Crazy thing is it's apparently easy to hold their croc and gator mouths shut, they have the power clamping down but apparently their jaws aren't that strong when opening That's why you can see people literally hold their mouths shut with one hand
The crocodile clip was almost every other crocodilian in the world except for the 'salty'. Love how they use stock footage of anything in these 'list videos'. I do hear that the cone snail is such a painful injection that some people will keel over from the shock within seconds. We have some here but not as bad as those.
They say the stonefish sting is so painful morphine does nothing for it. People have begged for the doctor to cut their foot off from the pain being so bad.
Cigarette snail has its name because its venom will kill in the time time it takes to smoke a joint with no known antivenom it is a deadly af sea snail
My mate used to go to Australia to visit his wifes family. He told me that you would see Black Widows just run across the living room floor and you would have to pack your clothes into bags and shoes into boxes when you went to bed.
To be fair, as an aussie living in a rural area, you really don't see that many snakes/spiders.. granted I'm not a farmer but still. As long as you look where your going and make sure to stomp around a bit snakes won't bother you, and most household spiders are relatively harmless. They don't WANT to bite you but they will if you corner them.
@@SentaiYamaneko Kinda true, but not really. It’s true that babies can’t control how much venom they use, but even if one unloads all it’s venom it still equates to less than an average adult bite.
As a Pommy in Oz I have already seen many of these beasties. In Sydney, funnel webs are in the garden, on the window frames and sometimes at the bottom of the swimming pool. So I moved to Tasmania which has a more Pommy climate. Jackjumper Ants, Redback spiders, Tiger Snakes, Copperhead Snakes, Blue ringed Octopus, Great White Sharks... Jack jumpers are angry little c***s that bite with their jaws and then sting repeatedly with their tail and can jump a long way (usually up your trousers). I got stung on my side and had a 15cm black/blue patch for about a month. Looked like I'd been hit by a rubber bullet. Even male Platypus is fuckin venomous. Stay in Pomgolia.
Blackadder is one of the greatest comedies ever written. It's such a pity that so many people only know Rowan Atkinson as Mr Bean when Edmund Blackadder is his masterpiece.
Actually, the horse is the most dangerous animal in Australia... but people find that a bit boring, so we've gotta go with the less common ones in these videos.
Actually they are. We just don't see them because they get out of our way quicker than we get into theirs. But your average suburban park will be home to at very least 1 Eastern Brown and sometimes a Red Bellied Black or a Tiger. And I can guarantee you 100% that in summer, you have walked past a Brown snake more than once and not known it's in the leaf litter on the edge of the footpath, or up a tree above your head minding its own business. If you live on a sloping block or on stumps, there is a fair chance in summer that a snake could be living with you.
The muscles used to close the mouths of alligators and crocodiles are the strongest on the planet of any animal. Oddly, though, the muscles used to open their mouth is very weak. That's why animal trappers and removers use duct tape to shut the gator/croc's mouth. There is no way a croc or gator can open their mouth once it has been taped shut.
I'm 29 from Victoria and I've never seen half of these things in the video 😂 it's all scared of us besides the crocodile but just stay away from the water
I bush walk and have seen plenty of snakes in Victoria in summer. But my only actual close encounter with a snake was in Norway of all places! I was in a forest and bent down to look at a pretty looking stick... and the stick slithered over my foot. It was an Adder. Who knew Norway had snakes!
Average of 32 animal-related deaths in Australia annually versus over 200 murders annually. That does not include rape, assaults, armed robbery, domestic violence, drunk driving...Remind me again, who is the most dangerous animal in Australia?
I'm laying in bed in the Aussie bush watching this. I just chuckled. Australia is pretty safe gents. I hardly ever come across a snake and the usually just want to be left alone. Edit. Sadly we have just lost a young man to an eastern brown snake bite. My condolences and prayers go out to his family.
The pic of the guy with his head in the crocs mouth is I'm pretty sure from Thailand 🇹🇭. That is impossible to do to an Australian salty .🇦🇺🐊's have a ferocity metre switched on 10 at all times because unlike Nile crocs who eat wildebeest once a year. 🇦🇺🐊's don't know when they're gonna eat again. They see boar, horse, water buffalo or you and it's😋 Go Time 😋 mate.
We call him the King Brown. He is native to my area. Highly aggressive and unlike other snakes that only inject venom first bite, The King injects up to six bites with more venom. Which kills you three different ways, attacks your blood, organs and nervous system
I heard about the box jellyfish, (most dangerous creatures of the world list maybe?), the blue ringed octopus, bull sharks kill people everywhere it seems, the salt water crocs, also found in Indonesian Nations, and just snakes and spiders generally, not specific ones, but they have a lot of them as everyone knows. I figure if I ever go there, I'll research more thoroughly, and try to stay in populous areas , where it must be safer?
Those last two, lying on the bow of the boat, are found all over the world and extreme caution should be applied when inter-acting with them. They can act very friendly but one wrong turn and you're done for. So, approach with a lot of care! YOU'VE BEEN WARNED!
Always amusing what's in these videos. There was even some footage from Australia this time. The rest as usual was Africa and parts of Asia to the north of us.
as an Aussie, yeah we grow up with wildlife. Have I ever had a close experience with our local fauna? Hell yeah. Spiders are a part of life. Funnel web - check your shoe. Huntsman - find bugs to feed him/her. I could talk and talk about the good beasties in Australia but, it wouldn't make money on UA-cam. This is why a no talent called Bindi, is trashing the memory of a legend called Irwin,
I'm an Aussie. I've never seen any of the 'dangerous' things nor know or heard of anybody who has. I live in the bush and see kangaroos from my kitchen window every day. It's not as though I'm a city dweller
As a Victorian I have seen countless Brown's. Normally they won't bother you unless you corner them or you are in between them and their home. Normally if they are rearing up and you think you are in between you slowly walk away and they will happily and quickly move on their way. I would Dread to be in QLD.
The crocs and Irukandji (relative to the box jellyfish) are in the northern part of Australia. Irukandji only certain times of the year. All of the other stuff is common sense and they aren't usually waiting for you when you walk out the front door. Awareness is important. Don't be put off by the critters we have here in Australia. Ask someone you trust for advice. Local knowledge goes a long way.
If people living here haven't seen a snake or just one in half a lifetime, they must not get out much. By the time I turned ten, I came across dozens, including two death adders. Once I looked in a 44 gallon drum, only to discover a nest of baby snakes. Didn't F with that.
Video of African crocodiles attacking Bisen , not Australia , like alot of these videos they use file footage , theres one of this deadly animals of Australia videos with a Komodo Dragon in it while their talking about a Monitor lizard , they forgot to mention we have 5 of the worlds most poisons snake species , Tiger snakes , Taipan , copper head , Mulga snake and also Red Back spiders our version of the Black Widow .
As an Australian I've seen plenty of snakes, spiders (we get redbacks in the house, which are venomous, and huntsmen which we don't mind because they eat flies and mosquitoes), and I've seen a single blue-ringed octopus. A friend of mine was very badly bitten by a snake which had curled up in her handbag - we worked at an airport in the desert - and ended up in intensive care, and our family has lost two dogs to snakes (silly buggers would attack the things instead of leaving them alone).But I've lived in the sticks for quite a few years. City-dwellers rarely see much more than spiders. But the thing all Australians are afraid of is none of the above animals - it's the native Australian magpie - ua-cam.com/video/HivhKv7wA-w/v-deo.html
Honey Bees aren't native to Australia like most parts of the world so the population has more people allergic to the venom of the sting than in places where honey bees have been around forever.
Can they be put into a trance where they become immobilized by rubbing their belly, maybe just a myth, don't know how you'd do that anyway, I wouldn't want to try.
@@mattpoules9467 it is not the rubbing of the belly that does the trick. Because they are over 250 million years old crocodilians still have a very tiny dinosaur brain. When you roll them onto their back their brain actually dislodges out of its seat and this causes the alligator or crocodile to be unconscious.
nah, isn't about the swelling, hot water helps break down the toxins/venom of alot of marine animals. so the bucket of hot water isn't about treating the symptom(swelling) but treating the root cause(envenomation). Vinegar is also used commonly for stings from jelly fish. Look up the Irukandji jelly fish that is also up around northern Aus, there is a syndrome linked to it. supposed to be exceedingly painful and i think pain relief drugs do little for it. they are also pretty dangerous for continued life.
As an Aussie I get a bit irritated when I hear people talk about Australia and “deadly” “dangerous” animals etc. it’s like yeah ok we got a lot of snakes and spiders which the majority of both tend to give a nasty bite but other than snakes and spiders which can be easily avoided. I usually follow up with but what dangerous animals bruh? Where’s our land predators? Oh our water based animals that are deadly sharks & crocs? Ok bruh sharks are pretty much global and crocs are in many other countries. Where’s our big cats? Where’s our bears? Where’s our wild canines? (excluding dingos because they small asf and keep to themselves except for that baby lmao)
As an Australian this is a good video normally these videos are uneducated and are misleading but this one is pretty close. Also it’s not as dangerous as everyone makes it out to be I live in the metropolitan suburban area of Adelaide in South Australia and you don’t normally see anything like this maybe once or twice a year if your lucky (or should I say unlucky). The brown snake is the most common of that list near me and unless your in the outback and a few hours from a hospital you’ll probably be fine.
As long as you're not walking around in the bushes you're fine.. and even then as long as you stomp around a bit the snakes will do their best to leave the area. They really don't like people much.
I've spent all my life bush walking in Australia. I've seen plenty of Eastern Browns, Tigers, Red Bellied Blacks. They don't want to be trod on, they get out of your way and you stay away from them. This simple concept appears to be rocket science to foreigners. I'm 59. Still alive.
13:00 I agree completely Mike. If I ever visit Australia, I'll be staying in the cities. I'll try to go to Sydney and Melbourne. And not leave the downtown areas.
@@rogdedodge7258 I'm an Urbanite. I love seeing international cities. Traveling to Toronto, Barcelona, Amsterdam, New York, Dublin, Munich, Boston, Mexico City, Miami, Ottawa, Chicago, Guadalajara, San Juan, Tegucigalpa, Nassau were all incredible trips.
Wow a place Daz hasn't been. Never thought I'd see the day lol
Right. The guy has been everywhere. Don’t know what job he has that enables him to travel that much?
@@wilddog371 drug smugler
@@wilddog371 he smuggles muggles into hog warts
@@smoaky123 Your comment is gold
I know, he's even been to the moon. Still there aswell.
Crazy thing is it's apparently easy to hold their croc and gator mouths shut, they have the power clamping down but apparently their jaws aren't that strong when opening
That's why you can see people literally hold their mouths shut with one hand
It's true , but I dare you to try it .
When u think venomous animals I think Australia, when u think dangerous animals I think Africa
I think Australia before you even finish the word "dangerous".
The crocodile clip was almost every other crocodilian in the world except for the 'salty'. Love how they use stock footage of anything in these 'list videos'. I do hear that the cone snail is such a painful injection that some people will keel over from the shock within seconds. We have some here but not as bad as those.
They say the stonefish sting is so painful morphine does nothing for it. People have begged for the doctor to cut their foot off from the pain being so bad.
Cigarette snail has its name because its venom will kill in the time time it takes to smoke a joint with no known antivenom it is a deadly af sea snail
@@katrinachampon2400 If it kills that quickly, they probably don't have time to try out anti venom.
Always cracks me up when Poms complain that Australia is so far away. Like it's further for them than it is for us.
My mate used to go to Australia to visit his wifes family. He told me that you would see Black Widows just run across the living room floor and you would have to pack your clothes into bags and shoes into boxes when you went to bed.
If thats what its like there we shouldve helped that wildfire burn longer.
It's really not that bad.. Just look at what you pick up and spray the spiders in your home. Problem solved!
your mate was lying
Which is complete BS because we don't have Black Widows in Australia. Huntsman are our house spiders are big, but not dangerous.
@@triarb5790, Really ? The Redback is a Black Widow but I can only go on what I was told.
To be fair, as an aussie living in a rural area, you really don't see that many snakes/spiders.. granted I'm not a farmer but still. As long as you look where your going and make sure to stomp around a bit snakes won't bother you, and most household spiders are relatively harmless.
They don't WANT to bite you but they will if you corner them.
Office bloke Bruce is gonna be upset if a skateboarder isn't on this list. He's gonna be so upset he's gonna change his name to caitlin 😂
I'm surprised that the red belly black wasn't on here, they often run away but you don't want to get bitten.
The inland Taipan, can kill up to a 100 people in a single bite, not several like the video said
And the babies can't control how much venom they dose you with, so you're far more likely to die if you get bitten by a baby.
@@SentaiYamaneko Kinda true, but not really. It’s true that babies can’t control how much venom they use, but even if one unloads all it’s venom it still equates to less than an average adult bite.
As a Pommy in Oz I have already seen many of these beasties. In Sydney, funnel webs are in the garden, on the window frames and sometimes at the bottom of the swimming pool. So I moved to Tasmania which has a more Pommy climate. Jackjumper Ants, Redback spiders, Tiger Snakes, Copperhead Snakes, Blue ringed Octopus, Great White Sharks...
Jack jumpers are angry little c***s that bite with their jaws and then sting repeatedly with their tail and can jump a long way (usually up your trousers). I got stung on my side and had a 15cm black/blue patch for about a month. Looked like I'd been hit by a rubber bullet. Even male Platypus is fuckin venomous. Stay in Pomgolia.
Can't make this up, 2 mins in a visit Australia ad.🤣😂 that's really bad advertising timing. 😂✌ great reaction.
Blackadder is one of the greatest comedies ever written. It's such a pity that so many people only know Rowan Atkinson as Mr Bean when Edmund Blackadder is his masterpiece.
Actually, the horse is the most dangerous animal in Australia... but people find that a bit boring, so we've gotta go with the less common ones in these videos.
I've lived in Australia for 70 years in different States and NEVER ever seen a snake
They forgot the the drop bear that likes to drop from trees onto humans, kangaroos and sheep looking for shade during the day.
7:53 we aussies have a tendency of just naming stuff how it is. Eg sydney harbour bridge, sydney opera house, they are exactly what they are😂
I live in Australia and can’t even remember the last time I saw a snake. People who have never been here think the animals are everywhere.
Actually they are. We just don't see them because they get out of our way quicker than we get into theirs. But your average suburban park will be home to at very least 1 Eastern Brown and sometimes a Red Bellied Black or a Tiger. And I can guarantee you 100% that in summer, you have walked past a Brown snake more than once and not known it's in the leaf litter on the edge of the footpath, or up a tree above your head minding its own business. If you live on a sloping block or on stumps, there is a fair chance in summer that a snake could be living with you.
The muscles used to close the mouths of alligators and crocodiles are the strongest on the planet of any animal. Oddly, though, the muscles used to open their mouth is very weak. That's why animal trappers and removers use duct tape to shut the gator/croc's mouth. There is no way a croc or gator can open their mouth once it has been taped shut.
8:07 There was a Brown Snake in the Rikki Tikki Tavi story with it being said to be worse than the two cobras.
8:31 Inspiration for Shelob from LOTR.
I'm 29 from Victoria and I've never seen half of these things in the video 😂 it's all scared of us besides the crocodile but just stay away from the water
Hiking near my house a couple of brown snakes have slithered past me. Nearly shat myself lol
I'm a 54 Australian and I have seen one brown snake, that's it's!
I bush walk and have seen plenty of snakes in Victoria in summer.
But my only actual close encounter with a snake was in Norway of all places! I was in a forest and bent down to look at a pretty looking stick... and the stick slithered over my foot. It was an Adder. Who knew Norway had snakes!
I've seen it documented somewhere that a single bite from a Taipan could kill 100 full grown humans
Average of 32 animal-related deaths in Australia annually versus over 200 murders annually. That does not include rape, assaults, armed robbery, domestic violence, drunk driving...Remind me again, who is the most dangerous animal in Australia?
I'm laying in bed in the Aussie bush watching this. I just chuckled. Australia is pretty safe gents. I hardly ever come across a snake and the usually just want to be left alone.
Edit. Sadly we have just lost a young man to an eastern brown snake bite. My condolences and prayers go out to his family.
The pic of the guy with his head in the crocs mouth is I'm pretty sure from Thailand 🇹🇭. That is impossible to do to an Australian salty .🇦🇺🐊's have a ferocity metre switched on 10 at all times because unlike Nile crocs who eat wildebeest once a year. 🇦🇺🐊's don't know when they're gonna eat again. They see boar, horse, water buffalo or you and it's😋 Go Time 😋 mate.
The "don't" at the beginning put me right in my place.
I don’t get it...
We call him the King Brown. He is native to my area. Highly aggressive and unlike other snakes that only inject venom first bite, The King injects up to six bites with more venom. Which kills you three different ways, attacks your blood, organs and nervous system
This was a good list! Usually these sorts of lists have the exact same animals but this was unique.
I'm surprised you didn't mention the drop bear.
I heard about the box jellyfish, (most dangerous creatures of the world list maybe?), the blue ringed octopus, bull sharks kill people everywhere it seems, the salt water crocs, also found in Indonesian Nations, and just snakes and spiders generally, not specific ones, but they have a lot of them as everyone knows. I figure if I ever go there, I'll research more thoroughly, and try to stay in populous areas , where it must be safer?
I’m surprised they didn’t mention the platypus, males have a venomous spur on their back leg (I don’t remember if it’s on both back legs or just one)
Their venom hurts like a bitch but isn't deadly to humans.
@@7thlittleleopard7 I bet it hurts! I wonder if because it’s not deadly to humans is why they didn’t include them.
Those last two, lying on the bow of the boat, are found all over the world and extreme caution should be applied when inter-acting with them. They can act very friendly but one wrong turn and you're done for. So, approach with a lot of care! YOU'VE BEEN WARNED!
Absolutely fantastic
Always amusing what's in these videos.
There was even some footage from Australia this time.
The rest as usual was Africa and parts of Asia to the north of us.
That "Brown Bomber" joke had layers to it.
the brown bomber is a famous black athletes nickname ( Joe Lewis , former Hvy wt Champ of the world I believe)
That type of crocodile has the 2nd strongest bite on the planet--3x the grizzly bear...no man from this planet is stopping those jaws from closing
Yeah you can't hold em open but you can hold em close pretty good
that's what I was thinking, the power of their jaw. There is no chance a human is stopping it from shutting with 1 hand let alone 2
as an Aussie, yeah we grow up with wildlife. Have I ever had a close experience with our local fauna? Hell yeah. Spiders are a part of life. Funnel web - check your shoe. Huntsman - find bugs to feed him/her. I could talk and talk about the good beasties in Australia but, it wouldn't make money on UA-cam. This is why a no talent called Bindi, is trashing the memory of a legend called Irwin,
I'm an Aussie. I've never seen any of the 'dangerous' things nor know or heard of anybody who has. I live in the bush and see kangaroos from my kitchen window every day. It's not as though I'm a city dweller
I don’t know where your from but I’ve seen all of these animals numerous times, except the Sydney funnel web. I’m from coastal central Qld.
@@jaywan5553 victoria
@Aaron Fawcett Title is quite wrong really. I would imagine few people gave encounter any of these 'killers'
As a Victorian I have seen countless Brown's. Normally they won't bother you unless you corner them or you are in between them and their home.
Normally if they are rearing up and you think you are in between you slowly walk away and they will happily and quickly move on their way. I would Dread to be in QLD.
I also can't deal with the ocean. It seems crazy to me that people run into something that is actively trying to throw us out of it.
Rattlesnakes have the fastest bite/strike speed in the world.
The crocs and Irukandji (relative to the box jellyfish) are in the northern part of Australia. Irukandji only certain times of the year.
All of the other stuff is common sense and they aren't usually waiting for you when you walk out the front door. Awareness is important.
Don't be put off by the critters we have here in Australia.
Ask someone you trust for advice. Local knowledge goes a long way.
5:14 The guy in thee middle has the same expression as the stonefish lol
The Adventures of the Office Blokes, Queens of the Desert ;-)
If people living here haven't seen a snake or just one in half a lifetime, they must not get out much. By the time I turned ten, I came across dozens, including two death adders. Once I looked in a 44 gallon drum, only to discover a nest of baby snakes. Didn't F with that.
I'd rather live here with all these creatures than live with Pommy weather lol
That's really lethal!
We also call them King Bowns if you want to give the crankiest snake on earth a meaner name
AND they will chase after you. CRANKY!!! 👍
Video of African crocodiles attacking Bisen , not Australia , like alot of these videos they use file footage , theres one of this deadly animals of Australia videos with a Komodo Dragon in it while their talking about a Monitor lizard , they forgot to mention we have 5 of the worlds most poisons snake species , Tiger snakes , Taipan , copper head , Mulga snake and also Red Back spiders our version of the Black Widow .
We ran out of scary names for snakes. Sooo many snakes…
As an Australian I've seen plenty of snakes, spiders (we get redbacks in the house, which are venomous, and huntsmen which we don't mind because they eat flies and mosquitoes), and I've seen a single blue-ringed octopus. A friend of mine was very badly bitten by a snake which had curled up in her handbag - we worked at an airport in the desert - and ended up in intensive care, and our family has lost two dogs to snakes (silly buggers would attack the things instead of leaving them alone).But I've lived in the sticks for quite a few years. City-dwellers rarely see much more than spiders. But the thing all Australians are afraid of is none of the above animals - it's the native Australian magpie - ua-cam.com/video/HivhKv7wA-w/v-deo.html
The Geographer Cone Snail is nooo joke. There’s some great videos on it
I live in West Palm Beach Florida and the beach closest to my house... Is the bull shark capital of the world
I've heard that on a different vid! Probably why I don't leave the sand when visiting. Lol
I once visited Birmingham and got taken by Haddock and Chips......
The most dangerous animal on the Australian continent is the feral bogan. They have a complete and utter disregard for other people.
This is like the opposite of an Australian tourism video.
Honey Bees aren't native to Australia like most parts of the world so the population has more people allergic to the venom of the sting than in places where honey bees have been around forever.
Inland taipan is local also, near as aggresive as the King
Interestingly, the Common Death Adder didn't make the list!
Crocodiles have a 3000 lb per square inch bite there's no way you would ever hold one's mouth open
Can they be put into a trance where they become immobilized by rubbing their belly, maybe just a myth, don't know how you'd do that anyway, I wouldn't want to try.
@@mattpoules9467 it is not the rubbing of the belly that does the trick.
Because they are over 250 million years old crocodilians still have a very tiny dinosaur brain.
When you roll them onto their back their brain actually dislodges out of its seat and this causes the alligator or crocodile to be unconscious.
it makes sense that the european bees would kill more australians than any of the native monsters living there.
King Brown is terrifying to us
The most dangerous ANIMAL in Australia is horse. Part reason is many fall off them
Hot water is one of the worst things you can do to prevent or alleviate swelling. Cold water yes, hot water no.
nah, isn't about the swelling, hot water helps break down the toxins/venom of alot of marine animals. so the bucket of hot water isn't about treating the symptom(swelling) but treating the root cause(envenomation). Vinegar is also used commonly for stings from jelly fish. Look up the Irukandji jelly fish that is also up around northern Aus, there is a syndrome linked to it. supposed to be exceedingly painful and i think pain relief drugs do little for it. they are also pretty dangerous for continued life.
@@fatroll1 Except I was specifically addressing what he said around 6:00 - "They had to put his leg in hot water to get the swelling down".
@@MrVvulf yep. Agreed cold is good for swelling, but they were addressing the toxin which would of been the cause of the swelling.
The Funnelweb spider is the creepiest, fuck that shit.
My mate died this year from King brown snake bite getting beer from the fridge.
Interesting joke
@@anti-loganpaul7827 wish it was
@@geppdude Well then I'm surprised that hasn't been nationwide news since there hasn't been a fatal snake bite in Australia since 1977.
My mate was opening a beer ,crock launched out of it and took him
As an Aussie I get a bit irritated when I hear people talk about Australia and “deadly” “dangerous” animals etc. it’s like yeah ok we got a lot of snakes and spiders which the majority of both tend to give a nasty bite but other than snakes and spiders which can be easily avoided. I usually follow up with but what dangerous animals bruh? Where’s our land predators? Oh our water based animals that are deadly sharks & crocs? Ok bruh sharks are pretty much global and crocs are in many other countries. Where’s our big cats? Where’s our bears? Where’s our wild canines? (excluding dingos because they small asf and keep to themselves except for that baby lmao)
As an Australian this is a good video normally these videos are uneducated and are misleading but this one is pretty close. Also it’s not as dangerous as everyone makes it out to be I live in the metropolitan suburban area of Adelaide in South Australia and you don’t normally see anything like this maybe once or twice a year if your lucky (or should I say unlucky). The brown snake is the most common of that list near me and unless your in the outback and a few hours from a hospital you’ll probably be fine.
We don't have AR15s.
You should react to UA-camr Ginger Billy, he is hilarious!
Australian wildlife were calling Australia home long before white settlement.
The dangers of Australian wildlife are seriously over exaggerated. We are one of the safest countries in the world.
no dangerous animals in oz. JUST DANGEROUS SPIDERS N SNAKES OCTOPUS, SNAILS. GYMPIE GYMPIE PLANT. etc.
There are no african wildebeast here.
Dang bunyips!
But at least we don't have AR 15's
I like snakes (peep the channel) but idk enough about snakes n Australia so wouldn't want to go looking for them over there
Waiting for more The Dooo m, Veltri, and H Mack 😁
2 deaths a year?
a australia has the 1st 2nd and 3rd most venomous snakes in the world. well as someone who doesnt like snakes thats one place i will not go.
As long as you're not walking around in the bushes you're fine.. and even then as long as you stomp around a bit the snakes will do their best to leave the area. They really don't like people much.
I've spent all my life bush walking in Australia. I've seen plenty of Eastern Browns, Tigers, Red Bellied Blacks. They don't want to be trod on, they get out of your way and you stay away from them. This simple concept appears to be rocket science to foreigners. I'm 59. Still alive.
:)
just bite them back
13:00 I agree completely Mike. If I ever visit Australia, I'll be staying in the cities. I'll try to go to Sydney and Melbourne. And not leave the downtown areas.
What's the point coming mate? Sydney and Melbourne are like any other international city. Get out there, listen to locals and use common sense.
@@rogdedodge7258 I'm an Urbanite. I love seeing international cities. Traveling to Toronto, Barcelona, Amsterdam, New York, Dublin, Munich, Boston, Mexico City, Miami, Ottawa, Chicago, Guadalajara, San Juan, Tegucigalpa, Nassau were all incredible trips.
The worst sharks you will ever encounter in Sydney or Melbourne are the ones who sell real-estate. The political ones can give a nasty bite also.
Um - it not called a ‘Sydney Funnel Web’ because it lives in Vegas
@@Twopennysau 🤣🤣😂👍
Two countries I'll never go to, USA and Australia. Both contain way too dangerous animals (in the US the animals being humans).
Am early
Me first!!!
I don't believe you. Prove it 😂
Inland Taipan is the most lethal,she got it wrong