suggest Australian videos for me to react to, fill this reaction request form docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSceysrMyvv0lt-AjofMukRQ3P8CviLGZnrjXI_FMGaTDNB6hQ/viewform?usp=sf_link LINK to original Video ruclips.net/video/emisZUHJAEA/видео.html
Foreigners don't realise just how dangerous it can be until people say stuff like "don't stand downwind of that plant" or "run, there are ants here". For context, if you stand downwind of a gympi-gympi plant it can cause temporary nosebleeds, itchy rashes & pain for up to 6 months. And in Tasmania there are jackjumpers, deadliest ant in the world. I was at fossil creek in tasmania and noticed jackjumpers on the high thick scrub around me, I have never run so fast in my entire life.
Yes, we do have blue-ringed octopuses in Australia, and they mainly live in rockpools. The greater blue-ringed octopus lives in the warm northern reefs. While the southern blue-ringed octopus is found along the shores and rock pools of the southern beaches.
As a local Aussie, I have been stung by jellies down at NSW beaches. It wasn’t a fatal sting but, it hurt like someone was twisting a hot knife in my foot
When aussies recoil in fear and go "Don't even TOUCH that, WTF is wrong with you?!?!?" you know that one of two things is happening, either they're taking the piss or you are touching something unbelievably deadly. Best bet is to go along with it and stop touching the thing. It'll either save your life OR make the joke funnier, no downsides.
*_I have seen many, many of these in Queensland, Australia._*_ We were taught from the first time we went to the beach as a child to never ever touch, these beautiful little assassins._ Some of the other common venomous beach going "nasties" are, the stone fish, box jelly's, and irukandji's.
the worst thing about blue rings, they look ugly until in self-defence mode, that's when the blue rings form and make them attractive, little kids play in and around the rocks/rockpools and see them and try to catch them, that's why we are taught from a really young age about them here
Simple rule, if it glowing with colors likes, blue or green, No Touchie,,,Ouch Blue Ring Octopus are around Australia, and south east asia. Extra thing, if you eat the "blue ring", can still be affected by the venom/poison, even if cooked. This has happened before
I've been living in Australia for almost 48 years, and I was in ankel deep water and saw a blue ring octopus. I've never been so close to death I didn't see it in time and stepped on it.
I live in South Australia and we used to find them in rock pools and catch them in jars to look at them closely! This was the 70s, maybe early 80s though, I haven't found one for decades.
Blue Rings can be found pretty much around the whole coast and in bays...I know they are in Port Phillip Bay outside Melbourne. Neighbour ended up in hospital from one being underneath the bouy his boat was anchored to.
To handle a blue-ringed octopus like she did, she's very lucky to be alive. 30 years ago I saw one of these strikingly colorful critters in a rock pool at Cronulla, a southern coastal town of Sydney.
Tasmanian here, when I was young I was snorkeling around and saw one, I had no idea what it was. I swam up to my Dad and told him about it, luckily he knew and ordered the family out of the water.
Nope. From "OZ" is the way to pronounce Aus. The letter "s" is sibilant in the full word, "Australia", but when shortened - "Aussie", for example, it is prosnounced like a "z". Has absolutely nothing to do with the word "us". Because it isn't a soft "s". "Oz" is what we call Australia for short. You know, like "Ozzie, Ozzie, Ozzie! Oi, oi, oi!" The video was from Bali, but blue-ringed octopuses live in Sydney Harbour as well.
Where I live in South Australia there are times where large numbers of blue ringed octopuses are present at popular swimming beaches and warnings are broadcast on local news networks advising people to take caution if swimming, still not as worrying as the potential for sharks to mistake you for their dinner though, just today 3 sharks were seen close to shore at some ouf our popular beaches. You never know when you might feel a bump then notice you're missing a leg moments before it comes back to finish you off lol..
When I lived in Adelaide South Australia I would go fishing around the Outer Harbour area and often found them at low tide under and among rocks while digging bait. Once my daughter found one in a coke can which was returned back to the water very quickly. I have seen them under the Outer Harbour warf when spear fishing.
Snorkelling at Peterborough, in Victoria, Australia. I was working on a good patch of abalone in the shallows taking my time picking and choosing the larger ones. The swell was a bit washy that day so I constantly had to grab onto rocks to stay in position. No gloves. Something told me to look at my support hand. There he was.... agitated, all bright blue ringed up not 2 inches from my fingers. Intense few minutes of 'did he or didn't he' ?? 😱 Thank You YAHUAH 🙌❤🙏 Time to go home, heart in my mouth, bumhole puckering. Didn't know they inhabited my neck of the coastline, lesson learnt. Suffice to say I wear gloves now.
She didn't notice the bright blue rings? Could the octopus have been any clearer about being poisonous? What a Muppet. Any creature that has markings like that is trying to tell you something. Listen.
They are disco death, check out the blue rings, my ma said I picked up one when I was a child 2-4 sort of range we were on holiday near Ballina, lucky me 😁
Bali is like a sister country to Australia. It's where all the bogan people go on holidays 😂 And blue ringed octopus are from Australia, though I think there are a few in Bali too.
05:21 great attitude to have, even if it's harmless most Australians feel it's bad form to interact excessively with the native wildlife as you can stress them out, accidentally harm them or make them flee from their habitat/nesting area which can endanger the population. For most animals if you respect their space they will respect yours, just like humans most animals just want to live their lives and don't want a stranger coming upto them and touching them.
Blue ringed octopuses are quite common in tidal rock pools on the shores of Northern Australian waters as well as many SE Asian nations. All octopuses possess a parrot-like beak which helps them to rip apart their usual prey of crabs, crustaceans, fish and other sea creatures that they can capture and kill. To capture their prey, especially crab's they latch on and with their beak bite the eye of the victim whilst injecting the venom. As the eyes of any animal is basically just an extension of the brain the injected poison acts directly and almost immediately on the victim's nervous system immobilising it and leaving it defenceless. This is why the bite of a blue-ringed octopus is so dangerous to humans as the neurotoxins injected are powerful, fast acting paralysing agents that the voluntary and involuntary muscles of the chest, lungs and heart are very susceptible to, leading to asphyxiation and heart failure within minutes if not treated by trained and well equipped medical staff. As these octopuses are often encountered in tidal rock pools where fast access, especially by vehicles or boats, or evacuation of prone victims by stretcher or carry can be complex and hazardous, and the victims are often children or young adults who were just playing or exploring, tend to make the blue-ringed octopus a very dangerous and deadly animal for unwary or naive humans.
Had an unsuccessful evening fishing with a rod off a pier at the mouth of Tweed River. Thought i might've had a bite after mostly reeling in the line. Jerk of the rod send a blue ring octopus up out of the water and landed about a metre from a small girl fishing with her Dad. Had it hit her of if she went to grab it I don't think she'd be here. Really didn't expect to land one at that location in that way.
"She found out it was a blue-ringed octopus". it's not like the blue rings didn't give away. My daughter one day found one right outside our house where we used to go into the water without shoes for a swim. Needless to say, I'm always wearing shoes now.
The other thing people pick up without knowing just how bad they are is the cone shell . The empty shells are ok of course but when the animal is alive inside there they shoot out a spike from one end that has a neuro toxin in it that's almost as deadly as the Blue ringed octopus . As for Jellyfish man dont even go in the water if they are around . The pain from some of them puts you into shock and people can die .
I honestly thought you were going to say "It's quite unfortunate but humans are very very very very very stupid" Oh and Nobody in Australia spells Aus... A-U-S, We all spell it OZ. (we shorten every single word we can possibly get away with shortening) Trivia: the world can thank us for "selfie"
We have jelly fish that are tiny and almost invisible but a sting is a death sentence or 48 hours of extreme pain eventually needing to be put on life support until the venom passes through your system.its the things U don't fear that'll kill you here
😂😂bro that girl would have had no more than 8 MINUTES to seek medical attention, & as for the bite, they have a beak which is tiny but SUPER SHARP u wouldn't feel it bite you, then you'd feel dizzy then you'd most likely die, my next door neighbour in my home town Morriset Died in 3 mins from a bluering
Jebus people i'm the one from down under, Its all about "Aus" not you. But we have the little buggers, i can find you 20 Ozzie versions of it :P i love this comment section though :D
In your own video "American Reacts To AUSTRALIA'S DEADLIEST ANIMALS (SONG)" ruclips.net/video/vB2MmDlCg1U/видео.html We've got a blue ringed octopus, no bigger than this, that just sits around in rockpools waiting to kill kids.
@@giobozzreacts Anything in the ocean that is vibrant bright colours, Leave it the F alone. Evil is picking up a sea creature & "waterboarding" it with air.
suggest Australian videos for me to react to, fill this reaction request form
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You saying that ‘I’m not picking up anything in Australia’ is probably the best thing anyone could tell people visiting Australia.
They should say it on the plane coming in 😂
Foreigners don't realise just how dangerous it can be until people say stuff like "don't stand downwind of that plant" or "run, there are ants here". For context, if you stand downwind of a gympi-gympi plant it can cause temporary nosebleeds, itchy rashes & pain for up to 6 months. And in Tasmania there are jackjumpers, deadliest ant in the world. I was at fossil creek in tasmania and noticed jackjumpers on the high thick scrub around me, I have never run so fast in my entire life.
Yes, we do have blue-ringed octopuses in Australia, and they mainly live in rockpools. The greater blue-ringed octopus lives in the warm northern reefs. While the southern blue-ringed octopus is found along the shores and rock pools of the southern beaches.
I never saw this before but my spine tightened even before your first comment. As a kid we were clearly told, don’t touch the bloody octopus.
Yeah its taught just like stranger danger in primary school, dont touvh these, or the spiders with bright red backs
Bali is in Indonesia ... Australian neighbours. The blue rings light up neon blue as a warning/deterrent.
As a local Aussie, I have been stung by jellies down at NSW beaches. It wasn’t a fatal sting but, it hurt like someone was twisting a hot knife in my foot
When aussies recoil in fear and go "Don't even TOUCH that, WTF is wrong with you?!?!?" you know that one of two things is happening, either they're taking the piss or you are touching something unbelievably deadly.
Best bet is to go along with it and stop touching the thing. It'll either save your life OR make the joke funnier, no downsides.
*_I have seen many, many of these in Queensland, Australia._*_ We were taught from the first time we went to the beach as a child to never ever touch, these beautiful little assassins._ Some of the other common venomous beach going "nasties" are, the stone fish, box jelly's, and irukandji's.
All Australians know about blue ringed octopus she was so lucky but what a idiot picking something up you don't know about
the worst thing about blue rings, they look ugly until in self-defence mode, that's when the blue rings form and make them attractive, little kids play in and around the rocks/rockpools and see them and try to catch them, that's why we are taught from a really young age about them here
Simple rule, if it glowing with colors likes, blue or green, No Touchie,,,Ouch
Blue Ring Octopus are around Australia, and south east asia.
Extra thing, if you eat the "blue ring", can still be affected by the venom/poison, even if cooked. This has happened before
Oz is a slang word for Australia .
Americans never get it because they say "ossie" instead of "ozzie".
I've been living in Australia for almost 48 years, and I was in ankel deep water and saw a blue ring octopus. I've never been so close to death I didn't see it in time and stepped on it.
I live in South Australia and we used to find them in rock pools and catch them in jars to look at them closely! This was the 70s, maybe early 80s though, I haven't found one for decades.
Blue Rings can be found pretty much around the whole coast and in bays...I know they are in Port Phillip Bay outside Melbourne. Neighbour ended up in hospital from one being underneath the bouy his boat was anchored to.
To handle a blue-ringed octopus like she did, she's very lucky to be alive. 30 years ago I saw one of these strikingly colorful critters in a rock pool at Cronulla, a southern coastal town of Sydney.
When we were kids, I stopped my brother from stepping on one of these when we were at the beach. I've only ever seen maybe three of these in the wild.
I live in NSW and they are at one of my local beaches in the rock pools
They are at every local beach from Eden to Coolangatta. What makes yours special?
@ Sorry I offended you for mentioning where I have seen them 🤷🏼♂️
@@wunphlat1596 Sorry to offend you for asking...
Simple rule for holidaying in Australia; DON'T PICK UP THE WILDLIFE! Not everything can kill you, but it wants to.
Tasmanian here, when I was young I was snorkeling around and saw one, I had no idea what it was. I swam up to my Dad and told him about it, luckily he knew and ordered the family out of the water.
same. I saw one of these in a rock pool near Stanley. Luckily my mum heard us talking about it and knew we would try and touch it. Lesson learned
Really? Ordered the family out of the water? 🤣🤣🤣 These things are not like Jaws. They don't chase you down and eat you!
Nope. From "OZ" is the way to pronounce Aus. The letter "s" is sibilant in the full word, "Australia", but when shortened - "Aussie", for example, it is prosnounced like a "z". Has absolutely nothing to do with the word "us". Because it isn't a soft "s". "Oz" is what we call Australia for short. You know, like "Ozzie, Ozzie, Ozzie! Oi, oi, oi!" The video was from Bali, but blue-ringed octopuses live in Sydney Harbour as well.
Where I live in South Australia there are times where large numbers of blue ringed octopuses are present at popular swimming beaches and warnings are broadcast on local news networks advising people to take caution if swimming, still not as worrying as the potential for sharks to mistake you for their dinner though, just today 3 sharks were seen close to shore at some ouf our popular beaches. You never know when you might feel a bump then notice you're missing a leg moments before it comes back to finish you off lol..
When I lived in Adelaide South Australia I would go fishing around the Outer Harbour area and often found them at low tide under and among rocks while digging bait. Once my daughter found one in a coke can which was returned back to the water very quickly. I have seen them under the Outer Harbour warf when spear fishing.
Snorkelling at Peterborough, in Victoria, Australia.
I was working on a good patch of abalone in the shallows taking my time picking and choosing the larger ones.
The swell was a bit washy that day so I constantly had to grab onto rocks to stay in position.
No gloves.
Something told me to look at my support hand.
There he was.... agitated, all bright blue ringed up not 2 inches from my fingers.
Intense few minutes of 'did he or didn't he' ?? 😱
Thank You YAHUAH 🙌❤🙏
Time to go home, heart in my mouth, bumhole puckering.
Didn't know they inhabited my neck of the coastline, lesson learnt.
Suffice to say I wear gloves now.
She didn't notice the bright blue rings? Could the octopus have been any clearer about being poisonous? What a Muppet. Any creature that has markings like that is trying to tell you something. Listen.
They are disco death, check out the blue rings, my ma said I picked up one when I was a child 2-4 sort of range we were on holiday near Ballina, lucky me 😁
She was so bloody lucky. If it was in Bali, it was too chill on holidays like the rest of us holidaying in Bali.
I've only seen one, in a rockpool in far north western Australia. The blue rings look like they're electric
You can find those octopus everywhere in AUStralia too.
Wild animals - That thing changed colours. Run away before it kills us!
Humans - Pretty, better touch it.
Bali is Indonesia just north of aus( pronounced oz) ee have these in oz to.
Bali is like a sister country to Australia. It's where all the bogan people go on holidays 😂
And blue ringed octopus are from Australia, though I think there are a few in Bali too.
05:21 great attitude to have, even if it's harmless most Australians feel it's bad form to interact excessively with the native wildlife as you can stress them out, accidentally harm them or make them flee from their habitat/nesting area which can endanger the population. For most animals if you respect their space they will respect yours, just like humans most animals just want to live their lives and don't want a stranger coming upto them and touching them.
Agree
Lots of blue ring octopuses in South Australia
Very lucky .some young dude in Australia messing around put one his freinds back then 30 minutes later the freind was dead 💀
Blue ringed octopuses are quite common in tidal rock pools on the shores of Northern Australian waters as well as many SE Asian nations. All octopuses possess a parrot-like beak which helps them to rip apart their usual prey of crabs, crustaceans, fish and other sea creatures that they can capture and kill. To capture their prey, especially crab's they latch on and with their beak bite the eye of the victim whilst injecting the venom. As the eyes of any animal is basically just an extension of the brain the injected poison acts directly and almost immediately on the victim's nervous system immobilising it and leaving it defenceless. This is why the bite of a blue-ringed octopus is so dangerous to humans as the neurotoxins injected are powerful, fast acting paralysing agents that the voluntary and involuntary muscles of the chest, lungs and heart are very susceptible to, leading to asphyxiation and heart failure within minutes if not treated by trained and well equipped medical staff. As these octopuses are often encountered in tidal rock pools where fast access, especially by vehicles or boats, or evacuation of prone victims by stretcher or carry can be complex and hazardous, and the victims are often children or young adults who were just playing or exploring, tend to make the blue-ringed octopus a very dangerous and deadly animal for unwary or naive humans.
Had an unsuccessful evening fishing with a rod off a pier at the mouth of Tweed River. Thought i might've had a bite after mostly reeling in the line. Jerk of the rod send a blue ring octopus up out of the water and landed about a metre from a small girl fishing with her Dad. Had it hit her of if she went to grab it I don't think she'd be here. Really didn't expect to land one at that location in that way.
"She found out it was a blue-ringed octopus". it's not like the blue rings didn't give away. My daughter one day found one right outside our house where we used to go into the water without shoes for a swim. Needless to say, I'm always wearing shoes now.
Yes they are all over Australia aswell and OZ is short for Australia.
Aus is pretty common. Cheers from Oz.
The other thing people pick up without knowing just how bad they are is the cone shell . The empty shells are ok of course but when the animal is alive inside there they shoot out a spike from one end that has a neuro toxin in it that's almost as deadly as the Blue ringed octopus . As for Jellyfish man dont even go in the water if they are around . The pain from some of them puts you into shock and people can die .
Octopus have beaks, like birds, at the bottom of their bulbous body. All octopus can bite. Blue rings kills though lol
They are found all over Australia. I have had a few in tanks as pets just wish they lived longer as they are very smart. But I would never touch one.
Aussie jingle bells
I honestly thought you were going to say
"It's quite unfortunate but humans are very very very very very stupid"
Oh and Nobody in Australia spells Aus... A-U-S, We all spell it OZ.
(we shorten every single word we can possibly get away with shortening)
Trivia: the world can thank us for "selfie"
Aus Aust OZ are all ways of saying Australia
Thanks for explaining
Hey least i didn't say no... o_0 can we talk about that >
Most of the deadLy sea creatures aus has are also in Indonesia Papua New Guinea and Timor Leste which are all above us
We have jelly fish that are tiny and almost invisible but a sting is a death sentence or 48 hours of extreme pain eventually needing to be put on life support until the venom passes through your system.its the things U don't fear that'll kill you here
Oz. Having palpitations just watching that. All first aid courses here cover that thing.
😂😂bro that girl would have had no more than 8 MINUTES to seek medical attention, & as for the bite, they have a beak which is tiny but SUPER SHARP u wouldn't feel it bite you, then you'd feel dizzy then you'd most likely die, my next door neighbour in my home town Morriset Died in 3 mins from a bluering
Baley is right next door to
australia
There so much stuff here that can you
Why would you touch something you don't understand
no Aus is Australia shortened like McDonalds is maccas
You would pronounce Aus as Oz.
Google it, blue ringed octopus.
Aus just means Australia.
That word “Aus” is pronounced Oz.
But it was from AUS, As an AussIE and our country being like OZ.... stop correcting my upside down speech.
@ I should have added “in Australia”. We pronounce Aussie as Ozzy… but you are free to do your own thing, of course.
Welp the guy who made the vid got the joke :D Maybe he's secretly a larrikin like aus "hehe"
Not "Os" but "Oz"
That ain't cute, that is crap your pants level of scary!
Jebus people i'm the one from down under, Its all about "Aus" not you. But we have the little buggers, i can find you 20 Ozzie versions of it :P i love this comment section though :D
OZ is short for Australia
bahahhaha i'm sure "from Aus" just meant from AUStralia
In your own video "American Reacts To AUSTRALIA'S DEADLIEST ANIMALS (SONG)"
ruclips.net/video/vB2MmDlCg1U/видео.html
We've got a blue ringed octopus, no bigger than this, that just sits around in rockpools waiting to kill kids.
Sounds absolutely evil 😬😮
@@giobozzreacts Anything in the ocean that is vibrant bright colours, Leave it the F alone.
Evil is picking up a sea creature & "waterboarding" it with air.
Yeah na….one lucky chick…
Dood your thinking too much, it's Aus because it's short for Australia