@@cosmic12321 I would happily show this to a classroom of kids were it not for the swearing (school policy). It's hard to find an animal educator as real and entertaining as Casual Geographic.
I love how we humans love to project our own sense of right and wrong onto a species of wild effing animal. How about this: they did what they did for reasons we cannot fully understand. But gimme a break with your exclusively human need to roll your morality and draw some corollary between your life, one that allows you to hopefully draw distinctions and comment on YT videos to thst of wild chimp? Seriously. He lives a much different existence in a brutal crucible and he is NOT playing by your rules. Don't believe me, just have him and his friends over for dinner. Be as gracious and respectful of your guests' sensibilities as you perceive them. And see if you still have a face and genitalia by the end of supper.
@ I think you’re taking me off context. I think I understand your criticism, but it points to one truth. We are not far from our chimp ancestors. Yes we’re not chimps, but we can be much worse than them. They are just honest. I’m just moralizing, not defining anything as fact. In fact, I watch videos like this to learn everyday
@@Dice-Z That’s why most Autocrats, Dictators and, Tyrants (like Stalin) are notoriously paranoid. Because when you have absolute power the only way someone’s gonna get that power is by overthrowing you. Usually like these chimps; violently.
"You might be from the hood, but he from the wood" "vanilla gorillas and Caucasian persuasion" really got me in the giggles. Always a quality bit of dialogue. Thanks for the obvious time and effort you devote to making this interesting and funny too. It is appreciated :D
❤😂Seriously this has to be one of the most hilarious quotable epic lines per- episode ever- and that’s saying something, because Every episode deserves multiple views to catch all of his wit but vanilla gorilla and you may be from the hood but he’s from the wood are absolutely awesome 👑
I love the animals revered in history; cats, dogs, birds, horses, their stories are sweet and it shows how much most human beings love animals enough to preserve them and their heroism. It’s so cool.
And yet people dont rlly revere chimps ot not in a positive way. Monkeys on rare occasions are revered positively and maybe gorillas and orangutans but chimps hell no. Ancient people knew.
The Przewalski's horses are near and dear to my heart. When I worked in my local zoo as a teen, a few of the more docile horses were right beside my station. I'd talk to them every day. My local zoo is part of the SSP for these horses and has successfully bred at least 33 foals since the 90s when they joined the breeding program for them.
@@annehatter3319 The majority of the horses were never on exhibit. The zoo had a breeding facility for multiple endangered species outside the city that is not open to the public, where the horses were essentially wild. Human contact was kept to an absolute minimum in order to keep these horses ready for their eventual release back into the Mongolian wilds.
It’s still so adorable we give medals and honor animals as legends and heroes, it gives me faith in humanity and also gives the animals what they truly deserve.
@@drippeeboye607 a medal may not mean much to an animal. But when a human sees one in possession of one or more, that animal gets fucking pampered compared to what the wild ones get.
I absolutely love that the army not only saved the pigeons life but honoured it with a title and medal. That’s the type of humanity we’re missing these days.
This guy stole another video and took some talking point from Joe Rogan. This guy is a liar and a sham, he tricked all of you. This is entirely not true, the original video context is different, this ape was from a rival tribe.
This Young Man has excellent communication skills. His narrating is full of intelligent humor, and he started each vignette with a sentence that grabbed my attention, keeping me riveted to the end.
"This pigeon saved hundreds of lives, and might be the reason why some of y'all exist". I felt that. Really did. Because my great grandfather was in the "Lost Battalion" of WWI, so that pigeon actually is a vital reason why I exist.
@@dakotajensen6756 My great grandfather kept a diary illegally during WWI. He documented the whole thing -- Lost Battalion -- in real-time. He was gravely wounded during most of it, and was in the same foxhole as Whittlesey. His name was James Larney. My grandmother finally allowed the diary to go out with a historian to be restored after my grandfather passed away.
As someone who's handled more than a few rescued wolves and wolfdogs, THANK YOU for your continuing respect for these gorgeous animals. As much as I like referring to them as "spicy forest puppers", they do NOT mess around when they're motivated, and I really wish more people and dogs would remember that and leave them alone. (Also, don't send your dog after a bear either, anonymous dude in the clip. You don't know whether there are cubs in the neighborhood, and if there are you'll probably lose your dog.)
Definitely agreed. There needs to be stricter regulations on ownership. My neighbor had a wolf when I was little and they let it out and it came into our yard and mauled me. It lasted a minute or less but it tore all the skin off my shoulder and was chomping down on my head before my grandpa scared it off. The only reason I survived was because the hood of my jacket stayed on. I think people forget they are capable of serious damage
I used to have a neighbor who had a wolf/malamute mix and he was Large. Very leggy and lanky, not as heavily built as you'd think. He was like, 12 so he was pretty chill, but you definitely didn't want to mess with him. And you NEVER approached him first. Just looking at him you immediately understood the rules. He was the undisputed king of the neighborhood.
I once saw something that looked exactly like the wolf in the video dead in the road. I thought it was a black bear, but the legs were clearly doglike, and it was definitely bear-sized. The problem is that this was in New Mexico, where the only wolves, the Mexican grey wolf, is the smallest species of wolf in North America. Plus it was black. I couldn't stop to examine it because it was at the entrance to a narrow bridge with no shoulder. I never did figure out what it was, but this was only a mile or so from a reservation where a coworker and I saw a _massive_ beaver, easily six feet long, that we _thought_ was dead. We got out of our cars and looked at it from just a few feet away and it never moved, but when my coworker went back with a camera to take pictures (this was before camera phones), it was gone, and there was no blood or bits of car at the site as there would have been if it had been hit as we had assumed. Maybe there's some timber wolves living on the rez, too, who knows?
We used to have a German Shepherd who suffered some gene defects that basically allowed him to grow back into wolf size. For him, his first 3 years of life were full of growth pain, but when he was done, he had 110 pounds of pure lean muscle, his head was as wide as my (I'm a 6 foot man) torso (including shoulders), with paws the size of my hands including fingers. It's insane to think about that that's what's hidden in wolf's DNA, just waiting to be activated. My grandpa once said that he probably was "The only dog to fight a boar and walk away alive and victorious". But he was insanely friendly, cuddly and loving, he only wanted to cuddle and chill all day. I miss that big guy so much, he was my best friend...
We had a giant GS like that when I was a child too. They'd put me on his back and let me ride him like a horse - he was insanely large, strong, and smart.
This channel is so amazing. This man here has put himself in a league of his own. His writing, which is crazy wild, editing, content, research, everything is just so impressive. Just, wow. The animal kingdom thanks him for putting so many lies to rest...
Eh - he’s on the TikTok and TH-cams, that’s at least a LITTLE attention-seeking… And that’s FINE. Because, let’s be honest, we all deserve a little more attention than we get. The fact that he’s getting it for animal facts and not stupid stunts is just a credit to his smarts.
The Cher Ami story is even more intense. It wasn't friendly troops firing at them. It was friendly artillery thinking they were the Germans. That feathery bastard was not only hearing constant gunfire, but also the deafening impacts of 75mm and 105mm HE shells and *still* had his shit together enough to get through multiple gunshot wounds
"They're afraid of getting stung in their trunks." Completely understandable. I would be too. Good on those army doctors for doing everything they could for Cher Ami!
I imagined getting stung in my nose and I cringed so hard. I can't imagine what it'd be like if my nostrils were bigger and a hundred belligerent bees could enter at their discretion.
@@mrgreenboy644 it'd be worse if we had to use our noses to feel and grasp things too. Like being stung on your hand, that hand is unusable now for a couple days at least. I can't imagine the pain of getting stung in the trunk.
Cher Amie was the last pigeon they had. He was their last chance at being saved. There is a small documentary about what happened. He was given a medal for military animals, and now sits stuffed in a museum.
Imagine if some other species did this to human servants: "this hairless monkey saved 200 of our kind, so we treated his wounds, gave him awards and then skinned and stuffed his corpse when he died. Such a hero!"
@@thatguynamedgabestyfy8348 Cher Ami by Harry Webb Farrington (1926) Cher Ami, how do you do! Listen, let me talk to you; I'll not hurt you, don't you see? Come a little close to me. Little scrawny blue and white Messenger for men who fight, Tell me of the deep, red scar, There, just where no feathers are. What about your poor left leg? Tell me, Cher Ami, I beg. All the world is at a loss, How you won that Silver Cross. "The finest fun that came to me Was when I went with Whittlesey; We marched so fast, so far ahead! 'We all are lost,' the keeper said; 'Mon Cher Ami - that's my dear friend You are the one we'll have to send; The whole battalion now is lost, And you must win at any cost.' So with the message tied on tight; I flew up straight with all my might, Before I got up high enough, Those watchful guns began to puff. Machine gun bullets came like rain, You'd think I was an aeroplane; And when I started to the rear, My! the shot was coming near! But on I flew, straight as a bee; The wind could not catch up with me, Until I dropped out of the air, Into our own men's camp, it’s fair! But, Cher Ami, upon my word, You modest, modest little bird; Now don't you know that you forgot? Tell how your breast and leg were shot. Oh yes the day we crossed the Meuse I flew to Rampont with the news; Again the bullets came like hail, I thought for sure that I should fail. The bullets buzzed by like a bee, So close, it nearly frightened me; One struck the feathers of this sail, Another went right through my tail. But when I got back to the rear, I found they’d hit me, here and here; But that is nothing, never mind; Old Poilu, there is nearly blind. I only care for what they said, For when they saw the way I bled, And found in front a swollen lump, The message hanging from my stump The French and Mine said, 'Tres bien!' Or 'Very good' -- American. Mon Cher Ami, you brought good news Our Army's gone across the Meuse! You surely had a lucky call! And so I'm glad. I guess that's all. I'll sit, so pardon me, I beg; It's hard astanding on one leg!
To this day, the story of cher amie is one of the greatest stories I’ve heard. Hundreds of men survived a death sentence in the worst chaos of war possible because of that single pigeon. He survived immense odds to save those people. What that pigeon did is like if a human courier got shot with a cannonball and proceeded to run an ultra marathon back to headquarters to carry his message. Unbelievable.
@@Truck-kun_01 to support your beliefs, remember that modern pigeons are constantly taking the subway to go to where they want to go. no one knows why, perhaps they just want to integrate with humans.
That bird was aware pigeons are very smart they knew the humans where in trouble and wanted to save them that’s why it pushed itself to its limits because it wanted to save them
ill never understand how you can deliver these fire punch lines with a straight face for as long as you have. nigga is downright hilarious and delivers facts that most people probably never heard of. and your alliterations crack me up, are of guard af, and subtly delivered which is what makes your content so funny. also very educational
I had a neighbor who had a wolf hybrid. She actually the sweetest gentlest dog I had met. My large 15 lbs Pomeranian LOVED her. She would let him jump all over her, while she lay on her back. She would put his whole head in her mouth , but not bite down, with him just sitting there looking happy about it. She was HUGE. If she put her front paws on my shoulders she still towered over me by a good head length. It was just amazing how something that large could be so gentle. Amazing that she loved playing with my Pomeranian but was never rough enough to hurt him when she was probably 10x his weight!
Dogs have an uncanny ability to be exceedingly gentle with small things, probably owing to pack instincts for caring for young. It's breathtaking sometimes.
Read a few times that wolves do this put in their mouth without biting thing as social bonding. There's even this crazy dude who spent years pretending to be a wolf and living in the litteral middle of the pack. You'd see these shots when the leader of the pack does it to the human, then when he was leader of the pack for some time, other wolves would kind of expect him to do it and be socially giddy and validated when he'd open his mouth for their heads to try and go in. Ps: cats do something a little bit similar with gentle tiny bites and nibbles too with friends and family even when not play fightning. A little bite or chew then off they go continuing their day. Anyway thanks for sharing, so sweet.
@@goldenpony822 I had not heard that about why they put each other’s heads in their mouths. Thanks for sharing. She put her jaws over his head from the top like /\ and he would sit there with his his tongue hanging out smiling, like he thought nothing of it. It was too cute. They really loved each other.
@@bunnygirl2448 wonderful creatures you describe there. That just sounds so lovely. If you're curious YT has some great shots with a few of those curious wolf interactions. By the way I must specify, the gentle bite I was mentioning from cats is done on the side of the furr, when it's done on paws as they often do is more about dominance.
I understand now why these videos take so long to come out not only all the research but the editing as well must take long enough! It doesn’t go unnoticed.
Protecting elephants by warding them off with something tiny like bees then turning around and giving bees a home and crops to pollinate only to label their honey as "elephant friendly" is incredibly wholesome.
I am sure A LOT of things could be handled that way. I remember reading that fresh garlic makes a great pesticide around your garden… We just need to think outside the box.
@k.hendrickson8735 This is very true! But keep in mind, it is much less reliable than commercial pesticides. Now, for a garden, this issue is relatively small. If you get 33 tomatoes instead of 36, it's not that big of a deal. The real problem starts to emerge when you start looking at how we feed society and realize that commercial farms have to use these types of pesticides to produce enough food for current consumption rates. Now, there are proposed solutions, both as concepts and plans, but it's a huge WIP. I bring this up only to say that thinking outside of the box is important. However, it can only be done when you understand the results of thinking inside the box and the mechanisms behind those conclusions. So, use garlic in your garden, it's much better. But also recognize this isn't going to be a society wide solution. It's also very much worth mentioning that if food production drops, it isn't us in rich countries who will suffer the most. It will be those who are most vulnerable in the most vulnerable regions of the world.
Seeing animals being recognized for heroic acts and receiving medals is the most wholesome but sad thing, sad only because we humans started the war to begin with. As great as it is to honor our men and women in the service for their Valor, bravery, and conviction. Seeing an animal being honored just hits different every time ❤
This guy stole another video and took some talking point from Joe Rogan. This guy is a liar and a sham, he tricked all of you. This is entirely not true, the original video context is different, this ape was from a rival tribe.
This guy stole another video and took some talking point from Joe Rogan. This guy is a liar and a sham, he tricked all of you. This is entirely not true, the original video context is different, this ape was from a rival tribe.
I couldn't look away! You were so engaging and I was HOOKED! You get a sub and a thumbs up my guy! I'm going in your archives and be entertained. Love you! Mean it!
Random note: Megalania is no longer the name of the massive Australian monitor lizard. It was realized that it is much more closely related to komodo dragons than previously thought, and now it belongs in the same genus as the dragon, in a different species, now known as Varanus priscus.
@@tjarkschweizer I'm sure most people do, for extinct animals at least. No one gives common names to Tyrannosaurus, Stegosaurus, etc. Maybe the rule gets changed when referring to Cenozoic animals, like Megalania, Mammoths, or Saber-Tooth "Tigers", but idk.
I love this kid. He doesn't need a long drawn out weird voice. Or a goofy name. Or even videos that are adreno boosters! He's just a great narrator, with great information, about great animals. He's great! 💥💯💙
this youtube stuff ir really good for him compared to national geographic. Much better pay, less stress and more freedom. They would need to give him a really big bag for it to be considerable
I raised a hybrid wolf as a 13-14 year old that my step father ordered from the back of a outdoors magazine for 400$ in the early 80s. He was the smartest animal and the most loyal and gentle canine I have ever had the privilege to help raise. They are pack animals and you and your interacting family are their pack. Outsiders that they don’t know be warned. It takes a little while for them to accept you or they just don’t. A truly amazing animal. I still to this day think of him and miss him.
I owned one as well big ol beast. The people that gave him to me taught him to smile at people, scared the crap out of everyone that didn’t know him. Sadly got his chain caught on a stump and was trampled by a moose.
At one point someone asked me who would be more dangerous, someone from the city or someone from the country. And I legit remembered your line "You might be from the hood, but he from the wood, he don't play." Your comentary is god tier my friend.
I wanna base my Beast Style Martial Art mastery on the Elephant and agreed I wouldn't wanna risk pissing off a hoard of bees with no bee suit on either.
I think the 2 people called "our hero" and "Dhar man shorts" have the pestilence go touch them(for the dirty minded people get your head out the gutter)
The fact that earlier modern humans lived in the same world as the megalania is absolutely terrifying, from a distance though one of the coolest most intriguing animals to me
@@RambunctiousReptilian as I said, self-defence, in a time when the sturdist material your home was made of might be a mammoth ribcage or tusk, you don't got a way to keep a determined predator out at night.
Just a speculation but maybe that's why so many human species went extinct- those who couldn't defend themselves died out. And those who survived had no choice but to hunt the other animals to extinction. Maybe that's how humans even started forming communities. It was definitely much easier to be with a herd than be a lone human in the goddamn stone age when giant lizards were still around...
Early humans specifically hunted them to extinction, like they did to most of the other Pleistocene megafauna. Premodern -and especially pre-agricultural - human history is all about ecocide, wiping out prey animals and “inconvenient” species. Modernity gets so much flak for destroying the Earth, but this is actually the least environmentally destructive era since humans first appeared on this planet. Respect for other animals and the environment is a (relatively) recent innovation.
I gotta say bro I respect how far you've taken this... You actually taught me more than animal planet and discovery all in like 5 episodes lol. Definitely have nothing but respect for the research you do
This guy stole another video and took some talking point from Joe Rogan. This guy is a liar and a sham, he tricked all of you. This is entirely not true, the original video context is different, this ape was from a rival tribe.
I absolutely love this channel. I'm learning while I'm laughing. Very informative and entertaining. That joke about the salamander not doing anything about slavery had me on the floor. That's just one. I don't have the time to count how many of Mamadou's very witty and well placed jokes made me laugh out loud.
If you want a better comeback story than Przewalski’s Horse, read about the Black Robin. They were down to 5 left on a small island off New Zealand in 1980 including the last fertile female. I remember hearing about the efforts to save them from extinction at the time. It got pretty hairy. There are around 300 today. Great videos by the way.
@@MrJohnnyDistortion New Zealand had no mammalian predators before the Europeans, hence why some of the birds were flightless and/or nested on the ground, and had no fear of the cats and rats that came with the Europeans, which decimated a lot of the local wildlife. Only found in the Chatham Islands the last remaining black robins were caught and transferred to a couple of small islands in the group that had been cleared of cats and rats and with help from conservationists were saved from extinction.
Maybe it's just because I'm emotionally compromised right now, but I am ugly crying and have tears streaming down my face from hearing about Cher Ami. That's a good fucking bird.
The incident with the chimps reminds me of my 2nd grade. There was a big bully in 3rd grade who used to bully all boys that were weaker than him. At one point during a break we gathered and ganged up on him, leaving him in the fetal position and in tears. He never dared to bully anyone afterwards.
@@XMorbidReignX Real talk though, rank don't mean shit to Doc. If a mission critical pigeon is triaged higher, it don't matter if there's a Chevron or a set of stars on your chest. The pigeon is going first and there's an 18g silver bullet for anyone who bitches.
I am currently pursuing a zoology degree in hopes of working in wildlife rehab and one thing I promised myself never to forget is that, regardless of how attached I am to an animal I'm caring for, a wild animal is still a wild animal.
It’s so easy when ur working with animals to eagerly work towards handling the “badass” (ie. dangerous) ones out of excitement, def gotta learn fast why that’s not a great idea even when u see others handle the same individual animal with ease
@@bannedwagoner69 working with "badass" animals isn't my goal at all. I will be just as happy caring for a songbird or squirrel as I would be caring for a hawk or bobcat. It isn't about how rehabbing an animal makes me look to other people, it's about helping the animals for the sake of the environment and the animals themselves.
@@ghufroon4134 He is a hero. Heroes don’t go to war to be heroes. Heroes are born because the situation they are in calls them to be Before the fight Amie was a normal pigeon who was trained to navigate but only wanted to be home. But he’s a hero because despite everything he did what he had to do and saved lives in the process
For size scale for the wolf: Tibetan Mastiffs are about the same weight class as a wolf, which makes sense as it’s believed that Tibetan Mastiffs were herding dogs used to defend against them. Although mastiffs in general are still somewhat smaller height and length than a wolf. It’s still fascinating. Also: clarification: dogs were used to defend against wolves but more often than not it was the bark, not the bite. Deep barks like Maremmas and Mastiffs are still used in parts of Europe, although wolves are rare, they do exist and it’s a choice between shoot or dog and I’m choosing dog every single time (I’m a hunter. I could choose shoot. But dog is a win win situation: I get a friend, I don’t have to shoot an endangered animal, and the wolf gets to live)
I’m more likely to see a real wolf for reference before I see a Tibetan Mastiff to reference for size. You should have said a washing machine or anything else except another dog especially one that’s not common to see. But you got ur point “unnecessarily” across. Lol. Keep that safety off and keep your boots pointing forward. 😂☮️🔥🌳💨 Happy 2days late 420. Or like the PUSSY cats call it. Earth Day. 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂 OH yeah Don’t forget to vote Trump 🇺🇸🇺🇸TRUMP🇺🇸🇺🇸TRUMP🇺🇸🇺🇸TRUMP🇺🇸🇺🇸
Not gonna lie i Literally just said "WTF is that" and you answered "it's a Salamander" like we were in the same room!! Lol had to share cause it still has me gimpin out!! 😆😆😆
As someone that has a Husky and spent time living in the Rockies, there are two takeaways from that. Firstly, when my Husky decides he's going to howl or otherwise verbalize himself, there is no question as to whether or not he is related to a wolf. Secondly, I've been within 50 feet of a timberwolf. There is no other canine scarier than that in my opinion.
Agreed, i live in the canadian rockeys, very, very big dogs, the females are 130lbs sure, but the males in the mountains can get close to 200lbs. Me and my dad ran into one late at night smoking some weed and we had no idea it was on the side of the trail till about 20ft away. Im more scared of them than bears or cougars by far. Cheers!🍻
I had a dog that had enough genetics from a Timberwolf to be considered illegal. Mom got it in nunavik as a "sled dog", we found out when we neutered him, the vet was very lenient and didn't report it lmao
1. Never in my life have I seen a wolf THAT big. 2. I really liked the albino gorilla. It looked pretty happy. 3. Thank you for another informative and educational video. Stay Hood, Nature!
Fun fact: Cher Ami was a female pigeon. They only found that out by the time she was dead, so she was posthumously renamed to Cher Amie, the feminine version of her name.
I'm from Barcelona and i remember snowflake("floquet de neu" in catalan, there is even a cartoon movie )... he died when i was a child and i remember everybody was so sad... He was so much beloved in Barcelona. He lived 39 years.
I love that they really appreciate that pigeon and admit and recognized he done everything to save thise soldiers lives! He was a hero and deserved everything he got. I bet he atleast enjoyed thise 8 months in comfort.
@@drewarnett3180 if I were to choose between a bird who saved 140 soldiers and a random dude that didn't save anyone and only did the minimum I'd choose to award the bird
Very educational, intriguing, and hilarious! I’d never heard of the Buffalo-hunting okavango lions before, or the military hero pigeon. If you’d like to do a follow-up segment on the Megalania thing, there’s this: Komodo dragons actually originated in Australia, alongside Megalania (and potentially one other giant monitor lizard), and the Komodos we have now are actually island dwarfs (smaller than the extinct mainland populations).
Few years ago i went to an animal park with gigantic enclosures- and i even got the chance to pet one of those przewalsky horses and her foal 🥺 they are so majestic and beautiful and i love how much space to run around they have there
I consider myself a animal lover (not the kind that gets you arrested and weird looks from the neighbors) and your vids still teach me so much. Animals are amazing and you do a great jobs explaining why. Thanks.
This guy stole another video and took some talking point from Joe Rogan. This guy is a liar and a sham, he tricked all of you. This is entirely not true, the original video context is different, this ape was from a rival tribe.
I'm glad he's balancing wholesome informative stuff with the "scary" bits. My job is nature education in the US, the last thing I want is kids to be afraid of snails and freshwater. Luckily the US doesn't have that parasite. But it's often harder to unlearn things...
Your human, so you have a bias to our cruelty Its only when you try to live as a being not a person, you can really analyze the depravity. No animal charges tax to live in the woods, and kills or imprisons you for failing to do so in the manner they told you. The animal would ether kill you or walk away, and humans do that too. . . So please tell me more 😂😂
No I would say it’s a tie between chimpanzees and humans it feels wrong to type that. We are as bad as monkeys that tear other monkeys’s balls off but it’s true.
he’s soooooo cool The way he does his thing The metaphors he use’s is so funny but brutally honest sometimes when we need to know what is dangerous or not he’ll let you know I thought David Attenborough was the king of nature but this kid is my second to David That’s a big deal Keep on keeping on you legend
yeah I vote that he should take David's place when he retires. He has perfect phrasing and very catchy clever sayings. I was chuckling at everything he was saying
About Pimu: This is basically what happens when you misinterpret Machiavelli. "To be loved or feared, try to be both but if you can't it is safer to be feared" is the message. He also STRONGLY advises against making it so people hate you, or they will overcome their fear and actually rise up.
@@maxxam4665 Machiavelli was only putting down on paper what our lineage going all the way back to the shared common ancestor with chimps and probably even past that instinctively knew already.
I love how this video starts off with a horrifying chimp massacre story and then ends with a pigeon being awarded a medal for its heroic efforts.
damn
The pigeon a real one 🙏
Really goes to show you just how flexible this man is
🤷🏾♂️🤣
The story of the pigeon being the reason some of us might be alive was my favorite
*"You might be from the hood, but he from the wood. He don't play."*
God, this guy continues to surprise me with new funny 1-liners.
need this on a shirt! I love his narrations, I'd be watching more nature documentaries if he was narrating😆
This was the best line in the whole video. We need more teachers like him. xD
these bots everywhere 🗿
@@MingChilling- Report them as spam. It might not do much, but it's better than nothing.
@@cosmic12321 I would happily show this to a classroom of kids were it not for the swearing (school policy). It's hard to find an animal educator as real and entertaining as Casual Geographic.
For those who don't know French, Cher Amie means "dear friend" and they could NOT have picked a better name for that bird
Lol, French is my mother tongue but I literally didn't notice it's name was French until now, I was pronouncing it like "Chair" :v
I was heading down in the comment to mention that. Have a thumbs up instead.
@@tincoeani9529 I think I would've pronounced it like chair ong-
@@tincoeani9529 IT'S NOT PRONOUNCED CHAIR 😭😭😭?
should've named him gigachad
‘Moral of the story, people don’t like bullies.’ That was very powerful
Humans are much the same. Some people think wielding power with an iron fist and being a tyrant ensures you the safest spot at the top, it doesn't.
Chimps are people too!
I love how we humans love to project our own sense of right and wrong onto a species of wild effing animal. How about this: they did what they did for reasons we cannot fully understand. But gimme a break with your exclusively human need to roll your morality and draw some corollary between your life, one that allows you to hopefully draw distinctions and comment on YT videos to thst of wild chimp? Seriously. He lives a much different existence in a brutal crucible and he is NOT playing by your rules. Don't believe me, just have him and his friends over for dinner. Be as gracious and respectful of your guests' sensibilities as you perceive them. And see if you still have a face and genitalia by the end of supper.
@ I think you’re taking me off context. I think I understand your criticism, but it points to one truth. We are not far from our chimp ancestors. Yes we’re not chimps, but we can be much worse than them. They are just honest. I’m just moralizing, not defining anything as fact. In fact, I watch videos like this to learn everyday
@@Dice-Z That’s why most Autocrats, Dictators and, Tyrants (like Stalin) are notoriously paranoid. Because when you have absolute power the only way someone’s gonna get that power is by overthrowing you. Usually like these chimps; violently.
"You might be from the hood, but he from the wood" "vanilla gorillas and Caucasian persuasion" really got me in the giggles. Always a quality bit of dialogue.
Thanks for the obvious time and effort you devote to making this interesting and funny too. It is appreciated :D
Those lines were legendary
❤😂Seriously this has to be one of the most hilarious quotable epic lines per- episode ever- and that’s saying something, because Every episode deserves multiple views to catch all of his wit but vanilla gorilla and you may be from the hood but he’s from the wood are absolutely awesome 👑
I live in the wood, can confirm the black bears are smaller than some of those big puppers.
This man is a true word smith. Love his nature videos!
Loool that should be put on T shirt, you might be from the hood be he from the wood :d Gold!
I love the animals revered in history; cats, dogs, birds, horses, their stories are sweet and it shows how much most human beings love animals enough to preserve them and their heroism. It’s so cool.
Don't forget the Bears bro
@@literallyhuman5990 and donkeys camels ect
What did cats do ?
But not enough to keep from driving them into extinction
And yet people dont rlly revere chimps ot not in a positive way. Monkeys on rare occasions are revered positively and maybe gorillas and orangutans but chimps hell no. Ancient people knew.
The Przewalski's horses are near and dear to my heart. When I worked in my local zoo as a teen, a few of the more docile horses were right beside my station. I'd talk to them every day.
My local zoo is part of the SSP for these horses and has successfully bred at least 33 foals since the 90s when they joined the breeding program for them.
I cannot begin to tell how jealous I am of you.
The zoo I worked at used to have Przewalski's Horses but their exhibit was taken down to make room for a new Mexican Grey Wolf habitat.
@@annehatter3319 The majority of the horses were never on exhibit. The zoo had a breeding facility for multiple endangered species outside the city that is not open to the public, where the horses were essentially wild. Human contact was kept to an absolute minimum in order to keep these horses ready for their eventual release back into the Mongolian wilds.
You talk to horses???
@@bendover7841 lots of people talk to horses.
“You may be from da hood, but he from da wood, he don’t play”
Had me fucking DYING
Jesus loves you very much!❤️
Hail satan @@CyberCoderZ1
Bro that was hilarious but real. Hood dudes don’t mess with them hillbillies like that
swag
@@PatroitSongChannelI pray for you
It’s still so adorable we give medals and honor animals as legends and heroes, it gives me faith in humanity and also gives the animals what they truly deserve.
Pogers
Yea some shit they don't understand or care about lol
@@drippeeboye607 still adorable, no?
@@drippeeboye607 a medal may not mean much to an animal. But when a human sees one in possession of one or more, that animal gets fucking pampered compared to what the wild ones get.
Okay now I feel like Sabaton should make a music about that bird
I absolutely love that the army not only saved the pigeons life but honoured it with a title and medal.
That’s the type of humanity we’re missing these days.
every comment i go to theres a bot commenting
It's it tho they were just using what they had in this case was a pigeon
No joke this should recieve it's own Sabaton Song.
@u know me that's what I'm saying too
For real? How many times will you put random links in people's comments
We do not care its annoying
@@nirablackfire2792 By God it should, this bird deserves it.
I love how they took the time to save the pigeon and honored it for its actions after the war. Not all soldiers are human. Well done, Carrier 🫡
This guy stole another video and took some talking point from Joe Rogan. This guy is a liar and a sham, he tricked all of you. This is entirely not true, the original video context is different, this ape was from a rival tribe.
I have a book that documents some of the greatest animal war heroes. Cher Amie has a chapter devoted to her.
@@downhomesunset book title?
@@downhomesunset I also need that book name
@@Mekesi1 War Animals: The Unsung Heroes of World War II
This Young Man has excellent communication skills. His narrating is full of intelligent humor, and he started each vignette with a sentence that grabbed my attention, keeping me riveted to the end.
Agreed! Guy is something too often missing from the Web & modern life: ARTICULATE!
"This pigeon saved hundreds of lives, and might be the reason why some of y'all exist".
I felt that. Really did. Because my great grandfather was in the "Lost Battalion" of WWI, so that pigeon actually is a vital reason why I exist.
Holy shit that’s insane
That’s actually pretty amazing.
Yo the lost battalion is one of my favorite stories from ww1
@@dakotajensen6756 My great grandfather kept a diary illegally during WWI. He documented the whole thing -- Lost Battalion -- in real-time. He was gravely wounded during most of it, and was in the same foxhole as Whittlesey. His name was James Larney. My grandmother finally allowed the diary to go out with a historian to be restored after my grandfather passed away.
@@AgentMorgan2010 ngl I'm too sentimental I'd have wanted it back
As someone who's handled more than a few rescued wolves and wolfdogs, THANK YOU for your continuing respect for these gorgeous animals. As much as I like referring to them as "spicy forest puppers", they do NOT mess around when they're motivated, and I really wish more people and dogs would remember that and leave them alone. (Also, don't send your dog after a bear either, anonymous dude in the clip. You don't know whether there are cubs in the neighborhood, and if there are you'll probably lose your dog.)
Definitely agreed. There needs to be stricter regulations on ownership. My neighbor had a wolf when I was little and they let it out and it came into our yard and mauled me. It lasted a minute or less but it tore all the skin off my shoulder and was chomping down on my head before my grandpa scared it off. The only reason I survived was because the hood of my jacket stayed on. I think people forget they are capable of serious damage
If I remember, there is actually a breed of dog that was specifically bred to help hunt bears
There's also a breed of dog bred to take down wolves-even timber wolves. Their skin hangs loose so they can wrestle free from bite-grips.
I used to have a neighbor who had a wolf/malamute mix and he was Large. Very leggy and lanky, not as heavily built as you'd think. He was like, 12 so he was pretty chill, but you definitely didn't want to mess with him. And you NEVER approached him first. Just looking at him you immediately understood the rules. He was the undisputed king of the neighborhood.
I once saw something that looked exactly like the wolf in the video dead in the road. I thought it was a black bear, but the legs were clearly doglike, and it was definitely bear-sized.
The problem is that this was in New Mexico, where the only wolves, the Mexican grey wolf, is the smallest species of wolf in North America. Plus it was black. I couldn't stop to examine it because it was at the entrance to a narrow bridge with no shoulder.
I never did figure out what it was, but this was only a mile or so from a reservation where a coworker and I saw a _massive_ beaver, easily six feet long, that we _thought_ was dead.
We got out of our cars and looked at it from just a few feet away and it never moved, but when my coworker went back with a camera to take pictures (this was before camera phones), it was gone, and there was no blood or bits of car at the site as there would have been if it had been hit as we had assumed. Maybe there's some timber wolves living on the rez, too, who knows?
We used to have a German Shepherd who suffered some gene defects that basically allowed him to grow back into wolf size. For him, his first 3 years of life were full of growth pain, but when he was done, he had 110 pounds of pure lean muscle, his head was as wide as my (I'm a 6 foot man) torso (including shoulders), with paws the size of my hands including fingers. It's insane to think about that that's what's hidden in wolf's DNA, just waiting to be activated. My grandpa once said that he probably was "The only dog to fight a boar and walk away alive and victorious". But he was insanely friendly, cuddly and loving, he only wanted to cuddle and chill all day. I miss that big guy so much, he was my best friend...
Was he famous on the news?
@@hiimjoe6768 no
We had a giant GS like that when I was a child too. They'd put me on his back and let me ride him like a horse - he was insanely large, strong, and smart.
@@Mysteri0usChannel memorable pics?
@@hiimjoe6768 some, but they're private :)
This channel is so amazing. This man here has put himself in a league of his own. His writing, which is crazy wild, editing, content, research, everything is just so impressive. Just, wow. The animal kingdom thanks him for putting so many lies to rest...
As the Pigeon God, I am truly proud of Cher Ami. A truly noble pigeon deserving of respect.
O great Pigeon god, thank you for blessing us with pigeons
Birds aren't real.
Lol
@@tishie42 the disrespect to THE Pigeon God........
all hail the great pigeon god!! 🙏🏻
Hello Pidgeon god, I highly respect you
This kid is great. No attention seeking bs just sharp narration, a quick wit and straight facts. He deserves all his success.
Eh - he’s on the TikTok and TH-cams, that’s at least a LITTLE attention-seeking…
And that’s FINE. Because, let’s be honest, we all deserve a little more attention than we get. The fact that he’s getting it for animal facts and not stupid stunts is just a credit to his smarts.
Facts
@@phastinemoon odc gotta assume hes attention seeking get educated bruh
I agree with you 1000%
@@phastinemoonHuh, you grew 2 weeks still think the same?
The Cher Ami story is even more intense. It wasn't friendly troops firing at them. It was friendly artillery thinking they were the Germans. That feathery bastard was not only hearing constant gunfire, but also the deafening impacts of 75mm and 105mm HE shells and *still* had his shit together enough to get through multiple gunshot wounds
🤣🤣I was LITERALLY screeching, “WHAT IS IT???” at the screen when you showed the salamander, so I appreciate you so calmly answering my question. 🤣🤣
"They're afraid of getting stung in their trunks." Completely understandable. I would be too.
Good on those army doctors for doing everything they could for Cher Ami!
I imagined getting stung in my nose and I cringed so hard. I can't imagine what it'd be like if my nostrils were bigger and a hundred belligerent bees could enter at their discretion.
@@mrgreenboy644 it'd be worse if we had to use our noses to feel and grasp things too. Like being stung on your hand, that hand is unusable now for a couple days at least. I can't imagine the pain of getting stung in the trunk.
I am glad someone actually thought a proper solution to keep the elephants away.
“This is a husky… this is a husky next to a wolf.”
The husky’s face says it all 🐺
Husky is like. "Better not piss him off"
“Please don’t eat me, please don’t eat me, please don’t eat me.”
-That husky
You maybe in the hood, but his in the wood...
@@jersonaralan3292- He ain't a hood dog he's a wood dawg 😂
Cher Amie was the last pigeon they had. He was their last chance at being saved. There is a small documentary about what happened. He was given a medal for military animals, and now sits stuffed in a museum.
Imagine if some other species did this to human servants: "this hairless monkey saved 200 of our kind, so we treated his wounds, gave him awards and then skinned and stuffed his corpse when he died. Such a hero!"
@@musicaccount3340 I mean, that's basically what mummification is, lmao.
@@strangerinastrangeland3613 i feel like thats innacurate🤔
@@musicaccount3340 well i dont mind it, small sacrifices for the cause.
@@strangerinastrangeland3613 true, and we even put mummies in museums so that people can gawk at some old king's bones.
"I'm not even 6 feet long unless I'm lying to somebody" 🤣 I felt that
That pigeon was more dedicated, loyal, and brave than most humans I know. Rest In Peace, Cher Ami.
That pigeon didn't mean that...he just wanted to get back to his nest
@@ghufroon4134 You must be fun at parties.
@@1ManRandom you must like whatever makes you feel good, rather than the truth.
@@akaroth7542 I just don't like spoiling other people's fun just to demonstrate my intelligence.
... but are you wise in doing so?
I remember Cher Amie story! There was even a poem dedicated to him. I named my parakeet after him because that pigeon was a hero.
What’s the poem
@@thatguynamedgabestyfy8348
Cher Ami by Harry Webb Farrington (1926)
Cher Ami, how do you do!
Listen, let me talk to you; I'll not hurt you, don't you see?
Come a little close to me. Little scrawny blue and white
Messenger for men who fight,
Tell me of the deep, red scar,
There, just where no feathers are. What about your poor left leg?
Tell me, Cher Ami, I beg. All the world is at a loss, How you won that Silver Cross. "The finest fun that came to me
Was when I went with Whittlesey;
We marched so fast, so far ahead!
'We all are lost,' the keeper said; 'Mon Cher Ami - that's my dear friend
You are the one we'll have to send;
The whole battalion now is lost, And you must win at any cost.' So with the message tied on tight; I flew up straight with all my might,
Before I got up high enough, Those watchful guns began to puff.
Machine gun bullets came like rain,
You'd think I was an aeroplane; And when I started to the rear, My! the shot was coming near! But on I flew, straight as a bee; The wind could not catch up with me,
Until I dropped out of the air, Into our own men's camp, it’s fair!
But, Cher Ami, upon my word, You modest, modest little bird; Now don't you know that you forgot?
Tell how your breast and leg were shot. Oh yes the day we crossed the Meuse
I flew to Rampont with the news;
Again the bullets came like hail, I thought for sure that I should fail.
The bullets buzzed by like a bee,
So close, it nearly frightened me;
One struck the feathers of this sail,
Another went right through my tail. But when I got back to the rear, I found they’d hit me, here and here;
But that is nothing, never mind; Old Poilu, there is nearly blind.
I only care for what they said, For when they saw the way I bled,
And found in front a swollen lump,
The message hanging from my stump The French and Mine said, 'Tres bien!'
Or 'Very good' -- American. Mon Cher Ami, you brought good news Our Army's gone across the Meuse! You surely had a lucky call! And so I'm glad. I guess that's all.
I'll sit, so pardon me, I beg; It's hard astanding on one leg!
@@13Senko that's fucking beautiful and I love it
Idk if your own Cher Ami is still around but I hope that they were the best little bird
I know right
Many animals are recognized as heroes
Like Ning Nong the elephant
You can check about him as well
And the poem is great
To this day, the story of cher amie is one of the greatest stories I’ve heard. Hundreds of men survived a death sentence in the worst chaos of war possible because of that single pigeon. He survived immense odds to save those people. What that pigeon did is like if a human courier got shot with a cannonball and proceeded to run an ultra marathon back to headquarters to carry his message. Unbelievable.
I especially like that the bird had no fucking idea what was going on
@@themug406I like to believe that it did and it was why it kept pushing itself to the absolute limit. Essentially destroying it's own limit breaker
@@Truck-kun_01 to support your beliefs, remember that modern pigeons are constantly taking the subway to go to where they want to go. no one knows why, perhaps they just want to integrate with humans.
@@themug406 he did know what was at stake.
That bird was aware pigeons are very smart they knew the humans where in trouble and wanted to save them that’s why it pushed itself to its limits because it wanted to save them
ill never understand how you can deliver these fire punch lines with a straight face for as long as you have. nigga is downright hilarious and delivers facts that most people probably never heard of. and your alliterations crack me up, are of guard af, and subtly delivered which is what makes your content so funny. also very educational
“You might be from the hood but he from the wood”Greatest quote ever said truly remarkable 👏
I had a neighbor who had a wolf hybrid. She actually the sweetest gentlest dog I had met. My large 15 lbs Pomeranian LOVED her. She would let him jump all over her, while she lay on her back. She would put his whole head in her mouth , but not bite down, with him just sitting there looking happy about it. She was HUGE. If she put her front paws on my shoulders she still towered over me by a good head length. It was just amazing how something that large could be so gentle. Amazing that she loved playing with my Pomeranian but was never rough enough to hurt him when she was probably 10x his weight!
Dogs have an uncanny ability to be exceedingly gentle with small things, probably owing to pack instincts for caring for young. It's breathtaking sometimes.
Read a few times that wolves do this put in their mouth without biting thing as social bonding.
There's even this crazy dude who spent years pretending to be a wolf and living in the litteral middle of the pack.
You'd see these shots when the leader of the pack does it to the human, then when he was leader of the pack for some time, other wolves would kind of expect him to do it and be socially giddy and validated when he'd open his mouth for their heads to try and go in.
Ps: cats do something a little bit similar with gentle tiny bites and nibbles too with friends and family even when not play fightning. A little bite or chew then off they go continuing their day.
Anyway thanks for sharing, so sweet.
@@goldenpony822 I had not heard that about why they put each other’s heads in their mouths. Thanks for sharing. She put her jaws over his head from the top like /\ and he would sit there with his his tongue hanging out smiling, like he thought nothing of it. It was too cute. They really loved each other.
@@bunnygirl2448 wonderful creatures you describe there. That just sounds so lovely.
If you're curious YT has some great shots with a few of those curious wolf interactions.
By the way I must specify, the gentle bite I was mentioning from cats is done on the side of the furr, when it's done on paws as they often do is more about dominance.
She probably thought your Pomeranian was a puppy
Wolves/wolf dogs will literally flip a switch with pups
I understand now why these videos take so long to come out not only all the research but the editing as well must take long enough! It doesn’t go unnoticed.
@complete video here say meatball if you’re real
I love how I get to learn something everyday on this channel! You are a very intelligent young man, thank you.
Protecting elephants by warding them off with something tiny like bees then turning around and giving bees a home and crops to pollinate only to label their honey as "elephant friendly" is incredibly wholesome.
I am sure A LOT of things could be handled that way.
I remember reading that fresh garlic makes a great pesticide around your garden…
We just need to think outside the box.
Genius. Pure genius
I love This Guy😂
The human version of “mutualism”.
@k.hendrickson8735 This is very true! But keep in mind, it is much less reliable than commercial pesticides. Now, for a garden, this issue is relatively small. If you get 33 tomatoes instead of 36, it's not that big of a deal.
The real problem starts to emerge when you start looking at how we feed society and realize that commercial farms have to use these types of pesticides to produce enough food for current consumption rates. Now, there are proposed solutions, both as concepts and plans, but it's a huge WIP.
I bring this up only to say that thinking outside of the box is important. However, it can only be done when you understand the results of thinking inside the box and the mechanisms behind those conclusions. So, use garlic in your garden, it's much better. But also recognize this isn't going to be a society wide solution. It's also very much worth mentioning that if food production drops, it isn't us in rich countries who will suffer the most. It will be those who are most vulnerable in the most vulnerable regions of the world.
That carrier pigeon story was so wholesome 😭they gave the little birdie a giant medal for his little neck to hold
Seeing animals being recognized for heroic acts and receiving medals is the most wholesome but sad thing, sad only because we humans started the war to begin with. As great as it is to honor our men and women in the service for their Valor, bravery, and conviction. Seeing an animal being honored just hits different every time ❤
What does it matter to a bird whether it receives medals or not. It got handicapped.
The humans fighting in the war didn't start it either.
You are one of the most creative factual presenters ever! I love how you interject humorous comments! Had me laughing throughout! Thanks for this!
“You might be from the HOOD but he’s from the WOOD.” 😂😂 love it
Best line ever right? Had me rolling. 😂
I was invested in the video but that was so real it brought me back to search for this comment 😂
That’s racist, he could be from bel air
😂 too funny
“You might be from the hood, but he from the wood he don’t play” is officially my favorite quote
I mean ay I'll mess with a gangster before I mess with a barbarian
Mine too! 😂😂😂
Just found this channel and that quote made me a subscriber 😆
This guy stole another video and took some talking point from Joe Rogan. This guy is a liar and a sham, he tricked all of you. This is entirely not true, the original video context is different, this ape was from a rival tribe.
@JMah Why?
That little pidgeon made me tear.
Good job little birb. Good job.
Birbs for the WIN!
We love birbs 🥺🥲
Thank you! This is perhaps the finest scholarly piece of evidence that machivellianism has a natural price you don't want to pay...
Kind of refreshing actually hearing animals stand up for themselves
Don't do it lol he's a scammer
It's not long ago it was more common. I'm good fam
@@DaMemeReaper are you surveilling the comments to warn people of these scammers? Found you replying to two different scam bots here.
@@shadow_phoenix_alex it's a thankless duty... Lol
@@DaMemeReaper well thank you
"about 194 soldiers survived because of it and even he after army medics refused to let him past tense" damn faith in humanity strengthened
Puts 'Dastardly and Muttley in their Flying Machines' in a new light, doesn't it?
1918 the great war rages on
A battallion is lost I the Argonne
The Pidgeon was really touching, I'm glad they made everything they could to save his life, and give the pigeon the honors he deserved.
This guy stole another video and took some talking point from Joe Rogan. This guy is a liar and a sham, he tricked all of you. This is entirely not true, the original video context is different, this ape was from a rival tribe.
She*
When the training is the only thing pushing you forward
I couldn't look away! You were so engaging and I was HOOKED! You get a sub and a thumbs up my guy! I'm going in your archives and be entertained. Love you! Mean it!
Random note: Megalania is no longer the name of the massive Australian monitor lizard. It was realized that it is much more closely related to komodo dragons than previously thought, and now it belongs in the same genus as the dragon, in a different species, now known as Varanus priscus.
You can still call it Megalania.
Or do you always refer to animals with their binomial names?
@@tjarkschweizer I'm sure most people do, for extinct animals at least. No one gives common names to Tyrannosaurus, Stegosaurus, etc. Maybe the rule gets changed when referring to Cenozoic animals, like Megalania, Mammoths, or Saber-Tooth "Tigers", but idk.
@@LeoTheYuty There are no rules.
Matter of fact is, people are used to calling this animal Megalania and they will continue to do so.
@@tjarkschweizer k
@@tjarkschweizer That's its common name now.
Kind of how Haliaeetus leucocephalus is known by another name.
I'm so glad I found this guy. His story telling is so freaking good. Love watching his story telling ability at work.
If you like scary stories watch Mrballen
Agreed. He's really good 👍🏾
Love your color commentary. "You might be from the hood, but he from the wood" for an example 😂
Ohhhhh. Man you might not want to use that word
what time stamp is that?
The wolf 8:27-8:29
Sdfu
Hes talking down on his cousins
It's wild how far this channels come. I was here when it first started blowing up now he's got a couple mil. Congrats man.
I love this kid. He doesn't need a long drawn out weird voice. Or a goofy name. Or even videos that are adreno boosters! He's just a great narrator, with great information, about great animals. He's great! 💥💯💙
It's like TicToc minus all the shit.
he's the Best narrator! he's already the best in the business
Also, I love the casual delivery of some of the most astonishingly creative word choices I’ve ever heard.
@@jotcw81 ah yes tic toc
Yea but the way the world is today nothing simple can be great apparently not sure where that logic comes from
Petition to get him his own show on national geographic
They aren't good enough for him.
this youtube stuff ir really good for him compared to national geographic. Much better pay, less stress and more freedom. They would need to give him a really big bag for it to be considerable
@@awesomemccoolname7111 prob not anymore. maybe 10 years ago
@@priscillajimenez27 idk, I remember them in the 80s and 90s they were amazing.
I kinda lost interest in Brave Wilderness when they got a contract with a network, I much prefer youtube content.
I raised a hybrid wolf as a 13-14 year old that my step father ordered from the back of a outdoors magazine for 400$ in the early 80s. He was the smartest animal and the most loyal and gentle canine I have ever had the privilege to help raise. They are pack animals and you and your interacting family are their pack. Outsiders that they don’t know be warned. It takes a little while for them to accept you or they just don’t. A truly amazing animal. I still to this day think of him and miss him.
*accept not except
What happened to him?
"or they just dont" lmao
I owned one as well big ol beast. The people that gave him to me taught him to smile at people, scared the crap out of everyone that didn’t know him. Sadly got his chain caught on a stump and was trampled by a moose.
@@idkwhybut... he lived 14 years and passed away in his sleep in our living room. He had a good life and was loved.
3:54 your timing is perfect man. I just said out loud: WTF is that? "Its a salamander."
At one point someone asked me who would be more dangerous, someone from the city or someone from the country. And I legit remembered your line "You might be from the hood, but he from the wood, he don't play." Your comentary is god tier my friend.
As someone from the wood, can confirm we don't play.
@@Geenoi fact
Loved This! So True!
@@Geenoi Agreed!
But what about someone who isnt from the hood or wood and instead is straight from the top of the mountain?
May your life be rid of the pestilence my friend.i love learning about animals especially from you
@our hero thanks a lot
I wanna base my Beast Style Martial Art mastery on the Elephant and agreed I wouldn't wanna risk pissing off a hoard of bees with no bee suit on either.
I think the 2 people called "our hero" and "Dhar man shorts" have the pestilence go touch them(for the dirty minded people get your head out the gutter)
049 actually helping someone? nice
049 get back to your cell
The fact that earlier modern humans lived in the same world as the megalania is absolutely terrifying, from a distance though one of the coolest most intriguing animals to me
Clovis Man hunted short-faced bear to extinction, which I'd consider an act of self defense, because those thing were no joke.
@@RipOffProductionsLLC Considering most animals back then were absolute giant killers, I can’t blame us for hunting them down.
@@RambunctiousReptilian as I said, self-defence, in a time when the sturdist material your home was made of might be a mammoth ribcage or tusk, you don't got a way to keep a determined predator out at night.
Just a speculation but maybe that's why so many human species went extinct- those who couldn't defend themselves died out. And those who survived had no choice but to hunt the other animals to extinction. Maybe that's how humans even started forming communities. It was definitely much easier to be with a herd than be a lone human in the goddamn stone age when giant lizards were still around...
Early humans specifically hunted them to extinction, like they did to most of the other Pleistocene megafauna. Premodern -and especially pre-agricultural - human history is all about ecocide, wiping out prey animals and “inconvenient” species. Modernity gets so much flak for destroying the Earth, but this is actually the least environmentally destructive era since humans first appeared on this planet. Respect for other animals and the environment is a (relatively) recent innovation.
"You might be from the hood but he from the woods and he dont play around"😂
I love how they gave the Carrier pigeon that got shot and still delivered the message extremely high honor
We salute that hero!
@@trajano777 🫡
Dude if you don’t have a writing team then that’s super fucking impressive. You’re a rock solid comedy writer man.
A genius
Agreed
Agreed!
💯💥💯
Yeah his segues are clean and plots are on point.
I gotta say bro I respect how far you've taken this... You actually taught me more than animal planet and discovery all in like 5 episodes lol. Definitely have nothing but respect for the research you do
This guy stole another video and took some talking point from Joe Rogan. This guy is a liar and a sham, he tricked all of you. This is entirely not true, the original video context is different, this ape was from a rival tribe.
I absolutely love this channel. I'm learning while I'm laughing. Very informative and entertaining. That joke about the salamander not doing anything about slavery had me on the floor. That's just one. I don't have the time to count how many of Mamadou's very witty and well placed jokes made me laugh out loud.
If you want a better comeback story than Przewalski’s Horse, read about the Black Robin. They were down to 5 left on a small island off New Zealand in 1980 including the last fertile female. I remember hearing about the efforts to save them from extinction at the time. It got pretty hairy. There are around 300 today. Great videos by the way.
How did the Black Robin almost become extinct?
@@MrJohnnyDistortion New Zealand had no mammalian predators before the Europeans, hence why some of the birds were flightless and/or nested on the ground, and had no fear of the cats and rats that came with the Europeans, which decimated a lot of the local wildlife. Only found in the Chatham Islands the last remaining black robins were caught and transferred to a couple of small islands in the group that had been cleared of cats and rats and with help from conservationists were saved from extinction.
@@tonythebubble3703
Thank you and thanks to those that saved them. But, are they actually safe?
Great one, although in some years the northern white rhino will have it beat
@@MrJohnnyDistortion humans are disgusting and greedy, that's why.
Maybe it's just because I'm emotionally compromised right now, but I am ugly crying and have tears streaming down my face from hearing about Cher Ami. That's a good fucking bird.
I actually know about it because the sabaton history about the song lost battalion wish talks about the battalion the bird belong to and how it happen
The incident with the chimps reminds me of my 2nd grade. There was a big bully in 3rd grade who used to bully all boys that were weaker than him. At one point during a break we gathered and ganged up on him, leaving him in the fetal position and in tears. He never dared to bully anyone afterwards.
Damn. That’s tough.
based
Yeah, the fetal position he was in was v reminiscent of ppl and what we would do
As a former Medic I can confirm that we would 100% save a dope animal if it was brought to us.
America always stealing shit
The General needs a by-pass
SIR THIS BIRD GOT LIT UP DELIVERYING INTEL THAT SAVED 130 LIVES
Sorry General, priority surgery.
@@XMorbidReignX Eh the general can wait; besides, his death means the command structure will move around for once.
@@XMorbidReignX "you saying I'm less important than a damn bird, doc?!"
"Yes 🗿"
@@XMorbidReignX Real talk though, rank don't mean shit to Doc. If a mission critical pigeon is triaged higher, it don't matter if there's a Chevron or a set of stars on your chest. The pigeon is going first and there's an 18g silver bullet for anyone who bitches.
I am currently pursuing a zoology degree in hopes of working in wildlife rehab and one thing I promised myself never to forget is that, regardless of how attached I am to an animal I'm caring for, a wild animal is still a wild animal.
Good luck
Wild human is just that. A wild human.
It’s so easy when ur working with animals to eagerly work towards handling the “badass” (ie. dangerous) ones out of excitement, def gotta learn fast why that’s not a great idea even when u see others handle the same individual animal with ease
@@bannedwagoner69 working with "badass" animals isn't my goal at all. I will be just as happy caring for a songbird or squirrel as I would be caring for a hawk or bobcat. It isn't about how rehabbing an animal makes me look to other people, it's about helping the animals for the sake of the environment and the animals themselves.
@@kobayashiajimu4747 thanks, I'll need it lol
"You might be from the hood, but he from the wood"
Man that's beautiful
"You might be from the hood but he's from the wood' 😂
Cher Ami is perhaps the greatest war hero who ever lived. He saved 195 lives, all without shedding any blood but his own.
Survived it too...something was on that birds side that day.
He isn't Hero, he is victim of war...he didn't mean to save those people, he just want to get back to his nest
@@ghufroon4134 which could be said for all the people in war also.
@@ghufroon4134 He is a hero. Heroes don’t go to war to be heroes. Heroes are born because the situation they are in calls them to be
Before the fight Amie was a normal pigeon who was trained to navigate but only wanted to be home. But he’s a hero because despite everything he did what he had to do and saved lives in the process
@@zaganim3813 the different is, this bird don't know he is at war
For size scale for the wolf: Tibetan Mastiffs are about the same weight class as a wolf, which makes sense as it’s believed that Tibetan Mastiffs were herding dogs used to defend against them.
Although mastiffs in general are still somewhat smaller height and length than a wolf. It’s still fascinating.
Also: clarification: dogs were used to defend against wolves but more often than not it was the bark, not the bite. Deep barks like Maremmas and Mastiffs are still used in parts of Europe, although wolves are rare, they do exist and it’s a choice between shoot or dog and I’m choosing dog every single time (I’m a hunter. I could choose shoot. But dog is a win win situation: I get a friend, I don’t have to shoot an endangered animal, and the wolf gets to live)
A wise choice.
I’m more likely to see a real wolf for reference before I see a Tibetan Mastiff to reference for size. You should have said a washing machine or anything else except another dog especially one that’s not common to see. But you got ur point “unnecessarily” across. Lol. Keep that safety off and keep your boots pointing forward. 😂☮️🔥🌳💨 Happy 2days late 420. Or like the PUSSY cats call it. Earth Day. 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂 OH yeah Don’t forget to vote Trump 🇺🇸🇺🇸TRUMP🇺🇸🇺🇸TRUMP🇺🇸🇺🇸TRUMP🇺🇸🇺🇸
Dogs were wolves 15,000 years ago until they sold out and became professional kiss azzez
I'm a hunter, I'm not taking my dog out in the woods. The wolves aren't as dangerous as the moose. And the grizzlies are even worse.
@@laurakastrup how and why would I ever be in a position to need to shoot a wolf?
That pigeon has accomplished more than all the people on TikTok combined. Literally don't even come close. Rest in peace soldier.
It honestly ain’t hard to accomplish more than all of people on that app, simply delete TikTok and you’ll have done it
...Dude, Casual Geographic is literally *right there...*
I mean, it's true, but don't be mean to him...
You know CasualGeographic is a TikToker right?
@@alimations5226 did he also earn military commisions for heroic acts of valor?
@@mellohi6175
Not gonna lie i Literally just said "WTF is that" and you answered "it's a Salamander" like we were in the same room!! Lol had to share cause it still has me gimpin out!! 😆😆😆
As someone that has a Husky and spent time living in the Rockies, there are two takeaways from that. Firstly, when my Husky decides he's going to howl or otherwise verbalize himself, there is no question as to whether or not he is related to a wolf. Secondly, I've been within 50 feet of a timberwolf. There is no other canine scarier than that in my opinion.
Hi There! Husky Lover Here Too! I Had 2 Beautiful Sisters!!
Stay Safe and Healthy My Friend!!
That makes no sense btw
Agreed, i live in the canadian rockeys, very, very big dogs, the females are 130lbs sure, but the males in the mountains can get close to 200lbs. Me and my dad ran into one late at night smoking some weed and we had no idea it was on the side of the trail till about 20ft away. Im more scared of them than bears or cougars by far. Cheers!🍻
🎉
I had a dog that had enough genetics from a Timberwolf to be considered illegal. Mom got it in nunavik as a "sled dog", we found out when we neutered him, the vet was very lenient and didn't report it lmao
I'm in my 40's and I'm still learning from this channel. Thank you.
1. Never in my life have I seen a wolf THAT big.
2. I really liked the albino gorilla. It looked pretty happy.
3. Thank you for another informative and educational video. Stay Hood, Nature!
i think i saw the Gorilla first on an album cover by Basement Jaxx.
Bruh that ain’t no gorilla, that’s skips from regular show 💀
@complete video here and im not enjoying seeing another comment like this
George from rampage movie
Thanks for giving whatever subtitles you wrote for 0.00000000001 second 😂
Fun fact: Cher Ami was a female pigeon. They only found that out by the time she was dead, so she was posthumously renamed to Cher Amie, the feminine version of her name.
08:28 - *"You might be from the hood, BUT HE IS FROM THE WOOD.*
BUSTED 🤣🤣🤣
I laughed at that part
I'm from Barcelona and i remember snowflake("floquet de neu" in catalan, there is even a cartoon movie )... he died when i was a child and i remember everybody was so sad... He was so much beloved in Barcelona. He lived 39 years.
I love that they really appreciate that pigeon and admit and recognized he done everything to save thise soldiers lives! He was a hero and deserved everything he got. I bet he atleast enjoyed thise 8 months in comfort.
" -it's a salamander."
I like how you timed that for anyone thinking 'what is that?!' like me. Nice
That pigeon is truly a badass. If an afterlife exists, he deserves to be in the upper echelons of heroes and legends.
I don't remember seeing anything about animals in the Norse Mythology, but Cher Amie might be able to roost in Valhalla.
But forget the people that died during the war
He flying in Valhalla
@@drewarnett3180 if I were to choose between a bird who saved 140 soldiers and a random dude that didn't save anyone and only did the minimum I'd choose to award the bird
Damn those chimps wanted pimu's blood thatday they had no mercy on him
That pigeon needs more recognition around the world, someone make it happen, I don't have enough influence 😭
It would be really cool if a big youtuber with about 2 million subs would make a video about it
Battlefield 1 pigeon mission
@@imadoge5036 😂
I also was legally blind for twenty years until about three years ago when I finally got LASIK. Life changing bro. Can’t recommend it enough.
When he uploads, my day gets sooooooooo much better!
same 🎉🎉🎉🎉😊😊😊😊
yea
Facts
@Chad, ironic
"You might be from the hood, but he's from the wood"
Nice one, mate 😄👌
That was good
Very educational, intriguing, and hilarious! I’d never heard of the Buffalo-hunting okavango lions before, or the military hero pigeon. If you’d like to do a follow-up segment on the Megalania thing, there’s this: Komodo dragons actually originated in Australia, alongside Megalania (and potentially one other giant monitor lizard), and the Komodos we have now are actually island dwarfs (smaller than the extinct mainland populations).
"Komodo dragons actually originated in Australia"
Yeah honestly no surprise there.
That Salamander was adorable. :)
Few years ago i went to an animal park with gigantic enclosures- and i even got the chance to pet one of those przewalsky horses and her foal 🥺 they are so majestic and beautiful and i love how much space to run around they have there
I consider myself a animal lover (not the kind that gets you arrested and weird looks from the neighbors) and your vids still teach me so much. Animals are amazing and you do a great jobs explaining why.
Thanks.
Based anti-furry
This guy stole another video and took some talking point from Joe Rogan. This guy is a liar and a sham, he tricked all of you. This is entirely not true, the original video context is different, this ape was from a rival tribe.
Same, i keep it platonic.
@@obviouslykaleb7998wdym? ain't no anti furry
@@NecroEddie cringe furry propagandist
Dogs may be from the hood, but wolves are from the wood… they don’t play. Well said brother
The way this guy presents his narrative is exceptionally funny and informative at the same time
YOUR STORY TELLING IS BY FAR THE BEST. NO ONE DOES IT BETTER THAN YOU. GLAD I FOUND YOUR CHANNEL
I'm glad he's balancing wholesome informative stuff with the "scary" bits. My job is nature education in the US, the last thing I want is kids to be afraid of snails and freshwater. Luckily the US doesn't have that parasite. But it's often harder to unlearn things...
Bilharzia?
Whenever I think that humans are the cruelest species, this channel opens my eyes that some species can be a lot crueler.
I think humans are cruelest by far, IMO
Agreed
Your human, so you have a bias to our cruelty
Its only when you try to live as a being not a person, you can really analyze the depravity.
No animal charges tax to live in the woods, and kills or imprisons you for failing to do so in the manner they told you.
The animal would ether kill you or walk away, and humans do that too. . . So please tell me more 😂😂
Well no humans r still more cruel
No I would say it’s a tie between chimpanzees and humans it feels wrong to type that. We are as bad as monkeys that tear other monkeys’s balls off but it’s true.
Your play on words is amazing. I try to catch them.all but still thinking about that last sentence slows.me.down..lol. Great videos. Thanks
he’s soooooo cool The way he does his thing The metaphors he use’s is so funny but brutally honest sometimes
when we need to know what is dangerous or not he’ll let you know
I thought David Attenborough was the king of nature but this kid is my second to David
That’s a big deal
Keep on keeping on you legend
yeah I vote that he should take David's place when he retires. He has perfect phrasing and very catchy clever sayings. I was chuckling at everything he was saying
the dickriding is immense 😂😂
but dont worry, i liked the video too ❤
High praise indeed ❤
Did you just discover the internet?
No lol
About Pimu:
This is basically what happens when you misinterpret Machiavelli.
"To be loved or feared, try to be both but if you can't it is safer to be feared" is the message. He also STRONGLY advises against making it so people hate you, or they will overcome their fear and actually rise up.
Yes because chips read Machiavelli.
@@maxxam4665 Machiavelli was only putting down on paper what our lineage going all the way back to the shared common ancestor with chimps and probably even past that instinctively knew already.
Damn didn't know tupac said that quote (joke)
@@drseizure I don’t get the joke?
I've heard Cher Amis' story a dozen times, but it never fails to make me tear up a little. R.I.P. little buddy.
Thanks for not clickbaiting us even after all this time bro. Good stuff indeed
I'm litterly bawling at the pigeon story right now. God bless that pigeon, and may the highest military ranks salute him. 😭❤🩹