California
Related: About this forum25-year-old OC man dies after rattlesnake bite
By Alexa Mae Asperin | Published March 12, 2026 10:11am PDT | Orange County | FOX 11 |

Julian Hernandez / GoFundMe
The Brief
Julian Enrique Hernandez has died after a month-long battle in the ICU following a rattlesnake bite at an Irvine trailhead.
It happened on February 1 near the Quail Hill Community Center while Hernandez was mountain biking, leading to his death on March 4.
The Orange County Coroners Office officially confirmed the cause of death as an animal bite, marking a rare and tragic outcome for a local rattlesnake encounter.
IRVINE, Calif. - A local mountain biking excursion turned fatal for a Costa Mesa man who passed away this week after being bitten by a rattlesnake at an Irvine trailhead.
What we know:
The Irvine Police Department confirmed that the incident took place on February 1 at the Quail Hill Trailhead, located near the Quail Hill Community Center at 39 Shady Canyon Drive.
Julian Enrique Hernandez, 25, was mountain biking in the area when he was bitten by a rattlesnake, officials said. He was immediately transported to a nearby hospital and placed in an Intensive Care Unit (ICU). Despite over a month of treatment, Hernandez died from injuries sustained during the encounter.
The Orange County Coroners Office identified the victim as Hernandez and officially attributed his March 4 death to an animal bite.
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Clouds Passing
(7,877 posts)RockRaven
(19,207 posts)If you encounter a rattlesnake, don't freak out.
Don't try to kill it to protect yourself.
Don't try to move it.
Just stay away from it.
Leave it alone.
https://nhm.org/stories/misplaced-fears-rattlesnakes-are-not-dangerous-ladders-trees-dogs-or-large-tvs
3Hotdogs
(15,302 posts)Old time advise was to try to cut an X across the wound and try (or a friend) try to suck out the venom. This idea has been abandoned because of the possibility of a mouth sore being infused with venom.
If you have an iPhone or Apple Watch, learn how to use the emergency satellite beacon.
lastlib
(28,121 posts)...and ice pack to reduce circulation around the bite; keep the bite lower than the heart; and above all, keep the victim CALM. Excitement causes blood to circulate more rapidly, carrying venom through the body more quickly. That's where the danger lies.
BTW, the constriction band (which can be anything like a shoelace, or a belt--anything that can go around an affected limb) is NOT a TOURNIQUET! It should be loose enough that it doesnt totally cut off circulation; whereas, a tourniquet DOES completely cut off blood flow, and is ONLY used where life is endangered.
mahatmakanejeeves
(69,421 posts)SoCal man dies after falling on rattlesnake while mountain biking
By Gillian Mohney, News Editor
March 13, 2026
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About 10% to 44% of people who suffer a venomous snake bite will have long-lasting injuries.
MichaelSvoboda/Getty Images
A 25-year-old man has died after being bitten by a rattlesnake while mountain biking on a trail in Irvine. ... Julian Enrique Hernandez of Costa Mesa was mountain biking along the Irvine trail near the Quail Hill trailhead in February when he stopped to wait for another rider and let people pass. As he unclipped from his bike, he reportedly lost his balance and fell in the nearby brush, where a rattlesnake bit him on the leg, according to Irvine police spokesperson Kyle Oldoerp.
Irvine Police responded to the call of a rattlesnake bite on Feb. 1 and Hernandez was transported to a hospital. He died of his injuries weeks later on March 4, and the coroner listed his death as due to animal bite, Oldoerp confirmed.
Death due to a venomous snake bite is extraordinarily rare in the U.S., with about five fatal bites reported every year, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. ... Oldoerp said a bite like this is very, very unusual for the Irvine trail area. ... Were trying to look back at the last decade and none of us are aware of any rattlesnake bites in the last 10 years, he told SFGATE.
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The CDC says there are about 7,000 to 8,000 venomous snake bites in the U.S. every year, a category that includes rattlesnakes, and about 10% to 44% of those affected will have long-term injuries.
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