake, or our combined presence might have kept it immobile until we had passed. If nothing else, it migh have bitten me, which would have been far more preferable than sitting in hospital watching the woman I love fighting for her life.

    However, from the practical side, I also know that Cindy couldn't have carried me out (she actually collapsed before the last stream crossing and I had to drag/carry her in a hip carry- her arm around my neck and my arm around her waist gripping her belt- across the last 60 feet of shallow water and up about 150 feet of road). She also doesn't possess the "command presence" to use her voice like a whip to drive human flesh far beyond its limits of pain and weakness... something I never valued enough before that day.

    And while Miss Cindy is a very good driver, I know for a fact that she could not have driven 19 miles down a winding, blind-curve-filled, 35 mph mountain road and traffic-filled highway in 19 minutes. Only a miracle, my EMT/EVOC training previous experiences with illicit high speed vehicle racing, and my intimate knowledge of the road I was on allowed me to make that kind of time and arrive intact at the hospital, sliding to a stop in front of the ER doors and waiting nurse.

    Still... right up until the epic began, a beautiful day, with an amazing woman, in the midst of some amazing scenery, with some world class rock at the end of the hike. Well worth the trip, if not the conclusion.

    Someday, we'll do that hike again.

    In colder weather

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