Mirror reflection reveals something VERY sinister hidden in a family’s bathroom

Mirror reflection reveals something VERY sinister hidden in a family’s bathroom – so can YOU spot it?

  • Brisbane homeowners heard an unusual rustling noise in their ensuite bathroom 
  • A huge carpet python was spotted as they looked at the reflection in their mirror 
  • The discovery comes as a python bit a woman in the bottom from the toilet seat 

Homeowners spotted a sinister creature in the reflection of their bathroom mirror after they heard unusual sounds rustling in the early hours.  

A carpet python was found curled up behind the blinds on a window sill after it had crept into an ensuite of a home in The Gap, west of Brisbane. 

‘After investigating the strange sounds, they found a few items on the ground after this not-so-graceful visit made its way around the room,’ Snake Catchers Brisbane, Ipswich, Logan and Gold Coast posted on Friday. 

Homeowners looked into the reflection of their mirror and saw an unexpected carpet python hiding behind their blinds

The unexpected surprise comes after 59-year-old woman Helen Richards was bitten by another carpet python in the bottom when she sat on a toilet seat in her sister-in-law’s Brisbane home. 

‘After I started doing a wee I got a very sharp tap on my bottom and a pain, and with that I jumped very quickly off the toilet and thought “wow, was that a green frog?”‘ she said.

A man, also from Brisbane, got the fright for his life when he lifted the toilet lid to a python relaxing inside last week.  

Carpet pythons are the most commonly caught non-venomous snakes in Queensland.  

However, their bites leave a substantial laceration and will cause a fair bit of bleeding.

The snakes can grow up to more than three metres in length, according to the Queensland Museum.

Carpet pythons are the most commonly caught non-venomous snakes in Queensland

Carpet pythons are the most commonly caught non-venomous snakes in Queensland

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