I didn’t even know stonefish could sting ! Thank you for all the animal information, your channel got me obsessed with animals when I was little and I’ve had an ever-growing fascination with them ever since. Whenever I tell my family or friends animal facts, they always say, “You learned that from Brave Wilderness, didn’t you?”
I love how the fish doesn't have a flight response. He's so bad, he just let's himself get captured. He's like "You think you can take me? Alright, let's see you try."
When I was 6 or so I was snorkeling in a shallow rocky area in Cuba and I literally jumped onto a stonefish by accident. I couldn't walk for several days, had insane swelling on my foot, and still have a spine-tingling fear of walking in bodies of water 15 years later. 1/10 would not recommend.
@@andrewbetsargis92 this is why people don’t like religion you just like lbgtq trying to force it down our throats i’m christian but you don’t need to preach everywhere you go.. it gets annoying
Not confidence or bravery on the fish's part. It likely doesn't even know what's going on. It's just existing. It doesn't need a thought process to survive like we do. You're looking at one of the dumbest living creatures & mistaking it's lack of awareness as confidence
Sitting here with my daughter watching your show. She absolutely loves it! This is her dad and she wanted me to tell you about me getting stung in the nose the other day. So the other day I got stung in the nose by an angry yellow jacket.
There have been reported deaths with anything to be fair. People die from bee or wasp stings all the time. Doesnt mean that you need to fear a wasp or a bee.
I was a Hospital Corpsman in the U.S. Navy for 22 years. While stationed on Guam at the Naval Hospital we would see stonefish sting victims on a fairly regular basis. Witnessing the symptoms of stings to the feet was horrifying to say the least. Lots of snorkelers and reef walkers kept us busy. The screams and the physical fighting (due to the pain causing uncontrollable hitting, kicking and yes biting)is horrible. Lets just say you are the only person that would do this ON PURPOSE. I salute you.
That’s pretty odd considering these fish are native to Australia and are very rarely found outside of Australian waters, the furthest they go is the indo pacific along reef systems. You may be thinking of similar fish there are other kinds in the stonefish family.
@sharpshooter420 just google it dude, there are apparently stonefish in Guam too. Australia is best known for it and yes they go west to African shores, but they do extend north of Australia all the way up to Japan, which I also didn't know until now. Hooray for google I guess
We Aussies are educated at a very young age about these sea creatures - you my friend, have balls of steel! even if you did only take a small tac from this fish
@@infinitedeath1384it wasn’t multitude of venom I don’t think. I think stone fish are like snakes they get rid of venom and then they got none left so I got a very tiny bit of it
In 1966, on Nukulau Island in Fiji, I had what was initially presumed to be a Stonefish "stab me" in the joint of my left forefinger - the reality was I had put my hand out to check out a weird fish. A tip of a barb snapped off. Yes, it was dreadful pain. The Fijian guides did not see the fish; they grabbed me and took me to the boat, the ferry Ranadi and poured cups of tea on my hand. That was all we had. To a thirteen-year-old, it was serious pain. That fish spike stayed in my hand for sixty years. Your jabbing yourself brought images of that day way back in January 1966.
Fun fact! Those "sheaths" around the spines are actually part of the venom sacks. As they become compressed (as the spine unsheathes) by your foot, the venom in them shoots up the spine and out the end into your foot. In other words, the Stonefish actually doesn't control the amount of venom going into you. That is determined by how hard you step on the fish
Turns out the stone fish won't kill you. You will just wish you were dead. They don't even have a flight response, they just sit there like "bro, you really don't want to do that".
@fosfan48 wrong. It's the most venomous fish on earth. Children and the elderly are at the most risk but it has killed and can kill you.... it can stop your heart beat and swell your lungs with the venom spreading in just a few minutes....
I used to work in The Great Barrier Reef. That is the mildest sting from a stone fish I've seen. It's not just the sting but the quantity of it that's the real threat because it hits so much harder and so much faster. I watched a reef diver get helicoptered to a hospital after stepping on one. But the fact that you willingly took a microdose of it, well done dude, thats a brave thing.
thats actually fish in general because some fish have blue colored fluids and spines and its a rare mutation. Ive had a snapper and needlefish that had blue meat and bones.
My guy's a madman.. As an Aussie I know about these guys. I've also heard victims can have reoccurring pain in the area years later, with around the same intensity
Stepped on one of these with full force when I was 11 years old. The pain was so intense I couldn’t think. That is the most painful thing I’ve ever experienced.
5:30 not only are the spines designed to shoot the most amount of venom into your foot but because there are so many spines and close together, if you step on a stonefish you will normally wind up having multiple spines penetrate your foot, not just one. Having spines only on the top of it’s body also tells you that the biggest issue the fish has with it’s camouflage is that it works so well that the top of its body is the only part that needs defending… from us who wander in the ocean and can’t see them. The stonefish doesn’t muck around with defence.
I love the way the fish is like "yeah whatever, pick me up, put me on a box, you wont eat me, i'll cause you excruciating pain if you try any funny business" And then the fish is like "what, wait a minute, you're going to sting yourself with me?" That day, a stonefish got an ego check lol.
The stonefish would be saying "don't do it, it's gonna really f'in hurt and I don't want to be responsible for that, man". Stoned fish might be a better name.
Bro is reeling in pain from the most painful sting in the world but checks to see if the stone fish is okay before applying first aid. That's some major Steve Irwin energy ❤
When I started watching these videos, I started getting addicted to animals like they are so fun before I didn’t like them so much and I didn’t really read about them but now y’all made my day❤🎉😊
Mark is like the bravest (and craziest) man in the world... he is literally the first and only person in the world to voluntarily take a stonefish sting...This fish is more toxic than a black mamba... this guy deserves my respect!👏👏👏
The guys from Kings of pain are completely nuts. They also put like their whole hand on the stonefish so they were probably stung multiple times at once
@@great_Caligola No. I think you're wrong... I've been following History's Kings of Pain here on RUclips since before I met Brave Wilderness and they've never been skewered by a stonefish... the furthest they got was when they decided to get stung by one scorpionfish, they even commented on how dangerous the stonefish was when they were about to be skewered by the scorpionfish, and said that they would never take the sting of a deadly creature like it (stonefish).
Well to be fair, it seems like he did the neoprene first which shot most of the venom off and only coated the spike. I think that was a calculated way to both show us what would happen and also reduce the amount of venom he’d receive. He did say he was only taking a micro dose. Either way, it’s still a big deal. I’m not trying to downplay what he did, just saying I think that was on purpose.
Holy heck man, great job keeping me hooked the whole video. Glad you didn't take the FULL dose of venom, what you took given your experience already highlights the hell it would be for victims.
The stonefish found on the East Coast of Africa has a greater volume of venom and a more potent venom. JLB Smith, a famous South African ichthyologist, recounted getting stung by one in the thumb. It took 3 years for his hand to heal completely and regain its former strength. From his book, High Tide.
@@zevo9314watch jacks world of wildlife, shows coyote is definitely just a showman (which is fine, it’s a business). I’ve been stung by a couple of the same things and it’s really not that bad.
I was so worried you were going to step on a stonefish as you went to walk it off. Glad you're okay, thank you for taking one for the team yet again!!!
Holy cow, Mark and Coyote are probably the toughest guys in this world. Man cuz this isn’t just painful, it’s dangerous. Thx for the education and teaching us about this creature and medical help
He use that same sting that he just squish all the venom out when he show you how that venom work🙄🙄.. bruhh seriously? Do people this easy to be manipulate?
@@Daniel_0778Well if it is that harmless just go ahead and do it yourself. I bet you would take it like a king. Gosh is it that hard to realize that the dosis was meant to give an example of the pain you feel when stung by this fish? For that reason the amount of venom was more than enough.
Nah, it's exaggerated a fair bit. I've grown up in Australia, i live in Queensland now in my 40's. Half the snakes i've seen have only been at snake shows. Haven't seen that many in the wild and i go hiking pretty much weekly. I've only seen a stonefish once when i was snorkeling off Lennox Head, and only saw it because it moved. Never seen a Blue Ringed Octopus, Cone shell, or Box Jellyfish, and it's been years since i've seen a medically significant spider. You've got more chance of being robbed here than you have of encountering our wildlife.
@@Spacegoat92 thanks for the clarification. Most us Americans have this view of Australia. Looks like a beautiful country with great people, but all the deadly animals scare us away from wanting to visit.
DANGGGGGG THIS GUY WENT ALL OUT. give him credit, because he just got stung by a fish some people die to, for us, and science, of course. if you do read this, thank you.
Not true my boy, The Kings Of Pain on discovery channel have done it already. Plus they got stung by multiple spines and didn't milk it all of its venom before doing so.😂
I wouldn't exactly say "all out"...unless you meant almost "all out" of Venom. He milked the spine of Venom and barely pricked his skin... hardly "all out!"
I'm guessing it's because absolutely nothing wants to eat it. Every creature living in it's environment probably instinctually knows at this point that it's a death sentence to mess with them.
If you know how to pick them up, ie, from the front and with your hands underneath - then you’re pretty safe. Just don’t approach them from over the top - the spines will become erect, and might get nailed.
Holy smokes, you’re ballsy. That demonstration before the sting was actually scary. I really hope you guys get paid the big bucks for doing stuff like this haha. That was wild
This fish reminds me of when I’m at the hospital and it’s taking forever for the doctor to show a student doctor to stitch me up. After, the fish is like, “humans” lol
Got stung by a stonefish in Mexico in 2014. I remember telling them to cut the foot off because it would stop the pain. This video seriously underplays the amount of pain a full sting causes.
Well yea cuz he didn’t fully step on one or get pumped full of the venom he already milked the venom from that one. Hes still crazy for this tho no knocks on him lol
When I learned about the stonefish in 5th grade science, I couldn't even sleep that night cuz I was so scared of accidentally stepping on one randomly and dying. This man is insane
i think one of the hardest parts about this is that you have to inflict the sting yourself. with a bug, it does it on its own, but you have to physically bring your own hand down with ones like these.
The pain response can be fatal resulting in nerve damage and you can go into shock but most people live. They wish they were dead though. Morphine and even amputation of the leg don't stop the pain. There have been suicides over it they say.
Only sources I found stated only 2 people have died from a stonefish sting and both were in their 50's. No doubt it's excruciating but it's lethality is probably overstated.
There have been few deaths from them. I don't think you would even need anti-venom after being stung. You just need to be hooked up to a heart rate monitor and ride the pain out.
No, this is incredibly irresponsible. These guys have culminated a VERY large following of young fans who are actively recreating their stunts. It’s why he’s pissed off the reptile handling and invertebrate handling communities. This is no longer educational, it’s dangerous.
This is also one of the first times I've seen Mark have a reaction as bad as one of Coyotes. He's usually been quite calm, even throughout a lot of pain
@@Exoke while that would reduce pain, sure, it's important to note that the stone fish is considered the most painful sting in the world, be it insect or otherwise. Also, that it is fatal in normal doses (AKA: stomping your foot on it). He was doing the only amount that could be considered "safe". Have you not heard of the claims of people wanting amputations to escape its sheer pain when given a full dose on the foot?
That was unbelievable, never thought anyone would voluntarily let themselves be stung by a rockfish. Imagine accidentally stepping on it, having the sting with full load of toxin deep in the foot and without expecting it, so also not being prepared with countermeasures. If you are alone or the vehicle is further away, you have no chance at all. You can't even walk anymore.
Mark is a lot better than Coyote in that respect. Not that I doubt some of the stings he takes are bad but he's such a diva for the sake of the algorithm on even relatively minor stings.
@@skykrasher4475 I'm basing it off of how others react to the same stings he's done. It certainly looks unpleasant but you don't see anyone else dropping to the ground and rolling around screaming.
Yeah Mark has an insane level of pain tolerance -- and he rolls with the pain instead of reacting intensely to it. Most people in his situation will at least scream and writhing in pain. Watch his reaction to the electric eel, you can see how he endures pain really well.
It was the most superficial pin prick. He had to squeeze the hell out of it just to get a drop of blood up. I don't blame him though for not taking a full hit just for a tv series.😂😂
You can clearly see it’s a microdose. There would have been only the most minute traces of venom on the end of the spine, rather than the full ejaculation like the neoprene got
Man, that is actually insane. I used to have such an intense fear of those guys when I was younger, though I never actually saw one. One time, when I was probably around 11 or 12, I was on holiday at the Gold Coast (I live in Melbourne), exploring this awesome giant rock pool (jeez I wanna go back there one day)- there were all sorts of fish, crabs, eels, and even a sea snake at one point. I was trying to catch something when I put my hand under a rock, and got the worst pain in my finger. Pulled my hand back and there was a ton of blood- I remember being so scared that it’d been a stonefish or a sea snake that I almost passed out in the water hahaha. I just laid there while the pain got worse and worse, until an ambulance came- they gave me hot water for my hand, and after some time soaking it, everything just almost entirely stopped hurting, other than the open wound itself. And, of course, the second I felt better, instead of getting back to rest, I went straight back out into the rock pools to find more cool stuff haha. To this day I still have no idea what got me back then, and whether whatever it was had been venomous at all, or if it was just extreme stress. I know it wasn’t a stonefish, since it actively attacked me- I specifically remember it crashing into my finger with such extreme power and speed that I felt the water around that finger move. It all happened in less than a second, my brain hardly had time to process it at all. My main theory since that day is that it was an eel- that’s what I’d been trying to catch when I put my hand under the rock. But while I don’t remember exactly what the wound looked like, I believe it was more of a large, jagged slash- not sure whether an eel could do that with all those teeth. So yeah, no clue lol. I know this was kinda off topic, but the whole ‘painful sea creature’ theme reminded me of it.
the absolute bravery this team has for the sake of education deserves multiple awards easily. It's so fascinating watching what you guys upload, it makes me feel like a child all over again.
Why? Because he released all of the venom before the sting and didn't interact with the sheath during it? The sheath controls how much of the venom you get, not the fish. So essentially all this guy did was poke himself in the hand with a sharp needle. There was very little, if any, venom introduced into his hand. These channels just over react to everything and make people afraid of these animals.
@@infernalstan886 I'm sorry, what part did I miss? The part where they released the stonefish? The part where he talks about getting a whole load in his foot sending him to the hospital? The part where he tells us all about the pain he experienced, that may or may not be legitimate? Please tell me what part of the "rest of the video" negates anything said in my comment. Would love to hear it. The point of my comment was to dispute the "bravery" involved, as mentioned by the other commenter, and to criticize these types of channels. You can ABSOLUTELY educate people in a fun and informative way without being hilariously theatrical about nothing and without disturbing the animal.
@@salazardjim4398 Right, because if you actually got pumped full of venom with all of the spines, you could potentially die. Mark did as much as he could without putting his life in danger
We have to watch out for them walking in shallow water here in Australia . The fact that he bled the spikes before spiking himself should tell you dont want 3 spikes in your foot with all the venom !
I kinda dig this fish. Most poisonous fish in the world and it doesn’t react overly aggressive or anything. He kinda just…exists. What an interesting fish.
@@outogetyougotyou5250 i’m aware of the difference between venomous and poisonous. i’m not really sure what you’re referring to but the stonefish is venomous not poisonous
I got stung in my foot once, it spread til my calves but I immediately received medical treatment, it only took between 1 - 2 week to get me fully recovered
My uncle stepped on one when he was in his teens, six puncture wounds down the arch of his foot. Naturally he screamed in pain, but was fortunate he was with friends. He passed out from pain after only a few moments and was pulled back to land where he regained consciousness. He said he wasn't sure if it was actual paralysis, or whether his lower body just shut down from pain, but he couldn't move the effected leg much at the time. He recovered quickly in hospital, but it was the most painful thing he's ever experienced by far.
Coyote is a tool he puts on an act and overreacts and yells and jumps around just to make it look worse then it is just for views there’s better guys out there that give you honest reviews of bites and stings and so many times like the bullet ant coyote acted like he was on fire and other guys did it some got multiple bites and they never got off their chair and barely flinched so coyote is putting on a show for extra views this guy is much better and there are plenty other guys doing this that are much better
I didn’t even know stonefish could sting ! Thank you for all the animal information, your channel got me obsessed with animals when I was little and I’ve had an ever-growing fascination with them ever since. Whenever I tell my family or friends animal facts, they always say, “You learned that from Brave Wilderness, didn’t you?”
Same I didn’t know a stone fish could sting
I known it stung but not that painful
@@lovehamketsu3357really
@@lovehamketsu3357 yeah, like just enough to hunt prey, not defend against humans. It’s awesome.
How else would it envenomate something
I love how the fish doesn't have a flight response. He's so bad, he just let's himself get captured. He's like "You think you can take me? Alright, let's see you try."
It says as I shoot it
Lmao funny af
Yeah thats not how it works
Yeah that's so weird I've never seen a fish act like that
Mark: ok ready in 1,2,3 sting me !!!!😅😂😂
As a Aussie myself I didn’t think ANYONE would do this on purpose give this man a award 🥇
Darwin award maybe
I love your videos
Coyote peterson been doing this for years lol
I hope you dont think this is real
@@kayleneal_BSSit is real, but he jerked it off out of all it's venom before hand. He just got the dreggs.
Imagine how bad it would hurt if you stepped on it
I felt that
The only one that can beat the pain of stepping on legos
@@DampySenpai what about a stonefish little piece of Lego 😅
I love you rawwfishing
When I was 6 or so I was snorkeling in a shallow rocky area in Cuba and I literally jumped onto a stonefish by accident. I couldn't walk for several days, had insane swelling on my foot, and still have a spine-tingling fear of walking in bodies of water 15 years later. 1/10 would not recommend.
He’s such a badass, he doesn’t even bother to flop around when out of the water. It’s like, “whatever ya’ll, let’s get this over with.”
Who? Mark?
@@Michael-mh4vr dude, the fish obviously.
What happened to the other insect guy
@@chrisdunn2013They do the channel together. Coyote Peterson is still a part of the channel.
How does this fish know its got the worst sting on earth?
The fact that the venom's color matches the barbs is awesome, sea animals are such amazing creatures
Blue is such an amazing colour when it's in nature, and it's pretty rare to see naturally as well. The video with the blue frog is still my favourite.
@@infinitedeath1384 absolutely agree, blue is my favorite color.
I would guess that the spines are translucent, and the venom is blue
yaaas the barbs i love nicki! 🏳️🌈🏳️🌈🏳️🌈
the spine is actually clear. the venom itself is blue. that's why the spine looks blue, it's full of venom.
I'm glad that Cyote gets a day off and he's not the only one going through pain
I thought something happened to Coyote, and that's why Mark is here taking the punch 👀 this does seem like a painful experience as a job tho, damn 😅
@@andrewbetsargis92
this is why people don’t like religion you just like lbgtq
trying to force it down our throats
i’m christian but you don’t need to preach everywhere you go..
it gets annoying
@@andrewbetsargis92 shuuuuush
@@michaelkorvac4007you shuuuuush
@@andrewbetsargis92Amen
the fact that it didnt even care that you picked it up is insane, the confidence it has is crazy
I think this thing is only a bit smarter than a normal stone
@@xviii5780😂
Confidence? 😂 it’s a fish dude 😂
@@msemihkaya You're right if you think it doesn't have confidence. Instead, it has _confishdence!_
Not confidence or bravery on the fish's part. It likely doesn't even know what's going on. It's just existing. It doesn't need a thought process to survive like we do. You're looking at one of the dumbest living creatures & mistaking it's lack of awareness as confidence
Sitting here with my daughter watching your show. She absolutely loves it! This is her dad and she wanted me to tell you about me getting stung in the nose the other day. So the other day I got stung in the nose by an angry yellow jacket.
“there have even been reported deaths.”
“anyway let’s touch it.”
thank you someone with common sense
There have been reported deaths with anything to be fair. People die from bee or wasp stings all the time. Doesnt mean that you need to fear a wasp or a bee.
I agree this is somewhat foolish even if just for educational purposes.
This guy is madening
This guy probably already told his loved ones if I die from getting intentionally pricking my skin with a Stonefish barb I died doing what I love.
It’s kinda cute how calm that little guy is. He was just kinda chillin’ in that little box.
They are cute, almost cuddly and they like people it's just the weapon system on their back but you have to tread on them, they don't attack you.
@@drewledge-re6vv❤❤
u got your glasses on gang? cuz we not looking at the same thing
He's doing his best stone impression.
Thought you was talking about mark lol
I was a Hospital Corpsman in the U.S. Navy for 22 years. While stationed on Guam at the Naval Hospital we would see stonefish sting victims on a fairly regular basis. Witnessing the symptoms of stings to the feet was horrifying to say the least. Lots of snorkelers and reef walkers kept us busy. The screams and the physical fighting (due to the pain causing uncontrollable hitting, kicking and yes biting)is horrible. Lets just say you are the only person that would do this ON PURPOSE. I salute you.
That’s pretty odd considering these fish are native to Australia and are very rarely found outside of Australian waters, the furthest they go is the indo pacific along reef systems. You may be thinking of similar fish there are other kinds in the stonefish family.
@@sharpshooter_Austhey're in Guam bro, use Google and your brain
I'm from guam, thank you for your service.
@sharpshooter420 just google it dude, there are apparently stonefish in Guam too. Australia is best known for it and yes they go west to African shores, but they do extend north of Australia all the way up to Japan, which I also didn't know until now.
Hooray for google I guess
@@sharpshooter_AusOr you could just walk on the Reefs in Guam and find out for yourself
“I gotta walk it off!”
[Steps on another stone fish] 😂
No replies? Lemme change that
😂😂
BAHAHAHAHHA
This is easily the best comment😂
😂😂😂
We Aussies are educated at a very young age about these sea creatures - you my friend, have balls of steel! even if you did only take a small tac from this fish
Imagine smacking your hand right on the spikes, so you get multiple injections and they penetrate deep in the hand 😣😫
@@infinitedeath1384it wasn’t multitude of venom I don’t think. I think stone fish are like snakes they get rid of venom and then they got none left so I got a very tiny bit of it
What doesn't kill you make you stronger. At this point, Mark and Coyote are possibly the strongest man alive.
I mean thats not really true but by that logic I guess
Mark and Coyote vs. Adam and Caveman Rob!
LET'S GO!
@@lastcorridorsansit makes you stronger mentally
@@strawberryscentedchlorofor9935 It propels your ego to greater lengths every time you hurt yourself
Yes
“The stonefish, a master of hiding, the most painful sting, it knows he’s the most painful”
The stonefish: 🪨🗿
They live up to their name
If Poatan was a fish
In 1966, on Nukulau Island in Fiji, I had what was initially presumed to be a Stonefish "stab me" in the joint of my left forefinger - the reality was I had put my hand out to check out a weird fish. A tip of a barb snapped off. Yes, it was dreadful pain. The Fijian guides did not see the fish; they grabbed me and took me to the boat, the ferry Ranadi and poured cups of tea on my hand. That was all we had. To a thirteen-year-old, it was serious pain. That fish spike stayed in my hand for sixty years. Your jabbing yourself brought images of that day way back in January 1966.
I know I am late but I have a question, does it still hurt every now and then? Well, at least until the spike was removed?
1966 was less than 60 years ago. so you are lying.
Fun fact! Those "sheaths" around the spines are actually part of the venom sacks. As they become compressed (as the spine unsheathes) by your foot, the venom in them shoots up the spine and out the end into your foot. In other words, the Stonefish actually doesn't control the amount of venom going into you. That is determined by how hard you step on the fish
So he actually didnt get that mutch venom in him? That is scary.
@@iamphatphobic7617 Not much in comparison, but still quite a bit considering he pre-squeezed the sacks, so the spine was soaked in venom
@@chazzplaysytcopper554 Yeah for sure i would not have the balls to poke myself with that spike even if i emptied most of the venom.
Really? We couldn't tell by the close up video showing it.
@@gravyd316 Hey, it's just some info. The video is pretty good at showing it but doesn't go into detail about the mechanism
Imagine stepping on one of those and get 3-5 spines worth of of venom......
I believe that’s what happens when people step on them. They get maybe 3 of those and the pain must be insane
Turns out the stone fish won't kill you. You will just wish you were dead. They don't even have a flight response, they just sit there like "bro, you really don't want to do that".
U can most definitely die if you don't reach treatment in time.
He literally tell you in tha video “theres even been reported deaths because of tha stone fish”
@Unku. From people having an allergic reaction or a heart attack because of the amount of pain not the venom itself i think
@fosfan48 wrong. It's the most venomous fish on earth. Children and the elderly are at the most risk but it has killed and can kill you.... it can stop your heart beat and swell your lungs with the venom spreading in just a few minutes....
Wrong.
“this is borderline unbearable” *is scarily calm and unphased*
I used to work in The Great Barrier Reef. That is the mildest sting from a stone fish I've seen. It's not just the sting but the quantity of it that's the real threat because it hits so much harder and so much faster. I watched a reef diver get helicoptered to a hospital after stepping on one.
But the fact that you willingly took a microdose of it, well done dude, thats a brave thing.
Ah, he's an adrenaline junkie.
Yeah I heard some people went into cardiac arrest and actually died from the venom of the Stone Fish.
Yea I was thinking he might put his forearm onto it and get hammered by 3 or 4 needles. He obviously thought best not to..
The blue venom is really gnarly! I had no idea their venom was blue like that. Really neat.
thats actually fish in general because some fish have blue colored fluids and spines and its a rare mutation.
Ive had a snapper and needlefish that had blue meat and bones.
Both Coyote & Mark are indeed THE bravest men to enter the Sting Zones with these animals & bugs. They both deserve a medal
Nothing brave about retardation
This is not bravery…..it’s stupidity
Mark is lowkey annoying hes trying to act like coyote like using the same phrases and facial expressions i prefer coyote
@@JoeMama-lq2jfprobably because theyre friends, on the same show, doing the same thing? Idk man seems kinda crazy that they act the same
Animals, bugs, and the Gympie Gympie plant at some point also
Every episode on this channel is adding a new phobia to my life
My guy's a madman.. As an Aussie I know about these guys. I've also heard victims can have reoccurring pain in the area years later, with around the same intensity
Really? That's so weird. Cool fact.
Could it be psychological pain becuase of the possible trauma resulting from the sting?
@MD-sr9ve possibly. Ever heard oh amputees feeling pain in their phantom arm? Like that. Like phantom pain. I don't know how to logically explain it
@@anaussieplays763I mean it’s gotta be mental there’s nothing actually that’s causing it
@@Eshock-js6vz who knows if it alters anything along your nervous system 🤷
The Stonefish being so toxic it has no flight reflex is like, a whole lesson in itself. Lol
one mode, fight.. lol
Suoer
I guess not only is the venom in the spikes, but also the fact that nothing can eat it.
@@iitzfizzit’s not even really fighting. It’s like a super passive aggressive fish lmao
Stepped on one of these with full force when I was 11 years old. The pain was so intense I couldn’t think. That is the most painful thing I’ve ever experienced.
i stepped in a fire ant hill.......
I stepped on a pebble once......man that stung
I have stepped on nothing that’s poisonous you people unlucky
Damn that’s crazy.
23rd April 2006, stepped on a lego
Most painful thing in the world
Stone fish:❌
Stepping on a lego:✅
5:30 not only are the spines designed to shoot the most amount of venom into your foot but because there are so many spines and close together, if you step on a stonefish you will normally wind up having multiple spines penetrate your foot, not just one. Having spines only on the top of it’s body also tells you that the biggest issue the fish has with it’s camouflage is that it works so well that the top of its body is the only part that needs defending… from us who wander in the ocean and can’t see them. The stonefish doesn’t muck around with defence.
I stepped on one and I had 5 pricks on my foot and the pain was intense and unrelenting.
Kind of a "Screw everyone" defense isn't it. They're designed to not be seen but, if we don't see them, we get up to 13-14 spines in our foot
Cool😊
I live near these fish!
Not planning on stepping on one, though.
I've stepped on sea urchin before and that was bad enough 😅
You should try it@@Ndkksooejn
Let’s appreciate all the pain he has to go through for hours just for us to be entertained for a few minutes.
Not entertained…educated lol
hours? id say days they probably get sick sometimes after these videos
To think he got a baby prick that didn’t shoot much venom
@@LickerofToes edutained
He's making a fortune by doing this though, it's not for nothing.
"I gotta walk it off."
Steps on stonefish while walking it off.
Hahah, that's the best mental image ever 😂😂😂
I love the way the fish is like "yeah whatever, pick me up, put me on a box, you wont eat me, i'll cause you excruciating pain if you try any funny business"
And then the fish is like "what, wait a minute, you're going to sting yourself with me?"
That day, a stonefish got an ego check lol.
Humans' preceding their reputation everyday. Fish: "😮"
I mean it was half checked, he got his hand stung by a depleted sting, that's some mad respect for the venom
The Stonefish's channel suddenly uploads a "I let myself get captured by the most dangerous ape ON THE PLANET!!!" video.
The stonefish would be saying "don't do it, it's gonna really f'in hurt and I don't want to be responsible for that, man". Stoned fish might be a better name.
Bro is reeling in pain from the most painful sting in the world but checks to see if the stone fish is okay before applying first aid. That's some major Steve Irwin energy ❤
The fish is so confident and chill you can literally see the look of annoyance on its face putting up with all this 🤣🤣
He’s stoned. 😂
😂😂😂😂
Just like rattlesnakes, they just stand their ground ratteling knowing you are terrified.
Bro is not impressed by the meat sack humans picking him up.
When I started watching these videos, I started getting addicted to animals like they are so fun before I didn’t like them so much and I didn’t really read about them but now y’all made my day❤🎉😊
I just love how it constantly looks unimpressed 😂
He’s like “damn it’s not coyote..”
“Aight fam, let’s see what you got. 🤷♂️"
Impressing the mighty stonefish is a tall order. The fish is basically saying, "okay, human, poke me and see what happens."
Mark is like the bravest (and craziest) man in the world... he is literally the first and only person in the world to voluntarily take a stonefish sting...This fish is more toxic than a black mamba... this guy deserves my respect!👏👏👏
Nah Coyote Peterson is better
Not true my boy, The Kings Of Pain on discovery channel have done it already.
The guys from Kings of pain are completely nuts. They also put like their whole hand on the stonefish so they were probably stung multiple times at once
@@great_Caligola No. I think you're wrong... I've been following History's Kings of Pain here on RUclips since before I met Brave Wilderness and they've never been skewered by a stonefish... the furthest they got was when they decided to get stung by one scorpionfish, they even commented on how dangerous the stonefish was when they were about to be skewered by the scorpionfish, and said that they would never take the sting of a deadly creature like it (stonefish).
He literally juiced the venom before hand and then barely pricked the least painful part of his hand
What's crazy is now Mark is literally taking stings that are lethal. I'd imagine things like this are well thought out medically.
Well to be fair, it seems like he did the neoprene first which shot most of the venom off and only coated the spike. I think that was a calculated way to both show us what would happen and also reduce the amount of venom he’d receive. He did say he was only taking a micro dose.
Either way, it’s still a big deal. I’m not trying to downplay what he did, just saying I think that was on purpose.
@@Not_Cielwow , I didn’t think of that. That’s brilliant while still showing us the potential of this sting
Does that mean the blue ringed octopus is next?
That fish watching you the whole time" thinking " this dude crazy AF " 😂 he was laughing i saw bubbles" 😮
This Amount of pain this guy go through just to teach us Is amazing and how he risk his life to teach us what a legend
Well he’s also a millionaire from doing this. lol
The other og guy is better tho
@@alexrich3969yea
I agree
Teach what? How to get sting? 😅
Holy heck man, great job keeping me hooked the whole video. Glad you didn't take the FULL dose of venom, what you took given your experience already highlights the hell it would be for victims.
full dose would have been a REALLY bad idea
For real
Yes
@@BraveWildernessTrue. This dose on the other hand, was a great idea!
Yea for real
The stonefish found on the East Coast of Africa has a greater volume of venom and a more potent venom. JLB Smith, a famous South African ichthyologist, recounted getting stung by one in the thumb. It took 3 years for his hand to heal completely and regain its former strength. From his book, High Tide.
9:30 I love that he still cared about the fish
Imagine if he took the full venom without milking it first. It's crazy how potent that sting is.
That’s the most chill fish I’ve ever seen. Also, that was hella dangerous.
The difference in how calm Mark is during stings and bites vs how dramatic Coyote is will always be hilarious to me.
Sometimes coyote will do that but mainly he would be have the same reaction as brave wilderness
People's pain thresholds aren't the same tho so there's that
coyote took full bites and stings, with full venom. this was the lightest prick with the smallest amount of venom
@@zevo9314watch jacks world of wildlife, shows coyote is definitely just a showman (which is fine, it’s a business). I’ve been stung by a couple of the same things and it’s really not that bad.
I’m betting coyote plays it up for the cameras
I was so worried you were going to step on a stonefish as you went to walk it off. Glad you're okay, thank you for taking one for the team yet again!!!
dude that stone fish is so chill, not even gonna move a bit while it's getting lifted up on the surface. I can tell its gonna be a good pet
It's hilarious how chill that fish was about the whole thing. That's the end result of an animal putting all its skill points into defense.
The best offense is a Good defense
Tank fish 😂
You would too if you got like 6 stings on your back full with venom
Mark Vins is literally Coyote's right hand man, Mark is willing to take bites and stings like a boss. Keep up the awesome work guys. 😎
Would of been better if he did it to a stinger that he didn't already take venom from
@@mabyonedayicanbehappyyea .. would of been better if he just stepped on it full force too right
@@gkrees9509 no that would be worse.
@@gkrees9509hahah fr
9:50 “hang on i gotta walk it off” this man is insane 😂
Holy cow, Mark and Coyote are probably the toughest guys in this world. Man cuz this isn’t just painful, it’s dangerous. Thx for the education and teaching us about this creature and medical help
There also the dumbest❤
And the most braves people ever
He use that same sting that he just squish all the venom out when he show you how that venom work🙄🙄.. bruhh seriously? Do people this easy to be manipulate?
@@calebheiligenstadt634oh the irony. *theyre
@@Daniel_0778Well if it is that harmless just go ahead and do it yourself. I bet you would take it like a king. Gosh is it that hard to realize that the dosis was meant to give an example of the pain you feel when stung by this fish? For that reason the amount of venom was more than enough.
Seems like every step you take in Australia could end up being your last (regardless of the type of surface you are walking on) 🥺
This was sheer insanity. Why would anybody ever do this willingly...
Nah, it's exaggerated a fair bit. I've grown up in Australia, i live in Queensland now in my 40's. Half the snakes i've seen have only been at snake shows. Haven't seen that many in the wild and i go hiking pretty much weekly. I've only seen a stonefish once when i was snorkeling off Lennox Head, and only saw it because it moved. Never seen a Blue Ringed Octopus, Cone shell, or Box Jellyfish, and it's been years since i've seen a medically significant spider. You've got more chance of being robbed here than you have of encountering our wildlife.
@@Spacegoat92 thanks for the clarification. Most us Americans have this view of Australia. Looks like a beautiful country with great people, but all the deadly animals scare us away from wanting to visit.
I know I’ve been gone for a while, but Coyote be looking mighty different in these videos. Lol.
Same lmao. Wtf happened to him 😬
😂
He needs rest after all the stuff he did. We don’t blame him
@@JetBlack2024please explain? I’m not caught up on coyote lore 😂
Ah yes Coyote thats the name I forgot
"I gonna walk it off" *steps into another stonefish* :D
DANGGGGGG THIS GUY WENT ALL OUT. give him credit, because he just got stung by a fish some people die to, for us, and science, of course. if you do read this, thank you.
Not true my boy, The Kings Of Pain on discovery channel have done it already. Plus they got stung by multiple spines and didn't milk it all of its venom before doing so.😂
@@kevinnguyen9138 so..? Lol.
@@kevinnguyen9138 wha-
I wouldn't exactly say "all out"...unless you meant almost "all out" of Venom. He milked the spine of Venom and barely pricked his skin... hardly "all out!"
@@tmcmillan45 i said “all out” because he went to the extreme level on what he was doing. more simple?
Is it just me, or does Mark have a way higher pain tolerance than Coyote?
Coyote: AHHH! ITS LIKE FIRE! AHHH!
Mark: This is very uncomfortable.
I don’t know about a higher pain tolerance, maybe just different ways of expressing it.
Mark said it was borderline unbearable, I just assume they show it differently
That's because Coyote likes to oversell his reactions. Probably to scare people, but also it gains more attention.
@@TyroneIsHere4UrAssyou get bit by an approximation of an Australian death worm and walk it off
@@DZ-DizzyDumm someone showcased that being stung by a bullet ant doesn't make you roll over and scream in agony the way Coyote Peterson does.
It's weird how docile and calm they are
I know he’s just chilling there 💀
Well they have their defences on their backs… so of course it’s just going to chill out when it can. It’s not likely to get a frontal attack
they're like "try me"
I'm guessing it's because absolutely nothing wants to eat it. Every creature living in it's environment probably instinctually knows at this point that it's a death sentence to mess with them.
When you are at the peak of poisonous in the animal kingdom, the only thing left is to be chill about it and enjoy being a badass stonefish
Someone give this man a reward he deserves it so much he is so brave!
That’s one of the most confident fishes I’ve ever seen in my entire life
He’s like ‘Pet me m8’
I love his "sup bro? : ] " face
i always thought Coyote was a crazy man but Mark is as crazy by catching it with his bare hands what a dude
If you know how to pick them up, ie, from the front and with your hands underneath - then you’re pretty safe. Just don’t approach them from over the top - the spines will become erect, and might get nailed.
@@nathanwilliams2152 still wouldn’t be me tho
Holy smokes, you’re ballsy. That demonstration before the sting was actually scary. I really hope you guys get paid the big bucks for doing stuff like this haha. That was wild
Right?? I just pictured that being someone's foot and my jaw was on the floor. They're so blue too!!
This fish reminds me of when I’m at the hospital and it’s taking forever for the doctor to show a student doctor to stitch me up. After, the fish is like, “humans” lol
Got stung by a stonefish in Mexico in 2014. I remember telling them to cut the foot off because it would stop the pain. This video seriously underplays the amount of pain a full sting causes.
then goddamn this dude has some balls of steel of he can withstand that pain
Well yea cuz he didn’t fully step on one or get pumped full of the venom he already milked the venom from that one. Hes still crazy for this tho no knocks on him lol
When I learned about the stonefish in 5th grade science, I couldn't even sleep that night cuz I was so scared of accidentally stepping on one randomly and dying. This man is insane
I swear! I thought it was a much bigger issue than it really us 😅
@@lLIBER4TORl Yeah that and quicksand LOL
For real! Bermuda triangle too lol
Yeah and I was fishing so I was terrified
i think one of the hardest parts about this is that you have to inflict the sting yourself. with a bug, it does it on its own, but you have to physically bring your own hand down with ones like these.
I never seen a fish be so calm😂😂😂
stonefish stings can be fatal right?? the amount of risks y'all take to provide us w entertainment and education is rlly impressive and respectable
The pain response can be fatal resulting in nerve damage and you can go into shock but most people live. They wish they were dead though. Morphine and even amputation of the leg don't stop the pain. There have been suicides over it they say.
Only sources I found stated only 2 people have died from a stonefish sting and both were in their 50's. No doubt it's excruciating but it's lethality is probably overstated.
There have been few deaths from them. I don't think you would even need anti-venom after being stung. You just need to be hooked up to a heart rate monitor and ride the pain out.
@@CDizzle3270always searching up stuff huh
No, this is incredibly irresponsible. These guys have culminated a VERY large following of young fans who are actively recreating their stunts. It’s why he’s pissed off the reptile handling and invertebrate handling communities. This is no longer educational, it’s dangerous.
This is also one of the first times I've seen Mark have a reaction as bad as one of Coyotes. He's usually been quite calm, even throughout a lot of pain
True. This is how you know that things are really bad.
It's because Coyote Peterson fakes his reactions. Mark is being genuine here, because it's actually really painful.
@lordfabulous6198 let's go get stung by bullet ants guys 💪😄
@@shadowguy7991 He literally juiced the venom before hand and then barely pricked the least painful part of his hand
@@Exoke while that would reduce pain, sure, it's important to note that the stone fish is considered the most painful sting in the world, be it insect or otherwise. Also, that it is fatal in normal doses (AKA: stomping your foot on it). He was doing the only amount that could be considered "safe". Have you not heard of the claims of people wanting amputations to escape its sheer pain when given a full dose on the foot?
Mark - "I gotta walk it off!"
* *Steps on a Stone Fish* *
😂
Lolol
Hahaha!!!
* *After stepping on the second stonefish, falls into a tidepool directly on top of a third stonefish* *
lol
Love the way that mark is doing coyotes thing lol
That was unbelievable, never thought anyone would voluntarily let themselves be stung by a rockfish. Imagine accidentally stepping on it, having the sting with full load of toxin deep in the foot and without expecting it, so also not being prepared with countermeasures. If you are alone or the vehicle is further away, you have no chance at all. You can't even walk anymore.
What about stepping on it and drown afterwards?
@@aboyaq7259or your face lands on another stone fish after stepping on one
Then you fall nuts first on it.
@@donotcareatallShould save that one for the final destination reboot
@@mo_musashi_284lmao yeah that’d be very unfortunate
The Fish: 🗿
I like how you don’t really dramatize the sting. It’s an honest show
Mark is a lot better than Coyote in that respect. Not that I doubt some of the stings he takes are bad but he's such a diva for the sake of the algorithm on even relatively minor stings.
If you wanna see someone that doesnt dramatizes a sting at all, check out Jack’s World of Wildlife, he even took a Black Widow and Brown Recluse bite.
@@Michael-kv9bgbrown recluse is crazy but black widow that's painful but overfeared
@@Goldenkitten1Let’s see you get stung by these things then. Bet you won’t think he was being overdramatic after that.
@@skykrasher4475 I'm basing it off of how others react to the same stings he's done. It certainly looks unpleasant but you don't see anyone else dropping to the ground and rolling around screaming.
"hold up, i gotta walk it off"
bro got the same mindset as my dad
The fact that Stonefish is just chilling and doing its thing without any movement, is just fascinating!
Yeah funny how its drowning without water. Awesome.
@@nicoschroeder5379 absolutely false, they can last up to 24 hours out of water, which honestly just adds to their danger factor
@@nicoschroeder5379guessing you didn’t even watch the video, where he explains they are able to sit outside of the water
To risk your life for views and clicks is one of the most irresponsible things to do. Why?? This is not cool at all!
Judging by your reaction,either not enough venom came in or you have an amazing pain tolerance
Yeah Mark has an insane level of pain tolerance -- and he rolls with the pain instead of reacting intensely to it. Most people in his situation will at least scream and writhing in pain. Watch his reaction to the electric eel, you can see how he endures pain really well.
It was the most superficial pin prick. He had to squeeze the hell out of it just to get a drop of blood up. I don't blame him though for not taking a full hit just for a tv series.😂😂
he squeezed some from the skin test, so there's that.
Clearly didn't take a proper sting. Not even close
You can clearly see it’s a microdose. There would have been only the most minute traces of venom on the end of the spine, rather than the full ejaculation like the neoprene got
Bro I didn’t know stonefishes have blue stingers, thank you so much for showing this video, and thanks for showing us how’s it like to be stunted
Ikr
They’re kinda sick tho
@@mitchellsanchez3937well yeah they do stunts according to OP
Man, that is actually insane. I used to have such an intense fear of those guys when I was younger, though I never actually saw one. One time, when I was probably around 11 or 12, I was on holiday at the Gold Coast (I live in Melbourne), exploring this awesome giant rock pool (jeez I wanna go back there one day)- there were all sorts of fish, crabs, eels, and even a sea snake at one point. I was trying to catch something when I put my hand under a rock, and got the worst pain in my finger. Pulled my hand back and there was a ton of blood- I remember being so scared that it’d been a stonefish or a sea snake that I almost passed out in the water hahaha. I just laid there while the pain got worse and worse, until an ambulance came- they gave me hot water for my hand, and after some time soaking it, everything just almost entirely stopped hurting, other than the open wound itself. And, of course, the second I felt better, instead of getting back to rest, I went straight back out into the rock pools to find more cool stuff haha. To this day I still have no idea what got me back then, and whether whatever it was had been venomous at all, or if it was just extreme stress. I know it wasn’t a stonefish, since it actively attacked me- I specifically remember it crashing into my finger with such extreme power and speed that I felt the water around that finger move. It all happened in less than a second, my brain hardly had time to process it at all. My main theory since that day is that it was an eel- that’s what I’d been trying to catch when I put my hand under the rock. But while I don’t remember exactly what the wound looked like, I believe it was more of a large, jagged slash- not sure whether an eel could do that with all those teeth. So yeah, no clue lol. I know this was kinda off topic, but the whole ‘painful sea creature’ theme reminded me of it.
Sting ray barb
@@Bb-yomomfugazzi ooooh omg I never thought of that! Definitely could be what did it
Woa, that is scary, but interesting...I wonder what it could of been!
Blud things I'm reading allat
the absolute bravery this team has for the sake of education deserves multiple awards easily. It's so fascinating watching what you guys upload, it makes me feel like a child all over again.
Bravery? I think more like insanity.
Masochists 😅
Why? Because he released all of the venom before the sting and didn't interact with the sheath during it? The sheath controls how much of the venom you get, not the fish. So essentially all this guy did was poke himself in the hand with a sharp needle. There was very little, if any, venom introduced into his hand. These channels just over react to everything and make people afraid of these animals.
@@shanewalker8607 guess you didn't watch the whole video 😂
@@infernalstan886 I'm sorry, what part did I miss? The part where they released the stonefish? The part where he talks about getting a whole load in his foot sending him to the hospital? The part where he tells us all about the pain he experienced, that may or may not be legitimate?
Please tell me what part of the "rest of the video" negates anything said in my comment. Would love to hear it. The point of my comment was to dispute the "bravery" involved, as mentioned by the other commenter, and to criticize these types of channels. You can ABSOLUTELY educate people in a fun and informative way without being hilariously theatrical about nothing and without disturbing the animal.
Being voluntarily stung by a stonefish? You guys truly deserve all of the views.
the spine already shot its load, and barely scratched his surface, this is nothing like what happens when you encounter one in the wild.
@@salazardjim4398 Right, because if you actually got pumped full of venom with all of the spines, you could potentially die. Mark did as much as he could without putting his life in danger
I have not visited this channel in a long time. But I enjoy watching this new guy. Feels more realistic. Subscribed.
I really appreciate how beautiful nature is, like this fish has spikes on its back and they glow blue. It’s pretty cool.
Mark and the whole brave wilderness team put in so much effort and bravery, and this video perfectly represents that 😮
This man is putting his life in danger just to educate us, and that shows his dedication for us ❤❤❤
Just for views..
@@hypersand4555Just for money
I would not call this education, at best entertainment.
Yeah I think crocodile hunter has the Info piece locked up. Homie nobody is as good as Steve Irwin. This just is just as crazy as him tho. 😂😂
I disagree. This is unnecessary.
Revealed Stonefish spines look like freshly unearthed crystals, strangely beautiful.
We have to watch out for them walking in shallow water here in Australia . The fact that he bled the spikes before spiking himself should tell you dont want 3 spikes in your foot with all the venom !
If you are living in Australia, why would you even get in any body of water unless you had a death wish?
@@Johannesburgus My whole child hood was in the water . Its very rare to see them and less rare to step on one .
Imagine being so deadly you don't need fight or flight response, only fight.
And its really a "fight", since the fish just sits there and someone else pushing its spike does the job. The fish does nothing.
I wouldn’t even call this fight, more like “f around and find out”
I kinda dig this fish. Most poisonous fish in the world and it doesn’t react overly aggressive or anything. He kinda just…exists. What an interesting fish.
Just Vibin fish
I am not sure, but I don't think their flesh is poisonous, bar the venom glands.
@@outogetyougotyou5250yeah it’s venomous not poisonous in this case
@@muchesko If you ingest its venom, it is in fact poisonous. I think you need look up the difference between venomous and poisonous.
@@outogetyougotyou5250 i’m aware of the difference between venomous and poisonous. i’m not really sure what you’re referring to but the stonefish is venomous not poisonous
I got stung in my foot once, it spread til my calves but I immediately received medical treatment, it only took between 1 - 2 week to get me fully recovered
I'm glad we have these absolute madmen to find out what these stings feel like for us so we don't have to do it ourselves
And it’s not like you would anyways so yeah shut up
My uncle stepped on one when he was in his teens, six puncture wounds down the arch of his foot. Naturally he screamed in pain, but was fortunate he was with friends. He passed out from pain after only a few moments and was pulled back to land where he regained consciousness. He said he wasn't sure if it was actual paralysis, or whether his lower body just shut down from pain, but he couldn't move the effected leg much at the time. He recovered quickly in hospital, but it was the most painful thing he's ever experienced by far.
The aqua color of the spikes and venom is truly incredible.
You sir, regardless of anything anyone says, are doing a very important task
Crazy how docile the fish is.
He is called a stone fish for a reason
this guy is way to nice and chill to be handling an alien like that
Lol chill before they all grow legs
I thought Cayote was crazy! You guys go through so much just to teach us about these animals! Well done!
Coyote is a tool he puts on an act and overreacts and yells and jumps around just to make it look worse then it is just for views there’s better guys out there that give you honest reviews of bites and stings and so many times like the bullet ant coyote acted like he was on fire and other guys did it some got multiple bites and they never got off their chair and barely flinched so coyote is putting on a show for extra views this guy is much better and there are plenty other guys doing this that are much better
The venom doesn't kill you, the pain just hinders your swimming to the point you drown to death
Very educational thank you!