I am the director of this film produced in 2015. To bounce back on some of the comments: it took us 3 years to identify the best windows of opportunity to meet these oarfish offshore, in particular at night. There is an interesting sophism which consists in avoiding plural mode when describing legendary creatures: the yeti, the loch Ness monster, etc... oarfish are real, and we met several of them during our dives. Indeed, we dived in an unusual environment, at night, above 2000 meter deep water, during planktonic blooms which attracted the animals that fed on copepods an krill. These dives are risky and required skills and safety protocols. Daylight behavior has been filmed at dawn, just before the animals returned to the abyss. The film exists in 4K, 4K HDR, so this format option will gradually appear on this link.
Everyone is talking about how stunning this documentary is. How about we give a shout out to the fearless divers who braved the abyss to bless us with such beauty.
@@4FYTfa8EjYHNXjChe8xs7xmC5pNEtz I feel that. 1st Mate: “word” Diver: “just going down the chain, gonna see if the chain snake hears me” 1st Mate: 😳 Diver: “gotta see where his nose is, I mo cut his head off to scan it. He sleeps where the sun don’t shine, let’s wake him up (kicks chain). 1st Mate: can I get your signature right here on this line?
Of hundreds of natural-science documentary videos I've seen, this may be the most beautifully produced. The quality of photography, sound engineering, thoughtful scripting and post-production -- all simply remarkable. I also very much appreciated the low-key approach taken, including the excellent, clear narration.
I really have to tip my hat to the divers. I absolutely love swimming and it has been a long standing dream of mine to dive and observe sea life for myself one day but upon doing further research as to what scary ass (ironically mostly harmless) creatures lurk below mother earth’s beautiful blue depths as well as the conditions of the ocean the further down you go. I can’t free dive further than 20ft due to how sensitive my ears are to pressure. Not to mention how *cold* deep water is… I really do not know how they do it… especially with all of the scary unknown noises you hear reverberating throughout the current and how suffocating the darkness is…
This is one of the coolest oceanic documentaries I've ever seen, and I've seen a lot of them!! What beautiful majestic splendor, the oarfish's pulsating fins are breathtaking. Love the editing, sound design, and especially the music!!
Me on the Otherhand thought To Myself "Before Seeing This Comment" that they actually dragged it out. This could have been way more to the point and even shorter. I actually had to look at the title again to make sure the video hadn't switched because at times I forgot what I watching.
Very well put together fish. The documentary was also well put together. With the soothing voice telling you about the oarfish and the music, it keeps you in tune with the story. The visual aspects of the show is one of hypnosis with the entrancing of the oar fish . Thank you on whoever made this show.❤
a beautiful documentary that reaffirms my belief that the ocean is terrifying 👍 I don’t know how those divers weren’t scared out of their minds, but I appreciate their hard work which yielded such valuable information.
Its a wonder how they make it back to the surface with kahones that big😎. I am a fairly seasoned diver. Over 300 hrs under water and I say no thanks to diving into the zone beyond where light dares not shine. Night diving is cool but very creepy, only to be trumped by wreck dives in my book. These guys are the truth. Commercial divers are like rockstars to me.
This has been a great watch. I've also been fascinated by oarfish when I first read it on an encyclopaedia. It's great to know new information about it. Kudos to the team who put this together and also the brave divers we have.
I have always been very interested in these creatures and this documentary filled some of that curiosity. I saw one of these during a dive i made in the southern waters of Okinawa, it saw it for about 3 minutes before it dove way to deep for me to follow.
Oh my gosh, sea serpents are real! I mean, not exactly like sailors thought, but oh my goodness! It's still 100% mythical looking. What a fantastically beautiful creature!
I’m 40 now. But I remember when I was in elementary school they had an oarfish preserved in some liquid at a museum. It was 20 or 30 feet long and I asked my teacher what it was. And she said… “I have no idea”. That was that and here I am all these later and they still don’t know that much about this beast. Amazinggggg
The first time I saw a video of an Oarfish was on a freediving channel a couple of years ago, It was filmed in the evening at sunset and again at sunrise. It was Huge and the photographers who were there to film the freedive took full advantage of its appearance and produced some amazing photography. This particular Oarfish was not at all nervous and was happy to let the divers approach very close.
Wow I didn't (consciously) catch that, thank you! However Nekko Guy is right -your minute mark is right after the image is over, and it really starts at 27:05 -ish.
@@audreymuzingo933 I chose that time as the clearest, most obvious moment of the effect I described, as some of the imagery was not as distinctive to the casual observer.
@@louisanow Hmmm, now I swear I'm not trying to be troll-y, but when I click your 27:13 it goes to right after the end of the fish's tail has completely exited the top of the screen, and the diver's wrist is there, where he's still reaching for the tail. Would you humor me and re-check if you meant to type that number? I've just never seen it not match for everyone, and it theoretically shouldn't matter what device or internet you're on. Reason it bugs me: I put minute markers in comments pretty often (or rely on other people's) and it would be important to know if it's not reliable anymore.
Very beautiful documentary and thanks for these divers who put forth the effort to get some understanding about this creature. AND THANK GOD FOR THE CAMERAMAN WHO FILMED THE UNDERWATER SCENES!!!!! During the whole documentary I was thinking about the person who was actually recording all of this. Beautiful and very talented to be able to film underwater and catch these beautiful scenes. I think the camera man needs more props 🎉
Absolutely fascinating. What a beautiful and strange animal. Finally, a RUclips video with REAL science without click bait. Thank you Go Wild. I think I'll subscribe.
You can tell the "serious" vids with REAL science because the BGM is fruity new age music instead of techno or rock and the announcer isn't an ADHD 19 year old yammering about how AWESOME and EPIC everything is
This is the most authentic documentary I’ve ever seen about ocean. I really appreciate divers that do this kind of things for us to know more about what’s inside the depth of the ocean. 👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍 Thank you for all your works.❤️
I snorkeled with two back in May of 2023 and made an eleven-minute video called Oarfish Rescue, which shows them swimming vertically and horizontally, and when touched, you can see finger prints left behind on the skin, which shows their skin has sensitivity to contact. I enjoyed your video very much. I learned a lot. It is the most comprehensive presentation on the Oarfish that I have found.Thank you!
Amazing docu, for me diving into the deep is too scary. I was diving off the Continental shelf on the Barrier Reef and i found it unsettling encountering a lot of very large fish coming up from the deep.
What a wonderful doku.Thanks to the brave divers,for showing us these extraordinary pictures of such beautyful creatures living in the deepsea.Oarfish are incredibly beautyful,they are giving me goosebumbs with their mystic look.Not to forget to mention the beautyful mystic music of the duduk.
I'm so glad there's insane people like this willing to explore the ocean cuz without them we would know far less than we do about the world in the sea.
DAVID & ROBERTO. WOW. WHAT AN AMAZING FILM. SO FANTASTIC. WITH THE PHOTOS AND MUSIC AND WORK COMPLETED. SERIOUSLY TO BE COMMENDED....THANK YOU TO YOU AND ALL THOSE MDS AND SCIENTISTS INVOLVED. BRAVO
Surely the fact that the vibration of cleaning Bouy attracted the Oar Fish means that it operates by sensing vibration in the water rather than smell? Just because it can smell doesn't mean it relies on it, like us!
23:25 My favourite part. It looks like a scene straight out of a movie. Surrounded by a bunch of beautiful ribbons of salps and then the star of the show appears
@@SKYCHICK__ an interesting point I never considered. I often wonder how 'preys' can manage this high level of anxiety, being on the menu of so many predators and marvel at seeing fish swimming so leisurely among sharks. No emotion and probably no imagination would be nature's kindness to them. I wish there was also no feeling of pain.
Fantastic video. One of the mysteries of ocean life. Like dinosaur bones that gave us Myths about dragons, the beached and dead oarfish gave us myths of sea serpents.
You forgot the Philippines, one was found in there too as recent as 2017. In the past centuries, the locals traditionally use the beaching deaths of this fish as a sign of an impending geological problem (such as an earthquake).
my goodness, what a beautiful animal. for some reason, i feel it and wish i could see one. the “whiskers” are absolutely lovely - like feathers. it certainly seems a calm fish. 🐟🐟🐟🐟🐟🐟🐟 46:54 i am completely overawed at the beauty and this life in the ocean as i haven’t been before. part of it is the calmness and slowness and another the perfect music composed for it. this music, the water sounds, and just videography of the ocean life moving slowly would be wonderful for people like me who have floating :) anxiety. thank you so much for this documentary, it’s so interesting. the oar fish is just an amazing creature. 🐟🐟🐟🐟🐟🐟🐟🐟🐟
You're comment is bit scary... Has it come this far? For me, reality is always more interesting because it's real. And also, nature has more to offer than anybody can imagine. I still learn things about nature that baffle me. Edit: Yeah I'm overthinking this comment to much... don't take me to seriously.
@@PieterPatrick I was imagining what words would come to mind if I found myself at 125ft down surrounded by salps. I couldn't think of a more apt word for the sensation. There is probably a better one. I'm obsessed with nature. I currently have 4 trail cams watching a feed station for pine martins on my property. There are allegedly on 4,000 throughout the UK where I live. I can also lose an hour watching a spider on a web or wasps building a nest. Surreal perhaps isn't the best word for the sensation but it sure would make the hairs on the back of my neck stand up.
As magnificent as it is, this fish doesn't appear to have any sense of awareness whatsoever. You could swim right on by it and it probably won't even notice.
I think all creatures are special, but the Oar fish is not the monster people thought. They are harmless. They are beautiful like most fish, but people get scared because they beach themselves, before a Tsunami. There's been 60 ft. Plus in the past. I think that they are beautiful in their way. Not a people predator! Love my Ocean! The newer, newer seen before species are so very interesting to me. Keep exploring, we may find ourselves, and others. ❤ the awesome new discoveries they have found. God Bless the Ocean and its contents! ✌❤😁🤟
I hate diving at the best of times. But going down in that darkness is just scary beyond imagination. We don't even know what's down there! What if a giant squid found you?
it's so small and seems totally harmless, makes me wonder how and why it inspired the sea serpent myth complete with imagery of ship attacks. these things have obviously never attacked any ships.
Oarfish weren't the only things that inspired tails of sea serpents. Rotting carcasses of whales, and basking sharks - where most of the flesh has decomposed, but the vertebrae remain - were also a very big source of the legends.
Certain deepsea squid look similar to the ribbonfish and oarfish. They position their tentacles like the crest and fins of the fish. I always thought either animal are mimicking the other animal.
Wow look at all those Valella’s aka “by the sea sailors” floating on the water by that meteorological buoy! Those things are so cool! But That sound of heavy steel and iron creaking in deep water freaks me out ! It’s such a creepy ominous sound!
@@PeachysMom either that or thalassophobia. I have an inordinate fear of man made objects under water. I’m not too crazy about large predatory fish under water either.. or whales… or jellyfish…..just basically any creature that can sting, bite, poison, strangle, or drag me to the cold dark depths to my death. Yeah basically just about everything in the deep ocean that I can’t see.
Imagine falling off a boat in the middle of the night, then discovering that the only place keeping you safe and out of the water, is a bouy. With nothing but water in sight. That's just as frightening, as that movie called "Buried". Next comes the seagulls, to peck your eyes out.
Watch in 4K ruclips.net/video/q1gIs-2WrdY/видео.html
Awesome, but the narrator is in a different language and it's not dubbed. :(
I am the director of this film produced in 2015. To bounce back on some of the comments: it took us 3 years to identify the best windows of opportunity to meet these oarfish offshore, in particular at night. There is an interesting sophism which consists in avoiding plural mode when describing legendary creatures: the yeti, the loch Ness monster, etc... oarfish are real, and we met several of them during our dives. Indeed, we dived in an unusual environment, at night, above 2000 meter deep water, during planktonic blooms which attracted the animals that fed on copepods an krill. These dives are risky and required skills and safety protocols. Daylight behavior has been filmed at dawn, just before the animals returned to the abyss. The film exists in 4K, 4K HDR, so this format option will gradually appear on this link.
Merci pour ce documentaire légendaire.
Thank you for your work, I like to fall asleep to documentaries when I can't sleep after being up for 20 hours.
Thanks for the remarkable camera work 🎥
I’m a photographer/videographer myself 📸
Did any earthquakes actually happen?
What a great achievement!!🎉
Everyone is talking about how stunning this documentary is.
How about we give a shout out to the fearless divers who braved the abyss to bless us with such beauty.
No. lol jk
Hear, HEAR!
And also, the brave veterinarian who fought the many hungry technicians circling around the oarfish head in the MRI unit.
I hate divers. To hell with the divers. Don't make me play the clown, Homey. I am this close to going off. How close? This close.
@@4FYTfa8EjYHNXjChe8xs7xmC5pNEtz I feel that.
1st Mate: “word”
Diver: “just going down the chain, gonna see if the chain snake hears me”
1st Mate: 😳
Diver: “gotta see where his nose is, I mo cut his head off to scan it. He sleeps where the sun don’t shine, let’s wake him up (kicks chain).
1st Mate: can I get your signature right here on this line?
Nah they're privileged enough getting to see all this crazy beauty in-person; they don't need shout outs.
Whom ever is the narrator, keep him. He has a wonderful voice that soothes and doesn’t overshadow the actual documentary.
Of hundreds of natural-science documentary videos I've seen, this may be the most beautifully produced. The quality of photography, sound engineering, thoughtful scripting and post-production -- all simply remarkable. I also very much appreciated the low-key approach taken, including the excellent, clear narration.
Voiceovers well balanced.
Wonderful documentary! Kudos to the divers for their bravery and tenacity in uncovering the mysteries of the oar fish.
I really have to tip my hat to the divers. I absolutely love swimming and it has been a long standing dream of mine to dive and observe sea life for myself one day but upon doing further research as to what scary ass (ironically mostly harmless) creatures lurk below mother earth’s beautiful blue depths as well as the conditions of the ocean the further down you go. I can’t free dive further than 20ft due to how sensitive my ears are to pressure. Not to mention how *cold* deep water is… I really do not know how they do it… especially with all of the scary unknown noises you hear reverberating throughout the current and how suffocating the darkness is…
😆
This is one of the coolest oceanic documentaries I've ever seen, and I've seen a lot of them!! What beautiful majestic splendor, the oarfish's pulsating fins are breathtaking. Love the editing, sound design, and especially the music!!
There's another good one about the ceolcanth
Yeah, well, that's just, like, your opinion, man.
It's a pity that the source of the Sufi music is not credited.
@@williamoverton7775 Coleocanth? Give us a reference? I will look for it. Thanks.
Me on the Otherhand thought To Myself "Before Seeing This Comment" that they actually dragged it out. This could have been way more to the point and even shorter. I actually had to look at the title again to make sure the video hadn't switched because at times I forgot what I watching.
Very well put together fish. The documentary was also well put together. With the soothing voice telling you about the oarfish and the music, it keeps you in tune with the story. The visual aspects of the show is one of hypnosis with the entrancing of the oar fish . Thank you on whoever made this show.❤
Facts!
And the cool , Jazzy not too loud or obtrusive music (a very hard balance to achieve!) It has the feel of a BBC Horizon.,,
I am experiencing the same extreme relaxation.
What a Magnificent fish! Beautiful as it shimmers in the light. Amazing that it swims vertically. Like a beautiful, silver ribbon ❤️
a beautiful documentary that reaffirms my belief that the ocean is terrifying 👍 I don’t know how those divers weren’t scared out of their minds, but I appreciate their hard work which yielded such valuable information.
These divers are extremely brave to dive in the open water like they do and they have gotten some amazing footage of these beautiful animals.
Its a wonder how they make it back to the surface with kahones that big😎. I am a fairly seasoned diver. Over 300 hrs under water and I say no thanks to diving into the zone beyond where light dares not shine. Night diving is cool but very creepy, only to be trumped by wreck dives in my book. These guys are the truth. Commercial divers are like rockstars to me.
Scary to watch… I get anxiety by watching
@@PassengerFifty7 first guy fuckin diving alone is stupid af
@@PassengerFifty7 I'd have to agree with you.. idk how they get those big ol balls into those wetsuits..lol.. very brave fellas indeed..
No amount of money they could pay me yo do that terrified of the ocean and everything that's in it
This has been a great watch. I've also been fascinated by oarfish when I first read it on an encyclopaedia. It's great to know new information about it. Kudos to the team who put this together and also the brave divers we have.
Last episode of River Monsters was first time I saw them, happy to see a full length feature.
I have always been very interested in these creatures and this documentary filled some of that curiosity. I saw one of these during a dive i made in the southern waters of Okinawa, it saw it for about 3 minutes before it dove way to deep for me to follow.
Windwalker?
Holy Moley what a stunningly beautiful fish. Thank you to all that made this video and for sharing it with us. That fish is spellbindingly gorgeous!
Oh my gosh, sea serpents are real! I mean, not exactly like sailors thought, but oh my goodness! It's still 100% mythical looking. What a fantastically beautiful creature!
I’m 40 now. But I remember when I was in elementary school they had an oarfish preserved in some liquid at a museum. It was 20 or 30 feet long and I asked my teacher what it was. And she said… “I have no idea”.
That was that and here I am all these later and they still don’t know that much about this beast. Amazinggggg
The first time I saw a video of an Oarfish was on a freediving channel a couple of years ago, It was filmed in the evening at sunset and again at sunrise. It was Huge and the photographers who were there to film the freedive took full advantage of its appearance and produced some amazing photography. This particular Oarfish was not at all nervous and was happy to let the divers approach very close.
This was awesome! The Oarfish is my fave fish and I've been fascinated about them ever since I first saw one in the game, The Ocean Hunter.
Same! My favorite fish too! Plus I don't eat fish so much love to this beautiful creature.
It's amazing and impressive that the divers did not immediately sink to the bottom because of their giant balls of steel.
What a run of the mill copycat comment. haha
@@OregonCrow Whose comment did I copy?
You, sir, have a beautiful mind :)
Just means their lungs and arms are even bigger and they are strong enough to swim against their massive balls
@@FuzzyGlowCar the millions of other people who have commented to exact same joke
27:13 the oarfish's silver skin is so reflective, the reflected image of the diver's gloved hand is incredibly clear.😮
found it at 27:07
Wow I didn't (consciously) catch that, thank you! However Nekko Guy is right -your minute mark is right after the image is over, and it really starts at 27:05 -ish.
@@audreymuzingo933 I chose that time as the clearest, most obvious moment of the effect I described, as some of the imagery was not as distinctive to the casual observer.
@@louisanow Hmmm, now I swear I'm not trying to be troll-y, but when I click your 27:13 it goes to right after the end of the fish's tail has completely exited the top of the screen, and the diver's wrist is there, where he's still reaching for the tail. Would you humor me and re-check if you meant to type that number? I've just never seen it not match for everyone, and it theoretically shouldn't matter what device or internet you're on. Reason it bugs me: I put minute markers in comments pretty often (or rely on other people's) and it would be important to know if it's not reliable anymore.
Very beautiful documentary and thanks for these divers who put forth the effort to get some understanding about this creature. AND THANK GOD FOR THE CAMERAMAN WHO FILMED THE UNDERWATER SCENES!!!!!
During the whole documentary I was thinking about the person who was actually recording all of this. Beautiful and very talented to be able to film underwater and catch these beautiful scenes. I think the camera man needs more props 🎉
SO MUCH Oarfish footage! So pleasing.
Absolutely fascinating. What a beautiful and strange animal. Finally, a RUclips video with REAL science without click bait. Thank you Go Wild. I think I'll subscribe.
You can tell the "serious" vids with REAL science because the BGM is fruity new age music instead of techno or rock and the announcer isn't an ADHD 19 year old yammering about how AWESOME and EPIC everything is
Jeremy Wade went looking for this fish years ago, in one of the episodes of the final seasons of River Monsters.
This is the most authentic documentary I’ve ever seen about ocean.
I really appreciate divers that do this kind of things for us to know more about what’s inside the depth of the ocean. 👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
Thank you for all your works.❤️
=d
Programs such as this are why I stopped watching tv years ago. Thanks for making this documentary and putting it on yt!.
I snorkeled with two back in May of 2023 and made an eleven-minute video called Oarfish Rescue, which shows them swimming vertically and horizontally, and when touched, you can see finger prints left behind on the skin, which shows their skin has sensitivity to contact.
I enjoyed your video very much. I learned a lot. It is the most comprehensive presentation on the Oarfish that I have found.Thank you!
Amazing docu, for me diving into the deep is too scary. I was diving off the Continental shelf on the Barrier Reef and i found it unsettling encountering a lot of very large fish coming up from the deep.
No picture in a book could ever do this animal justice.
Yeah like you've EVER read a book! XD
Incredible documentary! Such a unique fish, im happy to learn more about it
The music for this show was absolutely perfect. It really was like a second narrator. Bravo!
What a wonderful doku.Thanks to the brave divers,for showing us these extraordinary pictures of such beautyful creatures living in the deepsea.Oarfish are incredibly beautyful,they are giving me goosebumbs with their mystic look.Not to forget to mention the beautyful mystic music of the duduk.
Where in the world is Carmen Solano Lopez? :)
I'm so glad there's insane people like this willing to explore the ocean cuz without them we would know far less than we do about the world in the sea.
A living Giant Oarfish is absolutely gorgeous.
Jeremy Wade in his TV series "River Monsters" did a show on sea serpents, and it was this team of divers that helped him to swim with 2 Oar Fish
DAVID & ROBERTO. WOW. WHAT AN AMAZING FILM. SO FANTASTIC. WITH THE PHOTOS AND MUSIC AND WORK COMPLETED. SERIOUSLY TO BE COMMENDED....THANK YOU TO YOU AND ALL THOSE MDS AND SCIENTISTS INVOLVED. BRAVO
Surely the fact that the vibration of cleaning Bouy attracted the Oar Fish means that it operates by sensing vibration in the water rather than smell? Just because it can smell doesn't mean it relies on it, like us!
“Sensing vibration in the water” you mean sound? Fish can hear, this we know
Lateral lines
Seeing an Oarfish in the Wild must be like seeing a unicorn
An enchanting and beautiful documentary. Well done!
23:25 My favourite part. It looks like a scene straight out of a movie. Surrounded by a bunch of beautiful ribbons of salps and then the star of the show appears
During those nerve wracking night dives I just had to wonder if there's ever a moment when the smaller fish aren't full of absolute fear.
Fear is an emotion. Fish don't experience emotions. Just instinct of fight or flight.
@@SKYCHICK__ an interesting point I never considered. I often wonder how 'preys' can manage this high level of anxiety, being on the menu of so many predators and marvel at seeing fish swimming so leisurely among sharks. No emotion and probably no imagination would be nature's kindness to them. I wish there was also no feeling of pain.
Fantastic video. One of the mysteries of ocean life. Like dinosaur bones that gave us
Myths about dragons, the beached and dead oarfish gave us myths of sea serpents.
Wow, man. They're huge but their camouflage is so good they practically disappear
What a wonderful documentary. Thank you for posting.
HUGE props to the cameramen, absolutely insane
I was riveted with this magnificent fish -then the UV !! Spellbinding music too !!
Beautiful show, thank you to everyone who put this together.
Amazing documentary, better than a movie!
Incredible documentary! And amazing soundtrack too!
Absolutely beautiful and astonishing documentary.
You forgot the Philippines, one was found in there too as recent as 2017. In the past centuries, the locals traditionally use the beaching deaths of this fish as a sign of an impending geological problem (such as an earthquake).
It's fascinating and also kinda spooky how you can barely see the fish sometimes depending on the light and the angles of looking at it.
Incredible documentary thank you for sharing
Thank you for this documentary. I've been interested since I heard they surface sometimes right before an earthquake.
FASCINATING & MESMERISING… Thank you very much for sharing & showcasing this extraordinary creature.
my goodness, what a beautiful animal. for some reason, i feel it and wish i could see one. the “whiskers” are absolutely lovely - like feathers. it certainly seems a calm fish. 🐟🐟🐟🐟🐟🐟🐟
46:54 i am completely overawed at the beauty and this life in the ocean as i haven’t been before. part of it is the calmness and slowness and another the perfect music composed for it.
this music, the water sounds, and just videography of the ocean life moving slowly would be wonderful for people like me who have floating :) anxiety. thank you so much for this documentary, it’s so interesting. the oar fish is just an amazing creature. 🐟🐟🐟🐟🐟🐟🐟🐟🐟
I always wanted to be a marine biologist growing up. That curiosity led to a deep and crippling fear of open water.
Me too, one of the Best ocean docu’s ever. Kudos
When that oarfish started T-posing, I felt that
Watching the diver swimming amongst the profusion of salps was surreal and far more interesting than any computer generated imagery.
You're comment is bit scary... Has it come this far?
For me, reality is always more interesting because it's real.
And also, nature has more to offer than anybody can imagine.
I still learn things about nature that baffle me.
Edit: Yeah I'm overthinking this comment to much... don't take me to seriously.
@@PieterPatrick I was imagining what words would come to mind if I found myself at 125ft down surrounded by salps. I couldn't think of a more apt word for the sensation. There is probably a better one. I'm obsessed with nature. I currently have 4 trail cams watching a feed station for pine martins on my property. There are allegedly on 4,000 throughout the UK where I live. I can also lose an hour watching a spider on a web or wasps building a nest. Surreal perhaps isn't the best word for the sensation but it sure would make the hairs on the back of my neck stand up.
@@longlowdog Watching for hours how a male spider tries to convince a female that he isn't food. 🙂
Amazing and informative. Hats off to those divers, was tricky for me to watch with thalassophobia so FairPlay xxx
After watching many of these programs , I can finally say IMPREssive and Thanks EH
As magnificent as it is, this fish doesn't appear to have any sense of awareness whatsoever. You could swim right on by it and it probably won't even notice.
Awesome. Truly a labor of love to find what they seek.
Imagine being 15 feet long, 5 inches tall, and thin as a slice of bread, as a human.
Fun to imagine!
Absolutely mesmerizing, merci beaucoup!
I've never actually seen a sea serpent before. This is my first time. Watching all the way from Vanuatu
Wow now, that's in the middle of nowhere.
Stunning stuff.👍👍👍
Incredibly well put together. The oar fish is majestic for sure
I think all creatures are special, but the Oar fish is not the monster people thought. They are harmless. They are beautiful like most fish, but people get scared because they beach themselves, before a Tsunami.
There's been 60 ft. Plus in the past. I think that they are beautiful in their way. Not a people predator! Love my Ocean! The newer, newer seen before species are so very interesting to me. Keep exploring, we may find ourselves, and others. ❤ the awesome new discoveries they have found. God Bless the Ocean and its contents!
✌❤😁🤟
Amazing footage of this stunningly beautiful fish!!
Imagine swimming and this brushes your leg triggering your inner Olympian swimming ability back to shore.. LoL
A wonderful video…the oarfish is so beautiful…I was astonished that the scientist’s fingers reflected in the fish’s scales, just like a mirror.
That was incredible, I love the oarfish
Freaky scary!! Take my hat off to you divers!! 👍🏾
Chills, amazing documentary thank you!
That was a beautiful well crafted video. Nice one guys
I hate diving at the best of times. But going down in that darkness is just scary beyond imagination. We don't even know what's down there! What if a giant squid found you?
New “Subbie” here😀❤️
Thank you for this wonderfully knowledgeable and informative RUclips video.❤️❤️❤️
You know why he was curious about the buoy.. He’s like - “another being just as long as me.”
it's so small and seems totally harmless, makes me wonder how and why it inspired the sea serpent myth complete with imagery of ship attacks. these things have obviously never attacked any ships.
Oarfish weren't the only things that inspired tails of sea serpents.
Rotting carcasses of whales, and basking sharks - where most of the flesh has decomposed, but the vertebrae remain - were also a very big source of the legends.
@@Incomudro1963 and squids too? Isn't it true that squids grow without end until something kills them?
Certain deepsea squid look similar to the ribbonfish and oarfish. They position their tentacles like the crest and fins of the fish. I always thought either animal are mimicking the other animal.
Cool doco. We have them of Australia. Called basically a FAD. Fish attracting Device. They’re quite far of the coast but attract larger pelagics.
Very good doc.i watched the entire thing and it was well done.Thank u.😁
A few years ago the LSU marine biology class spotted and swam with one off the coast of Louisiana in the gulf
Superb documentary! A fan and an admirer from Pakistan.
Well made video. Mind boggling work by fearless researchers. Thanks for revealing such rare sights under such rare conditions.
Captivating production.
Well done.
Such an odd fish...it's so delicate...odd that it's so massive and yet so fragile. I'd figure it would quickly get gobbled up by predation.
Wow… what a great documentary. What a great fish. Thank you for this.
Wow look at all those Valella’s aka “by the sea sailors” floating on the water by that meteorological buoy! Those things are so cool! But That sound of heavy steel and iron creaking in deep water freaks me out ! It’s such a creepy ominous sound!
That’s called “Submechanophobia”
@@PeachysMom either that or thalassophobia. I have an inordinate fear of man made objects under water. I’m not too crazy about large predatory fish under water either.. or whales… or jellyfish…..just basically any creature that can sting, bite, poison, strangle, or drag me to the cold dark depths to my death. Yeah basically just about everything in the deep ocean that I can’t see.
Nature at its finest, beautiful fish 🐠
the footage is just......Amazing!! what an art!
Fascinating video! Thank you!
What a amazingly beautiful and eye opening doc! Wow
Fantastic docu.
Thank you! Cheers!
So very interesting ! Thank you!
Imagine falling off a boat in the middle of the night, then discovering that the only place keeping you safe and out of the water, is a bouy.
With nothing but water in sight.
That's just as frightening, as that movie called "Buried".
Next comes the seagulls, to peck your eyes out.
This was an amazing video!
Diving in the pitch black like this is so crazy
I stood upon the sand of the sea, and i saw a serpent rise up out of the sea, having seven heads. And upon his heads the names of blasphemy.