Yeah... Texans love their stories! 
However, a TRUE, story, I had a relative, about a hundred years ago now... He was chopping wood, and idiotically grabbed a log he didn't look at thoroughly first. There was a coral snake on the log and it bit his thumb. Coral snakes have worse poison that rattlers, but since their mouths don't open as wide as a rattler, and their fangs are further back, they can usually only tag you on smaller body parts like the skinny back ankle part, or fingers and thumbs.
Anyway, the coral snake got his thumb, the ax was in his working hand, so he whacked the head off the snake, and then whacked off his thumb.
@vehve
We still tell the story of my great-great-grandmother that sat on a black widow spider when using the outhouse in the dark. The story goes that she was so fat, that she only got a tiny bit of rot on the spot... And none got to her muscle.
Yeah, that is lovely.... She must have gotten bitten back in 1870, and we STILL talk about it.

However, a TRUE, story, I had a relative, about a hundred years ago now... He was chopping wood, and idiotically grabbed a log he didn't look at thoroughly first. There was a coral snake on the log and it bit his thumb. Coral snakes have worse poison that rattlers, but since their mouths don't open as wide as a rattler, and their fangs are further back, they can usually only tag you on smaller body parts like the skinny back ankle part, or fingers and thumbs.
Anyway, the coral snake got his thumb, the ax was in his working hand, so he whacked the head off the snake, and then whacked off his thumb.
@vehve
We still tell the story of my great-great-grandmother that sat on a black widow spider when using the outhouse in the dark. The story goes that she was so fat, that she only got a tiny bit of rot on the spot... And none got to her muscle.
Yeah, that is lovely.... She must have gotten bitten back in 1870, and we STILL talk about it.