Robert F. Kennedy Jr. goes barefoot, grabs snakes on Florida patio in viral video | Watch
The clip arrived online without much ceremony, just another phone recording from a sunny patio somewhere in Florida, the kind of place where sliding glass doors stay open longer than they should, and people drift in and out with drinks and half-conversations. In the centre of it, a moment that quickly stopped being ordinary: a pair of snakes moving across tiles, a small cluster of voices unsure whether to step closer or back away. Robert F Kennedy Jr is then seen walking in, barefoot, bending down, and picking them up as if it were the most natural thing in the world. Within hours, the clip had travelled far beyond its origin, carried mostly by disbelief.
The patio looks unremarkable in the footage: sun-bleached stone, a few chairs, the usual edges of domestic life that rarely make it into public view. What disrupts that calm is movement on the ground. Two snakes, later identified in reports as black racers, slide across the surface. They are quick, restless, not especially interested in the humans watching them, but impossible to ignore once noticed.
Kennedy crouches, reaches down, and lifts the snakes one after the other. They twist in his hands, reacting in the way snakes do when disturbed. At one point, there’s a suggestion of contact that looks like a bite, though it’s hard to make out clearly in the movement. Kennedy, holding both reptiles, appears to face the camera briefly as if acknowledging the moment, then steps away from the patio edge.
As reported by the BBC, later, the snakes were identified as black racers, a species widely considered non-venomous. The National Park Service notes that while they are not dangerous in the venomous sense, they will still strike if handled, which tends to be the point people forget in moments like this.
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After the clip circulated, reminders followed from wildlife authorities, including the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission. Their guidance was not particularly subtle: leave snakes alone, even the harmless-looking ones. Spring, they noted in public advisories, is a period when reptiles are more active, moving through residential areas with increased frequency.
The point they were making was less about fear and more about predictability. A snake on a patio is not unusual in parts of Florida. A person picking one up with bare hands is, at best, taking unnecessary risks. Even non-venomous species can bite in self-defence, and the reaction is often sharper than people expect.
Black racers are not rare in the region. They move fast, prefer open ground, and are often seen darting across gardens or driveways before disappearing again. Most encounters end without incident because most people do not try to intervene. There is a familiar pattern in Florida wildlife encounters where the advice is almost always passive: observe, step away, give space. The snakes are not intruders in the strict sense, just part of the environment adjusting to human sprawl.
Robert F Kennedy Jr snake incident at a Florida patio sparks viral video reaction
The patio looks unremarkable in the footage: sun-bleached stone, a few chairs, the usual edges of domestic life that rarely make it into public view. What disrupts that calm is movement on the ground. Two snakes, later identified in reports as black racers, slide across the surface. They are quick, restless, not especially interested in the humans watching them, but impossible to ignore once noticed.
Kennedy crouches, reaches down, and lifts the snakes one after the other. They twist in his hands, reacting in the way snakes do when disturbed. At one point, there’s a suggestion of contact that looks like a bite, though it’s hard to make out clearly in the movement. Kennedy, holding both reptiles, appears to face the camera briefly as if acknowledging the moment, then steps away from the patio edge.
As reported by the BBC, later, the snakes were identified as black racers, a species widely considered non-venomous. The National Park Service notes that while they are not dangerous in the venomous sense, they will still strike if handled, which tends to be the point people forget in moments like this.
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Wildlife warnings and the risks of handling snakes in residential areas
After the clip circulated, reminders followed from wildlife authorities, including the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission. Their guidance was not particularly subtle: leave snakes alone, even the harmless-looking ones. Spring, they noted in public advisories, is a period when reptiles are more active, moving through residential areas with increased frequency.
The point they were making was less about fear and more about predictability. A snake on a patio is not unusual in parts of Florida. A person picking one up with bare hands is, at best, taking unnecessary risks. Even non-venomous species can bite in self-defence, and the reaction is often sharper than people expect.
Understanding black racer behaviour in suburban spaces
Black racers are not rare in the region. They move fast, prefer open ground, and are often seen darting across gardens or driveways before disappearing again. Most encounters end without incident because most people do not try to intervene. There is a familiar pattern in Florida wildlife encounters where the advice is almost always passive: observe, step away, give space. The snakes are not intruders in the strict sense, just part of the environment adjusting to human sprawl.
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