DISC golfers remained stunned after a shark fell out of the sky in bizarre conditions.
The Hammerhead fell on a course in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina last month.
Disc Golf games took place on Splinter City Golf Course in South Carolina on 18 May.
A dead hammerhead -shark, however, crashed near the 11th hole of the wooded course.
It later turned out that a fishing bird that flew over Myrtle Beach dropped him.
Myrtle Beach is about half a mile away from the Atlantic Ocean.
The unusual event was seen by Jonathan Marlowe, who remembered the moment of the little hammer head who fell as he played Disc Golf.
“It is not uncommon to see a fishing thing wearing something, but you pay attention because it is really cool to see,” Marlowe said Garden & Gun Magazine.
“I thought it would be a random fish.”
The fish turned out to be a small, deceased Hammerhead -shark.
Marlowe said the bird dropped the shark after he was approached by a few crows in a tree.
The shark was easy to identify because of its distinctive, wide, T-shaped head.
Marlowe was with friends during the series when the group left De Haai under the tree in case the visae wanted to pick it up.
Marlowe, however, was informed later that day that the shark was still there, after another disk hole who had noticed that it had given his comments Facebook Post, recalling the situation.
The Facebook page Disc Golf by Myrtle Beach revealed that the course tends to get visits to snakes, raccoons and alligators.
However, it is safe to say that seeing a shark on the building, which was opened in 2020, is a first and will probably not happen anymore.
“We couldn’t believe it and kept asking ourselves:” Did that just happen? “Marlowe said.
It seemed to be a baby hammer shark.
Hammerhead -sharks can reach up to 20 feet long and weigh more than 1,000 pounds.
They usually live 20-30 years old.
There are 10 well -known species of the Hammerhead -shark.
It is not known which species fell out of the sky in Myrtle Beach.
But it is not unusual that hammerheads swim in the waters of South Carolina.
A survey of 2013-2016 by the South Carolina Department of Natural Resources detected three types of hammerheads in coastal waters for South Carolina and Georgia.
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