This re-enactment is no joke! It's exactly the same sequence of events that I encountered when bitten by a 5 1/2 foot Eastern Diamondback in the mid 1970's. By the time I reached the hospital approximately one hour after the bite, my legs were completely immobilized and the progression to diaphragm followed soon after. Fortunately, the ER had started IV's in both my arm and leg and that was the only thing that saved my life. About a year later I ran across the ER doctor that treated me that day and he told me that I had actually died and that all my vital signs had dropped to zero. I remembered that I heard the doctor yell at the nurses to start the antivenin in both IV's while he was injecting it in multiple locations in my forearm and upper arm. I spent nearly a week in the intensive care unit and another two weeks on the orthopedic floor while doing a kidney watch and having debridement surgery on my hand without anesthesia due to the lack of blood supply to the limb. I had to have physical therapy for a period of 2 months after the bite. The left arm and hand were never the same following the bite.
This video is truly mesmerizing! Thanks to the editorial board and film crew for showcasing the captivating world of venomous snakes with such depth and insight.
This episode is absolutely gripping! 😮 The way you showcased the world's most venomous snakes is both informative and thrilling. I learned so much about their behaviors and the dynamics of predator interactions. Thank you for creating such a fascinating documentary-can't wait for more episodes
This was such an exciting episode! 🎉 I’m fascinated by snakes, and this documentary did a fantastic job of highlighting their beauty and danger. I’m already looking forward to the next episode! Keep it up
While I found the episode interesting, I think some parts could have been a bit more in-depth. 🤔 I wanted to learn more about the conservation efforts for these snakes. Overall, a good watch, though
The David Weather's incident is "classic". I remember seeing that when I was a kid. I was always shocked and glad he was ok. The wound later abscessing was gnarly!
You mean the guy who got bitten on his abdomen? At least he survived. I kinda feel sorry for him and the snake too. If you remember, snakes attack when they feel threatened, if they are trained to be assassins (kinda like in that one Sherlock Holmes story 'The Speckled Band') or when they just feel hungry.🐍🍗🍖
Your channel is awesome! I really like the way you introduce wildlife with interesting information and vivid images. This is a valuable source of knowledge for those who love nature and want to learn about wild life. Hope the channel continues to grow and have more interesting videos!
They're just animals. Not monsters and it's very rare for this to happen as humans are not typically seen as prey. Yes it's always an awful thing and scary when a human gets killed so unexpectedly, but big cats, bears, leopards have killed and eaten way more than snakes have. Because most snakes cannot swallow past the shoulders of an adult, unless its a smaller adult or child and even that's also rare. My heart goes out to anyone who's killed before their time. 😢
@@metalmamasue3680 Same, Rest in peace for the victims who were killed by snakes. 🕊️ 42:43 This 911 call is honestly depressing because a 2 year old child was strangled to death. 😢
In my opinion, animals that are meant to be in the wild are not meant to be pets. They will most likely turn against their owner. Life is more important than to have such animals as pets.
Isn't that just about every domesticated pet? For example, most dogs and cats would be able to survive in the wild. What's your particular line in the sand? No amphibians, reptiles, birds?
Largest documented Gaboon viper Bitis gabonica 6.9 ft 47 lbs Fresno Chaffe Zoo is the heaviest documented venomous snake in captivity. Eastern Diamondback rattlesnake Crotalas admanteus 7.9 ft 34 lbs shot by a hunter named Rutledge in 1946 is the heaviest venomous snake documented in the wild.
No one who truly loves snakes would ever keep them as pets. Keeping shelves of large snakes in glass tanks is cruel. They were born to slither on ground/trees not coiled in a cage. This is equivalent to a human living in a closet and I don't mean a celebrity's closet.
I know a rattlesnake is not the deadliest snake of all time but it's definitely one of the most intimidating looking snakes on planet earth without question 🫣
13:32 How do Inland Taipan found in these areas that along with human ? I think it's coastal taipan that can be found near human population , at this clip it's look exactly like coastal taipan .
Did anyone see how he was treating that cobra, grabbing its head and being so rough, I felt worse for the snake than him, he had chance after chance to close lid and instead keep holding it up and showing off for camera
Inland Taipan ld 50 00.25 mgkg SC with its presynatic and postsynatic neurotoxic venom is 15 times more toxic than the venom of the Black Mamba ld 50 0.341 mgkg SC with neurotoxic and cardiovascular toxins.
Number 1 rule after being big do not try and suk out the damned venom cause u will cause more problems then solving them U DO NOT WANT RATTLE SNAKE VENOM N UR MOUTH
As long as you have no open sores in your mouth, it won't hurt you as much as it does being injected into your body. Poison is ingested, venom is injected. Poison makes you sick in your mouth or being swallowed more than venom does. Venom is just proteins that stomach acid breaks down. But sucking the venom out wastes time and isn't an effective way to remove it once injected into your body. You are far better off staying calm and getting to medical help asap, antivenom is the only thing that stops the effects of venom. I hope that helps.
In indonesia ular gibug (ground viper/pit viper/Calloselasma rhodostoma) is the most dangerous venomous snake, we usually call it ular ranjau darat (landmine snake) because this snake doing very well camoflage like a landmine. If you step on this snake you will meet God more faster along with your blood flow😅😵
Reticulated Pythons are huge like anaconda, there's a ton of different pythons, I think ball pythons are the smallest of the python family... and Reticulated Pythons are the biggest of the pythons
As much as they demonized the constrictor snakes in this video it should be know that big constrictor snakes kill 0 - 2 people a year worldwide (a little less then the amount of people killed by vending machines falling over), dogs kill 25,000 - 35,000 people in that same time. A minimum body count difference of 12,500 to 1. 39:53 That is a reticulated python in the photo (the only snake that has ever tried to eat a person) and from 40:11 on was a Burmese python, a less aggressive snake that has never tried to eat a person. That footage is disinformation. One thing they did get right was Gaboon vipers are very dangerous, unless you have ant venom and zoo keeping experience don't keep Gaboon vipers as pets. Get a ball python or a dwarf Burmese python no venom and they can't overpower a person.
Why isn’t anti-venom stocked at a nearby hospital of one who has one? Like a venom registry? I kind of figured that would be part of the expectation for ownership 🤷♀️
Because venom can vary depending on location even in the same species of snakes. Rattlesnakes can have primarily hemotoxic venom but also some neurotoxins too, Depending on the species of the snakes and what they prey on most.
Inland Taipans have the most toxic venom. But there are other factors that can make a snake deadlier like how close they are to humans and how common they are.
Eophis underwoodi was a small four legged snake discovered 165 million years ago but the gene for venom dates back over two hundred million years ago. Palientologist who studied all forms of fossilized life can give accurate dates going back over three hundred million years ago . Boa contrictors and Anacondas still have spurs on their skeletons where legs used to be 150 million years ago. These are scientific facts not based on religion.
Can anyone please explain how a snake like anacondas and reticulated pythons are able to consume animals with antlers and horns...I never knew how they could without killing themselves in the process
Boomslang translation in Dutch and Afrikaans means tree snake Colubridae family of snakes which have rear fangs with hemotoxic venom ld 50 12.5 mgkg SC is the most toxic venomous snake in Africa.
Bruce should win an Oscar for his performance.
No Oscar for being dumb 😂😂😂😂
This re-enactment is no joke! It's exactly the same sequence of events that I encountered when bitten by a 5 1/2 foot Eastern Diamondback in the mid 1970's. By the time I reached the hospital approximately one hour after the bite, my legs were completely immobilized and the progression to diaphragm followed soon after.
Fortunately, the ER had started IV's in both my arm and leg and that was the only thing that saved my life. About a year later I ran across the ER doctor that treated me that day and he told me that I had actually died and that all my vital signs had dropped to zero. I remembered that I heard the doctor yell at the nurses to start the antivenin in both IV's while he was injecting it in multiple locations in my forearm and upper arm. I spent nearly a week in the intensive care unit and another two weeks on the orthopedic floor
while doing a kidney watch and having debridement surgery on my hand without anesthesia due to the lack of blood supply to the limb. I had to have physical therapy for a period of 2 months after the bite. The left arm and hand were never the same following the bite.
This video is truly mesmerizing! Thanks to the editorial board and film crew for showcasing the captivating world of venomous snakes with such depth and insight.
This episode is absolutely gripping! 😮 The way you showcased the world's most venomous snakes is both informative and thrilling. I learned so much about their behaviors and the dynamics of predator interactions. Thank you for creating such a fascinating documentary-can't wait for more episodes
This was such an exciting episode! 🎉 I’m fascinated by snakes, and this documentary did a fantastic job of highlighting their beauty and danger. I’m already looking forward to the next episode! Keep it up
While I found the episode interesting, I think some parts could have been a bit more in-depth. 🤔 I wanted to learn more about the conservation efforts for these snakes. Overall, a good watch, though
@@apijopir1142
All snakes: „Don’t boop my snoot“ 😂
Snakes have magnificent skin 😍
THANK YOU FOR YOUR DOCUMENTARIES ON TH-cam 🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉
Friends, Give me love ❤❤
Snakes don't attack humans, they just defend themselves.
Friends, give me love ❤
While you’re correct for the most part; certain snakes have, indeed, attacked people. And have eaten them.
The cases are EXTREMELY few and far between…but there are confirmed cases.
I agree with you 🎉 but still scared them 😢
Some of the deadliest snakes in the world are particularly docile and like to hide. 🙀🙀🙀🙀🙀🙀 it’s a pattern in nature, believe it or not.
I really like videos like this, it helps me know more about animals
Wow, I never realized how strategic these snakes are when they hunt! The king cobra’s movements gave me chills. 🐍🔥
I know that vipers are venomous, but I have to admit that their beauty is what makes me adore them.
I really enjoy watching snake videos, thank you😆
The David Weather's incident is "classic". I remember seeing that when I was a kid. I was always shocked and glad he was ok. The wound later abscessing was gnarly!
You mean the guy who got bitten on his abdomen? At least he survived. I kinda feel sorry for him and the snake too. If you remember, snakes attack when they feel threatened, if they are trained to be assassins (kinda like in that one Sherlock Holmes story 'The Speckled Band') or when they just feel hungry.🐍🍗🍖
I respect him cause he does his own stunts 😌 7:59
Valuable information
Masterpiece.
Hi dear, give me love
@@urantapakhi2005
I don't understand
Nominate Bruce for an Academy award 😂😂
The narration is so engaging-it adds a whole new layer of depth to the documentary.
My favourite channel
The thought of being in a forest where deadly snakes are in the trees above 🐍👀 scares me .
😂😂😂😂😂 he’s so calm about , like matter of fact.
Really exciting video❤💥👋
Your channel is awesome! I really like the way you introduce wildlife with interesting information and vivid images. This is a valuable source of knowledge for those who love nature and want to learn about wild life. Hope the channel continues to grow and have more interesting videos!
I think you should post daily cuz your videos are the best
I enjoyed watching the deadliest snakes to see how they behave of being caught by humans handling them
*38:39** Oh my god! This guy must be terrified of the monster!*
🤣🤣🤣
If it were me, I would probably be like him. 😨😨😨
They're just animals. Not monsters and it's very rare for this to happen as humans are not typically seen as prey.
Yes it's always an awful thing and scary when a human gets killed so unexpectedly, but big cats, bears, leopards have killed and eaten way more than snakes have.
Because most snakes cannot swallow past the shoulders of an adult, unless its a smaller adult or child and even that's also rare.
My heart goes out to anyone who's killed before their time. 😢
@@metalmamasue3680 Same, Rest in peace for the victims who were killed by snakes. 🕊️
42:43 This 911 call is honestly depressing because a 2 year old child was strangled to death. 😢
Free handing venomous snakes is just stupidity
In my opinion, animals that are meant to be in the wild are not meant to be pets. They will most likely turn against their owner. Life is more important than to have such animals as pets.
Isn't that just about every domesticated pet? For example, most dogs and cats would be able to survive in the wild. What's your particular line in the sand? No amphibians, reptiles, birds?
Nice video ❤ Love it!
Cute video 😊
To own a powerful constrictor, that can grow to 20 plus feet and think you can CONTROL it, is absolutely mind boggling!
Pretty good information about snakes
Having snakes as pets is kinda dangerous unlike dogs, snakes has no emotions. You can't expect that they will love you in return
More when predators attack ❤
38:38 Oh my god! This guy must be scared of the monster!😰😰😰😰😰😰
very helpful video, thank you
Show me a 7 foot gaboon, I’ll wait 😂
Largest documented Gaboon viper Bitis gabonica 6.9 ft 47 lbs Fresno Chaffe Zoo is the heaviest documented venomous snake in captivity.
Eastern Diamondback rattlesnake Crotalas admanteus 7.9 ft 34 lbs shot by a hunter named Rutledge in 1946 is the heaviest venomous snake documented in the wild.
No one who truly loves snakes would ever keep them as pets. Keeping shelves of large snakes in glass tanks is cruel. They were born to slither on ground/trees not coiled in a cage. This is equivalent to a human living in a closet and I don't mean a celebrity's closet.
I agree
🐍 They were lizards before snakes🦎
Imagine lizards with 2 fang like teeth that can inject venom once it bites its victims. Dope..
the video is awesome
oh my that python photo was scary :/
I like these shows but not the snakes in real life.
Excellent!
exactly! i agree !!! animals defend themselves, Nothing MORE
Excelente vídeo!
I know a rattlesnake is not the deadliest snake of all time but it's definitely one of the most intimidating looking snakes on planet earth without question 🫣
Good bye Juan 😅😂😂
Stop fear mongering, snakes just want to be left alone. Also stop calling them monsters and super serpents
Couldn't move his legs then drives a car.
Start it in gear
AND how many people die because of "Pet" dogs? A heck of a lot more than pet snakes do. Just saying....
That is the horrible comparison every one has a dog… like 10 people in the country keep venomous snakes.
How did bruce manage to drive the car if his legs weren't working anymore...........
Hand controls.
😂it was a tesla
Start it in gear
13:32 How do Inland Taipan found in these areas that along with human ? I think it's coastal taipan that can be found near human population , at this clip it's look exactly like coastal taipan .
excekllent
Did anyone see how he was treating that cobra, grabbing its head and being so rough, I felt worse for the snake than him, he had chance after chance to close lid and instead keep holding it up and showing off for camera
I wait for episode 2...
20 million? The titanaboa is 60 million. Accuracy, come on people.
I thought only cameramen in the city was inconsiderate.. poor Bruce.
❤❤❤❤ 😊😊
She pasted away , that’s sad I see it in her sister’s eyes. 😢
This is why she shouldn't have owned those snakes
13:55 See now, it's clear that you're showing the coastal taipan while mentioned the inland taipan.
World's Most Venomous Snakes and Black Mamba is not even mentioned??
Inland Taipan ld 50 00.25 mgkg SC with its presynatic and postsynatic neurotoxic venom is 15 times more toxic than the venom of the Black Mamba ld 50 0.341 mgkg SC with neurotoxic and cardiovascular toxins.
awesome
Insurance should not cover funeral expenses for those who killed by their pet snakes.
Gaboon viper has neurotoxic venom and emotoxic.Not emotoxic alone
Respectfully disagree that the rattle snake is found everywhere in the US
Facts.
How he drive if he can’t utilize his legs?
Trying to pick it up was dumb
To kill any one not called defence ! Stay away from venomous snake ...
I wonder what Davids hospital bill was.
He should have known better to touch his mouth to where he was attacked by the snake 🐍
16:14 This is unacceptable. King Cobra is not a true cobra
44:05 snake;s behaviour is not unique
humans behaviour is unique
Why did they kill all her snakes its not there fault they could of just identified them then look at the side effects
18:03 holding a snake like that, and expect it not to bike you????
I mean some snacks dose attack humans but they also can be good to us to warn us
Snakes and I have an agreement,I dont go to the wild and they dont come to the city!!
These pythons are really scary
Number 1 rule after being big do not try and suk out the damned venom cause u will cause more problems then solving them U DO NOT WANT RATTLE SNAKE VENOM N UR MOUTH
As long as you have no open sores in your mouth, it won't hurt you as much as it does being injected into your body.
Poison is ingested, venom is injected. Poison makes you sick in your mouth or being swallowed more than venom does.
Venom is just proteins that stomach acid breaks down.
But sucking the venom out wastes time and isn't an effective way to remove it once injected into your body. You are far better off staying calm and getting to medical help asap, antivenom is the only thing that stops the effects of venom.
I hope that helps.
I couldn't think of something more American than a rattle snake. Obnoxious, loud, and thinks it's tough but is a girly snake 😆
16:09 Come on you're showing spectacled cobra while mentionong monocle cobra
So what..it's still great footage
@@fuiplu Though the footage is great why you're showing different species ... It's not just a random video, it's a documentary
In indonesia ular gibug (ground viper/pit viper/Calloselasma rhodostoma) is the most dangerous venomous snake, we usually call it ular ranjau darat (landmine snake) because this snake doing very well camoflage like a landmine. If you step on this snake you will meet God more faster along with your blood flow😅😵
Snakes are by no means pets they are wild animals also can't be tamed for nothing .
It depends on the snake.
@gigahorse1475 🤣🤣🤣 snake 🐍 a pet not for me
allah akbar
Did he say 22 ft python? I don’t think anyone has ever caught one over 20?
Reticulated Pythons are huge like anaconda, there's a ton of different pythons, I think ball pythons are the smallest of the python family... and Reticulated Pythons are the biggest of the pythons
They do say its a reticulated python... they grow up to 30 ft. long or so...
@@Kat_Catch_22 are you single?
Buddy it's true, reticulated pythons some even grown to 20-24 feet but they are not like anaconda in terms of bulk
Katherine is not very smart and her father shouldn't have let her keep the snake, very impractical and irresponsible
Watching
You got a Burmese Python and a baby? Talk about responsible parenting. 🙄😡
They are snack of honerbudger
Don't mess with these anacondas
As much as they demonized the constrictor snakes in this video it should be know that big constrictor snakes kill 0 - 2 people a year worldwide (a little less then the amount of people killed by vending machines falling over), dogs kill 25,000 - 35,000 people in that same time. A minimum body count difference of 12,500 to 1.
39:53 That is a reticulated python in the photo (the only snake that has ever tried to eat a person) and from 40:11 on was a Burmese python, a less aggressive snake that has never tried to eat a person. That footage is disinformation.
One thing they did get right was Gaboon vipers are very dangerous, unless you have ant venom and zoo keeping experience don't keep Gaboon vipers as pets. Get a ball python or a dwarf Burmese python no venom and they can't overpower a person.
Why isn’t anti-venom stocked at a nearby hospital of one who has one? Like a venom registry? I kind of figured that would be part of the expectation for ownership 🤷♀️
The snake isn’t a local snake. They have the antivenin for local snakes.
If it hemotoxic how come he's having nurotoxin symptoms
😮😮😮
Because venom can vary depending on location even in the same species of snakes. Rattlesnakes can have primarily hemotoxic venom but also some neurotoxins too, Depending on the species of the snakes and what they prey on most.
They can film a good anaconda movie 😅
They said the saw toothed viper is the world’s deadliest. I thought the Island Taipan was the deadliest.
Inland Taipans have the most toxic venom. But there are other factors that can make a snake deadlier like how close they are to humans and how common they are.
WE ARE VENOM
20 million years ago ? LOL
Eophis underwoodi was a small four legged snake discovered 165 million years ago but the gene for venom dates back over two hundred million years ago. Palientologist who studied all forms of fossilized life can give accurate dates going back over three hundred million years ago . Boa contrictors and Anacondas still have spurs on their skeletons where legs used to be 150 million years ago. These are scientific facts not based on religion.
At the end, in addition to curiosity, adoration and obsession should be selfishness.
Can anyone please explain how a snake like anacondas and reticulated pythons are able to consume animals with antlers and horns...I never knew how they could without killing themselves in the process
11:44 For anyone who wonderd: Boomslang is Dutch for tree snake
Boomslang translation in Dutch and Afrikaans means tree snake Colubridae family of snakes which have rear fangs with hemotoxic venom ld 50 12.5 mgkg SC is the most toxic venomous snake in Africa.
Pronounced Boomslang boom is tree and slang is snake in Dutch and Afrikaans.
didn't really feel bad for david...
Did they really not put Australia in the list 😂 literally 10 of the most venomous snakes are from Australia