They're poisonous, they're officially 'feral', and Queensland is filled with them, so it's fitting that one cheeky man found an innovative way to make the cane toad temporarily immobile.

In a video posted by YouTube user swampgarage, the North Queensland resident showed just how easy it is, by stacking three cane toads on top of each other.

Going to new lengths to show how bored Australians can be, the 'how-to' video went step-by-step in describing just how to deal with the surplus of toads in the country.

'A simple three toad stack that anybody can do at home,' the instructor piped.

Scroll down for video

Ta-da! A Queensland man has demonstrated the perfect way to 'stack cane toads'

Beginning with three toads in a bucket, the unnamed man begins by placing one of the cane toads on its back.

'We need to put the toad upside down, and we get our next toad and put it on top,' he said with a confident ease.

Yet upon placing the third, the stacked deck of cane toads falls apart, with the bottom toad wriggling free from it's strange predicament.

Not to be denied however the man tries again, easily stacking the two together before attempting to plant the pesky third toad.

'Two's easy, anybody can do that,' the man says in the video.

'Three is harder - gotta get the third to settle down.'

Needing three toads for his toad stacking demonstration YouTube user swampgarage demonstrates the ideal way to immobilise the feral animal

Not as easy as it looks! The Queensland resident began by placing the toads on its back, but struggled when putting the third on to complete the stack

Carefully taking the toad as it watched motionless, the man placed the toad - the trophy piece - on top completing his toad stacking demonstration showing off his flawless technique.

'There we go a perfect three toad stack,' he proudly boasts.

With almost two billion cane toads in Australia, toad stacking might just become a national pastime.