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April 24, 2024 32 mins
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(00:02):
So Michael Larry Show is on theair. Good morning, Captain, good
morning, Katain, good morning,Captain, good morning, Captain, good
morning, good morning, and captainsthe moon out Okay, wake up the

(00:28):
sun shot share this ring? Wouldyou an internta smiling so we see because
my friend see you and you're goingdowntowns free. Everybody say good morning,
good morning, good morning, captain, captain, good bye, thank God

(00:57):
the summers. I was watching themost inspiring story about a girl who worked
at a brewery. She's a onelegged girl, which you know a lot
of people wouldn't hire, but theydid. A one legged girl who worked

(01:18):
at a brewery. They had herin charge of the hops. Well,
what's the difference between Wuhan and Vegas. What happens in Vegas stays in Vegas.
Friend of mine lives in Dublin.He got in trouble with his Irish
pension scheme because he was funding theIRA. I thought he could fund the

(01:49):
air right from the good news category. More than one hundred and twelve high
school seniors from Brazoria County have beenpresent with full time job assignments in the
skilled trades as part of their careersigning day done in conjunction with the Brazoria

(02:09):
County Petrochemical Council. Good on you, BCPC the Brazoria County Petrochemical Council.
The students garnered job offers from companieslike Basf, Dal Chemical, Liondel,
Bassel, Phillips, sixty six,Chevron, Phillips, and more. Career

(02:31):
Signing Day resembles Athletics Signing Day.The difference is these graduating seniors begin careers
in welding, pipe fitting, millwrite, iron working, electrical instrumentation, HVAC,
carpentry, and more without the burdenof college debt. Participating students are

(02:53):
selected through a rigorous application and interviewprocess, underlining the bcpc's commitment to how
industry standards and quality placements. TheSigning Day event was held yesterday inside the
Dow Academic Center on the campus ofBrasisport College in Clute. Aaron Innies,

(03:14):
alternate Funding director for the Brassisport IndependentSchool District and chair of the BCPC Signing
Day Committee, says, quote,the record breaking number of job offers is
a testament to the readiness of ourgraduates and the sheer demand from industry for
the skilled trades. It's not justa win for these young professionals in the

(03:38):
BCPC, but also a constructive shifttowards a more skilled future for our community.
Now, ramon, what does theBCPC stand for again? Yeah,
no, I'm asking you. Youwere sitting right there. Missouri County's correct
Petrochemical Council BCPC is the Brazoria CountyPetrochemical Council. Good on them. The

(04:09):
alternate funding director for the Brassport isdand the chair of the BCPC. A
Signing Day added this year. Wenot only celebrate the largest number of job
opportunities offered through Career Signing Day,but also the collective effort of everyone involved
in making it a reality. Ourgoal is to continue fostering the prosperity of

(04:33):
both our local youth and the industrythat plays such a pivotal role in our
economy. Boy, that's a goodnews story to start the show. That
is a good news story to startthe show. Industry in Brazoria County saying

(04:56):
we need good skilled workers and we'rewilling to train them people that want to
make a career out of it.Now, I know how this drill works.
I've played this game. There arepeople who say, oh Michael,
you don't think some kids are goodenough to go to college. Oh Michael,

(05:17):
you think this is for dummies,and you think this, and I
hear it all not true at all, because guess what, if you want
to go to college. I wouldargue most people will get more out of
the college academic experience if they waittill they're about twenty five. Most kids,

(05:42):
and I would say, I'm goingto guess eighty to ninety percent at
eighteen years old coming straight out ofhigh school, where let's be honest,
they've never made their own bed.Most kids going straight from high school into
college is a continuation of frat parties. It is a continuation of the dating

(06:06):
process and the partying process, whichis why so many kids get out of
high school, go to their dreamuniversity and get kicked out first semester,
first year. They're not bad kids. A lot of them are going to
turn out to be really good kids. They're going to turn out to be

(06:29):
productive adults, but they were notemotionally ready at eighteen to party and go
to school. You know, inparticularly in finance and in certain areas of
business, used to be the case. And I don't know if this is
still true now, but it probablyis. That they didn't want, you

(06:53):
know, at investment banks and privateequity firms and analysts and these sorts of
things. They didn't want you togo straight from your four year college degree
into an MBA. They wanted youto work for two years and then get
an MBA. Because what we're talkingabout here is practical, useful skills.

(07:16):
At the end of the day,a lot of people have bought the bull
that a classroom is where we're learningthe skills that are so important, and
by and large that's not true.The skills that are going to be important
for most people, not engineering,not physics, not mathematics. The skills

(07:43):
that are going to be important aregoing to be learned in life with experience
under the tutelage of a mentor,whether that is as a plumber, electrician,
carpenter, mill wright. I grewup around a bunch of meal rights.
I never hear about mill rights anymore, iron workers, welders, but
so much more. There are somany other things that you do, so

(08:07):
many other things that you do.I mean, we fully understand that that
it's not the classroom where a footballplayer develops into being a top level entertainer
for us all to enjoy. Wefully understand that the top singers and actors
didn't learn their craft in the classroom. Don't ask me, by Iman,

(08:31):
why are you showing key in Mersey. I'm in favor of making good decisions
good for you bc PC, that'sCrazoria County Patrick Chemical Council. With the

(08:52):
Katie ISD school Board election and allthe school board elections going on, my
recommendation is for the two d's DonovanCampbell and David Olson. I try to
keep it very simple because I know, based on emails that people are driving
and if I can just give youthe simplest way to remember something, it

(09:15):
makes it far more likely that youwill. And I know that for many
of you you have other things goingon at the same time. So,
Donovan Campbell and David Olson, I'llplay you yet another clip by one of
the awful incumbents, which is Foxand Champagne, and the things that they've

(09:35):
been saying, they've continued it now. I mean, these two women seem
determined that every kid at KADISD becomea transgender. I mean I can see
nothing else, and they are soangry at white men based on the things
that they say. I'm shocked theyever got elected. And I think what
happens is this goes back to andwe're all guilty, myself included of not

(09:58):
paying attention to who got on theschool board. So you get these bossy,
bitchy women who are angry at theworld, ugly single, too many
cats, too much cat urine fortoo long, and you go, wait,
that person shouldn't be making the policiesfor my school district where my kids
or my grandkids go. Donovan Campbell, David Olson, A number of you

(10:20):
have asked for a recommendation in theh CAAD, which is Harris County Appraiser
District Races. And I'm going tomake this as easy as I can,
which is Fraser, Scott and mccrutchen, Bill Fraser, Kyle Scott, Erica
mccrutchen. If you miss that,you'll have to go back to the podcast.
I can't respond to every one ofthese emails individually with a bunch of

(10:43):
names, Fraser, Scott, andmccrutch and that's places one through three.
I hope that helps. I sawthat Prago is closing. I hadn't been
to Prague in a long time,but I used to have an office at
twenty four to forty four times inRice Village. Prego was one of the
places that we would walk to rightaround the corner. It was a good
Indian restaurant almost right next door calledShiva. This little coffee shop called Mech's.

(11:09):
There was a good Italian joint atmorning side in times called Kalinas.
Remember Kaleena's right next door to theBrier shop at the time. We talked
to the owners of Kalina's a fewyears ago. So there was Shiva's.
Was my Indian hook. Uh,Kalinas was there. I didn't drink back
then, but a lot of peoplewould want to meet and go over to
Gingerbread, so I would go overand have water, which you don't really

(11:31):
want to go to a pub ifyou're not drinking, but I did.
How was the ambusious, But Pregowas a good There was the El Mason,
which is the It's Cuban America,but they had to have a little
text mex because people didn't know thedifference. And I think they'd come in
there asking for enchiladas in a Cubanrestaurant, and I think I forget the

(11:54):
guy's name. He's quite the personality. He got mad at me because he's
a big bicycle rider and I madebiking jokes. But he's a great restaurant.
You're a great guy. I can'tremember the guy's name, but he's
he's fiery Cuban park plug kind ofa guy. He and his wife.
But Elmeson was right there. Andthen there was a little tapas restaurant called

(12:16):
something I don't remember. And andthen there was Prego. Prego had been
there since nineteen eighty three. PregoRamon, as you know is Tracy Vaut
was the original restaurant tour in thatfamily. She had Prego. She had
Backstreet was it Backstreet Cafe right thereon on Shepherd on the on the curve

(12:39):
if you're if you're headed southbound onShepherd, where Shepherd hits Allen Parkway,
you start headed heading southbound, you'llgo across Dallas. Uh They got the
big high rise to the left rightthere and uh Oka. You start back
at Allen Parkway, there's the Schoolfor the Retarded, right it was called
the School for the Retarded. That'snot to make it us a name of

(13:00):
it. And that's sold out now. So then you head south and you
cross over Dallas. It's Dallas tothe east, and then I can't remember
what it was called on the west, but it was they had to have
a fancy river oaks name on thewest side of it. And then you'd
come down just a few more feetand it would make that real sharp curve
where it made that curve is nowused to be Tia Tequila's or something like

(13:22):
that, some little kind of textme. Actually it's an odd slice of
a lot. And then that becamerice Box, and I think it's still
rice Box. And then you turnto the you turn to the right,
which would be the west, andthen it'll turn back to the left and
you have a bunch of buildings onthe left that are old residences that become
offices that go out of business,and then people try to open up an

(13:45):
art gallery and they fail, andthen there might be like a it was
a little music shop there. Itwas a great idea. People were going
to come there and jam and you'dpay twenty five bucks a month, and
I think they probably had three members. So then it turns back to the
left and you're headed further south,and right there on your left is the
River Oaks district, and then you'llcome right up to West Gray. Turn
left you can go to Lagrillia,not Lagrilla anymore. That's I think Levi

(14:07):
opened a restaurant there. I thinkso, but he didn't tell me,
so I'm mad about it. Ithink Levi was going to open a restaurant
right there. I have not beenthere in a minute. The only place
I go right there is Charles Clark'sPlace rest in nineteen But back it up,
you know the backup noise you comeback before as you're making that sharp

(14:28):
turn right there on the left wherethe rice box is directly on the other
side of the rice box, whichis technically another street, but you can
see it right there. That wasBackstreet Cafe, which was named top restaurant
in Houston. And so Tracy hadBackstreet and then she had Praygo. That's
going back forty years. It's along time in this business. And she

(14:50):
had a chef named Hugo or Ugo, And I mean, it's a great
story because I think Ugo came hereas an immigrant. He worked his way
up in the kitchen. He goesall the way up to be her head
chef and they get married and nowhe's the co owner. And then since
then they opened they opened one youknow the hotel that has a Texas pool

(15:18):
on the top. Is that aMarriott, like a real fancy Marriott.
It is northwest of George R.Brown. So they had a restaurant there
called Zakatool or I forget the nameof it. It's like exocht ql,
which is an Aztec name that nobodycan pronounce and so people will have to
spend five minutes saying it. Butit was meant to be interior Mexican,

(15:43):
which is you know, kind ofthat's kind of UGO's thing, because remember
he had UGO's on West tim Oryou been there, great old building,
great brunch. But the first timeyou go, you're in for a little
bit of a surprise because it's notwhat I'm used to and what I like,
which is tex mex Po will callMexican food, but it's not.
It's its own cuisine and it's textmax and that means you got a lot

(16:03):
of cheeses and you got a lotof what we would call gravy, you
know, the sort of traditional andthat was the mix of the Texas and
the Mexican that worked this way reallyinto San Anton and Houston and then out
from there puffy tacos and things likethat. What Ugo does is more interior,
which is more like the mole andthings like that. I'm not crazy

(16:26):
over all that stuff, but I'mnot. My wife loves it, just
that's not my thing. I ama text Max dude. Give me chips
and queso, a cheese enchilada.I'm gonna get myself worked up here.
A cheese enchilada. What did wehave the other day? Ramona and I
went for text Max late lunch theother day A flout that he got mad
at me because I didn't eat myfloutera. I like a flota because it's
texture, chicken flouta, two cheeseenchiladas, refried beans and rice man.

(16:52):
I could eat refried beans. Speakingof that, Steve McQueen fart story.
That was a story. So theother day I was talking about Sundayan's Head's
wife got bitten by a copperhead threetimes, and I have gotten more emails
from people that have been bitten,almost all my copperheads. The doctor who
treated her, it turns out it'sa pretty prominent doctor in snake bite industry.
He'll be our guest tonight. Ifyou can't say something nice, you

(17:17):
can always say it on the MichaelFerry Show. Sneaky Snake. Now,
maybe you won't see him, maybeyou won't hear, but he will sneak
up behind here and drank all ofyour root beer. And then Sneaky Snake
goose dancing, wiggling, Sneaky snakegoose dancing, giggle in and a kids.

(17:47):
I don't like old sneaky snake.He laughs to let you see when
he goes a wig, the landthrough with the grass, and his hickles
is underneath. That's why he doesit. It's the only reason he's slithered.
Thing about it is people don't knowabout Sneaky snake because they hear the
hissing and they go yeah. Buthe was also giggling and kissing and dancing,

(18:07):
just like with the Baptist. Italways leads to dance and leads to
giggling, leads to kissing, leadsto the baby eggs. You cannot Before
we get to our guests, aquick note I've been meaning to make and
I have overlooked. I get alot of requests and they seem to have
been coming in droves for a good, trustworthy, competent, diligent, caring

(18:33):
wills and estates attorney. Now,I have long resisted speaking for lawyers for
a number of different reasons, butthis one is an area. This isn't
a guy running around trying to suitpeople. I encourage people to plan and
structure your life. My wife andI have done it. We've done it

(18:56):
for my parents. In fact,what a treat. Michael cat who I
went to law school with, isa lawyer in Orange. And I left
Orange to go to law school.He left law school to come to Orange.
He married the girl whose family wasfuller of funeral home and flowers.
Wonderful man, and he did allof my parents estate planning because I didn't
feel like I should be part ofthat. Right, that's a little bit

(19:18):
of a conflict anyway, So hedid it all and they were very happy
and all is good. So Ido not have someone my mentor in life.
Walter Zivly was an estate planning lawyer. That's what he did as he
sat down with people and prepared.You don't have to be wealthy to need
to plan your estate, because thepoint at which you pass or your parents

(19:41):
passed, or your spouse path.The government is going to try to get
into between you and your heirs.And if you have planned that properly,
you can pass what you worked sohard to save onto your loved ones rather
than handing it to Joe Biden tosend to Ukraine. And that requires thinking
about your death before your death,which might see him a cobra idea.

(20:03):
But that's what planning is all about. That's why we call Generator Supercenter before
the storm, That's why we callbronze roofing before it's raining. So I
was telling the story about snake bite. You know what led to that story,
Remone. What led to that storywas the guy went into a shop
to rob the shop, using thesnake as his weapon. And then we

(20:23):
got talking about snake bites and emailscame in and Sundance has Head's wife,
Misty got hit by a snake bite, and I got an email from somebody
who said it wasn't an accident,that she's okay, that's the top snake
bite doctor, Spencer Green and Imade the joke, how do you know
it's the best snake bite doctor,It's wild. My wife was at surgery

(20:45):
for ten hours, and before thesurgery, the surgeon told me he goes
oh way through, I'll probably stopand get lunch. I don't need to
know that. Why even tell methat? Was the afraid I was going
to run into him in the cafmaterial. I get these gravings. Those

(21:07):
Snickers commercials are true. But hewas a great brain surgeon. We learned
later on that he's like the best. I don't know how they determine the
best brain surgeon. You know,maybe there's a competition. America's Got Tumors
was the best. So I madethe joke that it's good that people think

(21:32):
their doc is the best. Butthen I start doing some research and it
turns out this fella, he's prettyprominent in the Are you ready for this
remo? Sala silates, anti convulsanttoxicity FISO, tigmine, alcohol withdraw and

(21:52):
invenomations. Invenomations I think an invenomationas you've been hit by snake pretty much,
and he consults on more than onehundred bites and stings annually, including
snake bites, spider bites, aspin venomations, and jellyfish stings. Do
you notice they don't call an aspbite an asp bite. They called it
an aspen invenomation. I once wentto the hospital with an aspen invenomation.

(22:15):
True story. My dad was workingovernight shift, overtime at DuPont and I
got hit by an asp and theyrushed me to Orangem Royal Hospital. But
this is not about me. Thisis about our guest doctor Spencer Green.
That's an E on the end.Welcome to the program, Thanks for having
me. Funny story, and I'mimpressed that you got some of those words
pronounced correctly too. I track himdown last night at I don't know,

(22:37):
ten thirty, and you know,I figure I got to test him out.
See he's gonna be get on there. And he's a little, you
know, stiff, little little uhrigid in our text exchange and then I
said, well, you know,you feel comfortable on the radio and he
said I was an old DJ.I said, what, so we you
know, we kind of connected likethat. Plus he I went to college

(23:00):
with my friend Paul Strugg, whoI went to law school with. So
it's a small world after all,Spencer Green, how does one I got
a minute in this segment because Italked too long and then we'll get into
some of these stuff. How doesone did? Were you always interested in
snakes? No, that's the funnything. You know, from the time
I was like a zygot until Iwas four, I want to be an

(23:22):
ice hockey player, and then allof a sudden, at age five,
I want to be an eye doctor. And that lasted for thirteen years.
You know. I went to medicalschool knowing I'd do emergency medicine, never
thinking anything about talks in general orsnake bites in particular. And it was
only when I was stuck in IRock with my special ops unit, not
doing a whole lot of medical stuff, that I sort of looked around and

(23:42):
I found some snakes. They said, oh, snakes are cool, and
I'm like, oh, I wantto devote my life to snake bites and
other invenomations. It was something Inever would have guessed. And if someone
had told me twenty years ago thatI, a Jew from New York,
would end up creating snake bits inTexas, I would be like, what
the heck are you talking about?You can't say a Jew, but I
am, oh, yeah, goodpoint. And you in special you in

(24:06):
special ops, which that's pretty cool. It wasn't as cool as it sounds.
I know, well everybody in twentythirty, I shouldn't a lot of
paperwork, a lot of paperwork.Doctor Spencer Green is now at HCA Kingwood
is an in venomation expert and he'llbe our guest coming up. If you

(24:27):
have questions email them along. I'mgonna have to keep him for a while.
He's good. Doctor Spencer Green atHCA Kingwood is a renowned snake bite

(24:49):
doctor, among other things. Seemsto be a passion of his. The
number one question I'm getting doctor isif I'm an hour or so from a
hospital, that that is, I'mat the deer LEAs, what is a
good initial treatment plan when I'm bitten? So that's a great question. You

(25:10):
know. We always tell people thatmany of the things that were previously recommended
have proven to be useless at bestand dangerous at worse. So what we
don't want people doing is anything stupidand harmful. So we don't want them
cutting and sucking. It's not goingto work. It's just going to make,
you know, the bite site abigger wound. We don't want them,
you know, tying on a tourniquet. You know, tourniquets are great

(25:30):
for life threting, bleeding, butotherwise you're just cutting off the blood supply
to you know, in a venom'slimb. That's going to make it worse.
We don't want them to use electricshock. It's amazing how many people
think that they can, you know, neutralize the venom with electricity, like
a car battery or whatever. Theheck er sun gut. All it does
is called burns locally and occasionally,you know, kill the person. You

(25:52):
know, I know, it's coolin a Tarantino sort of way to hook
your friend up to a car battery, but it's help the bite, you
know, really knowing that, Holdon, do we know the origin of
that crazy treatment option? I don't. I'm sure we can figure it out.
That's why probably a movie that wasa movie plot alcohol is involved,
I'm sure. So let me goback sucking the venom ount. Obviously when

(26:15):
I was a kid, that thatwas you know, you'd see that in
what was the Fall in the quicksandmaybe bitten by snacking this subfle the venom
mount. Why is that not agood option because it's completely pointless. You're
not going to be effective. Infact, even the commercial suction devices don't
remove any venom. They actually removeinterest to to fluid, thus concentrating the
venom. You can't suck it out, you know, you can't. The

(26:38):
way the things are, you know, shapes, they're not going to deliver
venom to a place that you caneasily assess with your mouth, and you
couldn't generate enough pressure. It's pointless, and all you're gonna do is introduce,
you know, your dirty mouse bacteriainto something that normally wouldn't get infected.
You know, sink bites are nottypically associated with infection, which is
why these people don't need antibiotics andso frustrating when they get placed on antibotics.

(27:02):
But you start looking at or bitingit, or chewing or doing other
stupid stuff, that's when you canget an infection. Well, yeah,
you're not gonna you're not gonna getout. What is the number one spot
that people get hit by snake?You know, so I've done a bunch
of studies on epidemiology. It's prettysimilar, hand and foot, but it's
almost always distal to the wrist anddistal to the ankle. And here in

(27:23):
my you know, in Southeast Texas. My numbers are you know, during
the day hands typically when they're gardeningor like weading a meter or doing something
where they can't see where they're puttingtheir hand. Or at night it's a
foot bite when they're wearing foot flopsor barefoot, and it's almost always unintentional.
You know, there's this perfasive myththat people get bitten when they're messing
with the snake. That's not trueat all. The overwhelming majority of bites

(27:45):
happen when you don't see the snake, you step on it or near it,
you stick your hand in it.You know, very few bites happen
because of intentional interaction. Like I'vedone a few studies now and the numbers
range from twelve and a half percentto twenty percent. But certainly it's minority.
Most people just don't see the snakebefore they get bitten. Is there
a demographic group that gets bitten morethan others? So there are more men

(28:07):
than women, but it's not ahuge disparity. You know, women tend
to get bitten a little more onthe feet, maybe because they're wearing standals
more and guys wear shoes and bootsor whatnot. And of course it's you
know, twenty to forty five,but we see extremes in age. I've
had infants who are a few monthsold get bitten. I've had people in
their kneties get bitten. And likeI said, it's usually unintentional. And

(28:30):
we talked about this last night.Alcohol is rarely involved. You know,
there's another pervasive myth that always getbit when you're drunk. There was a
huge study out of Dallas that foundin less than one percent of bites were
associated with alcohol or drug use.Now my experience is a little bit different
from that. It's closer to tenpercent. But whether it's one percent or
ten percent, it's still a minority. Most people are not drunk when they

(28:52):
get bit. They want to bedrunk after they get bit. That's the
whole other story. How many peopleare bitten and it turns out that it's
not one of the four poisonous snakesof Texas and when they come in.
So rarely do I have people comein after bites from non venous snakes,
either because they know it's not venomous, or they have no symptoms, or
someone tells them. Sometimes The goodthing is these days, everyone's got a

(29:15):
phone, and it's really easy toidentify the snake. So I couldn't tell
you the numbers of how many peolds. I mean, I've been bitten dozens
of times by non venomus snakes.There's nothing to worry about. You don't
have to get antibious. You don'thave to update your tennis right away or
anything like that. So I couldn'tpossibly tell you. I can tell you
of the people who do come tothe hospital, maybe like a half a
percent have bites, maybe one percenthave bites from non venomous snakes. All

(29:37):
right, so we got four venomoussnakes in Texas. I'm sure that the
coral we have more than that wehave. I mean, it depends on
how you look. So we have, you know, like a dozen rattlesnake
species. We have two different speciesof copperhead, we have one species of
cotton mouth, and we have theTexas coral snake, which is the most
necessary. This is like the Palestinians. I don't recognize all of those.
I have a couple that I lockedin about nineteen forty eight. That's where

(29:59):
I'm stuck. Okay, that works, So I'm going on about coral snakes,
and I'll correct you in a second. Yeah, okay, so I'm
kidding. So you know we wereI was taught growing up, you got
the coral, copper head, watermoccasin, and rattlesnake. So, operating
on that category of snakes, let'ssay, how would you assign them.

(30:19):
I'm assuming coral would be last becausethey're teeth and all of that stuff,
But how would you assign them interms of how often? Because the emails
I got it was almost everybody wasa copperhead. Yeah. So nationwide,
copper heads account for a little morethan fifty percent of all bites. In
Southeast Texas, it's close to likeseventy seventy five percent. Where I am,
I get very few rattlesnink bites.I've only had two rattles think bites

(30:41):
in the last three years. WhereI've had good, god like one hundred
and thirty four confirmed copper heads,I think eleven confirmed cotton mouth and a
bunch that I can't confirm, Likeif I don't see the sink myself,
I call it unconfirmed. And lessonslike a her personsis friend of mine,
but they're almost always coppyrehad some cottonmouth. I've actually had more monical cobra
bytes than I've had rattle snak bites, because you know, a lot of
my friends own monical covers like thefour f one fifty of non. Nato

(31:03):
stinks every idiots go one, butyeah, copperheads are far and away the
most common around White one second,Spencer Green is our guest. Can you
rewind that for a second and playthat last thirty seconds because it was a
lot packed into there. That wasI think that was clever. I've got
one hundred and thirty four confirmed copperheads, I think eleven confirmed cotton mouth,

(31:26):
and a bunch that I can't confirmmy If I don't see the same myself,
I call it unconfirmed. Un Lesson'slike at her personces friend of mine,
but they're almost always copperhead, somecotton mouth. I've actually had more
monical cobra bites than I've had rattlesnak bites, because you know, a
lot of my friends own monical coverslike the four f one fifty of none.
Nay Tho stinks every idiots go one, but what he's working automobile references

(31:48):
and I gotta like that that that'svery clever. That's very clever. Well
hang with me, I having ablind squirrel can find a nut now and
then, yeah, exactly, Ihave I have lots of questions about what
to do, and in case Iforget to ask you when we come out,
my first question is going to bewhat exactly is happening when that venom

(32:08):
goes into our bike? What isit doing to us? That's going to
be my first question. And tobreak that down more with Spencer Green at
HCA Kingwood Snake Bite Expert. Bythe way, we got to do some
radio train You cannot use the worddistal on here. Ramon rushed to the
computer and was looking up for discalI said the opposite of proximal and it didn't helpen
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