Python Wedged Deep in Chicago Woman's Car Removed by Wildlife Expert

Brad Ludsteen said it was "definitely an unusual call" being asked to remove the reptile

<p>Brian Hill/bhill@dailyherald.com</p> Brad Lundsteen owner of Suburban Wildlife Control holds a four-foot-long ball python that he removed from a Toyota Crown on Oct. 2

Brian Hill/bhill@dailyherald.com

Brad Lundsteen owner of Suburban Wildlife Control holds a four-foot-long ball python that he removed from a Toyota Crown on Oct. 2

Talk about throwing a hissy fit!

A persistent python found itself a new home in a Chicago woman's vehicle this week — until a local wildlife expert ended up capturing it. According to the Daily Herald, the ball python first slithered its way into a local woman's vehicle on Tuesday, Oct. 1, when it traveled from the front steps of her friend's Geneva home to behind the tires of her Toyota Crown sedan.

While police and a local animal shelter couldn't help, according to the outlet, the unidentified woman ended up connecting with Brad Lundsteen, owner of Suburban Wildlife Control.

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Lundsteen, who told NBC affiliate WMAQ-TV that his "bread and butter" for animal removal includes "raccoons out of attics" and "skunks under houses," said that being asked to remove a snake from a car was "definitely an unusual call."

<p>Brian Hill/bhill@dailyherald.com</p> Brad Lundsteen

Brian Hill/bhill@dailyherald.com

Brad Lundsteen

Related: S.C. Woman Finds Snake on Her Car’s Windshield While Driving to Work: They're 'My Biggest Phobia'

As he told the Daily Herald, Lundsteen has removed around a dozen snakes during his 38 years on the job. “They’re definitely not native to the area,” he said. “It’s almost always somebody’s pet that has gotten out or gotten too big. So they disposed of it.”

After searching underneath the vehicle, Lundsteen couldn't see the snake but recognized its "really musky" smell, he told the outlet. He then encouraged the car's owner to bring it to State Street Collision, where employees had the car lifted so he could take a closer look.

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Lundsteen then reached into blindspots with his bare hands for the reptile, before the crew eventually removed the car's rear wheels and located the snake above the axle. “I was pulling it really hard, and then it finally just popped out,” Lundsteen said, reflecting on his 30 minutes struggling with the 4-foot-long critter.

<p>Brian Hill/bhill@dailyherald.com</p> Brad Lundsteen

Brian Hill/bhill@dailyherald.com

Brad Lundsteen

“I thought it would be twice as big. I was kind of shocked,” Lundsteen said. “I expected it to be much longer... They can get gigantic. We had one that was 16 feet long that had escaped out of an apartment building and literally coiled itself around a car.”

The Daily Herald reports that the wildlife expert will next have the snake brought to a licensed reptile rescue facility, as WGN-TV reports that it was on a farm awaiting transfer as of Thursday, Oct. 3.

“I know the snake didn’t come from here obviously, so it just goes to show animals do get in and hitch rides,” Lundsteen told WMAQ-TV.

<p>Brian Hill/bhill@dailyherald.com</p> Brad Lundsteen (right)

Brian Hill/bhill@dailyherald.com

Brad Lundsteen (right)

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This isn't the first snake who thought it could hitch a ride without permission this year. Back in May, Lisa Kournelis of Australia attempted to have a snake removed from her vehicle four times, before eventually deciding to coexist with the animal.

<p>Brian Hill/bhill@dailyherald.com</p> A ball python

Brian Hill/bhill@dailyherald.com

A ball python

As she told Australia's ABC, she first spotted the reptile in April but believes it entered her vehicle at a worksite months before, prompting her to drive around with woolen work pants and other protective gear. She added that she didn't "really have any other choice" than to continue with her life with "Fluffy" — her eventual name for the reptile friend — in her vehicle.

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