The Man Who Injected Himself With Snake Venom
By Nolan Moore on Tuesday, April 15, 2014
“Sometimes they pretend to be harmless, but they are not. That is snake’s nature, believe it or not.” —S.L. Hamilton, Snakes
In A Nutshell
While most people are terrified of snakes, Bill Haast handled these legless reptiles every single day. After opening his famous Miami Serpentarium, Haast devoted his life to studying and milking snakes. Even more impressive, Haast injected himself with snake venom every day . . . a bizarre treatment that actually saved lives.The Whole Bushel
Bill Haast loved snakes. He started catching them when he was seven
and was bitten by a copperhead and timber rattlesnake before his 13th
birthday. During the 1920s, he dropped out of high school and toured
with a traveling snake show. Eventually ending up in Florida, he went
to work for a bootlegger and spent his spare time hiking around the
Everglades, searching the marshes for fork-tongued reptiles. After his
boss was arrested, Haast worked as a mechanic for Pan American World
Airways, a job that let him travel the world and smuggle home cobras in
his toolbox.
When he wasn’t milking snakes, Haast was busy mixing up his own bizarre brews. A big believer in the medical properties of venom, Haast treated over 6,000 patients with his homemade venomous elixir. With the assistance of a local doctor, the Snakeman treated people suffering from various ailments like arthritis, Parkinson’s, and multiple sclerosis.
However, after CBS did a story on his controversial therapy in 1951, the Food and Drug Administration ordered Haast to cease and desist—but they didn’t say he couldn’t treat himself.
For over 60 years, Haast regularly injected himself with a crazy concoction made of venom from serpents like mambas, kraits, cottonmouths, and cobras. Not only did he claim it made him healthier, the toxins also seriously built up his immune system, something which probably saved his life on multiple occasions.
During Haast’s long career, he was bitten over 170 times by deadly snakes like Malayan pit vipers and eastern diamondbacks. On one occasion, his wife had to chop off the end of his blackened finger, and another time, the White House secretly sneaked antivenin out of Iran to save the Snakeman’s life. (He wasn’t immune to “that” particular snake.)
On the flip side, Haast’s blood was so full of antibodies that it was actually used to save lives. On multiple occasions, Haast was flown to remote locations like the jungles of Guatemala where he donated his superhuman blood to rescue snakebite victims. In fact, his poison-proof plasma saved over 21 people.
Sadly, Haast shut down his Miami Serpentarium after a young guest was killed by one of his crocodiles. After closing up shop, Haast spent a few years in Utah before moving back to Punta Gorda and reopening his snake farm sans the showmanship. The Snakeman continued milking deadly reptiles until his 92nd birthday when he lost his finger to a pit viper. Despite his nubby hands, he kept on injecting himself with his snake serum every day, famously saying, “I could become a poster boy for the benefits of venom. If I live to be 100, I’ll really make the point.” Bill Haast died on June 15, 2011. He was 100 years old.
Show Me The Proof
Bill Haast obituaries from the New York Times, LA Times, and Washington PostBill Haast and King Cobra (CBS documentary)
Link: http://knowledgenuts.com/2014/04/15/the-man-who-injected-himself-with-snake-venom/
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