Man kills anaconda and saves boy.

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Mar 23, 2006
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"I kept hitting it with the machete but it felt like a rubber tyre, it wouldn't tear,"

Keep your blades sharp people.


SAO PAULO (Reuters) - A 66-year-old Brazilian man wrestled with a 15-foot (5-metre) anaconda for nearly half an hour to free his grandson from the snake's crushing death grip, local media reported on Friday.


Matheus Pereira de Araujo, 8, would likely be dead inside the belly of the 80 pound (35 kg) anaconda if his grandfather had not heard his screams for help, zoologists said.

Anacondas, the biggest snakes in the world, live in swamps and rivers. They kill prey by asphyxiation or drowning.

When the snake struck Araujo, who lives in the world's third largest metropolis of Sao Paulo, he was playing with a cousin on Wednesday in a creek bed on his grandfather's farm 310 miles (500 km) from the city in a town called Cosmorama.

"It was very fast. I didn't have time to do anything," the Folha de Sao Paulo newspaper quoted Araujo as saying. "My grandfather is a hero -- I was so afraid of dying."

Joaquim Pereira was driving home when he heard the screams of Matheus and his cousin Flavio, 8, who ran to get help.

Pereira jumped into the ravine and grappled with the snake, which started coiling around him as well.

"I started fighting the animal and tried to loosen its grip on the boy's neck but the snake was too strong," Pereira told the Bom Dia newspaper of Sao Jose do Rio Preto.

Pereira then attacked it with stones and a machete.

"I kept hitting it with the machete but it felt like a rubber tyre, it wouldn't tear," he said.

He killed it after a long struggle to free the boy, who needed 21 stitches on his chest where the snake bit him.

"It was the most terrible scene that I've seen in my life," Pereira said. "It was totally coiled around him while he was screaming that he was dying."

Senator Eduardo Suplicy said Pereira should be honoured by the Brazilian government for heroism.


http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20070209/od_uk_nm/oukoe_uk_brazil_anaconda
 
Yeesh, lucky.
If It was my grandson it would have been dead a lot quicker though.

Thats what I thought. I don't know much about anacondas, but it seems like the skin would have gave way pretty easily to a sharp blade. The machete must have been extremely dull.
 
I cut this one out of our morning paper yesterday morning. I had planned to translate and post it here but hadn´t gotten around to it.

When my wife moved into our current neighborhood (1974) it was divided by a large swamp. An anaconda (Sucurí) in that swamp had eaten a kid and the locals had killed the snake and cut the boy out of its belly. These snakes are like 15 - 18 feet of living telephone pole.

No, I have never seen one. Mac
 
I cut this one out of our morning paper yesterday morning. I had planned to translate and post it here but hadn´t gotten around to it.

When my wife moved into our current neighborhood (1974) it was divided by a large swamp. An anaconda (Sucurí) in that swamp had eaten a kid and the locals had killed the snake and cut the boy out of its belly. These snakes are like 15 - 18 feet of living telephone pole.

No, I have never seen one. Mac

Since you live in a area where these snakes actually live, do you know anything about how tough they are? Would a sharp knife be able to penetrate their skin?
 
Troutfisher,

Put it this way, if you kill an anaconda in Brazil you or one of yours had better have some serious injuries or you will be spending time in jail. In this case the grandfather was totally justified and they recognize that, if not you face some really, really bad time in the Brazilian corrections system.

The account of the attack that I saw didn´t include the part about the machete, in fact it had called the blade a knife. From what I´ve seen of most machetes in rural Brazil the edge was probably pretty blunt and battered, sharpening them on rocks and sidewalks is common.

I would think a sharp knife would punch a nice hole in them and then rip from there. They aren´t armor plated, just scaly. I would be be very surprised if the point of my BK-7 didn´t penetrate. I don´t have any firsthand experience with that though. People around here who kill big snakes tend to keep their mouths shut. Mac
 
snake skin can be tough. but stingray skin (and I don't mean the nice tanned ones you buy to wrap sword handles) dulls your knife like no other leather.
 
Anacondas aren´t endangered its just that Brazil is really anal about killing wildlife. Hunting is banned here. In a SD situation you´d be OK you´d just have to prove that it was in defense. The common rule is shoot, shovel, and shut-up. Mac
 
"I kept hitting it with the machete but it felt like a rubber tyre, it wouldn't tear,"

Keep your blades sharp people.


Of course he was pannicked, but, he needed to slice, not chop. :thumbup:
Take a large diameter piece of radiator hose and chop at it, it flexes.
Now, slice it , it severs.

Of course, this guy has probably whacked with a machete his whole life, so he started whacking, doing what came natural.
If it was a machete and not a knife?

Stabbing and slicing, that would be the key.

Luckily, it worked out for them. Man, that is a true survival situation.
 
Anacondas aren´t endangered its just that Brazil is really anal about killing wildlife. Hunting is banned here. In a SD situation you´d be OK you´d just have to prove that it was in defense. The common rule is shoot, shovel, and shut-up. Mac

That's interesting. I recall seeing one of those PBS documentaries that showed natives hunting birds (parrots or something else maybe) with what appeared to be a Marlin .22. I also remember seeing another PBS documentary that commented that rural Brazilian rubber collectors often hunt for sustinence, and in the video the guy was carrying a single shot shotgun with him in the rainforest, while he was out and about. The documentaries were both made in the early 90's. Has the situation changed since then? Were they just breaking the law and not giving a damn whether or not it was publicly known? Is there special rules for the natives and other groups, the way they are given special privelages in the US?
 
Talking with a zoologist I know, large snake skin can be very tough stuff and muscled.It needs to be to keep other snakes etc off.The bigger they get the tougher the 'hide' so stabbing it isn't like some mammal!Not surprised it felt like rubber tyre plus in a panic situation such as that....most of the snake's vital organs would be protected in the coiling process.Constrictors have ferocious teeth as well, I just wonder the psychological aftermath for grandfather and grandson, a tough brave pair.
 
MP510,

Indians can hunt on their reservations. Subsistence hunting is winked at in the hinterlands but you can only use a single shot 16 ga IIRC. Hunting is banned, not to say it doesn't happen. Law enforcement coverage here is very thin in the rural areas. Mac
 
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