Snake Catcher Riverview
If you need a snake catcher in Riverview, CALL NOW on 0418 633 474. Urban Reptile Removal attends Riverview every day of the year — usually on site within 30 minutes.
Stay calm and keep your distance. Move children and pets clear of the area, but keep your eyes on the snake from a safe spot. The most useful thing you can do before we arrive is maintain visual contact — a snake that's been watched is far easier to find. You don't need to take a photo or identify the species — just watch where it goes.
About Riverview
Riverview sits on the ridge above Tambourine Bay, with the bushland of Tambourine Bay Reserve and the Lane Cove River foreshore forming the eastern and southern boundaries. St Ignatius' College and its surrounding playing fields anchor the centre of the suburb, with established residential streets running between the school grounds, the bushland reserves and the river. The character is mature North Shore residential — large established blocks, dense canopy, sandstone outcrops, and a layout where almost every property sits within a few streets of bushland or water. That setting produces consistent diamond python work and reliable red-belly callouts through the warmer months.
Golden Crowned Snakes, like this one, are one of the most common snakes we find in Riverview
What we see in Riverview
Diamond pythons are the signature species. The bushland connections to Lane Cove National Park, the Tambourine Bay reserve corridor, and the mature roof cavities of the established housing stock sustain a strong resident population. Roof cavity callouts run year-round.
Red-bellied black snakes work the damp gullies, the foreshore drainage, and properties with pools, ponds or thick shaded garden beds. Consistent through summer.
Eastern brown snakes are uncommon — the bushland character doesn't suit them. Occasional sightings on the drier ridge blocks.
Golden-crowned snakes turn up in the sandstone country and shaded leaf-litter gardens after summer rain. Venomous but their bite is medically minor.
Lace monitors appear from the bushland reserves in summer.
Blue-tongued lizards and Eastern water dragons are part of Riverview's everyday wildlife. Water dragons in particular are common along Tambourine Bay and the school playing fields. Many of the snake calls we attend turn out to be one of these — never an issue, always happy to attend and confirm.
Where snakes go on Riverview properties
The hiding spots reflect the bushland-and-water character: roof cavities and eaves for pythons, under decking and pergolas, behind hot water systems, around pool pumps and filtration boxes, in thick damp garden beds, along sandstone retaining walls, under garden edging, behind air-conditioning units, in garages and storage areas, and through the gaps between the house and the back reserve or foreshore boundary. We work through them methodically once we arrive.
After we leave
Every Urban Reptile Removal job ends with a brief walk-through of the property. We tell you why the snake was likely there, what's drawing it in, and what you can change to reduce future activity — short grass, no clutter along the fence line, stored items lifted off the ground, gaps sealed where rodents travel, and no pet food bowls left outside overnight. No snake repellent sprays, no gimmicks. Just the things that actually work.
Call Urban Reptile Removal — Snake Catcher Riverview
For a snake catcher in Riverview, CALL NOW on 0418 633 474. Snake in the roof, snake in the yard, snake by the pool, snake near the bay — every day of the year. Urban Reptile Removal.
About Chris Williams
Urban Reptile Removal was founded by Chris Williams, one of Australia's most experienced reptile specialists. Chris has spent more than three decades working professionally with reptiles and amphibians, including roles with Taronga Zoo, the Australian Reptile Park and a wide range of wildlife organisations throughout New South Wales.
He is the founder of Snake Ranch, which grew to become Australia's largest reptile breeding facility, and is the author of seven books covering Australian reptiles, amphibians and wildlife. Since 2014, Chris has served as President of the Australian Herpetological Society, helping to promote reptile research, education and conservation across the country.
Today, Chris oversees the Urban Reptile Removal network, training and licensing the snake catchers who respond to jobs throughout Sydney and regional New South Wales. When you contact Urban Reptile Removal, you're dealing with a team built on decades of practical field experience and a genuine understanding of Australia's reptiles.
We wrote the book on urban reptiles - https://sydneysnakecatcher.com.au/shop/

