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All the United States New Mexico Chiricahua Desert Museum
AO Edited

Chiricahua Desert Museum

This rural museum is home to more than 50 local desert reptiles and the world's largest snake bite kit collection.

Rodeo, New Mexico

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Ian Lefkowitz
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The Chiricahua Desert Museum is located in Rodeo, New Mexico.   ianlefk / Atlas Obscura User
The world’s largest snake bite kit collection.   ianlefk / Atlas Obscura User
A resident of the Chiricahua Desert Museum.   ianlefk / Atlas Obscura User
More than 50 reptiles are kept in the museum, with information about the species.   ianlefk / Atlas Obscura User
The serpentarium is home to reptiles of all stripes and scales.   ianlefk / Atlas Obscura User
The museum also includes/is mostly an extensive gift shop, selling local crafts.   ianlefk / Atlas Obscura User
Rattlesnake tail sculpture at the museum.   WhiskeyBristles / Atlas Obscura User
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What do you do when you’re bitten by a venomous snake? It may not be the quickest approach, but one answer might be to drive to the tiny town of Rodeo, located in New Mexico’s panhandle just over the Arizona border. There, you can visit the Chiricahua Desert Museum, home of the world’s largest snake bite kit collection, and a place that is at the forefront of antivenom research.

The museum was founded April 1, 2009, and on first glance, it straddles the line between roadside gift shop and educational center. There is a small "living museum" (code for: has a lot of snakes) in the rear of the facility, which is home to a cramped serpentarium featuring more than 50 reptiles found in the Chiricahua Desert, including several rattlesnakes. The snake bite collection kit is also located inside, along with a description and some advice: “To state the obvious, the best thing is not to get bitten by a venomous snake.”

In addition to the snakes, the museum also offers a number of other collections, ranging from an outdoor botanical garden, to a small museum sharing Chiricahua Apache history, to works of western art. The artwork includes a 15-foot sculpture of a rattlesnake tail, commissioned by herpetologist/artist Tell Hicks. The facility is also a full-fledged science museum, publishing research on herpetology and hosting conferences with many of the leading doctors, veterinarians, and venomologists in the field.

Related Tags

Science Museums Museums And Collections Poison Snakes Reptiles

Know Before You Go

While entrance to the Chiricahua Desert Museum is free, access to the reptile exhibit and snakebite kit collection is not. Plan accordingly.

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ianlefk

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WhiskeyBristles

  • WhiskeyBristles

Published

September 15, 2023

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Chiricahua Desert Museum
4 Rattlesnake Canyon Rd
Rodeo, New Mexico, 88056
United States
31.870353, -109.03483
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