If you’re talking about a snake found in a box of strawberries, that’s a rare but real-world type of contamination incident—usually happening in produce packaging during harvesting, transport, or storage.
🐍 What it usually is
Most cases involve:
- A small non-venomous snake accidentally picked up in fields
- Hidden inside leafy produce or fruit crates
- Discovered when the package is opened at home or store
Common harmless species (depending on region) may include:
- Garden snakes
- Rat snakes
- Other small field snakes
⚠️ Is it dangerous?
- The main risk is startle or panic, not poisoning
- Some snakes can bite if handled, but many are not venomous
- Food itself is usually still safe if uncontaminated, but it should be discarded as a precaution
🧊 Why it happens
- Strawberries are often grown close to ground level
- Harvested in open fields where wildlife lives
- Snakes can hide in crates or between leaves
- Rarely, they survive transport if unnoticed
🧼 What to do if it happens
- Do not touch the snake
- Step away and keep others safe
- Close the container or isolate the area if possible
- Contact store or supplier immediately
- Call local animal control or wildlife services
🧾 Bottom line
A snake in a strawberry box is rare and accidental, usually a field animal that got mixed into produce during harvesting. It’s more of a safety and hygiene issue than a food-related one.
If you want, I can explain how produce safety systems prevent this, or what inspections happen before fruits reach stores.