Hurricane Sally: Alabama Hurricane Captures Big Crocodile Swimming


Hurricane Sally appears to have brought more than just an increase in strong winds, flooding and dangerous storms.

Alabama resident Tina Bennett captured a video of a giant crocodile floating in the water outside her Gulf Shores home on Wednesday.

“Oh my God, this is out our window!” Bennett was expelled in a video posted on Twitter by WKRG-TV meteorologist Thomas Gabboy. “It’s a 10 or 12-foot crocodile!”

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Gibboy noted that the giant reptiles were another reason for the shelter until the floodwaters receded.

“Not only have the power lines gone down, but the wildlife has also been displaced,” he wrote.

According to Birmingham’s WVTM-TV reporter, Brittany Decker, in addition to Gator, El Orange Beach, next to Hayla, swimming pool was also caught later in the day.

“A typical Wednesday of 2020,” the station wrote.

According to the National Hurricane Center (NHC), Sally made a landfill fall as a Category 2 storm at 4:45 a.m. on the CDT near Gulf Shores.

Sally brought measured rain to her feet, killed at least one person, and forced hundreds to rescue. At least eight waterways in southern Alabama and Florida Panandle are expected to reach major levels of flooding by Thursday.

On Tuesday, September 15, 2020, Mrs. Alligator (not one from Alabama) is spotted at M Point S Point, as Hurricane Sally's outer band arrives in the US (AP Photo / Stacy Places)

On Tuesday, September 15, 2020, Mrs. Alligator (not one from Alabama) is spotted at M Point S Point, as Hurricane Sally’s outer band arrives in the US (AP Photo / Stacy Places)

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The National Weather Service warned that some arrests could break records, break bridges and flood houses.

At least 50 people were rescued from flooded homes in Orange Beach and taken to shelters, Mayor Tony Kane said.

“We got a few people that we just couldn’t go in because the water is so high,” Kane said. “But they are safe in their homes. We will save them as soon as the water returns. “

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According to the Alabama Department of Conservation and Natural Resources, Alabama has l ind indigenous reptile species, including 12 lizards, 49 snakes, 31 turtles and American crocodiles.

The Associated Press contributes to this report