Mahzala
فَتَبَارَكَ اللَّهُ أَحْسَنُ الْخَالِقِينَ
Assalamualaikum

I was reading the news and I came across this. Check it out.
How does a 1.8 metre python end up emerging from a toilet in a 10th floor apartment?
That's the question being asked by residents of an upmarket block in Darwin's Cullen Bay, where the unwanted guest was discovered on Sunday.
Slimy and smelly, the black-headed python found in a toilet bowl had a body as wide as a person's wrist, said "shocked" Northern Territory reptile wrangler Chris Peberdy.
"It's one thing in the territory to have a green frog in the toilet ... but not a six-foot python," he told the NT News.
"It would certainly scare you if it came up from the depths of the toilet."
Mr Peberdy said the non-poisonous snake was probably a pet that had been living in the sewage pipes after escaping from a neighbour's home.
"There is no possible other way it could have got there than through the toilet," he said.
"Black-headed pythons are quite rare in the Darwin area, but they are popular in captivity.
"They are a prized pet and are quite valuable."
Mr Peberdy said when he saw the snake: "I was pretty shocked.
"I had to give him a good wash as he was wet and a bit smelly."
It is not the first time Mr Peberdy has had to rescue a snake from a toilet.
About three years ago an olive python was found living in the toilets of a city apartment block, he said.
http://news.ninemsn.com.au/article.aspx?id=583378
Assalamualaikum

I was reading the news and I came across this. Check it out.
How does a 1.8 metre python end up emerging from a toilet in a 10th floor apartment?
That's the question being asked by residents of an upmarket block in Darwin's Cullen Bay, where the unwanted guest was discovered on Sunday.
Slimy and smelly, the black-headed python found in a toilet bowl had a body as wide as a person's wrist, said "shocked" Northern Territory reptile wrangler Chris Peberdy.
"It's one thing in the territory to have a green frog in the toilet ... but not a six-foot python," he told the NT News.
"It would certainly scare you if it came up from the depths of the toilet."
Mr Peberdy said the non-poisonous snake was probably a pet that had been living in the sewage pipes after escaping from a neighbour's home.
"There is no possible other way it could have got there than through the toilet," he said.
"Black-headed pythons are quite rare in the Darwin area, but they are popular in captivity.
"They are a prized pet and are quite valuable."
Mr Peberdy said when he saw the snake: "I was pretty shocked.
"I had to give him a good wash as he was wet and a bit smelly."
It is not the first time Mr Peberdy has had to rescue a snake from a toilet.
About three years ago an olive python was found living in the toilets of a city apartment block, he said.
http://news.ninemsn.com.au/article.aspx?id=583378
Assalamualaikum

