I'm a farmer, used to raise cattle. A local guy raised bison and tried to get me into it, I'm good. :D I raise hogs, now. Hogs can injure you, cattle can kill you, bison could...send you into an orbital trajectory.
@FOX007-um1wr No, they're not. Not in weight. The Juarez fighting bulls are small. This was a rigged event with size mismatched animals. People just like to believe fairytales, rumors and sleight of hand type events. They're too lazy to get real education or experience. If both those animals were 2000 lbs, the Bison isn't winning.
@@bradleytenderholt5135 Those and tourists in general. It's an international plague of stupidity. I've seen it before the internet was a thing, and a whole bunch more after social media became an obsession. For as long as humans have owned any type of camera or video, they just can't seem to understand that getting too close to wild animals for the perfect picture is stupid. UA-camrs take the cake, but I've seen literally everyone except small children, who seem smarter, do the same thing. Even with Black Bears.
My husband and I had the privilege to babysit a neighbor's " american bison ". His name was " Stanley ". We would visit Stanley daily and feed him and texas longhorns from the back of a small flatbed truck. We found Stanley a pleasant fellow ( uncut ) and was graceful as he ran behind the truck with a bale of hay in the back. We were surprised by Stanley's easy SMOOTH speed easily keeping up with the truck with hay in the back. Sadly Stanley passed from natural causes. Miss him.
The story of Ferdinand is a metaphor for men like me. Despite looking like a cage fighter, I don't want to fight. I just want to enjoy the beautiful "flowers"(metaphor for sexy ladies). 🥰
@@bernadettecartingreat addition to this thread. God bless the LATE GREAT Dr. Rush Limbaugh. He was a great Ameriican & would be backing another great American fighting on behalf of America to take back the USA from the communist Left & restore our nation's greatness. Trump #45 & #46 will soon be #47.
As an Aboriginal Native every time i see that picture of the Mountain of Bison skulls my heart aches for them and my Ancestors..and yes there was Only skulls in that picture no other bones giving an Idea to how prolific the near extinction and Destruction of this Magnificent Animal was back then..
😂 You're the equivalent of a vegan, always feeling the need to tell everyone you are, in fact, a vegan... no one cares. No one cares you are aboriginal or whatever. Stop being a victim.
I hear you loud and clear! It makes me wonder what kept the people of Paris in the catacombs so long that they boiled and polished the sculls there and at least one other city that I don’t recall. I’m old and was taught some history in school, but not in much detail.
@@ryanesau8147White people killed off all the bison.in an effort to kill off all the natives. I mean black people killed them all. White people killed only what they needed and used every part of the bison. White people even ate the hooves while the natives threw out the filet mignon and prime rib.. the natives also killed off all the wooly mammoths. And sabertooth mastodons. And the giant wooly tooth rabbit.
We used to raise buffalo and beefalo for the meat market when I was a kid. We were constantly having to go chase the out of the road at all hours of the day and night because they just walked right through barbed wire and elecric fences like they were not even there. Most of the time they were relatively docile but when it was breeding season the bulls got mean as and a cow with a calf was a psychopath. I once saw an angry cow with a new calf break through a cinder block wall because she wanted out of the calving pen.
@@loquat4440 Hmm...i thought they were two different species. I had a buffalo burger decades ago in Oklahoma, now im wondering if it was really a beefalo burger
Too bad that no one bothered to tell government officials in Cambodia 🇰🇭, otherwise their Kouprey herds wouldn’t have fled further back into the wilderness.
There is an interesting history behind the official bison herd of Texas. The original Goodnight/JA herd had genetics only unique to themselves and unlike any other in North America. However the uniqueness would turn out to be a liability in that they would not survive because it was not diverse enough. Eventually they were breed with some of Ted Turner’s herd in New Mexico. And the Texas bison went in to populate other bison in the country such as the ones in Yellowstone. The official herd of Texas now roams freely in Caprock Canyons state Park which is not that far from the Goodnight herd in Palo Duro Canyon state park. I highly recommend both parks.
This story gets brought up almost anytime someone talks about bison here in SD. Phillips was one of the people responsible for saving the bison from extinction. You did a great job telling the story and I subscribed.
@@snickerswo1f519, if you are the video's author, congrats and thank you for the story. Please check my comment where I explain Pierre's fate, which I managed to figure out. 😉
Everybody’s saying, Americans cheered for the buffalo when the buffalo are native to this continent, and Europeans brought cows/bulls/cattle. I love Buffalo and I love cattle and I know they can roam together without problem. Where’d the problem come from, human interaction as always.
Ok just to answer. The term back then though bison was the same as African Buffalo. They are both similar to on another. It's similar to what a pit bull is termed today. American Stafford terrier is the actual origin as English Bull terrier. Which is the real pit bull term from English. America tends to use the mistaken identity of animals. The bison VS Buffalo American Stafford (incorrect)vs English bull terrier(correct). Jack London wrote the terms wrong and So bison and Buffalo, were called wrong from 1900 wrong. And so the term were pretty dumb. He did that then. It hasn't changed. The terms were first written in 1898 as Buffalo/ Pit Bull Terrier VS England in terms you can understand today that "Call of the Wild" started the wrong cases. Just so a reader which means what, American Stafford terrier didn't nor Buffalo were terms originally used. The English bull terrier got the name "pit bull " going back over a thousand years to fight in the bulls in the bull pits in England ended in 1688 as illegal. The term Buffalo goes back wrong even more so. All just so you know the American Stafford terrier started existence in about 1800 in Stafford Virginia given the meaning. Take both terms and that's what it meant.
What a cool story, I will definitely share this one. Not editing out the minor mistakes, to me, made it feel human, like a friend sitting there reading me the story.
Given the alternative that a lot of new videos are using: AI generated voice overs, I prefer the narrations that are done with a real human voice, even if they contain mistakes.
I thoroughly enjoyed this video. I grew up in Texas and I grew up hearing about my Dad , a farm boy who as a young man joined the Texas Guard Service. He and his fellow Guardsmen went across the border to Mexico to watch the bullfights. He told me that he and his buds were cheating for the bulls and the crowd didn't appreciate that. Being a farm boy that raised cattle he didn't like seeing the Matador slowly bleed out the bull with pikes as he run by until he was so blood-lost that he didn't have any more fight in him and then walk up to him like a big shot and drive his sword into him when he didn't have any fight left. So they cheered when the bull would get the Matador ;)
I just watched this in person in Madrid. It was very interesting to see something so historic and storied. It was especially interesting how accurate aspects of episodes of bugs Bunny were😂
Oh! What memories you conjure up, for me ... Grew up in EP in the middle sixties; and witnessed the bullfights there. Alfredo Leal was a top bill fighter from Spain, if memory serves me. His youth and debonair style had every sweet young thing in Juaréz following him around his hotel in swarms. During one occasion, we happen to have friends staying in the same hotel (newly built in the Chamezal area). Elegant stairs, indoor bars that spilled out into various sitting niches, outdoor sunken bar/poolside with a ledge to stand on in the pool; so you could swim to the bar and perch there while drinking your daiquiri, then swim off after being refreshed! We always had to accompany our friends and family, visiting us in summer, to bullfights. Heady times, indeed ... I loved going over to Juaréz in the '60's and '70's!
@@Bullbothapeople understand that they are bison the same way they know Canada geese are not Canadian Geese. Don’t be that person who chastises people.
I remember buffalo nickels. Dimes and quarters were made out of real silver. In 1964 or thereabouts they replaced the silver with copper, overlaid with something else resembling silver. Thus began fake money.
I can’t believe that even back then they didn’t get serious about saving these animals until they’d cut the population from 30 million to a few thousand.
Those were just the skulls. The information stated in this did a good but conscious effort to skirt the fact that eliminating all of the buffalo was a concerted plan by American leaders to kill off the Native Indians. They don't teach this in most schools because it was a Government organized attempt of genocide and they almost pulled it off. Until around 1832, which is only 192 years ago and is not some ancient history, buffalo were thriving east of the Mississippi River. BTW- There were hired gunners on trains that targeted passing herds that had people loading their guns for them so they could shoot and kill as many buffalo as possible. Shoot one grab a loaded gun, shoot one grab a loaded gun..... Unlike at all what was stated, is that they didn't use the dead buffalo to feed the railroad workers or any other people and they didn't use them as resources, they just left all of the states covered in hundreds of thousands of rotting buffalo carcasses on their way west to take over and populate the country. Hiding our uglier side of history like we did with the real truth about slavery. Is it that "His story" was just a really just a made up story?
Agreed ... it was also political- kill the Buffalo 🐃 Bison and the military and the politicians and the settlers all new the Plains indians would starve... and just like giving blankets that had been wrapped round european Measles and smallpox sufferers it became another way of weakening and depopulating the Native Americans of the first Nation tribes off the land. Biological warfare and starvation, a Genocide ... Leading to wounded knee and the trail of Tears.. 💀 Yet the legacy of Sitting Bull and Chief Joseph and others, survived like these few Buffalo ... The Buffalo have recovered and returned ... hopefully the wisdom of the first Nations will follow in their path, time to listen before its too late for the new Americans?
I'm from South Dakota (where Pierre was from) and I remember my dad telling me this story with pride. My dad was fond of buffalo and native american culture even though we were descendants of finnish immigrants.
@vladtheimpala5532 It sounds like "Peer" rather than 'peeAIR". Everyone in Pierre and the rest of South Dakota pronounces it that way, even though it's not the way every other "Pierre" is pronounced.
@@hashtagrich I don't cringe because that's how you are supposed to say it. But yea most people say "Peer". I actually cringe when they say it the "right way". lol (or wrong way in you are french)
When I was young and living on our farm I witnessed a confrontation when our big Brown Swiss bull had it out with the neighbors Charolais bull. Our bull, Roy, had enough of the neighbors bull baying at him and chasing one of his cows in heat. Roy was across the road behind 4 strands of barbed wire. I could not believe it when Roy went over the wire, crossed the road, and jumped a cattle-guard. He continued charging and the other bull charged as well. I had no idea they were going to head butt, I thought they would just holler at each other and maybe push each other around, as I'd seen done before. Boy was I wrong. They hit like 2 locomotives and the fat and muscle on both bulls rippled like a wave from their head back to their tail and back towards their head. Then they backed up and and did it again. I got scared they were going to kill each other. But the Charolais went down on his front knees after the second hit and Roy stood there pawing the ground, ready to go again. The Charolais got up and headed for home. I don't think he ever crossed over and chased Roy's gals again. I saw Roy take on several bulls that strayed onto our place, usually over cows in heat. But the funniest was when the other neighbors' big white stallion took him on. It used to harass the cattle, biting them and giving a little kick sometimes. When he met Roy, Roy turned to look at him and got a hoof between the eyes. Then Roy turned 90% and rammed Sugarfoot (the horse) in the side and down he went. Roy was just about to run him into the ground, but the horse jumped up and fled. I remember several other encounters Roy had and he never lost. As big and powerful as he was, he was just about the gentlest bull I ever saw. We used to ride him and he just trotted around, never trying to dump us.
I am surprised that a Brown Swiss bull was big enough to handle a Charolais. When I owned a ranch in southeastern Oklahoma, I had what was supposed to be the second-best bull ever recorded in the world, with another Charolais in France being the best. My Charolais was raised by someone from the town just south of Oklahoma City where the university is. I kept two bulls; one was a registered Black Angus that I kept for my heifers, because the Charolais was too heavy for small, young first breeding beef cattle. The way they measure cattle to determine their national standing (and I don't remember everything) is by taking sonic measurements of the ribeye, their weight per day of age, their weening weight, and more. Some of the Hunts, of oil company fame, had a Charolais ranch out west on Highway 80 on the north side of the highway. When they had a big sale of their cattle, they printed up a thick catalog with most of their bulls on separate pages with their pedigree listed. I had to laugh to myself to see that none of them came close to the quality of my bull but would sell for far more I would have been able to sell my bull. I wish I had a place now, but one can't pursue two dreams at once.
@@ezseeker Thanks for sharing that info. Interesting. I am wondering, do you mean bigger as in heavier? I've seen Brown Swiss oxen and they were huge, but not heavy like beef cattle. Maybe Roy was more maneuverable than the bull he was fighting?
I remember growing up in Orangevale, CA (Suburb of Sactown) and in the early 90's when driving up Hwy50 in Folsom near Prairie City Rd along the hwy there must have been about 50-100 Buffalo. In the late 90's we just stopped seeing them. It was always cool seeing that herd of Buffalo growing up
i remember back in the 60s and 70s when there were very few bison left on earth. it's good to know they made a comeback and the importance of protecting our environment as we all play our part on this planet.
Most of them were crossed with bovine to make it possible. I think the only pure bread heards are in Yellowstone. Maybe a couple private collections but cattle made the recovery happen.
Pierre had three bulls staying as far away from him as possible… Pierre sat down in the middle of the ring and took a nap! Lmao sounds like an American 🇺🇸… hilarious 😂😂
Unfortunately, all the promoters proved is that some people will do anything for a buck, proving they were nothing but cruel, heartless, greedy scumbags. Besides, that your presentation was great!
Just different time back then. You can’t shame them for customs that we no longer consider acceptable. You likely would have been right along side the rest of them if you were raised around it and accept it from birth. That’s just how we work as humans.
It was a different time with different standards. One of the two greedy scumbags is largely responsible for saving the American bison from extinction, and he was specifically trying to save them by bringing their numbers way up.
Yes. Even if standards were different back then, the idea of selling their heroes to the butcher after all that instead of bringing them home . . . Disgusting.
In Ky...farmers put "jacks" in with their cattle herd and these Jack's not only are Terminators on predators such as coyete these Jack's sometimes turn on the bulls. A Jack will quickly beat the life out of a 2000lb bull. I personally seen a Jack quickly beating a 2000lb bull near to death. The Jack will rotate in a circle with very accurate powerful kicks to the head and legs. A big Jack is about 650lbs It would be a toss up between a Jack and a Buffalo I think.
@maximusvonderbrewskis it's a male "donkey" Their the best cattle protection you can have with your herd. Well by themselves their extremely formidable...a PACK of great Pyrenees are impossible to beat...they can't eat what the cattle eat all the time so the farmers where I live use "jacks"
My dads boss bought 5 buffalo for his farm and had telephone poles cut and buried and a heavy chain link fence attached to them to keep them corraled and the biggest buffalo Mr Nickle walked over to the fence put his head down and hooked his horn into the links and basically picked his head up and pulled the poles out of the ground and flicked the fence onto his back and walked into the next field and started grazing
The reason they’re called” Buffalo” is because whenever the Europeans came here they compared them to Buffalo from where they were from therefore, they were called American Buffalo
Reader’s Digest needs to print the story because too many of the certain kind of scruples won’t put it on the cover of Guidepost (founded by Dr. Norman Vincent Peale).
When our family lived in SD near Wind Cave National Park, my father often would make fun of tourists who would drive their cars off the road in the park to get a closer look at the buffalo herd that was free to roam the park. Time and time again my father would report that a "docile-looking" Buffalo had charged and smashed a car or injured the foolish driver!
Great story! First one I've seen on your channel. I very much appreciate the personal narration. Even with the odd stumble of the tongue, it is 1000% better than those robot voiced we hear so often on UA-cam. So new sub for sure!
If you happen to ever get to visit Kentucky one of these days, visit the Stockyards Restaurant at 255 Helena Road in Flemingsburg for the best roast beef 🥩 meal in greater Kentucky.
Charles Goodnight founding manager of the famous JA Ranch in the vast region of Palo Duro Canyon (Texas version of Grand Canyon) saved the last of the bison in the Panhandles of TX & OK. He experimented with crossbreeding bison and Hereford cattle. One of the Lonesome Dove (actor TL Jones) characters was based on Goodnight. He carried large amounts of cash to buy land from stressed ranch and farm owners he encountered. To protect himself he trained a Border Collie to sleep on his chest when camping on the range. Goodnight married late in life and had no children.
Ok....I'm calling BS. This narrative says that hunters for the RR would kill 100,000 buffalo per day. BS. It also stated that these hunters used high powered rifles that could drop a buffalo from 1000 yards away. That comment is true but there were not a handful of hunters on the plains who could make that shot without luck, beyond skill, oozing from their ears. Shots up to and usually not more than 500 yards were the norm. And, Im familiar enough with American Western History to understand that there were exceptions but they weren't common.
It’s mostly a narrative of evil oppressive Europeans bent on destroying nature. _(ironic considering the obsession with conservation)_ Estimated population, before & after, with a single variate narrative to explain the change. In contrast, people rarely discuss the introduction of the horse and firearms to the Comanche and its consequences.
I will disagree with your comment that Buffalo are calm or peaceful. They have poor vision. But, they are aggressive. And shooting at 1,000 yards was only in the movies.
In 1872 you would have been there watching with them. People at that time had to kill their own food and had not raised animals to the same level as people. I only kill something if I intend to eat it and that's fairly rare any more, but I will slaughter a hog, but my children understand that our pets were not family members, and were never treated as if they took an equal place in our house.
The narration of this was so refreshing to hear. We all stumble over a words or a saying now and again and hearing your made this video far more enjoyable than the ai voice lazy channels use. A thirty minute video with out a stammer just doesn’t jibe. The historical story you shared is one of several involved over time and this is the first time I’ve heard of any of them. Love your channel and of course I subscribed and clicked to thumbs up the video.
My friend's cousin has a ranch and his Buffalo are so laid back and friendly! I was petting the big creatures and they seemed to enjoy the interaction with humans! I kinda understand why it took Pierre a bit to react to the threat! I will say this they are so huge up front around the shoulders and neck I understand how they got the best of the bulls! It's kinda like a bull dozer vs a front end loader! The bulldozer being the Buffalo is just built to hold its ground and push around anything in it's way especially if it is a threat! Great story! Peace ✌️ ☮️
Petting them and treating them like a pet will get you killed dead. Most of them I've seen in private hands have enough cattle genes in them to calm them down some, but they are still moody and unpredictable regardless of how long you've been petting them.
A friend of mine has a herd of 70-80 bison. They are awesome creatures, I'm not getting any closer than a 100 yards of em! When those bulls start standing up, it's time to stop!
I visited a farm when I was younger, like 30 years ago, that had a herd. They were pretty tame. We pet them through the fence and ate carrots we fed them. They were massive, that’s for sure.
@@smelltheglove2038I will never figure out the American fascination with petting an animal that had just as soon kill you as feel your touch. Cattle only allow it because they associate humans with food. Buffalo are just to moody to be screwing with.
My only complaint about your story is your repeated pronunciation of Fort Pierre. In South Dakota the name is pronounced Peer. My Brother in Law is a singer/song writer in Custer SD. He wrote a song about Scotty Philips entitled "The Man who saved the Buffalo" Custer State park is home to one of the largest buffalo herds in the world and can be traced to Scotty Philips herd. Each year Custer State park has a round up of the herd which allows a heathly population and several other herds across America have started from them. All thanks to Scotty Phillips.
Good video. Next time do a practice run through to get out grammar mistakes. Then make your final version and while making it if you have any as everyone does. Stop the recorder and start where the sentence ended with no mistake. Or where there was a pause without a mistake. Also, try to keep the tone of your voice constantly building to the climax of the bison killing 3 bulls. Keep at it! Listen to others with a lot of subscribers and their constant changing of voice tones. Some good ones are "Dark Skies" , "Project Farm", "Task & Purpose". I hope this helps.
Man, this guy is really butchering the script he chose to read. It’s painful to listen to him stumbling and fumbling over his words, even though it seems to be good info.
Yes! Where have you been sir? I miss your new content. I am currently in college for a degree in US history for secondary education. I plan on incorporating your video chronological order into my lesson plans in the future. Thanks for everything! Hope you are doing well!!!
@@xdtIt was a good video. He did just fine. I really enjoyed it. You have no respect for someone who worked hard to provide you and others with an education on a controversial part of history that’s difficult to find all the information on this man gave in his video. Perhaps not everyone should be commenting on videos. That means people like you. So, just maybe YOU NEED TO SHUT UP! Learn & show some respect!
Hmm correction on ur history .. most Scotsman and Irishman never returned to thier homeland .. they did not have the money . Most joined the army or ranch or went on the land rush on the oklahoma territory.. none if any returned due to the cost of ship travel and risk . Most knew this upon the trip . They had one way tickets . FYI
@@bradleytenderholt5135 No. That would be unsurprisingly one sided. We already have examples of juvenile male elephants killing large male rhinos in the wild, practically effortlessly. Outside of a human using technology, no land animal on Earth has a chance of taking down an elephant in a physical confrontation.
@@Unpainted_Huffhines believe it or not, some lions have gotten hungry enough to take down elephants and even giraffes. While this isn’t 1 v 1, I feel like the dramatic size discrepancy kinda evens the odds.
@@TwinTurboLsx I am aware. A number of lions can combine efforts to take down a lone young, old, or ill elephant. But a healthy bull is pretty much unchallengable.
@@Unpainted_Huffhineswell I'm no expert but I have seen a pride of lions take down a good sized elephant. It's just a matter of wearing it down with superior numbers. Lions rarely get elephants isolated to kill one but it happens often enough that the Lions know to close the trunk to help stop it breathing.
Tell it to the character George Kennedy played in that ‘Virginian’ episode “THE NOBILITY OF KINGS” who stumbled upon a sickly steer the day before the big cattle drive to Cheyenne begun. After stumbling onto the steer in question he wanted to shoot down every individual in the herd that one steer was from, but faced opposition from both the owner of the steer as well as the title character of The Virginian himself until the town vet made his analysis, and said that the herd in question had to be destroyed, including a newly added black Aberdeen-Angus bull. Just check out the IMDb file on the episode as well as the IMDb file of the 1974 made-for-tv movie “BULL OF THE WEST”, which includes footage from the same episode mentioned.
my family and i a 15 year old boy in 1987 were vacationing Mexico's capitol D.F my dad thought it would be a good idea to have the whole family visit the Plaza de Toros. "the plaza of bulls" what horror we all saw. poor bulls and one unlucky matador though his life was not taken. i saw at least 3 bull fights that Sunday afternoon before we left for a scheduled 8 fights. i have always cheered for the bulls always!
Black Elk tells a story of a bull that fought a bison. The two charged at each other : the bison's horns tore a huge gapping wound from the bulls head to its tail. The bull fell over dead having been sliced from head to tail.
THANK YOU!!! I have been hoping someone would post this comment. I read that book some years ago, and was hoping someone else would have as well. He said the Indians were betting on the bison (he called it a buffalo but I don't want to bring all the corrections people out) and the whites were betting on the bull. I can't remember if it was a longhorn or not. I do remember everyone questioning how the bison would be able to connect with its tiny horns and most people, including the boy Black Elk, thinking the bull had a big advantage in its reach. He told another story about a bear and a dog that were made to "fight.". Remember that one?
Thank you for doing this story. I think it's awesome. Long live our great American Buffalo. I would have loved to be in that crowd when Pierre had his day in the ring.
It`s not quite fair to blame "hunters" for the near-extinction of the bison. It was a deliberate policy to deprive the Plains Indians of their livelihood. Train passengers were allowed to shoot bison from the windows and the carcasses were left to rot. Bison were shot just for their tongues, or for their hides. The waste was horrific, as was the carnage. Willi B. in Canada.
It wasn't in our life time . Things were different then and you can't judge those times by ours. There were different times and values. We need to understand that.
Though the terms are often used interchangeably, buffalo and bison are distinct animals. Old World “true” buffalo (Cape buffalo and water buffalo) are native to Africa and Asia. Bison are found in North America and Europe. Both bison and buffalo are in the bovidae family, but the two are not closely related.
Everybody knows that. But we have been calling bison buffalo for at least as long as European man has been in North America. We have towns and cities named Buffalo. There were buffalo wallows, buffalo roads, buffalo hunters, buffalo guns. And there are at least 2 Buffalo Rivers. I like callin' 'em buffalo, or buffler as many old timers did.
@@w.neumanthe Cape would lose, but I would love to watch. The meanest animal I have ever seen in the world is the Cape Buffalo. Strong and don't get killed easily!
Almost correct. "True" buffalo (members of the Bubalus genus) are only in Asia - these being water buffalo and such. African buffalo (genus Syncernus) aren't true buffalo either - but they're more closely related to Bubalus than they are to domestic cattle or bison. You're right on the rest, though: bison aren't very closely related to any of them, and are most closely related to yaks.
Dude, great story and presentation. My only suggestion would be to just slow down ur speech pattern just a bit. This will build more anticipation, lessen the few small speaking errors, and add more of an off the cuff, storyteller kinda feel to it. Don't take my simple suggestion as criticism. I am by NO MEANS badmouthing ur video. U do an amazing job! This is the first video from ur channel that I have watched. I enjoyed it thoroughly, and def will check out the rest of ur collection. I am a huge history buff/nerd, and can get lost in this type of content for days. Nice video!
Excellent story about the Bull and Buffalo very interesting and informative. Thank you for sharing this piece of history with us! I also just subscribed because of your interesting content!
I was born and raised in Juarez (been gone a few years now). Went to a couple of bullfights as a kid but the one I remember enjoying the most was when the matador was so unskilled that the crowd started cheering for the bull! I can't believe I never heard this story before, but I'm glad how it turned out. Thanks for sharing this with the world. I subscribed.
I'm a farmer, used to raise cattle. A local guy raised bison and tried to get me into it, I'm good. :D I raise hogs, now. Hogs can injure you, cattle can kill you, bison could...send you into an orbital trajectory.
I can imagine. Those bison have a huge upper body with the strength to match. Bulls aren't small, but are dwarfed by the bison.
😂😂😂😂😂lmfao
Musk oxen..
😂😂😂
@FOX007-um1wr No, they're not. Not in weight. The Juarez fighting bulls are small. This was a rigged event with size mismatched animals. People just like to believe fairytales, rumors and sleight of hand type events. They're too lazy to get real education or experience. If both those animals were 2000 lbs, the Bison isn't winning.
The Buffalo said Im not taking this "BULLSH!T"
I see what you did there. lol
Lmao
🤣
That's why they go for your back, then knee, your heart, and mind. Americans beware them, they are at our door.
It sounds like the Buffalo knocked the bullshit out of him.
Buffalo "use their horns only when necessary to fend off bears and mating rivals" and elderly female tourists who get too close trying to pet them.😊❤❤
🤘
@@bradleytenderholt5135 Those and tourists in general. It's an international plague of stupidity. I've seen it before the internet was a thing, and a whole bunch more after social media became an obsession. For as long as humans have owned any type of camera or video, they just can't seem to understand that getting too close to wild animals for the perfect picture is stupid. UA-camrs take the cake, but I've seen literally everyone except small children, who seem smarter, do the same thing. Even with Black Bears.
Tourons know.
Bingo
Step right up ladies. Pat the fluffy cow and possibly lose your pants.
My husband and I had the privilege to babysit a neighbor's " american bison ". His name was " Stanley ". We would visit Stanley daily and feed him and texas longhorns from the back of a small flatbed truck. We found Stanley a pleasant fellow ( uncut ) and was graceful as he ran behind the truck with a bale of hay in the back. We were surprised by Stanley's easy SMOOTH speed easily keeping up with the truck with hay in the back. Sadly Stanley passed from natural causes. Miss him.
I like you used real language. Cut. Most don't use that word unless in the know! Love it. ❤️
He wasn't uncut, he was a bull.
@@bradleytenderholt5135 huh?
@@davidrice3337 city boy u are. Lmfao
LOVE YOUR VIDEO and YOUR hard work, THANK you for sharing 💕💙💕💙💕💙💕💙💕💙💕💙
But Ferdinand just wanted to sit and smell the flowers and wanted nothing to do with Pierre 😂
Obviously a distant relative of Ferdinand’s.
The story of Ferdinand is a metaphor for men like me. Despite looking like a cage fighter, I don't want to fight. I just want to enjoy the beautiful "flowers"(metaphor for sexy ladies).
🥰
Possibly.
Bulls pivot on their back legs... Buffalo pivot on their front legs. Deadly difference!
hi 9917, the Buffalo's are taller and maybe faster too so a Buffalo who can turn/pivot on front legs can get the bead on the Bull alot quicker?
@@StandingStones1776-vb6zn yes, and the matador...
Actually it's just the opposite
@@Levis-l8l look it up
Awesome story and narration! I never heard of Scotty Phillips, but thank God he helped save the American Bison!
They are not saved yet...
Some lunatics out there are breeding them for the purpose of setting them up for trophy hunters looking for heads to mount over their fireplaces.
@@gerharddeusser9103Sure they are. Like Rush Limbaugh said, as soon as you start to eat something, people will start raising it.
@@bernadettecartingreat addition to this thread. God bless the LATE GREAT Dr. Rush Limbaugh. He was a great Ameriican & would be backing another great American fighting on behalf of America to take back the USA from the communist Left & restore our nation's greatness. Trump #45 & #46 will soon be #47.
Terrible narration, so unprofessional. Still, good story.
As an Aboriginal Native every time i see that picture of the Mountain of Bison skulls my heart aches for them and my Ancestors..and yes there was Only skulls in that picture no other bones giving an Idea to how prolific the near extinction and Destruction of this Magnificent Animal was back then..
😂 You're the equivalent of a vegan, always feeling the need to tell everyone you are, in fact, a vegan... no one cares. No one cares you are aboriginal or whatever. Stop being a victim.
The fallen and their arena bloodsport games. Like a dagger in the heart.
I hear you loud and clear! It makes me wonder what kept the people of Paris in the catacombs so long that they boiled and polished the sculls there and at least one other city that I don’t recall. I’m old and was taught some history in school, but not in much detail.
Ya but the North American Indians killed buffalo in the millions … the whites did as well, but Indians did it more.
@@ryanesau8147White people killed off all the bison.in an effort to kill off all the natives. I mean black people killed them all. White people killed only what they needed and used every part of the bison. White people even ate the hooves while the natives threw out the filet mignon and prime rib.. the natives also killed off all the wooly mammoths. And sabertooth mastodons. And the giant wooly tooth rabbit.
We used to raise buffalo and beefalo for the meat market when I was a kid. We were constantly having to go chase the out of the road at all hours of the day and night because they just walked right through barbed wire and elecric fences like they were not even there. Most of the time they were relatively docile but when it was breeding season the bulls got mean as and a cow with a calf was a psychopath. I once saw an angry cow with a new calf break through a cinder block wall because she wanted out of the calving pen.
I definitely would not want to be on the other end of a pissed off bison 😂 They're huge animals.
Whats a beefalo???
@@madarab37 Hybrid between bison and domestic cattle= beefalo. Many of the bison today have cattle genes in them they interbred without problems.
@@loquat4440 Hmm...i thought they were two different species. I had a buffalo burger decades ago in Oklahoma, now im wondering if it was really a beefalo burger
@@madarab37 Yes they are two separate species, but they can interbred.
We can also thank Mrs Charles Goodnight for convincing him to rescue a small herd of buffalo. Which is where the Texas herd of Buffalo also came from
Good thinking on her part.
I agree, a simple thing like this kept a species from going extinct
Too bad that no one bothered to tell government officials in Cambodia 🇰🇭, otherwise their Kouprey herds wouldn’t have fled further back into the wilderness.
There is an interesting history behind the official bison herd of Texas. The original Goodnight/JA herd had genetics only unique to themselves and unlike any other in North America. However the uniqueness would turn out to be a liability in that they would not survive because it was not diverse enough. Eventually they were breed with some of Ted Turner’s herd in New Mexico. And the Texas bison went in to populate other bison in the country such as the ones in Yellowstone. The official herd of Texas now roams freely in Caprock Canyons state Park which is not that far from the Goodnight herd in Palo Duro Canyon state park. I highly recommend both parks.
A herd of wild Bison hid out in Palo Duro Canyon, and were some of the most genetically pure Bison left.
This story gets brought up almost anytime someone talks about bison here in SD. Phillips was one of the people responsible for saving the bison from extinction. You did a great job telling the story and I subscribed.
Thanks for subbing (this is my alt account)
@@snickerswo1f519, if you are the video's author, congrats and thank you for the story. Please check my comment where I explain Pierre's fate, which I managed to figure out. 😉
Everybody’s saying, Americans cheered for the buffalo when the buffalo are native to this continent, and Europeans brought cows/bulls/cattle.
I love Buffalo and I love cattle and I know they can roam together without problem. Where’d the problem come from, human interaction as always.
The buffalo was highly regarded by Americans. Europe, Africa and Asia also have buffalo.
What is the difference between a Buffalo and a Bison? They now teach that our Buffalo isn't a Buffalo, but a Bison in School...
Buffalo and reindeer, white tails east, mule deer in the more desert west. Nature rules still.
Even the famous Texas Longhorn was actually just the English Longhorn.
Ok just to answer. The term back then though bison was the same as African Buffalo. They are both similar to on another. It's similar to what a pit bull is termed today. American Stafford terrier is the actual origin as English Bull terrier. Which is the real pit bull term from English. America tends to use the mistaken identity of animals. The bison VS Buffalo American Stafford (incorrect)vs English bull terrier(correct). Jack London wrote the terms wrong and So bison and Buffalo, were called wrong from 1900 wrong. And so the term were pretty dumb. He did that then. It hasn't changed. The terms were first written in 1898 as Buffalo/ Pit Bull Terrier VS England in terms you can understand today that "Call of the Wild" started the wrong cases. Just so a reader which means what, American Stafford terrier didn't nor Buffalo were terms originally used. The English bull terrier got the name "pit bull " going back over a thousand years to fight in the bulls in the bull pits in England ended in 1688 as illegal. The term Buffalo goes back wrong even more so. All just so you know the American Stafford terrier started existence in about 1800 in Stafford Virginia given the meaning. Take both terms and that's what it meant.
What a cool story, I will definitely share this one. Not editing out the minor mistakes, to me, made it feel human, like a friend sitting there reading me the story.
Thought so myself.
Given the alternative that a lot of new videos are using: AI generated voice overs, I prefer the narrations that are done with a real human voice, even if they contain mistakes.
I thoroughly enjoyed this video. I grew up in Texas and I grew up hearing about my Dad , a farm boy who as a young man joined the Texas Guard Service. He and his fellow Guardsmen went across the border to Mexico to watch the bullfights. He told me that he and his buds were cheating for the bulls and the crowd didn't appreciate that. Being a farm boy that raised cattle he didn't like seeing the Matador slowly bleed out the bull with pikes as he run by until he was so blood-lost that he didn't have any more fight in him and then walk up to him like a big shot and drive his sword into him when he didn't have any fight left. So they cheered when the bull would get the Matador ;)
So would I.
T
To bad they didn't cheer for the Buffalo! They almost wiped it off the face of the earth.
I just watched this in person in Madrid. It was very interesting to see something so historic and storied. It was especially interesting how accurate aspects of episodes of bugs Bunny were😂
Oh!
What memories you conjure up, for me ...
Grew up in EP in the middle sixties; and witnessed the bullfights there. Alfredo Leal was a top bill fighter from Spain, if memory serves me. His youth and debonair style had every sweet young thing in Juaréz following him around his hotel in swarms. During one occasion, we happen to have friends staying in the same hotel (newly built in the Chamezal area). Elegant stairs, indoor bars that spilled out into various sitting niches, outdoor sunken bar/poolside with a ledge to stand on in the pool; so you could swim to the bar and perch there while drinking your daiquiri, then swim off after being refreshed!
We always had to accompany our friends and family, visiting us in summer, to bullfights. Heady times, indeed ...
I loved going over to Juaréz in the '60's and '70's!
idk if the buffalo knew he was supposed to win at first and was just on defense and then was like hey this jerk is trying to kill me lol
Sorta like people finally realizing what governments are really about!😆
It’s not a buffalo, it’s a bison.
@@Bullbotha shut up, you knew what they're saying just like everyone else.
@@Bullbotha Australian: "You can't wash your hands in a buffalo, but you CAN wash your hands in a bison."
@@Bullbothapeople understand that they are bison the same way they know Canada geese are not Canadian Geese. Don’t be that person who chastises people.
Bring back the buffalo nickel
A famous quote from the past and so true in todays inflationary times; "What this country needs is a good 10 cent nickel."
2006
@@parsonscarlson7984
#karma ! 😅
they have
I remember buffalo nickels. Dimes and quarters were made out of real silver. In 1964 or thereabouts they replaced the silver with copper, overlaid with something else resembling silver. Thus began fake money.
That pile of bones is just horrifying
And that was just one of many!
I can’t believe that even back then they didn’t get serious about saving these animals until they’d cut the population from 30 million to a few thousand.
Those were just the skulls. The information stated in this did a good but conscious effort to skirt the fact that eliminating all of the buffalo was a concerted plan by American leaders to kill off the Native Indians. They don't teach this in most schools because it was a Government organized attempt of genocide and they almost pulled it off. Until around 1832, which is only 192 years ago and is not some ancient history, buffalo were thriving east of the Mississippi River. BTW- There were hired gunners on trains that targeted passing herds that had people loading their guns for them so they could shoot and kill as many buffalo as possible. Shoot one grab a loaded gun, shoot one grab a loaded gun..... Unlike at all what was stated, is that they didn't use the dead buffalo to feed the railroad workers or any other people and they didn't use them as resources, they just left all of the states covered in hundreds of thousands of rotting buffalo carcasses on their way west to take over and populate the country. Hiding our uglier side of history like we did with the real truth about slavery. Is it that "His story" was just a really just a made up story?
Agreed ... it was also political- kill the Buffalo 🐃 Bison and the military and the politicians and the settlers all new the Plains indians would starve... and just like giving blankets that had been wrapped round european Measles and smallpox sufferers it became another way of weakening and depopulating the Native Americans of the first Nation tribes off the land. Biological warfare and starvation, a Genocide ... Leading to wounded knee and the trail of Tears.. 💀
Yet the legacy of Sitting Bull and Chief Joseph and others, survived like these few Buffalo ...
The Buffalo have recovered and returned ... hopefully the wisdom of the first Nations will follow in their path, time to listen before its too late for the new Americans?
The Wild West was exactly that.
I'm from South Dakota (where Pierre was from) and I remember my dad telling me this story with pride. My dad was fond of buffalo and native american culture even though we were descendants of finnish immigrants.
Also South Dakotan. Do you ever cringe when you hear Pierre pronounced the French way, rather than the local way? 😁
@@hashtagrich
What’s the local way?
@vladtheimpala5532 It sounds like "Peer" rather than 'peeAIR". Everyone in Pierre and the rest of South Dakota pronounces it that way, even though it's not the way every other "Pierre" is pronounced.
Most people who got to know the Indians and their culture, liked/like them, no matter where their ancestors came from.
@@hashtagrich I don't cringe because that's how you are supposed to say it. But yea most people say "Peer". I actually cringe when they say it the "right way". lol (or wrong way in you are french)
Those bulls got taught a hard lesson in physics.
That’s right!
USAUSAUSA!
Lots of Mex tacos,
So,
At least there’s that 😂🤷🏿♂️🙈🤡🌎
@@ransakreject5221when you say USA, you mean the USA what almost extinct the buffalos? Is that USA or is another one?
@@jorgeguanche5327 What a lame comeback. It's a Bison. Not a buffalo and they're def still here. Try again.
Wouldn't have happened without sick humans.
One fight with a buffalo had the bulls suffering PTSD.😂
I hope you never have to know what you are talking about there .
@@americanlivesmatter-BmanWildexactly
Lolol
@@americanlivesmatter-BmanWild thanks mom.
The PTSD I have produces just the opposite.
I demand an animated version of this story...these are the tales that need to be immortalized
You mean this video cannot be immortalized? It HAS to be an animation?
When I was young and living on our farm I witnessed a confrontation when our big Brown Swiss bull had it out with the neighbors Charolais bull. Our bull, Roy, had enough of the neighbors bull baying at him and chasing one of his cows in heat. Roy was across the road behind 4 strands of barbed wire. I could not believe it when Roy went over the wire, crossed the road, and jumped a cattle-guard. He continued charging and the other bull charged as well. I had no idea they were going to head butt, I thought they would just holler at each other and maybe push each other around, as I'd seen done before. Boy was I wrong. They hit like 2 locomotives and the fat and muscle on both bulls rippled like a wave from their head back to their tail and back towards their head. Then they backed up and and did it again. I got scared they were going to kill each other. But the Charolais went down on his front knees after the second hit and Roy stood there pawing the ground, ready to go again. The Charolais got up and headed for home. I don't think he ever crossed over and chased Roy's gals again. I saw Roy take on several bulls that strayed onto our place, usually over cows in heat. But the funniest was when the other neighbors' big white stallion took him on. It used to harass the cattle, biting them and giving a little kick sometimes. When he met Roy, Roy turned to look at him and got a hoof between the eyes. Then Roy turned 90% and rammed Sugarfoot (the horse) in the side and down he went. Roy was just about to run him into the ground, but the horse jumped up and fled. I remember several other encounters Roy had and he never lost. As big and powerful as he was, he was just about the gentlest bull I ever saw. We used to ride him and he just trotted around, never trying to dump us.
Great story
Thank you for sharing that. What a great bull! He sounds perfect! And gentle too, icing on the cake.
Sounds like a good story for Reader’s Digest.
I am surprised that a Brown Swiss bull was big enough to handle a Charolais. When I owned a ranch in southeastern Oklahoma, I had what was supposed to be the second-best bull ever recorded in the world, with another Charolais in France being the best. My Charolais was raised by someone from the town just south of Oklahoma City where the university is. I kept two bulls; one was a registered Black Angus that I kept for my heifers, because the Charolais was too heavy for small, young first breeding beef cattle. The way they measure cattle to determine their national standing (and I don't remember everything) is by taking sonic measurements of the ribeye, their weight per day of age, their weening weight, and more.
Some of the Hunts, of oil company fame, had a Charolais ranch out west on Highway 80 on the north side of the highway. When they had a big sale of their cattle, they printed up a thick catalog with most of their bulls on separate pages with their pedigree listed. I had to laugh to myself to see that none of them came close to the quality of my bull but would sell for far more I would have been able to sell my bull.
I wish I had a place now, but one can't pursue two dreams at once.
@@ezseeker Thanks for sharing that info. Interesting. I am wondering, do you mean bigger as in heavier? I've seen Brown Swiss oxen and they were huge, but not heavy like beef cattle. Maybe Roy was more maneuverable than the bull he was fighting?
Refreshing to hear a human voice reading. Thank you.
I wish that he had a higher output volume.
That fucking A.I. voice
@@Cash4gold84
Yeah, that thing is everywhere on UA-cam now. At least change up the AI voice now and again, people!
Very unprofessional narration. I should know, I'm a professional. Check out my IMDb. Still, an interesting story.
They didn't want to do the actual speaking, but AI was busy hacking everyone's computers.
I remember growing up in Orangevale, CA (Suburb of Sactown) and in the early 90's when driving up Hwy50 in Folsom near Prairie City Rd along the hwy there must have been about 50-100 Buffalo. In the late 90's we just stopped seeing them. It was always cool seeing that herd of Buffalo growing up
i remember back in the 60s and 70s when there were very few bison left on earth. it's good to know they made a comeback and the importance of protecting our environment as we all play our part on this planet.
Most of them were crossed with bovine to make it possible. I think the only pure bread heards are in Yellowstone. Maybe a couple private collections but cattle made the recovery happen.
I rarely watch a thirty minute video, but i loved this one. Great job, Sir! 🙋
Pierre had three bulls staying as far away from him as possible…
Pierre sat down in the middle of the ring and took a nap! Lmao sounds like an American 🇺🇸… hilarious 😂😂
Unfortunately, all the promoters proved is that some people will do anything for a buck, proving they were nothing but cruel, heartless, greedy scumbags. Besides, that your presentation was great!
Just different time back then. You can’t shame them for customs that we no longer consider acceptable. You likely would have been right along side the rest of them if you were raised around it and accept it from birth. That’s just how we work as humans.
It was a different time with different standards. One of the two greedy scumbags is largely responsible for saving the American bison from extinction, and he was specifically trying to save them by bringing their numbers way up.
Correct.
Yes. Even if standards were different back then, the idea of selling their heroes to the butcher after all that instead of bringing them home . . . Disgusting.
The presentation was very unprofessional. Still, a good story.
Anyone who knows anything about bison instantly knew before watching this video that an America buffalo can easily overpower any bull.
In Ky...farmers put "jacks" in with their cattle herd and these Jack's not only are Terminators on predators such as coyete these Jack's sometimes turn on the bulls.
A Jack will quickly beat the life out of a 2000lb bull.
I personally seen a Jack quickly beating a 2000lb bull near to death.
The Jack will rotate in a circle with very accurate powerful kicks to the head and legs.
A big Jack is about 650lbs
It would be a toss up between a Jack and a Buffalo I think.
@@allenlindsey1175
What is a jack?
@maximusvonderbrewskis it's a male "donkey"
Their the best cattle protection you can have with your herd.
Well by themselves their extremely formidable...a PACK of great Pyrenees are impossible to beat...they can't eat what the cattle eat all the time so the farmers where I live use "jacks"
@@maximusvonderbrewskisa mule
@@Dougarrowhead your talking about something you 0 about.
Why haven't I heard of this yet. Incredible! Thanks
American education system is my guess
My dads boss bought 5 buffalo for his farm and had telephone poles cut and buried and a heavy chain link fence attached to them to keep them corraled and the biggest buffalo Mr Nickle walked over to the fence put his head down and hooked his horn into the links and basically picked his head up and pulled the poles out of the ground and flicked the fence onto his back and walked into the next field and started grazing
Sometimes you have to listen to a fourth grade reading level in order to find out about something you're interested in on youtube. 😢
The reason they’re called” Buffalo” is because whenever the Europeans came here they compared them to Buffalo from where they were from therefore, they were called American Buffalo
I live in Buffalo so this story is pretty cool to hear. Thank you.
It must be hot inside there.😂
Funny guy.
Buffalo, Tx ?
Buffalo where? There is a Town or city named buffalo in a few states.
Tatanka
@OneOut1 probably buffalo NY lol
Been watching your whole library of videos with my fiancé recently . We love your presentations and hope you keep making more again !
Cappy is that you? 🤓
well there's one failed marriage
@@bacon81 yep!... that's our Cappy... UA-camrs are humans too... [most of them...] lol
Damn one of my favorite youtubers commenting on one I just discovered. What a cool day lol
My fave pro Ukie propogandist.
The narrative of the bull and buffalo fight was compelling 🤣
Reader’s Digest needs to print the story because too many of the certain kind of scruples won’t put it on the cover of Guidepost (founded by Dr. Norman Vincent Peale).
When our family lived in SD near Wind Cave National Park, my father often would make fun of tourists who would drive their cars off the road in the park to get a closer look at the buffalo herd that was free to roam the park. Time and time again my father would report that a "docile-looking" Buffalo had charged and smashed a car or injured the foolish driver!
Great story! First one I've seen on your channel. I very much appreciate the personal narration. Even with the odd stumble of the tongue, it is 1000% better than those robot voiced we hear so often on UA-cam. So new sub for sure!
It is a great story and very entertaining, but the use of audacity editing could clean the story up making it more presentable.
Very-well told! Not a fan of bull fighting; but a great story... Good Job. Carry on.😊
Don’t worry about it, you’re ignorant of the culture is all.
Not well told. This guy does not know how to read.
@@claudemaassen2963Better him than an AI
I’m a US citizen living in Madrid, Spain. Very interesting story and I wish I would’ve heard more about Pierre what happened while in Spain thank you
If you happen to ever get to visit Kentucky one of these days, visit the Stockyards Restaurant at 255 Helena Road in Flemingsburg for the best roast beef 🥩 meal in greater Kentucky.
Well, I am a Catalan living in the Americas, and happy to inform you that I worked it out. See my previous comment. 😊💪🏿
Good grief.
The official bison herd of Texas is kept at Cap Rock Canyon State Park. Highly recommended.
There is a herd that crosses the
Mex and New Mex border, been
In that area many decades😮
Charles Goodnight founding manager of the famous JA Ranch in the vast region of Palo Duro Canyon (Texas version of Grand Canyon) saved the last of the bison in the Panhandles of TX & OK. He experimented with crossbreeding bison and Hereford cattle.
One of the Lonesome Dove (actor TL Jones) characters was based on Goodnight. He carried large amounts of cash to buy land from stressed ranch and farm owners he encountered. To protect himself he trained a Border Collie to sleep on his chest when camping on the range. Goodnight married late in life and had no children.
Yay.....
Amazing.
Theres bison in a prarie state park in florida
Once again, your thorough research paints a lifelike narrative of a 20th century spectacle. Thanks for the new video! Keep it up
He copied this video word for word from an article written in 2013.
Dances With Wolves was filmed on the Scotty Phillips ranch south of Ft. Pierre.
What disgusting cruelty we enjoy watching.
Pierre means ROCK ! How fitting , them poor fighting bulls must have thought they were fighting a big Boulder with four legs and a set of horns...🦬😄🤣
The mexican crowd was the real beast , not the animals.
Ok....I'm calling BS. This narrative says that hunters for the RR would kill 100,000 buffalo per day. BS. It also stated that these hunters used high powered rifles that could drop a buffalo from 1000 yards away. That comment is true but there were not a handful of hunters on the plains who could make that shot without luck, beyond skill, oozing from their ears. Shots up to and usually not more than 500 yards were the norm. And, Im familiar enough with American Western History to understand that there were exceptions but they weren't common.
It’s mostly a narrative of evil oppressive Europeans bent on destroying nature.
_(ironic considering the obsession with conservation)_
Estimated population, before & after, with a single variate narrative to explain the change.
In contrast, people rarely discuss the introduction of the horse and firearms to the Comanche and its consequences.
I will disagree with your comment that Buffalo are calm or peaceful. They have poor vision. But, they are aggressive. And shooting at 1,000 yards was only in the movies.
Yeah, only Valdez can make 1000 yard shots.
Cruelty of animals for entertainment? It's sickening.
In 1872 you would have been there watching with them. People at that time had to kill their own food and had not raised animals to the same level as people.
I only kill something if I intend to eat it and that's fairly rare any more, but I will slaughter a hog, but my children understand that our pets were not family members, and were never treated as if they took an equal place in our house.
Human cruelty on full display.
People can be so ignorant.
Exactly!!
It was a different time and people were not so sensitive and weak as they are today.
There were less snowflakes back then.
That is the elephant in the room. Such things must make God cry and be embarresed.
Thanks for the history lesson. But I'm left sickened and sad from it. 😞
Yes, me too, a bit. I thought it was disgusting that they would just try to dump the bison for slaughter after they made all that money for them.
We all know from childhood that Mexican bulls just like to sit in the shade all day, smelling the beautiful aroma of fresh flowers!😂👍🇬🇧
Ferdinand.My favorite book as a child.
I'm finding the "one take" narration extremely refreshing. Keep it right up. 👍
Animals are smarter than we give them credit for.
The narration of this was so refreshing to hear. We all stumble over a words or a saying now and again and hearing your made this video far more enjoyable than the ai voice lazy channels use. A thirty minute video with out a stammer just doesn’t jibe. The historical story you shared is one of several involved over time and this is the first time I’ve heard of any of them. Love your channel and of course I subscribed and clicked to thumbs up the video.
Thirty minutes might be a lot to ask, but I don't think thirty seconds would be.
My friend's cousin has a ranch and his Buffalo are so laid back and friendly! I was petting the big creatures and they seemed to enjoy the interaction with humans! I kinda understand why it took Pierre a bit to react to the threat! I will say this they are so huge up front around the shoulders and neck I understand how they got the best of the bulls! It's kinda like a bull dozer vs a front end loader! The bulldozer being the Buffalo is just built to hold its ground and push around anything in it's way especially if it is a threat! Great story! Peace ✌️ ☮️
Bison
Petting them and treating them like a pet will get you killed dead. Most of them I've seen in private hands have enough cattle genes in them to calm them down some, but they are still moody and unpredictable regardless of how long you've been petting them.
A friend of mine has a herd of 70-80 bison. They are awesome creatures, I'm not getting any closer than a 100 yards of em! When those bulls start standing up, it's time to stop!
I visited a farm when I was younger, like 30 years ago, that had a herd. They were pretty tame. We pet them through the fence and ate carrots we fed them. They were massive, that’s for sure.
@@smelltheglove2038I will never figure out the American fascination with petting an animal that had just as soon kill you as feel your touch. Cattle only allow it because they associate humans with food. Buffalo are just to moody to be screwing with.
LOVE Buffalo at TEDS BAR & GRILL !!!
6000.00 in 1907 = 195,000 today
What?
Inflation all because of Nixon’s failure to renew the 1934 Gold Reserve Act of FDR.
$198,080.43 today
195000 purebred or total? There are also a couple species in Canada. I know there is a forest bison that's a little smaller
Is that mountain of skulls still around? If so, where is it?
My only complaint about your story is your repeated pronunciation of Fort Pierre. In South Dakota the name is pronounced Peer. My Brother in Law is a singer/song writer in Custer SD. He wrote a song about Scotty Philips entitled "The Man who saved the Buffalo" Custer State park is home to one of the largest buffalo herds in the world and can be traced to Scotty Philips herd. Each year Custer State park has a round up of the herd which allows a heathly population and several other herds across America have started from them. All thanks to Scotty Phillips.
I love the story of this piece of history. Thank you!
Good video. Next time do a practice run through to get out grammar mistakes. Then make your final version and while making it if you have any as everyone does. Stop the recorder and start where the sentence ended with no mistake. Or where there was a pause without a mistake. Also, try to keep the tone of your voice constantly building to the climax of the bison killing 3 bulls. Keep at it! Listen to others with a lot of subscribers and their constant changing of voice tones. Some good ones are "Dark Skies" , "Project Farm", "Task & Purpose". I hope this helps.
Man, this guy is really butchering the script he chose to read. It’s painful to listen to him stumbling and fumbling over his words, even though it seems to be good info.
Yes! Where have you been sir? I miss your new content. I am currently in college for a degree in US history for secondary education. I plan on incorporating your video chronological order into my lesson plans in the future. Thanks for everything! Hope you are doing well!!!
Good luck !
@@allthingsreviews8375 thank you very much!
Feb 4, 2024. Not everyone should make UA-cam videos. The stammering, incorrect pronunciation and poor reading detracted from a good story. Try Editing
A computer program...
@@xdtIt was a good video. He did just fine. I really enjoyed it. You have no respect for someone who worked hard to provide you and others with an education on a controversial part of history that’s difficult to find all the information on this man gave in his video. Perhaps not everyone should be commenting on videos. That means people like you. So, just maybe YOU NEED TO SHUT UP! Learn & show some respect!
"Buffalo are rarely aggressive"???? That's the most ignorant statement I've heard on this channel.
The skull cracks echoed for blocks and the bulls blood covered the arena? OK that''s a lot of blood Mr booboobenwah! 🤣
I guess a drip here and then another > over there adds up 🩸>>>>>>🩸>>>>>>>>>>🩸🤠💬 Boy-Howdey⁉ G~G ☑
Hmm correction on ur history .. most Scotsman and Irishman never returned to thier homeland .. they did not have the money . Most joined the army or ranch or went on the land rush on the oklahoma territory.. none if any returned due to the cost of ship travel and risk . Most knew this upon the trip . They had one way tickets . FYI
While I deplore aninal cruelty, and would never condone this being done, I can't deny a certain curiosity as to who would win this fight.
They should try an elephant huh?
@@bradleytenderholt5135 No. That would be unsurprisingly one sided. We already have examples of juvenile male elephants killing large male rhinos in the wild, practically effortlessly.
Outside of a human using technology, no land animal on Earth has a chance of taking down an elephant in a physical confrontation.
@@Unpainted_Huffhines believe it or not, some lions have gotten hungry enough to take down elephants and even giraffes. While this isn’t 1 v 1, I feel like the dramatic size discrepancy kinda evens the odds.
@@TwinTurboLsx I am aware. A number of lions can combine efforts to take down a lone young, old, or ill elephant. But a healthy bull is pretty much unchallengable.
@@Unpainted_Huffhineswell I'm no expert but I have seen a pride of lions take down a good sized elephant. It's just a matter of wearing it down with superior numbers. Lions rarely get elephants isolated to kill one but it happens often enough that the Lions know to close the trunk to help stop it breathing.
This is a fascinating story I have never heard before!
Kudos for the great topic, images, and research.
Good story, a bit long however. Thank you for your time spend.
Pierre figured out "its better to give then receive" and the bull....well f.a.f.o.
Found your channel thru The DZ. Very happy I did- your content is right up my alley
This is very amusing. Somebody should absolutely do a movie about this.
This is animal cruelty. And I'm not a PETA fanatic but this is wrong to do this for entertainment.
Wait until those guys mocking the Buffalo until they see how fast they can run!
Ooo yeah the Buffalo won yes but the fighting bull was only half the size of the buffalo, is like a 8 year old boy fighting a 14 year old boy.
Killing all those buffaloes was disgusting act by the settlers of the time, know wonder the Indians hated them.
You've never heard what Indians did at buffalo jumps.
Tell it to the character George Kennedy played in that ‘Virginian’ episode “THE NOBILITY OF KINGS” who stumbled upon a sickly steer the day before the big cattle drive to Cheyenne begun. After stumbling onto the steer in question he wanted to shoot down every individual in the herd that one steer was from, but faced opposition from both the owner of the steer as well as the title character of The Virginian himself until the town vet made his analysis, and said that the herd in question had to be destroyed, including a newly added black Aberdeen-Angus bull. Just check out the IMDb file on the episode as well as the IMDb file of the 1974 made-for-tv movie “BULL OF THE WEST”, which includes footage from the same episode mentioned.
How about just leaving the animals ALONE?!
my family and i a 15 year old boy in 1987 were vacationing Mexico's capitol D.F my dad thought it would be a good idea to have the whole family visit the Plaza de Toros. "the plaza of bulls" what horror we all saw. poor bulls and one unlucky matador though his life was not taken. i saw at least 3 bull fights that Sunday afternoon before we left for a scheduled 8 fights. i have always cheered for the bulls always!
Black Elk tells a story of a bull that fought a bison. The two charged at each other : the bison's horns tore a huge gapping wound from the bulls head to its tail. The bull fell over dead having been sliced from head to tail.
9 times out of 10, it was probably a black Aberdeen-Angus bull that got killed by the bison 🦬.
THANK YOU!!! I have been hoping someone would post this comment. I read that book some years ago, and was hoping someone else would have as well. He said the Indians were betting on the bison (he called it a buffalo but I don't want to bring all the corrections people out) and the whites were betting on the bull. I can't remember if it was a longhorn or not. I do remember everyone questioning how the bison would be able to connect with its tiny horns and most people, including the boy Black Elk, thinking the bull had a big advantage in its reach.
He told another story about a bear and a dog that were made to "fight.". Remember that one?
Animal Cruelty is repulsive in all cases.
You might say humans simply suck…
Does that also include killing copperheads, rattlers, and water moccasins if they get into your yard?
How about just defense of one’s property and life from the invasions by rattlers and such?
Great presentation of a strange event!
Domesticated cattle fighting buffalo is like a modern human fighting a Neanderthal.
That makes no sense!
Tell it to Charles Darwin.
Tell it to Fred Flintstone.
@@LindaCooper-i3f
He knows ... 🙆🏼♂️
Thank you for doing this story. I think it's awesome. Long live our great American Buffalo. I would have loved to be in that crowd when Pierre had his day in the ring.
Interesting upload and it's also refreshing to hear a human voice (warts and all) instead of the now popular and soulless AI rubbish..!
Well done!
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Nice report. Well done!
It`s not quite fair to blame "hunters" for the near-extinction of the bison. It was a deliberate policy to deprive the Plains Indians of their livelihood. Train passengers were allowed to shoot bison from the windows and the carcasses were left to rot. Bison were shot just for their tongues, or for their hides. The waste was horrific, as was the carnage. Willi B. in Canada.
How does setting up a fight between a bull and a Buffalo make somebody a mastermind?🤷♂️
It wasn't in our life time . Things were different then and you can't judge those times by ours. There were different times and values. We need to understand that.
Because in that time it would be the equivalent of setting up Ali/Tyson?
One of the most sinful things to do is to kill an animal not for a meal but as a trophy instead , that is what drove me away from hunting .
Though the terms are often used interchangeably, buffalo and bison are distinct animals. Old World “true” buffalo (Cape buffalo and water buffalo) are native to Africa and Asia. Bison are found in North America and Europe. Both bison and buffalo are in the bovidae family, but the two are not closely related.
Everybody knows that. But we have been calling bison buffalo for at least as long as European man has been in North America. We have towns and cities named Buffalo. There were buffalo wallows, buffalo roads, buffalo hunters, buffalo guns. And there are at least 2 Buffalo Rivers. I like callin' 'em buffalo, or buffler as many old timers did.
**( A DueL Between A °Cape-BuffaLo • {&} • An °American•Bison WouLd ProbabLy Make For A More•Fair And Much•Better Fight ! )** 😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮
Thank you, capitan obvious
@@w.neumanthe Cape would lose, but I would love to watch. The meanest animal I have ever seen in the world is the Cape Buffalo.
Strong and don't get killed easily!
Almost correct. "True" buffalo (members of the Bubalus genus) are only in Asia - these being water buffalo and such.
African buffalo (genus Syncernus) aren't true buffalo either - but they're more closely related to Bubalus than they are to domestic cattle or bison.
You're right on the rest, though: bison aren't very closely related to any of them, and are most closely related to yaks.
Amazing story. Can't wait to see the next one
Dude, great story and presentation. My only suggestion would be to just slow down ur speech pattern just a bit. This will build more anticipation, lessen the few small speaking errors, and add more of an off the cuff, storyteller kinda feel to it. Don't take my simple suggestion as criticism. I am by NO MEANS badmouthing ur video. U do an amazing job! This is the first video from ur channel that I have watched. I enjoyed it thoroughly, and def will check out the rest of ur collection. I am a huge history buff/nerd, and can get lost in this type of content for days. Nice video!
Excellent story about the Bull and Buffalo very interesting and informative. Thank you for sharing this piece of history with us! I also just subscribed because of your interesting content!
This was great very informative and just an awesome spectical of history! Thanks
You're not bull💩ing me! Great story!
lovely historical story learned so much
I was born and raised in Juarez (been gone a few years now). Went to a couple of bullfights as a kid but the one I remember enjoying the most was when the matador was so unskilled that the crowd started cheering for the bull!
I can't believe I never heard this story before, but I'm glad how it turned out. Thanks for sharing this with the world. I subscribed.
Stoked to finally see a new upload from you! Really hope to see more!!
Amazing piece of history, thanks for sharing ❤
Custer discovered gold??? uh, no. But my grandmother in the Black Hills got a little Frenchman in her.
Ha !
I married one ah dem😎🤙🏻💯