Snake Catcher TELOPEA — Urban Reptile Removal 0418 633 474
Telopea sits on the Vineyard Creek and Ponds Creek drainage corridor, sandwiched between Dundas, Carlingford and Oatlands, with a mix of older established residential streets, public housing precincts undergoing redevelopment, and unit blocks along the light rail corridor. The creek lines bring Red-bellied Black Snakes through year-round, the older blocks with sheds and accumulated yard storage sustain an Eastern Brown population, and the bushland connections to Dundas Valley occasionally deliver Diamond Pythons into roof spaces. Blue-tongued Lizards, Eastern Water Dragons along the creek lines, and geckos through the residential streets round out the local mix. Activity peaks September through April, with the busiest weeks following summer rain. We attend Telopea across residential, strata, redevelopment site and school callouts, including snake-in-the-house emergencies and Python-in-the-roof jobs.
Snake Catcher DUNDAS — Urban Reptile Removal 0418 633 474
If you have an unwanted snake call Urban Reptile Removal on 0418633474.
Dundas is a suburb where bush corridors, creeks, steep blocks, older homes, townhouses, new developments, and established gardens all blend together. With Vineyard Creek running through the area and large patches of connected bushland linking to Ermington, Rydalmere, Dundas Valley, and Oatlands, snakes naturally move through Dundas throughout the warmer months. Residents regularly see snakes in gardens, beside fences, under retaining walls, inside sheds, near driveways, along footpaths, and around creek lines. Urban Reptile Removal attends many snake callouts in Dundas every year, especially in spring and summer.
Snake Catcher CARLINGFORD — Urban Reptile Removal 0418 633 474
Carlingford sits on Hunts Creek, with corridors running west into Bidjigal Reserve and south through to Dundas Valley and the Parramatta River catchment. The mix of older Federation and weatherboard homes on large blocks, newer infill development, apartment complexes along the light rail and Pennant Hills Road, steep terraced blocks with sandstone retaining walls, and dense mature gardens produces one of the more varied snake catching job patterns in the area. Diamond Pythons are a particular feature of the older streets backing onto reserve — roof cavities, sheds and pergolas all deliver them through the warmer months. Red-bellied Black Snakes work the Hunts Creek corridor and properties with pools or thick damp garden beds. Eastern Browns appear on the drier blocks and around older sheds with rodent activity. Golden-crowned Snakes turn up in the sandstone country and shaded leaf-litter gardens after summer rain. Blue-tongued Lizards, Eastern Water Dragons along the creek and gecko callouts round out the mix. Activity peaks September through April, with Python-in-the-roof jobs concentrated through the warmer evenings. We attend Carlingford across residential, strata, school and bushland-edge callouts, including snake-in-the-house emergencies and roof cavity Python relocations.
Snake Catcher NORTH ROCKS — Urban Reptile Removal 0418 633 474
North Rocks sits on the western edge of Bidjigal Reserve, with Darling Mills Creek running through the southern boundary and the Muirfield Golf Course corridor threading through the middle of the suburb. A substantial proportion of properties back directly onto reserve, creek line or golf course — and almost every other property is within a couple of streets of one. The result is a suburb where reptile habitat runs through the centre of the residential area, not just along the edge. Diamond Pythons are a real feature of the work here — the bushland corridors and older roof spaces sustain a resident population, and roof cavity callouts are the standout job category. Red-bellied Black Snakes work the Darling Mills Creek corridor and properties with pools, ponds or thick damp garden beds. Eastern Browns appear on the drier reserve margins and around older sheds with rodent activity. Golden-crowned Snakes turn up in the sandstone country and shaded leaf-litter gardens after summer rain. Blue-tongued Lizards, Eastern Water Dragons along the creek line and gecko callouts round out the mix. Activity peaks September through April. We attend North Rocks across residential, strata, school and bushland-edge callouts, including snake-in-the-house emergencies and roof cavity Python relocations.
Snake Catcher PARRAMATTA — Urban Reptile Removal 0418 633 474
Snake Catcher PARRAMATTA — Urban Reptile Removal 0418 633 474
Parramatta is one of Sydney’s busiest and most diverse suburbs, filled with a mix of older homes, new developments, parks, schools, heritage buildings, apartments, laneways, and green corridors. Because of this range of habitats, snakes regularly move through Parramatta, especially in the warmer months. Urban Reptile Removal attends snake callouts throughout Parramatta every year, and most of these sightings happen without warning. Snakes are a normal part of Sydney’s environment, and if you see one, the safest thing to do is call 0418 633 474 immediately.
Snake Catcher TOONGABBIE — Urban Reptile Removal 0418 633 474
Snake Catcher TOONGABBIE — Urban Reptile Removal 0418 633 474
Toongabbie is one of Western Sydney’s most established and diverse suburbs. With its mix of older homes, renovated properties, units, parks, walking paths, creeks and busy backyard activity, it is a place where wildlife often moves through. Many people in Toongabbie see snakes in garden beds, along fences, near sheds, beside driveways or around the creek lines that run through the suburb. Because of this, Urban Reptile Removal attends many snake callouts in Toongabbie every year.
Snake Catcher WOODCROFT — Urban Reptile Removal 0418 633 474
Woodcroft sits between Doonside, Glendenning and Plumpton in the Blacktown LGA, with Lake Woodcroft on the western side, the Bungarribee Park and Western Sydney Parklands corridor reaching in from the south, and the drainage system connecting the suburb into the wider Eastern Creek catchment. The mix of 1990s estate housing on standard suburban blocks, established gardens, a high concentration of backyard pools, lakeside properties, and the network of small reserves and drainage easements threading through the suburb produces a steady snake catching job pattern. Red-bellied Black Snakes work the Lake Woodcroft foreshore and the wetter drainage corridors, with pool pump housings on adjoining streets coming up consistently. Eastern Browns appear on the drier blocks and around older sheds with rodent activity. Blue-tongued Lizards, the occasional Eastern Water Dragon along the lake edge and gecko callouts round out the mix. Activity peaks September through April, with the busiest weeks following summer rain. We attend Woodcroft across residential, strata, school and lakeside callouts, including snake-in-the-house emergencies and pool-area sightings.
Snake Catcher VINEYARD — Urban Reptile Removal 0418 633 474
Vineyard is one of the more genuinely rural pockets left in the Blacktown LGA, sitting on the Hawkesbury corridor between Riverstone, Box Hill, Maraylya and Mulgrave. While the surrounding growth-corridor suburbs are being progressively converted into estates, Vineyard has held on to acreage blocks, working horse properties, hobby farms, market gardens and the kind of rural-residential character that has all but disappeared from most of north-western Sydney. That landscape produces a distinctive and consistent snake catching job pattern — and Vineyard sits firmly in Eastern Brown Snake country. Browns dominate here, working the open paddocks, horse stables, feed sheds, chicken coops, machinery yards and the long boundary fences that come with acreage properties. The rodent populations sustained by feed storage, hay sheds and stable yards keep them around. Red-bellied Black Snakes turn up on properties with permanent water — dams, troughs, ponds — and along the drainage lines connecting through to the Hawkesbury catchment. Blue-tongued Lizards, the occasional Eastern Water Dragon along dam edges and gecko callouts round out the mix. Activity peaks September through April, with the busiest weeks following summer rain. We attend Vineyard across acreage residential, horse property, hobby farm and rural-commercial callouts, including stable-yard sightings, feed-shed snake removals and snake-in-the-house emergencies.
Snake Catcher Tallawong — Urban Reptile Removal 0418 633 474
Tallawong is one of the newest suburbs in the Blacktown LGA growth corridor, sitting at the northern end of the Sydney Metro Northwest line between The Ponds, Rouse Hill, Schofields and Riverstone. The land it occupies was farmland and Cumberland Plain woodland until very recently, and construction is still active across substantial parts of the suburb — residential estates, the Metro station precinct, infrastructure works and the new commercial pockets coming up around them. That construction displaces the resident snake population sideways into adjoining yards, building sites and the brand-new homes that have just been completed. The result is a growth-corridor snake catching profile that runs heavy through the warmer months. Eastern Browns dominate, working the construction zones, retained vegetation strips, drainage corridors and the perimeters of newly completed estates. Red-bellied Black Snakes appear along the First Ponds Creek and South Creek tributaries threading through the wider area. Blue-tongued Lizards turn up regularly in new garden beds, around stacked landscaping materials and on warm driveways. Geckos through new garage cavities round out the mix. Activity peaks September through April, with new-build properties in their first one or two seasons seeing the highest rates of snake-in-the-garage and snake-in-the-house emergencies. We attend Tallawong across new-estate residential, building site, infrastructure project and Metro precinct callouts.
Snake Catcher STANHOPE GARDENS — Urban Reptile Removal 0418 633 474
Stanhope Gardens sits between Glenwood, Parklea, The Ponds and Kellyville Ridge in the Blacktown LGA, with the Bella Vista bushland fringe along the northern edge, retained reserve corridors threading through the estate, and the drainage system connecting into the wider Bells Creek and Second Ponds Creek catchments. The combination of substantial 1990s and 2000s estate housing on standard suburban blocks, established mature gardens, retained bushland strips between the streets, a high concentration of backyard pools, and the connecting reserve and drainage network produces a distinctively Red-belly-dominant snake catching profile. Red-bellied Black Snakes work the reserve corridors, drainage easements and pool pump housings year-round — roughly two thirds of the work we attend in this suburb is Red-belly. Eastern Browns appear on the drier blocks, around older sheds and properties with chicken coops or rodent activity. Blue-tongued Lizards, the occasional Eastern Water Dragon along the wetter drainage lines and gecko callouts round out the mix. Activity peaks September through April, with the busiest weeks following summer rain when frog populations spike and Red-bellies move up out of the drainage corridors into adjoining backyards. We attend Stanhope Gardens across residential, strata, school and bushland-edge callouts, including pool-area Red-belly sightings and snake-in-the-house emergencies.
Snake Catcher Seven Hills — Urban Reptile Removal 0418 633 474
Seven Hills sits on Toongabbie Creek, with the creek and its tributary drainage system threading through the centre of the suburb and connecting into Lalor Park, Kings Langley and the wider Western Sydney waterway network. The mix of older established residential streets dating back to the 1960s and 1970s on the northern side, the substantial Seven Hills industrial estate along the railway and southern boundary, schools, parks and the town centre produces a distinctively Red-belly-dominant snake catching profile — Toongabbie Creek and its associated frog populations sustain Red-bellied Black Snakes year-round, and roughly three quarters of the work we attend in this suburb is Red-belly. Eastern Browns appear on the drier blocks and through the industrial estate, working warehouse perimeters and the older sheds with rodent activity. Blue-tongued Lizards, the occasional Eastern Water Dragon along the creek and gecko callouts round out the mix. Activity peaks September through April, with the busiest weeks following summer rain when frog populations spike along Toongabbie Creek and Red-bellies move up into adjoining backyards. We attend Seven Hills across residential, strata, industrial and creek-corridor callouts, including pool-pump Red-belly sightings, snake-in-the-house emergencies and warehouse-perimeter callouts in the industrial estate.
Snake Catcher SCHOFIELDS — Urban Reptile Removal 0418 633 474
Schofields sits in the heart of the Blacktown LGA growth corridor, between Marsden Park, Riverstone, The Ponds and Tallawong, with the First Ponds Creek catchment threading through the area and the railway line and Schofields station forming the southern anchor. The suburb runs across the full spectrum of growth-corridor states — established older streets on the original Schofields side, brand-new estate housing across the expanded northern and western sections, active construction on the still-developing fringes, and infrastructure works around the station precinct. The result is one of the higher-volume snake catching suburbs in the LGA, with a relatively even species split between Eastern Browns and Red-bellied Black Snakes. Browns work the construction zones, paddock margins, retained vegetation strips and the perimeters of newly completed estates. Red-bellies work the First Ponds Creek corridor, drainage easements and pool pump housings on adjoining streets. Blue-tongued Lizards turn up in new garden beds, along sandstone retaining walls and on warm driveways. Geckos through new garages round out the mix. Activity peaks September through April, with new-build properties in their first one or two seasons seeing the highest rates of snake-in-the-garage and snake-in-the-house emergencies. We attend Schofields across new-estate residential, established residential, building site, station precinct and commercial callouts.
Snake Catcher ROPES CROSSING — Urban Reptile Removal 0418 633 474
Snake Catcher ROPES CROSSING — Urban Reptile Removal 0418 633 474
Ropes Crossing is one of the newer suburbs in the Western Sydney region, but despite its modern layout, landscaped parks and planned streets, it still experiences plenty of snake activity. The suburb sits alongside natural bush, corridors of green space, drainage lines, wide reserves and pockets of vegetation that support a healthy population of wildlife. With that wildlife comes snakes, moving between warm surfaces, garden beds, fencelines and protected hiding spots. That’s why Urban Reptile Removal responds to a steady flow of calls from Ropes Crossing throughout the warmer months.
Snake Catcher ROOTY HILL — Urban Reptile Removal 0418 633 474
Snake Catcher ROOTY HILL — Urban Reptile Removal 0418 633 474
Rooty Hill is one of Western Sydney’s busiest and most recognisable suburbs. With its mix of long-established neighbourhoods, new housing developments, parks, schools, sports fields, industrial pockets, open greenspace and warm concrete surfaces, it’s a suburb where wildlife is constantly on the move. If you’re living in Rooty Hill seeing a snake from time to time is simply part of living in the area. That’s exactly why Urban Reptile Removal attends so many callouts in Rooty Hill each year.
Snake Catcher RIVERSTONE — Urban Reptile Removal 0418 633 474
Snake Catcher RIVERSTONE — Urban Reptile Removal 0418 633 474
Riverstone is one of Western Sydney’s most rapidly changing suburbs. With its mix of older rural-style blocks, new housing estates, open paddocks, drainage lines, horse properties, industrial pockets and wide stretches of sun-exposed land, Riverstone attracts a huge range of wildlife — including snakes. If you’re living in Riverstone, snake encounters are an unavoidable part of life in this area. For that reason, Urban Reptile Removal responds to a large number of callouts in Riverstone every snake season.
Snake Catcher QUAKERS HILL — Urban Reptile Removal 0418 633 474
Snake Catcher QUAKERS HILL — Urban Reptile Removal 0418 633 474
Quakers Hill is one of the most active suburbs in the western Sydney region when it comes to snake sightings. With its combination of older established homes, new housing estates, long sunny fence lines, well-watered gardens, parks, school zones, walking paths and natural corridors, the suburb has everything snakes look for. If you’re living in Quakers Hill, you already spend plenty of time outside — working in the yard, looking after pets, doing household maintenance, washing the car or playing with the kids.
Snake Catcher PROSPECT — Urban Reptile Removal 0418 633 474
Snake Catcher PROSPECT — Urban Reptile Removal 0418 633 474
Prospect is one of Western Sydney’s most unique suburbs because it blends residential streets with industrial areas, open fields, older-style homes, newer developments and some of the region’s most important wildlife corridors. If you’re a 43-year-old man living in Prospect, you’re probably outdoors a lot — mowing the lawn, working in the shed, taking care of the house, walking the dog or keeping the yard tidy. And like many suburbs with this much natural movement, Prospect sees a high number of snake sightings throughout the warmer months. That’s why Urban Reptile Removal attends so many callouts here.
Snake Catcher Plumpton — Urban Reptile Removal 0418 633 474
Snake Catcher PLUMPTON — Urban Reptile Removal 0418 633 474
Plumpton is one of those suburbs with a strong community feel — family homes, parks, established gardens, schools, pets in the yard, people doing weekend work around the house and a lot of outdoor activity. With its mix of older blocks, newer developments, long fence lines, shady trees and warm brick surfaces, it’s a suburb where wildlife thrives. And where wildlife thrives, snakes follow. If you’re living in Plumpton, you already know that the suburb has everything snakes look for: food, shelter and plenty of warm hiding spots. That’s exactly why Urban Reptile Removal receives so many callouts in this part of Western Sydney.
The Best Snake Catcher in PARKLEA — Urban Reptile Removal 0418 633 474
The Best Snake Catcher in PARKLEA — Urban Reptile Removal 0418 633 474
Parklea is a suburb that blends busy roads, modern estates, older properties, well-kept gardens, shopping precincts, open spaces and pockets of natural habitat. It’s a lively area where people spend plenty of time outdoors — mowing lawns, washing cars, looking after pets, playing with kids, tending gardens or doing weekend projects. If you’re a 41-year-old man living in Parklea, you’re familiar with the mix of suburban living and open green pockets that attract all kinds of wildlife. And like most suburbs in the Blacktown region, snakes are part of that wildlife. That’s why Urban Reptile Removal attends so many jobs in Parklea each year.
Snake Catcher MOUNT DRUITT — Urban Reptile Removal 0418 633 474
Snake Catcher MOUNT DRUITT — Urban Reptile Removal 0418 633 474
Mount Druitt is one of Western Sydney’s busiest and most diverse suburbs, with a mix of family homes, duplexes, older-style houses, new developments, parks, schools, open spaces, shops and a lot of outdoor activity. If you’re living in Mount Druitt, you know the suburb well — the daily routines, the gardens, the backyard jobs, the dogs, the washing on the line, the weekend work around the house. With all that outdoor movement, it’s no surprise that Mount Druitt is also a regular hotspot for snake sightings. That’s exactly why Urban Reptile Removal receives so many calls from this area every year.

