Updated
Updated · The Guardian · Jul 9
Hengzhou Boosts Antivenom After Hundreds of Cobras Escape Flooded Farms
Updated
Updated · The Guardian · Jul 9

Hengzhou Boosts Antivenom After Hundreds of Cobras Escape Flooded Farms

3 articles · Updated · The Guardian · Jul 9

Summary

  • Hengzhou opened a fast-track treatment channel at its designated snakebite hospital and increased antivenom supplies after floodwaters damaged breeding farms and released hundreds of snakes, including cobras, kraits and green pit vipers.
  • State media said Typhoon Maysak-driven flooding hit snake farms after days of heavy rain, prompting emergency guidance that warned snakes could shelter in homes, stairwells, building corners and riverbanks.
  • Several villagers have already been treated for bites, according to a local doctor, and Beijing News reported one snakebite death, though Hengzhou People’s Hospital declined to confirm it.
  • Guangxi’s wider flooding has killed at least six people, forced at least 50,000 evacuations and left six missing after reservoir overtopping and breaches surrounded villages in several towns.
  • China’s storm toll has risen to 38 nationwide, including 21 deaths in a Gansu landslide and 11 in Hubei thunderstorms and tornadoes, underscoring the broader summer extreme-weather crisis.

Insights

With thousands of venomous snakes loose after a flood, can this Chinese city ever be declared truly safe?
When reptile farms are built in flood zones, is a snake-filled catastrophe simply inevitable?