04/13/2025
For being the last day of shows before a six-day break during which I’ll feed the snakes, Friday was a doozy. I’m ready for the break, to be honest.
It was a pretty busy day, for starters. Originally, we had two programs at Immanuel Lutheran preschool, and a late afternoon Spring Fling at Westminster Presbyterian Preschool, but I got invited to a young lady’s celebration at the Shriner’s Children’s Hospital, and we were able to squeeze that in between the scheduled events. I’m so glad I did.
Aspen is a twelve-year-old animal lover, and she has been in a halo for the last six weeks. A halo is a piece of metal that is screwed into the skull, and with the weight of the body, helps to straighten out the spine. It looks terribly uncomfortable, and the patience, bravery, and optimism of children like Aspen are only a few of a hundred different reasons why Shriners kids will always hold a special place in my heart. Aspen’s halo is coming off on Monday, and the Shriner’s staff wanted to help her celebrate by inviting me and the Greenville Zoo, as well as a few of our respective animals, out for Aspen’s celebration.
There were other children and their families helping Aspen celebrate, and I showed off the ten or so animals I brought into the hospital with me, allowing Aspen and the other children to pet and hold as appropriate. Aspen was terrified of the tarantula at first, but with tears in her eyes, she held it, and was absolutely elated after she held it. The child had no idea that I was more thrilled than she was.
In fact, there were smiles all around, with the possible exception of the Infection Control nurse, who watched the animals and I with a wary regard.
The zoo girl had now arrived, and I chatted with her while the table I had been using was sanitized by the hospital staff in preparation for the zoo’s presentation. We got along swimmingly; she had brought along a ball python, a spotted salamander, and a tenrec, which is a hedgehog-like creature from Madagascar. I was surprised to learn that my new friend had never held a tarantula. It was a condition we remedied before I left.
I cautioned her not to wear her sticker while in her zoo uniform. It’s best to avoid any appearances of impropriety and potential conflicts of interest.
Then it was off to the Spring Fling, a short journey that was hampered somewhat by severe thunderstorms with hail.
The large spacious room that I was setting up in already had a number of stations with a variety of games, and across the way, inflatables were being set up. The school had an eight-foot table for me, which I ultimately decided to place a few feet in front of mine - I could put individual animals on that table, keeping a buffer between my table that held many of my animals. Children began arriving early, and everything was going great, right up until the big hand got to the twelve, and it hit start time.
I was already in show mode, and had shown several animals. Mr. Beasley, the bearded dragon, was on the table, and I was offering a large superworm to him in front of a few kids. Sometimes Mr. Beasley acts disinterested, and the beetle larva was crawling all over my hand. I was moving my hand around to keep the worm in sight of the lizard. The superworm was on the tip of my little finger, and that got Mr. Beasley’s attention.
He cocked his head, opened his mouth slightly, and it would be just a second before his tongue would take the worm off my finger.
Except it didn’t.
I can only surmise that since the worm and my pinkie finger appeared to be approximately the same color and shade, Mr. Beasley assumed that he was being offered a very large mealworm. I came to this conclusion rather rapidly, since a full third of my pinkie was now in the lizard’s mouth.
During the countless times I’ve fed Mr. Beasley in the past, one thing I’ve noticed is that the first thing he does when a mealworm winds up in his mouth is begin bringing his jaws together to crush the worm. Regrettably, with the worm initially being on my finger, it was too far back in his mouth for him to chew it. It was now my pinkie that he was concerned with.
I was pretty concerned as well, since it was my pinkie.
Bearded dragons make some awesome pets because of their docility. What’s not talked about is how sharp their teeth are, how powerful their jaws are, and how a wriggling mealworm in the back of their throat incites them to engage in more aggressive chewing.
It was probably no more than 5 or 10 seconds that my finger was in his mouth, but it felt a lot longer. I finally got my finger dislodged, and Mr. Beasley turned his attention back to the mealworm. He may have swallowed the worm whole. Thinking back, one regret I have is not quickly digging out another mealworm, handing it to one of the wide-eyed kids, and saying, “Here. Your turn.”
Pro tip: Should you ever be in the position of having a 16-inch powerfully-jawed lizard macerating one of your distal phalanges, refrain from displaying overt concern and exclamations of pain. That’s how I’m resolving to do it next time.
I put Mr. Beasley back into his bin, cleaned the smeared blood off the table, and retrieved a bandaid from my first aid kit. You know the one. It’s strategically placed on top of my display table. I know some folks think it’s just there for show. Sometimes kids ask me, “Why is there a first aid kit?” I always reply, “Because it’s better to have it and not need it than to need it and not have it.”
Anyway, the Spring Fling is in full swing, and my job is to show animals for two full hours. It’s noisy, people everywhere, my finger is sore, and I decide it’s time to bring out one of my animals that I don’t use but occasionally.
Violet is a big active sweetheart of a boa constrictor. She’s about seven and a half feet long, fifteen or twenty pounds of muscle.
She’s crawling and climbing all over me, and we’re having a grand time. I eventually handed off the back end to a gentleman that was there. I was holding her loosely about a foot behind her head.
Out of nowhere, a little girl walks up in front of me, and what does she have in her hands? A HAMSTER.
Now everybody relax. It wasn’t real, but it was realistic. So I figured I’d play along.
“Oh, no!” I say. “Please don’t bring that hamster any closer. “Violet here will wolf that thing down in no time-“
It feels initially like an electric shock, although there was definitely some pain, as you would expect to feel when a large snake grabs the inside of your forearm and hangs on with 70 or 80 needle-sharp teeth. She didn’t hang on very long; there was that familiar sound I heard (and felt, if you can feel a sound) that I always liken to two pieces of Velcro being pulled apart as the dozens of teeth release from the tissue.
Well, that’s enough of that. I put her back in her bag, being careful not to drip blood on the bag, while holding my arm out away from my shirt.
Then it was back to the first aid kit after grabbing some nearby napkins. Inside the kit, I found the last antiseptic swab and the last gauze pad. There was a roll of white bandaging tape which I had to wrap around my arm in a couple of places to keep the gauze snug. I was especially careful using my knife to cut the tape. It seemed I was on a little run of bad luck. You know what they say about knives: “Better to have one and not need it, than to need one and not have it.”
Now that I was all bandaged up and the table was cleared off, it was time to get back into show mode. With two bloody incidents within a half hour, I needed to come good.
Except nobody was at my table. The nearest kid was thirty feet away.
Dummy.
It’s because you don’t have any animals out.
The kids and families all came back with me bringing the iguana out. And then the tortoise. I stacked the giant toads, making a “toad-um pole.” I even clowned around a few more times with the knight anole hanging off my finger. Everybody had a wonderful time.
But, it was nice to get home, get the animals put away, and to sleep in this morning until a little after seven.
I fed the snakes earlier today, and had a few errands to run. One of those errands was to buy a new first aid kit.
It seems my old one is somewhat depleted.