British Couple Reacts to Bizarre Creatures of Texas!

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  • Опубликовано: 31 июл 2024
  • British Couple Reacts to Bizarre Creatures of Texas!
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Комментарии • 349

  • @hollisminter2119
    @hollisminter2119 Год назад +92

    As a native Texan I would have enjoyed your reaction to an armadillo. They are truly prehistoric looking critters.

    • @ChristaFree
      @ChristaFree Год назад +3

      Yeah... they freak me out. Lol

    • @mentalcupcakes8142
      @mentalcupcakes8142 Год назад +4

      Yeah, but you never wanna go touching wild armadillos without protection, they are rife with disease

    • @vincentfrizell7055
      @vincentfrizell7055 Год назад +4

      That’s a misconception they can carry leprosy but they are not particularly disease ridden, and there are very few cases of leprosy attributed to armadillos

    • @ArgentLeftovers
      @ArgentLeftovers Год назад +1

      @@vincentfrizell7055 they do carry Hansen's disease, however it doesn't make the human/animal transition easily

    • @nathanbedfordforrest9546
      @nathanbedfordforrest9546 Год назад +1

      I have to disagree, they do have higher rates of leprosy than other animals. It’s why you should never eat them.

  • @Ameslan1
    @Ameslan1 Год назад +39

    "That is a huge frog!"
    Millie: "I thought it was a snake"
    James: "I thought it was a coyote"
    Both of their facial expressions when they see the huge frog! HAHAHA Laugh out loud!

  • @emilyb5307
    @emilyb5307 Год назад +27

    When you live or work with animals like that spotting them everywhere becomes second nature. I had never seen a snake a day in my life despite hiking for years. After I ran across a few water snakes I did some research. Then I started walking slower, learned what to look for and where to look and suddenly "Oh look, by the water!" . It's not planted or some crazy skill, just sheer experience and familiarity with what you're searching for.

  • @dreamweaver1603
    @dreamweaver1603 Год назад +1

    This guy is so dramatic about things that are just everyday creatures. Lizards and frogs are especially common. I love this guy.

  • @pollyduron674
    @pollyduron674 Год назад +9

    I live in Texas and I've seen most of these. Living out in the country, it's crazy the amount of critters and sounds at night.

    • @JustMe-gn6yf
      @JustMe-gn6yf Год назад +1

      And fire ants I hate them little devils

  • @wordkyle
    @wordkyle Год назад +28

    These creatures are very much part of the east Texas swamp/bayou area. Not many of the wetland varmints up here in arid west Texas. Our critters are a little bigger. There are a lot of different species across the state.

    • @HermanVonPetri
      @HermanVonPetri Год назад +2

      Actual coyotes, roadrunners, bobcats, horned toads, longhorn cattle, deer, even some bighorn sheep and javelina.

    • @user-nx8pe6pc3h
      @user-nx8pe6pc3h Год назад +1

      There is also bison herds. They are genetically different from the Dakota and Wyoming herds.

    • @ArgentLeftovers
      @ArgentLeftovers Год назад

      @@HermanVonPetri javelin are made by Satan. >_

    • @chriswhinery925
      @chriswhinery925 Год назад +1

      @@HermanVonPetri Giant scary centipedes.

    • @HermanVonPetri
      @HermanVonPetri Год назад

      @@chriswhinery925 If that wasn't enough, evil looking scorpions.

  • @jodyarrington8555
    @jodyarrington8555 Год назад +14

    I had most of those creatures as pets at one time or another when I was a kid. The green Anole lizards become very tame, and can be hand fed. 😃

    • @ArgentLeftovers
      @ArgentLeftovers Год назад +1

      Have videos of one that likes to lick our doorbell cam, haha

  • @jamesgirard4463
    @jamesgirard4463 Год назад +5

    I was just like this guy when I was 12 years old I love his childlike enthusiasm for animals

  • @Kevin_Lazar
    @Kevin_Lazar Год назад +24

    We need more Millie reacting to Coyote and do some of his painful stings videos

  • @m2hmghb
    @m2hmghb Год назад +5

    "How do you spot that?!?!" It's experience and movement. They've been doing it so long that anything that doesn't belong draws their attention. I've seen it in military vets, hunters, and photographers. I'm not as good - but I'm no slouch either.

    • @JustMe-gn6yf
      @JustMe-gn6yf Год назад

      And light reflecting off the eyes

  • @mikegrantham7440
    @mikegrantham7440 Год назад +2

    I live in NE Texas and we have those same creatures here. Wasp are really vicious and have a very bad sting. But their sting is not as bad as a yellow jacket. We used to go frog gigging and catch bull frogs for their legs. They are actually good fried and taste like fishy chicken. In my area, we have raccoons, possums, bobcats, road runners, wild hogs, wild turkey, deer, coyotes, armadillos (armored plated rats), owls, squirrels, and a variety of snakes both venemous and non-venemous.

  • @tom_macdonald_is_the_goat5978
    @tom_macdonald_is_the_goat5978 Год назад +17

    I thoroughly enjoyed this Millie's reactions always are on point we just need more of these

  • @RicardoRamirez-us7hf
    @RicardoRamirez-us7hf Год назад +13

    I enjoyed that. Thanks please do more just like it Millie's reactions made it way more fun. Thank you again.

  • @AtomicSquirrelHunter
    @AtomicSquirrelHunter Год назад +2

    "The wilds of Texas" I have to laugh... Cleveland is one hours drive to Houston.

  • @ThatShyGuyMatt
    @ThatShyGuyMatt Год назад +1

    The worst thing about picking up a frog or toad is..... they instantly piss on you. A defense mechanism so predators won't eat them. It's so gross but you kinda get used to it. You also learn to carry hand sanitizer for this reason lol

  • @iatemyphonegaming
    @iatemyphonegaming Год назад +17

    I love Coyote! His search for the most painful sting was such a crazy time!

  • @natemalnaa1
    @natemalnaa1 Год назад +2

    It's possible he has a very good ability to spot animals, I know my mom grew up hunting and she can see a deer/elks ear from a mile away it seems lol

  • @RayWhiting
    @RayWhiting Год назад +3

    I have geckos around my house (outside) all the time. I most often see them on my window screens (which you have said you don't commonly have in the U.K.) They are so cute, crawling around the windows. We have the brown ones (Mediterranean) as well as the green ones.

    • @grumblesa10
      @grumblesa10 Год назад

      i live in LV and we have them as well. There's a family in my back yard-which is great. They keep the bugs down...

  • @mauricehumphrey545
    @mauricehumphrey545 Год назад +5

    You guys HAVE TO see Coyote's "Brave Wilderness" series where he intentionally allows the most dangerous bugs and critters in the world ro bite him. This man is incredible!

    • @mtdreams72
      @mtdreams72 Год назад

      I agree. Completely insane lol

  • @toddsonnier3763
    @toddsonnier3763 Год назад +2

    I live about an hour from this spot. The green anole puffs out it's neck, which turns reddish, as a defense mechanism. He wasn't pulling it down. They do it on their own.

  • @G-grandma_Army
    @G-grandma_Army Год назад +10

    Texas is so diverse that what you find in one part, you won’t find in others. Where I grew up in West Texas there wasn’t a lake or river for like 2 -3 hrs away and those were small. Where I live now, closer to the gulf, there are lakes and rivers everywhere and alligators. You won’t find those in WEST Texas. :)
    The lizard is a Gecko. They change colors depending what they are on.
    Up north they get snow and multiple freezes yearly, down south it may snow every 15-20 years and usually it is very light. :) I took this way off of animals, which is what this video is about. Sorry. 😂

    • @lesterstone8595
      @lesterstone8595 Год назад +1

      Yes, back in the Texas Panhandle he'd be catching armadillos, prairie dogs, roadrunners, and rattlesnakes. 🤠

    • @dreamweaver1603
      @dreamweaver1603 Год назад

      But you will find alligators in Cleveland, Texas, where that guy was, especially at night. I kept wondering if he was going to see one.

    • @Mothobius
      @Mothobius 7 месяцев назад

      It's actually an anole, not a gecko.

  • @ivane5110
    @ivane5110 Год назад +2

    Y'all had me at "Texas". Yeehaw!

  • @mauricegford16497
    @mauricegford16497 Год назад +1

    Brave Wilderness is such a great channel and as a native Texan, I loved seeing your reactions! Great video!

  • @TreyM1609
    @TreyM1609 Год назад

    Most of these critters he’s spotting and finding they’re using the eyes home from their flashlight. Not all but most shine right back at you like they have a flashlight themselves

  • @TheRealZygmo
    @TheRealZygmo Год назад

    A few years ago I was stung by a swarm of Yellow Jackets about 30 times when I was mowing. Multiple stings on the back of my hands, some on my face and many on my knees.

  • @thegreatalyssa
    @thegreatalyssa Год назад

    Yes, there can be small alligators in ponds. We get panthers (mountain lions) walking through. We’ve had wolves at times after they were released or escaped from someone’s home. Lots of stuff to watch out for.

  • @DiamondPreston1234
    @DiamondPreston1234 Год назад +3

    There is no greater fear than the moment you lean in to look at a frog and it jumps directly at/on you. I get creeped out just thinking about it.

  • @PaolaBarrientos
    @PaolaBarrientos Год назад +2

    I live in Cleveland Texas, not too deep into the woods, but I do see some is those animal often. There are so many more that I would love to have seen on this video. Greeting from Texas 🤠.

  • @stevenleppo7996
    @stevenleppo7996 Год назад

    I actually live less than 3 miles from Chain O Lakes, my wife even worked there for a few months waiting for a vet tech opening. The number of alligators, gar, and a dozen other creatures there is amazing. They walk around with marshmallows to keep wild life at bay.

  • @derred723
    @derred723 Год назад

    When i was a kid i absolutely loved animal in nature shows.

  • @ChristaFree
    @ChristaFree Год назад +1

    I have part of bayou on my land and the boys go "frog gigging" to catch those big bullfrogs to eat. I fry up the legs for them but I just can't chew on a frog leg bone like a chicken bone so i take mine off the bone and make etoufee.

  • @edwinsteele221
    @edwinsteele221 Год назад +1

    I grew up in the woods and you get to the point where you can spot different critters that blind in

  • @shibboleth5768
    @shibboleth5768 Год назад

    15:33 best reaction. I laughed out loud on this one. You both are hilarious.

  • @verwulf
    @verwulf Год назад

    With a flashlight you can see the eyes. Often used to catch frogs at night. We called it gigging. Frog gigging.

  • @sandylee9564
    @sandylee9564 Год назад +1

    This guy certainly enjoys his swampy animals.

  • @mortensen1961
    @mortensen1961 Год назад +1

    The first one couldn't have been a gecko. It didn't try to sell him auto insurance. . .😁😁

  • @bruceshook1781
    @bruceshook1781 Год назад

    That frog would have been dinner! lol Love frog legs. I get cracked up watching your expressions to these critters. Wonder they didnt find a Gator.

  • @DCHoosier62
    @DCHoosier62 Год назад +2

    😂😂😂😂 y’all. Your reactions to those critters had me laughing so hard! Yes, we have frog jumping contests here in the states…mostly smaller farming towns.

  • @theoberhansleyclan1987
    @theoberhansleyclan1987 Год назад

    Him catching that bullfrog reminds me my great grandfather will go frog gigging for tomorrow's dinner

  • @michaelshelton8802
    @michaelshelton8802 Год назад

    Nighttime is one of the best times to spot them because their eyes shine in the light

  • @christianoliver3572
    @christianoliver3572 Год назад

    It's much easier to find critters at night.
    They weren't planting them for the purpose of making a video.
    All you really need is a good flashlight but a blue light or uv light is very useful as well.
    You just slowly move your flashlight around until you see either movement or eyes.
    We learned this in Cub Scouts here in Texas

  • @ethanbrinkman3401
    @ethanbrinkman3401 Год назад

    By panning with the light you can see animal eyes reflecting back. That's how they initially spot them

  • @davidcopple8071
    @davidcopple8071 Год назад +1

    I'm a born and raised Texan. I'm an avid hunter and fisherman. I can tell you without a doubt that that bullfrog he found wasn't nearly as big as they get here. I've caught them almost twice that size as a kid. And I've hunted them for their tasty legs for many years as well. They will literally eat anything that they can fit into their mouths. Mice, rats, other frogs, snakes, anything that fits. Awesome animals.

  • @flannery333
    @flannery333 Год назад

    As for how he is spotting most of the animals is eye shine from the flashlight and movement

  • @SFsc616171
    @SFsc616171 Год назад

    Hi! First, re frog, Mark Twain wrote a story about the jumping frog of calaveras county.
    Second, herf in my section of Louisiana, all around the apt complex, there are both brown and green geckos. Yes, that throat sac is part of their "hello, ladies!"
    Yes, there are quite a few critters between Texas and Louisiana

  • @xo2quilt
    @xo2quilt Год назад

    Calaveras County, California has an annual frog jumping competition! The longest jump is 5.365 meters.

  • @larryyeadeke2953
    @larryyeadeke2953 Год назад

    Famous last words, "I think we should head off into the darkness."

  • @theresabeck1029
    @theresabeck1029 Год назад +1

    would love to see more videos like this, so interesting

  • @samesame2505
    @samesame2505 Год назад

    From Minnesota but in my childhood i caught 2 garter snakes in my neighbors yard and kept them for years. normally they eat crickets and bugs, but because the snakes habitat was near a pond they would only eat minnows.

  • @scottdarden3091
    @scottdarden3091 Год назад

    When you hook a gar, you've got a fight on your hands. They are very strong. That Bull frog made me hungry for some frog legs

  • @kennyjohnson7051
    @kennyjohnson7051 Год назад +1

    Fried frog legs are a fairly common meal. Its not just a Texas thing though.

  • @greatgreyowl2583
    @greatgreyowl2583 Год назад

    The camera often make it look darker than it really is. Also the color spectrum of artificial light often make makes camouflage less effective and our eyes are usually very good at detecting motion.

  • @ArcticTron
    @ArcticTron Год назад +2

    Yeah I would like to see more from Brave Wilderness. I think his insect sting pain index journey is one that you should watch, but if that's not your style I would suggest really any video from them but for some reason the one that sprung to my mind at the moment was the "MONSTER Sockeye Catch!" video.
    Also as a note, more than likely the RUclips video compression as well as the angle of the cameras probably is what made it seem like they had "50/50" vision. Though I don't doubt that they also have that.

  • @stevenleppo7996
    @stevenleppo7996 Год назад

    That was actually a fairly small bull frog around here. My duck pond has several that seeing the eye spread, that is how we find them in the dark, we have thought we had baby alligators.

  • @davidterry6155
    @davidterry6155 Год назад

    We have several Mediterranean Geckos that live in the outside of our walls. They live in the wood trim and the under the wall hardieplanks

  • @BY-lp9tj
    @BY-lp9tj Год назад

    Are you thinking to live in Texas Beesleys?! lol the guy is so in love with the frog!

  • @harper6364
    @harper6364 Год назад +9

    I def would like to see ya'll watch more videos about the different wildlife here in the states. I thoroughly enjoyed Millie's reaction to some of the animals hahaha. I'm curious what type of animals are in Jersey.

    • @chriswhinery925
      @chriswhinery925 Год назад

      Home of the wild American Gym Rat. If you listen close you can hear their trademark vocalizations. "How much you bench?! How much you bench?!"

  • @winstonsmith8441
    @winstonsmith8441 Год назад

    You often see the light reflected off the animal’s retina.

  • @ThatShyGuyMatt
    @ThatShyGuyMatt Год назад

    Down south there are lizards everywhere. So seeing one is pretty easy. Sometimes at night your house will be covered in hundreds of them. Most are pretty harmless. In some cases if you live near water, your property may have hundreds of little frogs everywhere. So watch where you walk at night.

  • @gregdavidson670
    @gregdavidson670 Год назад

    I’ve stayed at the Chain of Lakes. Was in those cabins and had a inlet with a big ol gator waiting to see if we would throw out food in the water. Wouldn’t get in that water. It’s an hour north of Houston.

  • @emaniburton9422
    @emaniburton9422 Год назад

    That is a good frying frog! Down in the bayou someone would have caught that frog for dinner 😂

  • @Alex-dh2cx
    @Alex-dh2cx Год назад

    4:56, green anole bites do not hurt. As kids we used to let them bite and hang from our earlobes. All you feel is a light pinch

  • @montyferguson4657
    @montyferguson4657 Год назад

    The wasps are big but also slow. I've been stung once, it didn't hurt much, and the pain went away relatively fast compared to other wasps.

  • @rj-zz8im
    @rj-zz8im Год назад

    I love my lizards! They are my pest control and are cute little dudes. Armadillos come into my yard often digging around for worms and grubs. They can be destructive with their rooting and digging, so I catch them and relocate them. They are easy to catch since they have very poor eyesight.

  • @operationexploration9831
    @operationexploration9831 Год назад

    as a native Floridian I am so used to all of the snakes, turtles, wasps, geckos and more. I have caught bullfrogs larger than that and I kayak fish with 8 foot alligators. There is not much that scares me, I was catching all of these critters since I was three years old. I can't tell you the number of times I have had little alligators eat poppers and frogs while I am bass fishing. I have multiple pictures holding these little critters and they are photos I will cherish forever. and their reaction was absolutely priceless🤣

  • @ThatShyGuyMatt
    @ThatShyGuyMatt Год назад +2

    Who runs up and grabs a snake?
    Well, many American kids. lol. Pretty normal when your growing up, to learn about wild life in your area and catch it. Obviously depending on where you live, your taught early which things are safe to grab. Your also taught where dangerous spots may be. My first pet snake I found on a tree in our yard. It was a garter snake. Doens't bite, had not teeth or anything. Friendly little snake. It would curl up on my dads chest (under his shirt) and sleep.
    I will say though, it also seemed to happen more when I was growing up in the 80s before the internet became a big thing. Kids were always outdoors.

  • @wesleynewman5777
    @wesleynewman5777 Год назад

    Just for your info… most of the time at night you can find those types of animals because their eyes shine in the light. They are designed to be able to see in the dark so their eyes draw as much light as possible. Not like a human. they really glow, so it makes them much easier to spot. without the light they are basically invisible.

  • @spinalobifida
    @spinalobifida Год назад

    There were the green anoles(lizards) in Florida, but now you just see the brown anole. And they're everywhere. They're invasive.

  • @dibutler9151
    @dibutler9151 Год назад +1

    I caught a 50 lb alligator gar in my backyard in Alabama. It nearly took off my toes, lol

  • @jimgreen5788
    @jimgreen5788 Год назад

    Beesleys, his enthusiasm reminds me of the late Steve Irwin of the Australia Zoo, who died from an accidental sting by a sting ray 20+ years ago.
    How do skaters do a triple salchow? How does a skier fly downhill at around 70mph/120kph? How do race car drivers driver at more than 200mph/320kph? It's all one thing--lots of practice. That's how these 2 guys can find animals in very low light.
    Did you notice that when he went to the edge of the property how loud the crickets became?
    Not exactly Kermit the frog, was it? It couldn't be, because there was no Miss Piggy.

  • @ViolentKisses87
    @ViolentKisses87 Год назад +2

    I live in Southern Ohio and I caught a bullfrog once that would put that one to shame. I remember the exact spot I pulled it from in a overhang from a muddy creekbed.

    • @Jml416
      @Jml416 Год назад +3

      I was about to comment that it was a small one compared to most Texas bullfrogs...probably a younger one. I've eaten some frogs legs that were bigger than a chicken leg.😀

  • @Ginoulmer
    @Ginoulmer Год назад

    I have caught a bullfrog bigger then that one in North Dakota when I was in 4th grade. My brother would walk him with a leash. 😆 🤣 😂

  • @pointlessmanatee
    @pointlessmanatee Год назад

    2:17 amen brother preach it!

  • @bernardh4635
    @bernardh4635 Год назад

    i live near a creek and you can hear bull frogs all night long in the summer. Louder than the chirping of a million insects. Also I saw a comment below about armadillos. Those things dont care at all about being quiet at night. Most animals at night are very silent. Coyotes, Bob cats, raccoons, snakes even tortoises can move at night rather silently. If you do hear something tromping around in the leaves or through the bushes or trying to dig under your tent its an armadillo or something rabid. They dont care about being seen or heard the will tromp right through the brush and they dont run when you shine a light on them. One track mind, armadillos. They are cool looking though if you are lucky to see one in person. Most see them as road kill on the side of the interstate but in the wild they have no fear.

  • @lesman9686
    @lesman9686 Год назад

    This is so humorous.

  • @peterjamesfoote3964
    @peterjamesfoote3964 Год назад

    "The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County" is an 1865 short story by Mark Twain. It was his first great success as a writer and brought him national attention.[1] The story has also been published as "Jim Smiley and His Jumping Frog" (its original title) and "The Notorious Jumping Frog of Calaveras County". In it, the narrator retells a story he heard from a bartender, Simon Wheeler, at the Angels Hotel in Angels Camp, California, about the gambler Jim Smiley. The narrator describes him: "If he even seen a straddle bug start to go anywheres, he would bet you how long it would take him to get to wherever he going to, and if you took him up, he would foller that straddle bug to Mexico but what he would find out where he was bound for and how long he was on the road."

  • @hockemeyer1
    @hockemeyer1 Год назад

    Turtle fried up like chicken is excellent and so are frog legs.

  • @brettdrought6181
    @brettdrought6181 Год назад +7

    Fried frog legs are delicious. Cleveland, Texas is just up the road from Houston (less than an hour) so they are not that far from the big city life. I have seen many of those creatures here around my neighborhood but not frogs that big.

    • @AtomicSquirrelHunter
      @AtomicSquirrelHunter Год назад

      Back when Ft Bend çounty was still rice fields, giant bullfrogs we're everywhere, some much bigger than the one in this video.

  • @francesostrowski2374
    @francesostrowski2374 Год назад

    I really enjoyed this one. Very informative.

  • @Teresia12
    @Teresia12 Год назад

    Some aren't just in Texas.
    Frog leggs, yummmm!!!

  • @twisterlonglegs2271
    @twisterlonglegs2271 Год назад

    I'm a Native Rural Texan and all these animals are actually pretty common in my area, I will say this as hard as they are the gar fish is probably one of the best tasting fish you will ever eat.

  • @melissamosqueda7243
    @melissamosqueda7243 Год назад

    I've seen way bigger bull frogs in my grandparents fridge back in the 80's.. Lol

  • @warrenelkins1861
    @warrenelkins1861 Год назад +1

    If you train your eyes in nature you learn to spot camouflaged insects & animals .

  • @alyssahernandez1055
    @alyssahernandez1055 Год назад

    I have a tattoo of a green anole on my shoulder. I love them soo much they’re always running around my back yard.

  • @briankgarland
    @briankgarland Год назад +2

    Bullfrogs get even bigger than that one.

    • @skyydancer67
      @skyydancer67 Год назад

      Right? I thought that one was a little shrimpy

  • @davidneel8327
    @davidneel8327 Год назад

    They have many frog jumping contests in the US based on a MarkTwain story.

  • @MaddaTheApache
    @MaddaTheApache Год назад +3

    If you like Coyote, I think you’d really enjoy the craziness of his “Worst sting” series. Cheers!

  • @andyrehajr9511
    @andyrehajr9511 3 месяца назад

    The animals eyes glare , when lights hit them. that’s why they see them.I live in south Texas , all those are very common here

  • @CalKingOnyx
    @CalKingOnyx Год назад

    I grew up in East Texas and have seen all of these critters. I used to catch the little anoles and play with them, and love listening to the bull frogs singing. I kept waiting for him to jump on an alligator. That would have been cool. Oh, and red wasps are the spawn of Satan. Hate those things!.

  • @Athyma28
    @Athyma28 Год назад +4

    Definitely watch more Coyote. Informative and crazy😄

  • @aradek214
    @aradek214 Год назад

    When you hunt, you see things before anyone else does.

  • @clarencewalker3925
    @clarencewalker3925 Год назад

    I have the feeling that if she visits America she'll stick to New York or Los Angeles. What a reaction!

  • @lesman9686
    @lesman9686 Год назад

    This is like catching frogs.. lol

  • @robertahrendt67
    @robertahrendt67 Год назад

    That poor little gar. A day of swimming about trying to eat and not be eaten. Stopped for nap, and gets snatched out of water. Yes please, more of this.

    • @sherryford667
      @sherryford667 Год назад

      Yes, but what a story he has to tell the family.

  • @nasahomie
    @nasahomie Год назад

    Gar are scarier than the snakes lol

  • @JustMe-gn6yf
    @JustMe-gn6yf Год назад

    Millie gags at sight of bullfrog and all I see is a plate full of frog legs

  • @tanker2051
    @tanker2051 6 месяцев назад

    I live in East Texas, we have yellow jacket and red wasps the deal is, leave them alone and they leave you alone.

  • @Chibbs.E
    @Chibbs.E Год назад

    As a Texan, these are all super cute pets. :D

  • @cavlizzy
    @cavlizzy Год назад +1

    Native Texan here... Snakes & Roaches are what freak me out most!! TONS of both. *My oldest daughter used to have a pet snake she would wear around her neck to places like Walmart* ... SO funny watching people freak out when they realized it was REAL!!

    • @chriswhinery925
      @chriswhinery925 Год назад +1

      So many damned roaches. I moved here a little over a year ago and could not believe the size of these things. They're enormous and nothing I've tried over the last 14 months has kept them out of the house.
      Haven't seen a single (wild) snake since moving here, I guess where I am is too urban.

    • @cavlizzy
      @cavlizzy Год назад

      @@chriswhinery925 - You have to get a professional pesticide company to come out and spray inside & out. Like Orkin or Terminix. If you have a bad infestation then they might have to come out twice & spray again weeks later. It's a yearly thing we have to do! But It helps a lot. (some even fly😱) It's best to have them spray when it hasn't been raining or going to rain so the chemicals don't wash away outside. We usually have them come around May. Good luck. :)

  • @vikkitrishrunnshaw1127
    @vikkitrishrunnshaw1127 Год назад

    My brother, sister , myself and a couple cousins, would pick out bullfrogs one each and we would make bets who’s frog was biggest , fastest, best jump distance, we never hurt them , we didn’t keep them, we’d put them back in the bank creak and free them.