We used to call it the "Common Brown", but it was thought people weren't taking it seriously enough. "It's just a Brown snake" didn't didn't really accord it the respect it deserves.
I've got some old school neighbours here in rural Vic...nice old couple...around Christmas I saw the old fella coming up the path to the front door...I thought he was going to deposit a bit of Christmas cake or something but was just giving me the heads up...a brown under the hedge out front...I'm on a main road and everything...the sketchy little fuckers can show up anywhere...good times
Yes eastern browns are VERY common. The most common snake you see. Up northern australia you also have the King Brown and the Taipan which all look very similar too. Taipan is the most venemous snake in the world
When I was a kid, we spent plenty of time in the bush in the gold field areas and saw lots of snakes. Back then, the Tiger Snakes seened the most common.
I live in Eastern South Dakota. No venomous snakes here. Whew! When I see this and read about Australia’s nasty creatures, maybe someday I’ll just go to New Zealand instead.
@John-jt4dj The Inland Taipan is the most toxic venomous snake. The Eastern Brown snake is responsible for 60 percent of the snake bite deaths in Australia. The Inland Taipan lives in the remote black soil region of Australia where they rarely come into contact with humans nobody has ever died from the bite of the Inland Taipan.
The coastal taipan is generally considered to be the most dangerous snake in Australia. This one though is highly defensive and much more common to encounter, hence why many more people are bitten by it. The reason that the taipan is considered more dangerous, at least to handle, is because it is similarly temperamental, very long, and it has massive fangs and a huge venom yield, which the eastern brown lacks. It’s also extremely precise when it strikes. A bite from a taipan has nearly a 100% fatality rate without antivenom, and they are very willing and able to give you a bite.
Out of curiosity, why do snake catchers seem to rarely use the grabbing tool (with the jaw-like end)? It seems much safer than a simple hook, and a much easier way to control the head.
Leave it to an individual with an Australia accent to make catching the second most venomous snake in the world not only look easy but not break a sweat while doing so. Hats off to Australia for contending with some of the craziest creatures going.
@@robertmendick3195 there an interesting spider, their deadly to humans and all other primates but if they bite your cat or dog the pet hardly knows it, probably curtains for the spider when the cat or dog tears him to pieces.
Had rattlesnakes everywhere at our California hills home. Meh! Got used to them, learned alot and learned to appreciate them. As an American to an Australian... that aint a rattlesnake. If i wore a hat, id take it off out of respect. Those scare the living soul out of me. Pretty much everything in Australia scares the soul outta me. :D
I live in Australia, plenty of eastern browns around, but if you leave them alone, they leave you alone, now it’s only the 2nd, first place goes to the inland taipan or fierce snake. Name says it all. Welcome to Australia. 😂😂
@rcuintheshed6981 well a friend of my daughters was driving Along a desert type road when a pretty big tarantula dropped out underneath her dash,in panic she lost control and went off the road( luckily no damage ) another car pulls up check on her ( she had fled the car ) And they had to call help to police .When they came they were non too keen on searching for it .But eventually they did get it out the car .Eeeeeek
I remember watching a interview with Chris Hemsworth Thor and you're one of his rooms there was a brown snake I think it was his kids room. No way I'd live near things this venomous etc. then again I've been married twice. Lol
Probably a ratsnake. Copperheads can climb, but it's to reach cicadas. They are mostly ground dwelling snakes. Ratsnakes however are found in the craziest places
di Indonesia itu ular tanah atau ular kayu,gayanya memang seperti cobra Jika bertemu orang pasti berdesis seperti cobra dan tubuhnya keras juga kaku seperti kayu jika di pegang.Berbisa tapi bisanya level tikus dan binatang2 kecil
Well knowing its color is brown... at keadt all lnow yo Be AWARE.. We have browm snames in Florida too but they are NON VENOUMOUS smaller and you font see them much.
I'm glad I live n the US where it's easy to learn and identify the venomous from non venomous... I enjoy catching the snakes so it's nice to live where most r harmless
Lived in Ks almost 50 years, fishing most of the summer or hunting & have come across several species of rattle snakes like Dimond backs, timber rattlers. Also copperheads, water moccasins, cotton mouths. Have personally laid eyes on them all. My dad was in the navy & has poor hearing from artillery shell explosion on the ship so he can't hear rattlers. We were fishing when he accidentally stepped on a diamond backs tail. He always wore boots that probably kept him from being bit numerous times. Anyway he stepped on a rattlers trail & a huge part of the rattle came off & was still rattling like crazy after the fact. He picked it up & threw it across the creek to me so I could see it. Was weird to see it still rattling after being detached. Was a huge rattle too, had to be an older or bigger snake. Anyway years of seeing those makes you stay aware of your surroundings. We later moved to the Seattle area & came across a small snake & I wanted to know if it was venomous. My husband said there's absolutely no venomous snakes this side of the mountains. I was like are you really thinking that way. He's literally a book smart genius but has very little street smarts or common sense. He was in his 50s at that time & I said you can't just rely on Google or what a book says to know whether a snake's venomous or not. He's asked why I was like seriously you're really asking me that. I said people get them as pets & decide they either don't want them or can't take care of them & they'll release them anywhere. He looked stunned, like he would've automatically thought it was non venomous & probably stupidity would try to pick it up. Yeah he just assumed he was in the clear of any venomous snakes just because of where we were. Me I'm like I have nieces that are what I call a dim bulb that had a bunch of venomous snakes , they just disappeared one day. Wouldn't surprise me if she just let them go because she couldn't afford to feed them. I'll never pick up or mess with a snake before knowing if it's safe to handle. According to Google ks isn't suppose to have water moccasins but I guarantee you they're in some areas as far as Wichita. I had to laugh at the husband thinking he was all clear. I'm like how did you make it this far lol
@@Lady-Carmakazi u sure they aren't water snakes instead of cotton mouth? They look pretty similar, can b hard to tell apart if u don't know what ur looking for... yes ur correct ppl do turn loose snakes all the time so there's a possibility u could run across a non native venomous species, but certain snakes won't survive n certain climates so u can rule that out n most places other than Florida... learning to identify the native snakes still allows u to know what ur dealing with, and n the off chance u find a non native venomous species, well then u know it's not native and probably shouldn't touch it
Yeah we get a few eastern browns around home. I've accidentally come face to face with one when I ducked under a fall tree to continue my bushwalking trip. As soon as I went to stand back up I realised it was about three feet sway from me in a. Striking position. I just stood very still for about 30seconds and it turned and took off. They just wanna be left alone mate.The idea of a pissed off bear terrifies me 😃
Plus there's heaps of beautiful pythons in Australia. Dad's got two big carpet photos breeding on his place both around 12 foot. We used to catch and relocate when I was a kid. They'd be in our chook pen
@@Lady-Carmakazi I'm in Virginia and although Timber Rattlers are somewhat common around here, I've only come across 1 and by 'come across', I mean face to face. One decided to climb up in the engine of my truck for a warm nap. I obviously didn't know and it came out from under my hood (by my wipers) and up my windshield while I was driving. I quickly decided to give him the truck. Lol Luckily, I was in an open area (parking lot) and not going too fast cuz I dove out while it was still moving. Lol As u can probably guess, I'm not good around snakes. Animal control kindly came out and got him. I got my truck back, as well as a video of the capture from WAY across the lot to remember my adventure. As if I'd ever forget! :)
@@mindeloman I just rewatched this the other day. Correct about the shed. The #1, the inland taipan, he lays down and lets a wild one lick his face. Crazy
There's damn near a venom ous snake in every color like if u dont know ur snakes idnjus stay away cause ppl be saying this shit bout hella snakes most venomous snake stays the title half the time
How do you live there, poor guys, among all this horrors? The only poisonous thing we have is the viper, you have to go into the forest to get it and the mortality rate from it is about the same as from a bee sting
for those wondering, it's an Eastern Brown.
@Calvin The Carnotaurus Actually, I was thinking about what I was going to make for breakfast but thanks for asking...
I was wondering, I was wondering about that one, th I thought 💭 the western brown was more deadly than this one,
Guessing that you are going to be in serious trouble if you are interested, from either snake bite or so I'm told,
I thought it was a brown mamba
I was thinking that to
You'd think that something this bad-ass would have been given a more appropriate name than, "Oh, that's a Brown Snake."😁
If it’s brown flush it down
You know what's even more ironic? It's actually apart of the black snake family 😂
We used to call it the "Common Brown", but it was thought people weren't taking it seriously enough. "It's just a Brown snake" didn't didn't really accord it the respect it deserves.
Eastern Brown..put some respect on his name lol
@@kontrast4361 No it isn't. I think you're thinking of a king Brown not an Eastern Brown.
That's one dangerous snake
I've got some old school neighbours here in rural Vic...nice old couple...around Christmas I saw the old fella coming up the path to the front door...I thought he was going to deposit a bit of Christmas cake or something but was just giving me the heads up...a brown under the hedge out front...I'm on a main road and everything...the sketchy little fuckers can show up anywhere...good times
No thank you!😮😂
I can hear Steve Irwin saying,”Ohhhh! What a beauty! She’s a little grumpy!!” ❤
1 sek. Ciak 🚑⚰️
Forever and always an inspiration and a legend. 🥹😭🖤
Such a legend This man , gone but never Forgotten
isn't she gorgeous ?
@@chrisbarr959 she’s a little rippah!
He got pretty close to his hand there at one point 😮
My girlfriend reacts in the same way when I try to comfort her after an argument 😂
Okay Dana White 😂😂😂😂
HAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!!
You will have better response if you stop stuffing her into a big cloth bag.
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
🤣🤣🤣
The strength and quickness it can nearly climb it’s length vertically 😮
Hate Snake - we also have the Inland Taipan lol but that's another story
So that's normal in Australia like the way a diamond back rattlesnake is here in South Texas? But the Eastern Brown is way venomous and super fast.
Yes eastern browns are VERY common. The most common snake you see. Up northern australia you also have the King Brown and the Taipan which all look very similar too. Taipan is the most venemous snake in the world
Yup, I've lost 2 dogs in 10 years to brown snakes unfortunately.
When the environment makes up for its lack of volcanoes with lots of biological landmines lol
When I was a kid, we spent plenty of time in the bush in the gold field areas and saw lots of snakes.
Back then, the Tiger Snakes seened the most common.
I live in Eastern South Dakota. No venomous snakes here. Whew! When I see this and read about Australia’s nasty creatures, maybe someday I’ll just go to New Zealand instead.
That is just the nastiest snake in Australia. Very venomous and aggressive, this one is quite calm.
The Inland Taipan is the nastiest land snake in the world. The Common Brown is second.
@John-jt4dj The Inland Taipan is the most toxic venomous snake. The Eastern Brown snake is responsible for 60 percent of the snake bite deaths in Australia. The Inland Taipan lives in the remote black soil region of Australia where they rarely come into contact with humans nobody has ever died from the bite of the Inland Taipan.
Not aggressive. Just scared.
People are far more aggressive toward snakes than they are to people.
The coastal taipan is generally considered to be the most dangerous snake in Australia. This one though is highly defensive and much more common to encounter, hence why many more people are bitten by it. The reason that the taipan is considered more dangerous, at least to handle, is because it is similarly temperamental, very long, and it has massive fangs and a huge venom yield, which the eastern brown lacks. It’s also extremely precise when it strikes. A bite from a taipan has nearly a 100% fatality rate without antivenom, and they are very willing and able to give you a bite.
@@Cadec247 “dangerous” isn’t a well defined term. Coastal taipans are not to be messed with, but deaths from them are extremely rare.
Out of curiosity, why do snake catchers seem to rarely use the grabbing tool (with the jaw-like end)? It seems much safer than a simple hook, and a much easier way to control the head.
It's safer for the handler but can be very hard on the animal. Seems they can be injured pretty easily , getting squeezed too tight
ua-cam.com/video/RDidC3ZbZmA/v-deo.html
That link shows y some choose not to use snake tongs and use hook instead
@@e-reptiledysfunction2243 Thanks! (Hilarious channel name, btw!)
If I was capturing them for a living I'd be using the grabbers,
"Hey guys im in australia..."
*"Yoiiiink"*
I am afraid to visit Australia 😢
Lived here 50 years seen ten at most !
And me
@@martineaton425yeah, that’s 10 too many for me😂. In all seriousness I guess spotting 10 over a 50 year period isn’t too bad… be safe!
@@martineaton425so it's one snake every 5 years 😅
@@martineaton425That's 10 too many
Leave it to an individual with an Australia accent to make catching the second most venomous snake in the world not only look easy but not break a sweat while doing so. Hats off to Australia for contending with some of the craziest creatures going.
well! 12 gauge woulda been faster and safer..
A common snake in eastern Melbourne we live in the suburbs and have seen more than I would have expected. Lots in the bush.
The Australian funnel-web spider is another venomous creature whose bite requires immediate medical attention
In the 70’s there was no antidote for that bite
Worlds most deadly spider 🕷
@@robertmendick3195 there an interesting spider, their deadly to humans and all other primates but if they bite your cat or dog the pet hardly knows it, probably curtains for the spider when the cat or dog tears him to pieces.
Extremely dangerous!
Very dangerous!
understatement
Had rattlesnakes everywhere at our California hills home. Meh! Got used to them, learned alot and learned to appreciate them. As an American to an Australian... that aint a rattlesnake. If i wore a hat, id take it off out of respect. Those scare the living soul out of me. Pretty much everything in Australia scares the soul outta me. :D
😮 Big Eastern, Bloody great skills mate, BALLS of Steel 😂
Bite of that can put you down in minutes especially the young and old
That is one spicy death noodle
The Coastal taipan is another nasty one
Looks lightning fast too!
They are hell fast
Inland Taipan is the 1st in the world
But not as frequent as the Coastal taipan which is a certified killer
@@trevorkinchen6124 the mambas in South Africa are supposedly very aggressive ...even chase people ..but that might be an urban myth !
Also known as the Fierce snake. Watched the 10 most venomous with Steve Irwin and holy moley, he got up real close with that one. Crikey! ❤️
Where as Cobras can only strike forward and down the eastern brown can also strike backwards and up.
A snake you don't want to mess with!
🏃🏃🏃🏃🏃🏃🏃🏃as fast as you can
I HATE SNAKES
What a beautiful specimen, Big Eastern.
Not angry, just very scared.
I live in Australia, plenty of eastern browns around, but if you leave them alone, they leave you alone, now it’s only the 2nd, first place goes to the inland taipan or fierce snake. Name says it all. Welcome to Australia. 😂😂
I've just said those words here 👌🇦🇺 well said bro
Was in OZ in the 90s for 5 weeks .Did a 2000 mile road trip .Never saw one snake or a spider .
They saw you bro 😂
Now you mention it I've done 300,000klms not one snake inside the car either 🤔
@rcuintheshed6981 well a friend of my daughters was driving Along a desert type road when a pretty big tarantula dropped out underneath her dash,in panic she lost control and went off the road( luckily no damage ) another car pulls up check on her ( she had fled the car ) And they had to call help to police .When they came they were non too keen on searching for it .But eventually they did get it out the car .Eeeeeek
I lived in Brisbane for two years and never saw one snake
@Willsey you don't want to be there are the mo ,it's bloody cold.
I remember watching a interview with Chris Hemsworth Thor and you're one of his rooms there was a brown snake I think it was his kids room. No way I'd live near things this venomous etc. then again I've been married twice. Lol
Sorry Stewart but you can have your job 😉
The size of it! I caught myself saying "holy shit' out loud. You are SO brave❤
More like Daft 🏃🏃🏃🏃🏃🏃🏃🏃🏃🏃🏃🏃🏃
I have found a snake inside my home before. They can go anywhere they want. A copperhead had babies in my attic.
Probably not the wisest way to go about it. You must have a filthy house 😂
They can keep the house 🏠! Because I will be moving, lol 😂😅😂😂..
@@jamesstewart8377 that doesn’t mean their house is filthy. It just means I found a way in. You’re not very judgmental are you?
Probably a ratsnake. Copperheads can climb, but it's to reach cicadas. They are mostly ground dwelling snakes. Ratsnakes however are found in the craziest places
I got those and the worst...blue belly black and red belly black under my house. QLD FARMLIFE 😂 we work around each other .
Yep, and we had to take out two black mama's out of the house in a week, I'm living in fear. They are everywhere...
That thing was climbing right up his arm!
Hell no, I wouldn't be touching that snake at all.
I am sooo glad there are people who do this on the world. My heartrate was going crazy watching you!
Mine too.
You need a MUCH longer stick mate.
Good place to invest in a pet mongoose.
New fear unlocked: Australia. Australian for Florida!
He's a big guy!
Only recently have they acquired the name eastern brown. Their original name was Fkimdead.
@@akathecops 😂
Remember, kids, this snake is defensive and not aggressive.
Brown Snakes will bluff charge and strike and will turn to escape if they feel threatened.
Yikes. That is a serious looking snake.
Let me guess: Australia?
YEP THATS AN EASTERN BROWN
di Indonesia itu ular tanah atau ular kayu,gayanya memang seperti cobra
Jika bertemu orang pasti berdesis seperti cobra dan tubuhnya keras juga kaku seperti kayu jika di pegang.Berbisa tapi bisanya level tikus dan binatang2 kecil
A lot around Copmanhurst EBS and COASTAL Taipans around Jakadgery..Rough Scale Snakes long the Clarence.
From Australia??
Whyu messin wit it if it so dangerus?
They are a company that removes snakes from peoples property
There's always the Australian laughing male commenting. Sigh... How about a bit of respect for the snake.
Well knowing its color is brown... at keadt all lnow yo Be AWARE.. We have browm snames in Florida too but they are NON VENOUMOUS smaller and you font see them much.
My buthole puckered watching this from 1/2 way around the world😂
I'm glad I live n the US where it's easy to learn and identify the venomous from non venomous... I enjoy catching the snakes so it's nice to live where most r harmless
Lived in Ks almost 50 years, fishing most of the summer or hunting & have come across several species of rattle snakes like Dimond backs, timber rattlers. Also copperheads, water moccasins, cotton mouths. Have personally laid eyes on them all. My dad was in the navy & has poor hearing from artillery shell explosion on the ship so he can't hear rattlers. We were fishing when he accidentally stepped on a diamond backs tail. He always wore boots that probably kept him from being bit numerous times. Anyway he stepped on a rattlers trail & a huge part of the rattle came off & was still rattling like crazy after the fact. He picked it up & threw it across the creek to me so I could see it. Was weird to see it still rattling after being detached. Was a huge rattle too, had to be an older or bigger snake. Anyway years of seeing those makes you stay aware of your surroundings. We later moved to the Seattle area & came across a small snake & I wanted to know if it was venomous. My husband said there's absolutely no venomous snakes this side of the mountains. I was like are you really thinking that way. He's literally a book smart genius but has very little street smarts or common sense. He was in his 50s at that time & I said you can't just rely on Google or what a book says to know whether a snake's venomous or not. He's asked why I was like seriously you're really asking me that. I said people get them as pets & decide they either don't want them or can't take care of them & they'll release them anywhere. He looked stunned, like he would've automatically thought it was non venomous & probably stupidity would try to pick it up. Yeah he just assumed he was in the clear of any venomous snakes just because of where we were. Me I'm like I have nieces that are what I call a dim bulb that had a bunch of venomous snakes , they just disappeared one day. Wouldn't surprise me if she just let them go because she couldn't afford to feed them. I'll never pick up or mess with a snake before knowing if it's safe to handle.
According to Google ks isn't suppose to have water moccasins but I guarantee you they're in some areas as far as Wichita.
I had to laugh at the husband thinking he was all clear. I'm like how did you make it this far lol
@@Lady-Carmakazi u sure they aren't water snakes instead of cotton mouth? They look pretty similar, can b hard to tell apart if u don't know what ur looking for... yes ur correct ppl do turn loose snakes all the time so there's a possibility u could run across a non native venomous species, but certain snakes won't survive n certain climates so u can rule that out n most places other than Florida... learning to identify the native snakes still allows u to know what ur dealing with, and n the off chance u find a non native venomous species, well then u know it's not native and probably shouldn't touch it
Yeah we get a few eastern browns around home. I've accidentally come face to face with one when I ducked under a fall tree to continue my bushwalking trip. As soon as I went to stand back up I realised it was about three feet sway from me in a. Striking position. I just stood very still for about 30seconds and it turned and took off. They just wanna be left alone mate.The idea of a pissed off bear terrifies me 😃
Plus there's heaps of beautiful pythons in Australia. Dad's got two big carpet photos breeding on his place both around 12 foot. We used to catch and relocate when I was a kid. They'd be in our chook pen
@@Lady-Carmakazi I'm in Virginia and although Timber Rattlers are somewhat common around here, I've only come across 1 and by 'come across', I mean face to face. One decided to climb up in the engine of my truck for a warm nap. I obviously didn't know and it came out from under my hood (by my wipers) and up my windshield while I was driving. I quickly decided to give him the truck. Lol Luckily, I was in an open area (parking lot) and not going too fast cuz I dove out while it was still moving. Lol As u can probably guess, I'm not good around snakes. Animal control kindly came out and got him. I got my truck back, as well as a video of the capture from WAY across the lot to remember my adventure. As if I'd ever forget! :)
What is it a fierce snake or an Eastern Brown same snake
They're not
Introduce branded Krait and king cobra to Australia, then this snake will be in limited population 😂😂.
Only in Australia - Eastern Brown Snake - Welcome to Spring
Australia also has the deadliest snake in the world
The Coastal Taipan and his cousin the inland Taipan.
If bitten by one of these say your prayers.
Many people say that the Eastern Brown is the most venomous snake in the world, not the Inland Taipan.
I remember this snake from the Crocidile Adventures with legend Steve Irwin
Was that the one Steve went around showing the top 10 venomous snakes? As I recall, he found the Brown in his over-crowded shed. Really miss that guy.
@@mindeloman I just rewatched this the other day. Correct about the shed. The #1, the inland taipan, he lays down and lets a wild one lick his face. Crazy
That ole Devil sliding all up too folks door,glad nobody was walking out,always look down before you walk
Too much discrimination in the comments. It's a snake. Color shouldn't matter.
It's not angry!
It's defensive for good reasons!
LEAVE IT ALONE!!!
Be nice if you could read or see what was going on behind all that useless writing
Thrown on top of everything.
There's damn near a venom ous snake in every color like if u dont know ur snakes idnjus stay away cause ppl be saying this shit bout hella snakes most venomous snake stays the title half the time
Tenacity isn't second period eastern brown snake has persona of all da snakes back off is not in dictionary Majestic of serpentology
key word could, im addicted to gambling so I'd rather leave it untreated
Pellet Gun, no one would know. Backyard firepit, no evidence.
When handling them do you have to rotate your wrist in order to keep their head away from you?
How do you live there, poor guys, among all this horrors? The only poisonous thing we have is the viper, you have to go into the forest to get it and the mortality rate from it is about the same as from a bee sting
Nice video, but you may want to include the species in the video or the heading.
That’s when I go inside and call animal control while I watch it from the window.
Oh that bad boy has been sunning & he's very angry you interrupted!
What a gorgeous sheila
"Steve Irwin"
I have had the dubious honour of getting bitten by one of there in my veggie garden one day.
😢
Australians : It is Eastern brown
Asians : It is Western White beneath !😂😂
Me and mangoose watching this together now he's attacking my screen
Gotta love these bludgers,they mean business! 😎😎
I'll bet there are NOT a lot of people trying to take your job....
自宅の庭に当たり前に居るのが恐ろしいですよね~
Good ole common brown!
Ever seen a ticklish Danger Noodle before 🐍 😮
The snake was there to ask the owner about their extended car warranty.
F. THAT.
Youve got balls of titanium my man. 😮
My anxiety was thru the roof just watching this!!
You are much more brave than I am much much more😮😮😮😮😮
12g number 4 load 👍👌🇦🇺💯
We didn't get to see it strike 3 times because they didn't slow the edit down 😤
Second most ?...Then what happens to Black Mamba and King Black Cobra
Their bites are gargantuan.
Why is is the inside of the mouth black if its not a black mamba
That’s me filming with a 2,000,000,000 x zoom.
It’s a little like our western king brown
Yaar koi hindi mai btaayega kee iss snake mai zehar hota hai yaa nhi.english kam samj aati hai bai logo.
I’ve gotten bit by one and I lived, didn’t even need to go to the hospital
Pseudonaja textilis
Its very nervous and mega fast snake