First a snake fell from the sky onto a Texas grandma. Then the hawk attacked.

Peggy Jones sits on one of two tractors used to groom her property. She survived a snake and hawk attack while working in her yard in Texas last month.

Peggy Jones sits on one of two tractors used to groom her property. She survived a snake and hawk attack while working in her yard in Texas last month. (Peggy Jones)


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SILSBEE, Texas — All Peggy and Wendell Jones wanted was to end their day of yard work in Texas' triple-digit summer heat by getting cleaned up and going to the casino.

The couple — married 45 years next week — routinely splits up the three-hour job of mowing the lawn of an investment property in Silsbee, north of Beaumont.

Peggy Jones was riding a mower in the back of the property, far from the trees that line it, when "all of a sudden, out of the clear blue sky, a snake fell … and landed on my arm," the 64-year-old recalled.

There was no mistaking it. The reptile was dark-colored and 4½ feet long, she estimated.

The snake clutched her right arm and it wouldn't let go.

"I immediately began thrusting my arm, trying to knock the snake off," she said. "And as I was thrusting my arm, the snake just wrapped around my arm — and he started striking at my face."

The more the grandmother of four tried to rip the snake off her, the tighter it would wrap and squeeze around her arm, she said.

She screamed and cried for help as the tractor kept crawling along beneath her.

Still, the snake wouldn't let go.

Wendell Jones, 66, was mowing the front of their property. The sound of his own tractor and the traffic on the nearby highway filled the space between them, and that's how Peggy Jones said she knew she was effectively alone.

Then, just when she thought the snake might bite her — injecting her with fatal venom — a brown and white hawk swooped down and tried to clench it.

The serpent's grip on her arm was so tight that when the hawk grabbed it, Peggy Jones' entire arm jerked up in the air with the attempt.

The hawk tried again and again, its wings flapping in her face with each try, distorting her view of what was happening right in front of her.

All the while, the tractor kept mowing, zig-zagging Peggy Jones — and the tug-of-war of nature — across the field in an ordeal she called "utter chaos."

Many times in her life, Peggy Jones had watched this exact same scenario play out in nature: Hawk sets its sights on its prey, swoops in to attack, drops it on a barbed-wire fence, then goes back to claim its prize.

But she never imagined she'd play the role of fence.

Four times, the hawk dove and bobbed at its prize — and at Peggy Jones — before it finally scooped up the reptile and flew off, she said.

Right away, Peggy Jones felt some relief at having been freed.

Then, she looked down.

'Beyond anything I had ever experienced'

Her right arm was covered in blood, claw marks, lacerations, cuts and punctures.

"If you've ever cut yourself, think about 10 times that pain," Peggy said. "It's a pain you can't describe. … It was beyond anything I had ever experienced."

Bruises had already formed — and turned black, presumably from the snake's squeeze.

Peggy Jones, still processing what she had just experienced, kept screaming and yelling.

This time, Wendell Jones heard her and ran over.

"She was in hysterics and shock," he recalled.

"I just rushed her to the truck and headed to the ER," said Wendell Jones, who was at this point still uncertain of how such a horror had happened.

"It was probably three minutes before I actually understood what happened to her."

Doctors in the hospital cleaned and bandaged Peggy Jones' wounds.

On the lens of her chipped glasses, they found some liquid the Joneses think may have been snake venom, though it was never tested, they told CNN.

The doctors gave her antibiotics and instructions to continue them at home.

Before midnight on July 25, Wendell posted online a short rundown of all his wife had endured that day, ending it: "Thank you for the prayers."

The couple stayed up that whole night to monitor for any swelling and discoloration from a snake bite — signs Peggy knows well after a venomous snake bit her a few years ago, she said.

Thankfully, none appeared.

'I consider myself to be pretty tough'

More than two weeks later, Peggy Jones is left with the physical reminder of the chaos, her arm wrapped from elbow to wrist in bandages that have been refreshed from white to neon green to bright pink.

Meanwhile, the ordeal still lives in her mind as she contemplates how it could have had an entirely different — potentially fatal — ending.

"She's not sleeping well at all," Wendell said. "When she finally goes to sleep, I'm usually having to wake her up because she's dreaming."

The Joneses are taking extra precautions to ensure Peggy Jones' wounds stay clean: Any trace of infection could portend a life-threatening turn following a past double knee replacement.

"This is the toughest young lady I've ever met in my life," Wendell Jones said. "She doesn't worry about pain. She thinks she can do everything, and she pretty much can do everything, so I have to try and keep her slowed down because she's blow and go."

"I consider myself to be pretty tough," added Peggy Jones, "and I'm a survivor."

As for the casino trip, it will have to wait as the Joneses aren't making any unnecessary outings until Peggy Jones' wounds fully heal.

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Alisha Ebrahimji

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