Imagine some giant aliens come down to Earth in a crazy mech suit that lets them exist in a nitrogen-filled atmosphere...and all they want to do is hold your hand for a minute.
@@Shiva-mh6td If u validate in your own research the existence of intelligent extraterrestrial life forms visting us ,& the amount of evidence by now it seems to lead to very few conclusions .1.they have been here before us & have been not only watching but had direct interaction with our evolution,creation & progression for some unknown agenda .2.they are merely curious visitors studying us like the octopus in the ocean & tossing us back into the ocean of humanity with ufos being possible drones 3.we are some unkown value to them & they need us or want something from us as a resource.4.(the conspiracy one)they have made contact with our leaders & governments present / past & have made a pact or deal with them for some shared gained that is covered up above all else to the highest echelons of society.for what purpose besides control,dominion, & livestock i cant really say.
Did you know that on male Octopi, one of 8 tentacles is a penis? It's hard to tell which one, so we may never know if the Diver shaked his hand, or jerked him off XD
The most interesting thing to me in this video was when the octopus was trying to really get close but the diver quickly reacted defensively and so did the octopus, like somehow it knew that the diver got scared so the octopus backed off.
^THIS^ I could be wrong, but I think that non-apex predatory animals are highly empathetic by nature. Being able to interpret the mindset of prey likely makes them more effective predators, while interpreting the mindset of their own potential predators could keep them off the menu. I also believe that people may be losing the ability to empathize because our developments in farming, language, etc. lessen our need for such interpretation, but I digress. My rant is over. Such an amazing creature.
That very well could be. But perhaps it’s also just reacting to the movements defensively. That’s a big octopus sure, but the diver is big too and perhaps it doesn’t want to get into a fight it couldn’t win. We will probably never know. That’s the real shame of it. It is cool that it took interest in him though. Skin contact like that is how they taste and smell. The hand is not part of the octopus’s diet so it didn’t want to eat him, but it prolly woulda enveloped him for a bit to try and find out more. Such a fantastically awesome creature.
1) "Food? No." 2) "Enemy? Maybe, let's be careful" 3) "Damn, weird thing is smart. He spotted my fabulous camouflage." 4) "Now thing want to touch me with his strange tentacles, oooo what a bizarre creature." 5) "Thing say hello. Thing seems friendly. Let's have a hug! So many dumb fish in this place, I'm glad to meet something as clever as I am!" 6) "No hug? Thing scared. Thing reject my hug. Oh. I understand. Let's not go too fast with this love, thing don't want to be eaten and me either. After all, the survival before games." In case you ask i speak octopus
This is by far the most intelligent species of any invertebrate, and we still are learning so much about them, but a few things I can tell you is that the largest Giant Pacific Octopus was nearly 200 lbs, pretty impressive for only a 3 year lifespan, also with eight arms totaling 270 suckers per arm their unbelievably strong, usually captive specimens in aquariums are much more friendly then their wild counterparts cause they interact with their handlers on a regular basis.
Indeed, the female has to not eat for several months to oxygenate and protect her eggs. As a result, by the end they die due to pure exhaustion of resources.
@Thomas Paine Their nervous system/mental processing is quite stunning. The primary main brain sends the info to the arms nerve mass, and then the arms act accordingly independent of each other. In a nutshell, an octopus has to visually see what it's arms are doing to process its movements/understand it's relative position to the rest of it's body
TheSchmeister to my understanding there's only one penis tentacle and imagine what would happen if their females did not die protecting their young for example if a female where to get pregnant and have it a clutch of eggs she would guard theme unmoving till she died imagine if the mother didn't die and was able to teach what she learnt to the babies then how smart would they get cause for octopuses the mail doesn't stay
@@bengt3902 almost every hand you've ever shaken that belonged to a male has had a pp on it. cut to the chase and shake their pp instead, like this diver
Dude this might as well be aliens interacting with humans. This interaction is mind blowing. It shows how intelligent both sides are and the mutual respect they have to one another.
Its one representative of each species, like asians eat octopus there might be octopus that will attack human, all i wanna say is all races have bad and good humans but some races are dominated by cruel, disgusting people
@@danibot3000 on an off note, cephalopods are actually benefitting from global warming and overfishing. The warmer seas give them more time to breed, and the fish they compete with are dying out, giving them a boost over other creatures among the destruction. Them, many cnidarians, and some starfish are actually doing better from our havoc to some extent.
@@Shiva-mh6td I think he was making a joke about how Japanese people fetishize tentacles and usually incorporate it to not only be a part of their porn but also their TV shows such as with Anime. The joke fell flat but I got what he was aiming for.
Because a "hug" could progress to "what are these funny tube things? Let me just tug on them since I'm already latched onto and braced on you with eight arms..."
@@toniotrussardi8126 unlikely doesnt mean impossible though. It could have just been a singular freak occurence of it happening that someone was fortunate enough to catch on tape.
@Jason Woods yes and hawks are well known to eat snakes. I've seen a snake bite a hawk as it swooped down, killing him, and then eating him. Sure it's one in a million but that sort of stuff happens sometimes.
Octopodes are one of the most intelligent species on Earth, capable of abstract thought, and known for both their playfulness and their notorious skills as escape artists. The nicest thing about them, in my opinion, is that their intelligence is so clearly _alien_ to ours. Unlike cetaceans, higher primates, and corvids, which have comparable intelligence and think in ways at least recognizable to us, octopodes think in ways we can't even imagine, much less comprehend. They are so alien, in fact, that there is a legitimate hypothesis that they may have evolved from life which arrived from off-earth through panspermia.
The thing is though if you take Octopus dna and Human dna they are so similar that thinking they came from somewhere else would be silly. The only way they could’ve come from off-earth is if all complex life starts the same way as on Earth. Maybe there is only 1 way for complex life to start? If that’s the case then it wouldn’t matter if they are from here or somewhere else. We all look the same under a microscope.
I think it is a great way for us to practice communication with extraterrestrial life, should the chance arrive. Who isn’t to say that Octopus’ are our test sent by intelligent life to see if we are smart enough to communicate with them without too much issue. I’m not saying that is what’s going on, but to the Octopus, the water is their air, and the air is their space. Perhaps we could conduct a few more tests with them in our “environment” finding how we can make equipment for them to survive in our biome. We have so many things to learn from, and move forward, to get more information, but we, as a species can’t even communicate around the planet without having language barriers. I don’t know. I might be rambling, but I think learning to properly communicate with creatures such as these are filled with so much scientific potential, not only for learning about octopus, but also learning of different ways living things can think, learn, and, most importantly, how knowledge can be exchanged effectively between human, and non-human intelligent life, such as dolphins, octopus, and potentially, find some ways to streamline not only our language barrier problem, but for potential non Earth life. Think about it. If the diver wasn’t smart enough to show that octopus that there is something wrong, or we weren’t able to notice that the octopus was curious about the bubbles, this interaction could have been deadly, should the octopus snag or break something on the diver’s life support. If we had no idea what an octopus was, but we knew it was intelligent, and it killed a diver, that wouldn’t bode well to the public. When in reality, the octopus was curious and had no intention of creating such a negative impact on the human race. For all we know, that could be the first time an octopus saw a human. Most wildlife don’t want anything to do with humans, other than if it involves their own survival. We need to break out of this world we have, we need to expand our horizons. Let’s get to understand intelligent life on our own planet first before venturing out into the stars, shall we? We could learn a thing or two from these “animals.” (Heads up, Humans are animals too, don’t associate that word with less intelligence.) And this time, shall we make sure we don’t make a negative connotation towards something that doesn’t look exactly like us?
+Kieran Ennis Octopodes gather in underwater caves for meetings where they rapidly flash colours across their skin at each other. No one knows for certain why they do this, but there is a hypothesis that they're _talking._ Considering that they are known to use tools and that they have grasping tentacles which are _more_ dextrous than primate fingers, the only reason they didn't beat us to establishing a civilization is that underwater fire is a lot more difficult than open-air fire.
He is beautiful! And enormous! He is very pensive, and very reactive to the diver! He seemed to realize the diver was getting freaked out and was really polite and backed off. Such incredible creatures!
I love the way they reacted to each other. Both were very sensitive like they were on the same level. ( Don't get me wrong I just mean there were Both full of respect for each other and were interested in touching the "thing" they faced to get to know it . ) sorry for my terrible grammar. I am from Germany:)
Alina Sander, Germans are perfectionists with their own grammar and become better at English than others.. which is very easy to do these days so don't apologise :) P.s. octopus are smarter than humans, I know as I was one a few lifetimes ago and yet have carried previous ways of knowing (cognitive, spatial, and about 14 other senses) into my present. I have to morph now and then to get some kinetic emotions out of my system.
Octopus and Humans share mostly the same type of sensitive perception. We both feel things from our "hands". If you have cats for instance, when you present your hand to them you'll notice they'll rub them with their sensitive hair of their head. It's how animal say "hello!" : By contacting the part that are the most sensitive.
These interactions are endlessly fascinating. The long reach out to touch the divers mask, eyes moving watching the bubbles clearly thinking *something* Protect these guys at all cost
I'd be so terrified. Those things are super strong and super fast, not to mention insanely smart. They could kill quite effectively without so much as a thought, but this one just wanted a handshake. Cute.
A kinda dangerous thing to do, as the main well known danger of diving near octopuses is that they tend to rip your face mask right off, and then obviously its not easy to wrestle the thing for it back.
I love when people get all anthropomorphic--the octopus was probably testing him out to see if he was edible. But, yeah, call it being 'friendly' if you want. 🤣
I saw your Dodo feature of this experience and loved your explanation. "Was like meeting an alien" So beautiful. I just subscribed and look forward to seeing and hearing more from you. Thanks for sharing!
Giant Pacific octopus has to be one of my favorite sea creatures you don't get a sense of how big or strong they are until you've actually been with them
The way the guy reached out to the octopus and it reached back gently and politely. That is like what you'd expect from another human if you had no language in common and strangely different appearance. Intelligence recognises intelligence. This wasn't a man and an animal, this was a man and another person. A cephalopod person, but a person nonetheless.
Octopus: Dude i'm not your prom date, quit holding my hand. Diver: but your so suction cuppy and squishy, Octopus:I'm out of here, your starting to creep me out.
The interesting thing about octopuses is that their intelligence rivals that of human children, but they are incapable of teaching their young because the fathers abandon the family and the mothers starve themselves waiting for the eggs to hatch. So every new generation has to teach itself everything from scratch. Imagine how quickly they could advance if we could bridge that generational gap.
Id be so happy and honoured to be meeting her but terrifying at the same time. They're so damn strong if it wanted you broken it could, their smart too so it would notice weak points to quickly with every arm..... Want one
That's the most beautiful encounter you can have with a marine creature after dolphins. It's nice because sometimes they interact with you using the tentacles, and they tease you. Love them octopuses.
I just realized that *ALL* of my favorite animals are all highly intelligent. _Octopi_ _Beluga whales_ _Elephants_ _The smart breeds of dogs(Broder collies, German shepherds & Hungarian mudis)_ _Indian Ring Parakeets_ _Foxes_
@@jonhy8351 Perhaps not but we do unspeakable things to animals nonetheless. Worth reflecting on how things which appear normal become accepted - it will help clarify how some people in a foreign land find it acceptable to eat an octupus alive.
What I think I'd going on with most of animals out there that they're evolving, they can tell a friendly human from a hunter, but of course doesn't apply to all animals, animals of pray are born to kill instantly: such as lions, tigers, etc.
I love how, as soon as he realizes that you have put your glove back on and he can't feel and taste your skin anymore, he curls up his tentacles and backs off, too. They are intelligent in a way we still can't grasp. If it wasn't for their limited life span this would be an interesting co-existence...
Imagine some giant aliens come down to Earth in a crazy mech suit that lets them exist in a nitrogen-filled atmosphere...and all they want to do is hold your hand for a minute.
Closer to the truth than u realize.
@@Edward-6909 tell me about it
@@user-yd4tm3gl8s "but they are born to be eaten and milked" they'll say.
@@Shiva-mh6td If u validate in your own research the existence of intelligent extraterrestrial life forms visting us ,& the amount of evidence by now it seems to lead to very few conclusions .1.they have been here before us & have been not only watching but had direct interaction with our evolution,creation & progression for some unknown agenda .2.they are merely curious visitors studying us like the octopus in the ocean & tossing us back into the ocean of humanity with ufos being possible drones 3.we are some unkown value to them & they need us or want something from us as a resource.4.(the conspiracy one)they have made contact with our leaders & governments present / past & have made a pact or deal with them for some shared gained that is covered up above all else to the highest echelons of society.for what purpose besides control,dominion, & livestock i cant really say.
Human will think it is a peace sign but actually alien just play with their food
Remember, when shaking hands with an octopus, it's rude to only shake one arm.
you must shake them all!
@@popsicIes only the highest respect for our octopi friends
This comment reminds me of that one episode of Spongebob where Spongebob says “Remember: it’s illegal to lick doorknobs on other planets.”
Weird Fantasy one of the tentacles is also a penis
@@Ake-TL the handjob russian roulette.
couple of handshakes *alright, gimme a hug* no? *pulls back*
This is the best comment to summarize the video
diver had to be careful because giant octopuses are strong and could have damaged his equipment
atorsionx this is like the freaking boys in middle school
Wait.
Careful getting a hug from something with a big powerful beak that can bite chunks out of you while hugging you.
Human -- Touchy touchy?
Octopus -- OK
Octopus -- More touchy?
Human -- No! Back off!
Human is behaving like a cat. How the turntables have....
Michael Scott lmaooo
No it’s “how the turntables...”😂
Did you know that on male Octopi, one of 8 tentacles is a penis? It's hard to tell which one, so we may never know if the Diver shaked his hand, or jerked him off XD
@@John-X 3:11 lol
3:14 "You have my blessings my child"
"Cthulhu be with you."
@@-aa6991 "Praise be to Dagon"
"You have been forgiven for your sins"
Letting one so close to your mask feels risky
LMAO
The most interesting thing to me in this video was when the octopus was trying to really get close but the diver quickly reacted defensively and so did the octopus, like somehow it knew that the diver got scared so the octopus backed off.
This got to me
Especially when right after that moment, the diver looks into the camera @ 02:29 like "did this thing just read my fucking body language?"
^THIS^
I could be wrong, but I think that non-apex predatory animals are highly empathetic by nature. Being able to interpret the mindset of prey likely makes them more effective predators, while interpreting the mindset of their own potential predators could keep them off the menu. I also believe that people may be losing the ability to empathize because our developments in farming, language, etc. lessen our need for such interpretation, but I digress. My rant is over. Such an amazing creature.
Octopus are Socially Intelligent animals that are closest to Humans
That very well could be. But perhaps it’s also just reacting to the movements defensively. That’s a big octopus sure, but the diver is big too and perhaps it doesn’t want to get into a fight it couldn’t win. We will probably never know. That’s the real shame of it. It is cool that it took interest in him though. Skin contact like that is how they taste and smell. The hand is not part of the octopus’s diet so it didn’t want to eat him, but it prolly woulda enveloped him for a bit to try and find out more. Such a fantastically awesome creature.
The craziest part to me is the octopus trying to understand his dive mask and where the bubbles are coming from. Amazing.
Evan G They are extremely intelligent
@@KP-zb1tr like, 80-90 IQ
@@468erpeashooter9 It could be the case not gonna lie, but in this situation, you could say me a more valid number please?
468er/ PeaShooter You sir are incorrect on many levels
468er/ PeaShooter Well you’re not right so...
“Greetings, human”
*smother with tentacles*
arms
*fisherman's wife's dream*
*proceeds to scream like an anime girl*
That octopus is like, "This man-thing seems interesting. Perhaps copulation is possible."
Christopher Miller *plays "call of cthulhu" by metallica in the background*
@@Cortanasboyfriend Better yet: "A Shoggoth on the roof" by H.P. Lovecraft Historical Society.
well... they do the nasty with their tentacles, so the diver may just have lost his virginity.
As the old saying goes: "I've seen enough hentai to know where this is going."
???
It's so weird to see these two animals that live in completely different worlds interact with one another. I wonder what the octopus thinks.
1) "Food? No."
2) "Enemy? Maybe, let's be careful"
3) "Damn, weird thing is smart. He spotted my fabulous camouflage."
4) "Now thing want to touch me with his strange tentacles, oooo what a bizarre creature."
5) "Thing say hello. Thing seems friendly. Let's have a hug! So many dumb fish in this place, I'm glad to meet something as clever as I am!"
6) "No hug? Thing scared. Thing reject my hug. Oh. I understand. Let's not go too fast with this love, thing don't want to be eaten and me either. After all, the survival before games."
In case you ask i speak octopus
@@Meyour67120 😂😂😂🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣😍😍😍🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Probably as fascinated as we are after not being scared
Skid Skid That’s my questions for transgenders
@@Meyour67120 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
“Interesting.”
-Octopus
My homie so polite
Don't let da Japanese see him
Nor Priest uhh i see the both R34 artish and Weabs are running toward this video ready to re-created this scene in their so called art
Nor Priest did anyone say sushi? XD
Nor Priest Or the Chinese
*shakes a finger at it* "no, you can't have that." XD cute
IT’SME_ IamShe, 😆 I know, right? Lol
This is by far the most intelligent species of any invertebrate, and we still are learning so much about them, but a few things I can tell you is that the largest Giant Pacific Octopus was nearly 200 lbs, pretty impressive for only a 3 year lifespan, also with eight arms totaling 270 suckers per arm their unbelievably strong, usually captive specimens in aquariums are much more friendly then their wild counterparts cause they interact with their handlers on a regular basis.
Indeed, the female has to not eat for several months to oxygenate and protect her eggs. As a result, by the end they die due to pure exhaustion of resources.
@Thomas Paine Their nervous system/mental processing is quite stunning. The primary main brain sends the info to the arms nerve mass, and then the arms act accordingly independent of each other. In a nutshell, an octopus has to visually see what it's arms are doing to process its movements/understand it's relative position to the rest of it's body
If only they ahd longer lifes. They can learn, so imagine what they could eventually do
wait, how can a thing so big and so smart has such a short life span ?
Titanime I guess it’s cause it’s in the ocean and not on land but then again it’s how its species evolves
Octopus: Woah. You're weird looking, whatever you are.
Octopus: That's a weird looking fish
It's such a mind-blowing moment when two different species share an intellectual connection....
TheSchmeister I dont want you to get disapointed but according t'm aknowledged ppl on the comment section, they just shared the octopus penis
Hey, hentai is Bae too...
TheSchmeister to my understanding there's only one penis tentacle and imagine what would happen if their females did not die protecting their young for example if a female where to get pregnant and have it a clutch of eggs she would guard theme unmoving till she died imagine if the mother didn't die and was able to teach what she learnt to the babies then how smart would they get cause for octopuses the mail doesn't stay
When the other half of the connection is like 40% brain mass or something like that it’s hard not to. Octopi are insanely smart.
TheSchmeister 3:16 bonk
Diver: "Gib hand?"
Octopus: "okie."
Touches facemask
"Fascinating, I must contemplate this in isolation."
ZuluKasuki i must consult with the elder gods!
@@danteinf12
Yes brother Hunter.
They've somehow developed away to enter our domain. We must consult them.
@@blazermettro2059Yes brother quite the anomaly
@@LumbridgeTaxi Maybe we could do the same, brother?
@@jokerkeyz8805 may i join brother... this has been very fascinating brother😂
Oh that's so cute. He almost is shaking hands with you
Octopus biolgy is weird, trust me I’m a marine biologist in training.
@@bengt3902 all the time and I will be there at the same time as the other one
Don't worry buddy, that ASMR girl can't hurt you here.
Oh God I know who you mean.
As an ambassador of my kind i shall welcome you in the underwater empire of Cthulhu. Let us shake tentacles uhhh "hands"...
@@bengt3902 wait how can you tell-
@@bengt3902
almost every hand you've ever shaken that belonged to a male has had a pp on it. cut to the chase and shake their pp instead, like this diver
They have arms, not tentacles
Amazing to behold the octopus checking out the articles hanging off of the diver. Can't watch octopus videos enough enough. Really enjoy them
I love how the octopus is curious and then tentatively reaches out and touches.
3:12
"Oh Great One, Cthulu, I ask that you spare this one in the day of your arrival on their land."
Hahaha XD
Dude this might as well be aliens interacting with humans. This interaction is mind blowing. It shows how intelligent both sides are and the mutual respect they have to one another.
Agreed. People take this kind of stuff for granted
Except aliens will probably fuck off the moment they learn about flat earthers
Its one representative of each species, like asians eat octopus there might be octopus that will attack human, all i wanna say is all races have bad and good humans but some races are dominated by cruel, disgusting people
Enter the Souyoung...
Speciec that could travel in space would have no desire to "talk" to us. Why would you try to talk with an ant for example
_"I had always wanted to feel an octopus' suckers, so I removed my glove and..."_
*Watch online for free and without registration*
oh my gosh this comment is golden
*Wait this isn’t a lolli*
Me: sees that this was posted about 6 years ago
Me: looks up how long octopus live
Also me: *rest in peace beautiful creature*
Such a intelligent creature, it's a shame that their potential is limited by their aquatic environment and their life span.
And by the destruction of our environment :(
@հokцƽ ρokus that's not true...
@հokцƽ ρokus uhhh lol. Its like this reply is begging for TH-cam comment drama. Grow up.
@հokцƽ ρokus Shut up magic geek.
@@danibot3000 on an off note, cephalopods are actually benefitting from global warming and overfishing. The warmer seas give them more time to breed, and the fish they compete with are dying out, giving them a boost over other creatures among the destruction. Them, many cnidarians, and some starfish are actually doing better from our havoc to some extent.
The octopus sure has a steady arm to film this. Great work!
octoselfie
Wait ................................................
Whot?
Friendly squishy boi
Always remember: if the octopus is male shaking its hand is like russian roulette.
That took me a second
Change the title to "Octopus boops humans snoot"
😆😂
Hunting horn main? 🤔🌾👀🌾
@@jacobherrera4616 idk why you brought up MH but cool
Tfw you will never be booped by an octopus
Stfu
He just met The Great Cthulhu
octopus are actually really smart and they will let you know if they like you or not they remember smells,tastes and people believe it or not
Too smart a creature to simply eat.
Dee. D. That's why u add streamed rice, seaweed nd soy sauce
Pretty funny.
Yeah, we have to fuck them first
@@ricardo3760 wtf is wrong with you
@@Shiva-mh6td I think he was making a joke about how Japanese people fetishize tentacles and usually incorporate it to not only be a part of their porn but also their TV shows such as with Anime. The joke fell flat but I got what he was aiming for.
that is such a cool experience, it seems genuinely curious and looks so regal lol. what a cool animal
"Tell me Human, have you heard of our Lord and savior Cthulhu?"
my guy just wanted a hug, why the diver gotta do him like that :(
Because a "hug" could progress to "what are these funny tube things? Let me just tug on them since I'm already latched onto and braced on you with eight arms..."
OneBiasedOpinion good point, and if the octopus got nervous or scared during a ‘hug’ it might bite with its powerful beak.
@@drnarwhal2888 thats unlikely great whites far too big for an octopus kill one,the video you saw the shark wasnt a great white
@@toniotrussardi8126 unlikely doesnt mean impossible though. It could have just been a singular freak occurence of it happening that someone was fortunate enough to catch on tape.
@Jason Woods yes and hawks are well known to eat snakes. I've seen a snake bite a hawk as it swooped down, killing him, and then eating him. Sure it's one in a million but that sort of stuff happens sometimes.
octopus: aye bruh bring it in couz.
diver: i aint like that my nigga!
This is so beautiful...like a dream. You must think of this encounter often. It was a blessing and I thank you for sharing..xoxo
Octopodes are one of the most intelligent species on Earth, capable of abstract thought, and known for both their playfulness and their notorious skills as escape artists. The nicest thing about them, in my opinion, is that their intelligence is so clearly _alien_ to ours. Unlike cetaceans, higher primates, and corvids, which have comparable intelligence and think in ways at least recognizable to us, octopodes think in ways we can't even imagine, much less comprehend. They are so alien, in fact, that there is a legitimate hypothesis that they may have evolved from life which arrived from off-earth through panspermia.
The thing is though if you take Octopus dna and Human dna they are so similar that thinking they came from somewhere else would be silly. The only way they could’ve come from off-earth is if all complex life starts the same way as on Earth. Maybe there is only 1 way for complex life to start? If that’s the case then it wouldn’t matter if they are from here or somewhere else. We all look the same under a microscope.
As a first year biotech student, I have always been fascinated by biology studies such as this one, I really appreciate and admire you job guys
I think it is a great way for us to practice communication with extraterrestrial life, should the chance arrive. Who isn’t to say that Octopus’ are our test sent by intelligent life to see if we are smart enough to communicate with them without too much issue.
I’m not saying that is what’s going on, but to the Octopus, the water is their air, and the air is their space. Perhaps we could conduct a few more tests with them in our “environment” finding how we can make equipment for them to survive in our biome. We have so many things to learn from, and move forward, to get more information, but we, as a species can’t even communicate around the planet without having language barriers.
I don’t know. I might be rambling, but I think learning to properly communicate with creatures such as these are filled with so much scientific potential, not only for learning about octopus, but also learning of different ways living things can think, learn, and, most importantly, how knowledge can be exchanged effectively between human, and non-human intelligent life, such as dolphins, octopus, and potentially, find some ways to streamline not only our language barrier problem, but for potential non Earth life.
Think about it. If the diver wasn’t smart enough to show that octopus that there is something wrong, or we weren’t able to notice that the octopus was curious about the bubbles, this interaction could have been deadly, should the octopus snag or break something on the diver’s life support.
If we had no idea what an octopus was, but we knew it was intelligent, and it killed a diver, that wouldn’t bode well to the public. When in reality, the octopus was curious and had no intention of creating such a negative impact on the human race. For all we know, that could be the first time an octopus saw a human.
Most wildlife don’t want anything to do with humans, other than if it involves their own survival. We need to break out of this world we have, we need to expand our horizons. Let’s get to understand intelligent life on our own planet first before venturing out into the stars, shall we? We could learn a thing or two from these “animals.”
(Heads up, Humans are animals too, don’t associate that word with less intelligence.)
And this time, shall we make sure we don’t make a negative connotation towards something that doesn’t look exactly like us?
+Kieran Ennis Octopodes gather in underwater caves for meetings where they rapidly flash colours across their skin at each other. No one knows for certain why they do this, but there is a hypothesis that they're _talking._ Considering that they are known to use tools and that they have grasping tentacles which are _more_ dextrous than primate fingers, the only reason they didn't beat us to establishing a civilization is that underwater fire is a lot more difficult than open-air fire.
"Bro stop touching me"
He is beautiful! And enormous! He is very pensive, and very reactive to the diver! He seemed to realize the diver was getting freaked out and was really polite and backed off. Such incredible creatures!
I love the way they reacted to each other. Both were very sensitive like they were on the same level. ( Don't get me wrong I just mean there were Both full of respect for each other and were interested in touching the "thing" they faced to get to know it . )
sorry for my terrible grammar. I am from Germany:)
Alina Sander, Germans are perfectionists with their own grammar and become better at English than others.. which is very easy to do these days so don't apologise :) P.s. octopus are smarter than humans, I know as I was one a few lifetimes ago and yet have carried previous ways of knowing (cognitive, spatial, and about 14 other senses) into my present. I have to morph now and then to get some kinetic emotions out of my system.
Octopus and Humans share mostly the same type of sensitive perception. We both feel things from our "hands".
If you have cats for instance, when you present your hand to them you'll notice they'll rub them with their sensitive hair of their head. It's how animal say "hello!" : By contacting the part that are the most sensitive.
The octopus was like: Take my tentacle, you my pale monochromatic friend and follow me, I'll show you the secrets of the ocean.
I love how the octopus stopped once he touched your face. Just a curious fella! So cute how it kept giving handshakes.
It's so communicatable and effectionate. Seems before the octopus left, it gave the diver a pet on the side of his face. Sweet
I’m watching this at 2 am and for some reason this made me start crying real tears
you are sensitive...
it's okay sweetheart
"i swear, he was touching me on weird places"
*"show us on the doll Jamie"*
These interactions are endlessly fascinating.
The long reach out to touch the divers mask, eyes moving watching the bubbles clearly thinking *something*
Protect these guys at all cost
Diver: "Back off!"
Octopus: "Bro I was just trying to untangle your O2 cable."
It was so interested in your bare hand because it has taste buds in his suckers and probably determined that you were tasty.
*Everyone gangsta unless that thing hugs your face*
I'd be so terrified. Those things are super strong and super fast, not to mention insanely smart.
They could kill quite effectively without so much as a thought, but this one just wanted a handshake.
Cute.
At first it was shy... But then it became so curious. Really awesome footage.
"I m... shy...."
After 2 min
2:18 "You are mine!!!"
A kinda dangerous thing to do, as the main well known danger of diving near octopuses is that they tend to rip your face mask right off, and then obviously its not easy to wrestle the thing for it back.
Me: (sees an octopus). Ahh one of many intelligent creatures of the marine world.
(Sees a squid). I'm eating calamari tonight boys.
I love when people get all anthropomorphic--the octopus was probably testing him out to see if he was edible. But, yeah, call it being 'friendly' if you want. 🤣
This is definitely another theory which might be true
2 smart bois holding hands
I can’t even express how much I love Giant Pacific Octopuses!! There just such astonishing cephalopods.
Octopus: "You're a strange one, where are the rest of your arms?"
I saw your Dodo feature of this experience and loved your explanation. "Was like meeting an alien" So beautiful. I just subscribed and look forward to seeing and hearing more from you. Thanks for sharing!
Earth has the most interesting aliens
Giant Pacific octopus has to be one of my favorite sea creatures you don't get a sense of how big or strong they are until you've actually been with them
Continuation of video to be found on Redtube?
Han Ng try hentai haven 😂
I find this to be so interesting! It's like the octopus is studying the diver and is giving him the same trust that the diver is giving him!
We were once again United by the algorithm I see.
The way the guy reached out to the octopus and it reached back gently and politely. That is like what you'd expect from another human if you had no language in common and strangely different appearance.
Intelligence recognises intelligence. This wasn't a man and an animal, this was a man and another person. A cephalopod person, but a person nonetheless.
3:10 THIS IS SO CUTE HE’S PUTTING HIS TENTACLE ON YOUR FOREHEAD AS IN A LAST GOODBYE AND IT SEEMED SO AFFECTIONATE
he was actually probably just curious about his diving mask, as he was also inspecting the hoses and putting it's arm where the air comes out
Octopus: Dude i'm not your prom date, quit holding my hand.
Diver: but your so suction cuppy and squishy,
Octopus:I'm out of here, your starting to creep me out.
The interesting thing about octopuses is that their intelligence rivals that of human children, but they are incapable of teaching their young because the fathers abandon the family and the mothers starve themselves waiting for the eggs to hatch. So every new generation has to teach itself everything from scratch. Imagine how quickly they could advance if we could bridge that generational gap.
Marcel la Rastaban I would help fund that research for sure
@Catamulch Cake You should see a doctor.
Be careful what you wish for:
Diver “a handshake?”
Octopus “nah dude...HUGGS”
Diver “AARGHHHH😱”
This is how hentai begins
Yeah fuck u bitch
Nigga what??😂
HNTR KLLR I already thought about it before the video started
Bruh this a cute innocent moment why you gotta sexualize the damn octopus
Red Moon 96 come on bro, you know that octopus was thinking some naughty thoughts. XD
They are like a living fractal entity, so trippy and soothing to see them process information
You can tell they are smart creatures.
Id be so happy and honoured to be meeting her but terrifying at the same time. They're so damn strong if it wanted you broken it could, their smart too so it would notice weak points to quickly with every arm..... Want one
I envy you. I always wanted to meet an Octopus D:
That's the most beautiful encounter you can have with a marine creature after dolphins. It's nice because sometimes they interact with you using the tentacles, and they tease you. Love them octopuses.
Octopus so smart 🐙👍
meowmeow meow *octopi
I love how both of them are curious to touch each other.. Both the human and the octopus. Cute.
It’s crazy how smart these things are tho
This is the cutest youtube recommendation I saw this week.
but when aliens gonna arrive are they gonna touching us and play with us that would be funny lol
Damn, so _that's_ what a LV 100 octopus looks like. Straight up raid boss-tier animal.
I just realized that *ALL* of my favorite animals are all highly intelligent.
_Octopi_
_Beluga whales_
_Elephants_
_The smart breeds of dogs(Broder collies, German shepherds & Hungarian mudis)_ _Indian Ring Parakeets_
_Foxes_
Octopuses
+Wat ar Yoo DOIN I My SWAMP! Human is one of my favorite animals not most favorite and also orcas are smart my favorite
Wat ar Yoo DOIN in My SWAMP! Your standards are too high...
Octopuses *
“What do you want, strange four-limbed creature?! Oh.....you’re friendly? Ok :3 “
*"C L I M B"*
I am now warm and fuzzy inside.
I love octopus. Very endearing for whatever reason.
Asians be like “friendly intelligent animal let’s eat “
Yeah, asians are the only people who eat octopodes. Europeans totally don't do that
Puckosar lmao no. It’s just Asians that eat them live.
Friendly intelligent animals like pigs, cows, ducks, chickens, turkeys, squids ...
But we don't eat them Raw
@@jonhy8351 Perhaps not but we do unspeakable things to animals nonetheless. Worth reflecting on how things which appear normal become accepted - it will help clarify how some people in a foreign land find it acceptable to eat an octupus alive.
The more video of octopi I see the more adorable I find them.
He’s trying to eat the camera lol 😂
If Octopi lived longer they would conquer the Earth
Texture wise, hes not being friendly. Just showing you warnings.
daisx beohfox How
Giant Pacific octopuses also turn red and bumpy when they feel curious. If it was trying to scare the diver off, it would make itself huge and puffy.
@@BizzarreProductions Don't they flash, too, if they were being aggressive? This guy didn't seem to flash at all to me
The diver didn't know that the first tentacle wasn't really a tentacle *giggles*
What I think I'd going on with most of animals out there that they're evolving, they can tell a friendly human from a hunter, but of course doesn't apply to all animals, animals of pray are born to kill instantly: such as lions, tigers, etc.
octopuse can surprisingly read body language pretty well. it could probably tell that this guy wasn't meaning to end its life
Humans will bond with anything and it's rad.
I've heard they'll try to take off your mask & regulator!
Octopus: *I JUST WANNA SHAKE HIS HAND!!!*
I love how, as soon as he realizes that you have put your glove back on and he can't feel and taste your skin anymore, he curls up his tentacles and backs off, too. They are intelligent in a way we still can't grasp. If it wasn't for their limited life span this would be an interesting co-existence...
Squidwards met a strange fish today
lets be honest, 6 year passes this octopus already became cuisine