The Terrifying Truth About Chimps

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 10 лип 2022
  • Get NordVPN exclusive deal here: nordvpn.com/casualgeographic. Try it risk-free thanks to their money back guarantee!
    My New Book Is FINALLY Out!! ⬇️⬇️
    www.amazon.com/100-Animals-Th...
    For more consistent content, make sure to follow my Tiktok and Instagram below
    TikTok: vm.tiktok.com/ZM8TDoghj/
    Instagram: mndiaye97?...
    If you’d like to support the channel and earn access to exclusive content, check out my Patreon below
    / hoodnature
    Subscribe, turn on ALL post notifications and make sure to drink water and hug your mother

КОМЕНТАРІ • 12 тис.

  • @mndiaye_97
    @mndiaye_97  Рік тому +1048

    Get NordVPN exclusive deal here: nordvpn.com/casualgeographic. Try it risk-free thanks to their money back guarantee!

    • @yamikage252
      @yamikage252 Рік тому +6

      o

    • @ajanidavis6771
      @ajanidavis6771 Рік тому +3

      Brother man I wholeheartedly, 100%, agree with the avoiding humanity completely

    • @EarlSmith2469
      @EarlSmith2469 Рік тому +2

      love the video, thank you!

    • @jackbrenner6340
      @jackbrenner6340 Рік тому +6

      bet you can't say anything messed up about manatees the great sea potato other than who hunts them

    • @godofqueef2754
      @godofqueef2754 Рік тому +1

      Imma Google it

  • @unknownvariable9239
    @unknownvariable9239 Рік тому +17834

    Chimps have always terrified me, way scarier than any shark. Mostly because they’re so human-like but also so unhinged and wild.

  • @randomcenturion7264
    @randomcenturion7264 Рік тому +4428

    Chimps are bloody terrifying. They've got the capacity to be both kind and cruel.

  • @stevencoffin328
    @stevencoffin328 Рік тому +1863

    I think what is so scary about the Travis story is that whenever you hear about for example somebody getting mauled by their "pet" tiger it's because the tiger was rough housing with their owner and just didn't know their own strength. If a tiger wanted to actually kill them, they would done it easily.
    Travis not only wanted to kill that woman but wanted to drag it out and make it as slow and painful as possible.

    • @WLongDoesWStuff
      @WLongDoesWStuff 11 місяців тому +219

      Travis is also a sentient being like a human, with a large brain, who was abused and on Xanax.

    • @Farah.tics23
      @Farah.tics23 11 місяців тому +156

      Good. Animals are wild for a reason. That’s why you don’t drug animals like that.

    • @Farah.tics23
      @Farah.tics23 11 місяців тому +26

      @@WLongDoesWStuffExactlyyyy

    • @snazzyjovialwyrm3314
      @snazzyjovialwyrm3314 11 місяців тому +107

      @@WLongDoesWStuff A large brain that is still developing and doesn't completely comprehend human nature, if at all, at that. I don't know how people think they can raise chimps without problems.

    • @WLongDoesWStuff
      @WLongDoesWStuff 11 місяців тому

      @@snazzyjovialwyrm3314 Yeah, well, it still comprehends. Though it's got a smaller brain, and is still developing, it's not going to be a war waging killing machine by instinct. You do realize that there's undocumented cases of people raising chimpanzees. Not every chimp will rip someone's face off. Obviously it was provoked.

  • @derrickbartledoo2680
    @derrickbartledoo2680 Рік тому +625

    Komodo dragons are way faster than I imagined. That's genuinely terrifying to know something that big, strong, venomous and heavy is also capable of flashing across a room towards you.

    • @Kden420
      @Kden420 Рік тому +70

      Reptiles are extremely fast. But they have terrible stamina. At some point their power literally runs out like a battery and they need to sit in the sun for a few hours to recharge.

    • @benmorrow9487
      @benmorrow9487 Рік тому +7

      I once saw a video of a Komodo eating a monkey. 🤣

    • @Joshua_Hale
      @Joshua_Hale 11 місяців тому +37

      @@Kden420 While generally true, it's worth noting that monitor lizards have a more efficient respiration and cardio system than other lizards, so they are able to act as true pursuit hunters.

    • @user_anonymous000
      @user_anonymous000 10 місяців тому +8

      ​@@Joshua_Haleyou talk like chatgpt

    • @Narutass43
      @Narutass43 9 місяців тому +19

      They're in the one family of lizards that unlocked the lifehack of "run and breathe at the same time"

  • @unknownvariable9239
    @unknownvariable9239 Рік тому +17469

    I’m genuinely shocked that any of these people managed to get so close to chimps and even escape alive.

    • @starchiild622
      @starchiild622 Рік тому +101

      congrats on being both top comments

    • @qualitymcbro8452
      @qualitymcbro8452 Рік тому +27

      @Don't Read My Profile Photo I've followed this before and I thoroughly respect it.

    • @brigidtheirish
      @brigidtheirish Рік тому +77

      I suspect heavy use of telescopic lens for most of these shots.

    • @kekekeke2200
      @kekekeke2200 Рік тому +36

      Altough, there are a bunch of russians who have Bears as pets

    • @dracodracarys2339
      @dracodracarys2339 Рік тому +103

      which is why jane goodall is a badass, she managed to convince an entire species of murderous psychopaths that she wasn't any fun to rip to shreds

  • @stateyourname7745
    @stateyourname7745 Рік тому +10673

    I volunteered at a zoo marketing department for a while, but by weird coincidence got to share the bus home with the animal care crew, they were very nice people, very open to chat and share photos and stories of the wild animals. I once asked them which animal was the one they had to be most careful around, expecting the answer to be tigers, all of them in unison agreed: never be alone or distracted in a room with Chimps.

    • @DaxterL
      @DaxterL Рік тому +1755

      From seeing videos of zoo keepers or animal workers at reservations and stuff, play with tigers, giving belly rubs and having such trust with sn animal, i can picture why a chimp would be their option to be careful around. I mean they need to be vigilant around any animal, but chimps are our closest relative, and we know what we are capable of.

    • @joshuaashton1929
      @joshuaashton1929 Рік тому +1457

      @@DaxterL no it’s more that they are just too smart to be treated like a pet. And also that they’ll rip your face off for no reason.

    • @mridulbisht9865
      @mridulbisht9865 Рік тому +424

      @@joshuaashton1929 the reason is you disrespected chimp culture mate.

    • @LordBrittish
      @LordBrittish Рік тому +284

      @@joshuaashton1929 Exactly. Just like humans.

    • @user-wn3wv5bx5e
      @user-wn3wv5bx5e Рік тому +655

      ​@@joshuaashton1929 Well, yeah, since they're the closest relative to us they're too smart to be treated like a pet. This isn't to offend the other animals but there's a reason why you can't treat a human like a pet, and the smarter the animal, the more attitude that'll come with knowledge.
      Only problem is that chimps, while intelligent, are emotionally not unless you _really_ dedicate your time raising it. At least with humans it wouldn't have the power to rip your face off when you try teaching it morals, chimps have the power and they _know_ they have the power.

  • @Noodleydoo
    @Noodleydoo 6 місяців тому +209

    I have a friend named Glen who used to work at the Dallas Zoo. He told me he would rather go into the lion enclosure than the Chimpanzee's. He said people have no idea how strong they are--or how vicious!

    • @LaVitaNouva
      @LaVitaNouva 4 місяці тому +17

      And if lion decided to kill you, they make you a quick meal, the chimp will have *fun* first.

    • @Xuno-cr6fb
      @Xuno-cr6fb 3 місяці тому +4

      Why do I feel like this is glen from Tre rags videos 😂

    • @shadowtail4063
      @shadowtail4063 7 днів тому +2

      They go for the balls,nose and eyes first. They are all fast twitch muscle

  • @anthonytonythegeek5561
    @anthonytonythegeek5561 11 місяців тому +179

    The 09 incident is honestly the most unsettling thing I’ve heard, I remember hearing about this when it happened, and I was young at the time (like seven years old) and even then I knew that would be terrifying, but after actually looking back, and seeing what happened, it’s truly unsettling. Also the fact that someone can have a pet that has almost 90 percent of their dna that is similar to ours is a little… odd to say the least

    • @Narutass43
      @Narutass43 9 місяців тому

      Great apes deserve personhood. No question.

    • @stefanidowling
      @stefanidowling 5 місяців тому +9

      I agree that’s very odd, plain weird etc. Why the hell anyone would want a chimpanzee as a pet is bananas!! 😉😆 They are terrifying to me. Just hearing about what they do to other animals is horrific so, why would anyone want to take the risk of being mauled possibly to deletion…One last thing, they’re not even close to being cute (those things are so damn ugly).

    • @2freezing
      @2freezing 4 місяці тому +1

      I was 9

  • @Woodsy2575
    @Woodsy2575 Рік тому +8058

    If anyone is interested in more chimp stuff, look up the Chimp War. Observed by Jane Goodall and her team, a community of chimps broke into two distinct tribes that systematically hunted each other down one at a time. They were seen using stealth tactics such as walking single file, and remaining silent as they crept up and encircled their targets before ambushing them.

    • @theflyingdutchguy9870
      @theflyingdutchguy9870 Рік тому +330

      seen that docu a vew times. its so crazy

    • @durrangodsgrief6503
      @durrangodsgrief6503 Рік тому

      Chimps are just us with no morals

    • @zigmand88
      @zigmand88 Рік тому +567

      Chimpanzees wage wars as horrible as humans did in the last great extinction, about 150,000 years ago.
      Planet of the apes is not that fictional as one might think firstly.

    • @That_Doctor_Del_Fella
      @That_Doctor_Del_Fella Рік тому +720

      They're experts at... gorilla warfare. I'll see myself out.

    • @ANunes06
      @ANunes06 Рік тому +426

      Can't help but wonder how the feud started. If it was a simple issue of limited resources, chumps will usually just break off into smaller groups and ... you know ... leave. Maybe compete for a couple years before one group's dominance is secured and THEN one of them leaves for greener pastures.
      That time? Nope. It suggests some kind of legitimate *disagreement* on something (probably resource distribution or the breeding situation). And THAT indicates a level of cultural development in Chimpanzees that I am simply not comfortable acknowledging as even a possibility.

  • @Johollister
    @Johollister Рік тому +2373

    Sooooo I got a chimp throwing things story. Many years ago, I was visiting a zoo and went to check out the chimps. They had a fairly nice(for a zoo) open enclosure surrounded by a moat. Two girls standing next to me thought it would be funny to toss ice cubes at the chimps. I was going to hollar for a zoo keeper, but then the largest chimp started tossing TURDS at the girls. They ran away screaming, then the chimp looked at me with a "hey you're cool you can hang" expression and he settled back down.

    • @residentrump3271
      @residentrump3271 Рік тому +1

      Few things in this world are more horrific than flying feces, but it sounds like those girls deserved it

    • @MrDibara
      @MrDibara Рік тому +1

      😳 You sure were lucky that chimp was fair and recognized you were not a douche.

    • @revenger211
      @revenger211 Рік тому +2

      The chimp really went "you're one of the homies now"

    • @Alan_Marin
      @Alan_Marin Рік тому +552

      *Those girls definitely won a stupid prize for sure*

    • @SynnJynn
      @SynnJynn Рік тому +55

      SMH...

  • @jasminedavis3030
    @jasminedavis3030 Рік тому +39

    Funny thing about Komodo dragons, is there was a recorded case of a man dying from TWO he had in his home. One of them had bit him, and causing paralysis, and with him unable to fight back, the two giant reptiles of them pretty much ate him alive. Police found his half eaten corpse 2-3 days later, when his boss (or family) reported him missing and they did a wellness check.

    • @indigo0977
      @indigo0977 5 місяців тому +8

      I feel most sorry for the policeman in this scenario. The owner chose to keep the lizards, but just imagine being sent out on a welfare check and encountering 2 komodo dragons and a half-eaten corpse...

    • @us3rG
      @us3rG 4 дні тому

      ​@@indigo0977untill recent years things like that were common

  • @dreamcatcherjulie1
    @dreamcatcherjulie1 Рік тому +85

    "I was seven but I wasn't stupid" 😅🤣...Loved the video, you have a great voice for this. I find the whole ape family interesting and watch a lot of videos about them. Good job. Thanks for making.

  • @noahleonard2481
    @noahleonard2481 Рік тому +2665

    I remember being in kindergarten in a town right next to Stamford and hearing about Travis tearing that lady’s face off from two of the teachers having a discussion. The one telling the story was so surprised by it, but the other teacher was super nonchalant and just went “I don’t care that he was raised like a human, it’s still a fucking chimp.”

    • @manswithnocheese.0.243
      @manswithnocheese.0.243 Рік тому

      “Goddamnit I don’t care if it was raised like a damn human, it’s still a chimp! They are scarily similar to humans Dane! I will bet real money that at least 40 of them could kill everyone in this school.”

    • @fishmcfish3850
      @fishmcfish3850 Рік тому +397

      I feel like that's how most people should really treat any animal other than dogs and cats to avoid 90% of news headlines

    • @hadbetterdays8118
      @hadbetterdays8118 Рік тому +90

      True at the end of the day nature will sometimes best nurture

    • @kingdribs9286
      @kingdribs9286 Рік тому

      @@hadbetterdays8118 and when it does you die like an idiot. Just keep a fcking house cat

    • @Ilivedbih
      @Ilivedbih Рік тому +129

      @@fishmcfish3850 There's more animals other than cats and dogs that can be pets ☠️. Hell, there's way more less dangerous pets to have than dogs and cats lmfao.
      My little birb is sure as hell less dangerous than my aunt's cat.
      She started to eat her face when she got drunk and passed out lmao, also tries to scratch out anyone's eyes when they visit 😆.

  • @ImperiousMax
    @ImperiousMax Рік тому +3493

    What's worse regarding Travis' case is one of his owners, Jerome, Sandra's late husband, actually told Sandra before his death to put Travis into a sanctuary after his death because he wasn't sure Sandra could take care of him on her own. But Sandra refused because she didn't want to be alone... To think that if she had done just that then that whole incident could've been avoided.

    • @theblackcatgirl7013
      @theblackcatgirl7013 Рік тому +199

      That entire situation is messed up and so so so damn heartbreaking hook, line and sinker.

    • @user-wn3wv5bx5e
      @user-wn3wv5bx5e Рік тому +246

      I do feel quite bad for Sandra if that were the reason though. Someone in that emotional state won't think straight, especially in an older age. She should've taken Travis back, but raising Travis must've brought a lot of memories that made her too overwhelmed to do so.

    • @Leapingriver
      @Leapingriver Рік тому +263

      They honestly shouldn't have had a chimp to begin with, let alone a full grown male. Its ridiculous she didn't put him in a sanctuary considering he already bit people.

    • @user-uq9oe7sc5m
      @user-uq9oe7sc5m Рік тому +96

      So he was living with an emotionally unstable woman? Is it *really* a wonder why he snaped?

    • @Bender789456123
      @Bender789456123 Рік тому +11

      @@theblackcatgirl7013 It's "hook, line and sinker" not center FYI 😋

  • @jimjoyce4423
    @jimjoyce4423 Рік тому +62

    I love how comfortable you are just being real. Keep stepping bro

  • @fraidycat01
    @fraidycat01 Місяць тому +6

    Chimps have always scared me, I think it’s because they’re so close to humans but just off enough to give the uncanny valley feeling.

  • @pux0rb
    @pux0rb Рік тому +1914

    Yeah the Komodo is an instant out for me. I remember watching Steve Irwin back in the day and I've never seen the man more scared than when he was on an island with those things. He had to be extra cautious with every move, and this is the man that would swim in shallow croc-infested waters. I gained a true appreciation and respect for the Komodo dragon after watching that episode.

    • @MurasakiTsukimaru
      @MurasakiTsukimaru Рік тому +58

      Idk, you ever see him cross waters filled with hippos?

    • @michaeldavid6832
      @michaeldavid6832 Рік тому +216

      didn't he get a cut on his leg and the dragon instantly went switched over into hunt mode for the thing it detected was bleeding (Steve)?

    • @pux0rb
      @pux0rb Рік тому +178

      @@michaeldavid6832 Yep, he had to run straight up a tree

    • @michaeldavid6832
      @michaeldavid6832 Рік тому +153

      @@pux0rb I haven't seen that once since around when it aired. I was shocked at how the dragon instantly detected the blood and instantly turned into a killer on the hunt.

    • @ElysetheEevee
      @ElysetheEevee Рік тому +51

      @@pux0rb Yeah, didn't it bite into the heel of his boot? Like they showed it and everything after split open with venom/saliva in it, didn't they? It's been decades since I saw that episode, so could be misremembering.

  • @Irmatu
    @Irmatu Рік тому +1469

    How that man escaped with his doctorate intact is insane.

    • @bahhumbug5467
      @bahhumbug5467 Рік тому

      @Pig 🅥 isn’t that techno blades pfp? That’s really fucked mann

    • @manubishe
      @manubishe Рік тому +112

      1930s were wild.

    • @Vlad_Tepes_III
      @Vlad_Tepes_III Рік тому +31

      Those were the days, the good old days.../s

    • @patrickloureiro351
      @patrickloureiro351 Рік тому

      @@manubishe just have either money, connections or "respect" and you could kill someone in broad daylight and get alway with.
      Edit: oh, and being family members with a politician was even more of a cheat code back then.

    • @rampage3337
      @rampage3337 Рік тому

      i think the last insane asylum in USA stopped experimenting on mentally sick patients in like the late 90s. you know experimenting on the mentally sick and those who have mental birth defects like ADHD and such. the shit the germans did to the jews happened to allot of people in the asylums to. so times use to be different and your morals are not based on what is morally right or wrong it's based on what society tells you is right or wrong. just as far back as 2010 chocolate balls where still called nigger balls in sweden

  • @avacornthelastponybender8583
    @avacornthelastponybender8583 Місяць тому +11

    Lady: ~holds Travis the Chimps Elmo~
    Travis the Chimp: "Peace was never a f***ing option!"

  • @johnkaeden
    @johnkaeden Рік тому +53

    You sir, have made all of UA-cam a better place. If I'm like the average viewer, then you haven given smiles and laughter to thousands of people. Never stop making videos!

  • @Replicaate
    @Replicaate Рік тому +946

    There was a story I heard of a chimp warlord (for lack of a better term) who was the head of one of the most brutal chimp bands in a region, but after one of his closest 'friends' was killed he seemed to lose interest in his ongoing brutal gang wars and vanished, and his massive group fell into infighting and split up.
    The old warlord was found some time later with a new band, mostly young orphans and they all stayed WELL out of the monkey warzones on their travels. Guess he had a change of heart and felt that his remaining years were better served protecting instead of murdering.

    • @r.j.penfold
      @r.j.penfold Рік тому +110

      Oh that's pretty neat

    • @michaeldavid6832
      @michaeldavid6832 Рік тому +186

      Sounds like his buddy was the instigator. "Hey BoBo, you gonna let him talk that ish to you?"

    • @MilloSpiegel
      @MilloSpiegel Рік тому

      @@michaeldavid6832 bobo, do you seee the Chimp over there? He called your mother a dirty Bonobo. Are you gonna let that slide? If

    • @williamthomas4769
      @williamthomas4769 Рік тому +14

      ...wow.😲

    • @manswithnocheese.0.243
      @manswithnocheese.0.243 Рік тому +1

      goddamn monkey man got so sad over his friends death that he didnt want to lose any more friends

  • @lilitharam44
    @lilitharam44 Рік тому +2464

    Komodos have actually been clicker trained, are as intelligent as a dog, and can recognize the zoo keepers and other humans who have interacted with them. They also don't generally bite unless they are hunting or hungry. I love but respect them. The ones at the Memphis Zoo are awesome! Love from Memphis!

    • @coffeewolfproductions9113
      @coffeewolfproductions9113 Рік тому +244

      While that is true it takes time to train a komodo and unless you're already on friendly terms I wouldn't take the risk with a komodo.

    • @omarsali2990
      @omarsali2990 Рік тому +148

      @@coffeewolfproductions9113 if he's not familiar with you that only means you're a nice meal

    • @touremuhammad5983
      @touremuhammad5983 Рік тому +62

      Yeah, but in the wild they dig up cemeteries & feed on people’s corpses. That’s how they sometimes go after people.

    • @kitlee172
      @kitlee172 Рік тому +19

      At least Komodos can’t fit through commodos. 🚽💩🦎🪠

    • @rampage3337
      @rampage3337 Рік тому

      the vast vast majority of animals can recognize human friends. and clicker training is something allot of animals can do and don't make them any smarter. and they literally do generally bite people. a fucking zoo tiger also rarely bites people but they can still do it and they do still do it occasionally. there are allot of animals that can be trained to tolerate people but it don't make them ignore their natural urges. humans are probably the only animal that can ignore natural biological urges because of our intellect allowing us to overpower biology with rules of society as it has a higher chance of survival and our brains know that. the only thing that makes murder wrong is society saying it's wrong. by nature we humans are made to kill and wars go back as far as humans go. the earliest signs of humans is also about the time we saw the earliest signs of war and execution.

  • @1fishmob
    @1fishmob 11 місяців тому +13

    The sad thing is, they originally planned on sending Travis to a chimp sanctuary like her husband requested, but she couldn't bring herself to part with Travis. That whole event could have been avoided.

  • @derrickallen2054
    @derrickallen2054 Рік тому +65

    My dude, you've got an interesting delivery with your videos, quick, informative, and funny. And it's refreshing to hear someone make light hearted jokes about race, especially when that person is a minority. You've earned yourself a sub. Keep doing what you're doing ✌🏻

  • @MrJaCraig
    @MrJaCraig Рік тому +1550

    Just want to add that it was Kellog's wife who made him kill the project, not him. She was the one who was worried about the son's development. Learned about this one in an ethics course.

    • @ahsanhaider6549
      @ahsanhaider6549 Рік тому +178

      "..he had no tolerance for unethical people"
      wow..just wow

    • @concept5631
      @concept5631 Рік тому +148

      @@ahsanhaider6549 Hypocrisy is humanity's most prominant trait.

    • @greenanubis
      @greenanubis Рік тому +21

      @@concept5631 Boy, youre right! We do the same thing as Kellog, but on industrial large scale in schools. Its the same process.

    • @bob7975
      @bob7975 Рік тому +78

      The Stanford experiment was shut down by the girlfriend of one of the researchers. He made the mistake of showing off to her what they were doing (she was also a researcher on a different project). She was absolutely horrified, as of course she was, and threatened to bring outside authorities into the situation. End of study. Sorry, everybody. Sorry.

    • @paul_particularlyunhappynut
      @paul_particularlyunhappynut Рік тому

      isn't that the same nigga who wide spread circumcision? fuck that guy

  • @dostagirl9551
    @dostagirl9551 Рік тому +1055

    I’ve always disliked chimps. Not to the point where I’m like “take them out.” More like that one uncle you just avoid at bbqs. This was reinforced in a science class I once took. The professor recounted how during an observation, two chimps approached a younger member from another group and then pretended to be its friend and entice it away from the safety of its family members. Then when it was isolated and brought into their own territory, they killed it. He ended it by saying that some theorized that since the chimps encroached onto the other group’s territory to lure the young chimp out and that resources were not scarce, it may have just been something they enjoyed doing. 🤯😱

    • @manswithnocheese.0.243
      @manswithnocheese.0.243 Рік тому +196

      Good to know, chimpanzees will lure the young and stupid from their families like a serial killer lures a hitchhiker into their car

    • @dimitripapadinikolaus
      @dimitripapadinikolaus Рік тому +81

      yh gorillas>>>>chimps

    • @Machineraptor
      @Machineraptor Рік тому +224

      They are just too similar to people, including all the fucked up things people do. It's quite disturbing how higher intelligence seems to come with maliciousness and cruelty

    • @baronconnect4iii620
      @baronconnect4iii620 Рік тому +119

      @@Machineraptor It's only through intelligence that you can even fathom cruelty.

    • @dinosaurlady2
      @dinosaurlady2 Рік тому +94

      I don't like chimps either. The only animal I ever really say that I dislike. I love other apes, but chimps terrify me and they are cruel.

  • @simplygaming2280
    @simplygaming2280 7 місяців тому +2

    I stumbled across your channel a few months back, my son and I love it! We make it a thing every weekend to get up and watch a few episodes so thank you for being funny and educational to us both :)

  • @cats1478
    @cats1478 3 місяці тому +4

    I rarely comment on videos. Actually, I'm commenting on you. What an amazing talent you are. I can see you going mainstream and doing the nightly news. Thank you so much for all the effort and thought you put into your videos. I have enjoyed them all. Take good care.

  • @micheleportatadino5919
    @micheleportatadino5919 Рік тому +1808

    I knew the tragic story of Travis, and there are plenty of gut-punching details I guess couldn’t be mentioned for time reasons: his foster father had died of cancer a few years before, so did his foster sister in car accident; those events and the subsequent depression of his foster mother sunk the chimp into a depressive state of mind as well, so much that his foster mom thought it was a good idea to cure him with antidepressants for humans.
    The day he mauled Charla Nash she had her hair dyed red, she exited the car with an Elmo toy which was also bright red, that may be the reason he snapped. That and the fact he was overweight, depressed and on drugs. It’s still uncertain.
    Oh and you forgot a couple of disturbing facts: the humanzee experiments/theories and the chimp clans war known as the Chimp Gombe War.

    • @TF2CrunchyFrog
      @TF2CrunchyFrog Рік тому +219

      Yeah, the "Humanzee" experiments were another class of bonkers. Thankfully the guy who wanted to see if human women would be impregnated by sperm from a chimp was shut down before the experiment went into the final phase. Although I read he had found women willing to try it.

    • @devinwhite5064
      @devinwhite5064 Рік тому +160

      @@TF2CrunchyFrog morals are surprisingly flexible for people. Like that quote says, "Everybody's got a price"

    • @captoshuragnarok7444
      @captoshuragnarok7444 Рік тому +61

      "One of the things you learn from years of dealing with drug people, is that you can turn your back on a person, but never turn your back on a drug." Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas (1998)

    • @ElysetheEevee
      @ElysetheEevee Рік тому +18

      I lived in Connecticut not too far from where this happened, when it happened. It was so surreal.

    • @debbylou5729
      @debbylou5729 Рік тому +31

      I lived in Fairfield Connecticut when this happened. The friend hadn’t done anything different. She visited often and hadn’t changed her appearance. They looked into anything and had to say, basically, chimp on drugs. The tax payers paid for this Sherlock Holmes reveal

  • @fox-dies
    @fox-dies Рік тому +4876

    also! definitely agree on the gorilla part. gorillas are terrifyingly strong, but they are also pretty passive if you're not threatening. theres videos of wild life photographers being approached by whole families of gorillas who just sorta chill around them and sniff them and play with their clothes.

    • @ThexDynastxQueen
      @ThexDynastxQueen Рік тому +578

      Only time I've seen a gorilla be aggressive towards humans in the wild was when a film crew got way too close but even then the male gorilla gave a warning charge and didn't just attack.
      It's like it knew the crew wasn't holding a gun nor wanted to hurt them, they just needed to back TF up lol. Amazing creatures.

    • @anim8dideas849
      @anim8dideas849 Рік тому +29

      I'd say it's depends on your size the bigger you are the more threading your are. at my size I would have chosen a komodo cuz the pic with the man holding it like a dog and not getting bit and two it's cold bold so you only have to fight it for like 2 minute b4 it gases out. if its hungry and big enough to not see you as a predator then I just flip the bed over on it and sit on it. I'd choose an average 5-7 foot komodo 100lb komodo over an 400lb gorilla any day.ty

    • @griffinmckenzie7203
      @griffinmckenzie7203 Рік тому +283

      @@anim8dideas849 you'd have a higher chance of surviving your lost fight with the gorilla than the komodo, bud. Stop fooling yourself.

    • @jasonblalock4429
      @jasonblalock4429 Рік тому +182

      It's also likely those gorillas have become accustomed to having humans visit and take pictures, which is getting to be an issue. Even with the usual warnings about minimizing direct contact with wild animals, some of them are becoming very comfortable around humans - which is all well and good and cute until poachers show up.

    • @kiki13451
      @kiki13451 Рік тому +36

      @@anim8dideas849 idk about your size but I’m not choosing a Komodo who’d probably be the same size as me 😂😂

  • @Ravens_and_Lilies14
    @Ravens_and_Lilies14 10 місяців тому +10

    Quick PSA on chiggers (yeah, I know, the name 😑) - I think some of what was pictured here were actually clover mites, which are also tiny and red but don’t bite and are just a nuisance. Chiggers tend to favor heavy brush or wooded areas, so if you see a bunch of tiny red bugs in or immediately around your home they’re probably clover mites, so don’t freak.

  • @lionheart6176
    @lionheart6176 11 місяців тому +5

    remember Jane Goodall witnessed and documented a literal war between two chimpanzee tribes in Gombe, the Kasakela and the Kahama, the Kahama were actually seperatists of the Kasakelas. this resulted in the entire male population of the Kahama getting torn to shreds and the females kidnapped by the Kasakela. the result was what land the loser tribe did have, got annexed by a bigger chimpanzee tribe called "The Kalande Empire" which made the entire war pointless, fun fact the Kahama were technically at peace and even traded with the Kalande. so Kasakela got their shit pushed in by the Kalande.

  • @engagingbus7991
    @engagingbus7991 Рік тому +2356

    That second to last video made me realize that if you do not do anything absolutely stupid with the gorilla, you can eat fruit with it, sit around, look non-threatening, and just chill out.

    • @zsu-23-4shilka2
      @zsu-23-4shilka2 Рік тому +561

      _(sits in room with large silverback gorilla just watching television & eating sandwich while said gorilla eats very large bowl of assorted fruits)_

    • @thedoomtrainer8292
      @thedoomtrainer8292 Рік тому +145

      @@zsu-23-4shilka2 Hell yeah

    • @jakobwhaley5641
      @jakobwhaley5641 Рік тому +2

      @@zsu-23-4shilka2 do that with a chimp and it will tear you apart

    • @user-ol1pm2iw9j
      @user-ol1pm2iw9j Рік тому +2

      The Gorilla isn't gonna give 2 craps about you unless you bust a move and I know you ain't unless your brains smoother then MJ.

    • @MikeyCyan
      @MikeyCyan Рік тому +234

      @@zsu-23-4shilka2 laughs because tv show is funny… fuck, I’m smiling?! Did it notice? Fuck, I’m looking at it 😢

  • @anonymoususer2280
    @anonymoususer2280 Рік тому +2632

    7:20 it was stated that the chimp was mourning his "father", who died from cancer but with Travis being a chimp, he couldn't express his emotions properly and started acting out more, hence the medication. She should've listened to her late husband who told her that if anything happened to him, to give Travis to the zoo. It's all in a documentary about the chimp.

    • @mariofan1ish
      @mariofan1ish Рік тому +155

      That's an interesting detail, actually. Do you think he knew what Travis would do, or that he didn't trust his wife to properly care for Travis?

    • @gothicMCRgirl
      @gothicMCRgirl Рік тому +327

      Yes, Travis had already been showing signs of aggression once he reached maturity, and the husband was ready to give him up but his wife was always reluctant. They shouldn’t have had Travis to begin with, but if they had just simply given up Travis to a sanctuary, that whole tragedy could’ve been prevented.

    • @DragoEpyon
      @DragoEpyon Рік тому

      @@gothicMCRgirl Also could have been avoided if they put the little fucker in the ground the second he started being aggressive.

    • @JuMiKu
      @JuMiKu Рік тому +97

      @@gothicMCRgirl No wonder. That is what always happens. That has been the fate of all those movie-chimps. They reach maturity and start becoming dangerous and so they are replaced by a new younger chimp. Good luck finding a zoo willing to take such a chimp, let alone a male, as they are always notoriously hard to find a home for.
      Most of these poor, unsocialized male chimps end up whiling away for decades in cages, as they can't be integrated into groups. Very few are lucky enough to at least end up in a sanctuary and not in a tiny cage in a roadside "zoo".

    • @kingwillie206
      @kingwillie206 Рік тому +1

      Given the assumed intelligence level and observed level of social complexity chimps display, I imagine it is many orders of magnitude more complicated than that. An adult chimp has all of the same basic needs an adult human needs and not have those needs met most likely drove him insane. Not enough exercise, an intrinsic testosterone driven urge for intercourse, a dysfunctional make shift family life etc. Not only could he not express his emotions properly, but he had no natural outlet for them.

  • @felineb751
    @felineb751 Рік тому +3

    I love how you tell each story with hilarious commentary 😂😂😂

  • @user-kr8qo9yq4k
    @user-kr8qo9yq4k 4 місяці тому +1

    Thanks man I appreciate you making these videos and I hope that you have a blessed day

  • @timtemple2230
    @timtemple2230 Рік тому +3809

    my girlfriend works at a chimp sanctuary and she tells me all kinds of wild stories. The wild shit usually happens when a new chimp is introduced for example one chimp that had been a pet its whole life and never socialized with its kind was brought in he also had his teeth removed so he couldnt effectively defend himself and there are 10 established groups on property numbering between 10 - 30 per group. The group this chimp was eventually introduced to had a female that would encourage the other males to attack the new chimp and since all the males wanted to mate with her she basically had gang of simps at her beck and call . New chimp ended up loosing a few toes after being jumped by the gang but what really stuck to me was that the alphas in these groups were like bouncers for the facility if shit got too rough and bloody they would funnel the alpha of said group wherever he was at during the scuffle to said scuffle and let him break it up... keep in mind a healthy alpha standing on two legs reached almost 6 feet in height well over 200 pounds .

    • @crashjayoo6
      @crashjayoo6 Рік тому +250

      So a human

    • @leerzeichn93
      @leerzeichn93 Рік тому +792

      @@crashjayoo6 yes, but with a body fat percentage body builders would be jealous at.

    • @Introvertsan
      @Introvertsan Рік тому +95

      Oh that is scary

    • @timtemple2230
      @timtemple2230 Рік тому +214

      @@pensamientoparadojico9642 I feel like the environment plays role in behavior seeing as how these chimps aren't wild and out in the lowlands of Africa free to be themselves completely. They understand their situation to an extent.

    • @timtemple2230
      @timtemple2230 Рік тому +163

      Also when these guys are hopping around and hitting the ground you FEEL it through the shoes you are wearing which was a sobering experience itself.

  • @Terraraptor1
    @Terraraptor1 Рік тому +2056

    I'm a zoologist, and I work with primates for a living. I just wanted to say thank you for making these videos. I genuinely learn something new every time, and you present it in such a way that it feels easily accessible for everyone. Your UA-cams very own Steve Irwin in my book.

    • @thereisnosanctuary6184
      @thereisnosanctuary6184 Рік тому +49

      This guy is a straight educator.

    • @AlanTClark
      @AlanTClark Рік тому +65

      You are zoologist?.... and you learn from UA-cam videos? That's actually very sad. And this guy is not an educator he just gets his information off of the Internet like everybody else, and just puts it to story format, which he is pretty good at I will admit, and I enjoy watching them.

    • @Seraphim262
      @Seraphim262 Рік тому +7

      What exactly did you learn from this video? I am curious.

    • @michaelanderson2385
      @michaelanderson2385 Рік тому +1

      @@AlanTClark so being a zoologist they should already know every piece of info the internet has to offer on animals? Intelligent people learn new things all the time, no need to be a douche 💁

    • @bigbadwolf4190
      @bigbadwolf4190 Рік тому +36

      If you are a zoologist, aren't you supposed to know this stuff already? 🤔

  • @whitejesus983
    @whitejesus983 Рік тому +2

    Informative and comedic, im here for it. Keep up the awesome content.

  • @kendrickb7397
    @kendrickb7397 10 місяців тому +2

    Just discovered this channel and it’s literally one of my favorites by far already 😂😂😂

  • @Marispider
    @Marispider Рік тому +1171

    I've never seen Charlotte's face after the attack but before multiple facial reconstruction surgeries (she looked unrecognizable and you could tell she had lost almost all of her face but it wasn't bad or horrifying, just... malformed), but I have heard the 911 call where you can hear Travis mauling her as she screams and his foster mother shouting "he's killing her!" while begging for help. It is nightmare fuel. Poor Charlotte, and poor Travis. A horrible way to live and a horrible way to die.

    • @SCP-rd1zc
      @SCP-rd1zc Рік тому +11

      link pls, I feel like ruining my day
      Edit: Thanks for sending the sauce

    • @Marispider
      @Marispider Рік тому

      @@SCP-rd1zc You better be grateful, I listened to the first five seconds to make sure it was the right one and immediately my gut dropped 😔 ua-cam.com/video/wgS0KgT5APc/v-deo.html Have fun lol

    • @tibik.8407
      @tibik.8407 Рік тому +53

      @@SCP-rd1zc No, you dont.

    • @UnprofessionalProfessor
      @UnprofessionalProfessor Рік тому +1

      @@SCP-rd1zc GamerfromMars did a video on it, with pics.

    • @monito3575
      @monito3575 Рік тому +3

      @@SCP-rd1zc also EXPLORE WITH US made a video about it . I think in the 911call the owner also said "He is eating her..."

  • @pisces2569
    @pisces2569 Рік тому +467

    The fact that Travis’s owner still advocated chimp ownership after Charlotte’s mauling pisses me off to no end. She took away a newborn chimp away from its mother and raised it in such bizarre circumstances. These circumstances led a testosterone-ridden, extremely strong chimp to have aggression issues to become so aggressive that it attacked people twice and needed Xanax to calm it down. Yet that medication only upped its anxiety and lead to his death and the near death of Nash. Travis was not the exception to the rule. He was a warning against chimp ownership!

    • @RaxusXeronos
      @RaxusXeronos Рік тому +48

      I don't want to live with something that could probably rip my arm off with it's bare hands if it decides it's not gonna tolerate me anymore.

    • @the13throse
      @the13throse Рік тому

      yeah seriously, primates of any kind aren't good pets, but especially not chimps. It's bad both for them and often the humans who own them, too. There's plenty of animals that make great pets if you bother to do the research and put the work in, but when it comes to wild animals? Just get a plushie ffs. At least that won't rip your face off.

    • @JacqueBibblequip
      @JacqueBibblequip Рік тому +10

      Travis just wasn’t a bitch. He took no disrespect, if you throw a bottle at him he gonna throw you like bottle

    • @grinnylein
      @grinnylein Рік тому +3

      There are a lot of animals that should never be pets, like every mammal that isn't domesticated Leave the rest alone and protect their environment then you can make safari tours to see them or watch documentaries about them

    • @testerwulf3357
      @testerwulf3357 Рік тому +1

      Sad thing is I think her husband before death told her to put Travis in a sanctuary and she REFUSED! She’s so selfish and self absorbed she put others in danger and almost killed someone..and then sees nothing wrong with it and thinks people should own those things?? She’s CRAZY

  • @Daniel-ru9uj
    @Daniel-ru9uj 5 місяців тому

    This channel is one of the more interesting ones. Glad I stumbled upon it!

  • @GusOjo-oz4vh
    @GusOjo-oz4vh Рік тому +1

    I am really entertained by this channel and this Host. His wit and sense of humor is 2nd 2 none.

  • @Deadsea_1993
    @Deadsea_1993 Рік тому +3987

    I remember the Travis story. The survivor was on national news and she also appeared a few times on Oprah. The story was very sad and it gets more sad when you know that Travis's adopted dad was dying and told his wife to put Travis in a chimpanzee sanctuary cause he felt that his wife couldn't raise Travis alone. He died and she refused to do that and then the attack happened like a year later.

    • @brandontaylor6677
      @brandontaylor6677 Рік тому +1

      He could've gone from chimp to pimp. Now he went from chimp to limp

    • @theofficialliedetector1545
      @theofficialliedetector1545 Рік тому +135

      He died in 2004, so it was more like 5 years

    • @Gurra88
      @Gurra88 Рік тому +296

      Some people believe a pet chimp is fine as long as you simply treat it well. I highly doubt that but let's find out. Have 100 chimps raised as pets in 100 different households for 15 years and see how things are going. I got a feeling that wouldn't end well but some people don't understand the meaning of wild animal.

    • @savannacromwell3978
      @savannacromwell3978 Рік тому +45

      Poor Travis

    • @jepjep6740
      @jepjep6740 Рік тому +175

      Her wife also give Travis some kind of drug (Xanax I think) to calm him down whenever he's gone wild. Which is a terrible idea.

  • @TheRealGuywithoutaMustache
    @TheRealGuywithoutaMustache Рік тому +1985

    “You can say ‘size matters’ all you want, but 4 inches made a difference that day”
    I swear this man never misses with his narration

  • @christopherlancaster9829
    @christopherlancaster9829 Рік тому

    I love your videos dude don't stop making them I love learning about cool stories and awesome facts about animals

  • @steveelias3727
    @steveelias3727 Рік тому +2

    Just found your channel, subscribed! You have a great way of putting this out I love it. One thing you kinda missed about Chiggers is being from the South, the places they like to dig in is sweaty areas like around your belt line and most importantly....they make you scratch like to have a bad case of the crabs (if ya know what I mean). They love that spot the most!

  • @personwomanmancameratv4558
    @personwomanmancameratv4558 Рік тому +1114

    while eating , i heard that the doctor that transformed his own kid into a chimp had little tolerance of people who are unjust or unethical . i almost choked on my food gagging ... saw the white light and everything . why would you do that to me ?
    love the vids btw , keep up the good work mamadou

    • @andersjjensen
      @andersjjensen Рік тому +29

      You should know better by now :P
      If it isn't the facts that gets you you're almost guaranteed an uncontrollable laughing fit at how he describes things! This dude is NOT food-and-drink safe!

    • @woozihae
      @woozihae Рік тому +8

      My humour broke 😭😭

    • @pisces2569
      @pisces2569 Рік тому

      Honestly they should do a psychological study on him. His hypocrisy is outstanding!

    • @madonnasbutthole9674
      @madonnasbutthole9674 Рік тому

      I love your name.

    • @zecuse
      @zecuse Рік тому +1

      Were you eating corn flakes?

  • @ChadThastle
    @ChadThastle Рік тому +1911

    I was a child in CT when this happened and everyone had the same “why have that as a pet?” Reaction. She is the reason why legislation was passed shortly after to make exotic pets illegal in Connecticut

    • @bezoticallyyours83
      @bezoticallyyours83 Рік тому +1

      Too bad it still does not stop idiots from keeping wildlife

    • @rikitikitavi7454
      @rikitikitavi7454 Рік тому +20

      Waterbury in the house! But yes that was a WILD thing to wake up to

    • @bezoticallyyours83
      @bezoticallyyours83 Рік тому +11

      @Funtime Florian agreed

    • @flixs1353
      @flixs1353 Рік тому +2

      @Funtime Florian nah I want a lion as a pet

    • @araw993
      @araw993 Рік тому +12

      I think having an exotic pet is ok if you're in that type of area where you see them in their natural habitat everyday. If you can establish a relationship with them awesome. But I would never have one oyt of their habitat. I would rather meet them whenever I see them

  • @paulmayes76
    @paulmayes76 3 місяці тому

    You always have awesome content I like that that you always give me some information that I've never heard before and I appreciate you must do a lot of homework my friend keep going I love it

  • @scotthouliston.4195
    @scotthouliston.4195 10 місяців тому

    Great video very well thought out nice work

  • @cadenz7719
    @cadenz7719 Рік тому +1185

    The rhino is the okay choice. Yes they are very paranoid, however, rhinos raised in captivity often act more like giant Labradors. It depends on where the rhino was raised. Gorilla is still best choice by far.

    • @andidinu1456
      @andidinu1456 Рік тому +43

      And ..how would the rhino even enter the bedroom

    • @ero_dynamic_dominion5669
      @ero_dynamic_dominion5669 Рік тому +245

      @@andidinu1456 /spawn

    • @Commander_Shepard.
      @Commander_Shepard. Рік тому +63

      @@andidinu1456 Tranquilize it, and then build the bedroom around it.

    • @professionalidiot4987
      @professionalidiot4987 Рік тому +9

      @@Commander_Shepard. who said you could have a tranq? Honestly the real solution is to just choose a small house, not a million dollar mansion. And if you're like me and prefer meat over vegetables, just feed it whenever you get veggies on the fridge. Same with gorillas. You might even gain respect with king khung.

    • @Commander_Shepard.
      @Commander_Shepard. Рік тому

      @@professionalidiot4987 I was answering how to get in to a bedroom.

  • @JusticeFortheSilenced
    @JusticeFortheSilenced Рік тому +729

    There is a woman named Aya Katz who has a pet chimpanzee named Bow. We in what I like to call the chimp community have been trying to talk her into letting him go to a sanctuary. He literally lives on a back porch. Even though she swears he will never hurt her mark my words, this won't end well.

  • @kingofallmediums2123
    @kingofallmediums2123 5 місяців тому

    Your videos are some of the best on the Internet! Keep up the good work. 😊😊😊😊😊😊

  • @tonimccleveland5014
    @tonimccleveland5014 5 місяців тому

    Thank you for the information I really appreciate you

  • @bennetla10
    @bennetla10 Рік тому +362

    Fun Fact: Chimps actually can't throw spears, well, not enough to do real damage anyway. Thanks to longer arms and shorter legs, Chimps center of balance is alot higher than humans. Which makes it impossible to throw a javelin with any degree of force and accuracy.

    • @killer13324
      @killer13324 Рік тому +69

      spears ain't *only* for throwing.

    • @qualitymcbro8452
      @qualitymcbro8452 Рік тому +38

      That applies to balls, rocks etc. Chimpanzees also run into the issue that they can't smoothly release a shaft quickly due to a relatively limited range of motion in their thumbs.

    • @qualitymcbro8452
      @qualitymcbro8452 Рік тому +31

      @@killer13324 Melee is also sub optimal for them, because they lack the ability to so quickly transition from thrusting to bludgeoning, due to a limited of range of motion in their thumbs not enabling a smooth transition (give them a mace).

    • @theflyingdutchguy9870
      @theflyingdutchguy9870 Рік тому +38

      their shoulders are also not evolved for throwing things like ours are. we are more adapted for those sort of things. chimps are more adapted to climb

    • @aurourus6894
      @aurourus6894 Рік тому +48

      You don't need to be standing to throw properly.
      The reason why they can't throw is because they have completely different shoulder anatomy and they have vertical pecs. We have horizontal pecs.

  • @enkhovy
    @enkhovy Рік тому +390

    One day my friends talked about animals and they asked around about the others opinion on 'dangerous animals'. Without any time to think or decided which animal, I just blurted out "hippos and I fear the chimpanzees too".
    They might be laughing that day, but your/this guy's videos already made up my mind.
    Edit: Just noticed a typo, I don't 'dear' the chimps.

    • @ytyoungrichnhigh
      @ytyoungrichnhigh Рік тому +8

      Oh no you're 100% correct.

    • @jaschabull2365
      @jaschabull2365 Рік тому +27

      Wait, aren't hippopotamus infamously deadly animals? Don't see what there is to laugh at.

    • @manswithnocheese.0.243
      @manswithnocheese.0.243 Рік тому +31

      @@jaschabull2365 theyre literally living 9000 pound war machines

    • @Zer-ec4ly
      @Zer-ec4ly Рік тому +4

      When the time comes, you will have the last laught.

    • @debbylou5729
      @debbylou5729 Рік тому +2

      Like the guy from Casual Geographics says…….hippos will remove you from the census, just because they can

  • @jovanreid6782
    @jovanreid6782 15 днів тому

    Your commentary is awesome. You've got yourself a sub, bruh.

  • @Notsotopofthefoodchain
    @Notsotopofthefoodchain 25 днів тому

    This man is unrivaled in his respective profession! Thank you 🙏.

  • @Aidenfirewing3470
    @Aidenfirewing3470 Рік тому +1207

    The experiment reminds me of studies on feral children - grew up with no human interaction, usually in the woods. Since abandoning kids in the woods isn't as common these days, modern feral kids is pretty rare. I remember one modern case of a girl kept in a room away from the family (she was eventually rescued and recovered)

    • @eacalvert
      @eacalvert Рік тому +82

      I would use the term "recovered" lightly.

    • @hellion6737
      @hellion6737 Рік тому

      Bro I have a video about travis: ua-cam.com/video/WeVzs1r7tpk/v-deo.html

    • @flob_the_bob
      @flob_the_bob Рік тому +13

      @@eacalvert why, now I want know

    • @garimasundriyal2933
      @garimasundriyal2933 Рік тому +24

      Genie Wiley?

    • @eacalvert
      @eacalvert Рік тому

      @@flob_the_bob so let me set the scene. Dad is a raging and abusive person. He would not let anyone speak a single word not only in the same room but even where she might be able to hear it. She essentially had minimal human contact: her mother was in the room long enough to feed her and change her. When she was found she was strapped to a chair as that was where she spent most of her days. She was never toilet trained while in the care of her biological parents. When CPS finally rescued her she had no idea how to speak. At all. She could use grunts that was it. She couldn't really walk in a bi-pedal fashion.
      She was taken to a team of specialists/researchers who were able to help rehabilitate her to a point. They learned that at a certain point in development, if not given normal speech contact, the brain will not develop how to use /speak in sentences. She could learn words and could understand simple sentences but could not make her own.
      To top all of this off her mother somehow still had legal custody of her and the courts, despite the mountain of evidence of the progress she had made and the conditions she was rescued from. Her mother had removed from probably the 1st ppl ever in her life who treated her literally as a human and not some rabid animal, and her put into a group home for the mentally r-word (as that was what it was still called back then) and the researchers were legally denied from seeing her again. Her mom got pissy b/c Genie had been allowed to live in the home of one of researchers and they grew attached to each other in mother child like relationship....b/c Genie's mom had not exactly done a stellar job in that regard

  • @almanac4150
    @almanac4150 Рік тому +648

    I'm genuinely shocked I haven't suffered the repercussions from being around chiggers. I remember watching them crawl across my feet as a kid when I would walk barefoot in the grass. 😳

    • @SagittariusAyy
      @SagittariusAyy Рік тому +55

      How, bruh? I remember getting absolutely wrecked by those mofos back when I stayed at WDW’s Fort Wilderness Campground back in 2010

    • @almanac4150
      @almanac4150 Рік тому +61

      @@SagittariusAyy I guess I was only around the adults. They were so tiny and everybody told me they were harmless so I would just watch them crawl around. Whenever I wanted to get them off my feet I would just rinse with the water hose.

    • @Legend-up2dn
      @Legend-up2dn Рік тому +47

      @@almanac4150 you have some incredibly good luck I hope you know that

    • @manakzar7148
      @manakzar7148 Рік тому +30

      @@Legend-up2dn Incredibly lucky? They are as annoying as mosquitos just not as likely to carry diseases. Incredibly lucky to avoid an inconvience.

    • @rubenharos6988
      @rubenharos6988 Рік тому +1

      I never encountered these things

  • @MisterMonsterBro
    @MisterMonsterBro Рік тому +3

    10:06 that picture of the jaguar gave me chills bro.

  • @gaaraofthefunk7163
    @gaaraofthefunk7163 10 місяців тому +2

    Thank you for uploading, I hope you find the same lvl of happiness we get from absorbing knowledge off your vids ✨
    Best Occasional Geographic UA-camr 🥳

  • @Nil_Sama
    @Nil_Sama Рік тому +1002

    I've always had this fear of monkeys and primates; chimps especially. I'd always thought it was an irrational fear, then I saw a NatGeo documentary about chimps. It also featured Travis' story, among other things. Yeah, let's just say, I was glad I didn't live anywhere remotely near them. Strangely though, despite being around 7 or 8 at the time, I felt a sense of relief knowing my fears were rational.

    • @squirrelabouttown6022
      @squirrelabouttown6022 Рік тому +5

      So have I! I used to have reoccurring nightmares as a kid. I can still remember some of them.

    • @bl4k4tt84
      @bl4k4tt84 Рік тому +19

      bruh how you afraid of your self

    • @Nil_Sama
      @Nil_Sama Рік тому +9

      @@bl4k4tt84 It is how it is.

    • @honeybeehomicide6760
      @honeybeehomicide6760 Рік тому +20

      Uncanny valley

    • @brokentortilla
      @brokentortilla Рік тому +16

      Nobody tell this guy that humans are also primates

  • @morningstarghuleh1087
    @morningstarghuleh1087 Рік тому +787

    When I was a very small child of around 5years old, I watched a David Attenborough show on chimps and it scared the utter crap out of me. I had always been taught how nice and cute and funny chimps were, yet here was little me witnessing a group of them hunting and ripping apart other monkeys. Absolutley shattered me and I've never wanted to really look at a chimpanzee again. I've studied them a bit since, but I would never ever trust one if I had to go near it.

    • @anna8328
      @anna8328 Рік тому +69

      Healthy. I was horrified at 16 by reading about a woman who worked whole life to help chimps and gave birth in the jungle. One day she was walking around with newborn... Yeah the chimp snatched it and killed it. The article explained it's full of nutrients for them and it's not uncommon to attack babies of other or own species. Also you shouldn't have been allowed to watch that at age 5.

    • @MrTheevilmage
      @MrTheevilmage Рік тому +16

      I saw that same documentary when I ws little too :0 and it gave me the exact same feelings about Chimps and its why I have a fear of them myself

    • @ageishyena3035
      @ageishyena3035 Рік тому +22

      @@MrTheevilmage I hear ya. And what's worse, they go into Rage Mode if you lock eyes with them so you can't even look directly at them or they go more batshit than the Joker

    • @SnowAngelAJ
      @SnowAngelAJ Рік тому

      @@anna8328 Damn...

    • @porc1429
      @porc1429 Рік тому +9

      The Bonobos are the nice ones. Bonobos should get more popular

  • @sc13ncef16tion
    @sc13ncef16tion Місяць тому +2

    The Thanos line did it for me. +sub.

  • @skullsnguns22
    @skullsnguns22 5 місяців тому +3

    Never stop making your jokes, bro.
    3:40 _"...in ways that would have CPS, PETA, and the Geneva Convention pulling up."_ LMAO

  • @TF2CrunchyFrog
    @TF2CrunchyFrog Рік тому +307

    THere had been at least one documented case of a chimpanzee (born in a zoo in captivity) who was able to drive a motorbike _in everyday town traffic._ He was a male chimp named Henry who lived in a zoo in France, in the 1960s/70s. David Taylor, a British veterinarian who specialized exclusively in the treatment of semi-wild animals living in captivity in zoos, circuses and marinelands, related a meeting with Henry in his autobiographical book _Zoo Vet: Adventures Of A Wild Animal Doctor_ (published 1976). Taylor wrote how he had been called to France to treat a dolphin who was suffering from an unknown illness, and when he arrived at the airport, he was told "Henry will take you there"... only to see a big male chimp on a bike, wearing shorts and a cap, who regarded him with indifference. He was told to ride shotgun behind Henry, then Henry took off... perfectly balancing the bike, stopping at traffic lights with idling engine, and all traffic cops in town (that was in the 1960s) knew Henry and greeted him and directed traffic to make way for him. Taylor wrote that was the weirdest ride he ever had. He was nervous because he had never ridding a motokbike before, so he did all the thinks terrified newbies do like leaning into the wrong direction in curves... but Henry balanced that bike perfectly, he worked the clutch, he navigated calmly through traffic and clearly understood traffic rules; unclear if he could read signs or if he just knew the route, but he had clearly understood the verbal order to take the human to the dolphinarium, so he knew where places were and what they were called. (Much like sheep dogs and seeig-eye dogs for the blind.)
    [quote] David Conrad Taylor, BVMS, FRCVS, FZS, was a British veterinary surgeon. He was the first veterinary surgeon to specialise in zoo and wildlife medicine. Taylor worked with zoo and wild animals from 1957, acting as a consultant on the treatment of some of the rarest species on Earth. He was world-renowned as an expert in marine mammal medicine.
    In the mid-1970s and early 1980s, Taylor wrote a popular series of autobiographical books that charted his life and experiences as a "Zoo Vet". [/quote]

  • @yourholyjeebus5569
    @yourholyjeebus5569 Рік тому +392

    chigger nymphs actually can carry diseases! We just don't know if they can spread them! My dad is an ecologist and he's studying that right now! just thought it would be a cool (not very cool) fun fact.

    • @angelwings967
      @angelwings967 Рік тому +20

      Let’s hope that they can’t!! 🙏🏼

    • @Jesus-Henry-Christ
      @Jesus-Henry-Christ Рік тому +5

      Very cool Actually

    • @posthistoricdino422
      @posthistoricdino422 Рік тому +30

      "chigger nymphs" feels like a very dangerous phrase, especially with this video putting "chimps" on the mind

    • @openorwap5412
      @openorwap5412 Рік тому +3

      @@posthistoricdino422 Yup. Not ideal to spoonerise the two 🤐😵

    • @polinn5510
      @polinn5510 Рік тому +2

      @Freddy Medina damn

  • @CoffeeMania-uq7if
    @CoffeeMania-uq7if День тому

    Awesome video, well done bud

  • @TheNewAgedDiogenesAfterRehab
    @TheNewAgedDiogenesAfterRehab 8 місяців тому

    That was an amazing video, thank you! I would love to see you do one of my biggest fears, bears. Regardless, I liked and subscribed. I can't wait to see what you come up with next.

  • @dawnmana5876
    @dawnmana5876 Рік тому +502

    I wish I could get the naive "humans are the only living thing that does bad things" people i know to watch these.

    • @omgitsclinton
      @omgitsclinton Рік тому +108

      Well it's kinda funny the 2nd highest offender is closely related to us

    • @sergiopepe2210
      @sergiopepe2210 Рік тому +5

      Send it

    • @Rudoku1
      @Rudoku1 Рік тому +97

      @@omgitsclinton At least the 3rd isn't. Damn dolphins

    • @dawnmana5876
      @dawnmana5876 Рік тому +45

      @@omgitsclinton I don't know. Orcas are about neck and neck with chimps.

    • @filthycasual8187
      @filthycasual8187 Рік тому

      @The Stonefish No. Intelligence breeds the ability to see maliciousness for what it is. Everything on this savage shithole planet is malicious.

  • @Ilaunchnukes
    @Ilaunchnukes Рік тому +364

    Fun fact: The 3700 psi estimate for q crocodile came from a 4 meter long crocodile. That was from an AVERAGE 15-16 foot crocodile. Scientists estimate that crocs 20 feet or larger can exert 7000+ psi, almost that of Tyrannosaurus Rex.

    • @cryptic7844
      @cryptic7844 Рік тому +9

      Less than a squirrel tho

    • @fransthefox9682
      @fransthefox9682 Рік тому +14

      Imagine the bite force of a fully grown Deinosuchus...

    • @ASBDYTheAwesome
      @ASBDYTheAwesome Рік тому +1

      I think it was estimated 21000 psi

    • @FanFav101
      @FanFav101 Рік тому +3

      Don't know what any of this means

    • @TY-km8hj
      @TY-km8hj Рік тому +3

      @@FanFav101 bite force

  • @usmcmma
    @usmcmma Рік тому +1

    This guy is my favorite youtuber of all time!

  • @killcondo
    @killcondo 8 місяців тому

    There’s something very British about the commentary, makes an already interesting commentary witty and engaging.
    I love these docs, this is just further proof that nothing in nature stays pretty when it gets hungry.

  • @jamesteegardner2273
    @jamesteegardner2273 Рік тому +2086

    "Chiggers, or Chiggas, which is somehow less offensive..."
    Someone give this man an award! Seriously, he teaches us so much while making us laugh, and somehow, he makes it look effortless!
    Some production company should seriously consider giving him a TV show, he's that good! I remember him saying that Steve Irwin was someone who he used to admire, so it'd almost be fitting if he was the one to be the next famous "animal guy".

    • @wedgeantilles1498
      @wedgeantilles1498 Рік тому +97

      A TV show would be a waste of his talent. Nobody watches cable anymore. He has a more powerful platform here. Also doesn't have to deal with a greedy studio, digging into his pockets and making him force out content faster, and lowering the quality. He's better off as an independent creator here. Social media is now the biggest and still the fastest growing media form in the world... TV/cable has went the way of the radio.

    • @ssj4gogeta130
      @ssj4gogeta130 Рік тому +6

      He actually said apparently but ight lmfao?!

    • @clayhudson8668
      @clayhudson8668 Рік тому

      You know what chiggers are being in the country we all know don't lay in the grass

    • @blacktemplar1139
      @blacktemplar1139 Рік тому +3

      ​@@wedgeantilles1498What do you mean "gone out the window"? All they did was just try to get more money-in the worst possible ways (IM LOOKING AT YOU GW!), they still exist, and make profit.

    • @webx135
      @webx135 Рік тому +16

      Dude my word was always "Chegro"

  • @BlueBackground
    @BlueBackground Рік тому +64

    “Here’s why you should never give a chimpanzee Xanax” that sounds like the beginning to a bad joke

  • @duanecarr6712
    @duanecarr6712 2 місяці тому

    Great channel man

  • @pyro6300
    @pyro6300 Рік тому +201

    i still remember that story in 09 of the chimp ripping the woman's face off, and seeing the images on the news made me burst out into tears. i was so young and it terrified me, had multiple nightmares on end

    • @nengehtardzer2839
      @nengehtardzer2839 Рік тому

      Naw how bout seeing the images of the lady's fucked up face on TV and them later on seeing it again in a book about it

    • @prod.droppa999
      @prod.droppa999 Рік тому +2

      Sameeeee

    • @joeplayzgames2625
      @joeplayzgames2625 Рік тому +1

      She survived, but died a year later.

    • @KBReal870
      @KBReal870 Рік тому +20

      @@joeplayzgames2625 The chimps owner is the one who died a year later. I'm pretty sure Nash is still alive.

    • @guybrushthreepwood2014
      @guybrushthreepwood2014 Рік тому

      Yo can you describe it? Like not to be a pussy or anything but if that shit fucked up the guy from the video (watched a couple of his videos but never really memorized his name) I don't think it would be a good idea for me to google it. I mean I shat my pants when I saw the melting zombie from "return of the living dead". And the faceless woman should be a pint worse.

  • @blueblade6174
    @blueblade6174 Рік тому +106

    I live in Nigeria. I visited a zoo in Gusau when I was a kid - like 10 or younger. We were looking at hyenas in their enclosure, and one of the keepers went in to feed them. But this is Nigeria, so of course he left the door to the enclosure open. My mom yelled for all of us run. And that zoo keeper got an earful from her.

    • @deinsilverdrac8695
      @deinsilverdrac8695 Рік тому +7

      Some country shouldn't have zoo
      Sorry south America, middle east, africa and south, india and east Asia but all country in these region
      Not only look like prison or early 1900 zoo
      But also have no regard for animal life, health and security

    • @deinsilverdrac8695
      @deinsilverdrac8695 Рік тому +13

      @@blueblade6174
      from what i've seen
      there's a big difference between western/japenese/chinese/australia/new zealand zoo, and the rest of the world zoos
      the worst zoo of Europe and US are like the best zoo of Ivory coast, Indonesia, Thailand, Surinam and Morroco.
      They're at the same level as US private zoo like tiger king one.
      i've never said i think "western" and chinese zoo are good either, but at least they try to give decent habitat and enrichment to the animals and help in conservation and public awareness, founding of in and ex-situ project and can even release their animals int the wild sometime.
      also they give more space and something else than concrete to the animal.
      you can't deny the big change of mentality and logistic of zoos, they're still changing, and in the right way
      more space, less human interaction, hide the public, more natural enclosure, multiple species in an enclosure, enrichment, natural instinct and stimulation, training to avoid to tranq them everytime and have a trust relationship and to better know the mental and physical state of the animal, conservation project, show and tell the public about the situation of the animal and how to help them, give money to protect habitat, reintorduction into the wild, actually save species (they already saved multiple and are the last hope for few other species).
      I want a world with no need of zoo,
      but today they're helpful and essential.
      but they have to get better, and a lot of them are trying and do actually very well.
      and then we stil have 1900 monstruosity such as private zoo and zoo of countries/owner that don't have the ethic, knowledge, logistic, money, terrain and ressources to have a good zoo

    • @blueblade6174
      @blueblade6174 Рік тому

      @@deinsilverdrac8695 tl;dr

    • @deinsilverdrac8695
      @deinsilverdrac8695 Рік тому +7

      @@blueblade6174
      zoo are usefull
      zoo bad, but evolve and change, they get better for the animal.
      poor country, private zoo are bad and prison
      modern zoo in western countries and sometime in China/Japan try to be better and still evolve
      bigger more natural enclosure
      enrichment and stimulation for the animal
      overall better life and environnment for them
      help in conservation and protection of nature, and for the public information.
      better?

    • @blueblade6174
      @blueblade6174 Рік тому

      @@deinsilverdrac8695 maybe

  • @Huitzilopochtli-vb6ql
    @Huitzilopochtli-vb6ql Рік тому

    Bro you the rsion I know all the random shit I know I could not survive in the wild without your videos

  • @Jaydenthemanicvillain15202
    @Jaydenthemanicvillain15202 3 місяці тому +1

    As someone with autism and an issue with showing empathy to humans, I show empathy to people that have my trust, animals, babies, and disabled people. I will never have empathy for wild/pet chimps because I know what they are capable of.

  • @Shannonbarnesdr1
    @Shannonbarnesdr1 Рік тому +340

    here might be some explanation as to why travis got so angry and aggressive '' Toxicology reports confirmed Sandra's statement that she had given Travis Xanax-laced tea the day of the attack, which could have exacerbated his aggression.[37][38] Xanax is a short-acting, potent anti-anxiety drug that can cause disinhibition and disorientation and occasionally paradoxical reactions of hallucination, aggression, rage, and mania in humans.''

    • @That_Doctor_Del_Fella
      @That_Doctor_Del_Fella Рік тому +77

      He essentially had a bad trip from the drugs and went ballistic.

    • @killjoym6973
      @killjoym6973 Рік тому +46

      I remember she said she was giving him xanax bc he became agressive after puberty. It could either be drugs or just his nature.

    • @Shannonbarnesdr1
      @Shannonbarnesdr1 Рік тому +4

      @@That_Doctor_Del_Fella pretty much

    • @Shannonbarnesdr1
      @Shannonbarnesdr1 Рік тому +43

      @@killjoym6973 she should have went to a wild life exotic specialist doctor, instead of trying to give him something designed for humans and not knowing a proper dosage either, granted chimps and humans are extremely close but the chemistry, plus body mass / weight is different, the metabolism is different which means hed likely need something tailored to his body type, but ultimately he belonged in the wild, or at a sanctuary, not as a damn pet !!!

    • @DarkPsychoMessiah
      @DarkPsychoMessiah Рік тому +32

      @@Shannonbarnesdr1 Everyone was telling her to send Travis to a chimp sanctuary even her cancer-ridden husband until his death but she refused every single time

  • @rez1053
    @rez1053 Рік тому +843

    Nearly lost my left hand to a large aligator that was even named by the locals. Someone running "tours" on their hoverboat through the everglades. Used some meats to draw him in. Always consider where you go to view wildlife. You're literally trusting strangers with your lives.

    • @OmnipotentSaiyan
      @OmnipotentSaiyan Рік тому

      Chiggers terrifying me.
      They’re black and smart…
      Nah but seriously those bumps are repulsive 🤢

    • @JakeKoenig
      @JakeKoenig Рік тому +39

      It wouldn't have been so bad. You could've become a golf teacher and helped someone win the Tour Championship.

    • @UndyingZombie
      @UndyingZombie Рік тому +17

      Well, as the saying goes. "Never put your life in someone else's hands. They will likely steal it away." ( Its a very old saying that, I feel tends to be forgotten/slept on now-a-days. )
      *EDIT*
      Fixed a slight spelling error, as I typed "they" instead of "the". In the sentence "Well, as the saying goes".
      Sean James.. Thank you for pointing that error out.

    • @SUPREME_MACHINE_V2
      @SUPREME_MACHINE_V2 Рік тому +4

      @@JakeKoenig but then he would've fallen through a window when the person he helped showed him the stuffed alligator

    • @elementalargon7597
      @elementalargon7597 Рік тому +2

      @@JakeKoenig Well played, sir!

  • @chiefbosn9731
    @chiefbosn9731 9 місяців тому

    This host needs his own late night talk show! his presentation skills and wit are outstanding!

  • @mailcs06
    @mailcs06 Рік тому

    7:32
    Oh god I just realized. I remember hearing about this. I was 6 or 7 when this happened, and lived in a small town in NY right next to the border with Connecticut. Heck, my mom went to work in Stamford.

  • @darthplagueis13
    @darthplagueis13 Рік тому +210

    A chimps ability to throw things should never be underestimated.
    I once read a story about a vet who was task with tranquilizing a chimp so he could treat some kind of condition that made it go half-made with pain. The chimp was in a cage that has one wooden side. The vet used a blowpipe to shoot a tranq dart through a knothole in the wood. The chimp pulled out the tranq dart, turned around and threw it back through the knothole, hitting the vet in the face and coming only half an inch short of taking his eye out.
    Their hands may not be quite as dextrous as human hands, but their reflexes and hand-eye coordination are crazy good.

    • @KlavierMenn
      @KlavierMenn Рік тому +26

      So you're telling me that they can ALSO snipe your ass if ammo is provided? Um, how much do they need to evolve so they can get to arrow and bow? Coz they have the lance and stone already...

    • @-Radical.Ed-
      @-Radical.Ed- Рік тому +6

      They also are far stronger than us, if you use ammo and cause it damage not enough to impair it, be sure that if he hits you with it, the damage will be much worse.

    • @fluffylittlebear
      @fluffylittlebear Рік тому +10

      ​@@-Radical.Ed- Not really. They're stronger than us relative to their size, but only by maybe 50%. In absolute terms, a large strong man would be stronger than most chimps. He'd still have no chance in a fight due to claws, teeth, and general ferocity though.

    • @worldprops333
      @worldprops333 Рік тому

      @@KlavierMenn ua-cam.com/video/K-4SthopN2U/v-deo.html

    • @cotocoyerakson8195
      @cotocoyerakson8195 Рік тому +1

      Well, just look at Zeke.

  • @jeffreywarf
    @jeffreywarf Рік тому +2699

    The cruelty of those chimps you've mentioned is probably learned from other cruel chimps. I think back to the story of when all the aggressive male bonobos of a bonobo group ate bad fruit and died and the group of bonobos became much nicer as a result because the surviving females didn't let their kids grow up to be like the aggressive males.
    Edit: it was baboons

    • @tdvwest9514
      @tdvwest9514 Рік тому +169

      It was actually baboons not bonobos.

    • @greenanubis
      @greenanubis Рік тому

      Oh, cmon... This woman with the chimp, Kellog, Skinner and many other people think that you can form people and animals to your liking by raising them "right". Some even go so far to bet their utopian ideas on it. Its not complete bullshit, but its still misguided enough to get you completly different results than expected. And wrong!

    • @thegreatestcrewmate9195
      @thegreatestcrewmate9195 Рік тому +325

      Baboons, not Bonobos.
      However, it was a fascinating example of how upbringing and culture affect behavior. New males who joined the tribe would become less aggressive and more cooperative, showing that they learned the local culture.

    • @cleaved3453
      @cleaved3453 Рік тому +83

      since they dont live such cozy lifes as humans, its very likely that they will become aggressive again after a generation or 2. All it takes is 1 tragic incident and the aggressiveness will return.

    • @kenh.5903
      @kenh.5903 Рік тому +46

      They will become more aggressive or they will die because nature is a cruel mistress

  • @riccarrasquilla379
    @riccarrasquilla379 6 місяців тому

    thanks for the video

  • @kynever7865
    @kynever7865 7 місяців тому +3

    3:18 Kellogg like, the cereal? Is this the cereal guy? (I paused at this point)

  • @noahdixon885
    @noahdixon885 Рік тому +1712

    Seriously, someone give this man a show or something. He has a gift that he needs to share with the rest of the world.

    • @mjrchapin
      @mjrchapin Рік тому +44

      These vids could with maybe a tiny bit of adjustment, be shown in science and bio classes in schools. Loaded with info, and cautions, but also entertaining. I'm serious, it's that amazing.

    • @gnbman
      @gnbman Рік тому +54

      Dude, we're watching his show. This is it.

    • @fernosbonos5394
      @fernosbonos5394 Рік тому +5

      @@mjrchapin give it 50 years and his a class discussion

    • @renato360a
      @renato360a Рік тому +12

      he would be censored and half the fun would go.. he would have to adjust his script and I wouldn't love it.

    • @joemama-xm4xv
      @joemama-xm4xv Рік тому +8

      Well, not really. Alot of the 'facts' are missing sources and are mostly overstated.

  • @MM-pv5tp
    @MM-pv5tp Рік тому +277

    4:16 just a correction, he didn’t call the experiment off because it was ruining his son, he called it off because the results were underwhelming.

    • @libRteedude
      @libRteedude Рік тому +78

      Yeah, that makes more sense. A dude who was willing to do all that crap to his son in the first place seems like someone who would go on no matter the personal cost, unless he wasn't getting what he wanted.

    • @fredericksmith7942
      @fredericksmith7942 11 місяців тому +47

      Horrifying the way his son was just a possession to this guy. I feel so bad for Donald Kellogg.

    • @kodomoshawn6729
      @kodomoshawn6729 9 місяців тому +26

      Honestly what was up with people named Kellogg doing weird unethical shit

    • @AB-un4io
      @AB-un4io 9 місяців тому

      Monstrous family. Evil.

    • @oceanelf2512
      @oceanelf2512 8 місяців тому +30

      That was the most disturbing thing in this video. That man was no father in the true sense of the word, only in a biological one. What kind of heartless person would do that to another human being, let alone his own son? :(

  • @radhouze2554
    @radhouze2554 8 місяців тому +1

    this channel does a good job spreading awareness of how Chimps are wild animals and not pets

  • @alexismariaotero
    @alexismariaotero 5 місяців тому

    i loved this one so much. did not know i had the same specific fears as Steve Irwin (plus chimpanzees). my parrot fear feels sooooo validated now!!!!

  • @dawnmana5876
    @dawnmana5876 Рік тому +417

    You didn't get the worst part about chiggers. They will get you no matter how much clothing you wear AND their favorite spots are the tender skin of the groin. They will also get the soft skin on the back of your joints, but they REALLY love the groin. It's also a horrible itch much worse than a mosquito itch. I know all this first hand. My house is next to the woods in the southeast US.

    • @momentomori1747
      @momentomori1747 Рік тому +33

      They can be effectively repelled using powdered sulfur, though. If you have to go into the woods applying it to skin and clothing below the knees can help keep them away.

    • @SagittariusAyy
      @SagittariusAyy Рік тому

      I can confirm, chiggers are persistent motherfuckers that WILL get you if you give them an opportunity

    • @Alondro77
      @Alondro77 Рік тому +2

      Our here in the Northeast tend to stick to the ankles, but occasionally they get into other places.

    • @eliana2522
      @eliana2522 Рік тому +14

      I hate chiggers so much, every time I decide to leave the house to go through a field or to my grandmother's I plaster my legs in this powder (diatomaceous earth). It usually works but every once in a while I forget and I suffer for the next 3 weeks

    • @thejestor9378
      @thejestor9378 Рік тому +13

      The fact that I have to maintain the lawn of my families old homestead on our farm and I have seen these fellas on the mower while riding it, and have yet to have one stick to me is a bit odd.. then again, I also have never once been bitten by a tick out there while my dad has. Guess parasites just don’t like me.

  • @alegogo2911
    @alegogo2911 Рік тому +468

    There are 2 things that i like about this chanel, the knowledge and the creatinity in the explanations you do

  • @noddynoddy.8822
    @noddynoddy.8822 Рік тому

    Bro. Your channel is great! 😀SUBBED!

  • @user-vk2tm4yt8t
    @user-vk2tm4yt8t 6 місяців тому +1

    This Man does Great work and is entertaining while doing. holy fuck 3.2 million Subs i knew you would blow up. im Glad to see this. GOOD WORK MAN.... love from CCCC