Fun fact!! They actually do make art sculptures under water like that to prevent illegal fishing. It’s especially popular off the coast of Italy, the sculptures are a tourist attraction and it becomes a fish sanctuary as a bonus
@@NutjobGTO no. If the hook gets caught on the sculpture you're not likely to get it back or the sink for the hook... Divers and Fish just get an extra piece of art to make use of or admire. I've see one (not personally but video of it) where it was a metal shark sculpture that looks like it just comes out of the darkness if you're not paying attention.
@@NutjobGTO hooks/nets will break on a significantly reinforced sculpture, so someone trying to do illegal drag net fishing will just lose their entire net, for instance
@@dustorm5012 there actually is one, I forget where exactly it was but there’s a video of murky water with the shark statue suddenly coming into sight from the depths
oh no, when male spiders find a mate they "play" the strings to see if the female is "interested" so basically that spider was trying his luck with an Amazonian warrior.
Fun fact: If you're ever bitten by a tarantula hawk wasp, the best thing you can do before an ambulance arrives is literally lay down and scream. Screaming induces an adrenaline rush and thus slightly numbs the excruciating pain you'll be in and laying down prevents you from injuring yourself even more if you fall down in pain. Fun things, really.
For those that didn't catch it (including Click himself): The Rosette Nebula ever so slightly resembles a skull (at least, in the picture shown), which is why it was on r/nope in the first place. Creepy shit that either the universe is able to somehow almost perfectly recreate a skull using solar systems, stars, and planets, or we're able to recognize patterns in things millions of times bigger than us.
I'm just realizing that a picture of that nebula was used for Avenged Sevenfold's album The Stage. I thought the post was a joke at first because I always thought the cover image was space-inspired artwork meant to resemble a skull (since they have their skull logo on all their album covers); I just looked up the Rosette Nebula and found out the image is actually of that nebula. Mind blown. 😮
The snakes coming out of their burrow are so cute. Swaying around, taking in the scents and warming up. They might have just come out of winter dormancy.
It was either a hibernaculum or like just a fam of gater snakes that felt the person filming coming, and were looking to see if it was dangerous/if they need to flee
If it helps anybody feel a little less uncomfortable, it is actually a myth that pelicans can push their spines into their mouth; the "spine" is simply something called glottis exposure, which essentially just means that they're inverting the skin beneath their beak. Additionally, they don't do this to cool down. They do this to adjust the pouch so it is back in its normal position. It's apparently also related to hygiene. Still, it looks very strange regardless of what it is. I will note that I am not a professional, I just recalled that this was a myth and decided to ensure that I was remembering correctly/fact check for this comment.
@@BewilderedCitrus I think Casual Geographic is where I saw the pelican thing too, but on his RUclips channel. I think he complies his ticktoks for his RUclips videos so I don't remember which video it was.
I mean, they are using their neck to push their pouch skin. The tubular shape is formed by their neck, which famously contains their spine. They use their spine to do this as much as I use the bones in my hand when I do a massage.
My Irish (Gaelige) teacher discovered that her house had been built on a mass grave and was utterly thrilled at the notion. People came in droves to dig up her floor boards and remove bones and she took photos of it all to show us. Absolutely horrifying. and she was still happy enough to sleep UP-FREAKING-STAIRS while her entire ground floor was just dead people. SUPER NOPE
For anyone curious: the short shouted croc from some of those clips is Rex; she belongs to Snake Discovery here on RUclips. She was rescued from a neglectful previous owner and the reason her snout is so short and upturned is because her previous owner kept her in such a small living space for years that her growth was severely stunted and her snout deformed as she grew. She’s doing well now tho, and seems very happy in her new enclosure 💖
Me coming to the comments to see if anyone pointed out that Rex was in the clips with the Gator (since she is an Alligator not a croco) and sure enough I found this one! She's such a good girl and I remember all of those videos that were in the clips. Bathing her and then her going to a pet store to pick out a new toy was adorable.
As a Australian I can confirm that you can domesticate Kangaroos but you can train it to attack strangers. My uncle had a "pet" one called Robert. No one got passed Robert
My friend had one called "Wally", he was a huge boy, towered over me! She works for the CSIRO with roos and one day Wally decided to fully attack a worker and he was so strong my friend had to hit him over the head with a heavy pan and knocked poor Wally out for a minute. He was fine, better than the poor guy he was kicking who was lucky he kept his intestines on the inside, though quite possibly was done having kids, judging by his reaction when Wally kicked him in the balls and wicket!
It makes sense. Kangaroos are a very social animal with a hierachy among their groups. They might not be instinctively inclined to live with humans like dogs do, but they can act in a social group like a household.
The garter snakes (14:23) are absolutely adorable. Edit; Fun fact, garter snakes are pretty much harmless. They can release a smell via "musking" but are non-venomous to humans.
I've been wanting to get a snake for a while, either a garter snake or hognose. My entire family said they will not come over to my house if I have a snake. I thought, wait is that supposed to discourage me?
@@mkjirak Lmao. Check out Snake Discovery then. They have online orders (with waitlists) and some really cool snakes. They bred PURPLE hognoses a while back, as well as consistently having albinos.
Actually they are rear-fanged venomous snakes but their venom is very weak and their fangs are really small so they are indeed harmless to humans and as an extra fun fact they can actually be poisonous depending on what they eat for example if they eat a poisonous salamander they store the toxins in their liver so anything that eats them will get sick or possibly die.
YES FINALLY, my time has come: 14:25 Those guys are garter snakes, a species of snakes that are quite unusual in their behavior compared to other snakes. The person filming has come upon an occupied burrow where a group has hibernated together, the sheer amount of snakes being comfortable alongside each other is quite rare in the snakedom. I guess in the video it is spring and this bundle of snakes has just come out to soak up some warmth. There are probably a lot more snakes down there. They are a non venomous species, nativ to North America and are one of few species than can be homed in groups. Furthermore those gurls are ovoviviparous - meaning they incubate the eggs inside of the female, the babies than hatch whilst still inside and then are given birth to.
@@anonygent hey there, thanks to bring it to my attention that my wording wasn't clear enough. I shall edit it =) Because I meant unusual when it comes to this behavior, as far as I am aware that many snakes hibernating together is unique to garters. Thanks again!!!
@@kisakisakura6663 Gotcha. For the record, there is a cave in the desert southwest where a species of rattlesnake hibernates en masse during the winter. I'm on the phone, so I can't look it up at the moment, but if I remember right, it's in Texas and the western diamondback, but I can't swear to either.
I'm pretty sure the FUCKING RING to rule them all is in there along with gollum, actually I wouldn't be surprised if Smaug is in there too (which granted I lovd Smaug but I'm pretty sure he'd incinerate me lol)
@@Allantitan I'm Aussie, and the biggest I've seen is a Queensland python so I can't even imagine an anaconda or boa irl! Though it's the little ones that'll getcha here lol
The baby owls look like derpy aliens that were sent to study the strange questionably-sapient species that wear a second skin and fight each other for fun, and now they’re questioning their life choices because they think we’re gonna eat them.
Yea i thought they were aliens and i was so scared and i still dont like that they exist on this earth, WHY CANT THEY LOOK LIKE BIRDS AND NOT FLUFFY LITTLE ALIENS
The "croc" being cleaned , reading and picking a toy is actually an alligator named Rex. She can be found on the Snake Discovery channel and is a prefect example why you shouldn't keep crocs or gators as pets. Also the many lil sneks are garter snakes and might be a newly born litter.
@@Kitty-xi1sb I'm not extremely knowledgeable, but I don't know that this is done by anything but army ants. I could easily see that type of explanation of the behavior arising from misconceptions about army ants though. Many species of army ants are blind, or nearly blind. Additionally, as far as I know army ants are the only types of ants where a nest actively moves around and transports the queen. Usually the queens just fly and found a new nest before losing their wings, or the nest only moves the queen under rare circumstances.
@@markjacobson4248 I honestly didn't know whether it was done by anything else or not, but I wouldn't be surprised if there was so I didn't question it. As stated, yeah, army ants are blind and commonly move nests. If I'm correct I'm pretty sure I saw something that said they also form these tunnels along important resource lines and attack anything that disturbs it, a real nuisance anywhere they live with humans.
Two of the clips from the alligator one are from Snake Discovery, her name is Rex and her growth was stunted because she was kept in a small wooden box with not enough light or food for the majority of her life, the clips were from her birthday a few years ago when they took her to pet smart to get some new toys
Wolves are surprisingly huge. If they stood up on their hind legs, they'd be as tall as an adult human. They can stand at your waist, not your hips, and maybe a bit higher. They're massive animals, at least compared to their cousin, the dog. They're so beautiful and so misunderstood.
They aren’t surprisingly huge, people just choose not to know how big they are. They want wolves to be like huskies. So they believe wolves are just huskies.
@aduckofsomesort It's insulting to the wolves, honestly. Huskies are cute pets and all, but they're not quite as cool. It probably wouldn't be a good idea to just straight up get a wild grey wolf as a pet, though, haha
I once found a large insect and caught it in a glass. When I brought it home, I looked it up. apparently, it was a tarantula hawk wasp that I had BROUGHT INTO MY HOUSE!!! Turns out, it is the state insect of New Mexico (where I live), has the second most painful sting of any insect (second to the bullet ant), and has an average size of two inches. If you are stung by one of these, the best advice to follow is to lay down and scream. Not even joking.
@@williamlevison9966 release endorphins, endorphins reduce the pain, Only slightly though it will hurt to the point you are likely to pass out from pure pain
14:39 That's a den of Garter snakes! Garters are one of the very few species of snakes that are communal, and also who go into a legitimate hibernation over colder seasons (other snakes go into something called brumation, which is similar but not exactly like hibernation) During colder seasons, Garters will actively seek out other Garters, and find abandoned burrows and hibernate together until spring. There can be a shocking number of Garters in one den, upwards of fifty sometimes. And then when they wake up in spring, they immediately start trying to get it on with each other lmao garter snakes are so weird. Edit: Also, that behavior is called 'periscopeing', and lots of snakes do it. Those ones are likely doing it because they're looking around for potential predators before coming out of the den, or they likely see the person filming moving around and are watching to see if they're a threat. It's very common for pet snakes as well, for them to just freeze when you walk up to their tank, staring at you for a full minute before summarily ignoring you and carrying on what they were doing lmao. Also 16:50 that's likely a juvenile anaconda. Sub-adult, at most. Not full grown.
*bear opens door* Click: "Oh, imagine if it was a duck opening the door." Me: *flashback to when a couple of swans tried to open my patio door like the velociraptors in Jurassic Park*
So my guess with the cellar at 8:31 is that it's either a basement to go into for things like tornadoes, or it was to hide alcohol during the time of prohibition, when they had to make alcohol and sell it. Usually they would have concealed basements and/or rooms that were usually not in the blueprints of houses be made so that they could get away with it and not be caught
depending on the region, location within the house, and how large the space at the bottom actually is, it could also be a root cellar! I used to live in a house built in the mid 1800s and the family who had owned it before us had covered the root cellar hatch with plywood and linoleum tile, but the house had an actual basement so we kinda had to figure out what the hell the deal was with the room under the kitchen that had been boarded up from the inside of the doorways and filled with dirt with only about an 18in gap between the highest boards/dirt level and the flooring above it! my friends were convinced there were bodies in there and refused to go into the basement for anything lol
The snakes coming out of the burrow wasn't even a "nope." They were cute widdle danger noodles. Now, that one in the lake thicker than my whole body, THAT'S A NOPE.
I wonder if it was even snake. It looked more like dragon lizard. But I'm just guessing 😅. Whatever it is I wouldn't go there 😅. Also yes, those snakes were adorable. 😍
@@pissapocalypse That's a _highly rational_ fear though. Like being afraid of close, unsecured exposure to polar bears, tigers and heights high enough to likely be fatal if you fell. If humans didn't instinctively and rationally fear these kinds of things, we probably wouldn't be here today.
@@Arbaaltheundefeated yeah... looks like the guys in the Boat annoyed an Anaconda that just eat and was on its way to a nice place to rest. If i recall correcly, a good Meal can nurture a Snake for Weeks. Constricting Snakes swallow dead prey whole, as long its small enough to pass the unhinged jaw. I think in the same Area as Anacondas, there are alligators and capibaras. Maybe it hade a chunky Capi for lunch. Sometimes they are like humans and overestimate their capabilities. Then they can suffocated because their prey is to big, but because of their teeth, they can get rid of it.
Those were just newborn garter snakes! Completely harmless and they like to eat your pests. It’s so cool to see a whole wild family like that! They give live birth so it’s quite likely they literally just were born at the time and they wanted to explore a little!
Also, being a spiral staircase there are no landings to slow or stop you if you fall (fun fact: spiral stairs are banned in Australia for that very reason)
@@_foxpuppet sounds like a sensible ban. I have some brain damage (hypoxia, I had a 6 minute seizure and you don't breath during those things) that effects my balance and I HATE spiral staircases because they are a DEATH TRAP. If you fall, there's no stopping until you reach the bottom. And the "walls" around them are usually metal and can break bones.
as an Australian , kangaroos can be domesticated if the were raised by people as a joey . my mum rescued a joey and raised it for awhile and once it was healthy enough she let it go back in the wild but when we go to the place where she let it go it still comes up to us it's so cute . I also I love ur videos u are freaking halarious I'm a new subscriber. and statues are creepy as hell.
The round hole under the foundation is not a well, it is an old privy. The outhouse must have been incorporated into an an extension of the main house, it's just odd it wasn't filled in. The other small basements with stairs are cold cellars, used to store potatoes and canned goods. My grandmother still uses hers, she can control the temperature with a ventilation window.
Fun fact: Some of the gator vids are Rex from Snake Discovery ty channel. She cannot be released into the wild bc of her being raised/improper cared for by humans before her current "parents" rescued her. The clips where she was being cleaned and with a toy in her mouth was her. 😆
It's way worse than that. It paralyses a tarantula, drags it back into its' burrow and lays an egg on it. The tarantula is then eaten alive by the larva after it hatches.
So it's basically a "tarantula-hawk wasp" then - a wasp that is a "hawk" to tarantulas. ...aside from the whole laying-eggs-in-living-prey thing, which is less typical of hawks.
The alligator getting the toothbrush bath and the one with the pink harness are the same one. Her name is Rex, and she lives at Snake Discovery Zoo. I've watched their RUclips channel throughout the pandemic. Some of the most genuine people who really love reptiles. Rex lived in a small box for decades, but she now has a great life. Thank you for this episode. I think it's my favorite. Also, I agree that spiders are good bois.
I was at the Kroger's up the street in Houston. I was at the self-checkout. Looked behind me, and there was an 80-pound pit bull sitting in the guy's shopping cart. Looking chill and happy.😂
18:58 probably that thing and the moray eel was the inspiration for the xenomorph. Fun Fact! The moray eel has two sets of jaws! An outer one for grabbing, and a inner one for chewing (aka ripping the fish into swallowable chunks)! This way it can eat the fish without giving it a chance to escape! Isn't that a fun animal fact!
take this with a grain of salt cause I've only seen it once and can't remember the name so I cant fact check but I came across a youtube short a while back that mentioned an insect that had the retractable mouth the alien does
and a small parasitic plant called hydnora africana (also calles "jakkalskos") according to the aliens designer HR Giger. I actually found one in the western cap region of south africa. top spot in any weird plant list
Is it bad that I actually could for a while (until I developed allergies) I could navigate a 4 floor victoriana home based solely off smell or sound, and if you know those kinds of homes in the states they have super uneven floors so I had to be accurate enough to go up and down stairs of uneven hight But I have autistic hypersensitivity and only typing this did I realise that that is why I can, I've known I'm autistic for more than a decade... I'm dumb
@@ConstantChaos1 My hypersensitivity is somewhat canceled out by my eyes and ears being barely functional. (Can't read words smaller than 2 inches in height from 7 feet away without my glasses, and have 40% hearing loss in my left ear, and 20% in my right.)
3:48 this kind of thing reminds me of the gympie-gympie tree, also known as the “suicide bush.” Basically its leaves are covered in hard to see hyperdermic needles that are nearly impossible to remove. Each of them contains a neurotoxin that won’t kill you but will cause immense pain compared to being set on fire and doused with acid simultaneously. The pain can persist for months or even years. I think you can figure out how it got the suicide bush moniker.
I'm so glad that gympie-gympie trees don't grow where I live. I did some research on plants like this in college and the reason the pain lasts so long for that particular tree is because it's silicon based, which the human body can't properly break down. A very scary plant whose defense system was designed to be as strong as possible.
As a Canadian I feel others should know that if you see a moose it is very possible u will die if you don't stay hidden or go somewhere safe (that's close) they can dive 20 ft, swim and run faster than any athlete. Not to mention how much they weigh
Yeah, Moose are one of a handful of animals where if you run over it with a vehicle, you and the vehicle are going to suffer far more damage then a moose
@@brothersandsistersofvalhalla If you hit a moose hard enough to kill it you were gong about 4x faster than it took to kill you. Moose are not only massive blocks of inertia, their legs are generally long enough that your engine slips underneath them; leaving all that moose mass to hit directly though your windshield and front seats, leaving over a thousand pounds of pissed off, disoriented wildlife desperately scrambling to get away from this weird metal thing that just knocked out its legs. Out in the woods, though; yeah. Just be respectful of their space and don't give 'em reason to run/ knock you down and you'll be fine.
18:53 This is actually a myth, they're spine is not coming out of their mouth, it's just the huge pouch being founded inside out while it yawns. What it actually does to cool off is waggle it's loose pouch around a bit.
@@Mystery-Wolf Yeah I also lived in the city but Toronto is known for it's green spaces and they have the Islands that is pedestrian only. Great for catching frogs and snakes!
14:23 These little noodles are called Garter Snakes, and they are one of the very few snake species that live in social groups. Particularly like in this picture, which seems to be the entrance to a hibernaculum, where they spend the winter in very large groups. They're only found in North and Central America, so it's not surprising you don't immediately know what they are, but they're extremely common here, so much so that finding them in home gardens is common enough to give them an errant nickname "garden" snake, because it sounds similar. Also they make great pets if you keep a small group of them, as they're very social for reptiles.
I used to live near the woods, and every spring I would see them come out of their little winter home and thought they were so cool. And in 2nd grade we had a small group of them as class pets, also very cool.
Oh so they aren't dangerous (I know everything CAN be dangerous but just in general), if you find a nest like the one in the video would you be able to throw some food just outside and they wouldn't attack you?
@@kempolar9768 no snake except maybe the 2 largest species of snakes will attack you unless they think you're about to kill them. just leave them alone, even the most venomous, and you'll be fine
16:08 There's a story by Yasutaka Tsutsui where people just all walk off into the ocean, literally shoulder to shoulder. Trampling and drowning anyone who falls behind and gets in the way. That waterpark is like the floaty version of that.
Bless their little avian hearts, barn owl chicks look like aliens LOL The critter in the dark tunnel that was licking the air is a monitor lizard/komodo dragon. Also, the mouth of the xenomorphs from Alien were inspired by dragonfly larvae.
14:24 As a snek owner, I instantly brighten when I saw all those Garter Snakes. Garter Snakes are harmless. So, you won't have to worry about them. Also, those snakes were coming out of brumation. Brumation is the reptile version of hibernation. Either that, or you found a newly hatched clutch of eggs.
I almost drowned at 14 in a wave pool getting trapped under all the others with their inner tubes. Fortunately my dad noticed from the "shore" and forced his way through the crowd to grab me and drag me out. I will never forget the burning feeling in my lungs as I was trying to find a gap in the surface.
I’ll never understand why pool parks don’t have a separate wave pool for floaties. I almost lost a friend after getting separated from them and struggling to get around the tubes to pull them out from under one
My girlfriend had this same thing happen to her when she was like nine. She genuinely thought she was going to die because well she would have if help came too late.
That whole berry thing is nasty. Certain alkaloids in those plants are no joke and can do some nasty things. One plant that comes to mind is Mala Mujer, which behaves like a nettle. Nettles have a lot of stinging hairs. One guy that touched Mala Mujer said it was like being stabbed with nuclear glass daggers
@@tatiana4050 either an immortal time traveler or someone who just wouldn’t want anyone to dare try and test his opinion, so approximating the worst thing he could imagine.
@@a-problematic-person Can't feel pain = the type of person that wouldn't be talking about plants and would more likely talk about knives. Enjoys pain = the type of person that wouldn't be talking at all.
6:41 they seem to be Dorylus Ants, a type of very agressive blind ant that builds tunnels of larger strong ants to guide the smaller ones along a certain path. These ants are extremely agressive and violent and if left alone there are known reports of them taking out large animals including cows. These monsters have even been known to kill humans and sadly babies who are left alone to long and are found commonly in several areas in the world but mostly centeral and east africa. If you ever encounter ants like this if you live in, or travel to areas where they live it is a good idea to have a way to burn them. Some say it smells horrible but it is a good way to remove them from an area or space. That said if you are in a spot you are just seeing these about it might also be a good idea to just get the hell out of said area. Funny enough these are not even the most dangerous ant species alive but given how much nightmare fuel this species is I'll be nice and not speak of the even more horrible ants out there in the world... Also love your videos click
@@fierdrages6523 Being 100% honest it's just a guess but that's the closet type of Ant I think it is and IDK any other ants that build tunnels with themselves like that so just a guess but a educated one. And yeah people avoid these things like the plague and nothing stops them. If you poison it never gets them all, if you spray poison they just go around where you sprayed even avoiding the dead ones. Is why people say use fire. If you burn them down the line you could keep them from coming back... At least for a while
7:10 that is the hive of ants moving locations. The ants shown in this video are essentially the protector ants. They usually stay in the hive, kind of like a crown guard of sorts as they're meant to protect the queen and other ants if an intruder where to ever get into the hive. They also dig the tunnels and living spaces for the other ants. They are the protectors of the hive, therefore they are they largest and the strongest and also the most venomous of the ants in a hive. When the hive needs to move for whatever reason, such as in this video, they create a tunnel with each other for the other 'weaker' ants, as well as the queen, to move once the scouts have found a new location for the hive. They will lead the others of the hive to the new location and protect them from all sides, which is why they will attack anything that touches the tunnel.
For the last one, imagine if they had security guards or even just normal staff disguise themselves as the statues and when a robber comes in, they do the whole weeping angels thing by moving when said criminal isn't looking at them. Also point is someone was controlling the lights to add to the horror factor.
Exterminator here! I used to be super freaked out by creepy basements and crawlspaces but I'm in them literally every day so I don't even notice anymore. I LOVE the spider playing violin, that is so cute. I have house spiders in every corner of my house for natural pest control as I occasionally get fungus gnat explosions in my 50+ tarantula enclosures. Also, yes, ants will do that when transporting the queen, kinda like an entourage of cars around the president. Also, the giant nests are yellow jackets, and it is actually terrifyingly common to have nests that large especially when people never go in their attics... I had one that was about four feet across this summer, it took me an hour to remove. Fun fact, if you give paper wasps, hornets, yellow jackets, etc colourful construction paper they make some incredibly beautiful nests! I ADORE stinging insects. Also, garter snakes are communal and hang out together, much like in this video, especially over the winter to keep warm. The lizard in the underground tunnel appears to be some sort of monitor lizard based on the forked tongue and the shape of the head, probably an Asian water monitor based on the markings. Awesome video! - Charlotte
@@mcfarofinha134 they're garter snakes, but I have heard people refer to them as garden snakes, either bc they misheard the name or bc people normally encounter them in their gardens.
27:48 the toothbrush scrubby clip and the PetSmart clip are from another RUclips channel called Snake Discovery! The gator featured in those clips is Rex, a 35 year old rescue! She’s an educational ambassador and very calm, as well as being quite a bit smaller than your average gator of the same age. I do recommend their channel- they’re excellent ambassadors for reptiles and the reptile hobby, and they even have a zoo!
Fun Fact: The Annihilation film was based on a novel trilogy called the Southern Reach. The three books are called (in order) Annihilation, Authority, and Acceptance. If you love sci-fi and horror, I highly recommend this series. The books are also available on Audible.
I love this trilogy! To me it seems more like extreme weirdness than outright horror, so it's interesting to see the differences between the books and the movie which definitely played up the horror.
I'm pretty sure the "narrow stairs" at 8:31 lead to a "potato basement" (Google would accept the Danish word for those, but not find me an English equivalent) They're traditional underground storage places where people would store things that needed to be kept cool and dry but also away from sunlight - like, potatoes (potatoes go green and poisonous if exposed to sunlight for too long, which is why you should always cover your potatoes if some gets above the soil in your garden) I've looked at quite a few old houses here in Denmark and a rare few still have those potato basements, though most have either been filled up or expanded into a real basement.
In rural areas of Russia people still use those actively. For potatoes, carrots, and all sorts of pickles in jars. The funny thing here is that the Russian word for this storage area has the same root as the word 'burial'. The original meaning has something to do with the fact that you 'bury' the vegetables in the underground (I assume), but sounds scary out of context, like, if you don't know of the function of said cellar, just know that it's some sort of 'burial' :)
16:05 yes and it has happened before. There was also a case of the wave mashine malfunctioning and a bunch of people dying from being pushed down by people trying to escape.
You would think there'd be a policy in place preventing this sort of thing from happening in the first place, let alone again... Maybe I better stay away from watermarks. At least unless they're tightly regulated.
Fun fact: in New Zealand there used to live a giant bird called Haast's Eagle. It's the biggest eagle that has ever existed and had a wingspan of up to 3m, which was relatively short compared to its size. Its height standing up was up to 90cm and its body lenght was about 1.4m. It hunted Moa, which were flightless birds, looking kind of like our modern emu, which reached heights up to 3.6m with its neck fully streched. Both species have been extinct for centuries. When the Māori arrived in New Zealand they began hunting the Moa which drove them to extinction. Though I am not sure if it was to have them go extinct or as a food source. With the Moa going extinct the Haast's Eagle also started to decrease in numbers, since the Moa were their primary food source and being big birds they needed much food, which was increasingly harder to come by. In the end the whole process of those two species going extinct took less than a 100 years, which is extremely quick. So next time you watch LOTR or The Hobbit, remember that the earth actually did home very similar, if still not as large, eagles to the ones there are in the movies.
@@anthonyjames696 Haast's Eagles when extinct around the same time Columbus found America, so this isn't like epic prehistoric animals, this was "modern-age" animals
@@anthonyjames696 I never meant to insuinate that you thought they were prehistoric. It was for passing viewers who may not know when the Maori arrived at NZ, and don't realize how recent it was. Sorry for the confusion
Little things about hyenas: 1. Once a male hyena reaches adulthood, they are kicked out of the pack they grew up in, and if they're lucky to find another pack, males have to face a lot of hazing til they move up in rank(usually via a higher male dying or mating with a female in the pack). 2. Female hyenas have what's called a "pseudopenis" that they have to give birth through. In other words, lots of first time mothers can die in childbirth from the "canal" ripping and the young risk suffocating to death if they aren't lucky.
@@alchemysaga3745 There is a species of jumping spiders native native to south-east asia which goes by the name of _Portia labiata_ . These spiders hunt other spiders, preferably orb-weavers, and are known to be quite crafty when doing so. One of the strategies they use is plucking at another spiders web in order to simulate the motion of struggling prey, drawing the owner of the web towards them to be eaten.
Tarantula hawks are called that because they eat tarantulas. They're actually a parasitoid wasp. When the female is ready to lay her egg, she stings a tarantula, paralyzing it, and drags it to a prepared burrow. She lays one egg on it and then closes up the burrow. The larva hatches and eats its way into the spider, grows in there and finally pupates and comes out of the burrow. For the rest, tarantula hawks eat nectar and the juices of rotting fruit (they get drunk off fermented fruit juice sometimes). Also, they really don't want to sting humans and will only do so when they feel threatened and trapped... but their sting is known as one of the most painful insect stings in the world. Also 15:00 I'm pretty sure that's the Fukushima tsunami, I can find that particular clip but the people who posted it don't mention which tsunami it is but I think I've seen it in compilations from that one.
The cars noping away from that wall of water is actually from footage from the 2011 Japanese tsunami. It's awesome to see water that powerful, but also scary and sad when you realize how many people die during them.
8:44 Who cares about this possibily haunted 100 years old basement when there's a "You shall not pass" doormat in front of it ? I love to see a reference used like that.
That bear from Annihilation actually scared me, badly. I couldn't finish the show. I had to watch a summary afterwards. Imagine a creature like that, in that situation, in real life.
@@fierdrages6523 Pretty much. Feels like wool, appears dusty and after a few minutes it's itchy wherever it touched you and maybe even stings and gives rashes.
15:28 That is actually a Komodo dragon. Their bite is lethal. NatGeo writes: "Snakes typically have a single venom duct that leads to their fangs. But Komodos have multiple ducts located between their teeth. However, this means Komodo dragons don't deliver their venom as efficiently as snakes, Fry said. Rather than injecting venom directly via a forceful bite, the dragons use a specialized bite-and-pull motion to ooze the toxin into wounds during a sustained, frenzied attack." The combo of venom and lacerations will weaken you greatly if it hasn't already killed you, and they will lie in wait for you to either die in agony, or to finish you off hours later. They eat anything that moves.
Differences between gators and crocs: 1: Gators have rounder, wider snouts, more adept at catching FISH and usually don't attack humans unless provoked or fed by humans. The latter would cause them to seek out humans, often finding pets and small children. 2: Crocodiles are often lighter and are usually beige or moss green wile alligators come in various shades of grey and brown. 3: Alligators are a lot smaller than crocodiles. 4: Crocodiles have pressure sensors that can sense movement in the water all over their body while gators only have them on where their lips would be. 5: Crocodile teeth interlock and are visible at all times while only the upper teeth in gators can be seen when they close their mouths. 6: Crocodiles can be up to about twenty feet long, give or take, and are known to ambush anything that wants a sip of water, including any unfortunate humans.
27:30 the crocodile shown is a rescue animal from snake discovery. Her name is Rex and she was kept in a small box without UVB that's why she is smaller and has an up turned snout with mouthrott. That's why they're brushing her teeth. Nowadays she's living in a zoo exhibit that is run by the creator of snake discovery. Ultimately wholesome people and educators. Would highly recommend
Seconded! If you like reptiles, check out Snake Discovery, they've been one of my favorite channels for years, and it's really great to see Rex living her best life after such a rough start.
Looking at the other alligators makes me realize just how big Rex could have been if she wasn’t raised in a box for half her life. But I’m glad Emily and Ed rescued her☺️
The "foam" inside of walls that is itchy, more likely than not is fiberglass. The glass needles stick to your skin, which is why it's important not to scratch when dealing with fiberglass and after done, go straight into a hot shower. The alternative is expanding polyurethane (or expanding foam) which is itching because it dries your skin and it gets everywhere 😂
This is one of the reasons why I opted for specially manufactured wool insulation. The only downside was that the house smelled of sheep for a week or so!
14:32 Those look like Garter snakes. They're small snakes that often live together in dens. There's a town in Canada called Gimli, which has a tourist attraction called the Gimli Snake Pits, where you can walk around the wilderness and look in these pits that just have thousands of garter snakes crawling around in them.
Narcisse, Manitoba has the Narcisse Snake Pits, the largest Garter Snake Hibernaculums in the world. I've never heard of the "Gimli Snake Pits", and I'm from Manitoba and Gimli is in Manitoba.
29:17 helpful info: the Lwyd in Mari Lwyd is pronounced like Lloyd, in fact Lloyd is the Anglicised version of the name Llwyd (the male version of Lwyd), which means "grey" - with Mari Lwyd meaning Grey Mare. Also, W and Y are vowels in Welsh.
19:18 it's not a danger noodle technically, it's a green python, they aren't venomous at all and don't grow large enough to be dangerous to humans. They are chill and pretty, and make for good pets. I think their weird predator movie looking yawns are cute, like in a quirky way
One of the "crocodile" shown in the video is Rex, a rescue from Snake Discovery channel (she's actually an alligator)! She needs special care due to her snout being curved from being mistreated at her former home (hence the brushes). She was really picking her toys, the shop was warned and all precautions were taken for customers and employees. Now she enjoys her time at the Snake Discovery zoo, and you can watch her on Snake Discovery's Twitch channel
24:08 -Aww, such a good girl! Hyenas are very underrated -They clean up corpses, are better hunters than lions and have a very closely socialized within their pack
The snakes are called garter snakes they’re very common, and they don’t typically try to hurt you along with pretty much every single snake. They just want to be alone plus they’re not venomous.
Fun fact!! They actually do make art sculptures under water like that to prevent illegal fishing. It’s especially popular off the coast of Italy, the sculptures are a tourist attraction and it becomes a fish sanctuary as a bonus
So wait, they put the sculptures down to lure divers in specifically to go OH WELL TOO DANGEROUS TO FISH HERE NOW or something?
@@NutjobGTO no. If the hook gets caught on the sculpture you're not likely to get it back or the sink for the hook... Divers and Fish just get an extra piece of art to make use of or admire. I've see one (not personally but video of it) where it was a metal shark sculpture that looks like it just comes out of the darkness if you're not paying attention.
@@NutjobGTO hooks/nets will break on a significantly reinforced sculpture, so someone trying to do illegal drag net fishing will just lose their entire net, for instance
imagine fishing in a shark statue that's very realistic.
@@dustorm5012 there actually is one, I forget where exactly it was but there’s a video of murky water with the shark statue suddenly coming into sight from the depths
Funny thing is, the spider playing the violin was probably mistaking it for webbing and plucking it to check for food.
oh no, when male spiders find a mate they "play" the strings to see if the female is "interested" so basically that spider was trying his luck with an Amazonian warrior.
The spider was legit trying to romance his new roommate. O.O
@@DaWhiteWolffie acoustic arachnid love songs!
That's oddly wholesome
It would've been 10x funnier if it was fiddles back spider, it was drawn by the violin and just had to play once more
Fun fact: If you're ever bitten by a tarantula hawk wasp, the best thing you can do before an ambulance arrives is literally lay down and scream. Screaming induces an adrenaline rush and thus slightly numbs the excruciating pain you'll be in and laying down prevents you from injuring yourself even more if you fall down in pain.
Fun things, really.
Screaming is something I'm sure I would naturally be doing anyway at a time like that lol
Well, at least it's not too difficult to follow these instructions. Excruciating pain -> scream.
I think this is literally the easiest advice to follow.... I'll even add in some writhing for good measure.
Imagine you get stung in the mouth once you start screaming
Yea, I literally commented *scream* here. Good to see more ppl know.
For those that didn't catch it (including Click himself):
The Rosette Nebula ever so slightly resembles a skull (at least, in the picture shown), which is why it was on r/nope in the first place.
Creepy shit that either the universe is able to somehow almost perfectly recreate a skull using solar systems, stars, and planets, or we're able to recognize patterns in things millions of times bigger than us.
I thought him not recognizing the skull was a joke. He does that kind of joke sometimes.
I just thought it was pretty, would make a cool poster for my house
8:15 if anyone's wondering
@@silkwesir1444 I was thinking maybe it's because he's colorblind?
I'm just realizing that a picture of that nebula was used for Avenged Sevenfold's album The Stage. I thought the post was a joke at first because I always thought the cover image was space-inspired artwork meant to resemble a skull (since they have their skull logo on all their album covers); I just looked up the Rosette Nebula and found out the image is actually of that nebula. Mind blown. 😮
The snakes coming out of their burrow are so cute. Swaying around, taking in the scents and warming up. They might have just come out of winter dormancy.
It was either a hibernaculum or like just a fam of gater snakes that felt the person filming coming, and were looking to see if it was dangerous/if they need to flee
yes they look so cute!!!! They look right out of a pokemon game-
Ikr, why are they even in this subreddit?
Literally. They were all just next to each other vibing. They're just cute babies
@@JutlandAngel Must have been posted by someone with a phobia.
Fun fact: divers always go in pairs, so it would be at least two people scared of the skeletons vibing in dark waters
At least they really should. But you know that with humans, you *will* get one idiot who decides to go for a solo dive.
Bonus BOO!
Zum Glück bin halt nicht so schlimm ich hab das ja aber ich hab das es 😅
It's more of a horror when one goes, and two return
Oh dear God, I thought you said drivers and the comment about water confused me.
If it helps anybody feel a little less uncomfortable, it is actually a myth that pelicans can push their spines into their mouth; the "spine" is simply something called glottis exposure, which essentially just means that they're inverting the skin beneath their beak. Additionally, they don't do this to cool down. They do this to adjust the pouch so it is back in its normal position. It's apparently also related to hygiene.
Still, it looks very strange regardless of what it is.
I will note that I am not a professional, I just recalled that this was a myth and decided to ensure that I was remembering correctly/fact check for this comment.
Yeah, I was gonna bring this up since Casual Geographic talked about it on his tiktok.
@@BewilderedCitrus I think Casual Geographic is where I saw the pelican thing too, but on his RUclips channel. I think he complies his ticktoks for his RUclips videos so I don't remember which video it was.
Okay, thank you for the explanation
As soon as I saw this comment the part of the video talking about the pelicans came. That's what I call coincidence.
I mean, they are using their neck to push their pouch skin. The tubular shape is formed by their neck, which famously contains their spine. They use their spine to do this as much as I use the bones in my hand when I do a massage.
My Irish (Gaelige) teacher discovered that her house had been built on a mass grave and was utterly thrilled at the notion. People came in droves to dig up her floor boards and remove bones and she took photos of it all to show us. Absolutely horrifying. and she was still happy enough to sleep UP-FREAKING-STAIRS while her entire ground floor was just dead people. SUPER NOPE
well she is used to death because she is from ireland
@@aliceramdom.s💀💀💀
(I’m Irish too I shouldn’t have laughed at that)
As a kid I was terrified of skeletons, I think I might have died of heart attack.
@@froggycolouring lol
Hell yes i would love that
For anyone curious: the short shouted croc from some of those clips is Rex; she belongs to Snake Discovery here on RUclips. She was rescued from a neglectful previous owner and the reason her snout is so short and upturned is because her previous owner kept her in such a small living space for years that her growth was severely stunted and her snout deformed as she grew. She’s doing well now tho, and seems very happy in her new enclosure 💖
Rex is best alligator. BEST!
Yea I thought I recognized her!
Love her
I was just watching her video before this
Me coming to the comments to see if anyone pointed out that Rex was in the clips with the Gator (since she is an Alligator not a croco) and sure enough I found this one! She's such a good girl and I remember all of those videos that were in the clips. Bathing her and then her going to a pet store to pick out a new toy was adorable.
As a Australian I can confirm that you can domesticate Kangaroos but you can train it to attack strangers. My uncle had a "pet" one called Robert. No one got passed Robert
My friend had one called "Wally", he was a huge boy, towered over me! She works for the CSIRO with roos and one day Wally decided to fully attack a worker and he was so strong my friend had to hit him over the head with a heavy pan and knocked poor Wally out for a minute. He was fine, better than the poor guy he was kicking who was lucky he kept his intestines on the inside, though quite possibly was done having kids, judging by his reaction when Wally kicked him in the balls and wicket!
@@obnoxiousbluebird6634 Awesome Wally… I won’t mess with Wally.
It makes sense. Kangaroos are a very social animal with a hierachy among their groups. They might not be instinctively inclined to live with humans like dogs do, but they can act in a social group like a household.
I want an attack roo. Maybe I’m a jerk but it’s always hilarious when someone gets beat by a kangaroo, especially if they’re trespassing.
as an Australian i had no idea that was a thing but damn thats cool
Spiders: Scared of you, eats other bugs
Mosquito: Awful, full of disease
Spiders aren't afraid of you I can guarantee that.
Yes they are, that is why they would either bite you or run away.
@@brothersandsistersofvalhalla They actually evolved to know how we breathe to avoid us.
It’s like saying you wouldn’t be afraid of a giant the size of a skyscraper
@@thelittlestpika They crawl on people at night and some species of spiders have killed people. Do better research.
The garter snakes (14:23) are absolutely adorable.
Edit; Fun fact, garter snakes are pretty much harmless. They can release a smell via "musking" but are non-venomous to humans.
Adorable little snakes. Make great pets.
The way they're looking out of the burrow sounds, in my mind like "Human? Human...Hello human. No hurt snek."
@@KibuFox Check out Snake Discovery, they hatch and sell baby garters.
(Among other snakes and invertebrates)
I've been wanting to get a snake for a while, either a garter snake or hognose. My entire family said they will not come over to my house if I have a snake. I thought, wait is that supposed to discourage me?
@@mkjirak Lmao. Check out Snake Discovery then. They have online orders (with waitlists) and some really cool snakes. They bred PURPLE hognoses a while back, as well as consistently having albinos.
Actually they are rear-fanged venomous snakes but their venom is very weak and their fangs are really small so they are indeed harmless to humans and as an extra fun fact they can actually be poisonous depending on what they eat for example if they eat a poisonous salamander they store the toxins in their liver so anything that eats them will get sick or possibly die.
YES FINALLY, my time has come: 14:25
Those guys are garter snakes, a species of snakes that are quite unusual in their behavior compared to other snakes. The person filming has come upon an occupied burrow where a group has hibernated together, the sheer amount of snakes being comfortable alongside each other is quite rare in the snakedom. I guess in the video it is spring and this bundle of snakes has just come out to soak up some warmth. There are probably a lot more snakes down there.
They are a non venomous species, nativ to North America and are one of few species than can be homed in groups. Furthermore those gurls are ovoviviparous - meaning they incubate the eggs inside of the female, the babies than hatch whilst still inside and then are given birth to.
All true except the unusual part... garter snakes are one of the most common types.
@@anonygent hey there, thanks to bring it to my attention that my wording wasn't clear enough. I shall edit it =)
Because I meant unusual when it comes to this behavior, as far as I am aware that many snakes hibernating together is unique to garters. Thanks again!!!
@@kisakisakura6663 Gotcha.
For the record, there is a cave in the desert southwest where a species of rattlesnake hibernates en masse during the winter. I'm on the phone, so I can't look it up at the moment, but if I remember right, it's in Texas and the western diamondback, but I can't swear to either.
@@anonygent Sounds interesting, I hadn't heard that before, I will totally look into it.
Actually, it was recently found that garter snakes are venomous. But their venom is so mild, they might as well not be.
8:44
I love how they have a "You shall not pass" mat guarding the way in.
Im guessing to ward off any demons or balrogs that reside in that basement.
It certainly looks like that basement was dug deep, one could even say greedily.
Hey, the balrog pays good rent! Every full moon he leaves corpses on the mat.
@@Nirrrina unfortunately sometimes they wake up again and get a glow up
I'm pretty sure the FUCKING RING to rule them all is in there along with gollum, actually I wouldn't be surprised if Smaug is in there too (which granted I lovd Smaug but I'm pretty sure he'd incinerate me lol)
Imagine one of your kids goes down there and you can’t find them
I didn't realize anacondas were THIS huge. Now imagine the extinct Titanoboa.
I think it just ate an A3 Airbus!
Yeah no I’ve seen a side by side between I think a human and a Titan boa and screw that I’m out
@@Allantitan I'm Aussie, and the biggest I've seen is a Queensland python so I can't even imagine an anaconda or boa irl!
Though it's the little ones that'll getcha here lol
@@obnoxiousbluebird6634 most Australian animals: *exist*
Me: nope not messing with any of that *sees a kangaroo* frick that I’m out
Titanoboa: The ultimate Nope Rope.
The baby owls look like derpy aliens that were sent to study the strange questionably-sapient species that wear a second skin and fight each other for fun, and now they’re questioning their life choices because they think we’re gonna eat them.
I thought they were CGI they aren't even blinking right. Creepy little guys.
Makes sense
they look like a couple of very socially awkward people, just standing there doing nothing LOL
@@Coco-bl8zg Yeah, owls can't physically blink or move their eyes. That's why they turn into the Exorcist when they need to look at something.
Yea i thought they were aliens and i was so scared and i still dont like that they exist on this earth, WHY CANT THEY LOOK LIKE BIRDS AND NOT FLUFFY LITTLE ALIENS
The "croc" being cleaned , reading and picking a toy is actually an alligator named Rex. She can be found on the Snake Discovery channel and is a prefect example why you shouldn't keep crocs or gators as pets.
Also the many lil sneks are garter snakes and might be a newly born litter.
I’ve been searching for this comment lol
Rex is the best alligator to ever live !
Thanks for the comment! Also commented as soon as I saw her cx
Wanna add, the only reason Snake Discovery Keeps rex is because she's stunted and wouldn't survive in the wild. She's a rescue and she's great
I thought it was her! You cant forget that nose shape
I thought that gator looked familiar!
As an Australian, i can confirm our priminister is protected by trained and armed kangaroo body guards.
also koalas that fall from the sky and give you an STI
And don't forget the wombat head security officer and destroyer of cars and houses!
Mustn't forget the Wallaby special ops that are only stationed at night
And the Plover AC-130s
as another australian i can confirm this too, we also use kangaroos as cars, much cheaper than petrol!
@@emorat6982
Along with Emus and Ostriches
As a junior entomologist and ant enthusiast I can confirm that ants do indeed do that when transporting the queen.
Aren't there also blind ants that form those tunnels along resource lines where workers are transporting foods?
@@Kitty-xi1sb I'm not extremely knowledgeable, but I don't know that this is done by anything but army ants. I could easily see that type of explanation of the behavior arising from misconceptions about army ants though. Many species of army ants are blind, or nearly blind. Additionally, as far as I know army ants are the only types of ants where a nest actively moves around and transports the queen. Usually the queens just fly and found a new nest before losing their wings, or the nest only moves the queen under rare circumstances.
@@markjacobson4248 Yeah
@@markjacobson4248 I honestly didn't know whether it was done by anything else or not, but I wouldn't be surprised if there was so I didn't question it.
As stated, yeah, army ants are blind and commonly move nests.
If I'm correct I'm pretty sure I saw something that said they also form these tunnels along important resource lines and attack anything that disturbs it, a real nuisance anywhere they live with humans.
bugs are so cool..
Note: pelicans do NOT take their spines out they just stretch their pouches to cool down and press it against their necks.
Yup, it's called Gullar Fluttering, it's basically their version of panting
Also, the bird on the left in that picture isn't a pelican - it's a shoebill stork!
Correct. The only animal that removes it's spine to cool off is me.
nice
@@seigeengine excuse me. . w h a t ?
The ants in the center of the tunnel seemed to transport eggs, so perhaps that's why they're protecting it. They're moving the whole colony
Probably bulldog ants or bullet ants.
Yes there are some ant species that life normadic and when they move everyone should run
The ants are the ones nope-ing out
That's exactly correct
Yeah exactly. Ants are fascinating, man
Two of the clips from the alligator one are from Snake Discovery, her name is Rex and her growth was stunted because she was kept in a small wooden box with not enough light or food for the majority of her life, the clips were from her birthday a few years ago when they took her to pet smart to get some new toys
I knew I recognized some of those clips!
Yes I love snake discovery
I was just about to comment this
Actually, the one of the gator being scrubbed was Rex, too. 💖
Wolves are surprisingly huge. If they stood up on their hind legs, they'd be as tall as an adult human. They can stand at your waist, not your hips, and maybe a bit higher. They're massive animals, at least compared to their cousin, the dog. They're so beautiful and so misunderstood.
Yuh just leave them alone :/
I agree with everything you said but the one in the video definitely had me thinking skinwalker. Thanks for that nightmare Lazy Mascaraed
Yes! I love wolves and I love when people agree that they're beautiful and misunderstood!
They aren’t surprisingly huge, people just choose not to know how big they are. They want wolves to be like huskies. So they believe wolves are just huskies.
@aduckofsomesort It's insulting to the wolves, honestly. Huskies are cute pets and all, but they're not quite as cool. It probably wouldn't be a good idea to just straight up get a wild grey wolf as a pet, though, haha
I once found a large insect and caught it in a glass. When I brought it home, I looked it up. apparently, it was a tarantula hawk wasp that I had BROUGHT INTO MY HOUSE!!! Turns out, it is the state insect of New Mexico (where I live), has the second most painful sting of any insect (second to the bullet ant), and has an average size of two inches. If you are stung by one of these, the best advice to follow is to lay down and scream. Not even joking.
oh. oh no. oh that's not good.
Lmao looked it up as well. "Screaming reduces stress" or something like that
@@williamlevison9966 release endorphins, endorphins reduce the pain, Only slightly though it will hurt to the point you are likely to pass out from pure pain
@@justanotheranimeprofilepic ty
Yeah, I once swatted one out of the corner of my eye, not realizing what it was and had to sprint all the way home bc it was chasing me
12:07 The "expectation vs reality" gap with those baby owls is so big its legit hilarious.
Adorably hideous. Like pugs. Or hairless cats.
what are those things in the attic is what i want to knw
why do i feel like i should look at them without blinking because they might snap my neck
@@avalimusician I think they're Barn Owls
@@nildaespinoza3442 scp reference?-
14:39 That's a den of Garter snakes!
Garters are one of the very few species of snakes that are communal, and also who go into a legitimate hibernation over colder seasons (other snakes go into something called brumation, which is similar but not exactly like hibernation) During colder seasons, Garters will actively seek out other Garters, and find abandoned burrows and hibernate together until spring. There can be a shocking number of Garters in one den, upwards of fifty sometimes.
And then when they wake up in spring, they immediately start trying to get it on with each other lmao garter snakes are so weird.
Edit: Also, that behavior is called 'periscopeing', and lots of snakes do it. Those ones are likely doing it because they're looking around for potential predators before coming out of the den, or they likely see the person filming moving around and are watching to see if they're a threat. It's very common for pet snakes as well, for them to just freeze when you walk up to their tank, staring at you for a full minute before summarily ignoring you and carrying on what they were doing lmao.
Also 16:50 that's likely a juvenile anaconda. Sub-adult, at most. Not full grown.
*bear opens door*
Click: "Oh, imagine if it was a duck opening the door."
Me: *flashback to when a couple of swans tried to open my patio door like the velociraptors in Jurassic Park*
Oh my, no...
(Chaotic and terrified giggles.) 😢😹
So my guess with the cellar at 8:31 is that it's either a basement to go into for things like tornadoes, or it was to hide alcohol during the time of prohibition, when they had to make alcohol and sell it. Usually they would have concealed basements and/or rooms that were usually not in the blueprints of houses be made so that they could get away with it and not be caught
depending on the region, location within the house, and how large the space at the bottom actually is, it could also be a root cellar! I used to live in a house built in the mid 1800s and the family who had owned it before us had covered the root cellar hatch with plywood and linoleum tile, but the house had an actual basement so we kinda had to figure out what the hell the deal was with the room under the kitchen that had been boarded up from the inside of the doorways and filled with dirt with only about an 18in gap between the highest boards/dirt level and the flooring above it! my friends were convinced there were bodies in there and refused to go into the basement for anything lol
The snakes coming out of the burrow wasn't even a "nope." They were cute widdle danger noodles.
Now, that one in the lake thicker than my whole body, THAT'S A NOPE.
I wonder if it was even snake. It looked more like dragon lizard. But I'm just guessing 😅.
Whatever it is I wouldn't go there 😅.
Also yes, those snakes were adorable. 😍
Yeah im not afraid of snakes, but if it's bigger than I am then I'd be stupid to not be afraid
@@julkap4190 I think it was an anaconda that had eaten something big.
@@pissapocalypse That's a _highly rational_ fear though. Like being afraid of close, unsecured exposure to polar bears, tigers and heights high enough to likely be fatal if you fell. If humans didn't instinctively and rationally fear these kinds of things, we probably wouldn't be here today.
@@Arbaaltheundefeated yeah... looks like the guys in the Boat annoyed an Anaconda that just eat and was on its way to a nice place to rest. If i recall correcly, a good Meal can nurture a Snake for Weeks.
Constricting Snakes swallow dead prey whole, as long its small enough to pass the unhinged jaw. I think in the same Area as Anacondas, there are alligators and capibaras. Maybe it hade a chunky Capi for lunch. Sometimes they are like humans and overestimate their capabilities. Then they can suffocated because their prey is to big, but because of their teeth, they can get rid of it.
Those were just newborn garter snakes! Completely harmless and they like to eat your pests. It’s so cool to see a whole wild family like that! They give live birth so it’s quite likely they literally just were born at the time and they wanted to explore a little!
They are so cute. xD
They always freaked me out as a kid when they'd run across my path, but now I have tons of giant mice and really miss them
aw
My brain misread pests as pets
WIth how high that outside-the-building set of stairs is, it's probably WORSE than being inside as how strong the wind would be
Also, being a spiral staircase there are no landings to slow or stop you if you fall (fun fact: spiral stairs are banned in Australia for that very reason)
let's hope that's not the only staircase
@@_foxpuppet sounds like a sensible ban. I have some brain damage (hypoxia, I had a 6 minute seizure and you don't breath during those things) that effects my balance and I HATE spiral staircases because they are a DEATH TRAP. If you fall, there's no stopping until you reach the bottom. And the "walls" around them are usually metal and can break bones.
*strong
@@ViirinSoftworks gj.
as an Australian , kangaroos can be domesticated if the were raised by people as a joey . my mum rescued a joey and raised it for awhile and once it was healthy enough she let it go back in the wild but when we go to the place where she let it go it still comes up to us it's so cute . I also I love ur videos u are freaking halarious I'm a new subscriber. and statues are creepy as hell.
Roos are horrifying and adorable at the same time.
The round hole under the foundation is not a well, it is an old privy. The outhouse must have been incorporated into an an extension of the main house, it's just odd it wasn't filled in.
The other small basements with stairs are cold cellars, used to store potatoes and canned goods. My grandmother still uses hers, she can control the temperature with a ventilation window.
So not terror, just good design
We have a cold cellar in our basement. We are turning it into a hot box room for smoking lol
Those babby sneks leaving the burrow are so dang adorable
What's even cuter is that they don't do anything. I think they're garden snakes. Idk but it's cute AF
They’re called common garter snakes! :D
They actually aren't babies, looking at the surroundings those are closer to adults, baby garters are tiny, only a couple inches long
Click: *adorably butchers Australian accent*
Roo outside the door: heard you were talking shite, mate
I liked how it sort of started in an Irish accent and ended up slightly Scottish, and nowhere like an Aussie accent.
It’s funny
@@sammidee4713 as an Aussie I found it hilarious 😂 I know I'd do the same to his accent though
@@sammidee4713 "Swirttish"
Also aussie and thought it was hilarious!
Crikey mate ya fkd that accent harder than a ram in spring!
we don't say shite....
Fun fact: Some of the gator vids are Rex from Snake Discovery ty channel. She cannot be released into the wild bc of her being raised/improper cared for by humans before her current "parents" rescued her. The clips where she was being cleaned and with a toy in her mouth was her. 😆
Cool, so you watch them too!
I love that channel!
I love how The Click's first response to trespassers in his home is to sniff them. "Yeah, you smell alight, I'll give you the combination to my safe."
Click is a Golden Retriever: CONFIRMED
Protectors do that. Smells like family lets go kill another family.
That reminds me of those dogs in Undertale oh my god
A "tarantula hawk wasp" is ironically a type of "spider wasp" that actually EATS the tarantulas.
It's way worse than that. It paralyses a tarantula, drags it back into its' burrow and lays an egg on it. The tarantula is then eaten alive by the larva after it hatches.
its also known for being stupidly fucking large with an equally large stinger
@@Schlachti10 😨
Can we just pull a gender reveal party for the planet and burn it all
So it's basically a "tarantula-hawk wasp" then - a wasp that is a "hawk" to tarantulas. ...aside from the whole laying-eggs-in-living-prey thing, which is less typical of hawks.
The alligator getting the toothbrush bath and the one with the pink harness are the same one. Her name is Rex, and she lives at Snake Discovery Zoo. I've watched their RUclips channel throughout the pandemic. Some of the most genuine people who really love reptiles. Rex lived in a small box for decades, but she now has a great life. Thank you for this episode. I think it's my favorite. Also, I agree that spiders are good bois.
Yes! Another Snake Discovery fan!
As another SD fan, I approve.
I love Rexy so much. Poor baby is over 30 years old and only 4ft long
aw
As a Floridian I can confirm that we do in fact take our gators to Walmart and let them pick out toys.
I was at the Kroger's up the street in Houston. I was at the self-checkout.
Looked behind me, and there was an 80-pound pit bull sitting in the guy's shopping cart.
Looking chill and happy.😂
18:58 probably that thing and the moray eel was the inspiration for the xenomorph.
Fun Fact! The moray eel has two sets of jaws! An outer one for grabbing, and a inner one for chewing (aka ripping the fish into swallowable chunks)!
This way it can eat the fish without giving it a chance to escape! Isn't that a fun animal fact!
I'm pretty sure they're glass sharp too
take this with a grain of salt cause I've only seen it once and can't remember the name so I cant fact check but I came across a youtube short a while back that mentioned an insect that had the retractable mouth the alien does
"When the jaws open wide
And there's more jaws inside
That's a moray!"
and a small parasitic plant called hydnora africana (also calles "jakkalskos") according to the aliens designer HR Giger. I actually found one in the western cap region of south africa. top spot in any weird plant list
@@irishalchemy
"When an eel bites your thigh
and you bleed out and die
That's a moray!"
Imagine being a burglar, going into a house, and suddenly you hear "Oh, I thought I could smell someone sneaking into my house"
Is it bad that I actually could for a while (until I developed allergies) I could navigate a 4 floor victoriana home based solely off smell or sound, and if you know those kinds of homes in the states they have super uneven floors so I had to be accurate enough to go up and down stairs of uneven hight
But I have autistic hypersensitivity and only typing this did I realise that that is why I can, I've known I'm autistic for more than a decade... I'm dumb
@@ConstantChaos1 My hypersensitivity is somewhat canceled out by my eyes and ears being barely functional. (Can't read words smaller than 2 inches in height from 7 feet away without my glasses, and have 40% hearing loss in my left ear, and 20% in my right.)
@BlueFire Animations oof yeah that bites
Okay, I think I would be going out of that house as fast as possible though 🤣
The burglar smell themselves and panics out of there
3:48 this kind of thing reminds me of the gympie-gympie tree, also known as the “suicide bush.” Basically its leaves are covered in hard to see hyperdermic needles that are nearly impossible to remove. Each of them contains a neurotoxin that won’t kill you but will cause immense pain compared to being set on fire and doused with acid simultaneously. The pain can persist for months or even years. I think you can figure out how it got the suicide bush moniker.
That was a Backyard Scientist short. He did a video on the gympie-gympie so it might even be the same plant.
Was thinking about this.
I'm so glad that gympie-gympie trees don't grow where I live. I did some research on plants like this in college and the reason the pain lasts so long for that particular tree is because it's silicon based, which the human body can't properly break down. A very scary plant whose defense system was designed to be as strong as possible.
@@nzuria8135 The plant isn't silicone-based, but it's defense-mechanism is... I wouldn't want to run into the thing.
@@DrachenGothik666 Yeah, that's what I mean, sorry. Was replying while tired, lol
are we just not gonna talk about the empty subway jumpscare because that made my body take a screenshot
I was looking for a comment talking about this
How does your body take a screenshot?
@@LugiatheOceanGuardianyou see white for a second and then you will never forget that frame
As a Canadian I feel others should know that if you see a moose it is very possible u will die if you don't stay hidden or go somewhere safe (that's close) they can dive 20 ft, swim and run faster than any athlete. Not to mention how much they weigh
Yeah, Moose are one of a handful of animals where if you run over it with a vehicle, you and the vehicle are going to suffer far more damage then a moose
@@HallowedKeeper_ The moose is probably going to die from a head on car crash but it still can cause your vehicle and you massive damage/injuries.
Moose like most creatures won't bother you if you don't go bothering them majority of the time.
@@brothersandsistersofvalhalla If you hit a moose hard enough to kill it you were gong about 4x faster than it took to kill you. Moose are not only massive blocks of inertia, their legs are generally long enough that your engine slips underneath them; leaving all that moose mass to hit directly though your windshield and front seats, leaving over a thousand pounds of pissed off, disoriented wildlife desperately scrambling to get away from this weird metal thing that just knocked out its legs.
Out in the woods, though; yeah. Just be respectful of their space and don't give 'em reason to run/ knock you down and you'll be fine.
and they’re fucking BIG
18:53 This is actually a myth, they're spine is not coming out of their mouth, it's just the huge pouch being founded inside out while it yawns. What it actually does to cool off is waggle it's loose pouch around a bit.
14:37 Fun fact! Those are Garter snakes and are essentially harmless. Most they’ll do is give a weak bite or musk your hands lmao
But Click would still say you smell fantastic
They’re so cute!
I caught a few when I was younger.
@@FayolaOnline I only managed to get a few because I live in the city and don’t see them much, but I adore them so much. My lil sentient shoelace bbs.
@@Mystery-Wolf Yeah I also lived in the city but Toronto is known for it's green spaces and they have the Islands that is pedestrian only. Great for catching frogs and snakes!
That astronaut was pretty safe though. He had the gravitational force of his giant cast iron balls to keep him from drifting too far. 20:30
15:34 looks like it is either a Monitor lizard or a Komodo Dragon. Either way not something you want to surprise you in a confined space.
Komodos is only native to komodo island and they do get a bit homesick so definitely not komodo but definitely monitor lizard
So it's just... monitoring?
Komodos salavia do not get bitten by komodos it will basically turn your limb/body/organ into mush no joke in like 5 days
lizard karen be like i want to speak to your monitor
14:23 These little noodles are called Garter Snakes, and they are one of the very few snake species that live in social groups. Particularly like in this picture, which seems to be the entrance to a hibernaculum, where they spend the winter in very large groups. They're only found in North and Central America, so it's not surprising you don't immediately know what they are, but they're extremely common here, so much so that finding them in home gardens is common enough to give them an errant nickname "garden" snake, because it sounds similar.
Also they make great pets if you keep a small group of them, as they're very social for reptiles.
I love garter snakes, I will have a small group of them some day
I used to live near the woods, and every spring I would see them come out of their little winter home and thought they were so cool. And in 2nd grade we had a small group of them as class pets, also very cool.
Oh so they aren't dangerous (I know everything CAN be dangerous but just in general), if you find a nest like the one in the video would you be able to throw some food just outside and they wouldn't attack you?
@@kempolar9768 They wouldn't attack you anyway.
@@kempolar9768 no snake except maybe the 2 largest species of snakes will attack you unless they think you're about to kill them. just leave them alone, even the most venomous, and you'll be fine
Snakes staring at camera person: “Why is it just standing there, why isn’t it doing anything? What is it waiting for?”
16:08 There's a story by Yasutaka Tsutsui where people just all walk off into the ocean, literally shoulder to shoulder. Trampling and drowning anyone who falls behind and gets in the way. That waterpark is like the floaty version of that.
16:19 The most calm and elegant NOPE I have ever seen. I don't blame this guy at all.
True😏😏😏😏😏
I would join him
He’s the most respectful guy ever. The closest lightning strike imaginable and his only action is to have a slight flinch and honourably exit.
Bless their little avian hearts, barn owl chicks look like aliens LOL
The critter in the dark tunnel that was licking the air is a monitor lizard/komodo dragon.
Also, the mouth of the xenomorphs from Alien were inspired by dragonfly larvae.
I swear there has to be a multitude of conspiracy videos where they thought baby barn owls were aliens
I think the snout is too pointy to be a komodo, (maybe a baby?) but definitely some sort of moniter
Weren't the xenos mouth inspired by moray eels second jaw?
@@sadikicaine4881 that too, yeah. Dragonfly larvae also have that secondary jaw.
@@DasSpaceAce they don't have a second jaw , it's just their lower jaw being launched forward tho
Fun thought about spiders:
According to evolution, everytime you kill a spider you see, you're helping those spiders thrive that are better at hiding.
But what if I keep it as a corner buddy
@@Nyax50Lopez Then you made yourself a new fren.
But what if you get the type that attack and bite :< those suck really bad. I think its better to smush those because they also eat the fren spooders
What is I take it outside in my wolfy bush?
😰😰
14:24
As a snek owner, I instantly brighten when I saw all those Garter Snakes. Garter Snakes are harmless. So, you won't have to worry about them. Also, those snakes were coming out of brumation. Brumation is the reptile version of hibernation. Either that, or you found a newly hatched clutch of eggs.
Garter snakes are live birthing. They don't lay eggs.
I almost drowned at 14 in a wave pool getting trapped under all the others with their inner tubes. Fortunately my dad noticed from the "shore" and forced his way through the crowd to grab me and drag me out. I will never forget the burning feeling in my lungs as I was trying to find a gap in the surface.
I’ll never understand why pool parks don’t have a separate wave pool for floaties. I almost lost a friend after getting separated from them and struggling to get around the tubes to pull them out from under one
Yeah those things always seemed really dangerous to me. I've gone in one but I held onto the wall the whole time so I wouldn't get swept under
My girlfriend had this same thing happen to her when she was like nine. She genuinely thought she was going to die because well she would have if help came too late.
That whole berry thing is nasty. Certain alkaloids in those plants are no joke and can do some nasty things. One plant that comes to mind is Mala Mujer, which behaves like a nettle. Nettles have a lot of stinging hairs. One guy that touched Mala Mujer said it was like being stabbed with nuclear glass daggers
I wonder how did he know what nuclear glass daggers feel like.
@@tatiana4050 either an immortal time traveler or someone who just wouldn’t want anyone to dare try and test his opinion, so approximating the worst thing he could imagine.
@@alecLogan Immortal time traveler sounds right. Who else would touch that kind of plant?
@@smileyhappyface5864 somebody who cant feel pain/enjoys pain
@@a-problematic-person Can't feel pain = the type of person that wouldn't be talking about plants and would more likely talk about knives.
Enjoys pain = the type of person that wouldn't be talking at all.
6:41 they seem to be Dorylus Ants, a type of very agressive blind ant that builds tunnels of larger strong ants to guide the smaller ones along a certain path. These ants are extremely agressive and violent and if left alone there are known reports of them taking out large animals including cows. These monsters have even been known to kill humans and sadly babies who are left alone to long and are found commonly in several areas in the world but mostly centeral and east africa.
If you ever encounter ants like this if you live in, or travel to areas where they live it is a good idea to have a way to burn them. Some say it smells horrible but it is a good way to remove them from an area or space. That said if you are in a spot you are just seeing these about it might also be a good idea to just get the hell out of said area. Funny enough these are not even the most dangerous ant species alive but given how much nightmare fuel this species is I'll be nice and not speak of the even more horrible ants out there in the world...
Also love your videos click
Ohh they are those ant, I've heard of these, I thought they would run in hordes that people would run from
@@fierdrages6523 Being 100% honest it's just a guess but that's the closet type of Ant I think it is and IDK any other ants that build tunnels with themselves like that so just a guess but a educated one. And yeah people avoid these things like the plague and nothing stops them. If you poison it never gets them all, if you spray poison they just go around where you sprayed even avoiding the dead ones. Is why people say use fire. If you burn them down the line you could keep them from coming back... At least for a while
It was the ants basically swatting that branch that got to me
Of course their are from Africa... Every nightmare fual insects are from Africa or Australia.
I'm sorry did you say they can KILL COWS?
7:10 that is the hive of ants moving locations. The ants shown in this video are essentially the protector ants. They usually stay in the hive, kind of like a crown guard of sorts as they're meant to protect the queen and other ants if an intruder where to ever get into the hive. They also dig the tunnels and living spaces for the other ants. They are the protectors of the hive, therefore they are they largest and the strongest and also the most venomous of the ants in a hive. When the hive needs to move for whatever reason, such as in this video, they create a tunnel with each other for the other 'weaker' ants, as well as the queen, to move once the scouts have found a new location for the hive. They will lead the others of the hive to the new location and protect them from all sides, which is why they will attack anything that touches the tunnel.
Last time I was this early Click could still twirl his evil mustache
I've never been this early
Last time I was this early, clicky was still wholeheatedly denying him being a furry.
Last Time I was this early je was still locked in topiccy's Closet
same actually
It's a shame it is no more
For the last one, imagine if they had security guards or even just normal staff disguise themselves as the statues and when a robber comes in, they do the whole weeping angels thing by moving when said criminal isn't looking at them. Also point is someone was controlling the lights to add to the horror factor.
you haven't watched dr who
Ooooo
"Moose are amazing"
As a Canadian, Moose are fucking SCARY
YES! Large prey animals are surprisingly aggressive and will often cause more human injuries year-round than predatory animals. 😅
Basically, one of the most dangerous animals in Canada is a freaking vegan tank on four legs.
As a Canadian from PEI, I wish there were moose in my province
@@mel87kelthey can swim, so you may get your wish.
Orca whales are in the top 3 moose predators.
If you’re about to hit one in your car, it’s better to swerve into a ditch because of how strong they are. It’s absolutely terrifying tbh.
Exterminator here! I used to be super freaked out by creepy basements and crawlspaces but I'm in them literally every day so I don't even notice anymore. I LOVE the spider playing violin, that is so cute. I have house spiders in every corner of my house for natural pest control as I occasionally get fungus gnat explosions in my 50+ tarantula enclosures. Also, yes, ants will do that when transporting the queen, kinda like an entourage of cars around the president. Also, the giant nests are yellow jackets, and it is actually terrifyingly common to have nests that large especially when people never go in their attics... I had one that was about four feet across this summer, it took me an hour to remove. Fun fact, if you give paper wasps, hornets, yellow jackets, etc colourful construction paper they make some incredibly beautiful nests! I ADORE stinging insects. Also, garter snakes are communal and hang out together, much like in this video, especially over the winter to keep warm. The lizard in the underground tunnel appears to be some sort of monitor lizard based on the forked tongue and the shape of the head, probably an Asian water monitor based on the markings. Awesome video!
- Charlotte
Does anyone else feel that the inspiration for aliens came from people seeing baby owls in the dark
I swear I saw a “creepy unexplained video” of something that looked like those owls but human sized…
14:44 those are garden snakes, they are nice critters and I recommend keeping them around
Do you mean garter snakes? Or do they have multiple names?
@@mcfarofinha134 they're garter snakes, but I have heard people refer to them as garden snakes, either bc they misheard the name or bc people normally encounter them in their gardens.
Garter* snakes, although I agree that they are nice
Yeah they kinda remind me of Corn Snakes (also nice and fun)
@@mcfarofinha134 I think garden is a name used incorrectly enough that it's semi official.
27:48 the toothbrush scrubby clip and the PetSmart clip are from another RUclips channel called Snake Discovery! The gator featured in those clips is Rex, a 35 year old rescue! She’s an educational ambassador and very calm, as well as being quite a bit smaller than your average gator of the same age. I do recommend their channel- they’re excellent ambassadors for reptiles and the reptile hobby, and they even have a zoo!
Thanks for commenting on it! (I did too as soon as I saw her)
:DD IT IS REX Im so impressed I recognized her
@@_vomit.gremlin_ we love to see it! Have you kept up with the channel? They opened a zoo and she's got a fantastic enclosure now, it's top-notch!
@@SariaMarie yeah I just watched the new vlogs like yesterday :)
28:06 it may just be the floridian in me, but those crocodiles belong in r/aww and not r/nope.
That wasn't even the top speed of a bear, this was just a slight jug down the hill. Now image this twice as fast.
No, I will not imagine
"I repeat! Bear has reached mach 10!"
...**** ****** ***
Fun Fact: The Annihilation film was based on a novel trilogy called the Southern Reach. The three books are called (in order) Annihilation, Authority, and Acceptance. If you love sci-fi and horror, I highly recommend this series. The books are also available on Audible.
I love this trilogy! To me it seems more like extreme weirdness than outright horror, so it's interesting to see the differences between the books and the movie which definitely played up the horror.
I'm pretty sure the "narrow stairs" at 8:31 lead to a "potato basement" (Google would accept the Danish word for those, but not find me an English equivalent)
They're traditional underground storage places where people would store things that needed to be kept cool and dry but also away from sunlight - like, potatoes (potatoes go green and poisonous if exposed to sunlight for too long, which is why you should always cover your potatoes if some gets above the soil in your garden)
I've looked at quite a few old houses here in Denmark and a rare few still have those potato basements, though most have either been filled up or expanded into a real basement.
i think those are called root cellars in english, named after the root vegetables that would normally be stored in them.
In rural areas of Russia people still use those actively. For potatoes, carrots, and all sorts of pickles in jars.
The funny thing here is that the Russian word for this storage area has the same root as the word 'burial'. The original meaning has something to do with the fact that you 'bury' the vegetables in the underground (I assume), but sounds scary out of context, like, if you don't know of the function of said cellar, just know that it's some sort of 'burial' :)
"root cellar" is the English equivilent
@@maevekirkland9452 Yeah, thanks! I've just seen it in this thread. Not sure, maybe I even heard the word before, just forgot it :)
The English equivalent is "root cellar"
16:05 yes and it has happened before. There was also a case of the wave mashine malfunctioning and a bunch of people dying from being pushed down by people trying to escape.
You would think there'd be a policy in place preventing this sort of thing from happening in the first place, let alone again...
Maybe I better stay away from watermarks. At least unless they're tightly regulated.
Fun fact: in New Zealand there used to live a giant bird called Haast's Eagle. It's the biggest eagle that has ever existed and had a wingspan of up to 3m, which was relatively short compared to its size. Its height standing up was up to 90cm and its body lenght was about 1.4m. It hunted Moa, which were flightless birds, looking kind of like our modern emu, which reached heights up to 3.6m with its neck fully streched. Both species have been extinct for centuries.
When the Māori arrived in New Zealand they began hunting the Moa which drove them to extinction. Though I am not sure if it was to have them go extinct or as a food source. With the Moa going extinct the Haast's Eagle also started to decrease in numbers, since the Moa were their primary food source and being big birds they needed much food, which was increasingly harder to come by. In the end the whole process of those two species going extinct took less than a 100 years, which is extremely quick.
So next time you watch LOTR or The Hobbit, remember that the earth actually did home very similar, if still not as large, eagles to the ones there are in the movies.
They hunted Moa for food, extinction wasn't really on their mind.
@@pamiam9017 Ye, I already suspected that was the reason, but I didn't know for sure :)
@@anthonyjames696 Haast's Eagles when extinct around the same time Columbus found America, so this isn't like epic prehistoric animals, this was "modern-age" animals
@@xiphactinusaudax1045 I never said they were pre-historic 😅. They went extinct around 1400. Like I said: about the time when the Māori arrived
@@anthonyjames696 I never meant to insuinate that you thought they were prehistoric. It was for passing viewers who may not know when the Maori arrived at NZ, and don't realize how recent it was. Sorry for the confusion
Little things about hyenas:
1. Once a male hyena reaches adulthood, they are kicked out of the pack they grew up in, and if they're lucky to find another pack, males have to face a lot of hazing til they move up in rank(usually via a higher male dying or mating with a female in the pack).
2. Female hyenas have what's called a "pseudopenis" that they have to give birth through. In other words, lots of first time mothers can die in childbirth from the "canal" ripping and the young risk suffocating to death if they aren't lucky.
Even though I haven’t even watched the entire video I know it will be entertaining. I find your videos hilarious and they make my day 🗿✨
Well thats premature ejaculation
@@jay.shah96 LMAO what
Same. Only just started watching his channel and I already know each video will be good.
tarantula hawk wasp
I was needle felting while watching this and I looked over to the part with the empty subway and I very nearly stabbed myself during the jumpscare
Honestly, it's so adorable how the cute little spider was playing the violin.
Just trying to play the human a lullaby
They do that with their webs, I think, to either attract insects or a mate.
So they were either trying to place an Uber Eats or booty call.
@@alchemysaga3745 There is a species of jumping spiders native native to south-east asia which goes by the name of _Portia labiata_ . These spiders hunt other spiders, preferably orb-weavers, and are known to be quite crafty when doing so. One of the strategies they use is plucking at another spiders web in order to simulate the motion of struggling prey, drawing the owner of the web towards them to be eaten.
Probably plays one better than I do, tbh
@@wolf1066 I disagree :)
Tarantula hawks are called that because they eat tarantulas. They're actually a parasitoid wasp.
When the female is ready to lay her egg, she stings a tarantula, paralyzing it, and drags it to a prepared burrow. She lays one egg on it and then closes up the burrow. The larva hatches and eats its way into the spider, grows in there and finally pupates and comes out of the burrow.
For the rest, tarantula hawks eat nectar and the juices of rotting fruit (they get drunk off fermented fruit juice sometimes). Also, they really don't want to sting humans and will only do so when they feel threatened and trapped... but their sting is known as one of the most painful insect stings in the world.
Also 15:00 I'm pretty sure that's the Fukushima tsunami, I can find that particular clip but the people who posted it don't mention which tsunami it is but I think I've seen it in compilations from that one.
Nature is amazing and terrifying at the same time!
"I'm not someone who believes in ghosts." When people start with this my immediate response is. "Well there's your problem right there."
Just introduce them to Sam & Colby. That'll do the trick
Yeah that's fair
Shane and Ryan?
@@_.-Skitterbug-._ yesss
I believe in many things, god is not one of them.
The cars noping away from that wall of water is actually from footage from the 2011 Japanese tsunami. It's awesome to see water that powerful, but also scary and sad when you realize how many people die during them.
"God is definitely not real but Satan might be" holy shit a vibe
23:43 yeah kangaroos can be brought up as pets so they can definitely be bodyguards- plus they can kill with a single kick, so there’s that
8:44 Who cares about this possibily haunted 100 years old basement when there's a "You shall not pass" doormat in front of it ? I love to see a reference used like that.
That bear from Annihilation actually scared me, badly. I couldn't finish the show. I had to watch a summary afterwards. Imagine a creature like that, in that situation, in real life.
Congratulations Click, your "Australian" accent is an almost perfect Old Norse accent!
Coincidentally the Swedish language is of Norse descent.
It's not foam inside the walls. It's glass padding, which is made of tiny glass fibers like cotton candy. (DON'T EAT GLASS PADDING!)
I was thinking he was talking about the canned foam insulation at first until I remembered the fiber glass insulation that you buy in rolls.
Too late.
Like Asbestos?
@@fierdrages6523 Pretty much. Feels like wool, appears dusty and after a few minutes it's itchy wherever it touched you and maybe even stings and gives rashes.
Fibreglass
15:28 That is actually a Komodo dragon. Their bite is lethal.
NatGeo writes: "Snakes typically have a single venom duct that leads to their fangs. But Komodos have multiple ducts located between their teeth.
However, this means Komodo dragons don't deliver their venom as efficiently as snakes, Fry said.
Rather than injecting venom directly via a forceful bite, the dragons use a specialized bite-and-pull motion to ooze the toxin into wounds during a sustained, frenzied attack."
The combo of venom and lacerations will weaken you greatly if it hasn't already killed you, and they will lie in wait for you to either die in agony, or to finish you off hours later. They eat anything that moves.
Don't they also have horrible bacteria and diseases in their mouths that make it even worse? As if the venom wasn't _already_ bad enough...
Differences between gators and crocs:
1: Gators have rounder, wider snouts, more adept at catching FISH and usually don't attack humans unless provoked or fed by humans. The latter would cause them to seek out humans, often finding pets and small children.
2: Crocodiles are often lighter and are usually beige or moss green wile alligators come in various shades of grey and brown.
3: Alligators are a lot smaller than crocodiles.
4: Crocodiles have pressure sensors that can sense movement in the water all over their body while gators only have them on where their lips would be.
5: Crocodile teeth interlock and are visible at all times while only the upper teeth in gators can be seen when they close their mouths.
6: Crocodiles can be up to about twenty feet long, give or take, and are known to ambush anything that wants a sip of water, including any unfortunate humans.
27:30 the crocodile shown is a rescue animal from snake discovery. Her name is Rex and she was kept in a small box without UVB that's why she is smaller and has an up turned snout with mouthrott.
That's why they're brushing her teeth.
Nowadays she's living in a zoo exhibit that is run by the creator of snake discovery.
Ultimately wholesome people and educators. Would highly recommend
Honestly looking at that video made me realize how big she's gotten since Emily and Ed got her.
Seconded! If you like reptiles, check out Snake Discovery, they've been one of my favorite channels for years, and it's really great to see Rex living her best life after such a rough start.
Also Click was saying Crocodile for most of the vid, but Rex and most of the other animals in that vid are American Alligators
Looking at the other alligators makes me realize just how big Rex could have been if she wasn’t raised in a box for half her life. But I’m glad Emily and Ed rescued her☺️
Well yeah but he does say that he isn't sure if it's a crocodile or alligator. I would cut him some slack.
About the ant river: "I've heard they do this when they're moving the queen?"
Pretty fitting day for that clip to be posted in this video then....
Noooo but like I thought the same damn thing. Omg 😢 😭
The "foam" inside of walls that is itchy, more likely than not is fiberglass. The glass needles stick to your skin, which is why it's important not to scratch when dealing with fiberglass and after done, go straight into a hot shower. The alternative is expanding polyurethane (or expanding foam) which is itching because it dries your skin and it gets everywhere 😂
This is one of the reasons why I opted for specially manufactured wool insulation. The only downside was that the house smelled of sheep for a week or so!
21:45
That happened once, a hermit crab used a human skull as its shell
That's so metal
14:32 Those look like Garter snakes. They're small snakes that often live together in dens. There's a town in Canada called Gimli, which has a tourist attraction called the Gimli Snake Pits, where you can walk around the wilderness and look in these pits that just have thousands of garter snakes crawling around in them.
I actually live in Canada and I love snakes, so thanks for informing me! I'm going to visit it as soon as I can
Narcisse, Manitoba has the Narcisse Snake Pits, the largest Garter Snake Hibernaculums in the world. I've never heard of the "Gimli Snake Pits", and I'm from Manitoba and Gimli is in Manitoba.
Welp, time to take a trip to Canada!
I thought it was a Komodo dragon
@@DrachenGothik666 Sorry, just looked it up, you seem to be right. They may just be known by that name due to their proximity to Gimli.
29:17 helpful info: the Lwyd in Mari Lwyd is pronounced like Lloyd, in fact Lloyd is the Anglicised version of the name Llwyd (the male version of Lwyd), which means "grey" - with Mari Lwyd meaning Grey Mare.
Also, W and Y are vowels in Welsh.
19:18 it's not a danger noodle technically, it's a green python, they aren't venomous at all and don't grow large enough to be dangerous to humans. They are chill and pretty, and make for good pets. I think their weird predator movie looking yawns are cute, like in a quirky way
So... it's a nope rope!
@@billciphergirl6049 i hate that i didn't come up with that
16:27
"I'm going to respectfully get tf out."
16:39 the fact that a sentinel is noping out can be use as measurement on how bad the lightning actually is
I would too
One of the "crocodile" shown in the video is Rex, a rescue from Snake Discovery channel (she's actually an alligator)! She needs special care due to her snout being curved from being mistreated at her former home (hence the brushes). She was really picking her toys, the shop was warned and all precautions were taken for customers and employees. Now she enjoys her time at the Snake Discovery zoo, and you can watch her on Snake Discovery's Twitch channel
thanks for commenting ! As soon as I saw her I commented XD but yours is a bit more informative
@@FadeCrown haha a bunch of other people probably also commented, it's all good in the end
24:08 -Aww, such a good girl! Hyenas are very underrated -They clean up corpses, are better hunters than lions and have a very closely socialized within their pack
Rondom fact: hyenas laugh when nervous. Random fact 2: hyena are one of the few animals where the females in charge
I have a photo that looks just like your profile photo. My mom found it randomly
The snakes are called garter snakes they’re very common, and they don’t typically try to hurt you along with pretty much every single snake. They just want to be alone plus they’re not venomous.