Well Deano, in this instance you're being ridiculous...
It is definitely not a Taipan or Eastern Brown or even a Brown Tree Snake.
From the pic it looks like a Common tree snake or even a keelback.
Treat all snakes as venomous if you are uncertain as to what it is.
Do not try to kill them as more people are bitten trying to kill snakes.
All snakes are protected under Australian Law. It is illegal to kill even a taipan..
Leave the snake alone and call a licensed snake catcher if the snake is inside the house or posing a nuisance outside.
My cat has been dropping baby eastern browns at our front door with their tails bitten off .I then have to take their heads off .surprised the cats alive it's a **** of a thing the Mrs got when I was on deployment
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Jeez, must be some cat.
We had a farm raised tabby for 19 yrs, & he was catching Possums until just before he died, he'd bring 'em to the front step, separate the head from the body & leave 'em there,...some were considerably bigger than him,....but I don't think he'd come off so well against a snake!
Pickles.
One of those often quoted but never substantiated statistics that 'sounds good' to justify a position.
And what of the OP, catching an unknown possibly venomous snake, maybe a taipan to 'release' somewhere 'safe' ?
Hardly a convincing argument for the 'protection' of snakes.
At least on this we can (partially) agree. To kill snakes in their own bushland environment is totally unjustified.
NOT to kill venomous snakes in your own backyard where they are a risk to life or livestock is IMO both negligent and irresponsible. Snakes are territorial creatures, they won't just go away.
In the cities there may be professional snake catchers who will, presumably at some expense, come around and endeavour to catch the odd inconvenient snake. In the country we have shovels.
Deano![]()
On mine sites we have catchers!
I'm one of them.
We remove them from under vehicles, in cabins and work areas.
They are transported about 2 km away and released.
May have come on a bit hard Tombie, but I'm sick of the 'all animals great and small' being more important than, or as equally important as people arguments.
Whether it's an idiotic woman (ABC news a while back) actually crying over the 'trauma' of trying to rid dirty, filthy, stinking, diseased fruit bats that had taken over a NSW country towns park, or the nit-wits that would rather see kangaroos in plague proportions die agonisingly of starvation rather than be professionally culled. Or maybe the 'well meaning fools' that wanted feeding stations set up on Fraser Island to feed the unsustainable dingo population that had grown from tourist feeding/refuse after this un-natural food source was removed. The list goes on...............
Common sense doesn't seem to be as common as it used to be.
Deano![]()
Hey Deano, the exact percentages of snake victims coming from trying to kill the snake is moot, anywhere upward of 70% is claimed, but that the majority of bite victims were trying to kill the attacking snake is verified by ambulance and hospital statistics and by the research of the following, just to name a few:
Professor Bryan Fry, a venom expert at the University of Queensland
Bradley C 2008. Venomous bites and stings in Australia to 2005 (Dr Clare Bradley Research Fellow Research Centre for Injury Studies)
Sutherland & King, 1991 Management of Snake Bite Injuries: (Struan Keith Sutherland was head of the Australian Venom Research Unit, Department of Pharmacology, University of Melbourne 1994-2001).
(Dr Kathleen King Royal Flying Doctor Service of Australia)
Where you are right, snakes are territorial. However,if you remove/kill any snakes then others will move in. If a snake thinks it's a nice place to be then so will others. Mostly they are attracted to prey (mice/rats), a water source and shelter. As much open space as possible around the house is the best deterrent.
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