That’sssss not a charger! Driver discovers a SNAKE had slithered into her car 

That’sssss not a charger! Driver gets the shock of her life when she reaches for her iPhone cable only to discover a SNAKE had slithered into her car

  • The woman thought her phone charger was brushing against her leg
  • When she reached down to grab it, she realised it was a Green Tree Snake
  • She quickly got out of the car, opened all the doors and the snake slithered away 

A woman got the shock of her life after realising the iPhone charger she was reaching for was in fact a green tree snake that had slithered into her car.

The woman was driving back from Palm Beach, on Sydney’s northern beaches, when she felt a light scratching on her leg.

Thinking it was her phone charger touching her leg, she reached down to grab it, only to pat the harmless, slender snake.   

The woman was in Palm Beach in the northern beaches region of Sydney when she thought her phone charger was touching her leg. When she reached down to grab it, she realised a Green Tree Snake had hitched a ride

‘Holy sh**! That snake was around my feet,’ she can be heard screaming in footage obtained by 7 News.   

‘I figured it came from under my chair [so] I looked down and saw what it was,’ she told the publication.

She explained the snake had made its way to the middle console when her husband, sitting in the passenger seat, screamed for her to pull over.  

‘I was on a major road and in the middle lane. Took me another 10 seconds to find a turnoff,’ she said.

By the time the pair had pulled over, the snake had slithered into the boot and found a hiding spot between a collection of bags.  

Social media was flooded with comments from terrified people who said the footage had left them scarred.    

‘Another user said, ‘torch the car and Uber the hell outta there.’

‘Now every time I feel a tickle on my leg while I am in the car, I will freak the hell out thinking it’s a snake. I already freak out enough thinking it’s a spider,’ a person said. 

She managed to get out of her car without being bitten and after she opened all the doors and the boot, the snake got out

She managed to get out of her car without being bitten and after she opened all the doors and the boot, the snake got out

Green tree snakes are very common within northern and eastern Australia where they are mainly found in suburban backyards, parks and inner-city gardens. 

These snakes have no fangs and no venom which makes them very reluctant to bite as they would rather slither away. 

They are fast climbers and like to hide on rocks, windowsills, fences, outdoor furniture, veranda railings, pergolas, sheds or garages.  

Read more at DailyMail.co.uk