Your web browser is no longer supported. To improve your experience update it here

Queensland snake catcher left bemused after call out for beetle

A Queensland snake catcher got a lot less than he bargained for when he got the call to investigate some hissing sounds at a house in Townsville, in Far North Queensland.
James Bindoff, from Townsville Snake Catcher, said he took a call this morning from a very worried local at Heatley.
The caller had heard a loud hissing sound coming from a dog cage outside their property and thought it was coming from a large python.
The rhinocerous beetle James Bindoff found after being called out to a house for a suspected python.
The rhinocerous beetle James Bindoff found after being called out to a house for a suspected python. (Townsville Snake Catcher)
But - when Bindoff went to investigate - there was no reptile in sight, just a very vocal rhinocerous beetle.
"It's a first for me," James Bindoff told 9news.com.au.
"It's only an inch and a half but you can hear it hiss from 10 metres away.
"Which is why they thought it was a big snake."
Just because it is winter doesn't mean snakes aren't out and about. Point and case, there is a coastal carpet python hiding somewhere in this picture. It was removed after giving a homeowner in Mudjimba, on the Sunshine Coast, a fright recently.
A snake is hiding somewhere in this picture. Can you see it?
The beetle was relocated to a neighbouring tree to continue its life cycle.
The insects only breed for two to four months during their adult stages and die shortly after laying their eggs in rooting wood, Bindoff explained.
Sign up here to receive our daily newsletters and breaking news alerts, sent straight to your inbox.
CONTACT US

Send your photos, videos and stories to 9News contact@9news.com.au

Coupons: Save up to 80% on Today's Deals with Amazon promo codes