Snake on a plane delays a flight in Australia
An Australian domestic flight was delayed for two hours after a stowaway was found in the planeās cargo hold, officials said on Wednesday.
The snake was found on Tuesday as passengers were boarding Virgin Australia Flight VA337 at Melbourne Airport bound for Brisbane, according to snake catcher Mark Pelley.
The snake turned out to be a harmless 60-centimeter (2-foot) green tree snake. But Pelly said he thought it could be venomous when he approached it in the darkened hold.
āIt wasnāt until after I caught the snake that I realized that it wasnāt venomous. Until that point, it looked very dangerous to me,ā Pelley said.
Most of the worldās most venomous .
When Pelley entered the cargo hold, the snake was half hidden behind a panel and could have disappeared deeper into the plane.
Pelley said he told an aircraft engineer and airline staff that they would have to evacuate the aircraft if the snake disappeared inside the plane.
āI said to them if I donāt get this in one shot, itās going to sneak through the panels and youāre going to have to evacuate the plane because at that stage I did not know what kind of snake it was,ā Pelley said.
āBut thankfully, I got it on the first try and captured it,ā Pelley added. āIf I didnāt get it that first time, the engineers and I would be pulling apart a (Boeing) 737 looking for a snake still right now.ā
Pelley said he had taken 30 minutes to drive to the airport and was then delayed by security before he could reach the airliner.
An airline official said the flight was delayed around two hours.
Because the snake is native to the Brisbane region, Pelley suspects it came aboard inside a passengerās luggage and escaped during the two-hour flight from Brisbane to Melbourne.
For quarantine reasons, the snake canāt be returned to the wild.
The snake, which is a protected species, has been given to a Melbourne veterinarian to find a home with a licensed snake keeper.