Finding Reptiles in the Trash!

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  • Опубликовано: 9 май 2024
  • Today we found some unexpected reptiles, amphibians, AND invertebrates living in some garbage! Although it's sad to see trash lying around, at least some animals can take shelter in it... Watch to learn about various critters that we found in the trash!
    SNAKE DISCOVERY MERCH!
    www.snakediscoverystore.com/
    SNAKE DISCOVERY PATREON
    / snakediscovery
    Music by BenSound and Epidemic Sound

Комментарии • 2,1 тыс.

  • @rosestorm7413
    @rosestorm7413 2 года назад +816

    Funfact isopods are called ‘skrukketroll’ in norwegian, which basically translates to wrinkly troll😂

    • @apss5736
      @apss5736 2 года назад +18

      Swedish isopods - sad isopod noises

    • @ljcl1859
      @ljcl1859 2 года назад +2

      Are you Norwegian? From Norway? Do you live there?

    • @gonaruletheworld
      @gonaruletheworld 2 года назад +29

      We call them Woodlice in England. Wrinkly trolls is much cooler!

    • @dorabrooks76
      @dorabrooks76 2 года назад +7

      Thank you! That is a delightfully fun fact! 😄

    • @karinwestereng1910
      @karinwestereng1910 2 года назад +20

      They are also called "kaffedyr" in Norwegian, meaning coffee animals. Skrukketroll is cuter!

  • @anndownsouth5070
    @anndownsouth5070 2 года назад +2909

    I so love that Emily put the isopod in her pocket so she could show it to Ed, because she knows how much he loves isopods. 💕💕💕

  • @trishields
    @trishields 2 года назад +430

    When I lived in SoCal as a kid, one of those alligator lizards ended up living in our garden. We attempted to "rehome" him to a safer location outside (we had three cats) but he refused and continually came back (we knew it was him, because he was missing his tail, we named him Stumpy.) Ultimately, we ended up homing him in a large empty tank we had, he tamed very well and was super happy for years, even allowed us to hold him and hand feed him without issue and no biting (and his tail started regrowing!). He'd even come up to the glass to greet us each morning, then curl up under his log to sleep (they sleep in a circle!). Amazing experience, miss you little Stumpy.

    • @akio_kuro
      @akio_kuro 2 года назад +23

      That is absolutely adorable

    • @stellabelikiewicz1523
      @stellabelikiewicz1523 2 года назад +36

      I wish I could have provided this level of good husbandry to all the critters I caught when I was a kid in the 80s! The love was there, but the know-how lagged a bit behind…

    • @fatherlessbeing
      @fatherlessbeing 2 года назад +6

      SO CUTE

    • @chataldekleine3901
      @chataldekleine3901 2 года назад

      @@stellabelikiewicz1523 🐊🐍🐢🦁🦦🦇🦅🦂🕷️🐝🦛🐆🐅🦔

    • @chataldekleine3901
      @chataldekleine3901 2 года назад

      @@stellabelikiewicz1523 🦦🦦🦦🦦

  • @Rob_Thorsman
    @Rob_Thorsman 2 года назад +263

    "When it's scared, it rolls up as a defense mechanism."
    ball python: "Ah, I see you are a man of culture as well."

  • @jessicazuley8542
    @jessicazuley8542 2 года назад +509

    Alligator Lizard: Grr, I am angry. I want to bite you!
    Emily: Okay, here's my finger.

    • @CandiceLemonSharks
      @CandiceLemonSharks 2 года назад +33

      Emily could have died! She was in GRAVE DANGER of being EATEN by an ALLIGATOR (lizard)!
      REX, back in her enclosure: "no she wasn't"

    • @kaori566
      @kaori566 2 года назад +3

      h m

    • @wrendrawsstuff6403
      @wrendrawsstuff6403 2 года назад +5

      @lil grunt =) probably patreon

    • @wrendrawsstuff6403
      @wrendrawsstuff6403 2 года назад +4

      @lil grunt =) basically they pay to get early access to videos ^^

    • @labyplaas2644
      @labyplaas2644 2 года назад +2

      Hahaha this is so funny 😂 thank you for making my day 😊

  • @damienvaughn5608
    @damienvaughn5608 2 года назад +1216

    Love how the lizard wanted to bite Emily and she just
    Was like “okay” and puts her finger in its mouth

    • @Leannaxx2028
      @Leannaxx2028 2 года назад +6

      lol

    • @Fanalokaa
      @Fanalokaa 2 года назад +20

      Not gonna lie I do that with the lizards and skinks I catch as well
      Sometimes it even makes them give up biting while I hold them

    • @BPJD2004
      @BPJD2004 2 года назад +16

      Found one of those alligator lizards in my church when I lived in California (I live in Kentucky now), and when I took him outside, right before I set him down, he bit the crap out of my finger. I think I can still see where he got me! And this was about six or seven years ago!

    • @ashlee2915
      @ashlee2915 Год назад +3

      Lol

    • @KimberlyDeveau807
      @KimberlyDeveau807 Год назад +6

      He wa spike “OH YOU GONNA TASE LIKE COOKIES” “oh nope she tastes like rain”

  • @themaddiemads
    @themaddiemads 2 года назад +152

    My favorite part of Ed and Emily's relationship (as someone who obviously doesn't know them in person or anything) is the way they always match the other's excitement. Like from what I can see, they encourage each other's interests and don't ever feel like they can't be obviously excited about something.

  • @evelynvslife
    @evelynvslife 2 года назад +339

    As an Australian, seeing y’all just casually flipping trash shoots my anxiety through the roof 😅 one time I found a discarded soft toy on the side of the road, flipped it, and found a rather large red belly black snake curled up underneath it. I would love to find a python but 9 times out of 10 it’s something deadly.

    • @M.e.l.o.d.y.G.r.a.c.e
      @M.e.l.o.d.y.G.r.a.c.e 2 года назад +10

      Meee too (I’m also Australian)

    • @highjinx6519
      @highjinx6519 Год назад +12

      Yep here in Texas it’s very likely going to be a rattler, a cottonmouth or a copperhead and we also have coral snakes that show up in people’s gardens sometimes so I’ll def pass on tracking them down lol.

    • @FioreCiliegia
      @FioreCiliegia Год назад +1

      Yeah but even if they are spicy aren’t those pretty chill?

    • @evelynvslife
      @evelynvslife Год назад +5

      @@FioreCiliegia yeah normally, but it’s best not to bother them in case they’re not. Also, the younger ones tend to be quite sassy and bitey instead of chill or fleeing. Just ask my $3000+ cat.

    • @jessicapayne8622
      @jessicapayne8622 Год назад

      We take a stick with us when moving fly tipping in case of dead bodies

  • @cassandramuller7337
    @cassandramuller7337 2 года назад +315

    That Garter was super adorable. Like how he was super scared at first and then decided that you were an adequate heatsource. So cute how he curled around your fingers. Such a beautiful snake too.

    • @spjr99
      @spjr99 2 года назад +7

      I worked with wild garter snakes this summer, a lot of them are like that if they're a bit bigger and the small ones are snappy. The most aggro snake this summer was a 50 gram snake that was no more than a foot long but man he just kept biting me in the same spot over and over!

    • @meredithmitchell8921
      @meredithmitchell8921 2 года назад +4

      I misread “garter” as “gator” and was so confused reading the rest of the comment until I reread it.

    • @letshavefun1015
      @letshavefun1015 2 года назад +3

      @@spjr99 I think the reason the babies do that is because the adults are more street smart, so they know not to start fights when they're not being hurt. Babies, on the other hand, have no clue that something could just be looking at it, so they try to kill/scare away anything without realizing the possible consequences of picking a fight they can't win.

  • @CRCC830
    @CRCC830 2 года назад +315

    there’s something about herping that reminds me of careless childhood memories of exploring my backyard and the nearby parks

    • @apss5736
      @apss5736 2 года назад +8

      Yeah same I loved doing that

    • @samjohnson4751
      @samjohnson4751 2 года назад +14

      Yeah, watching this video reminded me that when I was small we had big plywood boards to cover our sandbox and sometimes they'd accidentally get left in the middle of the yard for a while and when we'd finally move them there'd be like worms and crickets and rolypolys under. Also we'd do that with garden border bricks flipping them to see the bugs.

    • @apss5736
      @apss5736 2 года назад +10

      @@samjohnson4751 ikr i used to look under some tarp in my garden when i was 6 and i would always find toads,isopods,centipedes and lots of spiders. it was so fun

    • @MelonHere20
      @MelonHere20 2 года назад +4

      Mhm same here, I also remember a time a random millipede decided to climb my leg XD

    • @shroomyesc
      @shroomyesc 2 года назад +4

      Yeah I live nearby a stream/creek, pond and swamp and in the late spring and early summer I like to go there and peer into the crevices to see the isopods, diver beetle larvae etc. It's really quaint. It's a nice break from every day life.

  • @devinscreaturecrew
    @devinscreaturecrew 2 года назад +54

    Hey Emily!
    That wasn’t actually a tarantula you found, but rather a false tarantula! They do look very similar, but this was not an Aphonopelma at all; it was Calisoga spp. They are very unique arachnids and it was very interesting to see a little peek at something you don’t usually get to see. I would be very excited to have discovered one, as they do look very convincingly like Theraphosidae!

    • @TianaLuo
      @TianaLuo 2 года назад +5

      bump

    • @sayosweeti5757
      @sayosweeti5757 2 года назад +4

      Interesting! it's cool to see certain species adapt to look like other species!

    • @juliangarrido3034
      @juliangarrido3034 Год назад +4

      @@sayosweeti5757 not exactly what’s going on between those two species. That is called mimicry. In this case they look similar because they are related. False tarantulas are part of the family nemesiidae while tarantulas are theraphosidae both are within the order mygalomorphae which includes trap doors/tarantulas/ false tarantulas/etc and the physical similarities you’re recognizing are called synapomorphies or “same traits” both have that help to distinguish them from other types of spiders like all the ones we are more familiar with in the order araneae

    • @sayosweeti5757
      @sayosweeti5757 Год назад +2

      @@juliangarrido3034 oh okay! So they’re related but similar? Neat!

  • @carm0924
    @carm0924 2 года назад +31

    The way Emily has literally no hesitation or fear while catching and handling animals is amazing! I am very envious of that!! I love animals but I am scared to touch a lot of them, I wish I wasn’t!

    • @boneclawwalker3778
      @boneclawwalker3778 2 года назад

      Yeah so we don't grab snakes here in Arkansas until we take a second to check that it's not a copperhead, cottonmouth, or one of several types of rattlesnake. Even the nonvenemous snakes here such as rat snakes, king snakes, and brown water snakes, will still happily bite you and hang on like a bulldog. But I love em anyway

    • @ThePhoenixUnderwater
      @ThePhoenixUnderwater Год назад

      I'd actually touch a wild snake if I was positive I knew exactly what it was, and it wasn't a venomous one!! Always prepare to be bitten of course!!
      I wouldn't have ever done it if it wasn't for Emily. I haven't ever deliberately gone herping, but I did see a Garter Snake randomly one day. I was in line for a shuttle bus to a Renaissance Festival, and we were near a wooded area, and there it was. If I was Emily, I'd have picked it up, or if she was there, and could tell me it was safe, I would have been more likely to pick it up!! I wanted to move it, because it was in danger of being stepped on, and my mom is afraid, and was with me.
      Someone in line behind me, she picked it up and gently tossed it into the nearby woods!! Maybe it was Emily in disguise 🥸 LOL Probably not, it was in Michigan.

  • @taylorandrews509
    @taylorandrews509 2 года назад +631

    Salamanders look like the real-life version of when people draw stick arms on snake photos

  • @MalonzeProductionsGaming
    @MalonzeProductionsGaming 2 года назад +151

    "Is that an isopod if your pocket, or are you happy to see me?"
    "Im happy to see you , so i put an isopod in my pocket"
    Relationship goals

  • @MnM.529
    @MnM.529 2 года назад +9

    I love that the lizard was like "hey I wanna bite you" and Emily was like "yeah sure" and just puts her finger near its mouth lol

  • @emilyburke3216
    @emilyburke3216 2 года назад +32

    Me: "Wow I can't wait to find a reputable salamander breeder and start making my collection bigger!"
    Emily and Ed: "Hey look at this salamander I found in the ✨trash ✨!" 😄😄

  • @epicwolf3
    @epicwolf3 2 года назад +397

    Appreciate you stating those "rules" to flipping as I have seen a lot of places in Colorado where you can see where people flipped over boards but didn't put them back in the same spot. Also love millipedes

    • @wildflower1397
      @wildflower1397 2 года назад +27

      Also, be careful flipping boards, as you might find a black widow or rattlesnake or worse. Find a sturdy branch to lift the board so your hands are further away. Bonus: you can use it to prop the board when needed.

  • @alipenn5302
    @alipenn5302 2 года назад +1944

    Me: **sees title** oh, that's sad that people would throw away reptiles like that.
    Me: **sees intro** oh! Ok that's good actually

  • @JoyWeidner
    @JoyWeidner 2 года назад +4

    The animals you found were really cool but I just wanted to say thank you for also featuring the moss! That forest that you shared at the very end of the video was amazingly beautiful!! 💕

  • @nanahand1959
    @nanahand1959 2 года назад +2

    Your enthusiasm for finding critters is contagious. Reminds me of when I was a kid & we would go to the local dump and the crick behind our house. My favorite find was the lizard 🦎 & that tarantula was a surprise.

  • @justabagel3381
    @justabagel3381 2 года назад +249

    I’ve lived in ca my whole life and I have only found an Alligator Lizard once. I was catching Western Fence Post Lizards(aka blue bellies) at a family function and one turned around and bit me. It didn’t hurt but I was confused so I went to show my grandpa the lizard biting me. On my way to Grandpa, the lizard let go and raced across the grass and climbed my 2 year old baby cousin and sat on the top of her head. Grandpa tried to get it out of her hair before all the aunts and Grandma saw it, but the baby started running because Grandpa looked big and scary. I probably should have helped him, but 12 year old me thought that watching a 6’2” linebacker chase a baby with a lizard in her hair absolutely hilarious. Grandpa was my first herping guide. I miss him.

    • @melissajarvis4829
      @melissajarvis4829 2 года назад +14

      Love the story! 😁😄

    • @lillyh3447
      @lillyh3447 2 года назад +10

      Thanks for sharing!

    • @amandastakeonit7402
      @amandastakeonit7402 2 года назад +18

      Awww I appreciate you sharing such a treasured gem. Props to awesome grandpas, may we meet them again

    • @emmy_platinum
      @emmy_platinum 2 года назад +5

      This was such a sweet story! Made me smile! Thanks for sharing!!

    • @OfStarrySkiesandFireflies
      @OfStarrySkiesandFireflies 2 года назад +6

      Western fence post lizards- thats the name. I see them all the time in my backyard, and i always try to catch them when i can. They love this brick wall that divides my backyard from a local trail. Whenever i manage to catch one, i always turn it over to admire the two blue stripes- so pretty!

  • @pinkkitty4430
    @pinkkitty4430 2 года назад +492

    "They don't really move much once they're comfy"
    me in a nutshell

  • @jessicacapizzo524
    @jessicacapizzo524 2 года назад +1

    Thank you thank you! I have always been afraid of snakes, salamanders, lizards, and millipedes, but I love watching you interacting with nature. I will never own a snake, but I love your informative videos, and I feel like you two really do respect the animals you care for. I am a furry animal "mom" and I care for them like you do yours, with attention too their needs, and respect for their abilities.

  • @skeletortheoverlordofevil1749
    @skeletortheoverlordofevil1749 2 года назад +1

    I am so glad I found your channel, it's so fun! And as a reptile owner myself I just love seeing other lizards, snakes, bugs, frogs, I could go on

  • @amandalucky8211
    @amandalucky8211 2 года назад +148

    Theory about the salamander rolling up: He kind of looks like a small pile of feces when he does that so maybe it's just meant to convince would-be predators that there's nothing worthwhile in that spot so they move on? I know very little about salamanders so this is just purely a guess from seeing it happen when Ed was holding the salamander.

    • @thoriated
      @thoriated 2 года назад +37

      Could also make it harder to find the head, and therefore more difficult for a snake to swallow it.

    • @electrowave114
      @electrowave114 Год назад +1

      'Tis a pretty good guess, and does make sense. Most predators wouldn't care about some random poop spot.

  • @ClintsReptiles
    @ClintsReptiles 2 года назад +1908

    Nobody gets as excited to find piles of garbage as herpers. FACT!

    • @nicolesreptilezoo7525
      @nicolesreptilezoo7525 2 года назад +32

      Yes! I went on vacation in Florida and the whole time I was just searching for Reptiles and amphibians I found a large American alligator and a Burmese python and many many iguanas and Brown anoles and green anoles

    • @tlsreptiles71504
      @tlsreptiles71504 2 года назад +5

      💯% true

    • @sampagano205
      @sampagano205 2 года назад +18

      Counter point, hermit crabs are similarly stoked to find big piles of garbage.

    • @FreeRangeZebez
      @FreeRangeZebez 2 года назад +4

      *birders arise from the dump*

    • @georgeprosser9157
      @georgeprosser9157 2 года назад +9

      Except maybe raccoons… They are known as ‘trash pandas’ after all

  • @chloegreene8316
    @chloegreene8316 2 года назад

    You guys make me happy when I'm down. Thank you, for real. Beyond grateful.

  • @gabriellehunter6545
    @gabriellehunter6545 2 года назад

    Love scrap piles for discovering!!! And thank you for sharing the fern moss outtake...

  • @jessedillahunty4394
    @jessedillahunty4394 2 года назад +129

    I'd really love to see an update on the rat breeding racks how they've been working out

  • @iridescent7816
    @iridescent7816 2 года назад +118

    As soon as they found the alligator lizard, I thought, "Hey, I know that species. They bite." And then it did. They're ornery little buggers. XD
    Strange to watch people in my area intentionally looking through trash for rattle snakes when I was taught to avoid trash piles for that very reason. I'm glad you found a bunch of little salamanders rather than rattle snakes~

    • @Cate2020
      @Cate2020 2 года назад +10

      Born and raised on the central coast and I thought the same thing when I saw the lizard! Like "oh! I remember catching those as a kid! They bit me!" 😅

  • @wyckedzcryptidz
    @wyckedzcryptidz 2 года назад

    I love Emily's love and excitement over every critter. I am the same way with critters..

  • @pencilcrayons9452
    @pencilcrayons9452 Год назад

    You guys are so fun to watch! I hope you have a nice trip home!

  • @ellie_lewis09
    @ellie_lewis09 2 года назад +255

    After a hard day this is just what I need: two wholesome kind people making great videos for us to watch!

  • @gillar12
    @gillar12 2 года назад +274

    Oddly, I have seen Emily's hand so many times that I picked up that her right index finger may have been swollen in one spot. Hope it is not hurting you, Emily.

    • @the_undead
      @the_undead 2 года назад +66

      Knowing Emily, I would not at all be surprised if it's because she was bit by something that she caught

    • @cherylcoker4179
      @cherylcoker4179 2 года назад +44

      @@the_undead probably the angry little alligator lizard that kept biting her finger lol

    • @TheCrazyOrange
      @TheCrazyOrange 2 года назад +2

      Yeah it's the same place the little lizard in the video got her lol

  • @animeboy9801
    @animeboy9801 2 года назад

    My family loves your channel. I have custody of my four grandkids, hence the channel name. I use my grandsons channel to watch RUclips. My oldest is 15 and already has two snakes. He wants to be like you. Very adamant about it too. We love what you two do. We have learned so much. Thank you. We love you both. Also we have been subscribed to your channel when you first started and I knew you were amazing from the beginning and now 2.5 million. Congratulations

  • @rinashort3919
    @rinashort3919 2 года назад

    Love this video idea. The best herping spots are not always the most scenic!

  • @hearsthewater
    @hearsthewater 2 года назад +119

    I kept getting startled when you would turn over something towards you. I live in an area that has a lot of copperheads and it was ingrained in me and my kids that we don't turn things over like that. Then I realized that not only are y'all trained professionals, but you WANTED to find snakes. LOL I finally calmed down and enjoyed the rest of the video.

    • @140kittykat
      @140kittykat 2 года назад +10

      Freaked me out too for a moment, then remembered it was probably chilly enough that the snakes would have been slower to react.

    • @rebella8898
      @rebella8898 2 года назад +7

      Same. Turn and walk away from piles and boards and logs.

    • @rock2946
      @rock2946 2 года назад +2

      Sameeee. I grew up in a rattlesnake area and was taught to avoid bricks, trashpiles, or just things that look like it could serve as a hide or den for a rattler. Everytime they turned the boards, I flinched 😭😅

  • @mariadelrosarionunez-tabar5636
    @mariadelrosarionunez-tabar5636 2 года назад +152

    I don't know why but her petting the moss made me smile.

    • @brandi3981
      @brandi3981 2 года назад +10

      It very much reminds me of something I saw on Facebook last week a little cartoon comic thing on there where a human asks her dog why he always likes to roll in the grass then the next panel is the grass with little faces on every blade asking to pet him

    • @birb6474
      @birb6474 2 года назад +1

      @@brandi3981 lmao thats amazing

    • @wildflower1397
      @wildflower1397 2 года назад +1

      Me too... wish I had log like that in my yard. :)

  • @rockbythetree
    @rockbythetree 2 года назад

    I found isopods in my back yard over the summer and made a nice enclosure for them thanks to advice I learned from snake discovery. Just noticed today that they had babies!! Thank you Emily and Ed for educating my children and I about cool reptiles and isopods

  • @jenna9406
    @jenna9406 2 года назад

    This is the first video from your channel I ever seen it’s inspired me and has changed my life thank you so much☺️

  • @ljcl1859
    @ljcl1859 2 года назад +86

    Watching your (Emily and Ed's) appreciation for 'adorable' creepy crawlies has really changed my perception of them. Centipedes would not be something I previously thought of as cute, in fact probably quite the opposite. Emily holding them and talking about their cuteness and personalities has made me appreciate them more. I can see them as cute now that I have 'met' them. Also, I have always thought snakes were interesting and sometimes beautiful, but now whenever I see a little or baby snake I think awe, they are so cute. You two are awesome educators. I'm an adult much older than the two of you, and you have greatly influenced me, I can only imagine the huge impact you have had on children. Still working on my spider issue. It's not as bad as it used to be, but they still give me the heeby-jeebies.

    • @nerlana1281
      @nerlana1281 2 года назад +12

      It was actually a millipede she was holding though I agree with all those legs they can be intimating and spooky... I still despise centipedes though more than likely because I get house centipedes in my basement and they seem to vaporize out of nothing to startle me!

    • @ljcl1859
      @ljcl1859 2 года назад +10

      @@nerlana1281 Oh thanks, and anything that lets itself into my house is no longer cute. A squirrel got into my basement through a door that was left open and I swear it made a sort of growling terrifying sound. It was in the beams of my basement at almost eye level when I came down the stairs. I would definitely not want the millipedes in my house. LOL

  • @ph0sgene967
    @ph0sgene967 2 года назад +76

    Can't believe you found an alligator lizard but not a bluebelly, they're so much more common! But they're probably in brumation right now
    Also those salamanders like to hide under plant pots too

    • @MelonHere20
      @MelonHere20 2 года назад

      Exactly! I see those all the time lol

  • @shaldana
    @shaldana 2 года назад +1

    What a delight of a video! Little treasures all over the place! So happy to see the tarantula - I'm such a huge fan of spiders of any kind and up here in northern Canada, there's no way to see a tarantula in the wild (or lizards, for that matter, though we have them in other regions. Not up here in cold central!). Thanks for a fun video.

  • @anikasinger2457
    @anikasinger2457 2 года назад

    The aquatic garter snake is gorgeous 😍 and so chill! I love him great find guys!

  • @mysteryanimates6807
    @mysteryanimates6807 2 года назад +144

    I once had a wild caught alligator lizard, she was a rescue. We found her in middle if the road not moving, so we took her home and got her warmed up and fed. We kept her in a nice warm cage and would feed her the fattest cockroaches we could find, and even once a dragonfly. We ended up releasing heron the side of the road where we found her once the weather warmed up. That was the only time I ever had a pet reptile. My mom was highly against having reptiles and still is but chose to let us keep Lizzy (that's what we named her) because my mom thought that she was gorgeous with she was. She didn't look like the one in the video tho. She was more of a grey color with blueish grey and black spots that looked like a checkerboard, her scales faded into a coppery color by her feet and near her flap with had a black stripe, she also had a regrown tail with was a silvery copper colored mix. She had probably the biggest personality I've ever seen on any reptile. If a cockroach escaped from her grasp she would get offended and chase after it full speed to get it. I miss her and loved her dearly.

    • @Silver_wind_1987_
      @Silver_wind_1987_ 2 года назад +7

      Lizzy: how dare you escape me!!! 😤

    • @heatherholland1051
      @heatherholland1051 2 года назад +13

      Good on you for saving Lizzy but than returned her to where she belonged.

    • @marygraniti7409
      @marygraniti7409 2 года назад +9

      Have to wonder what that experience was like from Lizzy's perspective, if reptiles could think at a certain level. :) It'd be like an alien abduction or a religious experience. "I was stranded and cold, and this giant creature picked me up and took me to a strange clear barrier and fed and warmed me. Eventually it just put me back right where it found me!" "Sure, Lizzy, tell us again about how big it was."

  • @FishForThought
    @FishForThought 2 года назад +401

    If I ever get the chance to find my next reptile in the trash...
    Finally a genuine reason to name it Trash or Garbage :)

  • @Sylvirayne
    @Sylvirayne 2 года назад +1

    I loved all the critters you found, but salamanders have always been a favorite of mine. Just the variety of traits different species can have, they're so cool!

  • @eshaehu
    @eshaehu 2 года назад

    So loving to see these animals...... but sad to see that they live in garbage....... my favorite of all the critters was the aquatic garter snake.... I want to thank you and Ed because of you guys my love for snakes has reached an other level thank you

  • @HunterHouck
    @HunterHouck 2 года назад +40

    Here early because of Patreon! 😁

  • @kellster2193
    @kellster2193 2 года назад +17

    The brown salamander you found was so cute and derpy looking.

  • @seanrallis6714
    @seanrallis6714 2 года назад +8

    I love how she sees the lizard trying to bite her, so she just offers her finger for him to bite 😂

  • @elihand4509
    @elihand4509 2 года назад +1

    Great video! Please do more of these!

  • @amandafinnerty3707
    @amandafinnerty3707 2 года назад +18

    I never needed to go herping for Alligator Lizards, they always snuck into my in-law's house some how. Once walked out of the bathroom to one chilling right in the hallway. Even found one under my pillow once. Man now I miss CA😔💔

  • @nicidorner9383
    @nicidorner9383 2 года назад +29

    Loved the the garter, he was so adorable!

  • @Meg_of_all_threads
    @Meg_of_all_threads 2 года назад

    My favorite find of the video was the tiny moss forest on the log ❤️
    It's adorable!

  • @furryoftheyear
    @furryoftheyear 2 года назад

    a reason to love this channel: they make cool/fun/interesting content that is also educational

  • @FioreCiliegia
    @FioreCiliegia 2 года назад +55

    Id love a video on how to set up your yard for critter success :) like if you were ever to make a critter friendly play structure for kids at your facility? Like maybe avoid certain wood chips and paints?

  • @hi_tech_reptiles
    @hi_tech_reptiles 2 года назад +31

    I've always thought the Garters here in eastern Iowa along the Mississippi seem to also cross with one another, especially closer to the marshy areas along said river. Some have red, some are more like Plains, some more striped like a Ribbon and everything in between. Given how they live so close and pseudo communally (I remember finding 3-5 adults under the same railroad tie lol) it makes sense that the species lines blur where the wild areas overlap, especially in a species as varied and prolific as Garters lol.

    • @zythe69akaru
      @zythe69akaru 2 года назад +3

      I'm in west central Illinois and grew up near the Quad Cities, so it's awesome to see your comment! I totally agree, there is SO MUCH variation in garters!

  • @pattygeuder41
    @pattygeuder41 2 года назад

    I loved this video even without any rattlesnakes. I would like to add that I'm so happy that Ed finally cut his hair. He looks good and I like Emily's without the colors too. Your videos are what I look for first when I take time for reptile videos. You helped me so much when I got my first snake (corn) at age 67. I follow all your great advice. Thank You!

  • @rrusty_spoon
    @rrusty_spoon 2 года назад

    Just when I think I couldn't possibly love you 2 any more 😄 your videos make everyone so happy 💚

  • @rebeccawalilko960
    @rebeccawalilko960 2 года назад +30

    I actually think the tarantula you found is either Aphonopelma eutylenum or Aphonopelma steindachneri. Aphonopelma chalcodes have a blonde carapace with blonde legs and red hairs on their abdomen and even males will have more of a brown coloration than a black one. It's still really cool that you found one though!

    • @1129BAMF
      @1129BAMF 2 года назад

      Just going to say the same. I was guessing aphonopelma xwalxwal. Definitely not a. chalcodes.

    • @apss5736
      @apss5736 2 года назад

      Yea chalcodes lock different

    • @Nicolas_Zanartu
      @Nicolas_Zanartu 2 года назад

      I dont believe that’s even a tarantula 😅
      But its another kind of mygalomorph spider

    • @tagdayley
      @tagdayley Год назад

      @@Nicolas_Zanartu you’re correct. its calisoga sp.

  • @tbc_cosplay
    @tbc_cosplay 2 года назад +41

    I would love to see more insects, arachnids and inverts featured on your channel! Snails and spiders do so much for our wild ecosystem 🥰

    • @wrendrawsstuff6403
      @wrendrawsstuff6403 2 года назад

      I love snails and spiders! Snails are the best

    • @nicolesreptilezoo7525
      @nicolesreptilezoo7525 2 года назад

      Same

    • @apss5736
      @apss5736 2 года назад

      Yeah tarantulas and other inverts are so cool

    • @amandastakeonit7402
      @amandastakeonit7402 2 года назад +1

      Not me. I started watching because it's a Snake channel, didn't mind other herps but it gets old having channels ruined by that. It would be awesome if that were patreon material or they split the channel.

    • @wrendrawsstuff6403
      @wrendrawsstuff6403 2 года назад

      @@amandastakeonit7402 I agree with this, I think the original commenter just meant like in general seeing more spiders and snails, not more videos entirely dedicated to them though

  • @Miss65boo
    @Miss65boo 2 года назад

    Those millipedes looked beautiful! I loved their coloration, but my favorite is the Garter snake, I have a real affection for them and that one was really pretty! I live on the Northern East Coast and our Garters are not nearly as bright. Thank you for such an interesting video, I learned a lot!

  • @KPbugs
    @KPbugs 2 года назад

    Loved seeing the millipedes and different types of isopods!

  • @xpartyrocking98
    @xpartyrocking98 2 года назад +29

    10:10
    Aligator lizard : Can me bite ?
    Emily : Okay here’s my finger, u may bite ! You cutie 💕

  • @arborealblazer283
    @arborealblazer283 2 года назад +11

    Sudanese Plated Lizards have a VERY similar flap to the alligator lizard you found (woo convergent evolution!) And they use it to inflate themselves after wedging into cracks so that predators can't pick them up!

    • @amandastakeonit7402
      @amandastakeonit7402 2 года назад +2

      BRILLIANT! I just KNEW it was for inflating! I just couldn't back it up since it didn't inflate for Emily, but the wedging makes so much sense! I could kiss you!!! Muah! YES YES YES!!! Thank you for sharing that!

  • @corlinabeerenz7323
    @corlinabeerenz7323 2 года назад

    Haha I love how happy you guys are to find isopods. Also that aquatic garter snake is sooo beautiful!

  • @canadianhunter94hexagonbus56
    @canadianhunter94hexagonbus56 2 года назад +1

    Amazing to see these animals that far south I grew up in British Columbia Canada and loved catching and releasing these species back into the wild this video brought back some amazing memories thank you hope all you internet people have a great day ps we also had painted turtles breed and lay eggs like a block away from the house I grew up in every year in the spring it was always super cool to see them digging into the sandy hillside too 😁😁 I used to help them cross the road any time I would see one

  • @herbivorehomestead5717
    @herbivorehomestead5717 2 года назад +5

    I super loved this video!
    The salamander had little baby dead pool arms and legs 🤣
    And it was friggin' adorable when Emily pulled that pill bug out of her pocket to show Ed! 😍
    Lastly, when the lizard bit Emily I was just expecting the pop up text to say something like "snack" lol 😝

  • @deusares4837
    @deusares4837 2 года назад +13

    I wish y'all could come to Utah, it's a lovely place and it has some great herping spots, I even accidentally caught a Painted turtle when fishing, I made sure he was ok. But as of now it's probably not the greatest time to herp, the tail end of spring is the best time, cuz it's just warming up and it's not freezing cold or scorching hot. Yay for living in a desert

    • @amandastakeonit7402
      @amandastakeonit7402 2 года назад

      Clint of Clint's Reptiles herps Utah all the time, he lives there. They should just go hang with Clint. I live just above you, LOVE living in the desert!

  • @jaedaschuyler8632
    @jaedaschuyler8632 Год назад +1

    IM CRYING IM SO HAPPY I live on the west coast of Canada and I go out herping all the time and I've caught DOZENS of Northern Alligator Lizards and I knew what it was immediately after you caught it!!! I'm so so happy to see an animal I see in my own wilds in your video, I want to one day become an educator on the natural species in British Columbia. Thank you for inspiring me so much with your videos

  • @ileeeenify
    @ileeeenify 8 месяцев назад

    I grew up in rural central CA and there were so many great critters. We regularly got tarantulas, gopher snakes, and toads all the time. There was a toad that took up residence under my dog’s water bowl. Hey, we even had roadrunners and coyotes too!

  • @zethcrownett2946
    @zethcrownett2946 2 года назад +18

    That was cool.
    I've actually seen a rattle snake in the wild on a hike during the summer, it was just sunbathing on the hiking trail and moved off when we stopped to let it pass so it wouldn't feel threatened. I recommend checking out Crystal cove next time you're in Southern California during the summer. Even if you don't find reptiles, there's tide pools there with little ecosystems.

    • @jadadavis002
      @jadadavis002 2 года назад +1

      this reminded me of a time i went hiking in central california in the summer with my sister and on our way home it started to rain so we got out and ran around. my sister ran far ahead of me and jumped off a log about a foot away from a rattlesnake curled under a tree. her scream was so loud my dad heard her from the car and came running. well she’s not always too bright so she walked up to it to figure out where the sound was coming from. our dad got there and she was in striking distance of the snake just staring. she never got bit but man did we give her crap on the way home for not leaving it alone once she saw it. the poor thing just wanted to be left alone and not get wet lol

  • @XSereneXShadowX
    @XSereneXShadowX 2 года назад +7

    When you said you were coming to CA I knew you would go to my neck of the woods! Hope central Cali was kind to you 😀

  • @meshelllabaun6610
    @meshelllabaun6610 2 года назад

    I grew up in So. Cal. and we always had scrap wood in the backyard. Reminded me of my childhood looking for critters under wood.

  • @taekooksupporter6772
    @taekooksupporter6772 2 года назад

    I loved the millipede, I have never seen one before so thank you!

  • @nickstrobelight7804
    @nickstrobelight7804 2 года назад +4

    I absolutely love garter snakes. I work as a groundskeeper at an interpretive center and when I mowed, I would make sure to keep an eye out for snakes/frogs/etc. and have been able to show plenty of kiddos garter snakes through the large windows 😭

  • @ladyrainwing6981
    @ladyrainwing6981 2 года назад +8

    Pickle rick- 9:25
    Edit: I love how when Emily was explaining the alligator lizard's skin flap she just let it bite her

  • @CricketsMa
    @CricketsMa 2 года назад

    Cool herping! I keep a good sized brush pile to give herps and small birds a quick escape from predators. It also offers shade in the heat of summer.

  • @aliciagates1
    @aliciagates1 2 года назад

    Omg the tongue color of that cute little garter snake was so adorable! Such a vibrant color! :)

  • @CandiceLemonSharks
    @CandiceLemonSharks 2 года назад +16

    I vote "coastal red banded millipede" for the common name of the truly adorable millipedes l
    (Here early because Patreon!)

    • @elianas1121
      @elianas1121 2 года назад +4

      Yeah, I was utterly shocked to learn that there are species that don’t have common names. Like, you’re telling me nobody took the chance to name it after themself?

  • @femghostface
    @femghostface 2 года назад +9

    That salamander is the cutest thing I’ve ever seeeen! His little baby walks

  • @sunnywen4441
    @sunnywen4441 2 года назад

    If you're ever back in CA during the spring, or early fall, Wind Wolves Preserve near Bakersfield is a beautiful place to go herping. We were looking specifically for pacific rattlesnakes for a bio project, caught, weighted and marked tons over our two day trip. Also a bunch of bullfrogs, tree frogs, tarantulas and other night critters for night herping

  • @TheSaltySiren
    @TheSaltySiren 2 года назад

    How awesome that you were in my area!! I had no idea that we have salamanders here! I had the most beautiful alligator lizard on my wall, next to my front door (outside the house. Lol!). It was gorgeous!!

  • @grrt722
    @grrt722 2 года назад +3

    I love finding aquatic garters! There's a waterfall that I hike to where the garters are always swimming around the upper pool and can be easily found wrapped around some reeds. Also fun to catch crawdads in the streams.

  • @lookin4avampire
    @lookin4avampire 2 года назад +12

    As a Northern Californian who doesn’t like bugs this video was scarily eye opening lol I was unaware of the giant tarantulas and millipedes that inhabit my area😅😅

  • @spongiformencephalitis
    @spongiformencephalitis 2 года назад

    i love herping vids, but especially when you find amphibians and invertebrates! this was great!

  • @shemicasheppard8408
    @shemicasheppard8408 2 года назад

    the garter was so cute.i liked the orange stripe on his back and the yellow-ish belly.

  • @sophiaprentiss3780
    @sophiaprentiss3780 2 года назад +32

    Can we take a moment to appreciate how kind Emily and Ed is even though all the reptiles are so adorable they still let them go 😇

  • @blondie2829
    @blondie2829 2 года назад +5

    Herping- the reptile version of alien abduction, lol. Love it, love your videos. I have never been a fan of nope noodles, but having watched you guys for so long the garter snakes I find in my yard don’t freak me out quite so much. So thank you for that, lol.

  • @kristofferbenoit
    @kristofferbenoit 2 года назад

    After every day at shcool I love watching you guys I watch you every time after gymnastics on Tuesday's

  • @melissasyard1212
    @melissasyard1212 2 года назад

    I wish my husband liked bugs as much as i do! I loved watching you guys get so excited to show each other!

  • @roonie9185
    @roonie9185 2 года назад +9

    That salamander reminds me of a drawing of a dog from a young kid.

    • @apss5736
      @apss5736 2 года назад +1

      Sounds like a Harry potter beast that hagrid would keep as a pet

  • @jaciserigala1074
    @jaciserigala1074 2 года назад +4

    i think it's adorable how the alligator lizard opened their mouth, wanting to bite and emily offered her finger as tribute

  • @sheilawilliams7198
    @sheilawilliams7198 Год назад

    Me and my grandma love your videos and I love how your snakes are so cute and I love how they like strike it’s so cute😊❤

  • @amandastakeonit7402
    @amandastakeonit7402 2 года назад

    I love the garter as well, he looked very heathy too! The feisty lizard was adorable! Maybe he blows himself up when really threatened, although he didn't do that with you. The salamanders were cute and they seem to thrive there.

  • @weeklyrandom8179
    @weeklyrandom8179 2 года назад +22

    Emily: let’s alligator lizard bite her
    Also Emily: Keeps talking calmly with no worry 😂

  • @jacobandrew2701
    @jacobandrew2701 2 года назад +5

    You know what I love? That you guys take time to find out information you don't know before sharing a video. You don't assume you know everything and hold your hands up when you don't.
    Massive respect!

  • @lizardman6515
    @lizardman6515 2 года назад

    I am so jealous of Batrachoseps and the alligator lizard! So cool!

  • @decameter
    @decameter 2 года назад

    Garter! Back at my old house in southern wisconsin, I used to have a garter pit behind my house in a little nature preserve area. So we used to get the midwest species just everywhere in the yard every spring xD