After infiltrating a residence in Queensland, Australia, a poisonous snake found its way onto a model train set.
The snake curled up in a tunnel on the train set, according to PerUPI. One of the residents initially believed it to be a rubber toy, but after realizing it was a snake, he phoned an expert.
Stuart MacKenzie was dispatched to the residence by Sunshine Coast Snake Catchers 24/7, a group of knowledgeable snake handlers. The visitor’s scales were recognized by him as brown tree snakes.
The Australian Reptile Park claims that brown tree snakes are very irascible and will repeatedly strike if they feel threatened.
According to the park, only a very large snake could inject poison into a human because they are colubrid snakes, meaning their fangs are toward the back of the mouth.
MacKenzie was an expert at properly removing the poisonous snake from the train set. For Sunshine Coast Snake Catchers 24/7’s social media, he captured the procedure on video.
In the video, MacKenzie finds the snake coiled up within the tunnel as she approaches the train that is covered with a net. He carefully removes the healthy, rather large snake with a long hook.
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Indeed, according to MacKenzie, it is not a rubbersnake. Here she is, merely attempting to be kind and compassionate.
MacKenzie moves the snake away from the train set after luring it out of the tunnel, pointing out that it would most likely soon shed its skin.
Once the tunnel is clean, MacKenzie pulls the snake from the house and places it in a netted bag. The snake is safely returned to the wild at the end of the video, far from residences and commercial buildings.