• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content

A Cape York Blog

Cape York paradise at Portland Roads

  • Blog
  • About Us
  • Mosiguard
  • Portland Roads Beach Shack

python Cape York

January 8, 2012 by Seamus Campbell

Beautiful big python at our backdoor

The other night I was met at our back door by a 3.5m python. It was very quiet and relaxed but it too big to have around the house.

Earlier in the day some of our little birds had been getting quite agitated and making warning noises, but I couldn’t see anything at the time. So I think the python had eaten something from our garden.

I asked our neighbour to help bag it and then I re-located it on the banks of a nearby creek.

He grabbed the python and I helped put it in a bag – this was my first time handling a snake like this; it was very strong – two of us struggled to get it in the bag.

I then drove to a nearby creek and let the python out on the bank – it seemed like a nice place for a big python to live.

Curled up behind the house
Curled up behind the house
python at Portland Roads
A bit of the python at it’s new home

python coming inside
Coming in our backdoor
python close-up
On the mat at our backdoor

python at Portland Roads
Moving away from the back door

Filed Under: Snakes Cape York Tagged With: python Cape York, reptiles Cape York, snakes Cape York

December 23, 2010 by Seamus Campbell

Python and Cane Toad – 17th Nov 2010

I heard a strange scuffling, scrunching sound outside our verandah. Looked over the edge and on the lawn noticed a small 80 cm or so long python inexorably dragging a much larger cane toad back along the grass.

The cane toad appeared stunned and although obviously alive, struggled very little. The python was only about 25-30 mm in diameter and the toad about 60-65 mm. The snake dragged it back about 3 meters to its lair in a rock wall. The cane toad grabbed onto grass and rocks on the way with its front claws but other than did not struggle at all. I was worried that the toad would kill the python once it was ingested, but wasn’t quite willing to tap the python on the nose and say “No”.
It took the python about 25 minutes to get the toad back to its hole in the wall.

It then slowly engulfed the toad – this was repulsive but fascinating.

The snake finally swallowed the whole cane toad – the whole process took over an hour.

python full of canetoad

Filed Under: Snakes Cape York Tagged With: python Cape York, reptiles Cape York, snakes Cape York

Copyright © 2023 A Cape York Blog Built by Boldacious Digital