That's very possible, even if the earth was razed to the ground and possibly radioactive there's so many of these one is bound to have gotten damaged and survived even in radioactive areas
Imagine in a post apocalyptic world people are rummaging through the remains of once was a growing society. They come across a jar filled with life. The soil, untouched by the poisons that killed all of the crops, shows vegetation and freshwater (small amount). This man has created an eco time capsule.😊
I planted a sealed terrarium to celebrate the birth of my daughter (after five beautiful sons). It has continued to grow and thrive. My seven year old grandson is utterly fascinated by it, he has been taking a weekly photograph at the same time every week for the past two years. I plan to give it to him in January, 2026, its 40th birthday.
We have a terrarium in a very large teardrop glass vessel that is well over 40 years old. The soil, plants, and everything are original, just as my Father-in-law prepared and planted it. The only maintenance that has been done, at most once or twice a year, is to add a very small amount of water. The teardrop shaped stopper is hand blown like the vessel, and there is a miniscule air gap, so occasionally, a small amount of water is needed to replenish the supply. It is almost entirely self sustaining, and absolutely amazing!
@@aslofiasitcanget2945 the whole point of it is that's it's a enclosed biosphere like the earth. Where there's a finite amount of water that never needs replacing. So if fully sealed, there's no need to keep adding water as the moisture can't escape.
Not really, everything ends. As he said, it’ll LAST* longer, not forever. Plus, is his invention, why would he not want to leave a legacy of sorts? Smh…ppl are weird…
@@rustyshackleford6927 unfortunately dale while most seemingly basic knowledge like this is still taught in schools there are kids who just don’t care or pay attention, just like there always have been. massive idiots have always existed you just see them ‘speaking up’ more often now bc they don’t have to deal with the ramifications of their words being linked to their faces or bc they’ve found community with the other idiots online, nothing has really changed other than the ability to see into the minds of people more easily
@@rustyshackleford6927 decades of service industry and retail management coddling idiots and feeding into their delusions has not helped the matter either lmao the ‘harsh real world’ just doesn’t really exist if someone is far enough off their rocker or has enough money they get whatever they want and think they’re right no matter the facts presented
@@rustyshackleford6927 because kids are stupid..? Isnt that problematic to the fact that you want humanity (and all creatures) to end because a few kids are lazy...
@@rustyshackleford6927This is simply a trick of the mind. When you know very little about a subject, it can feel like you know everything about it. The more you know about a subject, the more you realize your knowledge is limited. You have a 30-year-old 2nd grade level of knowledge about photosynthesis, and you think you know enough to belittle those who don’t.
that makes me sad because we could be just this dusty jar sitting on the shelf of an abandoned house and maybe we were once the subjects of wonderment to a kind man
I'd go check that out for sure. Being able to see like a couple year old one vs one that's been around for a hundred years, I'm interested in knowing what the biggest differences would be.
Man, imagine if someone made a terrarium and it survived for so long, all the organisms inside evolved into their own unique species perfectly adapted to living within a sealed glass jar
There's actually some similar events like this that have happened. One I can think of invole this species of mosquito that got trapped in a man made tunnel network. Originally the species prefered to feed on birds, but the mosquitoes in the tunnel adapted to perfer mammals and are now so different from the species that they originally came from that they can't even breed with them anymore making them their own species.
@@MWebb-de9pq by that logic pugs are wolves. those mosquitos are a distinct species, they are still close, but they are diverging. speciation is just small scale observable evolution.
@@MWebb-de9pq That is evolution. Evolution doesn’t just happen on large scales. If a new species has been created, evolution has certainly happened. The scientific definition of evolution is just a change in allele frequencies over time
Ive been seeing these sealed ecosystem projects a lot lately and it has me thinking. I dont know how long these can actually last, but assuming it is self sustaining, these pods are ecologically seperate from the world. So while the ecosystems of the world continue to evolve and change, these could stay largely unchanged. Almost like a bio time capsule. That to me is really cool
Btw if you're wondering about how long a terrarium last, there is a 60 years old one just search it cause i forgot the name of the person that made it 😅
They also might change on their own path, like imagine the bugs/plants adapt to survive inside a jar perfectly, I have no idea what they could possibly do to become *better* at living in a jar, but nature has its ways and it sounds super cool. It'd be a nice several generation long project
Anyone wanting to do this: I don't recommend sealing it like that immediately, it's better to wait and see to make sure you have the correct amount of water in it. It's pretty easy to over or under fill it
@@drake_diangelo yeah I don’t doubt they’re there, but it’s jus funny seeing all those comments and none of the others in a short scroll through the comment section
the plant inside makes oxygen, then carbon, the water from the plant itself evaporates then goes back into the soil from the condensation on the inside, it’s literally a cycle 💀 edit: this is for those who said the plants won’t survive, for bugs the possibility of them staying alive for long is little to none
@InspirationalSmiles the bone isn't their only source of food, it's more there just for nutrients and probably won't go away too quick if you take in the size of the isopods
@@InspirationalSmiles the bone provides calcium, when the bugs die, their carcasses will be eaten by their babies and absorbed into the soil and plants, thus recycling the calcium.
That's a terrible end indeed! Recover and get back to work--make another one today! It may very well last longer than 30 years...if'n you keep yer sister away from it! 😆❗
P.S. In about 4.5 billion years, our Sun will swell in size to become a red giant star which will destroy Mercury, Venus and the Earth so, don't feel too badly when your terrarium gets destroyed the second time. 😄‼️
There's a man with a sealed terrarium that's so beautiful and lush he's had for over sixty years. It's like looking into a miniature world. Size is like one of those big water bottles.
@@cheezkibbles1626 the guy who made this comment also saw the comments which were at the top of the comment section, which you also read first Then he made this comment knowing someone like you read the aformentioned comments and thought to post this to catch your attention Obviously.. it worked on me too 😂
There's a movie in this somewhere. The thousandth generation of isopods will have that one kid that goes "mama, what's out there? Why can we never leave the dome?" And the mom is just like, "hush now, nobody leaves. We've stayed here for generations and that's just the way it is." And then he proceeds to try and leave, leading to a world shattering crack in the jar, and a whole new world to explore.
POV Seeing YOUR comment repeating the same shit that's been said already more than enough times already. Quit ripping shit off fishing for likes. It's pitifully sad and weird. Also,it's YOU'RE*
Why do people forget that top comments get pushed in the standard algorithm of a comment section? You're going to see the comments that were first made when comments of people being baffled were more prominent, because the video was fresh, so it was vulnerable to stupider, less popular and agreed upon comments. As more people viewed it, they liked the comments pointing out how insane it is that some people really exist without knowing how plants give us oxygen, and then, probably rather quickly, the top comments took over. Whenever you see a phenomenon like this, select the "new first" filter for your comment section.
Yep, people will just see one comment complaining about other comments and then just ASSUME and pile on. Seen it many times in smaller comment sections where I can literally confirm there's like a SINGLE comment that caused all the complaining lmao
Great way to teach biology actually. Water cycle, carbon cycle, respiration. Could expand to other concepts too with a bit of poetic licence, eg mass balances in engineering/chemistry
@@hunterwolfgun4967we are Fucking it up for ourselves - earth does not need humanity. We need earth, It doesn’t need us. Earth is a rock and nature spawns endless genetic variation that will MOST DEFINITELY replace us all.
@@DeathnoteBB Really only a horror story if you had the person in a jar. But as a bug, thinking is limited to that of a bugs. So I don’t think it’d be as scary as you say it’d be.
@@DeathnoteBB All the bugs will know is the jar of life, and so do not feel that their freedom is limited. Also they can't really think to the level of perceiving freedom so...
I love little diy projects so if you want to then wrap some twine around the top cap of the bottle. It will look really nice. Also add a charm like a leaf or something if you want. Totally up to you and it’s only for the look.
I made one in a mason jar a few years ago, put it on my front porch and walked away. The plants have grown to the top of the mason jar. It’s quite impressive how well it’s done.
@@tabula_rosamy guy it’s ppl like you that keep the world going round and round. Stay awesome. And keep an eye on them Australian frogs for us. Out here doing the work and gettin’ it in. My man ✊
@@epicipodmodz The bugs r super small, so by the time that happens, the old bugs would've had babies and died and their babies could feed on them for more calcium
My oldest terrarium is 7 years old n i finally gave it a trim n it was so cool. I thought I’d never open it but after around a year you couldn’t actually see anything anymore for the plant life. The trim went extremely well n it was teaming with life. Very cool to see it sustain n become a little forest
I did it, I read all of the comments and found the ones about how baffling it is that people don't know how photosynthesis works. There were also many other comments wondering about what happens when the cuddlefish bone is gone, as well as, comments saying we're all in a giant jar and that the dude looked like Heath Ledger and he was going to break the jar after the video. There were also several comments about his voice either saying he sounded very pleasant or that he was too quite (take your pick). There now you don't have to go and read all of the comments to find out what everyone is talking about. (But if you do want to find those baffling comments middle mouse to the bottom and work your way up). :)
Actually if you have up to 20 different isopods all from different lineages you can entirely make a new ecosystem they mate with the dad of another isopod they mate with the mom of another isopod then mate with the kid from other isopod and do you understand? 😂🤓🧡🤓
@@zaya5360 no I meant in as one can mate with the dad and produce a kid and then another kid from another group of isopods can mate with that kid and it can go in perfect symmetry to ensure biodiversity! 🤣🤓🧡🤓
The mere thought of death makes me feel like nothing, everyone will be forgotten at some point, but that terrarium, that jar of twigs, moss, and bugs, thats a legacy, rather small, but a legacy none the less, i want to make something like this, but seeing it daily would be too much to handle, so ill sit and ponder life with a cup of tea once again.
This reminds me of that one video of a terrarium from 2007. Isopods, springtails, and centipedes still live in it. The soil is so dry and cracked on the surface, but water is plentiful underneath. The air inside the glass is very humid though. Butter hairy cress was the last plant species on the surface and the bugs fed on it. Very cool
@@KoreRosanice.. when I kept fish I did low tech set ups... just light and a heater, lots of plants clean up crew etc... I hardly ever had to do water changes, just top it off as needed and never used any water treatment chemicals
@@07foxmulder that’s because companies put tons of corn syrup in many foods. Corn syrup is very fattening plus cheap to produce. It’s just cutting corners that companies do in the US, that’s why there’s obesity. If you want to say something an not sound like an a** then you should have facts that go along with ur statement.
When my great grandma passed I was pissed that I didn’t get her two five gallon sealed terrariums until my grandpa’s brother explained that they were almost 80 years old and she made them with her mom as a child. My uncle still has them and they’re still going strong pushing close to 100 years old
@@lukasg4807 that’s what he says, but who knows maybe she remade them after so many years or maybe they really are as old as he says. regardless they are neat and have been alive as long as I can remember at least.
@@aceisgreatatwarthunder Me? I saw a comment and wanted to put my own spin on it. How is that stealing? You know what is tired and boring though. "sToLeN cOmMEnT ughhhhhhh"
@ace is great And honestly, about 90% comments I write, I write in about 30 seconds. Not a big deal. And likes matter to me somewhat. But not that much, especially now they took away dislikes. Before you could gauge things and actually see people's opinions. Now you can't.
@@NukaColaKris DONT WASTE UR LIFE ARGUING WITH THIS SHIT ITS USELESS THERE WILL ALWAYS BE HATERS I JUST SAW YOUR COMMENT FOR FIRST TIME AND FOUND IT FUNNY HOPE YOU HAVE GOOD REST DAY
I was gifted one years ago, i did just get rid of it recently, it wasn't looking pretty. All the plants turned brown and their veins wwre imprinted on the glass. There was a layer of moss at the bottom. There was nothing left. Maybe it needd some water. Nevertheless it was interesting to watch over these the changes that happened
@@Liusila brass doesn’t rust which is why I was thinking to use it. I suppose it could corrode over that time though. I was just trying to think of something inexpensive that would last a long time. I’m not sure what would be best. Aluminum or pewter?
I mean, isn't that what the Earth is? Except we don't need to be sealed in, gravity keeps the atmosphere on the planet. But it's a mostly closed system.
That's how the Earth works. The soil, bugs, plants, etc. are the ground and organisms. The glass wall of the jar is the atmosphere that keeps everything inside. The area outside the jar is outer space.
My friend made one of these with his grandfather before he passed, I see him admiring it every now and then. He made his nearly 4 years ago.
I have a question: how do they live without air?
@@sightorvisionair gets recycled wdym? Plants produce o2 and animals produce co2 easy
@@randomguy6328okay ,thank you very much
@@sightorvisionYeah man what that random guy said
@@sightorvisionman just went "tell me you don't know science without telling me you don't know how science works"
I like to think that if a mass extinction event occurred, these terrariums will somehow kick start life again.
That’s a really wholesome thought, underrated comment
Kick start 20k of dolars needed guys
It won’t survive as long as he thinks
That's very possible, even if the earth was razed to the ground and possibly radioactive there's so many of these one is bound to have gotten damaged and survived even in radioactive areas
@@AwsOm3Fac3You obviously know nothing about terrariums 😂
Imagine in a post apocalyptic world people are rummaging through the remains of once was a growing society. They come across a jar filled with life. The soil, untouched by the poisons that killed all of the crops, shows vegetation and freshwater (small amount). This man has created an eco time capsule.😊
This gives me an idea for an animation
Wall-E:
Edit: How does this have SO MANY LIKES-???? ALSO WHAT HAVE I STARTED-..
Irl mini geck from fallout
Until the run out of air
@@johnailles1762
That’s what the plants are for. Materially, it’s mostly a closed system. But it gets energy input from light allowing photosynthesis.
I planted a sealed terrarium to celebrate the birth of my daughter (after five beautiful sons). It has continued to grow and thrive. My seven year old grandson is utterly fascinated by it, he has been taking a weekly photograph at the same time every week for the past two years. I plan to give it to him in January, 2026, its 40th birthday.
what a beautiful idea. i've always wanted to have a terrarium, but i don't have the money to buy the materials. i'm sure he will love it.
The glass doesn't get dirty?
Intriguing
This warmed my heart
I hope you post a video of him getting it and the algorithm brings me back here to see it. This is absolutely beautiful.
It's all fun and games until a mini civilisation starts inside that terrarium and discovers the atom.
😂😭lmaoooo
Technically it already IS a civilization.
Roly Poly J. Buggenheimer
It's over for us when they hit the iron age.
Made me think about that one Rick & Morty episode
It’s something humbling about seeing someone make something life based that has the potential to outlive them
*makes baby*
I did that 3 times so far. They're adorable
This should be the top comment bc frfr
😅😅😅
@@TheBalisongBearbest comment
I hate to break it to you, but the fire marshal is NOT going to be happy about the lack of fire escapes installed within the terrarium.
Lmfao "is your fully isolated self-contained ecosystem up to code?"
Osha aint gonna be too happy about the lack of proper ventilation in such a confined workspace
🔥🔥
Ha, “break it to you”
@@redneck826there’s a plant it don’t need ventilation unless you think it needs clean air
We have a terrarium in a very large teardrop glass vessel that is well over 40 years old. The soil, plants, and everything are original, just as my Father-in-law prepared and planted it. The only maintenance that has been done, at most once or twice a year, is to add a very small amount of water. The teardrop shaped stopper is hand blown like the vessel, and there is a miniscule air gap, so occasionally, a small amount of water is needed to replenish the supply. It is almost entirely self sustaining, and absolutely amazing!
I really wish we can see it 🤞
You could seal it with silicone like he has! 😊
@@jeii8841then they can’t add water into it
then they cant put water in it and everything would die and the 40 years would dissapear all because they did as you suggested@@jeii8841
@@aslofiasitcanget2945 the whole point of it is that's it's a enclosed biosphere like the earth. Where there's a finite amount of water that never needs replacing. So if fully sealed, there's no need to keep adding water as the moisture can't escape.
Final act before death, kicks terrarium off shelf. "I Win."
This deserves more likes
Roly poly's will just scutter off like "we're freeeeee"😂
Putting a new spin on “kicking the bucket”
I think for him that would be a loss.
Not really, everything ends. As he said, it’ll LAST* longer, not forever. Plus, is his invention, why would he not want to leave a legacy of sorts? Smh…ppl are weird…
This the type of dude that’ll leave a terrarium to someone in his will.
if i got a terrarium from a will id be overjoyed thats so sick
These things actually look really nice for a desk decoration after a while
Then they just clean the jar and use it for flour or some shit
Honestly, if it doesn't fold, I'll throw it away. 😊
@@Vramirez6582 that’s a good policy.
Anything can outlive you if you're quick enough
I will take that challe- *combusts*
@@purp4168 look like you lost
@@Wulabaloo *Ash noises*
@@purp4168 damn you lost twice
Life speed run
He just gave a Rollie pollie a life sentence
Omfg that’s dark 😂
It's not fair. I would never trap anything even small. There's just no reason to
@@rookandpawnget a fucking grip, insects don't have any fucking idea what's happening
@@rookandpawnbro yearning for a Rollie pollie chill out it’ll live its full life in there with no worries always got something to complain about
We call those Wood Bugs in Canada lol
Y'all, the plants make the oxygen for the bugs. The bottle doesn't need to be opened for fresh air.
also if it's opened the water evaporates out, making a water cycle not exist. meaning he'd have to water it...
@@rustyshackleford6927 unfortunately dale while most seemingly basic knowledge like this is still taught in schools there are kids who just don’t care or pay attention, just like there always have been. massive idiots have always existed you just see them ‘speaking up’ more often now bc they don’t have to deal with the ramifications of their words being linked to their faces or bc they’ve found community with the other idiots online, nothing has really changed other than the ability to see into the minds of people more easily
@@rustyshackleford6927 decades of service industry and retail management coddling idiots and feeding into their delusions has not helped the matter either lmao the ‘harsh real world’ just doesn’t really exist if someone is far enough off their rocker or has enough money they get whatever they want and think they’re right no matter the facts presented
@@rustyshackleford6927 because kids are stupid..? Isnt that problematic to the fact that you want humanity (and all creatures) to end because a few kids are lazy...
@@rustyshackleford6927This is simply a trick of the mind. When you know very little about a subject, it can feel like you know everything about it. The more you know about a subject, the more you realize your knowledge is limited. You have a 30-year-old 2nd grade level of knowledge about photosynthesis, and you think you know enough to belittle those who don’t.
What if we’re all in some dude’s jar who died long ago
i like to think of that when i see these but i remember it's impossible bc it snows :( unless the jar was just left open
that makes me sad because we could be just this dusty jar sitting on the shelf of an abandoned house and maybe we were once the subjects of wonderment to a kind man
We were in some dudes balls before
Are you stoned?
@@rice_pp youre not thinking of a big enough jar dude
“MICHEAL DON’T LEAVE ME HERE”
LMAO
MICHE- *cough* MICHEAÀAAAAAL
MICHAEL *bang bang bang* HELP MEEE
YESS
MICHEAAAAAAAAAAAAL
It would be cool.. if these are placed in museums with the date of their creation
I'd go check that out for sure. Being able to see like a couple year old one vs one that's been around for a hundred years, I'm interested in knowing what the biggest differences would be.
Update us when it's outlived you
🤣🤣🤣 update: I’m back from the grave for this quick announcement…
@@MiaGonzalez-xx8re they know that, it’s clearly a joke
@@MiaGonzalez-xx8redumby
@@MiaGonzalez-xx8re r/wooosh
@@MiaGonzalez-xx8re Man you should update us when you finally find someone who finds you cool.
Man, imagine if someone made a terrarium and it survived for so long, all the organisms inside evolved into their own unique species perfectly adapted to living within a sealed glass jar
There's actually some similar events like this that have happened. One I can think of invole this species of mosquito that got trapped in a man made tunnel network. Originally the species prefered to feed on birds, but the mosquitoes in the tunnel adapted to perfer mammals and are now so different from the species that they originally came from that they can't even breed with them anymore making them their own species.
@@markwilson4686 The mosquitos in the London subway system
@Mark Wilson but they are still mosquitoes. That's not evolution, that's adaptation/speciation.
@@MWebb-de9pq by that logic pugs are wolves.
those mosquitos are a distinct species, they are still close, but they are diverging. speciation is just small scale observable evolution.
@@MWebb-de9pq That is evolution. Evolution doesn’t just happen on large scales. If a new species has been created, evolution has certainly happened. The scientific definition of evolution is just a change in allele frequencies over time
Ive been seeing these sealed ecosystem projects a lot lately and it has me thinking. I dont know how long these can actually last, but assuming it is self sustaining, these pods are ecologically seperate from the world. So while the ecosystems of the world continue to evolve and change, these could stay largely unchanged. Almost like a bio time capsule. That to me is really cool
Actually you’d think they would become adapted to live in the jar. It would be separate but I don’t think it would be the same as the previous
Btw if you're wondering about how long a terrarium last, there is a 60 years old one just search it cause i forgot the name of the person that made it 😅
@@Strezz08 thats awesome!
I’ve made many of them and to my truly are self sustaining and they are awesome if you do it correctly
They also might change on their own path, like imagine the bugs/plants adapt to survive inside a jar perfectly, I have no idea what they could possibly do to become *better* at living in a jar, but nature has its ways and it sounds super cool. It'd be a nice several generation long project
"hey great grandpa whats this?"
"Aaa you found my terrarium"
Anyone wanting to do this: I don't recommend sealing it like that immediately, it's better to wait and see to make sure you have the correct amount of water in it. It's pretty easy to over or under fill it
Also did he lock fumes from the glue inside the terrarium😂
@@Ih8danhumphreyI was thinking about that too. Smells like vinegar when it's solidifying.
@@piquelle2774 Acetic acid is a common biological compound used by all eukaryotic cells. It's not a concern.
@@piquelle2774 what, silicone? It really doesnt
I have one I just threw together with stuff from my backyard about 2 years ago, still going strong. I open it probably once a year.
One of those bugs will soon find out that he's on The Truman Show.
Terriuman Show.
@@badlydrawnsmiffynice one
@@aweebtaku429 thank you
@@badlydrawnsmiffynice one
@@badlydrawnsmiffy^ - ^👍
All fun and games till that terrarium becomes evolved enough to create its own miniverse experiment
"My universe powers your car?"
@@thekotabear69w reference
“Sounds like slavery with extra steps”
@@nikifelton4537no, they’re not slaves. See, they work for each other, have jobs, have families…
@@homemadecringeycontent6363"That just sound like slavery with extra steps!"
Its such a simple concept, yet we love it. Ive seen random jars in the woods turn themselves into terrariums on their own
Guy: This jar will outlive me
His 5 year old son: Allow me to introduce myself
Guy"goes to the forest and hides the terrarium at an unmapped location"
@@szymonbober2280im sure 4chan could find it within a Day
@@szymonbober2280nosey bear
“Allow me to wildly bitchslap this thingy thing” trying to see what it do
@@JamesJones2.15.19lmaoo
😂😂
The amount of “the amount of people who don’t know how plants work” vs the amount of people actually saying that is baffling
Most got pushed down but im definitely seeing them lol
@@drake_diangelo yeah I don’t doubt they’re there, but it’s jus funny seeing all those comments and none of the others in a short scroll through the comment section
@@djfunnydog420 sort by new, you’ll find them
😂
True. 😂
the plant inside makes oxygen, then carbon, the water from the plant itself evaporates then goes back into the soil from the condensation on the inside, it’s literally a cycle 💀
edit: this is for those who said the
plants won’t survive, for bugs the possibility of them staying alive for long is little to none
But what about the food, could the bugs really live that long? I’d imagine there’d be more bugs then what do they eat when the bone is out?
@InspirationalSmiles the bone isn't their only source of food, it's more there just for nutrients and probably won't go away too quick if you take in the size of the isopods
@@InspirationalSmiles the bone provides calcium, when the bugs die, their carcasses will be eaten by their babies and absorbed into the soil and plants, thus recycling the calcium.
@@InspirationalSmiles the bugs also eat decaying matter like leaves and stuff in the soil
if he put it out in the sun the water would dry up and there would be no way to get liquid back into there unless he opens it back up ……right?…
I did one of these in Girl Scouts, 3rd gradish.....lasted into my late 30's, when my sister dropped and shattered it.
That's a terrible end indeed! Recover and get back to work--make another one today! It may very well last longer than 30 years...if'n you keep yer sister away from it! 😆❗
P.S. In about 4.5 billion years, our Sun will swell in size to become a red giant star which will destroy Mercury, Venus and the Earth so, don't feel too badly when your terrarium gets destroyed the second time. 😄‼️
@@dustymiller65 😊
There's a man with a sealed terrarium that's so beautiful and lush he's had for over sixty years. It's like looking into a miniature world. Size is like one of those big water bottles.
Do you know where I can find a video of that at?
Yeah backup what u saying bro
@@mr.c.3760 You’re truly ignorant. Look it up yourself you lazy bum.
Leaving my comment here
fr 😭@@mr.c.3760
4B years in the future and there's intelligent isopods debating the existence of a world outside of the bottle.
This guy literally foresee future so far ahead, he’s making his own evolving spiece so they will conqueror planet and brand him as a figurehead 😂
This is how you make flat earther isopods
Whats outside the walls
@@PostprandialTorporbottle earth
It's really bold to claim that a terrarium will last more than 46 years, 2 months, and 15 days. Looking forward for an update
lmao
Dude planning assasination on a youtuber lmao
Bro
Bro are you the Grim Reaper
@Pie Squared dude I've seen you twice now and nobody cares
Bros voice is soothing
Terrarium in 100 years: Update 47 since our boys funeral.
bro his children gonna update us or some shit 💀
Our parents boys funeral!
@@shelovenikk u mean their children will update our children
@@redfox-ss8pq shit thats if he doesnt die younger than we think 😭
Make it ominous by saying 99th update
You're looking for the people who don't know how plants work
yeahhhh, not sure if those top comments were onto somethin after all
How did u know?
@@cheezkibbles1626 the guy who made this comment also saw the comments which were at the top of the comment section, which you also read first
Then he made this comment knowing someone like you read the aformentioned comments and thought to post this to catch your attention
Obviously.. it worked on me too 😂
Yup
@@joseppiboomer sort comments by newest first
The amount of people who don't know how oxygen works is concerning.. as if plants didn't exist 😭
but they dont they also need carbon dioxide or something? idk i dropped out February 😭
@@snickerswo1f519 the point of a terrarium is that the cycle of life is entirely contained. carbon dioxide is created by the springtails
@@snickerswo1f519 it's elementary school science.... nobody who doesn't know this should be on the internet...
@@snickerswo1f519 the organisms create the carbon dioxide… the springtails, the bacteria in the soil etc
@@snickerswo1f519 You obviously need to go back to school.
Heath Ledger loved his terrariums. RIP.
I love isopods so much. The way they just look for a cozy place to hide and tap their little antennas around
FR! I work on a farm and see them all the time. They’re very peaceful
They are literally me
Pill bugs?
I have some as pets they are so cute!
There's a movie in this somewhere. The thousandth generation of isopods will have that one kid that goes "mama, what's out there? Why can we never leave the dome?" And the mom is just like, "hush now, nobody leaves. We've stayed here for generations and that's just the way it is."
And then he proceeds to try and leave, leading to a world shattering crack in the jar, and a whole new world to explore.
Dude this could be a movie! 😂
Ever heard of Attack on Titan?
@@dazai2734 wow, no, I definitely didn't cry for an hour and a half straight on the fourth of November
Ever read The City of Ember?
Love City of Ember
It took two comments for me to realize half the viewers weren't aware the plants would cause the Co2 to become O2 again.
The American education system is something else
@@ajlucky0076 it's less the education system and more people not using their brain
@Orion The literal purpose of school is to build intelligence. Clearly it is failing
@@ajlucky0076More of people not giving a shit because we refuse to give people zeroes now
Most of them are still kids don't mind them or their country's education system is "something else" or either they're just not smart
Yo voice makes me think everything’s sunshine and rainbows fr
No glaze😂😂
“Instantly drops the pot after the video”
🤣 omg imagine
was thinking the exact same thing lol
😭😭
Drops it cuz they died. Thus, terrarium still outlived them.
Gave you your 1k like my boy
POV: your trying to find the comments that are baffling everyone
sort by new and it's every 5th person
POV Seeing YOUR comment repeating the same shit that's been said already more than enough times already. Quit ripping shit off fishing for likes. It's pitifully sad and weird.
Also,it's YOU'RE*
Why do people forget that top comments get pushed in the standard algorithm of a comment section? You're going to see the comments that were first made when comments of people being baffled were more prominent, because the video was fresh, so it was vulnerable to stupider, less popular and agreed upon comments. As more people viewed it, they liked the comments pointing out how insane it is that some people really exist without knowing how plants give us oxygen, and then, probably rather quickly, the top comments took over.
Whenever you see a phenomenon like this, select the "new first" filter for your comment section.
@@rachel5399not to mention most delete thier posts
Yep, people will just see one comment complaining about other comments and then just ASSUME and pile on. Seen it many times in smaller comment sections where I can literally confirm there's like a SINGLE comment that caused all the complaining lmao
Shake the bottle every ten years and see how the intergenerational bug trauma develops.
purely dubious
God approved this message 👍
At some point the newest generation will owe reparations to the generation right below them for the trauma that the first generation had to endure.
We do a little trolling
I can’t breathe
I appreciate you diving deep into your hobby
Old bug: "It's been 84 years since our last daily calcium" lol
They eat fallen leaves and shells of dead Bugs.
@arandomdude3109 yeah I figured it gets recycled somehow, I just found the "daily calcium" comment juxtaposed with sealing the jar for eternity funny
@@joshmakarenko5809it’s not
@@zyzzsdisciples6707it kind of is
@@zyzzsdisciples6707no, it is
In about 20 years, those bugs are gonna have a whole society and flying bug cars
Wait until this guy hears about bug climate change
@@phytoplankton7003 And then hear about all the drama with the bugservatives and republibugs
their society will decline when bugs define 548464846151645 genders
@@Potato-qc8yn those damn libug-rals
@@Potato-qc8yn LOL
We have a huge terrarium at my school and it’s been alive for over ten years already
High school project was to make one of these. Science teacher was showing off STUDENTS' terrariums that had been living for over 10 years 🤯
@@gothxpandathat’s so cool!!
how is it doing? :0
Share a photo!
Great way to teach biology actually. Water cycle, carbon cycle, respiration. Could expand to other concepts too with a bit of poetic licence, eg mass balances in engineering/chemistry
His voice be making me tear up 😢😮
“It’ll last forever”
*my ass finding a cool jar on the street in 2080 prompting me to chuck it at a wall*
i just imagined some old geezer saying in a raspy voice “heh heh … jar” and then throwing it at a wall
Nothing last forever
@@crafterrium8724you made this comment 10x better oml
Your ass?😮😮
@@crafterrium8724I imagined the same thing but after he says jar it’s silent for a few seconds then cuts to right as the jar is hitting the wall
When you realize the earth works pretty much like this, now you feel in a big terrarium
Edit: the comments look like 'nam 1962
except not really cuz we are here and fucking the balance up
@@hunterwolfgun4967we are Fucking it up for ourselves - earth does not need humanity. We need earth, It doesn’t need us. Earth is a rock and nature spawns endless genetic variation that will MOST DEFINITELY replace us all.
@@hunterwolfgun4967 this literally just came into being. Give the creatures some time to dominate the jar.
Also technically wrong as the earth loses and gains millions of tons of material from solar wind and space debris and gets energy from the sun.
@@lenarianmelon4634 will this jar not be getting energy from lighting in the house?
If ya'll think about it, the earth is pretty much a huge terrarium.
exactly correct, this is where the word terrarium comes from
Terra is earth in latin and italian
That exactly where the word terrarium comes from!
No shit sherlock
Terra...
I love hearing his voice it’s so calm
My uncle made one in 1962, when He died in 2014 everything inside was still alive. His daughter still has it in her living room. It's a 10-gallon jar
How’s it doing?
That's amazing. What's in it?
You should share a video of it
MICHEAL DONT LEAVE ME HERE MICHEAL,MICHEAL HELP ME
MICHEAL? MICHEAL!!!!
MICHAEL*
Oh to be a bug living in a sealed terrarium on some guys shelf. No worries. No stress. Just life.
Unable to go anywhere except that sealed jar… sounds more like a horror story
@@DeathnoteBB Really only a horror story if you had the person in a jar. But as a bug, thinking is limited to that of a bugs. So I don’t think it’d be as scary as you say it’d be.
@@DeathnoteBB All the bugs will know is the jar of life, and so do not feel that their freedom is limited. Also they can't really think to the level of perceiving freedom so...
I... I'm sorry to tell you, but... you are a bug living in a sealed terrarium on some guys shelf.
It's all fun and games until the grand creator throws a centipede into the jar.
I love little diy projects so if you want to then wrap some twine around the top cap of the bottle. It will look really nice. Also add a charm like a leaf or something if you want. Totally up to you and it’s only for the look.
Ive never heard anyone say the words "worm poo" in such a calm voice
Thanks for the likes guys
🤣🤣🤣🤣
To be fair I haven't heard anyone hysterically screaming "worm poo"
@@wodansam75 are you an only child?
Now I want to hear "worm poo" in a death metal song.
Worm poo is just dirt and leaves 😅
POV: You're looking for the comments from people who don't understand plants
Pov: you still can’t find them.
Sort by new lol
Sort by new noob. :) The algorithm pushes comments down.
Terrarium = Earth - (minus) diversity
im out on a hunt and no ones gonna stop me
I made one in a mason jar a few years ago, put it on my front porch and walked away. The plants have grown to the top of the mason jar. It’s quite impressive how well it’s done.
Don’t view this profile🗿🗿
@@DarkDomain0001 I won't
Should he use the ah cuttlefish and asparagus or the vanilla pesto?
Very well he will use the cuttlefish.
@@ScottyDoesntKnow69 💩
Some guy in the post apocoliptic world: SHOTGUN!
The amount of people baffled by the amount of people baffled has some people baffled and well that's baffling.
The amount of times the word “baffle” is in this sentence is baffling!
Well consider me baffled!
Baffling bad
That's a lot of baffles
I am truly baffled
We need a live stream of this jar.
no one would watch that 😭🔥
@@maki7509 theres a livestream of a tank of african dwarf frogs and i watch it lol
I’ll be dead
@@tabula_rosamy guy it’s ppl like you that keep the world going round and round. Stay awesome. And keep an eye on them Australian frogs for us. Out here doing the work and gettin’ it in. My man ✊
@maki7509 you underestimate the capabilities of humans massively
All fun and games until they grow out of the jar and start chasing you
Don’t view this profile🗿🗿
That’s only if you water it with Red Bull
"The last of Us." This is what this man is creating.
Even if the bugs are everything inside the jar… they wouldn’t outgrow it.
That’s what the silicon is meant to prevent
'sealed forever'
**Picks up jar, slips and shatters**
the amount of people baffled by how plants work is scaring me.
That's why we will never solve climate change
What happens when the bugs run out of calcium?
@@epicipodmodz The bugs r super small, so by the time that happens, the old bugs would've had babies and died and their babies could feed on them for more calcium
@@eldritchomen cannibalism... not the answer i was expecting haha
@@epicipodmodz yup that calcium will still be there but in another form
My oldest terrarium is 7 years old n i finally gave it a trim n it was so cool. I thought I’d never open it but after around a year you couldn’t actually see anything anymore for the plant life. The trim went extremely well n it was teaming with life. Very cool to see it sustain n become a little forest
That’s so sick. Congrats!!
Is it that hard to right AND buddy.
@@mr.thebeemovie2363 is it that hard to write "write"?
I’ve seen a large one that was sealed for 60 years and still doing very well!
Cool!
Where?
@@lauhanyIt's David Latimer's. He planted it in 1960, then in 1972 he watered it for the last time and sealed it
@@GrenadeLauncherYT cool thanks I’m gonna look it up
@@GrenadeLauncherYT Unless your math is wrong that isn't the same terrarium.
This is so soothing to watch and listen to. Thank you :)
I cannot help but imagine finding this terrarium next to his bones in abandoned shack of the wasteland, that's some Fallout-ish experience.
New fallout game Easter egg
Omg I was gonna say this 😂
I did it, I read all of the comments and found the ones about how baffling it is that people don't know how photosynthesis works. There were also many other comments wondering about what happens when the cuddlefish bone is gone, as well as, comments saying we're all in a giant jar and that the dude looked like Heath Ledger and he was going to break the jar after the video. There were also several comments about his voice either saying he sounded very pleasant or that he was too quite (take your pick). There now you don't have to go and read all of the comments to find out what everyone is talking about. (But if you do want to find those baffling comments middle mouse to the bottom and work your way up). :)
Aye you a real one for that, I was literally on my way to do the exact same thing.
I think I've read more comments summarizing the other comments than comments commenting on the video.
Thanks bro, very cool
breh
Thank you.
Those isopods will be more familiar with their cousins than the average Alabamian
oh yeah.. no bio diversity they live in a gated community-
Actually if you have up to 20 different isopods all from different lineages you can entirely make a new ecosystem they mate with the dad of another isopod they mate with the mom of another isopod then mate with the kid from other isopod and do you understand? 😂🤓🧡🤓
@@FlareTheMythical with a kid?
Bro what?
@@FlareTheMythical how can you guarantee that they're unrelated initially tho?
@@zaya5360 no I meant in as one can mate with the dad and produce a kid and then another kid from another group of isopods can mate with that kid and it can go in perfect symmetry to ensure biodiversity! 🤣🤓🧡🤓
The mere thought of death makes me feel like nothing, everyone will be forgotten at some point, but that terrarium, that jar of twigs, moss, and bugs, thats a legacy, rather small, but a legacy none the less, i want to make something like this, but seeing it daily would be too much to handle, so ill sit and ponder life with a cup of tea once again.
This reminds me of that one video of a terrarium from 2007. Isopods, springtails, and centipedes still live in it. The soil is so dry and cracked on the surface, but water is plentiful underneath. The air inside the glass is very humid though. Butter hairy cress was the last plant species on the surface and the bugs fed on it. Very cool
Hopefully he put the date it was sealed on the terrarium. It could be like a biological time capsule. 😮
These things are so cool. Really tempted to try this maybe on a scale of a larger fish tank
I accident turn my fish tank into an ecosystem- it’s kinda cool
@@KoreRosanice.. when I kept fish I did low tech set ups... just light and a heater, lots of plants clean up crew etc... I hardly ever had to do water changes, just top it off as needed and never used any water treatment chemicals
My guy just sentenced those isopods to life in prison
A real life Wall-E situation might happen now.
Humans are getting fatter and fatter so Wall-E’s been pretty accurate so far.
@@07foxmulder stop telling try facts 😡🗿
@@Babeda-yes Found a fatty.
Don’t view this profile🗿🗿
@@07foxmulder that’s because companies put tons of corn syrup in many foods. Corn syrup is very fattening plus cheap to produce. It’s just cutting corners that companies do in the US, that’s why there’s obesity. If you want to say something an not sound like an a** then you should have facts that go along with ur statement.
Could you drop a little marble statue into one of these one day? Would love to see it turn green & be buried in the overgrowth
This is such a good idea!!
Aww that's super cute!
Plus some moss or even lichen, would be awesome
If you're thinking of the statue turning green like the statue of liberty, that's copper. Marble will not have the same effect
@@Shroomiest I was thinking algae
Glad to see Heath is OK
Wanna know how I got these jars?
@@ThineLesser lmao nice one
@@willt9721 cheers
I wish man…
😂😂😂
Such things are actually so beautiful
I love to see that Heath is actually alive and has a cool hobby!
I thought i was the only one😂😂😂
I thought the same!!! 😂
Oh no 😅💀
i thought he was john cena
When my great grandma passed I was pissed that I didn’t get her two five gallon sealed terrariums until my grandpa’s brother explained that they were almost 80 years old and she made them with her mom as a child. My uncle still has them and they’re still going strong pushing close to 100 years old
Just looked up oldest terrarium and if that's true then your uncle actually has the oldest terrarium as the one that pops up in google is from the 60s
@@lukasg4807 that’s what he says, but who knows maybe she remade them after so many years or maybe they really are as old as he says. regardless they are neat and have been alive as long as I can remember at least.
that shit is gonna start evolving new bugs
...WoW!...😳...😲...
It be so cool if the next time you visited your uncle you filmed a short of them, bc it would be amazing to see that!
Damn, that plant is gonna live for at least 21 years, 2 months, 3 weeks, 6 days, 7 hours, 35 minutes, and 48 seconds more. That's nuts.
That’s a scary prediction.
People who steal comments are just sad. Do likes really matter to people this much? Society confuses me so much.
@@aceisgreatatwarthunder Me? I saw a comment and wanted to put my own spin on it. How is that stealing? You know what is tired and boring though. "sToLeN cOmMEnT ughhhhhhh"
@ace is great And honestly, about 90% comments I write, I write in about 30 seconds. Not a big deal.
And likes matter to me somewhat. But not that much, especially now they took away dislikes. Before you could gauge things and actually see people's opinions. Now you can't.
@@NukaColaKris DONT WASTE UR LIFE ARGUING WITH THIS SHIT ITS USELESS THERE WILL ALWAYS BE HATERS I JUST SAW YOUR COMMENT FOR FIRST TIME AND FOUND IT FUNNY HOPE YOU HAVE GOOD REST DAY
I was gifted one years ago, i did just get rid of it recently, it wasn't looking pretty. All the plants turned brown and their veins wwre imprinted on the glass. There was a layer of moss at the bottom. There was nothing left. Maybe it needd some water. Nevertheless it was interesting to watch over these the changes that happened
I’m watching it over and over again because it’s peaceful :)
Looking for someone in this comment section who 'doesn't understand how plants work' is like trying to find Big Foot riding a Unicorn.
I found your comment while sorting by new comments, intending to find said comments not understanding how plants work
@@GlorifiedGremlin same
@@GlorifiedGremlin fr
the people who are clueless have been ratioed out of the top comments
Sort the comments by "new". It's really weird how many people don't know this.
You reckon there'll be a religion in that bottle some day?
You could make a religion out of this
Jesus H Cockroach
Obviously the cuddle fish that they got from their Messiah will be there meeting place 😂
nah, plants and bugs are not dumb enough to be religious.
@@TRAMANOSIAW comment
The isopods and springtials:"he's locking us here forever😱😭"
What about incorporating a brass coin that has the “sealed date” on it so after you expire people will know how old it is?
Would that not rust and dissolve within just a few decades?
@@Liusila brass doesn’t rust which is why I was thinking to use it. I suppose it could corrode over that time though. I was just trying to think of something inexpensive that would last a long time. I’m not sure what would be best. Aluminum or pewter?
If you wanted to over achieve it'd probably be better to try and get a glass jar with the date crafted indented in it.
Piece of tape and a sharpie… forever
So many scenarios are going through my head, especially where one day these terrariums will bring back life once the world is dying
Imagine living as one of those bugs and realizing that your whole existence was inside a jar in some room.
I mean, isn't that what the Earth is? Except we don't need to be sealed in, gravity keeps the atmosphere on the planet. But it's a mostly closed system.
That's how the Earth works.
The soil, bugs, plants, etc. are the ground and organisms.
The glass wall of the jar is the atmosphere that keeps everything inside.
The area outside the jar is outer space.
@@PsychicDave gravity does not keep the atmosphere in! our electro magnetic field does that.
@@elianna838 its the earth gravity, women are so stupid.
Now that's some attack on titan shit
Your voice is very calming
If Heath Ledger was a botanist.
Oh my god that’s what I thought!
Literally came here looking for this comment! Lol
So the terrarium is gonna outlive him very soon?
horticulture not botantist? i think
if heath ledger was a botanist, hed still be dead
Heath Ledger‘s twin brother building terrariums💯🤯😂
I was about to say that he looks like him😂🙈
Omg I just commented the same thing before o seen this crazy tho definitely twinzees
I'm glad I didn't have to scroll long to find someone else who thought the same! ❤
Looks nothing like him haha
I’m so glad it’s not just me seeing this lol
One day those bugs are gonna start to wonder what’s beyond the jar. On that day, you better run.
😂😂😂😂😂😂
Breaking news: bug becomes giant and breaks out of jar and wipes out 80% of humanity
@@Witless_YTGiant (human sized) Praying Mantis apocalypse would be the scariest shit ever. Even a three footer would be scary af.
All fun and games until some random mf in there summons the brother of Cthulhu
You should give monthly update shorts. Just an idea
Or start a new channel just to live stream this forever
@sethhhhhhh I'd definitely tune in to it whenever I don't have anything better to do or just to have it on in the background while I sleep or read.
A billion years from now, those organisms within that jar will escape to the real world
And decimate everything on their surroundings
Could totally make a game/story about the nightmare of realizing your entire world was some giant's terrarium made for fun
Bug fables is kinda this, minus the nightmare aspect
Isn't our world just a terrarium made by God? Maybe not "for fun" though
Earth lore
I can't think of anyone who would be better at this than you. Funny seeing you here
Welcome to flat earth
This is totally serene, you could watch it with tranquil music for hours and be satisfied 😌