Cottonmouth snakes are a species of pit viper and are native to the southeastern United States. They are poisonous vipers that are considered even more toxic than copperheads. In this video, you can see The Bearded Biologist, a man with a YouTube channel, encounter this curious snake. The video opens with a rather peaceful kayak ride on a quiet creek. The man is quietly and gently exploring the area. The water is dark, murky green, and there are many trees surrounding the space, which makes for an incredibly lush, green backdrop. There’s something floating in the water just up ahead, and the bearded biologist spots it right away. As his kayak gets closer, he realizes it’s a cottonmouth viper. It’s floating quietly along, letting the gentle current of the creek take it without making any of those undulating movements that keep it moving forward. It seems to spot the kayaker and turns its head over towards him. Instinctively, the bearded biologist puts up his paddle to defend himself if need be. The cottonmouth remains curious, its tongue slithering outward in the air, but the current takes it away from the kayaker. It does start slithering toward him, maintaining a curiosity, but eventually lets the natural current of the creek take it away from the kayaker. Throughout the encounter, the bearded biologist keeps his paddle out, toward the cottonmouth, in defense mode. The camera catches the scene perfectly, and there’s a shot when the viper is right in the center of the screen that you can appreciate just how close it got to the kayaker. As the current pulls it away from the kayak, the cottonmouth waves its tail a bit, as if fighting the current slightly, still intrigued by the man on the kayak. For a couple of seconds, it keeps slithering toward the camera. The final scene shows when it stops swimming against the current and continues on its way. Cottonmouth snakes are found across much of the southeastern United States. While cottonmouth snakes are venomous and anyone bitten by the snakes should seek immediate medical attention, their bites are rarely fatal. A study of fatal snake bites in the United States in the American Journal of Emergency Medicine studied 101 fatal bites between 1989 and 2018. They found that rattlesnakes accounted for 90% of fatal bites. In that time period, only two percent of fatal snake bites came from cottonmouth snakes.

How Likely Is a Cottonmouth to Pursue You?

Like their fellow pit vipers copperheads and rattlesnakes, cottonmouths prefer to wait for their favorite prey to come to them. Which means they prefer to lie in wait for mice and voles and are generally uninterested in humans. So why was that swimming reptile interested in the kayak? No one can tell for certain. Thankfully, its swimming skills, notwithstanding, it was unable to swim against the tide and was borne away by the current. A rather lucky occurrence which resulted in a happy ending for the kayaker.

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