Pythons invade shocked man’s toilet twice in one week: ‘Not the snake that wants to crawl all over you’

A slide No. 2.

An Australian man found a python coiled up inside his toilet – twice in one week.

Although finding one’s leftover work inside the toilet is disgusting, finding poop might be preferable to a scaly reptile hissing at you.

Hervey Bay Snake Catchers in Queensland, Australia, received a call in October. 22 to remove a coastal carpet python from a toilet.

A man found a python inside his toilet. Facebook/ Hervey Bay Snake Catchers

“The homeowner contacted us when he found the snake when he went to use the bathroom,” Drew Godfrey told Newsweek. “It was a female that probably moistened her skin before ejaculating.”

After pulling the reptile out of the toilet and pipes, they posted an image on Facebook describing the encounter.

“It managed to go right into the S-turn, so we had to cut the pipe under the house, go in one end and out the other,” the company wrote. “Eventually he got pissed off enough to come out and see us and Jonsey got one for the team and got in there to catch him.”

Hervey Bay Snake Catchers flushed the python out of the toilet. Facebook/ Hervey Bay Snake Catchers
The first snake found was a female that washed its skin before shedding. Facebook/ Hervey Bay Snake Catchers

They revealed close-up footage of the python being flushed out of the toilet. While coast pythons are non-venomous snakes that are “harmless” to humans, the homeowner was still shocked by their startled appearance.

However, a few days later, in October. 25, Australian residents heard a hissing from another unwanted guest inside their toilet.

The python, which was the same species as the first reptile but of a different sex, was coiled inside the bowl until Hervey Bay Snake Catchers made a return visit to remove the cold-blooded animal.

The second snake was a male, who was probably looking for the original snake that was found. Facebook/ Hervey Bay Snake Catchers

“The male most likely came in looking for the female as this was the last place he would have left a scent trail,” Godfrey continued to Newsweek.

Despite the skin crawling experience, snake charmers are used to dissecting reptiles in inconvenient areas, so it was just another day on the job.

“We’ve had to do this a few times before,” added the snake handler. “Getting snakes out of toilets is not unusual, but thankfully not that common. It’s something we might have to do once or twice a year.”

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Image Source : nypost.com

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