Sydney A mother from Queensland, Australia, had a hot moment, when her seven-year-old son Chase found her in one of his toys of a hundred venomous snake, wrote the news server news.com.au.
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The boy discovered a pakobra thlou inside the children’s kitchen. Thl pakobry are fast-moving poisonous snakes, their killing is not deadly for the hunter, but it is very painful and can cause local swelling. When Chase was discovered, Chase got scared and called his mother, who, despite her eye, managed to catch the snake and release it back into the open.
With cold winters, cold-blooded beaches in cold Australian states such as Tasmnia, Victoria and other parts of New Jin Wales are less active. But in Queensland, where the climate remains warm even in winter, snake-catching experts are advised to keep the population awake.
Snakes don’t go to hibernation, said William Pledger, who works for the capture service. Unlike bears, which have saved and will not climb out of the den for a year, snakes can be active at any time when it is warm. And they can be active in Queensland all year round.
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