@@fvancedThose caged wild animals live better than you or me, or the animals in the wild, so kindly shut up and put your guasi care about animals where it actually helps them, instead of pretending to be appalled online.
@@pippishortstocking7913no they don't they groom them but the baby's are small so it looks like there kissing do your research next time kissing isn't a evolved trath
If you like this you may wanna go to chimp sanctuary NW. They have alot of the chimps that were used for yrs in the pharmaceutical companies. Sad beginning but they are doing great there. You get to see so many different personalities with all them. Hope you like. 👍🏻 ✌🏻 Lori
More like other way around sweety. Watch again the baby gorilla is more active and present than the baby human. The baby gorilla sees the child first and go to the window and try to interact. The child barely do it towards the end of the video.
@Teddy Bear the baby gorilla must be the same age if not younger. And he realizes and comprehend that behind that glass is another baby. Make you think why being more advanced at a young age they remained behind later. And why the do called human evolved and they didn't.
@@user-me7di8ic8p I use to view it that way also, but I have come to feel that it may be better for them to be on a reserve than in the hands of poachers. With that being said, I do not condone zoos. A lot of people would have a different perspective if we were all caged and the animals were the observers. There is no doubt in my mind that mankind is the definitely the most dangerous being of all, but for now can we just appreciate the reaction that the baby gorilla and baby human shared with one another.
@@khaingeieiko8230 lol so would a drug using employee who lives half decent in jail, they’d get off the crap, and be fed and taken care of, better than they are rn. Off the drugs.
Why do ppl describe the random things animals do with their mouths and tongues as kissing? Its really starting to bother me. They're not kissing. That's not a kiss. Nor should we be pretending that animals even can kiss, tbh. Please stop.
@@dominicyelinyou should educate yourself on the primates in the wild because they do indeed kiss. Sure, calling it a kiss when a dog licks you might be a tad more of a stretch but even then, it’s not unlike human kisses. It holds very similar psychological value. “Please stop” telling people off for benign and well intended comments.
Look how little Gorilla had that little knee up,..kneeling at the window,..all relaxed, and intently interested,. forming his/her thoughts, scanning human baby's face,..limbs,..just so fascinated,..truly wonderful how they eyed each other,..curiosity, and acknowledgement of each other's existence,..just lovely,..Godspeed, long healthy, happy life to Gorilla family, and human family,...
This happened with my Son when he was around 2yrs old at Barcelona Zoo. A baby gorilla was up at the glass hands on glass with my Son it was lovely to see them interact, Until The Daddy Silverback rushed over and pulled him away only for the baby to come back to the glass. Such intelligent beautiful amazing Animals. Just a shame they are in captivity and not in the wild where they belong. Beautiful video.
In zoos to protect them. Their habitat is shrinking and people kill them and chimpanzees for bush meat. They have excellent habitats in most of these big zoos.
Love this ❤❤.. and love how mummy or sibling comes over to protect her baby .. ❤❤ It takes a village the animal kingdom know this .. but we humans haven’t grasped this .. we can learn of them !
sibling, if either parent remotely felt a threat to their cub was at hand they'd slam the glass.. a mother gorilla thankfully almost never registers a human baby as a threat.
Such a precious moment. Just beautiful! Who would have imagined that zoos/animal shelters would evolve to this level to allow such intimate interaction between man and beast ♥️
@@Iamllumash”Humans or modern humans are the most common and widespread species of primate, and the last surviving species of the genus Homo. They are great apes characterized by their hairlessness, bipedalism, and high intelligence.” Wikipedia
So adorable! This reminds me of when we took our son to the zoo when he was about 4 and he had on a red hoodie. We stopped to look at the Orangutan mom and baby. The baby was walking around and spotted my son and came up to the glass and put his hands on the glass and looked into my son's eyes who also had his hands on the glass looking back. Then the baby orangutan started doing somersaults in front of my son. It was so cute. Babies just want to play with other babies.
We have so much in common with the gorillas thanks its makes us proud and appreciate everything we have in front of us love to everyone including the gorillas thanks appreciate you guys thanks ! Joe
@@nahunflores5973 an adult gorilla is definitely still very dangerous, they are territorial and there's a set of rules to follow to prevent provocation. No direct eye contact is one of them I believe. But yes, chimpanzees are freaking terrifying. They can be real psychopaths and unpredictable at that. At least you know where you stand with a gorilla if you know the rules. I'm not sure there's any reliable set of rules with a chimp. Could be doing everything right and it might still chew your face off for shits and giggles.
@@teleriferchnyfain , I know Gorillas share 98% of human DNA. I just never agreed that we came from Apes. Not a Charles Darwin fan. But, I do understand that Gorillas share our feelings of Empathy,embarrassment, jealousy, grief, love, humor, anger, etc. I just never bought into we came from Apes. Even though we share a lot with them. ;-)
The gorilla baby shows much greater interest and inquisitiveness than the human baby. A sure sign of greater intelligence / more advanced mental development.
only up to a point.. there is a reason we have conquered the planet, invented an atomic bomb and nuclear energy and are flying to Mars soon, and they are not..
The most beautiful thing I have seen all day (and I saw a hum dinger of a Texas sundown tonight!)! So sweet, caring and loving like only infants (of both species) can be!
I saw a comment saying that there is definitely a soul behind those beautiful eyes! Precisely! They should never be caged, kept as pets or attractions for people to get distracted! THIS, is savage! Imagine if the situation was reversed, and us humans were behind glass doors to entertain those beautiful animals!... Just think about it!
@@fj2201 chimps are usually smaller than humans. the largest chimps seldom get over 150 pounds, some rare larger males can get close to 200 in some cases, but a 6 foot muscularly built human can weight more than that still.
Breaks my heart seeing them trapped in these cages, just awful. Can we please have a future where these animals live in their natural plentiful lush jungle where we go and see them, not vice versa.
Don't you realize that these gorillas are probably from the descendants of a poached gorilla? Human imprinted gorillas cannot be released into the wild
two sweet babies so much alike. As much as I hate seeing animals in zoos sometimes it's the safest place for them as long as they have enough room and are fed and treated right. Animals need to be treated right, kept safe from experimentation and poaching.
Children in every form of life whether it be human,Animal ,or any skin color are always loving and innocent. Hate and dislike are always things that are taught . We must learn from children who instantly love ,play and never see differences in others .
well, no, he did not evolve... nothing really evolves or makes any real progress in Africa.. like you know how the story goes "oh Africa is in bad shape because white man came and destroyed societies and took everything, this why we poor now... baaaaaa baaaaaa..." and so conveniently forget about Ethiopia which was never colonized (except like 4 years during WWII) and is in even worse shape that most African countries that were colonized.... Or Singapore, which was a silly and simplistic little spot on the map at the time when colonies were getting their independence, with much less infrastructure and connections than most African countries in the 1950` and 60`s, yet today is basically on average more rich than their previous colonizers.. food for thought, eh?