Current:Home > ContactVideo shows massive gator leisurely crossing the road at South Carolina park, drawing onlookers -VisionFunds
Video shows massive gator leisurely crossing the road at South Carolina park, drawing onlookers
View
Date:2025-04-26 06:42:55
There's something different about a pedestrian who crossed the road at a South Carolina state park this week. For starters, he has scales, a long tail and he was moving pretty darn slow.
The slow-but-steady walker is an alligator captured on camera Tuesday at Murrells Inlet in South Carolina’s Huntington Beach State Park, wrote Austin Bond, the coastal scenic photographer who captured the reptile on film.
"Why's he going so slow?" one child asked as the gator crossed the road and eventually came to a stop, leaving its tail partially out in the roadway.
Bond commented on his viral gator post later and added that he was riding his bike at the time. He only saw the gator once kids in the area alerted him.
“It was off the road and I didn't see it,” wrote Bond, who told USA TODAY Thursday afternoon that the group of kids who warned him knew to stay back.
They were a great group of kids, he said.
He added that alligators spend most of their life in freshwater but will sometimes enter saltwater to eat blue crabs and fish. In the video he recorded, the gator was leaving the saltwater side and headed to a freshwater lake, he said.
Photographer saw more than a gator that day
Bond is a youth pastor at LowCountry Community Church in Murrells Inlet but does coastal scenic photography on the side for fun.
The same day he captured footage of the gator, he also saw a roseate spoonbill and two bald eagles.
Once his post made its rounds online, social media users chimed in and made a few jokes.
“At least he crossed at the pedestrian crosswalk,” wrote one person.
South Carolina State Parks said on its website that alligators that are stressed stop walking and lie down.
“If you see this behavior, do not move closer to the alligator,” the agency wrote on its website.
It’s also important to keep kids and pets close by when viewing gators. Staying on pavement or sidewalks is best. Also, stay at least 15 feet away from them.
Other tips include:
- If you see this behavior, do not move closer to the alligator.
- If you find yourself near an alligator on land, never get between the alligators and the water.
- Do not crouch down in front of an alligator because alligators pick their prey based on size. Crouching down makes humans look prey-sized.
- Do not feed alligators. When humans feed them, they assume they are eating parts of people that have fallen into the water.
“Feeding an alligator literally teaches them that people are made of food,” South Carolina State Parks wrote. “Most incidents where a person is injured by an alligator involve them being trained in that behavior by humans feeding them.”
Once the alligators become a threat to humans, they are often euthanized, the agency said.
“You can protect our wildlife by not feeding them,” the agency wrote.
Saleen Martin is a reporter on USA TODAY's NOW team. She is from Norfolk, Virginia – the 757. Follow her on Twitter at@SaleenMartin or email her at[email protected].
veryGood! (1)
Related
- Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
- Amy Poehler reacts to 'Inside Out 2' being Beyoncé's top movie in 2024
- 'The hardest thing': Emmanuel Littlejohn, recommended for clemency, now facing execution
- The price of gold keeps climbing to unprecedented heights. Here’s why
- 'As foretold in the prophecy': Elon Musk and internet react as Tesla stock hits $420 all
- Rep. Ocasio-Cortez says New York City mayor should resign
- Milwaukee-area stolen Virgin Mary statue found and returned to church
- Anna Delvey's 'DWTS' run ends in elimination: She never stood a chance against critics.
- DeepSeek: Did a little known Chinese startup cause a 'Sputnik moment' for AI?
- Chicago’s Latino Neighborhoods Have Less Access to Parks, But Residents Are Working to Change That
Ranking
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- Whoopi Goldberg Defends Taylor Swift From NFL Fans Blaming Singer for Travis Kelce's Performance
- Heather Rae El Moussa Reveals If She’s Ready for Baby No. 2 With Tarek El Moussa
- New 'Wuthering Heights' film casting sparks backlash, accusations of whitewashing
- Google unveils a quantum chip. Could it help unlock the universe's deepest secrets?
- Resentencing for Lee Malvo postponed in Maryland after Virginia says he can’t attend in person
- Were people in on the Montreal Screwjob? What is said about the incident in 'Mr. McMahon'
- First US high school with an all-basketball curriculum names court after Knicks’ Julius Randle
Recommendation
Travis Hunter, the 2
Nashville district attorney secretly recorded defense lawyers and other office visitors, probe finds
You’ll Bend and Snap Over Reese Witherspoon’s Legally Blonde Prequel Announcement
Anna Delvey Sums Up Her Dancing With the Stars Experience With Just One Word
Israel lets Palestinians go back to northern Gaza for first time in over a year as cease
Kim Porter's children with Diddy call out 'horrific' conspiracy theories about her death
Women’s only track meet in NYC features Olympic champs, musicians and lucrative prize money
Hurricanes keep pummeling one part of Florida. Residents are exhausted.