Colter Herrington survives poisonous snake bite



Zachery Colter Herrington was bitten by a water moccasin in his family’s pool on 31 August 2010! “The fang marks might be gone, but the memory of the experience isn’t,” he said. See all the details in the following story about the incident by Stephanie Nelson which appeared in the Andalusia Star News on Friday, 3 September 2010. For a limited time you can read the story online here. (Because the story might be removed from the site at some time, we’re posting it here, also.)

Colter is the son of Joseph Decatur and Amy Michelle Edwards Herrington, grandson of Judy Nora Johnson Davis and her first husband Joe Frank Herrington, and great-grandson of Parley Philip, Sr. and Edith Christine Fail Johnson (Uncle Philip and Aunt Christine).

This story gives some of us the “willies”, Colter. We’re so glad you survived this nightmare! Family members can send an email to Colter via his grandmother Judy at
flmulelady@gdsys.net.

Ouch! Teen survives moccasin’s bite

An Andalusia teen is recovering from being bitten by a cottonmouth moccasin.

Colter Herrington, the 17-year-old son of Amy Herrington and Joe and Joyl Herrington, is a senior at Straughn High School. Most days, he passes the time at home after school is over each day.

Last Tuesday [31 August 2010], he said he got bored and decided to head outside to “goof off.”

“You’ll laugh, but I was outside playing with a frog,” he said. “It jumped into the pool, so I reached in to get the skimmer net out so I could get the frog.

“All I remember is seeing a head and fangs,” he said. “Right when I grabbed the basket, I saw its head and it got me right on the back of the thumb, where the thumb meets the palm.”

Herrington said the snake was near the drain of the in-ground pool, sitting between the net and side of the pool when it struck.

“Believe it or not, it didn’t hurt,” he said of the bite. “The venom, though, that was very painful.”

Herrington was home alone when the incident occurred. As soon as he made it inside the house, he called his mother, who incidentally is a nurse and emergency room manager at Andalusia Regional Hospital.

“My mom stayed on the phone with me the whole time,” he said. “She even beat the ambulance there. The only questions I asked was if I was going to lose my thumb and was I going to get to stay out of school for the rest of the week.”

Well, Herrington was one for two on the reply.

He didn’t lose his thumb; however, family and emergency room personnel watched as the venom caused swelling throughout the entire left side of his body. His hand swelled to approximately 30 centimeters, he said.

He did get to stay out of school until Monday. His recovery required a heavy dose of anti-venom, antihistamines, pain medicine and a two-day hospital stay.

As for the snake, it’s dead.

“My stepdad got to the house and wrapped a belt around my arm until the ambulance got there,” he said. “He walked back outside and saw the snake in the drain. I guess after it bit me, it crawled back down into the basket. He scooped it up and shot it. We took it to the hospital with us.”

Already friends are ribbing Herrington about his brush with danger.

“They’re calling me snake charmer and snake whisperer,” he said. “Although, I don’t think I did much charming. It seems like an awful lot of work to get 15 minutes of fame.”