Northmead: Emergency Snake Removal Urban Reptile Removal 0418 633 474
Emergency Snake Removal in Northmead
Call Urban Reptile Removal on 0418 633 474
If you've found a snake in your Northmead garden, on a path, near the driveway or anywhere else on the property, call 0418 633 474. We're usually on site within around thirty minutes depending on traffic and access, and we operate twenty-four hours across the suburb and the wider Hills District. When a snake appears unexpectedly, the right move is straightforward. Stop, step back, keep your distance, call us, and let us handle it.
Why Northmead Gets the Snake Activity It Does
Northmead has the kind of landscape that supports a real reptile population, and the work we do here reflects that. The suburb sits across the Toongabbie Creek and Darling Mills Creek catchments, with retained bushland pockets, drainage corridors and connecting reserve threading through the residential streets. Bidjigal Reserve sits within reach to the north-east, and the corridor running through to Winston Hills, North Rocks, Baulkham Hills and Old Toongabbie connects the suburb into one of the more continuous reptile habitat networks in the Hills District.
The housing stock matters too. Northmead has a lot of older established homes on large blocks, deep backyards, mature eucalypts, sandstone retaining walls, shaded garden corners and the kind of established planting that's had decades to grow in. The terrain itself, with slopes, gully blocks and stone garden features, gives snakes plenty of hiding options once they're on a property.
Snakes aren't appearing in Northmead because something is wrong with a property. They're appearing because the suburb is built on top of, and continuous with, a landscape that naturally supports them.
The Reptiles We Attend in Northmead
Diamond Python. A regular feature of our Northmead work, particularly near the reserves, creek lines and older parts of the suburb with dense gardens. Non-venomous, but large, adults reach two to three metres and they're powerfully built. The bushland corridors, mature gardens and older roof spaces sustain a resident population, and roof cavities are the standout job category here. Pythons follow rodents into the roof and settle in. We also find them stretched across warm retaining walls, curled behind thick shrubs, on sandstone steps, in pergolas and along gutters. They rely on camouflage rather than speed, and usually stay still when you find them. They don't chase, they don't behave aggressively. If you hear soft movement in the ceiling or see one anywhere on the property, call 0418 633 474.
Red-bellied Black Snake. Common along the Toongabbie Creek and Darling Mills Creek corridors, in shaded gullies and on properties with pools, ponds or thick damp garden beds. They follow frogs, so frog activity (particularly after rain) tends to bring them through. Venomous, but generally far less defensive than Browns. They will move away if given the chance.
Golden-crowned Snake. Common in Northmead, although most residents never see one. Small, nocturnal, with a pale crown-like marking across the head and a pink belly. During the day they shelter under stones, pot plants, timber sleepers, leaf litter, loose bark and shaded mulch beds. The deep gardens and bush pockets of Northmead give them countless hiding places. Venomous, but the bite causes only local symptoms in most cases and is not regarded as dangerous to adults, still warrants professional handling. We usually only relocate them when one has accidentally entered a home, garage or enclosed space.
Green Tree Snake. Common in Northmead, particularly in mature gardens, along fences, in pergolas and around roof lines. Slender, bright green or olive, fast-moving, completely harmless. They feed on skinks, geckos and small frogs and are excellent climbers, which is why they sometimes turn up at elevated parts of the property. Non-venomous, but a snake inside the house still warrants professional removal.
Eastern Brown Snake. Less common in Northmead than the species above, but present, particularly on the drier blocks and around properties with rodent activity, chicken coops or accumulated yard storage. Highly venomous. Step back, keep a visual from a safe distance, and call us on 0418 633 474.
Blue-tongued Lizard. Not a snake, but the reptile we are called for almost as often. Blue-tongues are large, slow-moving native skinks that get mistaken for snakes because of their size and the way they flatten their bodies when threatened. They are harmless, beneficial, and good for a garden, they eat snails, slugs and insects. Better to call and have us confirm than to assume.
Which Species Follows What
The species mix in Northmead makes more sense once you know what each one is following. Diamond Pythons follow rats and mice, which is why they so often end up in roof cavities. Red-bellied Black Snakes follow frogs and moisture, which is why they concentrate along the creeks and around pool pump housings. Golden-crowned Snakes follow small lizards and skinks under leaf litter and stonework. Green Tree Snakes follow skinks and geckos through gardens and along fence lines. Eastern Browns follow rodents through the drier parts of the suburb. Sightings increase after rain, through warm weather, and in early summer when reptiles are most active.
Where We Find Reptiles on Northmead Properties
For Diamond Pythons: roof cavities are the standout, particularly on older homes with tiled roofs and small gaps under the eaves. Also along gutters and roof edges, in pergolas and outdoor entertainment areas, on sandstone retaining walls, curled behind thick shrubs and on sunny garden paths.
For Red-bellied Black Snakes: pool pump housings, pool surrounds and water features, garden beds with thick mulch against boundary fences, under decks and verandahs in shaded damp corners, along fences backing onto Toongabbie Creek, Darling Mills Creek or the wetter sections of local drainage.
For Golden-crowned Snakes: under sandstone blocks, around rockeries and leaf litter, beneath timber piles, paths and outdoor tiles, around damp sheltered corners of the garden.
For Green Tree Snakes: along fences, through pergolas, around roof lines, in mature shrubs and along garden edges.
For Eastern Browns: garages, sheds with accumulated yard storage, around hot water systems, along long boundary fences, around chicken coops and outdoor pet bowls.
What to Do If You See a Snake in Northmead
Step back. Bring children and pets indoors. If possible, keep a visual on the snake from a safe distance. Don't try to move it, contain it, photograph it from up close or identify the species. Call 0418 633 474. We'll talk you through what to do until we arrive.
If you hear movement in the roof through the warmer months and you live on a bushland-edge or creek-line street, a Diamond Python is one of the more likely explanations. Possums and rats are the others. We can tell the difference on site.
What Actually Reduces Reptile Activity on a Northmead Property
The deterrent products sold at hardware stores, powders, sprays, ultrasonic devices, do not work. Skip them.
For Diamond Pythons specifically, reducing rodent activity in the roof is the single most useful thing. Pythons follow rats. If a Python turns up in the ceiling, the rats got there first. Seal roof entry points where you can, keep the roof clear of stored items that draw rodents, and address roof rodent activity through proper rodent control.
For Red-bellied Black Snakes, keep pool pump housings clear and unappealing as shelter. Thin out heavy garden beds along boundary fences. Manage frog activity where it has become concentrated against the house, without killing the frogs, they're protected.
For Eastern Browns, reducing rodent activity is the most effective measure. Tidy sheds and outdoor storage. Seal gaps under structures. Keep grass short along boundary fences.
If snakes appear repeatedly in the same part of your property, we can attend and identify what's drawing them in. Shade, moisture, dense vegetation, stored materials, heat-retaining stonework, or concentrated prey activity. Once the cause is identified, the adjustments are usually straightforward.
Urban Reptile Removal 0418 633 474. Licensed, insured, on call 24/7 across Northmead and the wider Hills District corridor.

