Most children talk about snake discoloration, but an 11-year-old Indian girl happily points to the giant reptile next to her and claims it's her "best friend."

Kazor's father, Taj Mohammed, was nearly sixty years old and had been a snake catcher in Gathampur for nearly 45 years.
His daughter, Kazor, does not like school, preferring to use snakes and play with them.
Kazor's dangerous friend had bitten her stomach, her cheek and her arm.
Kazor's father rushed into the forest and returned with herbs. Mashed and mixed with butter and black pepper, then eaten and applied to the wound.
Kazor said such herbs had saved his life many times.
Eat and sleep with cobras.
Her peers went to school to play with other children, and this little girl didn't love school but loved to be friends with these cobras.
But Kazor's mother, Salma, wants her daughter to get out of the days of being surrounded by snakes and fears being expelled from school for taking her pet to school.
Khadr Khan always said, "I have a lot of interesting cobras. Even though they sometimes bite me, sometimes it's my own fault because I make fun of them. These are very interesting.