- A woman seeking for sea glass in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, filmed a timber rattlesnake in the surf.
- The species is extremely toxic and has been classified as an invasive species.
In South Carolina’s Myrtle Beach State Park, a woman seeking sea glass captured video of something far more unusual: a timber rattlesnake in the waves.
Michelle Robert stated in a Facebook post that she was searching for sea glass while going along the beach when she noticed a snake in the water.
Watch the video here:
Robert wrote, “Waves were tossing him around and he kept going back in.”
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The park called Russell Cavendar, the owner of Snake Chaser, and asked him to move the snake.
According to Cavendar, the snake was a timber rattlesnake, commonly known as a canebrake rattlesnake. He stated that the species is extremely toxic.
According to him, the snake was released in a rural swampy area of Horry County.
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