Australian actor removes snake from plane – and earns a free drink

Australian actor removes snake from plane – and earns a free drink


Australian Disney megastar Andre Rerekura got rid of a snake from his flying — incomes him a isolated drink as a praise.

Chatting with Australia’s ABC News, Rerekura shared that sooner than his Virgin Airways flying from Broome to Perth took off on November 21, a passenger yelled a few snake being enroute. The preliminary take-off year was once in the end driven again, because the staff attempted to determine methods to maintain the status.

“They pretty much shut the whole plane down and everyone was going to get disembarked and sent off the plane, which we weren’t that keen for because everyone wanted to go home,” he recalled to ABC Information.

He added: “It was once a minute little bit of a unusual tale to suppose it was once true, to listen to that there was once a snake at the aircraft, so I don’t suppose a dozen of public believed it.”

However, Rerekura — who starred in Disney Plus’s Shipwreck Hunters Australia miniseries — said that he noticed the “crazy cute” Stimson’s python, a non-poisonous snake, next to his seat.

“As soon as I saw it, I identified it pretty easily… so I knew it was safe [and] I knew it was just scared and super shy,” he explained, noting that he didn’t have a problem picking up the snake and taking it off the aircraft.

He shared that everyone on the flight was so grateful for his bravery that the flight crew even gave him a token of appreciation: a free drink.

Disney star Andre Rerekura reentering his flight after removing a snake from the plane
Disney star Andre Rerekura reentering his flight after removing a snake from the plane (Instagram)

“I think everyone was relieved that they didn’t have to get off the plane and then a lot of people were happy that the snake was safe,” he explained, adding the flight was only delayed 20 minutes due to the incident. “The staff were awesome, they gave me a complimentary drink, I had a soda water.”

Another video of the flight posted to Instagram by 7News Australia showed the passengers applauding Rerekura, as he was seen reentering the plane after removing the snake.

“There is never a dull moment in aviation,  but that certainly takes the cake,” a flight attendant said over the intercom. “We do have a gentleman onboard who has safely taken it off the aircraft.”

Stimson’s pythons, which are non-venomous, have a “pattern of large reddish-brown blotches along their body with a paler background,” according to the Australian Museum.

This isn’t the first time that a snake has made its way onto an aircraft. In January, passengers on a Thai AirAsia flight from Bangkok to Phuket were shocked when they spotted a snake in the cabin’s overhead compartment.

At the time, the tiny snake was seen slithering over the cabin lights on an AirAsia Airbus A320 plane. One of the cabin crew members reportedly tried to capture the snake inside an empty plastic water bottle. The snake was later swept into a garbage bag using a plastic bottle.

In May, a passenger traveling from Miami International Airport in Florida was stopped by security after he was found with a bag of snakes hidden down his trousers. A TSA spokesman told The Independent that the passenger was attempting to take an international flight but had “basically admitted there were snakes in his pants” when the alarms had sounded.

The man was subsequently forbidden to board his flight, the spokesperson said, adding that such incidents were not “commonplace”.



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