A 22-year-old man was making breakfast when he saw the terrifying diamond python curled in the cereal box in Sydney, Australia.
Jarred Smith who was talking to Daily Mail Australia journalist gave a detailed story how everything had happened, “I thought mum had bought some strange door stopper at first but then I saw the tail end of what looked like a snake and thought “no way its a snake”.
Then I peeked in the top of the cereal box and its head popped out. I dropped my food and ran out of the kitchen and screamed out to my dad downstairs “dad, there’s a snake in the kitchen!”. When dad walked in it maneuvered even further into the box that’s when I took the video.”
Jarred then called the NSW Wildlife Information, Rescue and Education Service and they sent a snake handler to deal with an animal. “He asked if we minded if put the snake back in our garden which we didn’t. The snake wouldn’t fall out of the box so he had to rip it and the whole snake dropped out. He was more surprised when he saw it properly because he said it actually looked about two metres long.”
Diamond pythons are typically inoffensive by nature and generally reluctant to bite and the snake handler told Jarred that the species is harmless and only attacked when aggravated.
Jarred Smith who was talking to Daily Mail Australia journalist gave a detailed story how everything had happened, “I thought mum had bought some strange door stopper at first but then I saw the tail end of what looked like a snake and thought “no way its a snake”.
Then I peeked in the top of the cereal box and its head popped out. I dropped my food and ran out of the kitchen and screamed out to my dad downstairs “dad, there’s a snake in the kitchen!”. When dad walked in it maneuvered even further into the box that’s when I took the video.”
Jarred then called the NSW Wildlife Information, Rescue and Education Service and they sent a snake handler to deal with an animal. “He asked if we minded if put the snake back in our garden which we didn’t. The snake wouldn’t fall out of the box so he had to rip it and the whole snake dropped out. He was more surprised when he saw it properly because he said it actually looked about two metres long.”
Diamond pythons are typically inoffensive by nature and generally reluctant to bite and the snake handler told Jarred that the species is harmless and only attacked when aggravated.
إرسال تعليق