Horrified man finds something unbelievable in a bag of broccoli he purchased from… Check the first comment!

A man who went to a supermarket to get some groceries came back with a snake and didn’t realize it until after the animal got familiar with his food

Last month, 63-year-old Neville Linton bought a bag of broccoli from an Aldi branch in Stourbridge, England, and stored it in his fridge before taking it out to prepare a meal three days later.

But when he unwrapped the broccoli, however, the man immediately saw the unexpected guest. Continue scrolling to learn how the ordeal went down and don’t miss the talk we had about it with Dr. Steven J R Allain, aka The pop-punk Herpetologist.

A snake that was exploring a broccoli field somewhere in southwestern Europe got packed up and shipped to a British supermarket

Neville, who works in industrial cleaning, couldn’t believe his eyes.

“It was pretty frightening. I’m not good with snakes,” he said. “It’s lucky I didn’t just leave the broccoli out in the kitchen, or it would have been loose in the house.”

“That would have been a huge risk for us because we have two vulnerable people living here.”

Once he realized the creature was too big to be a caterpillar, he called his sister Ann-Marie Tenkanemin for help and she identified it as a snake.

The pair popped it in a tub and went back to the Aldi store on Dudley Road where Neville made the purchase.

“I thought she was joking at first, but I backed off when I saw it start moving. The guy in the shop was pretty frightened too,” he said.

The snake was taken to a local zoo and its specialists determined that it was a young ladder snake

The reptile was transported to Dudley Zoo, and its staff believe it to be a young ladder snake. However, Bored Panda got in touch with Dr. Steven J R Allain and he tends to disagree.

“Having reviewed the [actual] photo of the snake in the broccoli, I am not sure the zoo identified the species correctly,” Allain told us. “To my expert eyes, the snake is in fact a viperine water snake (Natrix maura), which is a harmless fish-eating species found throughout southwestern Europe and northern Africa.”

Allain is a zoology graduate from Anglia Ruskin University, a Master’s graduate from Imperial College London, and a current Ph.D. student at the University of Kent. His current area of research is primarily based around barred grass snake (Natrix helvetica) population ecology and the effects of ophidiomycosis, but he’s also interested in amphibian disease and population ecology.

“Seeing as a large portion of the food grown and imported into the United Kingdom comes from the Mediterranean region, it is no surprise to find a species from this area turning up in some vegetables likely grown there. In my opinion, the snake was likely moving through the field at the time, before being scooped up by agricultural equipment, then seeking refuge within the broccoli.”

The trip to the UK and then another one to Neville’s home took some time, but Allain said that these snakes are able to go a couple of months without food, and the chilling of the fridge would have helped keep its metabolism low, reducing the body’s energy demands.

“However, I can’t imagine it would have been comfortable,” he added. “Especially the rapid transition from the warm Mediterranean climate to a chiller, in order to keep the broccoli fresh.”

“Viperine water snakes are dangerous only if you’re a fish (or a frog). They do not bite humans as a defense mechanism (they’d much rather play dead), and they are regarded as non-venomous to humans.”

“I know this must have been a distressing time for Neville (especially for someone with a fear of snakes), but his reaction could have been more positive through more widespread education and understanding of snakes, and how to deal with situations like this,” Allain said. “It isn’t the snake’s fault that it ended up in the wrong place at the wrong time, but hopefully its new home at Dudley Zoo can help with breaking down these fears of snakes.”

Neville has been offered compensation but is trying to get more.

The father-of-three said the amount he heard didn’t sound fair because of the risk to his disabled son and vulnerable mother-in-law, who live under the same roof.

“It’s just not good enough,” he added. “The implications for us if it had got out in the house are huge. Plus, I’m phobic of snakes so there’s the emotional impact of that too.”

An Aldi spokesperson reported: “Our supplier has never had a complaint of this nature and has robust processes in place to prevent such issues occurring.”

“We are investigating this isolated incident and have apologized to Mr. Linton that our usual high standards were not met.”

Related Posts

HE MOCKED THE DRESS I SEWED BY HAND AT A BALLROOM FULL OF STRANGERS—THEN THE BILLIONAIRE HE WORSHIPPED WALKED PAST HIM

My husband brought me to that corporate gala the way someone drags along an old accessory—useful once, now embarrassing. Before we even entered the ballroom, Caleb leaned…

The Birthday Dinner That Exposed a Family’s Cruelty..

Emma attended her husband Daniel Whitman’s 38th birthday dinner at the mansion of his wealthy parents, Patricia and Harold. While Patricia showered Daniel’s biological children, Mason and…

MY BOSS TOLD ME TO “SEPARATE WORK FROM MY PRIVATE LIFE” WHILE MY SON LAY IN A HOSPITAL BED—SO I DID EXACTLY THAT

The moment my son Liam was rushed into the hospital after a devastating accident, the rest of the world stopped mattering. The endless emails, meetings, deadlines, and…

The Day I Came Home Early..

I came home two days earlier than expected, excited to surprise my wife Sarah with her favorite pastries and a bottle of wine. But when I walked…

The Photo My Daughter Understood Better Than I Did..

I was showing my five-year-old daughter some old photos of me from college, road trips, and different moments from before I met her dad. We laughed at…

You cut open a watermelon and saw cracks? Stop eating it immediately! Here’s what it means!⬇️

Cutting open a watermelon and discovering unusual internal cracks can be alarming, especially after encountering alarming social media posts linking these imperfections to chemicals and health risks….