I've seen a corpse flower IRL. The outside of the flower feels plastic/leathery. Didn't touch the inside of the bloody thing, but I can say that it definitely smells like rotten meat quite convincingly. The smell lingered a bit as we walked away, but all in all, it's not too bad. I can see how it got its name (the colour, the smell), but its main claim to fame probably is the impressive size. It's quite the sight to behold.
Thats why it called corpse flower. Lol. Interesting part for titan arum is that it has 2 different life cycles. For a year, it grows into flower and withers. Then, next few years, it grows out from earth again as tree-like and no flower until the end the cycle ends and withers.
Fun fact: The rafflesia was the inspiration for the pokemon, Vileplume. Edit: this was directed to the people who didn’t know. Not everyone has a degree in botany and video games/card games/anime.
That second "dead animal flower" you mentioned is litteraly designed to look like a rotting asshole to bugs that lay eggs in dead animals. It's super scaled so they can see it from a distance. Thankfully it doesn't "ripen and bloom" for long unlike plants all over the world that stay like that for months and is often locally referred to as the "Butthole Plant" to attract parasitic organisms. Some even have simulated hairs growing out. Isn't nature great?!
I've seen this get mixed up a few times so *for clarification:* *"Stinging Tree"* and *"Stinging Bush"* are the two common names for the Gympie-gympie Tree ( _Dendrocnide moroides_ ). A member of the nettle family, briefly touching this plant can cause excruciating pain that can last anywhere between 2 weeks to 10 years. _You have likely not encountered this plant._ *"Stinging Leaf"* is the common name for a far less dangerous member of the nettle family, the common stinging nettle ( _Urtica dioica_ ) which still has a sting, but one with far less hellish effect. _You could absolutely have encountered this plant._
Goodness! I hope NEVER to come across a stinging tree, EVER. Locally, we have the Manchineel tree: "Standing beneath the tree during rain will cause blistering of the skin from mere contact with this liquid: even a small drop of rain with the milky substance in it will cause the skin to blister. The sap has also been known to damage the paint on cars.[11] Burning the tree may cause ocular injuries if the smoke reaches the eyes.[12] Contact with its milky sap (latex) produces bullous dermatitis, acute keratoconjunctivitis and possibly large corneal epithelial defects.[13"
I will say this, SPIT/saliva s the only that soothes pain from stinging trees. Just spit on your hand and rub it very lightly on it, and I'm not kidding. I remember my sister pushing me into a huge stinging nettle bush, I've jumped into those too while drunk and you can carefully take the leaf from underneath and not get stung and throw it in your friend or something 😂 it's not as bad as many stinging trees but saliva helps A LOT with like 70% of stinging tree/plant pain.
Sometimes we used to play with the stinging leaf as kids. There were plenty where I grew up. The solution is to put mustard oil on the affected area and the burning will slow down considerably. You can bear the burning pain also... It dies of after 30mins to an hour or so. The first plant with popping seeds. We used to collect those. When turned brown it doesn't burst when touched. You have to dip it in water and it would burst after 30sec or so.
scientist finding a cure from stinging leaf and working day and night and weeks after weeks and months after months and finally..1 year later they discover this comment, the scientist said to himself..WHY DIDNT I BOUGHT MUSTARD OIL AAAAAA
I almost spat my beer out in laughter! Eucalyptus trees are known for being stupidly dangerous. They are dense and heavy, the raw oil or sap burns your skin and leaves a rash and the bastards catch fire so damn fast then burn with a vengeful heat. We are very aware of how dangerous of the humble Eucalyptus tree really is, we are just so focused on all the other shit out there, that death by tree branch that smells great, really ain't that bad.
@@doubl2480 Gum trees are beautiful. Every now and then a branch falls off but you would be more likely to be hit by lightning. There's no issue with the bark and the only times I've seen their sap is when they have a disease and it leaks out red and looks like blood, and it soon hardens into an attractive resin.
There are eucalyptus trees on the hill behind our house. One day I saw a huge limb just fall off one. Made one heck of a racket. I'm glad no one was underneath it!
I have been hiking off trail and accidentally pushed my way through overgrown dense brush that was completely stinging nettle here in Oregon. I was covered in hive like bumps and red patches all over for ever and it is so annoying and uncomfortable but I can't even imagine how intense that one plant would be because a worse version of stinging nettle would suck so bad, stinging nettle alone is annoying as heck.
Once I've participated in camp for hyperactive boys 11-13 years old. Our guardian used to punish us with crawling through stinging nettle bush while wearing only boxers during early morning exercise.We were covered with bumps ,red patches and blisters.He did that three times to us until one of the nurses found out about it. She called police and emergency.Our "guardian" was arrested and taken away .Some boys experienced extreme allergic reaction and a few of them were hospitalized.I had nightmares about it as a grown man until I began drink nettle tea for improving my health. I guess it changed my attitude towards nettle.
@@jaset362 An adult forcing 11 to 13 year old boys to do anything wearing only boxers is pretty sus honestly, even without the sadistic stinging nettle bush aspect.
Well that was early, but congrats to early birds here! There`s always time to learn random things that the algorithm suggests, even though it`s late at night.
These used to grow by the river when I was a child. And it was fine. Its seed pods 'explode' but it doesn't hurt at all. Its actually fun to set them off.
I remember a little girl died from a branch falling on her in a school yard here in Australia when she was on lunch break. I'm soooooooooooooo glad my kids are adults now. Although, everything here in Australia will still keep trying to kill them!💔😭
Being adults doesn't really affect the chance of death by falling branches so it's really all the same. In any case dangerous Australia is just an exaggerated meme really, your Southeast Asian neighbours also got some dangerous things lingering about.
I've learned from experience that if you see any plant with tiny needles or fuzz on it, _do not touch it!_ I've always had this weird primal fear of unknown plants, they freak me out a lot. Got rashes more times than I can count from nettles. Prairie roses are nasty too, since their thorns are very small, and the plant itself is easy to miss. Even cucumber leaves bother me, and bush beans will raise hives on my skin for a couple hours after harvesting. The gympie gympie terrifies me. I'm glad it grows far, far away.
@@ChatterGaming Why? Do you have a lot of scary mutant plants? I was so phobic about weird plants that I used to have anxiety attacks at the sight of underdeveloped Evergreen seed pods. They looked like tumors, and I thought I'd get sick if I even got close to them. ^^;
Lambs ear is one of the few exceptions. It's fuzzy and quite soft to the touch. It used to be used by soldiers to coagulate the blood from wounds and has antiseptic properties.
Together, you guys have done a service to mankind. Steve has done the research, convinced you of the potential, inherent danger of these plants, and prepared the script and video. You have narrated the video to enlighten your viewers/listeners. Thanks guys...now I know to watch out for these plants that look harmless but can create chaos in normally peaceful flora-filled spaces.
The Cholla cactus is a menace in my home state. One of the reasons I hate living in the Valley is because of this cactus. When I lived in Happy Valley (not joking it's an actual place), there were huge patches of this damn plant along the outskirts of the bike trails. Honestly, I saw more of this species of cacti than others, and that's saying something because my state's national plant is the Saguaro
We used to cut our eucalyptus trees back every summer, you cut the branches down and put the leaf section down as your base of the bonfire, let it dry out for a week and that fire goes up faster than pouring petrol on it.
Love your videos. Two complaints though. Click bait image-you didn't talk about that plant. Also, what's with the blurred images? Keep up the good work.
Teddy Bear Cholla is no joke. It will easily go through leather work gloves. Anyone hiking in its habitat would be wise to carry a large hair pick to remove them.
The Botanical Garden in St. Louis Missouri has had corpse flowers for many years, and they usually announce when it blooms so the public can go see it!
Hello! The Stinging leaf is called Gympie Gympie if I recall correctly. I used to watch tops of dangerous plants and such a while ago but never learned anything about that sticky fruit tree or these massive pincones. So thank you for sharing your researches with us~ Surprised you didn't mentionned the Manchinel Tree tho!
Dendrocnide moroides, commonly known in Australia as the stinging tree, stinging bush or gympie-gympie, is a plant in the nettle family Urticaceae found in rainforest areas of Malesia and Australia.
@@00BillyTorontoBill Usually only foreigners call Gympie-Gympie the stinging tree, it is a bush! We call it the suicide bush if anything. Some guy apparently wiped his ass with it, couldn't handle the pain and shot himself in the face (Back before that dude in Tasmania shot a bunch of families and children and we were like "Nope, no big ass guns anymore!") It usually grows in the sub tropic areas like North of Brissy in QLD, I have come across it a few times, but have never dared to touch it
It has a lot of different names and varieties and is found in almost every temperate forest. Locally we refer to it as "nettle" or "stinging nettle." The biggest problem with nettle is that it doesn't immediately sting, so sometimes you can walk through it for a short period of time before realizing it. If you are walking through the woods with unprotected legs, it's easy to get scraped up by thorny brush and walk through nettle at the same time, since these types of plants tend to grow side by side. Then you end up with a burning rash on top of scraped up skin, which can be pretty miserable. He has really exaggerated how dangerous it is, the worst of it is usually over in 20-30 minutes and I have never seen anyone or anything have to deal with it for more than a couple of hours. There are other plants such as poison ivy and poison sumac that can give long term rashes or cause more severe allergies, so maybe he was lumping all the stories together for our entertainment.
@@paulybeefs8588 I assume he gathered what he picked up on the net. But what about that story of that man who wipped his ass with it and shot himself tho? It was also in one of the other videos about it I mentionned
I knew someone in Nevada that was walking under a huge pine tree. And a cone fell and hit her shoulder and barely missed her head her neck and shoulder was black and blue and puffy and she was an excruciating pain for weeks
The 1st flower with the seed pods are explode. Are very similar to the Jewelweed plants we have over here in Maine United States. The pods look a little different But they explode the same way, And their seeds with little curly things on the inside look the same. The little Flowers look to be similar shaped. However jewelry flowers are yellow golden with like Orange specs. Looks kind of like a tiny Fairy Horn. The flowers taste really sweet. And the seed pods are fun to snap. The plant itself is really good for skin rashes and poison ivy.
That is not a corpse flower. It is a Pokemon and its name is vileplume Edit: eucalyptus trees, while they are very dangerous, make some of the most beautiful sounding drum sets I have ever heard. And if you find one that is growing on sloped ground, the figuring inside of them are beautiful
that strange theory of trees having social networks is actually incredibely fascinating, infact theres a great book on it called "The secret life of trees" if I remember correctly. An amazing read for strange and incredible facts :)
I have that plant all over my island in Animal Crossing And you're telling me it smells like a an onion sweaty gym socks and feces Great 😃👍 got to go redesign my Island
Stinging tree 😦...wonder if there's a relationship to the stinging nettle, pretty much the same...thankfully the damage is usually gone with a couple days at most...and even quicker if you grab a handful of Dock leaves and rub it over stung area...actually, would a Dock leaf have any effect on the tree version...!!? 🤔
Urtica dioica, often known as common nettle, burn nettle, stinging nettle herbaceous perennial flowering plant in the family Urticaceae. Originally native to Europe, much of temperate Asia and western North Africa so same family !
The stinging tree is kinda scary cause we have one that looks *VERY* similar to it but instead of stinging it feels pretty fluffy it has tiny hairs and the shape of the leaf is also the same but the difference is that its just soft to the touch
hey WATOP :) I love your channel.. and if there is one thing I could change.. it is for us europeans that you also give the celcuis und the meters of you themes ^^
Well, talking about cones from pine, here in south of Brazil, we have Araucária, wich is a kind of pine, wich produces a very, very, VERY big pines, like, almost 5 kg pines
[3:15] eating while watching? I’m fine thanks, but I can continue eating a meal even if something very gross is being told or seen, (I like watching these vids while eating dinner, pretty interesting stuff here so it’s always a blast) also I like the titan arum, it’s my favorite plant Touching a raffelesia? The closest thing I can get to that it petting a vileplume in Pokémon
I've seen a corpse flower IRL. The outside of the flower feels plastic/leathery. Didn't touch the inside of the bloody thing, but I can say that it definitely smells like rotten meat quite convincingly. The smell lingered a bit as we walked away, but all in all, it's not too bad. I can see how it got its name (the colour, the smell), but its main claim to fame probably is the impressive size. It's quite the sight to behold.
Yea I know that too!
I have touched one of them, the flower, looking part, anyway.
@@kerrynicholls6683 I guess WATOP was lying.
How do you know what rotting flesh smells like?
Sus
Thats why it called corpse flower. Lol. Interesting part for titan arum is that it has 2 different life cycles. For a year, it grows into flower and withers. Then, next few years, it grows out from earth again as tree-like and no flower until the end the cycle ends and withers.
Fun fact: The rafflesia was the inspiration for the pokemon, Vileplume.
Edit: this was directed to the people who didn’t know. Not everyone has a degree in botany and video games/card games/anime.
Whenever I use a Vileplume I always nickname it Rafflesia, lol.
Another fun fact, they don't hide it in the french version, it is legit called like that 😆
ok Sherlock
Lots of animals and plants were lol
Pretty sure it was the other way around 🤔
That second "dead animal flower" you mentioned is litteraly designed to look like a rotting asshole to bugs that lay eggs in dead animals. It's super scaled so they can see it from a distance. Thankfully it doesn't "ripen and bloom" for long unlike plants all over the world that stay like that for months and is often locally referred to as the "Butthole Plant" to attract parasitic organisms. Some even have simulated hairs growing out. Isn't nature great?!
It looks nothing like a butthole.
Helll noooo
I found this funny.
i take comfort in knowing that plants can be assholes too
fish???
WATOP: "I hope none of you are eating right now."
Me: *takes another bite*
Same
me 2 haha
Same but I was eating cereal
yo
Lol
I've seen this get mixed up a few times so *for clarification:*
*"Stinging Tree"* and *"Stinging Bush"* are the two common names for the Gympie-gympie Tree ( _Dendrocnide moroides_ ). A member of the nettle family, briefly touching this plant can cause excruciating pain that can last anywhere between 2 weeks to 10 years. _You have likely not encountered this plant._
*"Stinging Leaf"* is the common name for a far less dangerous member of the nettle family, the common stinging nettle ( _Urtica dioica_ ) which still has a sting, but one with far less hellish effect. _You could absolutely have encountered this plant._
Goodness! I hope NEVER to come across a stinging tree, EVER.
Locally, we have the Manchineel tree: "Standing beneath the tree during rain will cause blistering of the skin from mere contact with this liquid: even a small drop of rain with the milky substance in it will cause the skin to blister. The sap has also been known to damage the paint on cars.[11] Burning the tree may cause ocular injuries if the smoke reaches the eyes.[12] Contact with its milky sap (latex) produces bullous dermatitis, acute keratoconjunctivitis and possibly large corneal epithelial defects.[13"
I will say this, SPIT/saliva s the only that soothes pain from stinging trees. Just spit on your hand and rub it very lightly on it, and I'm not kidding. I remember my sister pushing me into a huge stinging nettle bush, I've jumped into those too while drunk and you can carefully take the leaf from underneath and not get stung and throw it in your friend or something 😂 it's not as bad as many stinging trees but saliva helps A LOT with like 70% of stinging tree/plant pain.
Sometimes we used to play with the stinging leaf as kids. There were plenty where I grew up. The solution is to put mustard oil on the affected area and the burning will slow down considerably. You can bear the burning pain also... It dies of after 30mins to an hour or so.
The first plant with popping seeds. We used to collect those. When turned brown it doesn't burst when touched. You have to dip it in water and it would burst after 30sec or so.
me and my cousins useds stinging plants aswell and fighted with them as swords using leaves so we could hold them
scientist finding a cure from stinging leaf and working day and night and weeks after weeks and months after months and finally..1 year later they discover this comment, the scientist said to himself..WHY DIDNT I BOUGHT MUSTARD OIL AAAAAA
@@Aercryptic : uhmm, are these cousins all boys? Sounds ouchy!
@@slcRN1971 yes 2 boys and im also a boy
@@Aercryptic It's "fought" not "fighted." Fought is the past tense of fight, brother.
I almost spat my beer out in laughter!
Eucalyptus trees are known for being stupidly dangerous. They are dense and heavy, the raw oil or sap burns your skin and leaves a rash and the bastards catch fire so damn fast then burn with a vengeful heat. We are very aware of how dangerous of the humble Eucalyptus tree really is, we are just so focused on all the other shit out there, that death by tree branch that smells great, really ain't that bad.
Eucalyptus and Koalas really make a pair. The tree is stupid and dangerous, the animal is stupid and a slacker xD
Everything in Australia is ready to kill… which is why I will never go there…
@@doubl2480 Gum trees are beautiful. Every now and then a branch falls off but you would be more likely to be hit by lightning. There's no issue with the bark and the only times I've seen their sap is when they have a disease and it leaks out red and looks like blood, and it soon hardens into an attractive resin.
Let's not forget the branches falling off randomly, without warning, and with no gust of wind required. Bloody widow making bastards.
I have never seen the sap burning skin, had it on me quite a bit without an issue. Could depend which gum but *shrug*
There are eucalyptus trees on the hill behind our house. One day I saw a huge limb just fall off one. Made one heck of a racket. I'm glad no one was underneath it!
I have been hiking off trail and accidentally pushed my way through overgrown dense brush that was completely stinging nettle here in Oregon. I was covered in hive like bumps and red patches all over for ever and it is so annoying and uncomfortable but I can't even imagine how intense that one plant would be because a worse version of stinging nettle would suck so bad, stinging nettle alone is annoying as heck.
Once I've participated in camp for hyperactive boys 11-13 years old. Our guardian used to punish us with crawling through stinging nettle bush while wearing only boxers during early morning exercise.We were covered with bumps ,red patches and blisters.He did that three times to us until one of the nurses found out about it.
She called police and emergency.Our "guardian" was arrested and taken away .Some boys experienced extreme allergic reaction and a few of them were hospitalized.I had nightmares about it as a grown man until I began drink nettle tea for improving my health. I guess it changed my attitude towards nettle.
@@jaset362 😳😱🤯‼️
@@jaset362 An adult forcing 11 to 13 year old boys to do anything wearing only boxers is pretty sus honestly, even without the sadistic stinging nettle bush aspect.
Well that was early, but congrats to early birds here! There`s always time to learn random things that the algorithm suggests, even though it`s late at night.
Not for me
This is the internet… time is not your time.
It only 10:11 pm here in India North east ( Meghalaya )
@@sirpenguinhonkers for me it’s morning
Right now for me it’s 08:24(England)
These used to grow by the river when I was a child. And it was fine. Its seed pods 'explode' but it doesn't hurt at all. Its actually fun to set them off.
Am i the only one that gets the urge to drink coffe with that intro
Nope. Me too.
that DeLonghi Prima Donna Elite (coffeemaker) costs me 120k in my currency lol
Hahah
I remember a little girl died from a branch falling on her in a school yard here in Australia when she was on lunch break. I'm soooooooooooooo glad my kids are adults now. Although, everything here in Australia will still keep trying to kill them!💔😭
Being adults doesn't really affect the chance of death by falling branches so it's really all the same. In any case dangerous Australia is just an exaggerated meme really, your Southeast Asian neighbours also got some dangerous things lingering about.
I remember hearing from my brother once that there is a plant out there that produces an oil that makes your skin "allergic" to sunlight.
It's called giant hogweed.
I've learned from experience that if you see any plant with tiny needles or fuzz on it, _do not touch it!_ I've always had this weird primal fear of unknown plants, they freak me out a lot. Got rashes more times than I can count from nettles. Prairie roses are nasty too, since their thorns are very small, and the plant itself is easy to miss. Even cucumber leaves bother me, and bush beans will raise hives on my skin for a couple hours after harvesting. The gympie gympie terrifies me. I'm glad it grows far, far away.
Good thing you don't have my back yard...
@@ChatterGaming Why? Do you have a lot of scary mutant plants? I was so phobic about weird plants that I used to have anxiety attacks at the sight of underdeveloped Evergreen seed pods. They looked like tumors, and I thought I'd get sick if I even got close to them. ^^;
Lambs ear is one of the few exceptions. It's fuzzy and quite soft to the touch. It used to be used by soldiers to coagulate the blood from wounds and has antiseptic properties.
I can't watch one of his videos without craving coffee
Together, you guys have done a service to mankind. Steve has done the research, convinced you of the potential, inherent danger of these plants, and prepared the script and video. You have narrated the video to enlighten your viewers/listeners. Thanks guys...now I know to watch out for these plants that look harmless but can create chaos in normally peaceful flora-filled spaces.
The Cholla cactus is a menace in my home state. One of the reasons I hate living in the Valley is because of this cactus. When I lived in Happy Valley (not joking it's an actual place), there were huge patches of this damn plant along the outskirts of the bike trails. Honestly, I saw more of this species of cacti than others, and that's saying something because my state's national plant is the Saguaro
Thanks for informing us about this valuable facts
I highly recommend this channel to my friend 💕
Congrats to everyone who is early And who found this comment 👏 ❤
🧂🍖🥤🙂
A AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
Same
Ok thanks what's my prize
No, bot
Do I, also win a prize?
Love it, specially your studio. Very lit 🔥 👌
But i want to
You could talk about the Sandbox Tree pr the Manchineel... they are trully terrifying...
We used to cut our eucalyptus trees back every summer, you cut the branches down and put the leaf section down as your base of the bonfire, let it dry out for a week and that fire goes up faster than pouring petrol on it.
Love your videos. Two complaints though. Click bait image-you didn't talk about that plant. Also, what's with the blurred images? Keep up the good work.
I love the Himalayan Balsum. We call them "touch me nots". They pull out by the roots easily when done flowering
I love watching about nature and animals life so watop is my best
Teddy Bear Cholla is no joke. It will easily go through leather work gloves. Anyone hiking in its habitat would be wise to carry a large hair pick to remove them.
The Botanical Garden in St. Louis Missouri has had corpse flowers for many years, and they usually announce when it blooms so the public can go see it!
Hello! The Stinging leaf is called Gympie Gympie if I recall correctly. I used to watch tops of dangerous plants and such a while ago but never learned anything about that sticky fruit tree or these massive pincones. So thank you for sharing your researches with us~
Surprised you didn't mentionned the Manchinel Tree tho!
Dendrocnide moroides, commonly known in Australia as the stinging tree, stinging bush or gympie-gympie, is a plant in the nettle family Urticaceae found in rainforest areas of Malesia and Australia.
@@00BillyTorontoBill Usually only foreigners call Gympie-Gympie the stinging tree, it is a bush! We call it the suicide bush if anything. Some guy apparently wiped his ass with it, couldn't handle the pain and shot himself in the face (Back before that dude in Tasmania shot a bunch of families and children and we were like "Nope, no big ass guns anymore!")
It usually grows in the sub tropic areas like North of Brissy in QLD, I have come across it a few times, but have never dared to touch it
It has a lot of different names and varieties and is found in almost every temperate forest. Locally we refer to it as "nettle" or "stinging nettle." The biggest problem with nettle is that it doesn't immediately sting, so sometimes you can walk through it for a short period of time before realizing it.
If you are walking through the woods with unprotected legs, it's easy to get scraped up by thorny brush and walk through nettle at the same time, since these types of plants tend to grow side by side. Then you end up with a burning rash on top of scraped up skin, which can be pretty miserable.
He has really exaggerated how dangerous it is, the worst of it is usually over in 20-30 minutes and I have never seen anyone or anything have to deal with it for more than a couple of hours. There are other plants such as poison ivy and poison sumac that can give long term rashes or cause more severe allergies, so maybe he was lumping all the stories together for our entertainment.
They are also called suicide plants
They are that dangerous!
@@paulybeefs8588 I assume he gathered what he picked up on the net. But what about that story of that man who wipped his ass with it and shot himself tho? It was also in one of the other videos about it I mentionned
I knew someone in Nevada that was walking under a huge pine tree. And a cone fell and hit her shoulder and barely missed her head her neck and shoulder was black and blue and puffy and she was an excruciating pain for weeks
Greetings from Greece!
The 1st flower with the seed pods are explode. Are very similar to the Jewelweed plants we have over here in Maine United States. The pods look a little different But they explode the same way, And their seeds with little curly things on the inside look the same. The little Flowers look to be similar shaped. However jewelry flowers are yellow golden with like Orange specs. Looks kind of like a tiny Fairy Horn. The flowers taste really sweet. And the seed pods are fun to snap. The plant itself is really good for skin rashes and poison ivy.
I can't help but feel like you left out the most dangerous plant of all, the machineel tree
You are right to mention said tree, however, there are already two videos on the channel dedicated to that very toxic plant.
My favorite UA-cam channel another video thanks fellas
Good lord that thumbnail is wild gonna diagnose someone with trypophobia
Animation is getting better and better.
That is not a corpse flower. It is a Pokemon and its name is vileplume
Edit: eucalyptus trees, while they are very dangerous, make some of the most beautiful sounding drum sets I have ever heard. And if you find one that is growing on sloped ground, the figuring inside of them are beautiful
If I'm not mistaken, around 1940- there was soldier who shot himself after accidently using stinging tree (Gympie) leaf to wipe his butt
There appears to be multiple corpses by the plant... I swear if the guy in the thumbnail still thinks it’s a good idea to investigate...
I hope this is no clickbait
The best UA-cam channel only if you write the measurements in Système International d'Unités ...
“I hope none of you are eating right now” Literally me launching up UA-cam and eating:
the evolution of plants is still generally much slower than that of animals
We have that kind of leaves in the Philippines. We call it alingatong in my native language🤪
Even Coconut Tree can kill 😨
Can we take a moment to appreciate how much time and effort he puts in the videos for us😇
Can we take a moment to report this bot comment 😇
@@TchSktch yea
@@TchSktch exactly😄
that joke at the ending was a GOLD NUGGET! Like approved!
who found this channel and can never stop anymore
Me
Your research is adorable
that strange theory of trees having social networks is actually incredibely fascinating, infact theres a great book on it called "The secret life of trees" if I remember correctly. An amazing read for strange and incredible facts :)
I feel so bad for the birds that get all sticky to those plants. Those stupid plants…
I understand it is just nature but it is dying for no reason.
Nettles, all I’ve got to say, the only way I got rid of it was with hand sanitizer, dock leaves can soothe the pain though.
Thanks, that thumbnail really helped my fear of holes
As someone with bad allergies I have developed a healthy...respect for the danger of pollen.
I have that plant all over my island in Animal Crossing
And you're telling me it smells like a an onion sweaty gym socks and feces
Great 😃👍 got to go redesign my Island
The item in animal crossing is called "titan arum"
Gotta make sure you never have weeds, it makes them more likely to spawn (in animal crossing city folk and backwards, never played the new one)
I found a very long pinecone in Oregon specifically Portland
I love your vids😍!
I was eating cereal while watching this 😭
I really enjoy your videos, facts and humor with perfect delivery.
The himalayan plant grows in phillipines too.. i touch it when i was a kid its just popped up and has pop rock sound
Congratulations to everyone who is early and who found this comment.
Right after the bee got hit by a seed an ad popped up 💀💀
"I hope none of you are eating right now."
Me: *Continues to have breakfast*
Bro when he animated the bee getting hit by the plant it was so funny for no reason 😭
Clickbait is strong with this channel
Stinging tree 😦...wonder if there's a relationship to the stinging nettle, pretty much the same...thankfully the damage is usually gone with a couple days at most...and even quicker if you grab a handful of Dock leaves and rub it over stung area...actually, would a Dock leaf have any effect on the tree version...!!? 🤔
nettles look similiar ... im with ya...lol. Must be cousins.
Urtica dioica, often known as common nettle, burn nettle, stinging nettle herbaceous perennial flowering plant in the family Urticaceae. Originally native to Europe, much of temperate Asia and western North Africa
so same family !
The stinging tree is kinda scary cause we have one that looks *VERY* similar to it but instead of stinging it feels pretty fluffy it has tiny hairs and the shape of the leaf is also the same but the difference is that its just soft to the touch
Was the thumbnail clickbait?
Hmmm , we often see life-sized ghost figures hanging from trees at Halloween time - yet you can’t show a dead bird hanging from a tree?
6:14 Eucalyptus is used extensively for coal production in Brazil because they burn relatively easy, so yep , they’re a big fire hazard all right.
3:58 in the Philippines we call it "Pungapung"
I watch watop amazingly and I watch his first video
Someone tell me how I can invest in one of those light set-ups... And the coffee maker... Someone tell me now.
YEEESSS STEVE IS BACK!!!!!!
I touched Stinging Nettle 2:40 at summer camp and it was everything he said. Didn’t last for months tho. Definitely a few days in my case.
Well damn.... Another great video 👍🏻
hey WATOP :)
I love your channel.. and if there is one thing I could change.. it is for us europeans that you also give the celcuis und the meters of you themes ^^
1:09 what does that look like to you?
"Eucalyptus tee drop branches"
Us bruneian and Malaysian during durian season: hold my machete
Well that was very useful !
Interesting.
Thumbnail is funny
I love it
Pre 1k likes squad!
3:22 yes I was eating at this very moment.. Actually I everytime I eat, I watch something.. And ever so often it is usually your videos..
maybe falling eucalyptus branches was the inspiration for Australian drop bears lol
The legendary stinging nettle 😂😂that one can give you real nightmares
"i hope none of you are eating right now" i felt called out as i took another bite of my food /hj
Best intro in yt
My primary school had a eucalyptus tree, a branch fell onto the playground set.
I actually laughed at the idea of a bee being taken out by plant flak.
Can we see the cute guy, “Steve, without the mask and hear him talk please?
Well, talking about cones from pine, here in south of Brazil, we have Araucária, wich is a kind of pine, wich produces a very, very, VERY big pines, like, almost 5 kg pines
I asked my brother to guess the full name of this channel WATOP
He told that
W - who
A - ate
T - the
O - onion
P - pizza
Lol 🤣🤦🏻♂️
😂😂😂😂😂
Love your voice and commentary RedWheel
Raflesia can be found in my country, they're called Bunga Bangkai or Rotten Crop Flower 🤭
he deseves so many likes and subs
So where's the thumbnail in this video? 👀
Efeef
Araucaria Angustifolia, a Brazilian pine , produces pine cones up to 5 kg.
The good news is that when boiled, the pine seeds are delicious
I was laughing at that silly dog at the end haha you mutt. But then heard its a coyote pup and AWWWW fell out ma mouth. Coyote are a wolves lil bro.
[3:15] eating while watching? I’m fine thanks, but I can continue eating a meal even if something very gross is being told or seen, (I like watching these vids while eating dinner, pretty interesting stuff here so it’s always a blast) also I like the titan arum, it’s my favorite plant
Touching a raffelesia? The closest thing I can get to that it petting a vileplume in Pokémon