I will never forget my first encounter with a wild badger. I had been on warden patrol all day within a group of woodlands owned by the Woodland Trust in Derbyshire. It was starting to become dusk so I decided to head home, has I did I noticed a huge earth covered mound which I thought might be an area of land where badgers might live, so I investigated the mound area. I found four large entrances, leading to underground passageways. I knew straight away I had found a Badger Sett. Upto this point I had never seen a live wild badger, I had seen lots of photographs and videos of badgers, but I had never come face-to-face with a badger myself. I decided to sit on the ground a few yards away from the sett entrances hoping I might get a quick glimpse of a badger. To my surprise I hadn't long to wait. I noticed a badger cub pop it's head out of the sett entrance. It sniffed the air, smelling for signs of danger. I had made sure I was down wind from the sett, so my scent could not be picked up by the badger/s. When the cub was satisfied there was no danger it came right out of the sett entrance and sat right in front of me! What a wonderful sight. I realised the cub's eyesight was 'very poor' as it was facing me, staring straight into my face, yet it did not seem one bit affraid of me, it did not attempt to run away. It just sat there staring at me! After about five minutes the cub turned away and made it's way into the woodland. I carried on with making my way home.
Despite growing up on a farm and my father pointing out a sett when I was young, I never, ever got to see a badger. Whilst they have the unfortunate tendency to spread tuberculosis which bovines can catch, I never heard of any farmer in my area wanting to evict them or harm them. They otherwise pose little threat and I personally would like to see research for a vaccine that would prevent cattle from being infected in order to help protect wildlife. I would really like to see a badger, although now living in Japan, my opportunity to do so are slim.
Here you go, now go for a walk and maybe get lucky. From Wikipedia; The Japanese badger is a species of carnivoran of the family Mustelidae, the weasels and their kin. Endemic to Japan, it is found on Honshu, Kyushu, Shikoku, and Shōdoshima. It shares the genus Meles with its close relatives, the European and Asian badgers.
@Frank Benlin, actually, Mustelidae is restricted to only the weasels, ferrets, and minks, while the skunks, stink badgers, badgers, otters, zorillas, muishund, shulang, huro, grisons, wolverine, tayra, martens, and fisher do not belong to Mustelidae anymore, they are instead moved to the families Mephitidae, Melidae, Lutridae, and Ictonychidae respectively, while the latter three families are grouped with Mustelidae into the superfamily Musteloidea, Mephitidae is not part of Musteloidea and instead evolved independently, Mephitidae belongs to a whole different superfamily, which is the superfamily Procyonoidea, meaning skunks and stink badgers are actually more closely related to the raccoons, ringtail, cacomistle, coatis, olingos, olinguito, kinkajou, and red panda than they are to the weasels, ferrets, minks, badgers, otters, zorillas, muishund, shulang, huro, grisons, wolverine, tayra, martens, and fisher.
I'm pretty sure I remember hearing that there is no scientific evidence that badgers have or spread TB....that's why there was such an outcry when the government announced the badger culling quite a few years ago, they said it was because of TB, but the scientific community said there is no evidence that they spread it to cattle. I'm sure I heard that right.
They say if you are TB free you should leave the badgers alone because if you cull them then others come from different areas and take over the sett that might have TB
I have never come across one of these when it's just been put out. Amazing to see just 163 views and 5 comments. I love listening to Sir David ... every wildlife video I watch that doesn't have a narrator, I hear him :-)
What's not to love here. Attenborough's voice. (Love this guy!!!), amazing camera work (Well Done BBC!!!). I can't wait to buy on disc the complete collected of Attenborough, someday, I'm saving up.
I have a set close by , they come round for some snacks i put out. I also have a hedgehog come round everynight for a snack.. the two met one night and the hedgehog curled up in a ball. The badger was sniffing very close to it ,i had to scare it off. My cat doesn't seem to bother any of them and they dont bother the cat. They are lovely to see , keeps me up at night watching them 😊
Este vídeo é simplesmente incrível!! Fora os arames e a ocupacao do seu espaço esta espécie é linda e brava ..a BBC levou-nos ao seu refúgio desbravando o túnel com a câmara para nos mostrar a próxima descendência!! Fantástico ...como sempre!!
Hi! How are you? The wind of early fall has been blowing in Korea/Seoul since early this morning. While summer requires sunlight for grains and fruits, daily life is not easy due to heat and humidity. It's going to be autumn now... I wish you good health and good things for the rest of the week. Thank you.
This is a dumb question but like all the European people I know freak out when they see an American badger. Are ours much bigger or something? I always hear ours are mean but I've always heard badgers are mean in general. They look about the same to me. Or based on the comments are European Badgers just more shy 😂 they chase dogs n cats and other farm animals round here, I grew up in a city n I've seen a badger IRL and not in a zoo. So maybe ours are meaner 🤦♀️😂
Good question. I have never seen an American badger so I can't tell for sure, but I've come across European badgers in the park of my city and they are super chill, they don't seem to be bothered at all 😅
@@zackebuh5868 huh, the ones here are like boot sized lions (they're long n squat like any other badger), they got a rep for being fierce and even wolves n bears don't mess with them. I'm the type that goes up to deer, raccoons, fox, skunk, coyote whatever and talk to em n pet em but when I'm in the Midwest n see a badger I nope right outta there just on their reputation, they straight up kill large animals. Interesting to know tho, thank you very much! Now I wonder if it's a resource issue 🤔 Still odd since they're in areas of the Americas that aren't super populated. Lots of farm land n forests up North.
Actually no, European Badgers are slightly larger than North American Badgers, the one in the US tend to be more aggressive yes but the European one definitely ain’t something to be messed with either.
They operate on different survival strategies. A european badger will always try to escape to its sett when it feels threatened and only fight if you either corner it or try to invade its sett. American badgers don't dig and therefore don't have anywhere to escape to, so instead of getting out of dodge, they try to scare off attackers with a threat display. If you're used to badgers giving humans a wide berth, the sight of one hissing and showing its teeth and trying to make itself as big as possible is a bit unsettling. When it comes to actually fighting, I don't imagine there's much of a difference, except for european badgers being a little bigger on average.
We are so utterly privileged to be able to share our world with such exquisite sentient beings. They are wonderful engineers who are capable of doing such intricate building designs, all in complete darkness of their set. To say these people are clever is an absolute understatement. 💜🦘🕉️🦡🌳💚
Funny how much mileage of tunnels most diggers in small ( e.g. scary ascarius..tapewurm...earthworms ish to badger needed for variation all seclusion ary matrix
I personally think the Badger should be the English 'national animal' not a Lion. Then again it's very 'empire' to have a non-native animal on our crests etc. 😅🦁
You must know that no human can know the mind of God. So stop pretending that you know it's name. Jesus, Allah, Kali etc - we don't know. Stop being arrogant, it annoys people, which does no good.
I will never forget my first encounter with a wild badger. I had been on warden patrol all day within a group of woodlands owned by the Woodland Trust in Derbyshire. It was starting to become dusk so I decided to head home, has I did I noticed a huge earth covered mound which I thought might be an area of land where badgers might live, so I investigated the mound area. I found four large entrances, leading to underground passageways. I knew straight away I had found a Badger Sett. Upto this point I had never seen a live wild badger, I had seen lots of photographs and videos of badgers, but I had never come face-to-face with a badger myself. I decided to sit on the ground a few yards away from the sett entrances hoping I might get a quick glimpse of a badger.
To my surprise I hadn't long to wait. I noticed a badger cub pop it's head out of the sett entrance. It sniffed the air, smelling for signs of danger. I had made sure I was down wind from the sett, so my scent could not be picked up by the badger/s. When the cub was satisfied there was no danger it came right out of the sett entrance and sat right in front of me! What a wonderful sight. I realised the cub's eyesight was 'very poor' as it was facing me, staring straight into my face, yet it did not seem one bit affraid of me, it did not attempt to run away. It just sat there staring at me! After about five minutes the cub turned away and made it's way into the woodland. I carried on with making my way home.
Where abouts in Derbyshire, may I ask?
Despite growing up on a farm and my father pointing out a sett when I was young, I never, ever got to see a badger. Whilst they have the unfortunate tendency to spread tuberculosis which bovines can catch, I never heard of any farmer in my area wanting to evict them or harm them. They otherwise pose little threat and I personally would like to see research for a vaccine that would prevent cattle from being infected in order to help protect wildlife. I would really like to see a badger, although now living in Japan, my opportunity to do so are slim.
Here you go, now go for a walk and maybe get lucky.
From Wikipedia;
The Japanese badger is a species of carnivoran of the family Mustelidae, the weasels and their kin. Endemic to Japan, it is found on Honshu, Kyushu, Shikoku, and Shōdoshima. It shares the genus Meles with its close relatives, the European and Asian badgers.
I saw one in my garden at night once and it was amazing but I’ve never seen one any other time yet
@Frank Benlin, actually, Mustelidae is restricted to only the weasels, ferrets, and minks, while the skunks, stink badgers, badgers, otters, zorillas, muishund, shulang, huro, grisons, wolverine, tayra, martens, and fisher do not belong to Mustelidae anymore, they are instead moved to the families Mephitidae, Melidae, Lutridae, and Ictonychidae respectively, while the latter three families are grouped with Mustelidae into the superfamily Musteloidea, Mephitidae is not part of Musteloidea and instead evolved independently, Mephitidae belongs to a whole different superfamily, which is the superfamily Procyonoidea, meaning skunks and stink badgers are actually more closely related to the raccoons, ringtail, cacomistle, coatis, olingos, olinguito, kinkajou, and red panda than they are to the weasels, ferrets, minks, badgers, otters, zorillas, muishund, shulang, huro, grisons, wolverine, tayra, martens, and fisher.
I'm pretty sure I remember hearing that there is no scientific evidence that badgers have or spread TB....that's why there was such an outcry when the government announced the badger culling quite a few years ago, they said it was because of TB, but the scientific community said there is no evidence that they spread it to cattle. I'm sure I heard that right.
They say if you are TB free you should leave the badgers alone because if you cull them then others come from different areas and take over the sett that might have TB
Amazing to see their world.
Badgers are super amazing animals, so cute! Thanks to BBC to let us know their life.
I have never come across one of these when it's just been put out. Amazing to see just 163 views and 5 comments. I love listening to Sir David ... every wildlife video I watch that doesn't have a narrator, I hear him :-)
Me to check out Netflix animal birds of prey episode is sick
What's not to love here. Attenborough's voice. (Love this guy!!!), amazing camera work (Well Done BBC!!!). I can't wait to buy on disc the complete collected of Attenborough, someday, I'm saving up.
Title: Underground labyrinth of Badgers..
Me: Oh, hell yeah!.
This is the footage badgers deserve! They have such complex setts, I’m so happy they made this clip.
Wow, their secret world is sooo complex~
Thank you for sharing this video~👍
Amazing creatures.
What cuties badgers are!!!
Amazing film footage, and the voice of Sir David Attenborough?
Count me in!
Wow cool video i really like it 👍
Badger badger badger badger badger badger badger badger badger, MUSHROOM, MUSHROOM!
I have a set close by , they come round for some snacks i put out. I also have a hedgehog come round everynight for a snack.. the two met one night and the hedgehog curled up in a ball. The badger was sniffing very close to it ,i had to scare it off.
My cat doesn't seem to bother any of them and they dont bother the cat. They are lovely to see , keeps me up at night watching them 😊
Este vídeo é simplesmente incrível!! Fora os arames e a ocupacao do seu espaço esta espécie é linda e brava ..a BBC levou-nos ao seu refúgio desbravando o túnel com a câmara para nos mostrar a próxima descendência!! Fantástico ...como sempre!!
Badger, Badger, Badger, Badger… 😊
I filmed a few on my trail cam, but only at night. I absolutely love them. And of course listening to Sir David A. is a real treat!! ❤️
Gotta love badgers.
Wow.what an amazing video of wildlife seldom seen on films or TH-cam..really appreciate it.
Just spotted one tonight in southern France coming out of a maize field, had no idea they even existed here!
Badgers can be poisoned with feed grade Urea. If they are causing destruction in your field of Maize 👍
Amazing! Thanks!
I like badgers
Hufflepuff pride! 💛🖤
so cute!!
♥️
Amazing Animal.
Thank boss🙏🙏🙏🇹🇭
Hi! How are you?
The wind of early fall has been blowing in Korea/Seoul since early this morning.
While summer requires sunlight for grains and fruits, daily life is not easy due to heat and humidity.
It's going to be autumn now...
I wish you good health and good things for the rest of the week. Thank you.
Good
Amazing animals life
What is that bird call at 1.25? Anyone? I hear it every night here in Scotland
That’s actually me, love from mum x
So many questions. Do they have good vision in the darkness as the obviously spend a ton of time in the tunnel system?
❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
sooo gooood😀
Here in the UK we use badger sets to return used engine oil back to deep underground where the Oil originally came from.
How in the H did anyone get footage this good? You'd think human scent would scare these guys out for good and leave this labyrinth abandoned.
👍
สวัสดีค่ะ
Red Wall OP!
Corpse paint at its finest! Trve kvlt black metal badgers UNITE! 🤔😂😁👍🏻😎🤘🏻🖤🌲🦡
The badger will always be my strongest ally on far cry primal up there next to the Owl of course.
Schön 🤠
I was really exited to watch Badgers in their natural habitat but when David Attenborough mentioned the Set i realised it was all fake :(
We’ve found the original earthbenders.
I clicked on this bc of Bread and Jam for Frances, by another Brit, Russell Hoban.
🐾
Aww, how could you cull something so cute?
Because farmers are terrified of them spreading TB even when it gets proven they don’t have it.
@@Kingsaxxy3872badgers do carry TB
This is a dumb question but like all the European people I know freak out when they see an American badger. Are ours much bigger or something? I always hear ours are mean but I've always heard badgers are mean in general. They look about the same to me.
Or based on the comments are European Badgers just more shy 😂 they chase dogs n cats and other farm animals round here, I grew up in a city n I've seen a badger IRL and not in a zoo. So maybe ours are meaner 🤦♀️😂
Good question. I have never seen an American badger so I can't tell for sure, but I've come across European badgers in the park of my city and they are super chill, they don't seem to be bothered at all 😅
@@zackebuh5868 huh, the ones here are like boot sized lions (they're long n squat like any other badger), they got a rep for being fierce and even wolves n bears don't mess with them. I'm the type that goes up to deer, raccoons, fox, skunk, coyote whatever and talk to em n pet em but when I'm in the Midwest n see a badger I nope right outta there just on their reputation, they straight up kill large animals. Interesting to know tho, thank you very much! Now I wonder if it's a resource issue 🤔 Still odd since they're in areas of the Americas that aren't super populated. Lots of farm land n forests up North.
Actually no, European Badgers are slightly larger than North American Badgers, the one in the US tend to be more aggressive yes but the European one definitely ain’t something to be messed with either.
They operate on different survival strategies.
A european badger will always try to escape to its sett when it feels threatened and only fight if you either corner it or try to invade its sett.
American badgers don't dig and therefore don't have anywhere to escape to, so instead of getting out of dodge, they try to scare off attackers with a threat display.
If you're used to badgers giving humans a wide berth, the sight of one hissing and showing its teeth and trying to make itself as big as possible is a bit unsettling.
When it comes to actually fighting, I don't imagine there's much of a difference, except for european badgers being a little bigger on average.
We are so utterly privileged to be able to share our world with such exquisite sentient beings. They are wonderful engineers who are capable of doing such intricate building designs, all in complete darkness of their set. To say these people are clever is an absolute understatement. 💜🦘🕉️🦡🌳💚
I respect everyone who were involved in this Seriously the best piece that i ve ever seen on TH-cam 💌 Hate off to well all 💟 love your videos
Hello
Funny how much mileage of tunnels most diggers in small ( e.g. scary ascarius..tapewurm...earthworms ish to badger needed for variation all seclusion ary matrix
I personally think the Badger should be the English 'national animal' not a Lion. Then again it's very 'empire' to have a non-native animal on our crests etc. 😅🦁
480p lol
Bag
subhanAllah. beauty of life 🤩😍
BadgerettEs deserve privacy ...........you anglos should leave them alone.
اذكروا الله ذكرا كثيرا كثيرا تفلحوا وتطمئن قلوبكم وتتنور حياتكم
Hate to break it to you, but the comment section is for commenting about THE VID and/or content.
Really? Yup. 👍🤣👍
@@majoroldladyakamom6948 good for you for making a very valid point.
Badgers are carnivorans that belong to the family Melidae, they are native to Eurasia, Africa, and North America, there are over fifteen extant species within seven genera and four subfamilies
Taxonomy:
• Family: Melidae (Badgers)
•• Subfamily: Mellivorinae (Short-Faced Badgers)
••• Genus: Mellivora (Honey Badger Lineage)
•••• Species: Mellivora capensis (Honey Badger)
•• Subfamily: Helictidinae (Ferret Badgers)
••• Genus: Melogale (Northern Ferret Badgers)
•••• Species: Melogale moschata (Chinese Ferret Badger)
•••• Species: Melogale subaurantiaca (Formosan Ferret Badger)
••• Genus: Helictis (Indochinese Ferret Badgers)
•••• Species: Helictis personata (Burmese Ferret Badger)
•••• Species: Helictis cucphuongensis (Vietnamese Ferret Badger)
••• Genus: Bassaritaxus (Indonesian Ferret Badgers)
•••• Species: Bassaritaxus orientalis (Javan Ferret Badger)
•••• Species: Bassaritaxus everetti (Bornean Ferret Badger)
•• Subfamily: Melinae (Old World Badgers)
••• Genus: Arctonyx (Hog Badgers)
•••• Species: Arctonyx collaris (Greater Hog Badger)
•••• Species: Arctonyx albogularis (Northern Hog Badger)
•••• Species: Arctonyx hoevenii (Sumatran Hog Badger)
••• Genus: Meles (Eurasian Badgers)
•••• Species: Meles meles (European Badger)
•••• Species: Meles canescens (Caucasian Badger)
•••• Species: Meles leucurus (Asiatic Badger)
•••• Species: Meles anakuma (Japanese Badger)
•• Subfamily: Taxideinae (New World Badgers)
••• Genus: Taxidea (American Badger Lineage)
•••• Species: Taxidea taxus (American Badger)
Two
First
Frist
Who asked that your first
Is that like F I R S T? 🤣
Ratenbourgh is a sellout
Back off, puppy!
His name is Sir David Attenborough (anointed by the Queen), and he is a true Global Treasure.
You must know that the creation is created by only Allah, we have to worship him to go to heaven no other ways
I believe in a flying spaghetti monster
@@elijahstuffs I believe in big Chungus 😂
You must know that no human can know the mind of God. So stop pretending that you know it's name. Jesus, Allah, Kali etc - we don't know. Stop being arrogant, it annoys people, which does no good.
Allah is Satan himself 👹🔥
@@blucat4 Great comment.