I would have expected the Zambezi river at or near the top of the list. It has crocodiles, elephants and lions along its banks, far more hippos than the few left in the Nile, and the bull shark is called Zambezi shark in Africa for a reason.
Bull sharks like having their pups & growing up in rivers before returning to the ocean as adults. Then come back to the rivers to have pups again. What’s is unknown is if they keep returning to the same rivers they were born, grew up in.
@@bigtex1238 Because Macron lied that it was safe for swimmers to compete in swimming in it. Swimmers didn't even completed the race, all of them shortly after entering the river exited and started throwing up collectively. It's not about the wildlife, yes, but its disgusting, dirty and dangerous.
They change everyday due to ebbs and flows. Yet we name them but yet they differ each day. Are they rivers nah. They are but spirits of the cosmos containing alien like creatures of the night
Oh yeah South American river. A place where seemingly tiny harmless fish can enters urethra and caused some very painful feeling. That's the dreaded candiru
@@planescapedcould you pee after ? Or was a a temporary closure from it biting you - that some pretty kinky stuff your into but I’ll give you 10/10 for originality and dedication
I'm surprised the Everglades wasn't the Florida rep ngl. Technically the Everglades is just a wide and slow-flowing river that houses hundreds of thousands of gators, large pythons, 10 ft long alligator gar, bull sharks, American crocodiles, black bears, and a handful of venomous snakes like coral snakes and cottonmouths. Great video none the less, and really cool!!
Alligator gar in the everglades? No. Florida gar? Yes, and MAYBE up to 6 feet. Also, as with MOST of the rivers on this list, it just isn't that dangerous due to wildlife....
Alligator Gar don't attack people. They just look scary. They also get up to 14 feet and about 400 lbs, bout the same size as a Bull Shark and are also very endangered. My state are doing an alligator gar restoration in our asian carp infested rivers. They are the best defense we have against the invasive carp that pretty much eat the food chain. Saw some butt hole take a 12 footer a while back. Not cool.
This is such a good video, what a legend. He is so underrated. Vid suggestion: Animal groups worst affected by conservation bias- the main topic for my IB PYP Exhibition
As an African it never seems to amaze me how we always come on top in all things dangerous. Even our mosquitoes, flies and bees are deadly, yet alone the plants as well, touch em and die. 😅
@@cameronspence4977to be fair, when it comes to reptiles no other countries come close, and spiders. Australia takes the cake for both of those, and having larger crocs. Otherwise Africa beats us everywhere else
@@LoganSrensen I'll concede that your venomous reptiles are more venomous and your biggest crocs are bigger, but ours try harder and that has to count for something.
You could add the entire coast north of the Tropic of Capricorn. Not only does it have crocodiles and sharks but also the most deadly jellyfish in the world namely the Irukandji jellyfish and the box jellyfish.
@@Andrew-df1dr Steve Irwin once made a video on a boat out in the ocean in the gulf Carpentaria, super dangerous. Sharks, salt crocs, box jellyfish and venomous sea snakes.
@sidneyvandykeii3169 no the salt water crocodile is bigger and more dangerous the reason more people are taken by crocodiles in africa is australians have common sense around water crocodiles inhabit...Africans do not
The Adelaide River is no joke, I grew up in the northern Territory and there is no ammount of money you could pay me to get me in the water, we counted 24 crocodiles in a 100 metre stretch of river
I am actually surprised of the Tárcoles being in the list. Im Costa Rican, and it does definitely has many crocodiles, but its still surprising since few peoplr die on it every year. Also, excellent videos, Tsuki! Thank you!!
@thomashamilton2761 , there's plenty of videos that show people floating rivers and swimming around alligators without issues. This clown that put the video together is a Smooth Brain!
I remember as a kid being super hesitant to go tubing in the St Johns River bc you'd fly off the tube (being pulled by a speed boat) and then just have to tread water until the boat came back to get you... in the middle of THAT river, with water too dark to see in....
The Yukon River has no crocodilians, giant snakes, or Big Cats -- but it has moose (Arctic equivalent of a rhinoceros) and grizzly bears; they are bigger than tigers and eat almost anything.
Lol ,tigers and rhinos are like far more deadlier to humans than moose and grizzlies ,so it's definitely not as deadly as the rivers mentioned in the video
I fully get the Congo being number 1, but as someone in the Zambezi catchment, where we have the densest hippo populations in the world, some notoriously tetchy elephants and - due to some catastrophic management decisions involving colonial and precolonial body dumping, and mass releases of lifelong captive crocodiles after farms closed down - a healthy population of nile crocodiles that unequivocally view humans as food, I'm kind of grumpy that the Nile got a mention. (We do not have the Goliath tigerfish, but we do have it's smaller relative, and several species of giant catfish, one of which mainly eats young crocodiles, as well as smaller venom-spined ones, a river god who has pledged to destroy infrastructure, sharks in the lower reaches, massive pythons, numerous venomous snakes (including semi-aquatic forest cobras), and giant fishing owls that will happily divebomb anything when they have fledglings. And some of the most splash-happy lions outside of the Okavango.)
Because the Nile crocodile is the 2nd largest and 2nd most dangerous crocodile the salt water crocodile is the first...the reason more people are killed by crocodiles in Africa then Australia is common sense and also the lack of it
To me, it's the mysterious Amazon river. It is also full of anacondas that rarely attack humans, but a danger worth mentioning. Piranhas are not as aggressive to humans as what films depict, but they DO pose a real threat if you swim around them since splashes trigger their hunting behaviour. There are also other herd fish capable of taking down humans. Parasites and microorganisms are overlooked here. The Congo might seem to be more dangerous because it's well documented. Current is the only factor that gives it an edge to the New World's basin.
I grew up around the St Johns. As someone stated previously there are bull sharks there but they normally only go as far as Lake George. According to my father in the 1970's it was not uncommon to hear about people water skiing and getting followed by bull sharks. To my knowledge though there's never been a verified bull shark attack in the St Johns. There is another danger of the St Johns but it's more associated with lakes and tributaries. But we have brain eating amoebas that kill a few people every year or so.
great video. On the subject of rivers I have a questions and hope you might have insight. The Mackenzie, Northern Canada, is at all time low level after being at record high levels a few year ago. How does this effect the wildlife in the north?
Well any river with a crocodile especially is highly dangerous. Because of that the Zambezi river in Africa should've made this list, it's rife with crocodiles, also hippos.
I am surprised you didn’t mention the candiru catfish when discussing the Amazon. You should do a video on them I would like to know more about a fish that swims up your genitalia to feed on your blood. That’s scary
There aren't many recorded human deaths to anacondas, they are overrated in terms of being dangerous. Any river that has many big crocs would be far worse.
Wow, so Brisbane river is number 5!! Every time I'm near the river I'm always looking for fins in the water, been here for just over 50yrs and have never personally seen a bull shark!
correction* alligators can be found in all rivers and in every lake, also not limited to: retention ponds - any form of pond, puddles, the drain and if your driveway is positioned perfectly...where the sunrise hits the pavement in a way that effortlessly attracts the gators for that morning sun bathe
Any river that has bullsharks is bloody dangerous (even if it has no crocodiles, hippos, and such), not only are these fish capable of using underwater cavern systems and pop up in fresh water lakes, they are the most aggressive shark species that we are aware of. They will sometimes attack just because they can, not necessarily to feed.
@@AmrodOfDale Hippos are infinitely more dangerous than bullsharks by any measure. First, bullsharks don't actually attack humans a lot, next even if they do attack u can escape by punching their nose. With hippos in the water u are just dead, especially as they can chase u down in the land as well
Was hoping to see the Apalachicola/Chattahoochee on here, and the Ochlockonee. Filled to the brim with gators, but you covered North Florida with the St Johns. i get it
What a great video! I have learned so much. I may be wrong, but I still think Amazon has hundreds of undiscovered deadly fish and wildlife with many unreported deaths in the indigenous populations that live along its banks. It may be the deadliest.
Kinda glad I live further south in Australia. Up north the animals are crazy. Crocs, sharks, snakes. There is a wet and dry season up there, similar to Southeast Asia. Scary place.
And the 2 most deadly jelly fish in the world, down south we only have to worry about the great whites, Tiger sharks, bull sharks, stone fish and blue ring octopus
@jenniferphillippi1715 that's nice i eat blue waffles raw with a glass of 2 week old breast milk we can add both these comments to the list of things that never happened 🤣
I agree with the number one. Not only because the river is dangerous but also because it would be difficult to evacuate someone who is hurt because of the many rebels and lawlessness and because of deceases caused by mosquitoes and tsetse-flies. Being bitten by a dangerous snake in Florida or Australia and you still have a chance to get anti-venom in time. Being bitten on stretches on the Congo means you probably die because help is absent or comes too late.
And the legend talks about giant silures, that lurk in the muddy depth of this River. When I was a child, we heard about disappearing fishermen, and children, alongside the Canal of Ourcq. It is not the most dangerous river, but one of the gloomiest one, I grew up there, I swam only once on her waters.
@@ollieedwards4155 how can 63% of kills be fatal though? lol. I get what you're saying, but he's worded it poorly if what you're saying is the case. If they kill 300 people a year, 100% of those attacks are fatal. I think we get each other lol :)
River : * exists *
Bullsharks : "Bonjour."
I would have expected the Zambezi river at or near the top of the list. It has crocodiles, elephants and lions along its banks, far more hippos than the few left in the Nile, and the bull shark is called Zambezi shark in Africa for a reason.
Was about to comment the same thing,been on that river. NERVE WRECKING!
Yup. I’m pretty sure that the 9 most dangerous rivers in the world are all in Africa. Nile crocs and hippos see to that.
Yep, this is just a made up list with no real statistics. Zambezi/Chobe, try swim accross that
St johns also has bull sharks
yes i should've mentioned this but forgot my bad
Dont worry mate
Bull sharks like having their pups & growing up in rivers before returning to the ocean as adults. Then come back to the rivers to have pups again. What’s is unknown is if they keep returning to the same rivers they were born, grew up in.
DUUUVAAAL
@@TsukiCoveIf you ever do a list on deadliest lagoons you need to include the Indian River Lagoon. Malaria, red tide, and even tiger sharks...
After watching the Olympics, I would add the Seine in there too.
Why ?
@@bigtex1238 Because Macron lied that it was safe for swimmers to compete in swimming in it. Swimmers didn't even completed the race, all of them shortly after entering the river exited and started throwing up collectively. It's not about the wildlife, yes, but its disgusting, dirty and dangerous.
@@missk9521 oh crap. Pun intended
waiting for the breakdancer comments
Another banger, you're a legend mate!
and you are too :)
@@TsukiCoveand you are three 💋
Rivers are actually such wild ecosystems
They change everyday due to ebbs and flows. Yet we name them but yet they differ each day. Are they rivers nah. They are but spirits of the cosmos containing alien like creatures of the night
really
I love watching your channel grow. Been watching since you had like 1000 subs n your quality has always been top notch!
Some internet troll: Australia has the most dangerous rivers in the world!
Africa and South America: Are we a joke to you?
The #1 most dangerous river in the world is the one where I got my urethra bitten closed by a fire ant. >__>
That bastard was on a mission...
Oh yeah South American river. A place where seemingly tiny harmless fish can enters urethra and caused some very painful feeling. That's the dreaded candiru
@@planescaped wtf 😭
@@planescapedcould you pee after ? Or was a a temporary closure from it biting you - that some pretty kinky stuff your into but I’ll give you 10/10 for originality and dedication
In the congo river crocodiles pick people from boats becaise crocodiles have become used to human flesh....
I've just been binging all your vids. You sir have a subscriber.
thanks Steve :)
Great content. I'm glad ur videos showed up in my suggestions.
What a great watch for during work, would love continent specific versions of this 👀
i'll see what i can do in the future :)
Hey tsuki great video love watching your vids 👍👍
You deserve more views bro excellent video as always
thanks i really appreciate it :)
First time to the channel and thoroughly enjoyed the content. Gained quite a bit of knowledge .
I'm glad you enjoyed :)
I'm surprised the Everglades wasn't the Florida rep ngl. Technically the Everglades is just a wide and slow-flowing river that houses hundreds of thousands of gators, large pythons, 10 ft long alligator gar, bull sharks, American crocodiles, black bears, and a handful of venomous snakes like coral snakes and cottonmouths. Great video none the less, and really cool!!
Alligator gar in the everglades? No. Florida gar? Yes, and MAYBE up to 6 feet. Also, as with MOST of the rivers on this list, it just isn't that dangerous due to wildlife....
Has to be a traditional river
Alligator Gar don't attack people. They just look scary. They also get up to 14 feet and about 400 lbs, bout the same size as a Bull Shark and are also very endangered. My state are doing an alligator gar restoration in our asian carp infested rivers. They are the best defense we have against the invasive carp that pretty much eat the food chain. Saw some butt hole take a 12 footer a while back. Not cool.
Business interests interfere with the tourism truth.
bc @Fishingarrett keeps them in check
I thought the video was nicely done! I have no personal knowledge to critique the order but the narration and descriptions were perfect. Thank you!
This is such a good video, what a legend. He is so underrated.
Vid suggestion: Animal groups worst affected by conservation bias- the main topic for my IB PYP Exhibition
Thank you i love your videos there is always fun and intresting facts that alway puts a smile at my face keep up the good videos
thank you that's a really nice thing to say and i'll keep the videos coming :)
@SebastianSergejev-tm5yb thanks for saying that I want to see more videos
As an African it never seems to amaze me how we always come on top in all things dangerous. Even our mosquitoes, flies and bees are deadly, yet alone the plants as well, touch em and die. 😅
No. Australia has the most venomous
@@virnanmmm africa, australia and south/se asia are all pretty close for most venemous reptiles
@@cameronspence4977to be fair, when it comes to reptiles no other countries come close, and spiders. Australia takes the cake for both of those, and having larger crocs. Otherwise Africa beats us everywhere else
wait till you come to Australia Mate 😉
@@LoganSrensen I'll concede that your venomous reptiles are more venomous and your biggest crocs are bigger, but ours try harder and that has to count for something.
I love nature❤! These documentaries are entertaining, its fun to learn something❤
Great video mate keep it up!
will do
Thanks for mentioning my place tsuki
I love that even Crocs have to Yield to Hippos. I'd love to see a video where you rank the most dangerous Lakes in the world.
Keep up the good work man
will do :)
Great one, very interesting! 💪🏻
Another great video, as always!
Bro great video long time fan
Northern Australia: Ord River and Fitzroy River as well, you do not want to go swimming.
You could add the entire coast north of the Tropic of Capricorn. Not only does it have crocodiles and sharks but also the most deadly jellyfish in the world namely the Irukandji jellyfish and the box jellyfish.
@@Andrew-df1dr Steve Irwin once made a video on a boat out in the ocean in the gulf Carpentaria, super dangerous. Sharks, salt crocs, box jellyfish and venomous sea snakes.
@@mario10zeus I don't know of anyone that has been there. It seems like there are only two population centres Weipa and Groote Eylandt.
@@Andrew-df1dr maybe it was north of Cairns or Darwin, either case the sea was ridiculously dangerous
Lived and worked in the far north of Australia for many years. All the coastal rivers in the NT are pretty much deadly lol
I live on Bass River on Cape Cod in Massachusetts. I saw a big shark swim by one time and sometimes someone catches a Bass!
Bull Sharks go way up rivers to spawn
If someone catches two bass it's known as a double bass
Excellent video! Thanks!
I gave you a thumbs up as i enjoyed this video. Nile should have been 2nd however, lol. All good.
You are in DeNile of the fact that Tsuki putt the Nile in its proper place.
@sidneyvandykeii3169 no the salt water crocodile is bigger and more dangerous the reason more people are taken by crocodiles in africa is australians have common sense around water crocodiles inhabit...Africans do not
The Adelaide River is no joke, I grew up in the northern Territory and there is no ammount of money you could pay me to get me in the water, we counted 24 crocodiles in a 100 metre stretch of river
Crikey
great video i starts see your videos and they are fun to see
You have the best videos keep the good work 🔥🔥, can you do a video of mutations found in rivers?
No river is safe. 😂
Loved this one. ❤
I am actually surprised of the Tárcoles being in the list. Im Costa Rican, and it does definitely has many crocodiles, but its still surprising since few peoplr die on it every year. Also, excellent videos, Tsuki! Thank you!!
Great topic with lots of new (To me) information. Thanks!
A lot of FALSE information.
Good job i love your videos ❤️
thanks i appreciate it :)
A particularly great one, thanks!
I know that is difficult but can you do a top 10 of the most dangerous countries? According to wildlife
Nice video, keep going🙌🙌
Good work mate!!!
Don't let their looks fool you. Alligators are quite skittish. I've kayaked along several alligators, and they've always tried to flee
good to hear as someone whos going to florida soon
Yah until one grabs yah lmao
Florida man
If they were crocs, your history. They are super aggressive.
@thomashamilton2761 , there's plenty of videos that show people floating rivers and swimming around alligators without issues.
This clown that put the video together is a Smooth Brain!
Thank you for your quality content 😊
no problem :)
I remember as a kid being super hesitant to go tubing in the St Johns River bc you'd fly off the tube (being pulled by a speed boat) and then just have to tread water until the boat came back to get you... in the middle of THAT river, with water too dark to see in....
Can you please do a ranking of the most endangered misunderstood animals?
It seems like you have a very specific idea of what you want.
Maybe do your own video.
Who knows? Maybe you can also become youtube rich.
Endangered species aren't going to matter much longer now will they?
The Yukon River has no crocodilians, giant snakes, or Big Cats -- but it has moose (Arctic equivalent of a rhinoceros) and grizzly bears; they are bigger than tigers and eat almost anything.
I jump in the yukon every year buf wouldn't be caught dead in any of the others..also not a mention of anacondas
Bears if hungry far more dangeorus than crocs, but the sundurbans in INdia is suicide to swim in. Tigers are more efficient killers
The Yukon is tame, go lie down.
@@virnan Hypothermia is also a killer. Don't underestimate grizzlies and moose.
Lol ,tigers and rhinos are like far more deadlier to humans than moose and grizzlies ,so it's definitely not as deadly as the rivers mentioned in the video
Thanks for this, very interesting content.
I love the mention of the Irrawaddy dolphin. A picture of one of those guys has been my profile pic on Xbox for abt ten years now
Love your content man!
I was gonna question why the Nile wasn’t #1, but the Congo being #1 fixes that (though personally I have the Nile over the Amazon by a smidge)
Yeah I feel like congo, nile and amazon could all be argued at #1, 2 and 3
I fully get the Congo being number 1, but as someone in the Zambezi catchment, where we have the densest hippo populations in the world, some notoriously tetchy elephants and - due to some catastrophic management decisions involving colonial and precolonial body dumping, and mass releases of lifelong captive crocodiles after farms closed down - a healthy population of nile crocodiles that unequivocally view humans as food, I'm kind of grumpy that the Nile got a mention. (We do not have the Goliath tigerfish, but we do have it's smaller relative, and several species of giant catfish, one of which mainly eats young crocodiles, as well as smaller venom-spined ones, a river god who has pledged to destroy infrastructure, sharks in the lower reaches, massive pythons, numerous venomous snakes (including semi-aquatic forest cobras), and giant fishing owls that will happily divebomb anything when they have fledglings. And some of the most splash-happy lions outside of the Okavango.)
Because the Nile crocodile is the 2nd largest and 2nd most dangerous crocodile the salt water crocodile is the first...the reason more people are killed by crocodiles in Africa then Australia is common sense and also the lack of it
To me, it's the mysterious Amazon river. It is also full of anacondas that rarely attack humans, but a danger worth mentioning. Piranhas are not as aggressive to humans as what films depict, but they DO pose a real threat if you swim around them since splashes trigger their hunting behaviour. There are also other herd fish capable of taking down humans. Parasites and microorganisms are overlooked here.
The Congo might seem to be more dangerous because it's well documented. Current is the only factor that gives it an edge to the New World's basin.
Where would you rank the Zambezi river?
I grew up around the St Johns. As someone stated previously there are bull sharks there but they normally only go as far as Lake George. According to my father in the 1970's it was not uncommon to hear about people water skiing and getting followed by bull sharks. To my knowledge though there's never been a verified bull shark attack in the St Johns. There is another danger of the St Johns but it's more associated with lakes and tributaries. But we have brain eating amoebas that kill a few people every year or so.
I think our politicians may have swam there.
Won't be long and the Nile crocs will change that
@@ravenclaw8975That would explain a lot 😂.
great video.
On the subject of rivers I have a questions and hope you might have insight. The Mackenzie, Northern Canada, is at all time low level after being at record high levels a few year ago. How does this effect the wildlife in the north?
WAKE UP THE GOAT HAS POSTED
Great channel, informative.
Goliath Tigerfish are one of my favourite animals! Super cool animal
Well any river with a crocodile especially is highly dangerous. Because of that the Zambezi river in Africa should've made this list, it's rife with crocodiles, also hippos.
Sweet. Bemrisbane River in the top 5. Represent.
I am surprised you didn’t mention the candiru catfish when discussing the Amazon. You should do a video on them I would like to know more about a fish that swims up your genitalia to feed on your blood. That’s scary
Scary it is, but in terms of fatal dangers there are far more dangerous parasites in many rivers
Loved the clips from River Monsters
Amazing video
thanks i appreciate it :)
Nature is perfect, and beautiful ❤❤❤
I thought Zambezi river would be ranked in top 4
Best video from all the years
Minor correction: Tárcoles is accented on the first syllable. That's why there's an accent mark on the a. (Still, an excellent video.)
What about the Zambezi river ?
Seriously, it’s thick with crocs, hippos, elephants, lions etc.
Gotta factor the Anaconda into the Amazon. That alone could push it to #1
@@matthewcowdery5465 true, it is a water boa after all
There aren't many recorded human deaths to anacondas, they are overrated in terms of being dangerous. Any river that has many big crocs would be far worse.
Eu sou da Amazônia brasileira, muito comum nadar aqui no amazonas, nunca nadaria no Nilo e nem no congo e muito menos nos da Australia kkkk
Excellent video 😊
When tsuki posts he gives up brain cells🤓☝🏻
Wow, so Brisbane river is number 5!! Every time I'm near the river I'm always looking for fins in the water, been here for just over 50yrs and have never personally seen a bull shark!
Good to see "The Brown Snake" aka The Brisbane River getting a mention.
Damn, there goes my plans for a congo river swim.
you can do video about 5 deadliest reptiles in the world
Whoop whoop! St. Johns native here! 💪🏾😂
Longest video you made ❤
I agree totally with your ratings.
correction* alligators can be found in all rivers and in every lake, also not limited to: retention ponds - any form of pond, puddles, the drain and if your driveway is positioned perfectly...where the sunrise hits the pavement in a way that effortlessly attracts the gators for that morning sun bathe
Another banger
thanks i appreciate it :)
Bro thank you so much im telling my friends@@TsukiCove
Congo River has another terrifying aspect. The Ebola River is one of it's tributaries. The Ebola virus was named after the river.
Great information. You forgot to mention anacondas in the amazon river.
"Black caiman are not too be messed with"
The jaguar: "you call them caiman i call them lunch"
Do you include Orinoco with Amazon? Would have had it in the list and made it a top 10.
Hey, the St. Marys river just north has all the same stuff. We don't get on the list because we're small? Or because our headwaters are a swamp?
Any river that has bullsharks is bloody dangerous (even if it has no crocodiles, hippos, and such), not only are these fish capable of using underwater cavern systems and pop up in fresh water lakes, they are the most aggressive shark species that we are aware of. They will sometimes attack just because they can, not necessarily to feed.
Hippos are more aggressive and more deadly than bull sharks
@@kartikeyatiwari2502 I do not disagree. I'm just stating the dangers of bullsharks. Especially since they cover a much wider range than hippos
@@AmrodOfDale Hippos are infinitely more dangerous than bullsharks by any measure. First, bullsharks don't actually attack humans a lot, next even if they do attack u can escape by punching their nose.
With hippos in the water u are just dead, especially as they can chase u down in the land as well
Was hoping to see the Apalachicola/Chattahoochee on here, and the Ochlockonee. Filled to the brim with gators, but you covered North Florida with the St Johns. i get it
awsome
Your an Awesome man Sir.
What about the strid ?
When he put Amazon on number 2, I was quite surprised. But then I heard number 1 being Congo, then I thought yep, he's right
What a great video! I have learned so much. I may be wrong, but I still think Amazon has hundreds of undiscovered deadly fish and wildlife with many unreported deaths in the indigenous populations that live along its banks. It may be the deadliest.
One of my fav drum 'n bass DJ's is also names Tsuki, mad.
The cadence of the narrators voice, its borderline maddening.
Kinda glad I live further south in Australia. Up north the animals are crazy. Crocs, sharks, snakes. There is a wet and dry season up there, similar to Southeast Asia. Scary place.
And the 2 most deadly jelly fish in the world, down south we only have to worry about the great whites, Tiger sharks, bull sharks, stone fish and blue ring octopus
@@b4ked_one2518 I eat blue ring octopus raw with a side of feastables 👍👍
@jenniferphillippi1715 that's nice i eat blue waffles raw with a glass of 2 week old breast milk we can add both these comments to the list of things that never happened 🤣
@@b4ked_one2518 fair enough, I've never had feastables before
Great Photography
I agree with the number one. Not only because the river is dangerous but also because it would be difficult to evacuate someone who is hurt because of the many rebels and lawlessness and because of deceases caused by mosquitoes and tsetse-flies. Being bitten by a dangerous snake in Florida or Australia and you still have a chance to get anti-venom in time. Being bitten on stretches on the Congo means you probably die because help is absent or comes too late.
The Seine seems to be pretty lethal, judging by all those triathletes spewing their guts up 🤢
And the legend talks about giant silures, that lurk in the muddy depth of this River.
When I was a child, we heard about disappearing fishermen, and children, alongside the Canal of Ourcq.
It is not the most dangerous river, but one of the gloomiest one, I grew up there, I swam only once on her waters.
@@populustremulus228 oh that's creepy 😱
@@yellowjackboots2624 yes, Paris is creepy. Northern France is in general, especially in Winter.
"Nile crocs kill around 200 to 300 people each year. With around 63% of attacks being fatal." 😅😅
That does actually make sense 😂 He‘s saying they kill around 200-300 people a year, and 63% of all attacks that have happened are fatal
@@ollieedwards4155 how can 63% of kills be fatal though? lol. I get what you're saying, but he's worded it poorly if what you're saying is the case. If they kill 300 people a year, 100% of those attacks are fatal. I think we get each other lol :)
SOLID VIDEO!!!! Thank you!!!
Was expecting the Nile or Amazon river to be 1 and 2. Was surprising when it wasn’t