Recently, snake catcher Brendan Dyer shared on social networks an image of a giant python curled up in a car with the warning “remember to close the car door carefully” that made netizens phen. OMG”.

The story is that on the evening of June 17, the owner of the Great Wall 4-seater car parked in an empty lot in front of the house in the urban area of ​​Capalaba, in the city of Redland, Queensland (Australia) but did not close it. door carefully. The next morning, when the man left the house, intending to get his car to go shopping, he discovered a horrifying scene.

Bất cẩn để cửa ô tô hớ hênh chỉ một đêm, tài xế run bần bật khi phát hiện "bé Na" khổng lồ đang say giấc nồng ngay sau buồng lái - Ảnh 1.
The giant carpet python was sleeping soundly in the car.

A giant coastal carpet python was curled up next to the speedometer, below the cockpit. Terrified, the man had to call for help from snake catcher Brendan Dyer.

Brendan guessed that the animal had slithered through the window and had been in the man’s car since the night. “I don’t believe a python this big could slither through the vents of a car, so it could clearly have crawled in from the window. That’s why people should check their cars carefully before they get in. into the house”.

Brendan used a hook to wake the python and grabbed the back of the giant’s head with his hand and lifted it out of the car. The owner of the car is also witnessing a “memorable” experience.

Brendan’s 5-year-old daughter Tara was also trained by her father since childhood, so she is not afraid of this reptile, she even supports her father in the process. She understands that she must not touch any python or snake without her father’s consent, and Tara is also the one who helps Brendan release the python back into the forest.

Bất cẩn để cửa ô tô hớ hênh chỉ một đêm, tài xế run bần bật khi phát hiện "bé Na" khổng lồ đang say giấc nồng ngay sau buồng lái - Ảnh 2.
Little Tara is not afraid of this reptile.

An adult python can be 2.5m long and is the largest predator found in southeastern Queensland. They usually feed on a variety of birds and mammals and are not venomous to humans. However, if being hurt by a soulmate, the wound cannot be taken lightly. Normally, pythons prefer to live in areas such as roofs or walls, but they have also been found in bushes.

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