By Daily Mail Reporter
Last updated at 9:27 AM on 25th April 2011

Nine-year-old Tylar Butcher was bitten by an adder while walking in the New Forest, Hampshire, with her family

Nine-year-old Tylar Butcher was bitten by an adder while walking in the New Forest, Hampshire, with her family

A nine-year-old girl is recovering in hospital after being bitten by an adder, in an extremely rare attack.

Tylar Butcher's entire leg turned black after she was bitten on the foot while enjoying a bank holiday stroll with her family in the New Forest in Hampshire.

The schoolgirl, who had been walking along a footpath, 'yelped' as the black-striped snake slithered away into the long grass.

She was rushed to Southampton General Hospital's intensive care unit after an allergic reaction caused her leg to turn black.

Doctors treated her with anti-venom and believe she will now make a full recovery.

Tylar's father, Kenny, said: 'We just went to the New Forest for a walk with friends and literally as we were just walking back to the car my daughter let out a yelp.

'It was a very loud scream, not like one I have ever heard from her before.

'It was only meant to be a quick half-an-hour walk and, as we were sticking to the footpaths, Tylar was only wearing flip flops on her feet.

'At first I thought she had been stung by a stinging nettle but then I saw the snake slithering away and the puncture marks on her foot.

'She lifted her leg off the ground and was standing on one leg.

Painful: Tylar's entire leg turned black after she was bitten by the snake. She is now recovering in hospital

Painful: Tylar's entire leg turned black after she was bitten by the snake. She is now recovering in hospital

'You can tell by your children if they are in pain, and she was in absolute agony.'

As the family from Tring, Hertfordshire, made their way back to the car park, Mr Butcher called a cousin who keeps reptiles and was advised to call 999.

Mum Elayne, 35, said: 'It was like a ticking timebomb for the first 24 hours.

'It is every parent's worst nightmare for something like this to happen to one of your children.

TREAD CAREFULLY: ADDER FACTS

An adder, similar to the one which bit a nine-year-old girl

The adder is the only venomous snake native to Britain. 

It can be recognised by the distinctive 'V' or 'X' marking on its head and zig-zag stripe across its back.

The snakes are often found in open heathland and dense woods.

They are not aggressive animals  and will only resort to using venom as a last means of defence if captured - or trodden on.

Within hours of a bite, symptoms can include dizziness, nausea, vomiting and painful swelling.

The venom is rarely fatal but any bite should be taken seriously.

'To go from thinking she had been bitten by a grass snake to realising it was an adder whose venom could permanently damage her system was completely terrifying.

'First of all her toe and foot started to go black and bruise quite badly.

'When I left the hospital on Friday night the black and bruising had risen to her ankle but when I returned the next morning it was all up her leg, part of her groin and even on her torso.

'When she had tried to stand up on the leg yesterday morning, it caused her excruciating pain.

'I think that is when they decided to give her the anti-venom.'

Mr Butcher said that Tylar was recovering well and looking forward to telling all her friends at Grove Road School in Tring about what had happened.

'Tylar has coped extremely well with the pain,' said a proud Mr Butcher.

'Throughout the whole experience, she has been very brave.

'We cannot thank the doctor's enough for what they have done - they have been absolutely brilliant.'

Mr Butcher said it is not known exactly how long the blackening and bruising to Tylar's leg will last, but he said she is expected to be released from Southampton General Hospital.

Adder bites are relatively rare in the UK and Mr Butcher said there had been a lot of interest in his daughter's bite from doctors at the hospital.

There are ten recorded cases of death from an adder bite in the last century but no one has died from one in Britain during the last 20 years.

The New Forest in Hampshire, where Tylar was bitten by the venomous snake

Watch your step: The New Forest in Hampshire, where Tylar was bitten by the venomous snake

Here's what readers have had to say so far. Why not add your thoughts below, or debate this issue live on our message boards.

The comments below have been moderated in advance.

As sorry as I feel for this little girl, I feel this only serves to highlight the problem of the "General Public" treating the countryside as some kind of huge Adventure Playground, tromping all over as if there's nothing more sinister than a bee sting to be worried about...............I've been a gardener in rural countryside for 25 years, and have come across some of the most wonderful sights this country has to offer, and consider myself as extremely lucky because of it, but I find it totally unbelievable that there are moronic comments on here saying exterminate these creatures......let's face it, if someone stepped on you while you were taking your morning sunbathe.......you'd do something about it.............people just can't seem to be bothered to learn about their surroundings anymore......makes me wonder how the human race would survive a global breakdown.

People should also becare when walking the family dog, on commons,sand dunes etc as dogs don't tolerate venom in the least, if bitten its hard to tell,as the fur hides a bite site.,then the animal will collaspe without you ever knowing..was nearly bitten as a child when blackberrying. They like to bask in the sun.

At hospitals in Sri Lanka, they are experts on snake bites in a land where they have the most venomous snakes in the world. Most of the cases are dealt with by rest and painkillers because, as has already been stated here, the anti-venom is a big risk. Mind you, in this country, there is only one breed of poisonous snake so choice of which anti-venom is academic.

The Forest is chock full of adders at this time of the year and this warm weather is just what they like. Paths are a favourite place to come out of cover and soak up the rays! and we who live here habitually look where our feet are going - and wear proper shoes! My old Spaniel was bitten on the muzzle some years back and by the time I'd got her home and down to the vet she was very wobbly of her feet. She was given a whacking gret anti - histamine jab which stabilised her but it was a couple more days before the cricket ball sized swelling went down. The iick population has gone crazy in recent years. I took 6 off my dog in a day recently. I would urge visitors to check each other over intimately after a walk in the Forest. I had one on the point of my elbow last year, on the only bit of my arm I couldn't check! Lyme {not Lyme'S} Disease is utterly debilitating and you should go to great lengths to avoid contracting it. Upper arms and legs are the hotspots.

The adder is surprizingly common in southern England. There have been cases of adder bites in Hyde Park and in parliament Hill Fields. While rarely fatal it is very painfull. I was bitten aged 11, near Sizewell Power Station, East Anglia. I had a swolen leg and still have a distinctive double brown mark on my leg 40 years later.

"I knew someone who was in the army on manouevres in Dartmoor, and he trod on an adder, which bit right through his army boot - so even if this young girl had been wearing shoes or even walking boots, it would almost certainly have still bit through the leather." Sorry, but your 'someone' is spinning you a yarn: no British adder has fangs long enough (or strong enough) to bite through an army boot.

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