A snake catcher in Australia safely rescued four huge pythons from a home in two days and released them into the wild.

Snake catcher Stuart McKenzie with the Sunshine Coast Snake Catchers 24/7 took to Facebook on Tuesday to share the incident.

McKenzie wrote that he has responded to the residence in Buderim several times in the last few days after receiving calls of snake sightings.

"With it being the middle of breeding season we are regularly getting called out to multiple snakes at one residence," he wrote.

According to McKenzie, he removed 4 carpet pythons from the home in two days. The video of the rescue shows a male and a female carpet python about to mate on the top of the deck, which the snake catcher removed the same day.

The clip then cuts to another python that is seen slithering on a chair on the same deck. McKenzie says in the video that the snake "is active and on the search" for a female.

"He knows that there was a female here," he says in the video before grabbing it with his bare hands and placing the reptile in a bag.

The video then cuts to the snake catcher arriving at the same home after receiving a call that a big snake was found in the garden. The clip shows him safely removing the "beautiful" snake and releasing it into the wild.

"We catch a lot of Carpet Pythons every week but it never gets old. Such a cool snake!" McKenzie wrote in the caption accompanying the video on Facebook.

Last year, Joshua Castle, a snake catcher from Brisbane, Australia, had spoken to International Business Times about why snakes end up in unusual places like bedrooms, kitchens and toilets.

"Smaller species often get brought inside the home by a cat, larger species end up inside by accident through cat/dog doors and/or flyscreen holes due to temperature. It may be too hot outside so they need to cool off inside on tiles," Castle told IBT.

"They also sneak in through doors and windows that are left open for longer than needed. Some species of snakes can slither up the pipework to your toilet/sink/shower, this often happens by accident too, they either were looking for water or they got into a disagreement with a cat and bolted into the sewage," he added.

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Burmese python Pixabay