It's also astonishing to me how some people think that releasing an animal that grew in a zoo is a good idea. An animal like that is basically the equivalent of a human growing up well fed and housed in a hotel to basically the jungle and telling them good luck. They did this with an Orca once and when it was released it kept trying to follow boats wondering why it was abandoned and died a few months after.
yeah, i mean is so fucking obvious how cruel is release animal to the nature.... That very sad, you raise a baby with all confort and so you drop it away on hell... Why??
@@malkuusha Yeah, he was released around 2002 then died in 2003 due to failing to adapt to the new environment. I mean if I was suddenly thrown to a jungle because some aliens thought that I would be free there I'd "fail" adapting to the new environment too.
@@bruhism173 dogs can eat uncooked chicken bones perfectly fine.. you generally dont want to give dogs bones that have been cooked as they become harder/brittle and break into hard splinters when eating.. ask anyone who feeds dogs raw meat, and they will tell you.. my pomeranian used to crushed through chicken bones like nothing. the only thing you have to be careful about is when it gets small enough to where the dog may consider trying to swallow it, so you need to watch them, or put a clamp on the end of the bone..
Communism comes to mind. All forms of collectivism really. They're all based on good intentions, but they always end up in the death of millions. Modern western people definitely don't understand the harsh side of reality. It can be incomprehensibly beautiful, and simultaneously incomprehensibly harsh.
The swimming monkey one is not simply"just trying to help". Most likely they were local fishermen and also knew about the monkey's behavior and thought they could gain fame by making a viral rescue video.
@@shaheershakeel5618 honestly I'm puzzled by what to reply, cus honestly I didn't need to cus I was basically telling them not most people know someone has something. And that case was a example
As a rescuer (stray dogs and feral cats) myself, I know the dilemma too well, especially when it comes to pups that are apparently left alone. You can never know if they are abandoned or their mom is looking for food, just by passing by. So you can do it wrong both ways, by either non-caring or taking them. The only right way is to take some time to monitor the situation and then to act accordingly when you can be sure you're doing it right. This way you can make sure not to take away pups from their mom but also to not let them die if they are abandoned.
@@rabbitsarepro Right. And you won't want to let them die, either. This means you need to take some time and precautions before you act. If you can't do it by yourself, note the place and contact local volunteers, if you can, or check out later.
unless you plan on turning them into a house pet(farm pet) it is better to leave them alone. May seem cruel but coyotes, raccoons, foxes, need to eat also
I did that with slugs on my dirt road in the morning for a time xD I did my best to put them towards the direction they were headed. Btw, there were a lot of them
Also you should help toads who are on their yearly trip to mate, in germany we have many roads that cross their routes, so people gather together to pick them up and help them over the road. Some places even put up fences temporarily and the toads get picked up at the end of the day to bring them to the other side. But sadly there are still dozens of dead toads on the road during this time
Yep! My grandmother was an older native lady and we were taught that you don't mess with animals like this unless they are caught in human traps or asking for help, more than likely you are not helping the animal.
I waited several days asking neighbors if they'd seen where this kitten, that decided to move in with us, came from. No-one mentioned he was theirs and no-one posted any missing posters or responded to my lost and found, he also didn't have a full tummy so it was clear he wasn't being fed. I got him checked at the vet for a microchip, none so I kept him. Before then I looked after a stray cat, got his chip checked only to find the owners moved 9 years prior, never reported him lost and then denied they ever owned him, he lived to 19 with me. Years later another cat in very good condition followed me home so I took her to get a microchip check, neighbors were in tears I found her after she ran off during a terrible storm. Just observe, hold back and check, it's not that hard and every critter has their own unique story.
People against GMOs don't understand that it's not the vegetation that is dangerous but usually the pesticides used to help grow it. While people are concerned about looking for that non-GMO apple, they don't realize that the real difference is when pesticides were last used on it. Although it would be nice to see pesticide free as a labeling, the difficulty of growing the various fruits and vegetables without pesticides is extremely difficult.
The problem i have with GMOs is the company that developed it owns that item in perpetuity. Charging people to Grow this plant that they made forever. Even if it wasn't planted by the land owner that company can demand monetary compensation for their product growing wild.
The thing is that many GMOs actually need less chemicals, whether it'd be pesticides or chemicals to treat deseases, etc. ...that's the reason why many crops are modified in the first place - because it's cheaper at the end
@@mrcrabowski That's a falsehood. The most widely used GMOs are herbicide resistant crops. People use them so they can spray the entire field with a pesticide, such as glyphosate, so they don't have to carefully spot treat weeds or deal with weeds in some way other than pesticides.
Wild Heart Ranch, a wildlife rehabilitation centre in Oklahoma that I keep up with on Facebook (one of few that I fully agree with their treatment of the animals in their care, and ideology) puts out notices every year about leaving healthy animals alone, even if they seem abandoned. One that always sticks out to me is just how many fawns they take in that have been effectively kidnapped. Every year they push: A fawn with straight, pointy ears is getting fed by mum and there's no need to worry. Mum will leave the baby alone throughout most of a day as to not bring attention to them by predators. A fawn with curly-tipped ears is dehydrated and not getting fed, suggesting that the mother has abandoned it or been killed. They also end up dealing with several cases a year of baby animals sick because they were fed something inadequate for their needs.
@@UnauthorizedRosin I feel like a lot of animal rescues are on the extremist end, a bit like PETA. For instance, I stopped supporting Chicken Run Rescue when they went on a tirade about remembering the loss of Betty White because she at one point in her early, early life supported animals in entertainment, owned a chimp, and wore furs. They refused to participate in the big charity drive for animals in the pretence that Betty White was an awful person who doesn't deserve to be recognised as an animal advocate because of an this, and (GASP!) she ate meat! Instead of running a charity collection drive of their own that day, they ranted about how the remembrance of Betty White was eclipsing our remembrance of MLK, Jr. I feel like if they were there for the animals, they should accept the money to support those animals. Period. And not demonise a person based on some things they did as a youth. I also stopped following a fellow rooster rescue called Rooster Haus because they never replied to my queries about adopting some of their boys (I, too, ran a rooster rescue out of my own home), or they'd post a big schpeil about how difficult it was going to be to come down to my area to pick up some roosters, and when I'd reach out to them to ask for details so that I could go collect them instead, I heard absolutely nothing back. In both instances, I feel like the rescue at hand was shooting themselves in the foot in terms of shirking help that could've been available. In the instance of Chicken Run, it went further into trying to indoctrinate their followers into veganism (or you're evil), and taking unreasonably extreme positions on animal rights, both of which end up alienating a good deal of your potential supporters and donors. In my experience, a LOT of animal rescue groups end up behaving like Chicken Run, and seem like carbon copies of PETA, just rebranded to the animals of their choosing. I don't support PETA because their extremism is dangerous to the animals they claim to support, unreasonable, seldom founded in actual truth (read an article from them demonising a facility that works with owls claiming that "owls never lie on their back in the wild" when, in fact, it HAS been documented that owls will flip on their backs to "play", so far as we can tell, and I've even seen this behaviour myself), and they often end up exposed as very hypocritical to their own claimed goals.
I used to live on a small farm next to a fairly busy road. You wouldn't believe how many times the authorities showed up due to a complaint by a passerby. The problem? The horses were being horses. Majority of our population live in large cities watching disney and peta and have no knowledge of animal behavior. And apparently no knowledge of human behavior.
I feel the pain we had a 33 yr old tennessee walker (horse) that people were convinced was being starved...as if the one ton bale and morning sweet feed wasn't a clue that as animals age they have a harder time keeping fat and muscle on them.
With animals that don't appear to be in any danger, monitor the situation from afar. This is especially true with birds. Fledgling birds often appear helpless, but are in actuality being monitored by one of the parents and your interference only serves to hinder the fledgling rather than help it.
Intervening requires knowledge of the environment and ecosphere you inhabit. 3 days ago I had a situation where a baby bird was learning to fly and had fallen onto the ground in my front yard where I have two dogs. One of them, was a younger hound, and was loosely pawing at the bird as it cried out in distress. It's parents were squawking loudly overhead, clearly distressed as well at the situation. The best thing I could do in this situation was to round up the dogs, and secure them on the porch, giving the bird enough time to recover and attempt another flight. I came back 5 minutes later, and the baby bird had successfully left. All in all, it required hardly any intervention. More or less, it was about teaching my domesticated animals not to get involved because sometimes wild animals have things like parasites, and I would feel better with them sticking to a diet that I provide them.
I found a young house sparrow laying on the hard brick floor in my front yard It got entangled by some fiber/thread with some already cut into it skin. I pesume it fell from the nest its parents built next to my window AC. It was weak and the sun was cooking, sadly it parents either gave up or not around. I tried to drip some water near its beak and cut out the thread, it took a few sip then died in about 20 minutes.
Had a bird fall out it’s nest. It couldnt fly because it’s tail feathers hadn’t grown yet so it could only fly like how a chicken flys. It was on a tree branch then tried to jump on the roof but missed. The mother bird flew down fed the bird then guided it into the bushes on foot . Idk if the bird survived but at least the momma bird was still taking care of it.
Yes yes YES! Educating yourself about the animals and ecosystem is vital for knowing if,when, and how to act on an animal you encounter. I have my local wildlife rehabber, several vets, rescues, etc all in case of an animal in TRUE distress. If you love animals, please become educated about them and their habits and homes!
Good job, people sometimes forget that babies are second priority because you can always make more. So if mother feel threatened she will leave children which can be the case when people try to put birdie back in nest
@@realdragon birds recognize by view not scent, so if it was a really, really young bird that should still be in the nest... In those moment you want to put them (next) to the nest of you can (Except if it's corvid, the nest is for eggs, not birds. If it's corvid it's normal)
Shout out the cat I almost accidentally stole because I thought it needed rescuing. It didn't wanna come with me, so I left it, came back, and she was gone. About a week later, I found her sitting on the porch of her home
I am a cat feeder for the local cats around my school and once, this was quite heartbreaking, someone picked up a kitten who’s mother was very scared of people and walked away, I tried to explain that it’s mother was there, but they took the cat away, they obviously didn’t care enough about it because I found it there two days later, fed it, and the next day : gone. people need to respect that wild animals are just like us and don’t deserve all the kidnapping that we think will help them
So your feeding stray cats? Maybe you need to reevaluate your so called help too. Do yourself a favour, look up reasons why feeding stray cats is complicated. Had a neighbour doing this when I lived in an apartment. Needless to say the complexity of this never reached them. They ultimately got kicked out because they kept doing it but in secret. Guess what happened to the horde of cats that damaged our area and tried eating all the birds. Yup, they finally starved out and moved on. Way too many cats was getting out of hand
well dont feed them its just nature andtaht sucks but thats hoe life works so dont but what i do is take them to a place still out side or in the house and then places it so it dont die and we may have thousants of spiders in the adick😨 🤮🤢spider🤢🤮
Feeding feral,stray cats is horrible for the ecosystem they breed like crazy and they constantly hunt a lot of native wildlife please to do such things
Here in Brazil a lot of people talk about saving baby turtles and creating a route so they could get from sand to ocean safely. I wonder how much this action would impact other species.
Opa Igor, beleza? Vou explicar com o que eu sei (porém já aviso que não sou expert, mas trabalho no ramo animal). Boa parte das espécies de tartarugas marinhas conhecidas estão em risco de extinção, com uma pequena parte delas em risco extremo. Conheço uma ONG que protege as tartarugas marinhas aqui na minha cidade, é claro que a gente não deve interferir no processo natural, porém nesse caso acredito ser justificado. Melhor evitar a extinção desse animal a correr o risco, né?
@@5XXFelipeMuito legal a sua iniciativa, obrigado por existir. Se voluntariar a auxiliar ao seu semelhante sem esperar nada em troca é algo impressionante de se ver, logo posso afirmar que você será um ótimo profissional (Isso se já não for kk). Espero que a sua trajetória seja linearmente satisfatória e produtiva.
@@ErickdeOli6038 Obrigado, adoro ler comentários assim 🥰 Sou auxiliar veterinário e além de estagiar em uma clínica, faço trabalho voluntário em uma ONG de animais abandonados. Ainda não participo da ONG das tartaruguinhas mas pretendo um dia. Abraço e obrigado novamente.
This needed to be said. Thank you for posting this video! In addition to people who act with good intentions, I've noticed an uptick of videos where people intentionally injure or put animals (domestic or otherwise) in dangerous situations and pretend to rescue them.
Facebook is awful with people like this. They get outraged on why you didn't help the poor animals under many, many animal videos. Especially ones when a predator is going after prey, in the wild (not those force 2 small animals to fight in a small container, or live feedings for attention)
@@lastchanc3stars A question why do you interact with us if you don't like that we interact with you? And yes do that start this argument, but we like to be part of it else it is no debate only a self-congratulation as usual. Besides we in Glarus (CH) could need some snowflakes since the Clariden glacier has melted, it would be at least some help. And isn't it interesting your sort heard of it, went to my home country, climed up Clariden to see the no longer existing glacier *AND LEFT ALL THE JUNK AND THEIR TENTS BEHIND!* Bla bla, but ZERO respect for the nature.
Because they grow up isolated from nature and they dissociate from their food production and grew up watching Disney movies (kinda at least the Lion King talked about the "Cycle of Life", but I don't think they pay attention).
I’ve said for a long time that people need to leave the wildlife alone, everybody wants to be a TikTok hero, and they have no idea how nature works. Yes, it can be beautiful and cute but in reality, it is brutal, ruthless and horrifying at times.
Exactly. I work at a rescue ,,farm" and I just have to tell this... most of the time it is pretty nice there, but most animals don't have the cognitive tools to have empathy to the extent that we do. So yeah what I wanted to tell that I wisnessed is a duck trying to r**e a goose for example.
@@SmurfieDurfieThat's another thing that people don't realise. Birds can be some of the most monstrous animals out there, truly some cruel 💩 that's normal among them.
@@mnxs Yeah it can be horrible and I agree and think that many people romatisise nature (I like nature, but it is more neutral or mixed than good) I still love birds though! I just think that not every individual does these sort of things and even if, I don't think most realise what gruesome things they do or that it is horrible sadly. But yeah, even very cute animals can be very nasty and cruel.
That is why, when you actually use your brain, and you find an animal crossing the road (tortoise, hedgehog, snake...) you put them on the side where their head point at, not just a random side.
9:20 ish… This is why my family didn’t move spiders outside. We only moved them if they were in the way/likely to get stepped on, and then we moved them to where we had a bunch of houseplants. Lots of food for them, since fruit flies and house flies like that area, and the worst case being that they feed a stronger spider. No temperature shock or huge environment change.
about that superbanana, that must be one of the most frustrating things a scientist can face, researching and working for many years to find a solution to a problem and when you finally found it, thoroughly tested it and everything, the goverment is like, yea no we dont want that.
@@sergiofonseca2285 And there are bug sprays, pesticides and other gadgets to kill said bugs. I'd rather poison myself with those chemicals than have a spider in my house.
A dead animal is nutrition for another. Nature has a way of taking care of all her creatures. Something humans are biased towards even with their own kind.
Especially nowadays when most people have a phone they can quickly look up what to do in that situation. Found a baby bird in my back yard one time and that's how I found out you aren't supposed to move them if they have some feathers on them. No reason people can't quickly look up animal habits and if a situation is normal with them.
My dad pulled the car over on the on ramp to I95N outside Philly and jumped out, came back with a turtle. Put him in the back and off we went. To Six Flags in NJ. Not a word said about the turtle for the whole drive. We get there, Dad parked and walked the turtle all the way to the far side of the car park about 100 yds and let him go. He was well chuffed when he got back and clearly thought he did something nice. I said dad, imagine if that was a human being, crossing the street, and you pull over, jump out and grab him throw him in the back of the car and speed off to another state, then when you get there you go dump him in the woods, and then go ride rides with your family. Like a sociopath. The expression on his face was priceless, however he did not go get the turtle and take it home. Therefore IF by any small chance that turtle or his family are watching this excellent video, browsing the comments and read this “ I’m sorry my dad kidnapped you and took you to New Jersey and hope you found a way home, preferably not walking, obviously “ I now live in Florida and find soft shell turtles crossing the road all the time. I just carry them across the street in the same direction they were already going 😐Imagine if I jumped out and grabbed one and took it to Disney
@@not_soro Gods, don't get him started. I don't care which side he's on. The very fact he says a statement like that without realizing it could apply to any side of today's cultural divide should tell you to stay away from anything he says.
We humans are quite ironic aren't we we live in nature we made what we have because of nature animal and humans can both die and should yet people like to separate the two as if their different
@@not_soro Believe it or not different species protect different things. Otters protect eachother, dolphins protect eachother and humans protect eachother. Do you ever see an otter 'saving' a fox cub because it's 'alone' in the wild?
@@MiLa-xi6qj more like protecting their pack/family? you think wolf will protect other wolf outside its pack? no. so between my dog and stranger human who will i save? my dog obviously. anyone will choose their dog and not stranger human. they just didn't say it. dog will also choose their owner and not fellow dog.
Lol - my family does. Granted, it’s the eastern US… black widows and brown recluses (most dangerous spiders, black widow requiring immediate trip to the hospital, just first aid for brown recluse bite) tend to live outside, so they’re not really inside houses. So it’s mostly little jumping spiders that startle us- a cup and a piece of paper gets them out of the way, sending them under a bench or into a potted plant. Chasing them to safety is easier than trying to squish them, lol.
3:05: splashing would not help "distract" an alligator or a crocodile. The opposite is true, they're both highly attracted to splashing because it's indicative of prey struggling to swim
I always learned to leave nature alone. Always. It's an ecosystem so animals dying will prevent other from starving. It's sad, but the hard truth of nature.
Proboscis monkies are huge swimmers. They live in the Malaysian part of Borneo, and you probably get them in Kalimantan, but they don’t live throughout Indonesia.
I love when people try to correct someone even when the supposed correction isn't vital to the story in any way. You must have a superiority complex where you try to correct everything in everyday life, even if you aren't involved, like this video 😂. Maybe try to focus on vital things in your life and leave your superior knowledge of all things pointless out of others videos.
Fun fact. It is in Finnish law that you are obligated to aid ANY animal in distress. Meaning if ya find a fox kid out side the den but the parents are nowhere near yo be found, you are allowed to take the kid and head to any vet get it checked. After that YOU raise it
In my own apparetment, I don't kick out spiders. But when I lived with a roommate who would squash spiders, I would catch them and release them outside if they were seen. As far as I figured, in that case, if I put them outside, they had a possible chance to survive, but if they stayed in the apartment and my roommate saw them, they would end up dead.
Some Buddhism believers in China think releasing animals are good for their karma. So they release tortoises into water...or fresh water fish/turtle into ocean.
I once went to my local library and some guy tried to sell me a dog for $300. I said no and he dropped the price to $20. Said no again and he handed me the leash and walked away. I took the dog home, posted an ad on Craigslist about a lost dog and the owner contacted me and accused me of stealing it and reported me to the police. I took the dog to the furthest dog kennel from her as possible so she could enjoy the nice long drive and pay the fee to get her dog back. I told myself I’d never rescue a dog again after all that
It wasn't the stuff that did that to you. It was a human and humans all suck, every or the ones who save cats and dogs. But just because a human b was rude to you you're going to take it out on dogs who might be be needing you later on in life. Yeah, you're selfish.
What a bizarre situation that raises a ton of questions. Clearly the guy trying to sell you the dog and the owner woman were different people and may not have cooperated at all. Maybe the guy did steal the dog and the owner mistook you for him or seller guy was her acquaintance and lied to the owner about you stealing it to explain why it was gone. Either way he was evidently trying to get rid of it while she wasn't.
I mean the lady could have thought that you were the one who stole the dog instead of the other man ? Why not just explain the situation to her and offer to return the dog to it’s rightful owner instead of putting it through a stressful situation of placing it into another kennel like a petty asshole honestly doubt this story is true but if it is you shouldn’t be proud of what you did
Depends... Cats are still very much wild still. There are animals that look like dogs/cats when they're young and probably shouldn't be touched. Then there are the wild cats that look like normal cats or kittens but are adult wild animals that get mistaken for normal cats especially by tourists.
@@1ProAssassin yes but i doubt you'd find a wild cats in a city. and also yes cats are mildly domesticated, they can be left in the wild, but this can cause major issues in the long run. It can endanger all the other smaller lifeforms (cats are for instance illegal to have if left free in new zealand. Cats are considered pests and its understandable, especially in a place that has so many endangered bird species) and if left alone, they will just grow more and more in population. There's also the fact cats love warmth, and so some prefer home life, it's cozy and they can nap in warm comfy places safely without being attacked by a stray dog or other cats. there's a cat island, but they literally don't have anything to fear there, it's normal that they are left running free and all
@@KwehShiro Most of what u wrote has nothing to do with whether or not cats are "wild" and why mention ur doubt about finding wild cats in the city when the statement I'm answering is about dogs & cats being okay to rescue in general? Like u shouldn't stick ur arm in a shark's mouth. I doubt you'll find a shark in a city either but it doesn't make it a good idea to do it.
@@KwehShiro You can find wild cats in most cities, they're called strays. And fun fact, it is legal to put down stray cats as they are considered an invasive species, as long as it is done for the sake of conservation.
Absolute rubbish about the first monkey. The monkey was attacked by a much larger monkey and was starting to drowns. They had been monitoring the fight for some time before they decided to help. This man and his colleagues run this whole area as it a sanctuary. And they are experts in what they do.
Yes, the man is an animal conservator. Before the man rescued the monkey, he just stayed there to make sure passing boats didn't accidentally hit the monkey. However, because the monkey had been in the middle of the river for too long, he decided to rescue it.
Water rescues are the absolute worst because in most of the legitimate water rescues I’ve seen, an animal that’s actually struggling/drowning will actually swim towards your boat. I’ve even experienced this myself when a rat was drowning in my pool during a storm; the second it saw my net it made a beeline towards it because even the potential risks of coming straight to me didn’t outweigh the fear and exhaustion it was feeling. This thing was totally wild and wanted nothing to do with me, but it wanted _out._ In the instances that it doesn’t come to you, isn’t stuck in a pool, and it isn’t something that very obviously doesn’t belong in the water like a baby deer or a tortoise, then it’s probably best not to mess with it unless it exhibits the obvious characteristics of drowning; hardly any movement, swift shallow breaths, making no noise, etc. Thanks for shedding light on this issue… people want to help but end up doing more harm than good.
Genetically modified can be very dangerous. My friend is allergic to shell fish, but a few years back, his allergy spread to almost all foods, especially fruits. Doctors explained it was due to genetically modified foods, now containing shell fish.
I've seen this pattern alot actually. People developing random allergies to foods. But switch off to non gmo. And suddenly it goes away. Heck I was one of them. People pointing out that we live in a time where people have food allergies to damn near everything. When just simply 40 to 50 years ago this wasn't an issue with these foods. But it won't work because we're American. Which means we'll argue the definition of gmo. Claim that natural cross breeding is exactly the same as gene splicing with a microscope. And inserting DNA from a totally UNRELATED thing. Demand evidence and "sources" while already holding our ace card in our back pocket that says "That's not evidence" "How can you prove that's true??" "Science says otherwise" " That's not a big enough study" "Well that's just the minority, the benefits far out way cost" And argue semantics. Says one of the most unhealthy countries on the face the globe, with major chronic health issues constantly rising, and a Healthcare system hell bent on throwing pharmaceuticals that bring more issues at every problem. Instead of actually finding out why, or what's causing it. And leaving you with outstanding bills. These problems are a government certified Fact nation wide. What happened to the basic phrase "you are what you eat"? If you keep trying to abuse science and "reason" to keep arguing that theirs no evidence that anything you consume is harmful. Or simply put all your eggs in one basket and blame it one ONE specific thing. It'll all just get worse. I've seen scientists argue that there's absolutely no way shape or form. Is their any evidence that eating fast-food junk regularly causes health problems. At what point do we stop and think on our own?? It is NOT normal to be allergic to so many damn foods, and being chronically ill. Its no wonder they created the orobous steak... 🤦🏾♀️ Soon everyone will be arguing theirs literally no scientific evidence eating human lab grown meat is dangerous.
Species avoid extinction by passing on stronger genes through Natural Selection. Human intervention may either allow weaker genes to enter the gene pool or disrupt an important process.
I'v ran into a couple of fawns, that was all healthy, laying a alone waiting for mom. The only one to this day I'm not sure about was one I saw on a hiking trail. It was too young to be alone, looked healthy but it was off walking alone. It kind of came up to me and I waited to see if the mother was around and never heard a sound in any direction. The fawn eventually wasn't curious about me anymore and made off. I still have no clue if it was orphaned or not xD
LMAO! Yeah, this is about right. I know a lot of people who actually DO help animals, but when people who have fled one area and move to a new place start making decisions for local wildlife, that's where we have a problem. If you move somewhere from a different location, try asking a neighbor their opinion before placing blame on , or interfering with, local wildlife.....
I saw a hedgehog that was run over. She was dead and her three little ones crawled around her. They were just a few weeks old. I took care of them during the summer (in an outdoor enclosure with minimal human contact) and they moved back into the wild in the autumn. I made sure to make huge piles of branches and leaf for them to spend the winter in hibernation. I don't regret it 🤷♀️
Taking care of a couple of hedgehogs till theyre like 8 or so weeks old is different. Hedgehogs specifically can be relatively fine on their own after that 8 week mark.
Most rescue work is done to combat human causes, but still, if you didn't have the adequate facilities it could've gone differently. That is different than people just scooping up fledglings out of ignorance lol
My question is if the spider is an invasive species like the ones you mentioned then wouldn’t it be better for it to die then to possibly endanger local wildlife in one way or another.
@treycopeland1368 that is the point, invasive species that didn't belong there before get released into a new eco system (by humans) and destroy the local wildlife, making local population suffer.
This is like what we have here with the grey squirrel problem and how their introduction almost wiped out our native red squirrel population, they are coming back but i think personally they should cull the grey squirrel, thats alot harder to do with spiders though i imagen.
When I was little, I found an injured mouse on my grandma's back porch. A cat had been playing with it. So I scolded the cat, and I took the mouse into the house and kept it while I tried to get it to revive. When my mom found out, she told me to put the "dirty thing" outside and that the cat was doing his job. Now, when our cat presents me with a mouse, I say, "Good job." And I'm a lot more understanding when I get a dead chipmunk or come across a feather or two. That circle of life only works if it includes death. Though I DO still help turtles get across roads.
If you're having problems with the number of spiders in your house, you probably have a problem with some type of pest, whether you're aware of it or not.
True it’s basically a natural version of supply and demand. And I say natural cause I doubt most people would demand for the spiders, but where there’s a supply of food there’s predators🤣
Depends on time of year as well though as well, as well as where you live, we get a bunch more house spider during colder seasons for example we maybe get 2 to 5 big spiders in total in our house during the spring and summer but in the colders months like now for example we have either 1 house spider who is moving all around the house all the time or about 5 to 6 at one time. Also where my house gets the big house spiders my bfs house a 5 minute drive up to the next village he very rarely get big house spiders but get a huge amount of ricecrispy spiders all year round where as my house has never had any of those.
I remember when I was 8, me and my friend were messing around kicking boxes at the back of an old workshop and a cat bolted put of one and we heard kittens crying, there were three of them. He took two, I took one, because we thought they would die 8f we left them outside. Our Mums obviously explained the second we got home and we all took them back to the box and kept an eye out from a good distance the next day and night. We should have left them well alone, the mother cat had given up on them, she never came back to the spot. Even after taking them to a vet and with both of our Mum's help to keep them alive...well. 😔 I've had two cats since then and I still feel the guilt really, really sharply any time I SEE a kitten or any other baby animal- I am 41 this year, I don't think I'll ever truly forgive myself for that no matter how old I was. I had called him Gizmo, one of our favourite films was Gremlins back in the day. When I got my new kitten from my friend 2 years ago- I'd seen pictures of, but never met these kittens before- this single, tiny little creature who was juuust old enough to see properly, separated himself from his litter in the corner of the room the second I sat down on the couch and toddled across the room to me and climbed up my leg. He looked identical to that tiny thing I lost so many years ago, so I named the beautiful boy who's out prowling and hunting and being a happy cat right this minute Gizmo, in his honour. I don't know about reincarnation or what happens after we move on, but I hope that that little soul forgives me.
On the spider section, it is actually better to move them outside, like he said, native spiders will just find another spot (hoping it's not other person's house) but invasive spiders that find a safe place in houses will die. In any situation, killing invasive species is good, if they are kept alive, they'll probably outcompete native species and therefore, cause unbalance in the ecosystem, affecting other species. Also, don't save wild animals in all situations, unless, maybe, situations created by humans, like saving a bird that crashed into a window. As the video said, they serve as food to other animals and it is a part of life, natural selection remember?
omg....this is top class information..this video should go viral and educate millions of people about their actions .......thank you for making this video
So, did I make the right decision when I walked past a bee that was laying on the ground looking tired and not flying? I couldn’t decide if I should have perhaps put it on a flower or not
In the case of an insect that appears to be tired, unable to fly, or dying, you can put a bottle cap of water or maybe a bit of sugar water beside them (like hummingbird water). If they’re just tired or dehydrated, they’ll pull themselves to the bottle cap, recover, then fly away. If they’re dying, they’ll still be there 15 minutes later. It’s best not to move them because they might feel threatened and bite/sting (depending on the insect).
Interfering with nature is always a bad idea unless you are trained to deal with it. Even feeding wild animals can upset the balance of nature as some hunter gatherer and foraging skills can erode making wild animals dependent on hoomans. There is no part of my house were I don't mind having spiders. Spiders are all Shelob. Shelob is huge. Shelob is scary. It is more merciful to spiders for me to move or if I have Sting and the Light of Elendil to slay the beasts. If I see a spider out doors I leave it be, just providing a wide berth so it can't web me up. I think I show great restraint when it comes to spiders.
Dont get me wrong, i love animals. But most animals dont need saving. The animals that do need saving are probably all domesticated animals that are lost and forced to need humans to live. And thats probably because some human "saved" them when they were young.
My house became infested with giant brown spiders and I had them all exterminated. They were really dangerous and would just sit in the middle of the stairs or living room floor.
Depends on the age of the animal and their predicament. Young animals like most human children don't know what to do in dangerous situations and if a four-legged animal falls inside a hole it needs some assistance, especially if it's manmade because then it's human fault that will kill it and not natural selection.
Humans are not separate from nature, as many seem to think. Everything is natural selection. If the environment, created by humans behaving as humans naturally do, has holes in it, then animals that don't fall into holes will be selected for.
I am impressed how videos can give a different story despite knowing absolute nothing about the situation. I have watched the original video, without context we can assume many things but the original video has another video which explain the whole situation. The guy on the boat isn't some random guy, he knows what he was doing, go check it out before judging based on this video
Exactly This a video that is very much needed Even if an animal is being hunted do not help or do anything, even if it comes to your cars boat etc let it be U may see the prey n feel sorry n help it But it can also mean the predator who haven't eaten anything for days lose its food.
At least these guys are genuinely trying to help - unlike the RUclips turtle rescuers who glue shells and barnacles to their shells before scraping them off on camera, or fish rescuers, who release exotic species into the environment before trying to catch them for a video.
I was put off by the title because I didn't understand why someone would make a statement such as this but then, I watched the video and you are absolutely right. Sometimes it's better to NOT intervene. There are instances where it is necessary but, not every case. Thank you for posting this video and raising awareness that, sometimes, we need to let nature alone to take care of itself.
It's also astonishing to me how some people think that releasing an animal that grew in a zoo is a good idea. An animal like that is basically the equivalent of a human growing up well fed and housed in a hotel to basically the jungle and telling them good luck. They did this with an Orca once and when it was released it kept trying to follow boats wondering why it was abandoned and died a few months after.
yeah, i mean is so fucking obvious how cruel is release animal to the nature.... That very sad, you raise a baby with all confort and so you drop it away on hell... Why??
You mean that one orca from “Free Willy”?
@@malkuusha Yeah, he was released around 2002 then died in 2003 due to failing to adapt to the new environment. I mean if I was suddenly thrown to a jungle because some aliens thought that I would be free there I'd "fail" adapting to the new environment too.
@@bruhism173lol dogs do eat chicken bones mostly uncooked ones
@@bruhism173 dogs can eat uncooked chicken bones perfectly fine.. you generally dont want to give dogs bones that have been cooked as they become harder/brittle and break into hard splinters when eating.. ask anyone who feeds dogs raw meat, and they will tell you.. my pomeranian used to crushed through chicken bones like nothing. the only thing you have to be careful about is when it gets small enough to where the dog may consider trying to swallow it, so you need to watch them, or put a clamp on the end of the bone..
Bro really yeeted the monkey back to where he didn’t want to be.
Yeah that was pretty screwed up
I believed that for a moment but the original video in their comment section provided more context as to why.
😂
She
😅🤣😂🤣 Hahahaha! Hahahaha! LMAO and ROFL!
Imagine walking home from work in the pouring rain and you get abducted by aliens and get dropped back off at work in the pouring rain lmfao
🤣
I’d be so pissed haha
Exactly!
That's just when they call you back in for some "emergency" right as you get home 😆
Lol, I can relate to Jewel, almost freedom, then you get called back...only to get back to work ...but you're told they have it covered lol
it's truly shocking how much damage people can cause by "just trying to help"
intention is not everything..
Communism comes to mind. All forms of collectivism really. They're all based on good intentions, but they always end up in the death of millions. Modern western people definitely don't understand the harsh side of reality. It can be incomprehensibly beautiful, and simultaneously incomprehensibly harsh.
How many times we destroyed local environment by trying to "fix" it?
It's like they say, hell is paved with good intentions
There is a saying
"The road to hell is paved with good intentions."
The swimming monkey one is not simply"just trying to help".
Most likely they were local fishermen and also knew about the monkey's behavior and thought they could gain fame by making a viral rescue video.
The rabbit wanted to go back to save her children. And we as humans can't comprehend the fact that these animals have babies
Because child have to be either orphan or taken care by parent animal while other parent is at work in the office
Or that... They didn't know
@@Sonque123and maybe... we should mind our own business
@@shaheershakeel5618 honestly I'm puzzled by what to reply, cus honestly I didn't need to cus I was basically telling them not most people know someone has something. And that case was a example
@@Sonque123 yea I agree, you dont always have to reply to someone's response, I was just hoping you weren't defending their actions
As a rescuer (stray dogs and feral cats) myself, I know the dilemma too well, especially when it comes to pups that are apparently left alone. You can never know if they are abandoned or their mom is looking for food, just by passing by. So you can do it wrong both ways, by either non-caring or taking them. The only right way is to take some time to monitor the situation and then to act accordingly when you can be sure you're doing it right. This way you can make sure not to take away pups from their mom but also to not let them die if they are abandoned.
@@rabbitsarepro Right. And you won't want to let them die, either. This means you need to take some time and precautions before you act. If you can't do it by yourself, note the place and contact local volunteers, if you can, or check out later.
unless you plan on turning them into a house pet(farm pet) it is better to leave them alone. May seem cruel but coyotes, raccoons, foxes, need to eat also
😊😊😊
😊
@@JustARandomFio Why not just let them die. I'd prefer a logical argument than a moral one.
The one animal you should always help is turtles trying to cross the road. Just give them a quick lift in the direction they are headed.
Goated comment
And sloths unless you have time to waste.
I did that with slugs on my dirt road in the morning for a time xD I did my best to put them towards the direction they were headed. Btw, there were a lot of them
Also you should help toads who are on their yearly trip to mate, in germany we have many roads that cross their routes, so people gather together to pick them up and help them over the road. Some places even put up fences temporarily and the toads get picked up at the end of the day to bring them to the other side. But sadly there are still dozens of dead toads on the road during this time
And run the rabbit over on way😂😂😂
Yep! My grandmother was an older native lady and we were taught that you don't mess with animals like this unless they are caught in human traps or asking for help, more than likely you are not helping the animal.
You could also be taking a rightful meal from another animal
🙄@@twilightgardenspresentatio6384
Don't bring rave into it
Another native claim.......😅🙄
That's great advice.
I waited several days asking neighbors if they'd seen where this kitten, that decided to move in with us, came from. No-one mentioned he was theirs and no-one posted any missing posters or responded to my lost and found, he also didn't have a full tummy so it was clear he wasn't being fed. I got him checked at the vet for a microchip, none so I kept him.
Before then I looked after a stray cat, got his chip checked only to find the owners moved 9 years prior, never reported him lost and then denied they ever owned him, he lived to 19 with me.
Years later another cat in very good condition followed me home so I took her to get a microchip check, neighbors were in tears I found her after she ran off during a terrible storm.
Just observe, hold back and check, it's not that hard and every critter has their own unique story.
Cats are a domestic species and aren't native to most of the world.
Monkey was happily swimming
Bro got 8 likes in 1 year
People against GMOs don't understand that it's not the vegetation that is dangerous but usually the pesticides used to help grow it. While people are concerned about looking for that non-GMO apple, they don't realize that the real difference is when pesticides were last used on it. Although it would be nice to see pesticide free as a labeling, the difficulty of growing the various fruits and vegetables without pesticides is extremely difficult.
It’s only difficult for mass production
The problem i have with GMOs is the company that developed it owns that item in perpetuity. Charging people to Grow this plant that they made forever. Even if it wasn't planted by the land owner that company can demand monetary compensation for their product growing wild.
Like the soybeans used to produce leg hemoglobin for impossible and beyond " meat".
The thing is that many GMOs actually need less chemicals, whether it'd be pesticides or chemicals to treat deseases, etc. ...that's the reason why many crops are modified in the first place - because it's cheaper at the end
@@mrcrabowski That's a falsehood. The most widely used GMOs are herbicide resistant crops. People use them so they can spray the entire field with a pesticide, such as glyphosate, so they don't have to carefully spot treat weeds or deal with weeds in some way other than pesticides.
Wild Heart Ranch, a wildlife rehabilitation centre in Oklahoma that I keep up with on Facebook (one of few that I fully agree with their treatment of the animals in their care, and ideology) puts out notices every year about leaving healthy animals alone, even if they seem abandoned. One that always sticks out to me is just how many fawns they take in that have been effectively kidnapped. Every year they push: A fawn with straight, pointy ears is getting fed by mum and there's no need to worry. Mum will leave the baby alone throughout most of a day as to not bring attention to them by predators. A fawn with curly-tipped ears is dehydrated and not getting fed, suggesting that the mother has abandoned it or been killed.
They also end up dealing with several cases a year of baby animals sick because they were fed something inadequate for their needs.
@@UnauthorizedRosin I feel like a lot of animal rescues are on the extremist end, a bit like PETA. For instance, I stopped supporting Chicken Run Rescue when they went on a tirade about remembering the loss of Betty White because she at one point in her early, early life supported animals in entertainment, owned a chimp, and wore furs. They refused to participate in the big charity drive for animals in the pretence that Betty White was an awful person who doesn't deserve to be recognised as an animal advocate because of an this, and (GASP!) she ate meat! Instead of running a charity collection drive of their own that day, they ranted about how the remembrance of Betty White was eclipsing our remembrance of MLK, Jr. I feel like if they were there for the animals, they should accept the money to support those animals. Period. And not demonise a person based on some things they did as a youth.
I also stopped following a fellow rooster rescue called Rooster Haus because they never replied to my queries about adopting some of their boys (I, too, ran a rooster rescue out of my own home), or they'd post a big schpeil about how difficult it was going to be to come down to my area to pick up some roosters, and when I'd reach out to them to ask for details so that I could go collect them instead, I heard absolutely nothing back.
In both instances, I feel like the rescue at hand was shooting themselves in the foot in terms of shirking help that could've been available. In the instance of Chicken Run, it went further into trying to indoctrinate their followers into veganism (or you're evil), and taking unreasonably extreme positions on animal rights, both of which end up alienating a good deal of your potential supporters and donors.
In my experience, a LOT of animal rescue groups end up behaving like Chicken Run, and seem like carbon copies of PETA, just rebranded to the animals of their choosing. I don't support PETA because their extremism is dangerous to the animals they claim to support, unreasonable, seldom founded in actual truth (read an article from them demonising a facility that works with owls claiming that "owls never lie on their back in the wild" when, in fact, it HAS been documented that owls will flip on their backs to "play", so far as we can tell, and I've even seen this behaviour myself), and they often end up exposed as very hypocritical to their own claimed goals.
@@OlyChickenGuyVery well said.
I used to live on a small farm next to a fairly busy road. You wouldn't believe how many times the authorities showed up due to a complaint by a passerby. The problem? The horses were being horses. Majority of our population live in large cities watching disney and peta and have no knowledge of animal behavior. And apparently no knowledge of human behavior.
I feel the pain we had a 33 yr old tennessee walker (horse) that people were convinced was being starved...as if the one ton bale and morning sweet feed wasn't a clue that as animals age they have a harder time keeping fat and muscle on them.
Yuppies are dangerous
Do you mean animal behavior? That last sentence is confusing.
What did they think were wrong?
Peta is a terrible organization. They are such whack jobs that are terrible to both humans and animals.
Humans, as well intentioned as they may try to be, don’t always get it right.
With animals that don't appear to be in any danger, monitor the situation from afar. This is especially true with birds. Fledgling birds often appear helpless, but are in actuality being monitored by one of the parents and your interference only serves to hinder the fledgling rather than help it.
Intervening requires knowledge of the environment and ecosphere you inhabit.
3 days ago I had a situation where a baby bird was learning to fly and had fallen onto the ground in my front yard where I have two dogs. One of them, was a younger hound, and was loosely pawing at the bird as it cried out in distress. It's parents were squawking loudly overhead, clearly distressed as well at the situation. The best thing I could do in this situation was to round up the dogs, and secure them on the porch, giving the bird enough time to recover and attempt another flight.
I came back 5 minutes later, and the baby bird had successfully left. All in all, it required hardly any intervention. More or less, it was about teaching my domesticated animals not to get involved because sometimes wild animals have things like parasites, and I would feel better with them sticking to a diet that I provide them.
I found a young house sparrow laying on the hard brick floor in my front yard
It got entangled by some fiber/thread with some already cut into it skin.
I pesume it fell from the nest its parents built next to my window AC.
It was weak and the sun was cooking, sadly it parents either gave up or not around.
I tried to drip some water near its beak and cut out the thread, it took a few sip then died in about 20 minutes.
Had a bird fall out it’s nest. It couldnt fly because it’s tail feathers hadn’t grown yet so it could only fly like how a chicken flys. It was on a tree branch then tried to jump on the roof but missed. The mother bird flew down fed the bird then guided it into the bushes on foot . Idk if the bird survived but at least the momma bird was still taking care of it.
Yes yes YES! Educating yourself about the animals and ecosystem is vital for knowing if,when, and how to act on an animal you encounter. I have my local wildlife rehabber, several vets, rescues, etc all in case of an animal in TRUE distress. If you love animals, please become educated about them and their habits and homes!
Good job, people sometimes forget that babies are second priority because you can always make more. So if mother feel threatened she will leave children which can be the case when people try to put birdie back in nest
@@realdragon birds recognize by view not scent, so if it was a really, really young bird that should still be in the nest...
In those moment you want to put them (next) to the nest of you can
(Except if it's corvid, the nest is for eggs, not birds. If it's corvid it's normal)
Shout out the cat I almost accidentally stole because I thought it needed rescuing. It didn't wanna come with me, so I left it, came back, and she was gone.
About a week later, I found her sitting on the porch of her home
😂 That would have been a bad-good deed
@@bigyetee2592 deed'nt
(My joke sucks, I know)
@@nachbadz9921 deed'nt indeed☕👌
I am a cat feeder for the local cats around my school and once, this was quite heartbreaking, someone picked up a kitten who’s mother was very scared of people and walked away, I tried to explain that it’s mother was there, but they took the cat away, they obviously didn’t care enough about it because I found it there two days later, fed it, and the next day : gone. people need to respect that wild animals are just like us and don’t deserve all the kidnapping that we think will help them
So your feeding stray cats? Maybe you need to reevaluate your so called help too.
Do yourself a favour, look up reasons why feeding stray cats is complicated.
Had a neighbour doing this when I lived in an apartment. Needless to say the complexity of this never reached them. They ultimately got kicked out because they kept doing it but in secret.
Guess what happened to the horde of cats that damaged our area and tried eating all the birds. Yup, they finally starved out and moved on. Way too many cats was getting out of hand
they are totally not like us.
shouldnt be feeding feral cats
well dont feed them its just nature andtaht sucks but thats hoe life works so dont but
what i do is take them to a place still out side or in the house and then places it so it dont die and we may have thousants of spiders in the adick😨
🤮🤢spider🤢🤮
Feeding feral,stray cats is horrible for the ecosystem they breed like crazy and they constantly hunt a lot of native wildlife please to do such things
Here in Brazil a lot of people talk about saving baby turtles and creating a route so they could get from sand to ocean safely.
I wonder how much this action would impact other species.
Opa Igor, beleza? Vou explicar com o que eu sei (porém já aviso que não sou expert, mas trabalho no ramo animal).
Boa parte das espécies de tartarugas marinhas conhecidas estão em risco de extinção, com uma pequena parte delas em risco extremo. Conheço uma ONG que protege as tartarugas marinhas aqui na minha cidade, é claro que a gente não deve interferir no processo natural, porém nesse caso acredito ser justificado.
Melhor evitar a extinção desse animal a correr o risco, né?
@@5XXFelipeMuito legal a sua iniciativa, obrigado por existir. Se voluntariar a auxiliar ao seu semelhante sem esperar nada em troca é algo impressionante de se ver, logo posso afirmar que você será um ótimo profissional (Isso se já não for kk). Espero que a sua trajetória seja linearmente satisfatória e produtiva.
@@ErickdeOli6038 Obrigado, adoro ler comentários assim 🥰
Sou auxiliar veterinário e além de estagiar em uma clínica, faço trabalho voluntário em uma ONG de animais abandonados. Ainda não participo da ONG das tartaruguinhas mas pretendo um dia.
Abraço e obrigado novamente.
@@5XXFelipe Disponha meu caro :)
Considering how endangerd sea turtles are. I think it'd do more good for the ecosystem than anything.
This needed to be said. Thank you for posting this video!
In addition to people who act with good intentions, I've noticed an uptick of videos where people intentionally injure or put animals (domestic or otherwise) in dangerous situations and pretend to rescue them.
peta "supporters" (the die-hard ones) tend to do this.
Facebook is awful with people like this. They get outraged on why you didn't help the poor animals under many, many animal videos. Especially ones when a predator is going after prey, in the wild (not those force 2 small animals to fight in a small container, or live feedings for attention)
I was hoping that global warming would actually melt the snowflakes, instead they are becoming more abundant.
@@mhv5295I will begin a Twitter argument if I hear someone say "snowflake" one more time
It's even more ridiculous when a Karen said in the comments that the camera man is so cruel it did not saved the seal when a shark attacked it
@@lastchanc3stars A question why do you interact with us if you don't like that we interact with you?
And yes do that start this argument, but we like to be part of it else it is no debate only a self-congratulation as usual.
Besides we in Glarus (CH) could need some snowflakes since the Clariden glacier has melted, it would be at least some help.
And isn't it interesting your sort heard of it, went to my home country, climed up Clariden to see the no longer existing glacier *AND LEFT ALL THE JUNK AND THEIR TENTS BEHIND!*
Bla bla, but ZERO respect for the nature.
Because they grow up isolated from nature and they dissociate from their food production and grew up watching Disney movies (kinda at least the Lion King talked about the "Cycle of Life", but I don't think they pay attention).
Always let wild life do what it wants to do never interfere
Do you know about the emu war?
@@jihn9869 yes actually....that was crazy
Unless it's an invasive species that can wipe out the population of bees.
@@21stcenturystops59 aw yes the bee effect
if we did that pandas would be extinct by now, along with a lot of other species that are too dumb to survive.
I’ve said for a long time that people need to leave the wildlife alone, everybody wants to be a TikTok hero, and they have no idea how nature works. Yes, it can be beautiful and cute but in reality, it is brutal, ruthless and horrifying at times.
what a cruel world we live in. and this just added another reason I hate tiktok
okay when Orcas are Trapped by ice then we should let them die right?
Exactly. I work at a rescue ,,farm" and I just have to tell this... most of the time it is pretty nice there, but most animals don't have the cognitive tools to have empathy to the extent that we do.
So yeah what I wanted to tell that I wisnessed is a duck trying to r**e a goose for example.
@@SmurfieDurfieThat's another thing that people don't realise. Birds can be some of the most monstrous animals out there, truly some cruel 💩 that's normal among them.
@@mnxs Yeah it can be horrible and I agree and think that many people romatisise nature (I like nature, but it is more neutral or mixed than good) I still love birds though! I just think that not every individual does these sort of things and even if, I don't think most realise what gruesome things they do or that it is horrible sadly.
But yeah, even very cute animals can be very nasty and cruel.
That is why, when you actually use your brain, and you find an animal crossing the road (tortoise, hedgehog, snake...) you put them on the side where their head point at, not just a random side.
0:05 why does bro sound like he’s been gasping for air for 29 years
😂 idk
"The road to hell is paved in good intentions."
What quote is that?
@@psycho-delicpyromaniac9595 it's not a quote. It's a saying.
Humanity really has a control freak problem! This is why people just can’t seem to mind their own business. Always looking for a reason get attention.
9:20 ish… This is why my family didn’t move spiders outside. We only moved them if they were in the way/likely to get stepped on, and then we moved them to where we had a bunch of houseplants. Lots of food for them, since fruit flies and house flies like that area, and the worst case being that they feed a stronger spider. No temperature shock or huge environment change.
Nah either that spider is getting killed by me or testing it's luck outside. Ain't NO WAY I'm purposely releasing a spider in the crib.
about that superbanana, that must be one of the most frustrating things a scientist can face, researching and working for many years to find a solution to a problem and when you finally found it, thoroughly tested it and everything, the goverment is like, yea no we dont want that.
There's no way, EVER that I'm going to relocate a spider in my home, to another part of my home.
Yeah, it's better just eating it
@@nerden1549om nom nom
If there is a spider, there are bugs to feed said spider
@@sergiofonseca2285 And there are bug sprays, pesticides and other gadgets to kill said bugs. I'd rather poison myself with those chemicals than have a spider in my house.
I mean, I have one room and a kitchen. Only one of us will stay here, and it's the one who pays the bills.
I wouldn't say stop helping I would say do research about animals so you can tell when an animal is truly in need of help or not
A dead animal is nutrition for another. Nature has a way of taking care of all her creatures. Something humans are biased towards even with their own kind.
Especially nowadays when most people have a phone they can quickly look up what to do in that situation. Found a baby bird in my back yard one time and that's how I found out you aren't supposed to move them if they have some feathers on them. No reason people can't quickly look up animal habits and if a situation is normal with them.
That's like me going to Africa for vacation, and as soon as i step off the plane, someone snatches me up and takes me back to America.
They eject u off a plane onto some random shore at america
My dad pulled the car over on the on ramp to I95N outside Philly and jumped out, came back with a turtle. Put him in the back and off we went. To Six Flags in NJ. Not a word said about the turtle for the whole drive. We get there, Dad parked and walked the turtle all the way to the far side of the car park about 100 yds and let him go.
He was well chuffed when he got back and clearly thought he did something nice. I said dad, imagine if that was a human being, crossing the street, and you pull over, jump out and grab him throw him in the back of the car and speed off to another state, then when you get there you go dump him in the woods, and then go ride rides with your family. Like a sociopath.
The expression on his face was priceless, however he did not go get the turtle and take it home.
Therefore IF by any small chance that turtle or his family are watching this excellent video, browsing the comments and read this “ I’m sorry my dad kidnapped you and took you to New Jersey and hope you found a way home, preferably not walking, obviously “
I now live in Florida and find soft shell turtles crossing the road all the time. I just carry them across the street in the same direction they were already going 😐Imagine if I jumped out and grabbed one and took it to Disney
On top of they tend to starve to death trying to get back to their territory.
Wtf was your dad thinking? If he was even thinking at all...
I don’t know 🤦🏼♂️
"Dont squish them or put them outside. Move them to a part of your house where you dont mind having spiders..."
Ummmm... No.
Sorry but if I see a spider in my house then it’s gonna be a death match and I will definitely win
Nah, i hate most insect and Spiders are the one protect me from it
Tf you mean no?
@@NoTimef_r means no, they won't move it elsewhere inside house
While I appreciate your message WATOP, if the invertebrate isn’t paying rent, it ain’t staying.
You will get your rent when you fix the damned door.
-your friendly neighborhood invertebrates
They're providing you free pest control service. They eat other bugs which could otherwise cause damage.
@@abrahamames911 Yeah I take care of that on my own with spray. They can go keep the yard clean.
Free pest control.
@@AspiLeo And they can do their pest control in the yard lol
This is what happens when you react with feelings instead of logic. Kind of reminds me of all the feelings out there in the USA right now.
What feelings are you talking about ?
@@not_soro Gods, don't get him started. I don't care which side he's on. The very fact he says a statement like that without realizing it could apply to any side of today's cultural divide should tell you to stay away from anything he says.
@@bruticus0875 Boy just got offended by the truth
@@not_soro @bruticus0875 just gave you an example
Shit I feel sorry for the normal people that live there bruh
The child being thrown into the water with the monkeys head is so hilarious .I couldn't stop laughing. 😂😂😂😂😂😂
1:52
I've been saving fish from drowning by fishing them.. Thanks for sharing your thought, may be I should leave them alone
You can also see the mother was teaching her young how to defend itself a valuable skill it will need
In Nature, an animal's death is just another's opportunity. Don't interfere.
We humans are quite ironic aren't we we live in nature we made what we have because of nature animal and humans can both die and should yet people like to separate the two as if their different
it's just nature doing it thing, cycle of life simba.
Take that opportunity and eat it yourself!
@@not_soro Believe it or not different species protect different things. Otters protect eachother, dolphins protect eachother and humans protect eachother. Do you ever see an otter 'saving' a fox cub because it's 'alone' in the wild?
@@MiLa-xi6qj more like protecting their pack/family? you think wolf will protect other wolf outside its pack? no. so between my dog and stranger human who will i save? my dog obviously. anyone will choose their dog and not stranger human. they just didn't say it. dog will also choose their owner and not fellow dog.
Nobody is going to re-locate spiders to another part of their house! Just squash them
Lol - my family does. Granted, it’s the eastern US… black widows and brown recluses (most dangerous spiders, black widow requiring immediate trip to the hospital, just first aid for brown recluse bite) tend to live outside, so they’re not really inside houses. So it’s mostly little jumping spiders that startle us- a cup and a piece of paper gets them out of the way, sending them under a bench or into a potted plant. Chasing them to safety is easier than trying to squish them, lol.
I used to have a spider that built a web over my fish tank. I left it there.
bro, I do
i do !
3:05: splashing would not help "distract" an alligator or a crocodile. The opposite is true, they're both highly attracted to splashing because it's indicative of prey struggling to swim
Human: HEY, I SAVE YOUR LIFE😡
Monkey: No, you did not save my life. You ruined my route 😒
I always learned to leave nature alone. Always. It's an ecosystem so animals dying will prevent other from starving. It's sad, but the hard truth of nature.
Primate: using a lot of effort
Human: helps
Primate: no no no fu$k, shīt, chút
Proboscis monkies are huge swimmers. They live in the Malaysian part of Borneo, and you probably get them in Kalimantan, but they don’t live throughout Indonesia.
If someone said some animal live in some region, ofc it doesn't mean that they live throughout said region.. What are you trying to say
I love when people try to correct someone even when the supposed correction isn't vital to the story in any way. You must have a superiority complex where you try to correct everything in everyday life, even if you aren't involved, like this video 😂. Maybe try to focus on vital things in your life and leave your superior knowledge of all things pointless out of others videos.
Ahh im very used to see some malaysian claim something so aight
Classic malaysian move
That's only because it has that nose as a floatation device.
Fun fact. It is in Finnish law that you are obligated to aid ANY animal in distress.
Meaning if ya find a fox kid out side the den but the parents are nowhere near yo be found, you are allowed to take the kid and head to any vet get it checked. After that YOU raise it
less fun fact. bestiality is also legal under Finnish law so maybe they're not the best to look at as an example... maybe the two go together.
@Hello2uu2 - Don't you mean more fun fact?
At least for some people...
@@ezg8448 well if i said that it might come across as creepy now wouldn't it
@@Hello2uu2
I mean... It is not actually allowed. We just do not have law against it
@@SlendisFi_Universe not allowed your government legalized it in the 70's lmao
8:49 I got immediate goosebumps. I know it’s only a short clip but the dead stare with all that power behind it is horrifying.
If only those animal lover have the same compassion for fellow humans.
Nah, screw people. They know better, or should. 😂😂
Move a spider to another room? No thanks, they can go outside.
Did you not watch the entire house spider part they'll die if they do go out comment after you watch the video.
@@Catfish2048 Maybe thats what the person wants
Imagine moving them all to a single spiderroom
@@anormalguy8407 ok
@@Catfish2048screw spiders
Also, the smaller animals are underneath alot of the smoke. alot of people don't realize that because they stand taller then the animal.
Is this a horrible attemp at a joke or is it an actual fact that smaller wildlife are way more vulnurable than taller animals
The "Save the kids!" crowd will do everything in their power to stop people trying to help kids.
In my own apparetment, I don't kick out spiders. But when I lived with a roommate who would squash spiders, I would catch them and release them outside if they were seen. As far as I figured, in that case, if I put them outside, they had a possible chance to survive, but if they stayed in the apartment and my roommate saw them, they would end up dead.
There is no place in my house that I don't mind having spider's.
Alot of spider bites are very painful, speaking from experience.. so I don't take any chances if I find one in my home...
Yeah and they bite you mainly while you are sleeping they crawl on you and when you itch they bite
If your house has a lot of bugs that like to come in it’s always best to cover your ears at night too wear earplugs so no bug can crawl in your ear
Fact is they try getting fame by saving animals without knowing it , they mey save fishes from water one day 😮
Some Buddhism believers in China think releasing animals are good for their karma.
So they release tortoises into water...or fresh water fish/turtle into ocean.
Dont you know water drowns gods poor creatures. I is smarter than nature and I say rescue the fish from asphyxiation due to water.
@@reikoshadowstar3176 this says about your issue
I once went to my local library and some guy tried to sell me a dog for $300. I said no and he dropped the price to $20. Said no again and he handed me the leash and walked away.
I took the dog home, posted an ad on Craigslist about a lost dog and the owner contacted me and accused me of stealing it and reported me to the police.
I took the dog to the furthest dog kennel from her as possible so she could enjoy the nice long drive and pay the fee to get her dog back. I told myself I’d never rescue a dog again after all that
It wasn't the stuff that did that to you. It was a human and humans all suck, every or the ones who save cats and dogs. But just because a human b was rude to you you're going to take it out on dogs who might be be needing you later on in life.
Yeah, you're selfish.
What a bizarre situation that raises a ton of questions. Clearly the guy trying to sell you the dog and the owner woman were different people and may not have cooperated at all. Maybe the guy did steal the dog and the owner mistook you for him or seller guy was her acquaintance and lied to the owner about you stealing it to explain why it was gone. Either way he was evidently trying to get rid of it while she wasn't.
I mean the lady could have thought that you were the one who stole the dog instead of the other man ? Why not just explain the situation to her and offer to return the dog to it’s rightful owner instead of putting it through a stressful situation of placing it into another kennel like a petty asshole honestly doubt this story is true but if it is you shouldn’t be proud of what you did
lmao his facial expression in the thumbnail 🤣🤣🤣
The next thing you know, these people would try to save fish from drowning...
What a hero.
Remember that girl who chucked a tortoise into water while saying saving turtles is a hobby
Dogs & cats r ok to rescue, we know them , & r not technically wild anymore, yeah ! 💝 🐈 🐕
Depends... Cats are still very much wild still. There are animals that look like dogs/cats when they're young and probably shouldn't be touched. Then there are the wild cats that look like normal cats or kittens but are adult wild animals that get mistaken for normal cats especially by tourists.
@@1ProAssassin yes but i doubt you'd find a wild cats in a city. and also yes cats are mildly domesticated, they can be left in the wild, but this can cause major issues in the long run. It can endanger all the other smaller lifeforms (cats are for instance illegal to have if left free in new zealand. Cats are considered pests and its understandable, especially in a place that has so many endangered bird species) and if left alone, they will just grow more and more in population. There's also the fact cats love warmth, and so some prefer home life, it's cozy and they can nap in warm comfy places safely without being attacked by a stray dog or other cats. there's a cat island, but they literally don't have anything to fear there, it's normal that they are left running free and all
@@KwehShiro Most of what u wrote has nothing to do with whether or not cats are "wild" and why mention ur doubt about finding wild cats in the city when the statement I'm answering is about dogs & cats being okay to rescue in general? Like u shouldn't stick ur arm in a shark's mouth. I doubt you'll find a shark in a city either but it doesn't make it a good idea to do it.
@@1ProAssassin because you talked about confusing wild cats and cats together when they are young
@@KwehShiro You can find wild cats in most cities, they're called strays.
And fun fact, it is legal to put down stray cats as they are considered an invasive species, as long as it is done for the sake of conservation.
Absolute rubbish about the first monkey. The monkey was attacked by a much larger monkey and was starting to drowns. They had been monitoring the fight for some time before they decided to help. This man and his colleagues run this whole area as it a sanctuary. And they are experts in what they do.
Yes, the man is an animal conservator.
Before the man rescued the monkey, he just stayed there to make sure passing boats didn't accidentally hit the monkey. However, because the monkey had been in the middle of the river for too long, he decided to rescue it.
0:52 😂 humanity trying to do good in a nutshell
Water rescues are the absolute worst because in most of the legitimate water rescues I’ve seen, an animal that’s actually struggling/drowning will actually swim towards your boat. I’ve even experienced this myself when a rat was drowning in my pool during a storm; the second it saw my net it made a beeline towards it because even the potential risks of coming straight to me didn’t outweigh the fear and exhaustion it was feeling. This thing was totally wild and wanted nothing to do with me, but it wanted _out._
In the instances that it doesn’t come to you, isn’t stuck in a pool, and it isn’t something that very obviously doesn’t belong in the water like a baby deer or a tortoise, then it’s probably best not to mess with it unless it exhibits the obvious characteristics of drowning; hardly any movement, swift shallow breaths, making no noise, etc.
Thanks for shedding light on this issue… people want to help but end up doing more harm than good.
Genetically modified can be very dangerous. My friend is allergic to shell fish, but a few years back, his allergy spread to almost all foods, especially fruits. Doctors explained it was due to genetically modified foods, now containing shell fish.
I've seen this pattern alot actually. People developing random allergies to foods. But switch off to non gmo. And suddenly it goes away. Heck I was one of them.
People pointing out that we live in a time where people have food allergies to damn near everything. When just simply 40 to 50 years ago this wasn't an issue with these foods.
But it won't work because we're American. Which means we'll argue the definition of gmo. Claim that natural cross breeding is exactly the same as gene splicing with a microscope. And inserting DNA from a totally UNRELATED thing.
Demand evidence and "sources" while already holding our ace card in our back pocket that says
"That's not evidence"
"How can you prove that's true??"
"Science says otherwise"
" That's not a big enough study"
"Well that's just the minority, the benefits far out way cost"
And argue semantics.
Says one of the most unhealthy countries on the face the globe, with major chronic health issues constantly rising, and a Healthcare system hell bent on throwing pharmaceuticals that bring more issues at every problem. Instead of actually finding out why, or what's causing it. And leaving you with outstanding bills.
These problems are a government certified Fact nation wide.
What happened to the basic phrase "you are what you eat"?
If you keep trying to abuse science and "reason" to keep arguing that theirs no evidence that anything you consume is harmful. Or simply put all your eggs in one basket and blame it one ONE specific thing.
It'll all just get worse. I've seen scientists argue that there's absolutely no way shape or form. Is their any evidence that eating fast-food junk regularly causes health problems.
At what point do we stop and think on our own?? It is NOT normal to be allergic to so many damn foods, and being chronically ill.
Its no wonder they created the orobous steak... 🤦🏾♀️ Soon everyone will be arguing theirs literally no scientific evidence eating human lab grown meat is dangerous.
Species avoid extinction by passing on stronger genes through Natural Selection. Human intervention may either allow weaker genes to enter the gene pool or disrupt an important process.
I'v ran into a couple of fawns, that was all healthy, laying a alone waiting for mom. The only one to this day I'm not sure about was one I saw on a hiking trail. It was too young to be alone, looked healthy but it was off walking alone. It kind of came up to me and I waited to see if the mother was around and never heard a sound in any direction. The fawn eventually wasn't curious about me anymore and made off. I still have no clue if it was orphaned or not xD
mother deer leave there fawns in a hiding place as they feed theres a high chance the mom would come back
@@mnkash2007 and a plus, deer only show to be orphaned when they bleat close to anyone, hoping it is their mom.
LMAO! Yeah, this is about right. I know a lot of people who actually DO help animals, but when people who have fled one area and move to a new place start making decisions for local wildlife, that's where we have a problem. If you move somewhere from a different location, try asking a neighbor their opinion before placing blame on , or interfering with, local wildlife.....
I feel soo much better knowing all my spider homies watch my back while I sleep
I saw a hedgehog that was run over. She was dead and her three little ones crawled around her. They were just a few weeks old. I took care of them during the summer (in an outdoor enclosure with minimal human contact) and they moved back into the wild in the autumn. I made sure to make huge piles of branches and leaf for them to spend the winter in hibernation. I don't regret it 🤷♀️
Taking care of a couple of hedgehogs till theyre like 8 or so weeks old is different. Hedgehogs specifically can be relatively fine on their own after that 8 week mark.
You are a kind person
Most rescue work is done to combat human causes, but still, if you didn't have the adequate facilities it could've gone differently. That is different than people just scooping up fledglings out of ignorance lol
My question is if the spider is an invasive species like the ones you mentioned then wouldn’t it be better for it to die then to possibly endanger local wildlife in one way or another.
Tbh, invasive species are very interesting, as they are usually better at surviving than the native species.
@@treycopeland1368they're still invasive though.
@@fernandorochamedeiros5684 True
@treycopeland1368 that is the point, invasive species that didn't belong there before get released into a new eco system (by humans) and destroy the local wildlife, making local population suffer.
This is like what we have here with the grey squirrel problem and how their introduction almost wiped out our native red squirrel population, they are coming back but i think personally they should cull the grey squirrel, thats alot harder to do with spiders though i imagen.
When I was little, I found an injured mouse on my grandma's back porch. A cat had been playing with it. So I scolded the cat, and I took the mouse into the house and kept it while I tried to get it to revive. When my mom found out, she told me to put the "dirty thing" outside and that the cat was doing his job. Now, when our cat presents me with a mouse, I say, "Good job." And I'm a lot more understanding when I get a dead chipmunk or come across a feather or two. That circle of life only works if it includes death. Though I DO still help turtles get across roads.
If you're having problems with the number of spiders in your house, you probably have a problem with some type of pest, whether you're aware of it or not.
True it’s basically a natural version of supply and demand. And I say natural cause I doubt most people would demand for the spiders, but where there’s a supply of food there’s predators🤣
Or just live in Australia as is my case.😂
Depends on time of year as well though as well, as well as where you live, we get a bunch more house spider during colder seasons for example we maybe get 2 to 5 big spiders in total in our house during the spring and summer but in the colders months like now for example we have either 1 house spider who is moving all around the house all the time or about 5 to 6 at one time. Also where my house gets the big house spiders my bfs house a 5 minute drive up to the next village he very rarely get big house spiders but get a huge amount of ricecrispy spiders all year round where as my house has never had any of those.
I remember when I was 8, me and my friend were messing around kicking boxes at the back of an old workshop and a cat bolted put of one and we heard kittens crying, there were three of them. He took two, I took one, because we thought they would die 8f we left them outside. Our Mums obviously explained the second we got home and we all took them back to the box and kept an eye out from a good distance the next day and night. We should have left them well alone, the mother cat had given up on them, she never came back to the spot. Even after taking them to a vet and with both of our Mum's help to keep them alive...well. 😔
I've had two cats since then and I still feel the guilt really, really sharply any time I SEE a kitten or any other baby animal- I am 41 this year, I don't think I'll ever truly forgive myself for that no matter how old I was. I had called him Gizmo, one of our favourite films was Gremlins back in the day.
When I got my new kitten from my friend 2 years ago- I'd seen pictures of, but never met these kittens before- this single, tiny little creature who was juuust old enough to see properly, separated himself from his litter in the corner of the room the second I sat down on the couch and toddled across the room to me and climbed up my leg. He looked identical to that tiny thing I lost so many years ago, so I named the beautiful boy who's out prowling and hunting and being a happy cat right this minute Gizmo, in his honour.
I don't know about reincarnation or what happens after we move on, but I hope that that little soul forgives me.
Man the editing in this video was just.... *chefs kiss* . Definitely gonna watch more from this channel
If a spider relocates in my home I have no problem with them dying.
0:21 his spine is prolly broken now
On the spider section, it is actually better to move them outside, like he said, native spiders will just find another spot (hoping it's not other person's house) but invasive spiders that find a safe place in houses will die. In any situation, killing invasive species is good, if they are kept alive, they'll probably outcompete native species and therefore, cause unbalance in the ecosystem, affecting other species.
Also, don't save wild animals in all situations, unless, maybe, situations created by humans, like saving a bird that crashed into a window. As the video said, they serve as food to other animals and it is a part of life, natural selection remember?
omg....this is top class information..this video should go viral and educate millions of people about their actions .......thank you for making this video
"Move it to a part of your house that you don't mind having spiders"
So not inside my house?
So, did I make the right decision when I walked past a bee that was laying on the ground looking tired and not flying?
I couldn’t decide if I should have perhaps put it on a flower or not
They often fly away from the hive to die, so it would have died anyway you absolutely did the right thing
In the case of an insect that appears to be tired, unable to fly, or dying, you can put a bottle cap of water or maybe a bit of sugar water beside them (like hummingbird water). If they’re just tired or dehydrated, they’ll pull themselves to the bottle cap, recover, then fly away. If they’re dying, they’ll still be there 15 minutes later. It’s best not to move them because they might feel threatened and bite/sting (depending on the insect).
Bruh I laughed at your comment 😂🫤🤣
@@Pastel_lemons 😎
Interfering with nature is always a bad idea unless you are trained to deal with it. Even feeding wild animals can upset the balance of nature as some hunter gatherer and foraging skills can erode making wild animals dependent on hoomans.
There is no part of my house were I don't mind having spiders. Spiders are all Shelob. Shelob is huge. Shelob is scary. It is more merciful to spiders for me to move or if I have Sting and the Light of Elendil to slay the beasts.
If I see a spider out doors I leave it be, just providing a wide berth so it can't web me up.
I think I show great restraint when it comes to spiders.
Dont get me wrong, i love animals. But most animals dont need saving. The animals that do need saving are probably all domesticated animals that are lost and forced to need humans to live. And thats probably because some human "saved" them when they were young.
Humans tend to think they can change one detail of an ecosystem without affecting a lot of other moving parts.
My house became infested with giant brown spiders and I had them all exterminated. They were really dangerous and would just sit in the middle of the stairs or living room floor.
Depends on the age of the animal and their predicament. Young animals like most human children don't know what to do in dangerous situations and if a four-legged animal falls inside a hole it needs some assistance, especially if it's manmade because then it's human fault that will kill it and not natural selection.
Humans are not separate from nature, as many seem to think. Everything is natural selection. If the environment, created by humans behaving as humans naturally do, has holes in it, then animals that don't fall into holes will be selected for.
Young animals sometimes even know what to do soon as theyre born,they have instinct for survival withor guidance not like humans
If they fall into a hole they're therefore weak and The smartest and strongest will be able to survive
Monke: “Leave your fucking human paws off me and let me swim for fuck sake”
Human: YEET
I’m sorry, but if I find a huntsman spider in my house, it wouldn’t live much longer…
Chances are every banana you've ever had was genetically modified.
Bananas as we know them are not naturally occurring, so chances are a 100%
“Let me help you!” *Starts drowning*
1:46 Squidward Indonesian monke swim
I am impressed how videos can give a different story despite knowing absolute nothing about the situation. I have watched the original video, without context we can assume many things but the original video has another video which explain the whole situation. The guy on the boat isn't some random guy, he knows what he was doing, go check it out before judging based on this video
Exactly
This a video that is very much needed
Even if an animal is being hunted do not help or do anything, even if it comes to your cars boat etc let it be
U may see the prey n feel sorry n help it
But it can also mean the predator who haven't eaten anything for days lose its food.
Thank you
A squirrel doing drugs was not on my Post-2024 Bingo Card
POV: you swim 10 kilometres then some people put you back 💀
the large majority of people don't want spiders in their houses at all very few people are spider friendly
10:29 bet someone will do this catch around 10-15 spiders then in a few weeks there will be thousands crawling around they house 😨💀
8:05 That hair though.
At least these guys are genuinely trying to help - unlike the RUclips turtle rescuers who glue shells and barnacles to their shells before scraping them off on camera, or fish rescuers, who release exotic species into the environment before trying to catch them for a video.
I was put off by the title because I didn't understand why someone would make a statement such as this but then, I watched the video and you are absolutely right. Sometimes it's better to NOT intervene. There are instances where it is necessary but, not every case. Thank you for posting this video and raising awareness that, sometimes, we need to let nature alone to take care of itself.