news

[VIDEO] The Rainy Weather Is Causing Snakes To Appear All Over Subang Jaya

Residents in Subang Jaya are seeing more and more of the limbless reptile.

Cover image via Pravda

Looks like the rainy December weather is bringing more than just downpours to Subang Jaya.

A hair-rising video showing a python crossing the road in the town had recently gone viral on social media.

Image via SJ Echo

The video was uploaded on 1 December by SJ Echo, a Facebook community page. At the time of writing, It has since gotten 49,000 views with over 1,000 shares.

The 12-second clip - filmed by a resident near SS14, a street in Subang Jaya - shows the huge reptile slithering across the road slowly with a bulge in the stomach

EDITOR'S NOTE: Give Us a Call at 012-3288557 if you spot or catch a snake in Subang Jaya. We would like to click a few photos. But please call the Bomba at 03-5634 9444 to catch the snake before you call us. TQ

Snakes Appearing All Over Subang Jaya

SUBANG Jaya is not only attracting a lot of lightning these days. Even snakes are popping up all over the neighbourhood with a frequency of sightings that's making residents nervous.

The latest incident was just several nights ago when a huge python literally slithered across the road in SS14 in the middle of the night. A resident who was heading home stopped his car in the middle of the road when he realised what he thought to be a piece of wood in the middle of the road was actually a large python crossing the road.

Fearing that the snake would attack, the resident stayed in his car and recorded this video of the python which appeared to have a small bulge in its belly; indicating that it had probably just swallowed a small kitten-sized mammal.

The almost 8-feet long python disappeared into the drain on the other side of the road when police officers who were on their rounds came to assist.

ADUN Subang Jaya Hannah Yeoh said reports on sightings of snakes which included cobras had increased over the past few months.

"We have received many reports from residents of snakes appearing in their homes and surrounding areas. This could be caused by the changing weather patterns which drive the snakes out of their habitat into built-up areas."

"I have written to the Department of Wildlife and National Parks (Perhilitan) and their advise is for residents to clear any undergrowth in the neighbourhood. They said snakes are hard to lay a trap to catch as they move around and do not stay in any particular area for long," she said.

Hannah said sightings of snakes had been recorded in SS14, SS19, USJ3A, USJ1, USJ5 and PJS 11 Bandar Sunway.

She urged residents who encountered a snake to call for help from the Fire and Rescue Department.

The contact number for the SS17 Fire and Rescue Department is 03-5634 9444.

Posted by SJ Echo on Wednesday, November 30, 2016

"A resident who was heading home stopped his car in the middle of the road when he realised what he thought to be a piece of wood in the middle of the road was actually a large python crossing the road," SJ Echo wrote in the video post.

"Fearing that the snake would attack, the resident stayed in his car and recorded this video of the python which appeared to have a small bulge in its belly, indicating that it had probably just swallowed a small kitten-sized mammal."

The python then disappeared into the drain on the other side of the road.

Since the video went viral, fellow residents in Subang have started voicing out their concerns over the increasing sight of snakes in the area

Image via SJ Echo
Image via SJ Echo
Image via SJ Echo
Image via SJ Echo

According to SJ Echo, Subang Jaya state assemblyman Hannah Yeoh has been made known of the occurrence

Image via Alchetron

"We have received many reports from residents of snakes appearing in their homes and surrounding areas. This could be caused by the changing weather patterns which drive the snakes out of their habitat into built-up areas," she said.

Yeoh also added that most of the snake sightings were reported in SS14, SS19, USJ3A, USJ1, USJ5, and PJS 11 Bandar Sunway

Image via Cuteness

She urged residents who encountered a snake to call for help from the Fire and Rescue Department.

The contact number for the SS17 Fire and Rescue Department is 03-5634 9444.

It is uncommon for snakes to appear during the rainy season. Due to a drop in temperature, the reptiles are known to migrate to seek warmer shelter.

Image via IBT Times

"They (snakes) tend to come out from their natural habitat to find warmer places and this is when many of them are seen slithering into houses," said Civil Defence's disaster management, operations and logistics officer, Lieutenant Norasmawi Abdul Mutalib.

More trending news on SAYS:

You may be interested in: