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Snapping turtle presentation goes off the rails when it bites man, Florida video shows

A demonstration “what not to do with a snapping turtle” in turned into an illustration when the reptile bite its handler and refused to let go.
A demonstration “what not to do with a snapping turtle” in turned into an illustration when the reptile bite its handler and refused to let go. Video screengrabs

A demonstration of how not to handle a snapping turtle turned into a cringe-inducing illustration when the turtle bit its handler and refused to let go.

A video of the incident was posted Jan. 30 on Facebook by “Python Cowboy” Mike Kimmel, best known for hunting down the invasive pythons and iguanas in Florida’s Everglades.

“A client named Fatty showed us what not to do with a snapping turtle! Ouch!” Kimmel wrote.

Mike “Fatty” Linne was coincidentally discussing how snapping turtles bite when the one in his hand lunged with amazing speed and clamped down on his index finger.

“It hurts like hell,” he is heard saying. “He’ll just hold on for awhile. ... Like a mule.”

What follows is about a minute and a half of censored curse words, wails of pain and requests for someone to get a water hose and douse the turtle to remove it.

It’s not clear how one bystander pried the stubborn turtle loose, but Linne came away with his finger — and sense of humor — intact.

“The only thing meaner than that is me,” he says to the camera.

Linne lives in Indiana, but was visiting Florida to join Kimmel on hunts for invasive iguana and wild hogs.

The 2-minute video of his turtle encounter has gotten thousands of views, reactions and comments, including from some who marveled at the man’s calm demeanor.

“This guy has a true threshold for pain!” Jimmy Young posted.

“A straw up his nose will cause it to release its bite,” David Driver wrote.

“If you are really brave and really trying to be an influencer, you would let him bite something else,” Josh Grant said.

Snapping turtles are native to the East Coast and “can extend their neck the length of their body,” according to the College of Veterinary Medicine at the University of Illinois.

“Complementing this impressive reach, snapping turtles have a powerful, lightning-fast bite which can break bones with its extreme force,” the college said.

The lunge and bite can happen “as quickly as 78 milliseconds/bite,” the University of Florida Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences reports.

This shows the moment the turtle lunged and bit down on the man’s index finger.
This shows the moment the turtle lunged and bit down on the man’s index finger. Video screengrab
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This story was originally published January 31, 2025 at 7:25 AM with the headline "Snapping turtle presentation goes off the rails when it bites man, Florida video shows."

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Mark Price
The Charlotte Observer
Mark Price is a state reporter for The Charlotte Observer and McClatchy News outlets in North Carolina. He joined the network of newspapers in 1991 at The Charlotte Observer, covering beats including schools, crime, immigration, LGBTQ issues, homelessness and nonprofits. He graduated from the University of Memphis with majors in journalism and art history, and a minor in geology. 
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