The Problem Dogs Solved That We Couldn't

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  • @cidercreekranch
    @cidercreekranch Год назад +1695

    My spouse and I raised service dogs. The second dog we raised did not make it as a guide for a blind person and was transferred to the dog for diabetic organization. There he learned how to detect that a diabetic's blood sugar level was low and to alert the person and to not stop alerting until the person took action.

    • @virutech32
      @virutech32 Год назад +92

      wow did not know blood sugar dogs were a thing. why would i ever want to use the blood test. Just give me some beagles😁

    • @gioflores7989
      @gioflores7989 Год назад +14

      Had a coworker who had a service dog and said it was for when his blood sugars are low. Since he has type 3 with the machine attached to him to give him his insulin

    • @wickedcabinboy
      @wickedcabinboy Год назад +38

      @@gioflores7989 - Sorry, there's no such thing as type three diabetes. What you've described is type 1 or insulin dependent diabetes - the pancreas is producing either insufficient insulin or none at all and insulin must be given to supplement the deficiency. This generally begins early in life, either in childhood or adolescence. Type 2 diabetes or insulin resistant diabetes is a condition wherein the pancreas is producing adequate amounts of insulin but the cells don't absorb insulin well. Medication - not insulin - must be given to assist in the cells' absorption of insulin. This is not uncommon in older adults.

    • @hammerheadcorvette4
      @hammerheadcorvette4 Год назад +24

      @@wickedcabinboy Type 3 is in reference to Alzheimer’s disease

    • @wickedcabinboy
      @wickedcabinboy Год назад +45

      @@hammerheadcorvette4 - The full post reads "Had a coworker who had a service dog and said it was for when his _blood sugars are low_ Since he has type 3 with the _machine attached him_ to give him his _insulin"_ Now, I'm a nurse with 25 years experience in an ICU. That post says nothing about Alzheimer's but rather speaks of diabetes, type 1. The insulin pump and low blood sugar are the tip offs.
      Edit: I need to apologize to you for my initial response. It's pretty clear I don't know everything and you taught me something today. There is, in fact a Type 3 diabetes but I've never ever encountered it in my practice. In Type 3 diabetes it is specifically the brain cells of the Alzheimer's patient that become resistant to insulin.
      I still can't infer from the post that the coworker had Type 3 diabetes given that an Alzheimer's patient isn't generally employed but I'm making no absolute statements about that.
      Again, please accept my apologies.

  • @_Mike.P
    @_Mike.P Год назад +1166

    My parents previous dog warned them when I had a seizure in the middle of the night while I was sleeping behind a closed door. This happened twice.
    And this wasn’t even a trained dog, she was a former street dog we adopted.

    • @Knownsky
      @Knownsky Год назад +66

      The dog must care about you

    • @anima6035
      @anima6035 Год назад +59

      😭 dogs are the freaking best omg 😭

    • @liamo6_rblx290
      @liamo6_rblx290 Год назад +45

      Dogs are extremely smart, and they can also have seizures too. It probably knew that you weren’t having normal behaviour and it warned everyone.

    • @bobb.6393
      @bobb.6393 Год назад +4

      @@Knownsky absolutely

    • @billyandrew
      @billyandrew Год назад +35

      My friend had a dog, several decades ago, untrained, but it would alert him, giving him time to get to a couch, his bed, any soft surface to prevent accidents, as his fitting occurred.
      He had an implant embedded in his skull, as he got older, which senses a seizure and sends a short burst of electricity to the required area, stopping the fit in it's tracks.
      He isn't even aware of it and leads a normal life.

  • @bruces1g
    @bruces1g Год назад +285

    We have a Beagle-Jack Russel mix rescue named Rosy. Rosy is terrified of thunderstorm (and even rain). We call her our Weather Girl. She can take a quick sniff outside (and even inside) and will then run to her "safety space" (a dog bed under an end table). When this happens, we know there will be a rain or storm within a couple of hours. Today she predicted a storm front that was about 65 miles distance and moving our way! Anytime she does her "weather check" we always look at the weather radar app to see how close/far it is. Over the course of about 8 years, she has never been wrong!

    • @lulumoon6942
      @lulumoon6942 Год назад +1

      👍❤️

    • @Sunny12-23
      @Sunny12-23 Год назад +14

      We had a Norwegian Elkhound who could do the same. He too was scared of thunder and rain. Oddly enough he was named Odin.

    • @rossyvizcarra1927
      @rossyvizcarra1927 Год назад +1

      Cool

    • @windsofmarchjourneyperrytr2823
      @windsofmarchjourneyperrytr2823 Год назад +1

      I have a lab who is NEVER late with dinner time!
      In fact, BOTH were like that! Lol. On the minute, too.

    • @superpuppy321
      @superpuppy321 Год назад

      long live rosy

  • @SnuffBee
    @SnuffBee Год назад +599

    I'm currently training my dog to detect my migraines/VS snow flair ups based on my saliva (in cotton pads don't worry). I adopted him from a rescue (he sprinted out of his foster dad's control and knocked me over licking my face) and I noticed he started aggressively sniffing at my face whenever I had a flair up. He's having a hard time with general training, but I'm shocked at how keen he was right from meeting me at my own health. Dogs are amazing and I'm so glad he chose me.

    • @mhordijk0871
      @mhordijk0871 Год назад +21

      Some things are meant to be.
      The right players, at the right time, at the right place.

    • @SuperManning11
      @SuperManning11 Год назад +15

      You said you’re having trouble with general training-for me, I watched tons of YT vids on training, and they were helpful, but there was nothing as good as getting help from a professional trainer. The level of effective communication between me and my dog was raised significantly after professional training. I felt that the training was actually more for me than my dog, teaching me how to remain consistent, and how to make sure my family was being consistent in how they spoke to the dog and what they asked of the dog. It was beneficial throughout the life of my dog, as he knew he could communicate with me and vice versa. I highly recommend it!

    • @frizzlethecat2084
      @frizzlethecat2084 Год назад +12

      I imagine it is because for a dog, things like smelling is just natural and easy, while walking on a leash and sitting when told to is not. I am a trainer for mantrailing, so basically finding humans. I do it for those people who want to get their dogs a bit more brain-training, although a few of my trainees are also SAR-dogs. So it's not super-duper high-level training. I still try to do it in a way that would make it possible for any of the dogs to be a professional (and their humans, of course... it's usually the human that poses the limits ;-) ) and it is amazing to see how happy the dogs are to 'work' such things. It doesn't matter what kind of dog, and not even the age of the dog (although of course the older ones will never be as great as those learning as puppies) - all of them CAN do it and most of them really love doing it.
      My suggestion for your overall-training for your dog, based on my own experiences with rescue-dogs and also puppies:
      pick and choose.
      Decide which tricks and traits the dog ABSOLUTELY needs for their safety and your own health and concentrate on those. Let everything else slide, or just put it aside for later. Does the dog NEED to sit at a sidewalk? Or is it just adamant that it stops there? If sitting is not necessary, just train "stop" instead of "sit", as it is easier for the dog to learn.
      Does it NEED to walk right at your left/right leg? Or is it just necessary that it won't pull you through the street wherever it wants to go? If it just needs to walk without pulling you left and right or forward, concentrate on that and leave the "heel" off as a fancy trick.
      Things not to compromise on: "come here", and probably "leave it!", although I have to admit that I've been a bit slobby with that one myself ;-)
      Anyway, either way - good luck!

    • @resourceress7
      @resourceress7 Год назад +3

      Can you say more about your migraines/VS flare-ups? Does having the dog tell you when the symptoms are about to happen help you take medication early or lie down early or something?

    • @AmberAmber
      @AmberAmber Год назад +1

      @SnuffBee TY for sharing! XO

  • @nathanmartin9276
    @nathanmartin9276 Год назад +431

    Gives a whole new meaning to lab tests

  • @drbettyschueler3235
    @drbettyschueler3235 Год назад +251

    Cats, rats, and I'm sure other animals, can also detect illnesses. It was a cat who detected my breast cancer. It took two years to get a physician to order a mammogram, due to my age. By then, the cancer had spread throughout my body. So far, cats have notified me four times of cancer and where it is in my body. That has helped keep me alive, despite stage 4 cancer, for 29 years. Between cutting out new tumors, radiation, and chemo, I've been able to keep one step ahead of the cancer.

    • @loumarlin3040
      @loumarlin3040 Год назад +4

      How do they let you know where it is. My dog always wants to smell my breath. But I did have a major heart attack a month ago.

    • @marisamartin3664
      @marisamartin3664 Год назад +6

      God bless you- what a shame they made you wait so long.

    • @drbettyschueler3235
      @drbettyschueler3235 Год назад +42

      @@loumarlin3040 If a dog, cat, or any pet your are close with repeatedly sniffs the same part of your body you need to have it checked out. Dogs are really good with the heart. Mine used to wake me up at night by pacing when my heart was acting up. He'd huff and puff, while he paced, due to his anxiety, and the sound would wake me. My cats would pat the area where the cancer was over and over.

    • @deefee701
      @deefee701 Год назад +3

      @@loumarlin3040 It's fascinating isn't it. I read that dogs smell out breath to find out where we've been to eat. Do you eat out a lot? Otherwise, start hitting down when the dog does smell you and where. You might see a pattern. I did hear that dogs repeatedly headbutt areas that turn out to have cancer.

    • @lulumoon6942
      @lulumoon6942 Год назад

      What a blessing, love your friends extra hard! ❤️🐾💞

  • @cferracini
    @cferracini Год назад +232

    There are planty of stories of dogs knowing their owner is pregnant way before she found out. They describe it as a change in the dog's behavour. Usually described as more affectionate, careful and protective

    • @AngiePerezTV
      @AngiePerezTV Год назад +27

      I know this is about dogs, but my cat also picked up on my pregnancy (and later miscarriage) way before I did. He was over-protective of me the entire time and would cuddle up to me a lot more than usual.

    • @zp944
      @zp944 Год назад

      This isn't really that impressive, even I can smell where a woman is on her menstrual cycle.

  • @jaredkennedy6576
    @jaredkennedy6576 Год назад +117

    My wife's red heeler absolutely can read moods, and when anyone is getting stressed or emotional he'll run up and start licking them. My Swiss Shepherd has started doing the same for me, she was a rescue and has taken a long time to get comfortable with people.

    • @haroldfarquad6886
      @haroldfarquad6886 Год назад +14

      For sure they can. I dog sat my friend's dog about 3 years ago and was not in a good place in life. I broke down one afternoon and she immediately came up and started licking and nudging me to feel better. Seeing such an instinctive display to comfort made me feel better in seconds. My current dog did the same thing as a puppy about two months ago, running up in my lap and licking my face, which he never does on a normal day. Dogs are the greatest gift humans were ever given.

    • @anima6035
      @anima6035 Год назад +6

      @@haroldfarquad6886 I had a similar experience ❤️ dogs are such a gift in this mad world.

  • @itzybitzyspyder
    @itzybitzyspyder Год назад +118

    This is why they love sticking their head out the car window. They get an overwhelming cacophony of smells. Also why they live a fresh snow. They get a clean slate and they can dig for smells.

  • @jesuschrist3872
    @jesuschrist3872 Год назад +701

    It’s impossible to watch this documentary without wanting to pet these dogs! 🐶

    • @sogari2187
      @sogari2187 Год назад +15

      "...without wanting to [g]et these dogs!"

    • @yungnachty4474
      @yungnachty4474 Год назад +7

      @@sogari2187 I am petting my dogs right now watching this 😂

    • @saberlivre
      @saberlivre Год назад +9

      dogs are so precious

    • @anima6035
      @anima6035 Год назад +8

      Dog is god spelt backwards 🤔 what does it mean please, Jesus?

    • @fuccyahhat1229
      @fuccyahhat1229 Год назад +1

      @@anima6035 lmao 😂

  • @echospaw899
    @echospaw899 Год назад +90

    I sometimes suffer seizures, and at times I can tell/feel when they're about to happen. But most of the time I don't. I have a sheepdog that I adopted as a small puppy, and we immediately developed a special bond as he was growing older. He would act out in a way toward me just before I started to show signs of having a seizure. How he does it, I don't know, but, he seems to be in tune with me in ways I never saw coming. Dogs are amazing creatures. 💜 U Echo!!

    • @jakefilmore
      @jakefilmore Год назад

      I had a beautiful Cane Corso Mastiff, Jake, he started having grand mal seizures at 2. Sometimes I could notice a seizure coming on, he would be puzzled, as it got closer his eyes were darting about & I knew to turn off the lights, get him to lay quietly & hope the seizure wasn't too bad. He knew one was coming & he would approach me, worried & afraid. 1 time the seizure didn't stop & kept going & going. We had to rush him to the vets a wonderful woman who didn't mind being called on at 3am. She gave him meds to sedate him or he would've died & said she would keep him for a wk or 2, taking him home at night, where her Bullmastif would wake her if Jake had a seizure! Next morning she brought him into work so he could be monitored all day. He was medicated with Phenobarbital & Eltroxin as he had a thyroid deficiency. The standard med was meat flavored & Jake Hated it, he could smell it at the other end of house, impossible to make him take it. He lived on meds for 6 yrs, then I started weaning him off, soon he was on a low dose thyroid med & no more seizures. He lived to be 13, a grand old age for his breed. Another time at the vets, the young girls who come to walk all the dogs came in to be met by Jake running loose, foaming at the mouth, looking like he was rabid, he had opened cages for a duck & racoon to escape & let the resident Crow loose too! He broke the door leading to an exam room with a small fridge that had samples, cream for coffee & his all time favorite snack- Rollover! He emptied the file cabinet & shit on the papers, chewed through another door & chewed the wall. My vet was upset with the staff, Jake was a known escape artist & should've been locked in a special cage, he wasn't & that's how he got out & sprang the other inmates. Glad my vet loved Jake so much, she apologised profusely to me, no harm done to Jake but she did have a repair bill to fix the damage. Jake had separation anxiety, 180 lb baby who thought he was a chiuahua, had to sit beside me & didn't like my husband sharing my bed! The game of jumping on/off the bed at night was funny! for me! Lol! He was my best friend & I miss him still. RIP my friend Jake.

  • @benbevan3120
    @benbevan3120 Год назад +395

    Don't forget that some dog breeds like pugs and British bulldogs really can't smell that well and a comparison in x-rays shows why breeding for show is really sad.

    • @Periwinkleaccount
      @Periwinkleaccount Год назад +32

      More specifically, breeding for a squished face is. Fortunately, pugs that can breath normally still exist, and are just as cute as the deformed ones, so you can get one of those.

    • @anthonyfaiell3263
      @anthonyfaiell3263 Год назад +35

      People who buy bulldogs and pugs (and some other over breeded canus family lines) honestly disgust me. Those two specific breeds don't even look good. And that doesn't even count their dark history of over breeding. Continuing to buy these breeds ensures more breeding will happen. The fact that so few people who actually own these breeds even know anything about this is a perfect example of why democracy is a fool's wish. These people won't even research key aspects of their own lives, let alone politics and decisions that will affects millions of other people's lives as well.

    • @cooloox
      @cooloox Год назад

      @@anthonyfaiell3263 You need to get a grip of yourself. Bulldogs make amazing pets and are very loyal. I find you more dangerous than a dog.
      Let me guess: you're a democrat?

    • @anthonyfaiell3263
      @anthonyfaiell3263 Год назад +16

      @Anonymous D?NGO Yea, that was a bit of a jump wasn't it... lol. Welcome to ADHD and my brain.

    • @zoeydeu2261
      @zoeydeu2261 Год назад

      Buy a mutt or adopt a rescue. Stop buying inbred dogs from puppy mills!

  • @eyeln9ne696
    @eyeln9ne696 Год назад +538

    Once again confirming my belief that dogs are the greatest animals.

    • @LlAMx97
      @LlAMx97 Год назад +16

      Greatest things on planet earth

    • @erikbemis2315
      @erikbemis2315 Год назад +12

      @Steve Sherman hate to be that guy but dogs would do that too if someone didn’t feed them for long enough. I love both cats and dogs but lets not pretend they aren’t both animals who wouldn’t revert to their baser instincts if the situation calls for it.

    • @indestructiblemadness8531
      @indestructiblemadness8531 Год назад +7

      @@erikbemis2315 Im not so sure there is a general statement here. Dogs were bred to be companions. If you have a good relationship with the dog, and you both are hungering, the dog will probably do nothing to harm you. Even if he might die. (actually, I dont think a wild packanimals like a wolf or lion would attack you, if you are within their group. Only that accidents could occur far more likely, if you ran for some reason and their hunting instinct got triggered.)
      No clue about human sized cats though xD
      I dont believe they have a similarly good smell, and while they are definitly social, they mostly care about themselfes. Still, I love them xD

    • @BruderSenf
      @BruderSenf Год назад +4

      well,cats are pretty great but you cant beat mans best friend

    • @erikbemis2315
      @erikbemis2315 Год назад +2

      @@indestructiblemadness8531 that’s very true, thank you for sharing your perspective. I do agree dogs are far more geared towards companionship but I’ve seen very affectionate cats too. I guess I just love both tbh but you’re right 😂

  • @SusanHopkinson
    @SusanHopkinson Год назад +53

    When I’m walking my very social dog she sometimes barks unexplainably at certain people. As I work with people on their health and can see how illness shows up on the face and body, I gradually realised that she was barking at people who are unhealthy and possibly quite ill, although still functioning day to day. They are often elderly and after 7 years of this I’m convinced that is what is happening. This video has given me a lot of reasons to believe my intuition - and most especially hers!

    • @mymagicalcreatures7037
      @mymagicalcreatures7037 Год назад +2

      My dog does this too! I’ve been thinking the same thing you just stated. Because he’s so friendly and wouldn’t hurt a fly. He only does it to some people, not all. So when people ask me if he’s friendly; I say yes.. but sometimes he barks. He’s all bark though, no bite lol

    • @vickils9571
      @vickils9571 Год назад +1

      Dogs also bark at people with anger issues or anxiety.

    • @DNAleguillou
      @DNAleguillou 27 дней назад

      Question, what breed do you have? I had a dog bark at me expressing a lot of concern 😟. Almost wanting to tell me, hey, there's something wrong with you. I could almost read his mind. I was diagnosed with renal cell carcinoma and that was my first thought. Just curious if certain breeds are better at detecting than others and how exactly do they react. He kept barking at me, but not in an aggressive manner. Thank you

  • @tokas-kb6rb
    @tokas-kb6rb Год назад +28

    In this one chance , in a limitless universe, on this tiny rock I’m glad to have experienced life with dogs. One of the most wholesome beings.

    • @loumarlin3040
      @loumarlin3040 Год назад +2

      This picture of the dog looks just like ours except his ears stick straight up....he is beautiful and weighs 110 lbs last visit to vet.

  • @LadyCoyKoi
    @LadyCoyKoi Год назад +56

    I've lost count the number of times my dogs had told me to stop and go eat something, because I couldn't detect that my sugar levels are low until it was too late. When I had a dog, he/she reminded me to go eat, now I have to on my own just estimate that I need to eat something around 3-4 hrs in between snacks and meals. 💀 Far better life when there is a dog around. I am a firm believer that we have advanced civilizations due to three nonhuman animals... horses, cows and dogs. These domesticated beings made us humans get out and make things possible. It amazes me that they still inspire us humans to do more. 🥰

    • @jeremymullens7167
      @jeremymullens7167 Год назад

      Horses are kinda late for humans and mostly contributed to war.

    • @mabru9816
      @mabru9816 Год назад

      Cats are absolutely vital to our agriculturally centered civilization.

  • @treker2379
    @treker2379 Год назад +79

    Worth noting that good blinding is extremely important in these tests because dogs are so good at picking up cues from their human handlers. If the handler or someone else present knows which sample the dogs "should" identify, the dogs will pick up on signs in the people, not the sample.

    • @frizzlethecat2084
      @frizzlethecat2084 Год назад +16

      Yes! Very important point. Dogs are not even the best when it comes to olfactory talents, but they ARE the absolute best to work with humans because they are so linked into human evolution and have evolved into something that would rather pick a human than another dog when they're still puppies. It's insane how well they read us, so there is absolutely no question on whether dogs know our moods. Hell, they know exactly if you#re going into the kitchen for a drink or if you're about to open the fridge!
      I think that's also the reason they're developing the robot. It will not care about the humans in the room and any test would be less prone to accidental cues.
      Accidental cues are also the bane of everyone who's doing SAR-work with mantrailing-dogs. Dogs who work without a human close by, like avalanche searches or lost hikers on open planes don't tend to give false positives, while dogs with a human attached on a 10m lead absolutely might "because Hooman wants me to go this way!". It's awful for training-purposes, but it's definitely fun to watch how quick a dog is influenced by the tiniest weight-change towards one foot or the other.

    • @batfurs3001
      @batfurs3001 Год назад +12

      With the example of the dog identifying the one patients as having cancer before they themselves even knew they had it, and with how good they are at detecting seizures, hyper/hypoglycemia, etc out in the real world I'm very hopeful that doggy tests will be an important and lifesaving part of our medical future. Saving human lives and enriching doggy lives! A dog with a job is a happy dog

    • @veramae4098
      @veramae4098 Год назад +7

      Which is why some people are taking a second look at "drug" dogs and others "trained" in police work. The danger is too often that the initial training is correct but the officer who ends up with the dog is not sufficiently trained! Dogs should never be rewarded just because they alert, but later, after it's been proven they found an item.
      If a dog is rewarded for "detecting" drugs in the field, they will detect often .. or give what are called "alert" responses.
      Or the officer flat out lies that they saw an "alert" as an excuse to further investigate someone because the officer feels it's needed, not really because the dog alerted.

    • @juanausensi499
      @juanausensi499 Год назад +4

      @@veramae4098 That's absolutely true. Dogs and their handlers are a team. You have to train the handler as well as the dog.

    • @jakefilmore
      @jakefilmore Год назад +1

      @@veramae4098 More often than not police dog handlers do direct the dog of hit on what they want, I little tug, point or even facial movements can cause the dog to react as they want, to please their handler of course. Then when they get the dog to alert but nothing is found they often plant "evidence" to make the arrest. Dogs are great at scent finding, too bad they're capabilities are ignored by cops wanting an arrest.

  • @PeterrAre
    @PeterrAre Год назад +45

    Theres a Radiolab podcast episode where a woman realised the men at the alzheimers clinic all had a funny smell including her husband, but no one else could detect it. She had tests and could identify alzheimers samples and similar to the dog experience even picked out samples from the healthy trial group who later went on to develop the condition. The ability is very rare of course in humans!

    • @caroldelosangeles3621
      @caroldelosangeles3621 Год назад +1

      Dna human ♥️ so much more than the sistem wants we know

    • @ES11777
      @ES11777 Год назад

      Wow that is amazing thank you for sharing

  • @sarahbeara946
    @sarahbeara946 Год назад +53

    My dogs knew I was pregnant before I did for both of my pregnancies. They would be super clingy and became extremely protective when we left the house. Now if they start acting a little off, I always wonder what’s going on

  • @gwolf1404
    @gwolf1404 Год назад +34

    BTW - I have had hunting dogs for years, and their ability to find birds is astonishing. 30 feet or more, and when they are positive, there is a bird there! I love them

  • @GeoffryGifari
    @GeoffryGifari Год назад +121

    if dogs can smell cancer earlier than our instruments, does that mean cancer patients exude a particular blend of molecules to the air?

    • @jschouten1985
      @jschouten1985 Год назад +54

      Yes

    • @stevensteven4863
      @stevensteven4863 Год назад +25

      Yes I learned this on coughing there is this smell ... and that smell is sometime the infection on your throat

    • @mhordijk0871
      @mhordijk0871 Год назад +62

      It's your body chemistry.
      It's your hormones and waste products of your metabolism.
      They pick up on the slightest changes.
      They can predict epileptic seizures, bloodsugar in diabetics and even dehydration.

    • @bonniehall578
      @bonniehall578 Год назад +13

      Cancer has a definite smell.

    • @AquilaCat
      @AquilaCat Год назад +25

      I could smell the cancer on my dog when he ended up getting lymphoma sarcoma. It's a sickeningly sweet and bitter smell. I imagine it's a similar smell that humans have when they have some types of cancer, too.
      Some people can also smell ketoacidosis in diabetic people or animals. I've heard it smells kind of fruity. So I'm not surprised that people give off different distinct smells when sick with various ailments.

  • @melusine826
    @melusine826 Год назад +29

    That's why I hate how we bred brachy dogs (like pugs/bulldogs) that can't breathe/smell well

    • @MrMorrisonandDean
      @MrMorrisonandDean Год назад +6

      Yes. These poor doggos :(

    • @caroldelosangeles3621
      @caroldelosangeles3621 Год назад +1

      Exactly 💯 aren't they genetically modified also? So sad people is still buying them instwad of adopting others dogs so wonderful skilled

  • @JustScrapHD
    @JustScrapHD Год назад +439

    isnt it crazy that most of the new, groundbreaking scientific methods are basically just a crude mimikry of nature? There is still so much to learn

    • @jschouten1985
      @jschouten1985 Год назад +15

      Actually, no, it isn't.....'cause nature exists for millions of years, science isn't 🤷🏼‍♂️

    • @sedaotieno
      @sedaotieno Год назад +59

      There's a thing in engineering design literally called "Biomimicry" 😂 we learn from the masters

    • @trippersigs2248
      @trippersigs2248 Год назад +4

      @@jschouten1985 that's not necessarily true though

    • @Tokahax
      @Tokahax Год назад +13

      Proof that intelligence can look very different than only that which humans can express.

    • @JustScrapHD
      @JustScrapHD Год назад +16

      @@jschouten1985 Sure but nature has no intent. Millions of years of random chance are giving us these amazing blueprints.

  • @francesleader2746
    @francesleader2746 Год назад +10

    My dog, a Groenendahl Belgian Shepherd, could always guide me to our living vehicle but not necessarily via the route we had taken when we left it. I only had to say "Let's go home!" or "Where's the van?" and off he would go with me following along. This was especially useful when we went to festivals with massive carparks where we had left the van maybe days before! He found our cat when she was swept away by a fast flowing river. He was invincible at hide and seek.... there was no getting away from him! When he was 3 years old I became the local Dog Warden and my dog would always help me to find lost pooches very quickly, simply by sniffing the owner. I had to be very quick on my feet to keep up with him as he would be hot on the trail, especially if the dog was frightened or injured. We moved to a fruit farm on a mountain in Spain when he was 7 years old and he made friends with a neighbour's elderly dog. One day, he insisted we walk across country, anxiously rushing ahead of me. He found his friend, deceased in the undergrowth. As he aged and his sight began to fail, he depended on his sense of smell to find me among crowds of people on the beach where we lived. He died of old age a decade ago and I still miss him every day.

  • @khanyithegreat
    @khanyithegreat Год назад +181

    They are incredible, we're so lucky to have let those wolves hang around early humans, now we have great friends.

    • @BlessingsMate
      @BlessingsMate Год назад

      EVOLUTION designed this?? A basic summary of what that means...
      In the beginning was nothing but then it somehow became as big as the universe. Then there was dirt and water but then somehow it became alive. Then there was an organism but somehow it had the structure and information to reproduce. Then one decided to be a male and somehow another organism became female and somehow at the same time, with fully functioning structure and information, they reproduced. Then they grew branches, then arms, then fins, then legs, then wings, and breathed water and then air and now we see them all perfectly mutated to flourish in their ecosystems!
      Seriously, Have you considered how a butterfly came to be? What came first, the egg? caterpillar? chrysalis? butterfly? What mutation could cause a crawling creature to suddenly hang upside down, dissolve its organs and appendages and 2 weeks later emerge as a flying creature? And then find another butterfly to reproduce? Truly a fairy tale!
      How did the dog get these incredible organs? Mutations don't give new information, they corrupt existing information.
      It is glaringly obvious we are part of creation. The world around us is so incredibly complex that design is the obvious, logical and scientific conclusion. Jesus was a real historical figure who claimed to be God. He also confirmed that he created the world and was coming back a second time to reward and judge the world. He proved this by rising from the dead and fulfilling many prophecies. He also foretold what would happen before he would come again. These things have been coming to pass more and more. He loves his creation and has a purpose for everyone of us! But the evil we see in the world is not from God. We have a cruel enemy of everything good and right and you can see the devil's handiwork more and more. Please look into this urgently and with honesty. God is not a policeman in the sky, he is not a genie that grants wishes, he is loving and merciful and rewards those who seek him. Do not decide who God is by looking at religious people, you must decide who God is by reading what he says about himself in the bible. Then you would have judged fairly. Start with John or Luke. These are eyewitness accounts of what Jesus said and did. There are many resources to answer your many questions. Especially on creation and evolution www.creation.com
      Seek the LORD while he may be found, call upon him while he is near (Isaiah 55)
      For since the creation of the world God’s invisible qualities-his eternal power and divine nature-have been clearly seen, being understood from what has been made, so that people are without excuse. (Romans 1:20)
      To realise that your life is precious, you are loved, and you have a purpose, is real freedom and responsibility. There is an epic heavenly battle for your soul! You're never alone, reach out from wherever you are, Jesus is there, trust Him.

    • @sirvantanite1307
      @sirvantanite1307 Год назад

      @@JhonIkkiOfficial more like foresight. Imagine shaming humans that actually struggled to survive for raising companions that greatly benefited their lives and increased their survival odds of both the humans and wolfs.

    • @EthanRadell
      @EthanRadell Год назад

      @@sirvantanite1307 imagine shaming symbiotic relationships lmao

    • @sirvantanite1307
      @sirvantanite1307 Год назад

      @@EthanRadell imagine not being able to read. Old Igor over here was the only one shaming anything.

    • @EthanRadell
      @EthanRadell Год назад

      @SirVantaNite yeah man I was taking your side lol the person above you has no critical thought.

  • @sophroniel
    @sophroniel Год назад +36

    So I have hypersomina (basically really good sense of smell) and it used to baffle me that people around me don't realise each individual person smells... not bad or good, just unique. It is unfortunately a burden, most of the time, and strong smells have been known to give me migraines or, in the case of eucalyptus oil (that I didn't know at the time), make me faint across the room!!
    That said, there was a study done, and if we greeted by smelling palms instead of shaking, we could detect who people are in the dark and if they were unwell, even without having a super sense of smell!

    • @chrisfuller1268
      @chrisfuller1268 Год назад +1

      I might have hypersomina! Did you receive a diagnosis and if so, how? I also sometimes get headaches from smells. I have this weird ability to smell when I am near a cemetery, even centuries old cemeteries in which the markers have all dissolved.

    • @sophroniel
      @sophroniel Год назад +2

      @@chrisfuller1268 you likely do, I think it's fairly common? I asked the doctor after googling "why do I smell things other people don't". Hopefully your doctor is nice enough to not just fobb you off because if you ask a question by saying "I have looked online-" some don't let you finish before rolling their eyes, but if they let you continue and say "- but I want you to tell me what you think, as a doctor, please?" I've found they're more open to answering weird questions like "why can I identify people by smell" or other random hypersomnia things lol
      Wait, edit, to _actually_ answer you question the above is what I did, I looked online, saw my symptoms matched, then asked a doctor next time I saw him. Apologies if u live in a non state-funded healthcare country tho 😔🙏🏻

    • @chrisfuller1268
      @chrisfuller1268 Год назад

      @@sophroniel thank you! I found hyperosmia in an online search, so I am excited to learn more. I've only ever confided in those closest to me after doctors have told me they have never heard of such an ability.

    • @sophroniel
      @sophroniel Год назад +4

      @@chrisfuller1268 if your doctors don't know I'd just ignore them altogether, and don't worry too much. I don't know how old you are, but it's not too much of a weird thing to tell family or friends or whoever you want, and an "official" diagnosis is not a big deal, imo, as there is no handy blood test or something that can tell you a yes/no answer, unlike other conditions. If the definition and symptoms of hyperosmia (sorry I've been spelling it wrong, I am a bit dyslexic 😅) and your symptoms match up-and it's not suddenly appeared, or comes and goes, or is otherwise causing you any specific medical issues currently or going forwards, all of which warrant doctor involvement to make sure it's not a symptom of something else-I think it's a pretty safe bet to self diagnose something like this. If it's not one of the specific medical things I said (aka you've been like this your whole life, and it doesn't come and go randomly), in my experience all a doctor will likely do is ask you the same questions you have googled about yourself, and then just say "cool, sounds like you have it then" and nothing else happens.
      To explain a bit more, if it is causing things like headaches, nausea/vomiting or migraines, I'd definitely consult your doctor and mention the hyperosmia specifically and link the two, but if you have no allergies you should be fine, as long as you have and no other negative effects. "Hyperosmia" is just a word to describe the trait variation some humans have, after all; it's not a disease or disorder, so you don't have anything that affects your lifetime or something heavy like that, it just means you interact with the world a bit different. Heightened smell, taste, sense of touch and hearing often factor into the sensory overload that people on the autism spectrum often experience. It's not always an overload/overwhelming episode, but many people with ASD (myself included) often have hightened taste, smell, sense of touch and hearing, even sight (specifically I am quite photophobic and don' like bright sunlight especially). Sometimes it even crosses into synaesthesia (which I also have! I just see sounds and music as colours and textures though, I can't taste colours or anything like that).
      Back to the hyperosmia causing physical effects that you may want to think about, these can be very random things, like with physical stuff (aka nausea, headaches, and so on. In other words, physical reactions) or also there also might be other behaviours secondary to the experience of hyperosmia that, without explanation, doctors might/could otherwise diagnose as being cause by-or stemming from-mental issues, such as anxiety, OCD, phobias (and stuff related to having ASD, as well as lots of others to many to list or detail here), as behaviours can be things such as obsessively avoiding overwhelming/bad/strong smelling foods (anything linked to food can be massive cos scent and smell are so interrelated), feeling faint due to someone spraying aerosol, disliking smelly plants so avoiding (or surrounding yourself with) certain plants. I often can't cope with people's shampoo, body wash or laundry powder! Everything is sooo heavily scented, and even some makeup is! Sometimes hyperosmia can mean that (very weirdly, without context) you are always avoiding or being always near certain people due to their perfume or pungent body odor (BO, man. I just can't deal with it!! I am SO glad I don't have the BO gene!! You can tell by what kind of earwax you have! Wet = you get that strong, pungent BO, but if you have dry earwax, you don't! Like for me, my dad and brother, it's the same; we all know I have a very strong sense of smell as previously established, so I know I'm not missing something (I've also asked many people, from doctors to friends and even to strangers in an experiment once!) and even after hours of exercise and sweat, all three of us have no BO, and just smell a bit salty. That's it. I've never worn (or needed to wear) deodorant and it's a blessing, honestly!! It can change if you eat foods with volatile, sulphurous compounds, like garlic, onion, and a few other things (I can smell when someone has eaten pork, for example. Only pork smells this specific way and it makes people smell awful to me! I don't think it's the same with bacon, though (luckily!), but there are a few other specific foods I can smell people have eaten that unlike garlic and onions (which I think most can smell after you've had them), like chilli, shrimp and a bunch of random spices.) Apparently re the no-BO gene is really rare in europeans, so I'm even more blessed and lucky lol!!! Def look the earwax/BO thing up, the whole thing is so weird and really interesting!!)
      So yeah. As long as your symptomsare not causing or being caused by something medical and you don't have adverse effects (or can get around the ones you do by changing behaviours or food or switching out laundry powders), I'd recommend just treating it as your own special super power 😉😀

    • @chrisfuller1268
      @chrisfuller1268 Год назад +3

      @@sophroniel thank you for your encouragement! I've had the ability since my earliest memories and assumed everyone else could also smell the same things but they just ignored it. I don't remember when I figured out that I was smelling things which no one else smelled, but I quickly learned to not mention it. I used to get headaches and nauseated but as I get older that has diminished somewhat. I still don't know whether my general sense of smell is better but the smell of cemeteries, even ancient cemeteries in which the stones have all dissolved are detectable. They smell a lot like lilac flowers even in the winter time with everything covered in snow, though the scent is subdued. It's not psychological because I will be driving someplace new at night and pick up the scent before seeing any cemetery. I frightened my wife early in our marriage once by saying "I smell dead people" just before the cemetery came into view. Now my wife thinks my ability is funny.
      When I first searched for hyperosmia, I noticed it is associated with certain illnesses. It seems unlikely I have an underlying illness but I plan to get checked out to be sure.
      I have a nephew with ASD which has made his life very difficult though he is one of the most brilliant and humorous persons I know. It breaks my heart when he suffers from ASD. I wonder whether ASD might be coincident with hyperosmia? Your name appears to be Scandinavian which also makes me wonder whether Scandinavians might be at higher risk for hyperosmia as my mother is 100% Norwegian.
      Thank you again so much, I will look up hyperosmia and BO!

  • @crocutalcorvus444
    @crocutalcorvus444 Год назад +5

    Several of my friends have dogs who work in cancer hospitals. They smell like urine from people who are suspected of having cancer. Dogs can detect the cancer several months before electronic and chemical equipment can detect it. They are my heroes!

  • @zappedguy1327
    @zappedguy1327 Год назад +37

    I love how useful dogs are to us but I feel a bit of remorse over the way we have inbred and damaged so many dog breeds.

  • @Bowielicius
    @Bowielicius Год назад +53

    You can never go wrong with doggos

  • @kathrynjanzen5618
    @kathrynjanzen5618 Год назад +20

    Many years ago I worked in a pharmacy. I went to the basement frequently for stock. One day I noticed a slight burning smell down there. I reported to my boss who went down there but couldn't smell it. Each time I went I would tell her something is wrong. Finally at closing she decided to get it checked. It was an electrical fire! The firemen said the building would have burned down overnight! I didn't get a raise 😶😋

  • @bokchoiman
    @bokchoiman Год назад +22

    Incredible. The more I learn about our furry companions, the deeper I appreciate their existence.

  • @bnthern
    @bnthern Год назад +19

    my master"s work was on PAT (pet assisted therapy) and it was found in 1993 that family pet often found illness that mecics could not and were then proven to be wrong 3 to 5 weeks later!

  • @haroldfarquad6886
    @haroldfarquad6886 Год назад +14

    We always point to the harnessing of fire as one of mankind's most significant and beneficial achievements, but I'd put the domestication of dogs right next to it. They have been our companions, fellow hunters, guardians, farm hands, and all-around alarm systems for thousands of years. The value they've added to the human race is beyond words, and we wouldn't be where we are today without dogs.
    Plus, they are the goodest boys and girls. Mine is the goodest, though.

  • @big_red_machine3547
    @big_red_machine3547 Год назад +9

    My black lab, Rudy, used to love coming fishing with me. He’d smell the fish deep underwater and go bezerk in the canoe. We never caught one fish, and capsized twice, but it was amazing to see how he wanted to help out so bad ❤

  • @dosadoodle
    @dosadoodle Год назад +28

    My dog will sometimes lie down on top of kibble I drop onto her bed. And it's only when I point out the food that she realizes it's there and eagerly eats it. I suspect some of the super smelling ability has been (accidentally and artificially) selected out in some dog breads in favor of other characteristics.

    • @anima6035
      @anima6035 Год назад +9

      Dogs are funny 😂 sometimes I'm sure they have supernatural abilities, other times they are just fluffy doofuses 😍❤️

    • @Keturah53
      @Keturah53 Год назад +1

      Maybe its the chemicals in the processed kibble ?

  • @rubynicol7464
    @rubynicol7464 Год назад +8

    My dog is amazing, had alerted me to dangerous situations, calms me when I cry, even let's me know when my neighbor isn't okay

  • @mihaicolceriu-nicola7148
    @mihaicolceriu-nicola7148 Год назад +20

    my mother in law had a dog,that knew she had cancer before the doctors discovered it lol

  • @tdawg719
    @tdawg719 Год назад +37

    When I was young I took a bodybuilding supplement that was basically like legal steroids. Who knows wtf was going on with my hormones but I could taste and smell at an entire different level. Shit was wild.

    • @SaltyMedia801
      @SaltyMedia801 Год назад +1

      Interesting that could be good or bad depending on where you go

    • @davidwilson6959
      @davidwilson6959 Год назад +15

      that’s just called acid

    • @chrisfuller1268
      @chrisfuller1268 Год назад +9

      Living indoors also suppresses our sense of smell. I have this weird ability to know when I am near a cemetery by smell, even centuries old cemeteries in which the markers have all dissolved.

  • @ladyajninja23
    @ladyajninja23 Год назад +11

    Yet another reason dogs are quite literally man's best friend.❤️

  • @GermanShepherdDaphne
    @GermanShepherdDaphne Год назад +12

    My German Shepherd is like this X 10000000 she sniffs everything and lately been sniffing me whining in a certain area on my body. I’m going to go get checked out soon. If I’m positive for something then I know why she’s been sniffing and whining at me

  • @ryan49805
    @ryan49805 Год назад +42

    Still find it mind blowing that all these adorable fur balls evolved from wolves.

    • @virutech32
      @virutech32 Год назад

      idk man wolves can be pretty adorable. well other than that clack everytime they close their jaws that makes my brainstem nervous.

    • @JacobBax
      @JacobBax Год назад +1

      Well, a pack of wolves is a very well organized group.

    • @DannyWakahisa
      @DannyWakahisa Год назад

      Less "evolution" and more "intentional genetic tampering by humans". Sometimes people say "what did we do to deserve dogs 😭" It's simple. We made them.
      Very impressive critters though, to be sure :).

  • @intergalacticGM
    @intergalacticGM Год назад +35

    Another fascinating video, I love when something "common" as a dog is studied in a way that amazes me and makes me feel respect for those creatures.
    I really hope someday you'll have a Spanish channel so that I can share with my friends.

  • @redhidinghood9337
    @redhidinghood9337 Год назад +23

    This should be more widespread as an early detection technique that's very cheap. Yes the training would take some time but it ain't hard or unenjoyable work to give a dog treets and once they've learned it all u need to do is give them food. They could be smelling dosens of people per day 5-6 days a week. You could build up quite a big number of people with that schedule

  • @johnpossum556
    @johnpossum556 Год назад +23

    This is the most perfect video I have seen this month. Dogs have played a prominent part in my life and as far as I am concerned they can never get too much elevation. Great scriptwriting, too!

  • @Sunny12-23
    @Sunny12-23 Год назад +15

    My late husband had lung cancer. Months before the doctors diagnosed him our then 5 year old labrador who is just a regular pet dog had figured it out. At the time we did not realise what his incessant licking of my husband's hands meant. It was much later (too late) that we realized what he had been trying to tell us. Dogs are much smarter than we are.

  • @NilsMueller
    @NilsMueller Год назад +89

    Dogs tell time by smell. Example: you leave for work in the morning, your dog knows when you will be back based on how much smell is left

    • @HShango
      @HShango Год назад +6

      Wow never knew that, that's super interesting

    • @prosurfaholic5121
      @prosurfaholic5121 Год назад +5

      Source?

    • @frostingfox8180
      @frostingfox8180 Год назад +3

      Half life of smell lmao

    • @tacotuesday2489
      @tacotuesday2489 Год назад +4

      Sounds like bs.. Thats basically saying if someone farted id be able to tell when their coming back by how much i can smell of it? Smells dont tell time people...

    • @itzybitzyspyder
      @itzybitzyspyder Год назад +4

      @@tacotuesday2489 the dog tells time by the dissipation of the smell.

  • @donnaallgaier-lamberti3933
    @donnaallgaier-lamberti3933 Год назад +2

    My rescue Lab/Staffy has started to "alert" me when my husband (with cognitive decline) is cooking, and something is burning on the stove burner BEFORE I even smell it. She also keeps smelling my left ear where I had an ear infection last fall. I will be telling the ear/nose/throat physician this fact at my upcoming appt.

  • @Svengalish0000
    @Svengalish0000 Год назад +6

    Theranos should have just gotten into the business of medical detection dogs. One dog = 200 tests! That could've been a game changer.

  • @ariebaudoin4824
    @ariebaudoin4824 Год назад +3

    the smelling machine almost mae me sad, bc it is definatelly gonna be more efficiant then dogs if it work in terms of costs to raise vs make, but i was just getting exited thinking about how nice it woul be to have a dog as a docter

  • @randal_gibbons
    @randal_gibbons Год назад +15

    I had a dog that would smell everything when I took him for a walk. When I took him out to do his "business" it would take him up to 30 minutes to find a place worthy of his deposit. It was frustrating to say the least.

    • @loumarlin3040
      @loumarlin3040 Год назад +1

      OMG....your wording was so hillarious, I laughed so hard ...thank you for those words.

  • @erictaylor5462
    @erictaylor5462 Год назад +2

    I encountered a very naughty rescue dog working for the ski patrol. I was working at a ski area as a lift operator and one day I was closing a top shack. It was quite common for lift operators to be last off the mountain, but sometimes this one ski patrolman would stop to help lift operators close out their top shack.
    This ski patrolman had an avalanche rescue dog that would run down the hill as the guy skied down.
    I am an amputee and so I ski on one leg with outriggers. At the end of my shift I would stick my prosthetic leg in a backpack to ski off the mountain.
    When skiing on my own time I have a tailored pair of ski pants with a zipper so everything is nice and tight after I take my leg off. But I had a pair of uniform pants to wear when I was working. When skiing in my uniform pants the empty pantleg would just flop in the breeze.
    When skiing down at the end of the day we were required to ski down a specific route so we'd be easy to find if we had a problem.
    This particular route had a long flat spot and you had to hit it with some speed to get passed without having to pole a lot. Something that is not easy to do the way I ski.
    I had built up some speed to get passed this spot with the ski patrolman not far behind me. His dog however was running next to me and barking.
    There was something about my unusual skiing stile that "bothered" the dog, that or he thought it was just part of some game.
    Just as I got to the start of the flat spot this dog decided I'd gone far enough and he grabbed my flapping pantleg and stopped, causing me to fall.
    He was a very bad dog that day. I made the ski patrol guy tow me through the flat spot.

  • @FivePointsVids
    @FivePointsVids Год назад +4

    Further evidence Dogs are the BEST

  • @casedistorted
    @casedistorted Год назад +7

    We just got a dog, and she won't stop sniffing my legs. Also my stepmom's dog kept sniffing my legs when i visited recently too.. I asked my doctor but he didn't think anything of it. I hope I don't have something wrong with me now.

    • @JacobBax
      @JacobBax Год назад +2

      Ask an other doctor if you are worried, even specialists are always right.

    • @prashasti598
      @prashasti598 Месяц назад

      Any update?

  • @EvanMoon
    @EvanMoon Год назад +10

    Dogs are superheroes. My service dog can smell when I am disoriented and scared and he then leaves me back out of the area exactly the same way we entered

  • @spacelemur7955
    @spacelemur7955 Год назад +8

    Ants have been found to be 95% effective in detecting human cancer cells.
    I love dogs, but ants are far cheaper to train. Clearly, cuddliness is not the higher priority.
    But, hey, let's find which diseases each species is best at, and use all the best ones.

    • @frizzlethecat2084
      @frizzlethecat2084 Год назад +4

      Also, the chance of ants getting clues from the humans in the room is next to nill - so I'm all for ants! (Also a lot cheaper to maintain)

    • @spacelemur7955
      @spacelemur7955 Год назад +3

      @@frizzlethecat2084 As a cat, your aversion to dogs is quite understandable.

    • @frizzlethecat2084
      @frizzlethecat2084 Год назад +2

      @@spacelemur7955 You got me! 😁 (I was talking more scientifically. Dogs are a lot nicer to have in the house than ants...)

  • @IanSinclair77
    @IanSinclair77 Год назад +1

    The way I like to explain dog's sense of smell is that they navigate the world through smells and their nose in a similar way humans do with eyes.
    I used to blindfold my German Shepherd - have him sit/stay while I hid treats. When I told him to go find, he wouldn't even try to take the blindfold off. He just used his nose and would find the treat nearly as fast as if he wasn't blindfolded. It amazes me what he was able to do. I've had a lot of dogs and did dog adoption for years at the RSPCA (which is where I got my GSD). He was my best friend and buddy for 13 amazing years He was the smartest dog, and I trusted him more than I ever would most people.
    But if he was a service dog, he would have led someone right into traffic on day one. Lol. He could do EVERYTHING I wanted. He knew how to heel - but was constitutionally unable to heel for more than 3 seconds without me barking "heel!!" With every other step.
    Dogs are amazing. 100% love and have the best day of their lives, every day of their life.

  • @tackleberry8604
    @tackleberry8604 Год назад +8

    The editing in this video was epic, the dumster cat 😂 all the cute nip bits, awesome stuff, dogs are truly a blessing, i love them so much.

  • @Scraggledust
    @Scraggledust Год назад +16

    My cat, “snuffles” like my dogs do. Kinda funny. Two of my dogs are hugely food incentive. The littlest one prefers toys and praise. I love to watch them “smell the air” when there are gusts of wind. They lift their heads nearly straight up in the air. Been around animals my whole life - and they are amazing.

    • @_mxbird
      @_mxbird Год назад

      more recent research actually suggests that while dogs do indeed have more olfactory receptors, cats’ are incredibly more sensitive which edges them ahead as better smellers!

  • @slcRN1971
    @slcRN1971 9 месяцев назад +1

    After having watched a program about dogs and how they can save lives. There were a few breeds that are very trainable, to become very adept at smelling out certain drugs, low blood sugar, cancers, guide for blind individuals, knowing a seizure is oncoming.
    We had a Dalmatian dog (our rescue dog, due to be put down-on the very next day) that kept sniffing and patting on a specific spot on our youngest son’s back. She was so persistent that he asked me what was wrong with her. About two months later, my son called and told me that he had a melanoma, on his back (right where she had indicated. It was very small - - but the scar is quite large, because of the numerous blood vessels that the cancer had made for itself.

  • @teeniequeenie8369
    @teeniequeenie8369 Год назад +2

    I just pray that if this becomes a “thing” that the dogs used are treated very well for there work

  • @nicholaspratt8473
    @nicholaspratt8473 Год назад +14

    My parents were freaking out so I stayed with my girlfriend. I was distraught but under control. Her dog kept coming over to me, licked my toes, and stood guard

  • @brendaburgner-williams8515
    @brendaburgner-williams8515 Год назад +3

    Today I went to do laundry at the laundromat, a friend was there. I took my dog with me because I don't like being alone at the laundromat to get scary, my dog went up to my friend and poked her nose right into her belly gently of course. That's when my friend told me that my dog is very smart she just poked her nose in her belly and she was really gentle about it. I looked at her and I said are you pregnant? She said yes with twins. That made my day! My dog is so awesome!

  • @mooster47
    @mooster47 Год назад +2

    If I get riled up about politics or have a stressful near miss in traffic, my dog gets upset and won't eat. I'm pretty sure she's detecting elevated cortisol. She's my warning system to chill out. It would be easy to verify this correlation, since cortisol is tested for routinely in many blood tests. My doctor told me I had elevated cortisol in a blood draw that was taken right after someone nearly backed into me on her parking lot.

  • @1989someguy
    @1989someguy Год назад +7

    This just makes me love dogs even more

  • @zacharywong483
    @zacharywong483 Год назад +6

    Your footage, as always, is impeccable! Excellent video all around as well!

  • @user-um5rk5wj7d
    @user-um5rk5wj7d Год назад +8

    one of, if not my, most favorite channel!
    lovely videos!

  • @kelly5198
    @kelly5198 Год назад +2

    Just another reason or proof that laws should protect dogs against abuse or neglect..they truly are mans best friend..they are here to help us. And they do in so many ways.

  • @ivengideonv6428
    @ivengideonv6428 Год назад +1

    I heard this 2 yr old lab was being abused , after I had her a few days , I found he was defending himself , she would coming at me in a dead run , jump in the air and kick me in the stomach , or run up behind me and grab my leg and jerk .my leg out from under me .She's mellowed out through the years , but stills has spells . You always hear of animal abuse but not owner

  • @froJoss
    @froJoss Год назад +7

    Absolutely spectacular video! But I can't get over that it seems to have been produced and written by my old Basset Hound...

  • @pamelaahdeez
    @pamelaahdeez Год назад +5

    I just found your videos, I love em!! You make the info so easy to comprehend

  • @holocene2164
    @holocene2164 Год назад +3

    I have to say, your channel is one of the best, interesting, easily digestible science channel out there. Thank you for all you do!

  • @FinancialShinanigan
    @FinancialShinanigan Год назад +5

    Lower the background music please

  • @menwithven8114
    @menwithven8114 Год назад +8

    My dog about 5 years ago saved me from a heroin overdose. My wife was asleep and I came home and went in my basement where my big lab wouldn't go because stairs and couldn't see me from top of stairs. I overdosed down stairs and my dog ran to my sleeping wife and started crying until she woke up then ran to the top of the stairs. Wife found me blue and unconscious. Unfortunately put thay dog down a few days ago and it was the hardest moment of my life. My guardian angel is no longer around 😭

    • @jonathansmith1590
      @jonathansmith1590 Год назад

      He really did save your life 😌. What happened to your dog was definitely unfortunate though 😔

    • @lavahike3279
      @lavahike3279 Год назад

      Such a beautiful story. Thanks for sharing 😢

    • @ranjittyagi9354
      @ranjittyagi9354 Год назад

      Why did you have to have him killed? 😠

    • @menwithven8114
      @menwithven8114 Год назад +2

      @ranjittyagi9354 because she had diabetes for the last 2 years that I gave her 2 shots a day for and had went blind about a year ago, adjusted pretty well over some time, then went deaf about 3 months ago and she became scared to a degree and she could no longer be comfortable without my presence. So for the last 2 months 100% of the time I was home I had to be physically touching her or she would cry. I spent about the last 6 weeks every night sitting in my front yard from 5 PM until about midnight because she enjoyed being outside so I would put a blanket down and lay with her all night every night and have my wife bring us food. She also had terrible hip dysplasia and could barely walk. I tried to give her time to see if she could adjust because I've always said I would do ANYTHING she needed as long as she could still walk and not be scared. So was watching my dog suffer and slowly get boxed into a life of silence and darkness and become scared and could barely stand enough or would you like more details?

  • @pramathdsbdxbxh
    @pramathdsbdxbxh Год назад +4

    Can't wait to see my local dogtor!

  • @JesgateOnDown
    @JesgateOnDown Год назад +2

    They need to be training dogs to detect things like ovarian & other types of cancer that have less noticeable early symptoms than prostate cancer. There's already tests for that.

  • @georgechris2204
    @georgechris2204 Год назад +20

    The first step to successful investing is figuring
    out your goals and risk tolerance - either on your own or with the help of a Financial Advisor. If you can get the facts about savings and investing with a well detailed plan, you should be able to gain financial security over the years and enjoy the benefits of managing your income.

    • @muyiwamg8841
      @muyiwamg8841 Год назад

      I think the pandemic have really taught
      people the importance of multiple streams
      of income, unfortunately having a job
      doesn't mean security.

    • @mav3420
      @mav3420 Год назад

      Successful people don't become wealthy
      overnight. What most people see as a
      lance wealth, a great career and luxury is a
      result of smart work.

    • @hoshifuyo4494
      @hoshifuyo4494 Год назад

      @@mav3420 It's not how much money you save in the
      bank, but how much money you earn and
      how hard it works for you. Money devalue
      over time, investment is the best option as it
      grows over time

    • @steceymorgan814
      @steceymorgan814 Год назад

      @@hoshifuyo4494 I think the key thing here is working with a
      professional. Yes people have devoted their
      lives to making profits in the market, but
      those of us who haven't but are interested in
      investing can simply work with them.

    • @eddiejohn8506
      @eddiejohn8506 Год назад

      @@steceymorgan814 Alright, so you know anyone?

  • @flyingark173
    @flyingark173 Год назад +3

    Very good video, one of the best yet. And I'll have to say...the absolute smoothest transition to the sponsor I have ever seen! Edit: of any video ever on RUclips

  • @TheGodThatNeverFail2
    @TheGodThatNeverFail2 Год назад +7

    I clicked for the cute dog noses, I stayed for the science 🐶❤

  • @DerdOn0ner
    @DerdOn0ner Год назад +4

    This just shows, that doggos are the best bois and girls ever

  • @davebartosh5
    @davebartosh5 Год назад +6

    This was very interesting! I knew dogs had a keen sense of smell, but the reality of how good is amazing!

  • @thedoruk6324
    @thedoruk6324 Год назад +22

    doggos are being hecking miraculous as always

  • @jtgd
    @jtgd Год назад +10

    Thanks evolution. Maxed out intelligence and left out all the other features

    • @blahthebiste7924
      @blahthebiste7924 Год назад

      Lord Farquad voice: "That's a sacrifice, I am willing to make."

    • @glacousxx
      @glacousxx 3 месяца назад +1

      Its very important we should be thankful for what we have.

  • @anmariekritzinger154
    @anmariekritzinger154 Год назад +1

    And this is why dogs are the most amazing animals in the world and should be protected at all costs. Everything about dogs are just beautiful and they have a relationship with humans unlike any other. True angels. We are so blessed to have them in our lives.

  • @strawberrymoonphased
    @strawberrymoonphased Год назад +2

    How incredible are dogs!!? I knew they were amazing and could detect things that could save our lives, but this is way more than I could have imagined!

  • @HShango
    @HShango Год назад +5

    Now I understand why my friend's dog stops to investigate and smell his surroundings 🤔

  • @j121212100
    @j121212100 Год назад +3

    dogs for medical diagnostics! I hope that is available soon. That would be much cheaper than tests with much lower accuracy.

    • @luddity
      @luddity Год назад

      And way more pleasant. With immediate results.

  • @Veptis
    @Veptis Год назад +1

    The book I am reading also a chapter on this topic. I will return and watch this video once I finished reading.
    Have read the chapter and now will watch this video. The chapter just mentioned that it's difficult to test mammals. And they tested he number of different molecules. As well as the concentration. And the results they had was that the human was equivalent or better than all mammals. Including dogs and some small apes.
    Reference was given, the book is by Bettina M. Pause.

  • @stevensteven4863
    @stevensteven4863 Год назад +2

    I learned this on coughing there is this smell ... and that smell is sometime the infection on your throat

  • @Davethreshold
    @Davethreshold Год назад +7

    There are SMELLING CONTESTS for Dogs! A couple I know has one that is very gifted in that area and she has more blue ribbons than you would think possible. ❤ I always capitalize, "Dog." I think they deserve it! 🤡

    • @loumarlin3040
      @loumarlin3040 Год назад +1

      I watch a show on Amazon prime not too long ago about this woman that joined the military and ended up working with bomb sniffing dogs ...it was so good the attachment dog and handler have. It was a true story so good...the dogs name was Rex, I can't remember the woman soldiers name but it was a true story.

  • @billyshane1
    @billyshane1 Год назад +3

    Dogs are very good dogs

  • @jonasdominguezrodriguez1143
    @jonasdominguezrodriguez1143 Год назад +2

    really really nice, allways awesome the way you explain and also the love you put on it

  • @FurryEskimo
    @FurryEskimo Год назад +2

    Eh.. Frankly I wish people would look more into this claim that dogs are SO much better than us at smelling.. Our senses tend to be logarithmic in their sensitivity, and we made broad assessments based on the input we receive. If a human’s vision quality doubled, what you see may very well look nearly identical to your brain. Brain size also needs to be taken into consideration, because while dogs do have a lot more brainpower devoted to their sense of smell, it’s ironically not as much as you’d think.. Yes their sense of smell is a lot better than ours, but please don’t just assume that X times more sense organs in their nose means their X times better than we are at detecting odors.

  • @sapelesteve
    @sapelesteve Год назад +7

    Dogs are truly amazing animals! Great video RS! 👍👍🐶🐶

  • @spinne7887
    @spinne7887 Год назад +5

    When I'm older, i want a dog
    And very nice video 👍

  • @gappy10123
    @gappy10123 Год назад

    I’ve been waiting for a video bout this!! Thank you for delivering such great content

  • @Dango428
    @Dango428 Год назад +1

    The background music from 0:00 to 2:50 is so unnecessarily hype and I love it

  • @lukavasovic2820
    @lukavasovic2820 Год назад +9

    Always excited when I see you upload! Great video as always

  • @phileas007
    @phileas007 Год назад +3

    your dog is my spirit animal 😂

  • @iamhailey4080
    @iamhailey4080 Год назад +2

    My dog got really obsessed with me and I couldn't understand why a few months later found I have cancer and when the cancer had been gone he wasnt as obsessed with me (im 13 by the way)

    • @fly463
      @fly463 Год назад

      Nice dog

  • @scottrippy8857
    @scottrippy8857 Год назад +1

    I have a great picture of my dog sniffing my knee,he wouldn’t quit,3 years later had surgery on it they found stuff in the knee joint they’ve never seen before the surgeon told me