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Bill Haast (December 30, 1910 – June 15, 2011 [1]) was the owner and operator, from 1947 until 1984, of the Miami Serpentarium, a tourist attraction south of Miami, Florida, where he entertained customers by performing live venom extraction from snakes. [2]
According to a first-person account published in Orlando Magazine in 2011 at the age of 67, when he was six years old he met Bill Haast who was the owner of the Miami Serpentarium and became his mentor, and the first snake he ever picked up was a rattlesnake which struck at him but hit his fingernail without penetrating the skin. [1]
In the "Serpentarium" (named in honor of Bill Haast's famed Miami Serpentarium), a wide spectrum of animals are presented from African penguins to alligator snapping turtles, boa constrictor snakes to lemurs. Various other animal feedings, keeper talks and casual presentations occur throughout the park daily.
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Miami Serpentarium: Miami: 1947–1984 Miracle Strip Amusement Park: Panama City Beach: 1963–2004 Miracle Strip at Pier Park: Panama City Beach: 2010–2015 Mystery Fun House: Orlando: 1976–2001 Ocean World Fort Lauderdale: 1965–1994 Ocean View Pavilion Amusement Park Jacksonville Beach: 1928–1964 Paradise Park: Silver Springs: 1949–1969
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Bill Haast, owner and director of the Miami Serpentarium, injected himself with snake venom during most of his adult life, in an effort to build up an immunity to a broad array of venomous snakes, in a practice known as mithridatism. Haast lived to age 100, and survived a reported 172 snake bites.
Bill Haast: 1910–2011: 100: American director of the Miami Serpentarium [89] Viktor Hamburger: 1900–2001: 100: German professor and embryologist [90] Alice Hamilton: 1869–1970: 101: American toxicologist [91] Michael Heidelberger: 1888–1991: 103: American immunologist [92] Rudolf Hell: 1901–2002: 100: German inventor [93] Joel Henry ...