Australian woman wakes to find massive python on her chest

Friday, 16 January 2026 - 10:25

Australian+woman+wakes+to+find+massive+python+on+her+chest
In the middle of the night on Monday, Rachel Bloor stirred in her bed to find a heavy weight curled up on her chest.

Half asleep, she reached out for her dog - and instead found herself petting a smooth, slithering object.

As Bloor retreated further under the covers and pulled them up to her neck, her partner switched on the bedside lamp and confirmed the Brisbane couple's fears.

"He goes, 'Oh baby. Don't move. There's like a 2.5m python on you," Bloor told the BBC.

Her first words were expletives. The second, an order to evacuate the dogs.

"I thought if my Dalmatian realises that there's a snake there... it's gonna be carnage."

The dogs secured outside the room - and her husband wishing he was with them - Bloor began carefully extricating herself.

"I was just trying to shimmy out from under the covers... in my mind, going, 'Is this really happening? This is so bizarre'."

She believes the carpet python - which is non-venomous - had squeezed itself through the shutters on her window onto her bed below.

Once freed from the python, she began casually feeding it back out the way it came in.

"It was that big that even though it had been curled up on me, part of its tail was still out the shutter."

"I grabbed him, [and] even then he didn't seem overly freaked out. He sort of just wobbled in my hand."

The same couldn't be said for her stunned husband, but Bloor herself was barely fazed, having grown up on acreage around snakes.

"I think if you're calm, they're calm."

Though if it had been a cane toad - one of the country's most damaging, and ugly pests - that would be another story, she said.

"I can't stand them, like they make me dry retch. So if it was a cane toad, it would have scared me."

All animals and humans escaped from the interaction unharmed.

Carpet pythons are constrictors that are common in coastal areas of Australia, and usually eat small mammals such as birds.

Source - BBC


Sri Lanka’s tea exports to UAE rise amid strong demand
Friday, 12 June 2026 - 10:19

Sri Lanka’s tea exports to the United Arab Emirates continued their upward trend in 2025, reaching 18.32 million kilograms, compared to 17.73 million... Read More

SriLankan flight to Sydney returns due to operational occurrence
Friday, 12 June 2026 - 10:17

SriLankan Airlines said Flight UL606, which departed Colombo for Sydney at 12:05 a.m. today (12), returned to Bandaranaike International Airport (BIA)... Read More

Trump objections delay US-Canada bridge launch
Friday, 12 June 2026 - 10:19

The U.S. and Canada have decided to delay the ‌opening of a new $4.7 billion bridge connecting Detroit and Windsor, Ontario, that was set to open... Read More