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How To Survive Encounters With Dangerous Animals by skyhighweb(m): 6:38am On Jul 07, 2020
The title of Rachel Levin’s book, Look Big, is just about the best two words of advice one can give about how to survive most animal encounters. In her illustrated service manual, Levin breaks down how to handle 50 different kinds of animals common in North America, based on expert advice.

Let’s look at her tips for dealing with five of these creatures and see how they stack up with what the experts say—and with real-world experience.





Rattlesnakes



The Book’s Advice: “Leave a snake alone. The bad stuff happens when people don’t. Let the animal pass. Give it a good fifteen feet. Coiled, rattling, and head raised? Give it even more room. If you accidentally step on one and get bitten: keep cool. But seriously, don’t run; getting your heart rate up makes the venom seep into your bloodstream faster. Skip the snakebite kits and tourniquets; that’s outdated advice. Try to get medical aid.



“And do your best to avoid snakes in the first place. A sunny, 90-degree day is snake weather. Skip the flip-flops, and wear boots instead. Pair them with long, sturdy pants like jeans. (A study actually proved denim’s effectiveness against venom injection.) Don’t use earbuds (you want to hear the rattle). On a mountain bike, be extra cautious.

soundlala

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How to Survive Encounters with Dangerous Animals


The title of Rachel Levin’s book, Look Big, is just about the best two words of advice one can give about how to survive most animal encounters. In her illustrated service manual, Levin breaks down how to handle 50 different kinds of animals common in North America, based on expert advice.

Let’s look at her tips for dealing with five of these creatures and see how they stack up with what the experts say—and with real-world experience.





Rattlesnakes



The Book’s Advice: “Leave a snake alone. The bad stuff happens when people don’t. Let the animal pass. Give it a good fifteen feet. Coiled, rattling, and head raised? Give it even more room. If you accidentally step on one and get bitten: keep cool. But seriously, don’t run; getting your heart rate up makes the venom seep into your bloodstream faster. Skip the snakebite kits and tourniquets; that’s outdated advice. Try to get medical aid.



“And do your best to avoid snakes in the first place. A sunny, 90-degree day is snake weather. Skip the flip-flops, and wear boots instead. Pair them with long, sturdy pants like jeans. (A study actually proved denim’s effectiveness against venom injection.) Don’t use earbuds (you want to hear the rattle). On a mountain bike, be extra cautious.



Rattlesnakes are designed to hear the pounding of bison hooves, not the quiet roll of a tire tread. Peek under a log before sitting on it. Shake out your sleeping bag. And if you’ve got to peel off the trail to pee, toss a few pebbles first.”



Real-World Experience: According to one study, most snake bites occur on people’s hands and forearms. What does that tell you? Levin is correct that people get bit when they try to mess around with a poisonous snake.

I regularly encounter rattlers, both around my home in Los Angeles and on camping trips throughout the desert Southwest. But neither I nor anyone I know has ever been bitten. Actually, I take that back—I watched a friend of a friend get bitten on Instagram a couple years back after he picked up a snake he found on a trail to pose with it for a photo. Rattlers are typically polite enough to warn you of their presence, making them relatively easy to avoid.



Mountain Lions



The Book’s Advice: “If, one day, you do meet a mountain lion on the trail or, uh, in the city (one was spotted roaming San Francisco not long ago), try your best to look big and very much alive.

Stand tall. Stare the lion in the eye. Open your coat. Grab your kids, without bending over. Don’t run (mountain lions are faster). But don’t just stand there, looking scared out of your mind, either—that suggests you are easy prey. (Which, let’s be honest, you are.) Instead, intimidate. Wave your arms. Yell. Scream.

Throw water bottles, rocks, whatever you’ve got. If attacked, ‘Give ’em hell,’ says Veronica Yovovich of the Mountain Lion Foundation. What­ever you do, don’t lie down or play dead—­or they’ll eat you for dinner.”



Real-World Experience: Lion populations are expanding across the country. It’s pretty freaking cool to write that line. Heck, we’ve got one right here in Hollywood. P-22 occasionally shows up on a motion sensor camera and once got trapped in a basement, but otherwise the thousands of people who cross his path every day are unaware of his presence.


That’s P-22 in the illustration above, but as far as I know, no day hikers have ever actually run into him on the trails around the Hollywood sign. Want to know how to avoid getting killed and eaten by a mountain lion? Don’t turn into a deer. Otherwise, us humans should count ourselves lucky if we ever get to see one in the wild.



Bedbugs



The Book’s Advice: “Put pest control on speed dial and then ransack like a detective searching for evidence, emptying dressers, nightstands, and closets.

Bedbugs hide behind headboards and mirrors, on carpets and couches. Scour every crevice and then declutter like you’re Kondo on cold brew, and just keep vacuuming. Swap your wooden bed for steel. They can’t climb metal or bathtubs. (Go ahead: get in and curl up.) Wash and dry everything on high heat, seal the rest of your stuff in Ziploc Big Bags (for up to a year, according to the EPA), and toss whatever you can.

This is no time for nostalgia. Trained dogs can find the bedbugs if you can’t (‘Sherlock Hounds,’ as one company calls them). The PackTite Closet Bed Bug Heater System sounds like it helps, but $800 for a product that promises to roast bedbugs right off your shoes? Maybe just buy a new pair.”



Real-World Experience: Back when I used to live in Brooklyn, our loft in Williamsburg was overrun by bedbugs one summer. I had the telltale red bites from head to toe. We were going broke just trying to pay the rent, and our landlord wouldn’t help, so my roomates and I resolved to tackle the problem ourselves.

First, we stripped all our bedding and took that and all our clothes to the laundromat and ran everything through several hot-water cycles. While that was happening, we dusted every surface with diatomaceous earth and packed it into all the nooks and crannies in our furniture. We even cut the fabric off the underside of our couch and filled its springs and frame with the powder. Then we set off way more flea bombs than the square footage called for and hung out at a local dive bar until it was safe to go back home. It might have been luck, but that did the trick. You can beat them.



Alligators



The Book’s Advice: “Run—zigzag, straight line, doesn’t matter.

Alligators might be the only predators in the world you’d have a shot at beating in a race. Though they rarely pursue on land, around water, stay alert. Alligators ambush.

They latch on to prey, roll it underwater until drowned and dead, then toss it back like a tequila shot. Which means that adult humans aren’t easy eating. Put up a decent fight, and the alligator might decide to ditch you. ‘They prefer not to contend with violently struggling prey,’ says Allan Woodward, of Florida’s Fish and Wildlife Research Institute. ‘Scream. Splash. Kick. Sure, try and......


more on the article here
http://www.soundlala.com/news.php?id=1587

Re: How To Survive Encounters With Dangerous Animals by sylve11: 6:52am On Jul 07, 2020
skyhighweb:


Rattlesnakes



Give it a good fifteen feet. Coiled, rattling, and head raised? Give it even more room. If you accidentally step on one and get bitten: keep cool.

http://www.soundlala.com/news.php?id=1587




The book advises 15 feet but I will give a distance of 50 feet, if possible, 75 feet. I don't want to set my eyes on that creature. sad sad cool
Re: How To Survive Encounters With Dangerous Animals by EzzyCarter: 7:00am On Jul 07, 2020
Source is soundLALA.com? This post will surely make FP grin
Re: How To Survive Encounters With Dangerous Animals by sylve11: 7:03am On Jul 07, 2020
skyhighweb:


Rattlesnakes



Give it a good fifteen feet. Coiled, rattling, and head raised? Give it even more room. If you accidentally step on one and get bitten: keep cool.

http://www.soundlala.com/news.php?id=1587


The book advises 15 feet but I will give a distance of 50 feet, if possible, 75 feet. I don't want to set my eyes on that creature. sad cool
Re: How To Survive Encounters With Dangerous Animals by XXXXTENTACION: 7:09am On Jul 07, 2020
EzzyCarter:
Source is soundLALA.com? This post will surely make FP grin
grin lala the protector of snakes will surely love this one cool
Re: How To Survive Encounters With Dangerous Animals by uniqueboi1(m): 7:22am On Jul 07, 2020
When you meet a wild cat, get ready to fight to the death.

As for snakes always be ready to get them numb and strike them dead.

I have a substance which causes numbness in snakes that you don't need to pursue them to kill. Just pour it on any part of the body, it would be alive but can't do shit. All you do then is cut off the head.
Re: How To Survive Encounters With Dangerous Animals by illicit(m): 7:24am On Jul 07, 2020
Boko Haram nko
Re: How To Survive Encounters With Dangerous Animals by spy24(m): 7:39am On Jul 07, 2020
That lion own eh
Re: How To Survive Encounters With Dangerous Animals by skyhighweb(m): 6:20am On Jul 11, 2020
illicit:
Boko Haram nko
lol

1 Like

Re: How To Survive Encounters With Dangerous Animals by skyhighweb(m): 6:20am On Jul 11, 2020
sylve11:



The book advises 15 feet but I will give a distance of 50 feet, if possible, 75 feet. I don't want to set my eyes on that creature. sad cool
lol fear fear
Re: How To Survive Encounters With Dangerous Animals by skyhighweb(m): 6:21am On Jul 11, 2020
XXXXTENTACION:
grin lala the protector of snakes will surely love this one cool
theres no snake picture or video soo lala won't care. cheesy
Re: How To Survive Encounters With Dangerous Animals by Lotusflowerbomb: 9:28am On Jul 11, 2020
uniqueboi1:
When you meet a wild cat, get ready to fight to the death.

As for snakes always be ready to get them numb and strike them dead.

I have a substance which causes numbness in snakes that you don't need to pursue them to kill. Just pour it on any part of the body, it would be alive but can't do shit. All you do then is cut off the head.
What's the substance and where can one get it?
Re: How To Survive Encounters With Dangerous Animals by uniqueboi1(m): 12:17pm On Jul 11, 2020
Lotusflowerbomb:
What's the substance and where can one get it?

Alcohol, ethanol, kaikai, ogogoro.

Instead of looking for kerosine or pms just keep one keg of alcohol nearby. Pour it in such a way it would touch the head well o.

1 Like

Re: How To Survive Encounters With Dangerous Animals by Lotusflowerbomb: 5:15pm On Jul 11, 2020
uniqueboi1:


Alcohol, ethanol, kaikai, ogogoro.

Instead of looking for kerosine or pms just keep one keg of alcohol nearby. Pour it in such a way it would touch the head well o.
Thanks for the tip

1 Like

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