A snake carcass was discovered in Havering Country Park, not identifiable as a native UK species. The carcass is believed to be from a pet that was improperly disposed of in the park. A walker found the remains on July 9, prompting attention from Havering Council. The council confirmed the snake will be removed, but did not specify when. Photographic evidence shows distinct dark and light green patterns on the snake's skin, indicating it is not a native species.
A snake carcass found in Havering is believed to be the remains of a pet that has been 'wrongly disposed of'. A walker in Havering Country Park came across the carcass last Wednesday (July 9), which did not resemble any of the UK's native species.
Havering Council's parks teams confirmed that the carcass is believed to be the remains of a pet and added that the dead snake will be removed from the park.
The council's parks team have confirmed that the snake carcass does not resemble any of the UK's native snake species and believe it is possibly the remains of a pet.
A photo shows the remains, with the dark and light green pattern on the skin clearly visible.
Collection
[
|
...
]