Male Lions are also formidable hunters. When they reach maturity they get kicked out of their pride and have to fend for themselves until they find one of their own. It's called the wilderness years if I remember correctly.
yep your right they are pushed out by the father to stop cross breeding and hopefully they have brothers to create a coalition but sometimes lone males will come together to create a coalition..and the females do most the hunting were the males will patrol their terrotory..and u will hava dominant male in the coalition for mating rites..Lions are amazing animals they are the only social cats the rest are solitary.Lions are my favorite animal with a leopard a close second its just a shame what happens to them..
To avoid startling black and or grizzly bears people wear little bells on their back packs. This also helps identify the type of bear. Grizzly bear scat has little bells in it.
“... they are this supernaturally strong, hulking monster that can kill things with its face, and you just take that away from them???” Joe Rogan understands tigers on a level that hasn’t even occurred to most of us.
It was a movie called Roar. They lived with Lions for like 11 years. And there was over 100 lions, tigers, a cheetah, panthers, etc. the movie cost like 17 million to make, it was never shown in the US and it made only 2 million. A bunch of people got hurt
Always one person who can't wait for someone to mispronounce a word or sentence and then post it in the comments. Lol Why? I really don't understand the whole point of doing so. Anyone?
Roar is one of the craziest things I've ever watched. There is no plot to speak of, because the lions wouldn't play along with the scenes, and they actually get co-directing credits as a result. Noel Marshall was a lunatic and if Jan de Bont (the cinematographer) hadn't come back after getting scalped, the movie probably wouldn't exist at all, since all the crew walked off with him.
@@Eamonproductions-yg5jc That would be the aforementioned cinematographer Jan de Bont. He for all intents and purposes took over editing after Marshall and Hedren couldn't make heads or tails of it.
Roar is a crazy fucking movie. The family was insane. Completely fucking insane. Tippi Hedren, Noel Marshall, Melanie Griffith. You can see where Melanie got her looks from. My goodness Tippi Hedren was one of the most beautiful women on the planet. They owned dozens of big cats. Filmed the movie Roar for like a decade with UNTRAINED WILD ANIMALS. Everyone on set was injured and no one died. Can’t imagine the amount of cocaine ambition / confidence you need to live that lifestyle
This happens to me sober when someone posts a amazon ad on their facebook page. I try to side scroll the post which side scrolls the facebook to video or marketplace. Gets me frequently.
Check out the Elephant man story, a biker dude who worked on the movie & stayed on afterwards to care for an abandoned elephant who’d been left behind, he took care of it for years...its a beautiful story...
Adolescent and adult male lions eat anywhere from 8 to 25 lbs of food a day. But if they take down larger prey, they will eat 80+ lbs. They use one of two major methods to bring down prey, the throat clamp and the muzzle clamp. The former is more effective in asphyxiating prey. The latter is more effective in ensuring the prey cannot make noise. It's just weird to keep an animal like that as a pet. Even in captivity, these animals need several acres of ground to roam in. Even then, it's not ideal. Wild animals should be in the wild.
Should have pulled up that video of the two guys who raised a lion Cub until it grew up about 20 years later. It remembered who they were and continued to hug them . Just wild animals. Insane that people live with those fuckers.
That doc about the movie “Roar” that her parents did is INSANE!! It is so stressful to watch because everyone is constantly in danger of being mauled to death in the movie!
House cats are actually descendant from several different small wild cat species. And most modern house cats are descendant from one wild cat called Felis silvestris lybica. It is theorized that they domesticated themselves around 12000 years ago.
If reaction channels are allowed to show full length videos down in the corner, how come Jamie can't even show us a few seconds of videos every now and then? Do they have different rules for a podcast compared to a regular youtube video? I don't get it. Reaction channels even make money on their videos even though they contain copyrighted material. It's fair use as long as it's just a small box in the corner, and not the main focus of the video or something, right? I love these podcasts, but I would enjoy it a lot more if they actually showed the videos they were watching.
Reaction channels aren't really allowed to show full length videos. Most of them have a huge portion of their videos demonetized and make their money from patreon or merch sales. Some are able to get by using methods to not get matched against the copyright library - stuff like pausing the video constantly, talking over it, adding effects, graphics, slowing down, speeding up. With JRE they're live so doing all of that is not really worth it - and it's a big channel so they're much more prone to user flagging.
True. A male lion is the easiest to handle. Leopards/panthers are said to be the most difficult. Say what you want about people that own them but they are keeping certain species on the planet.
The mom tippy hendren was part of a wildlife sanctuary Shambala. I went there when I was 16 and met tippy and I took a pic petting a tiger and a panther. It was awesome
I worked as an animal handler for four years on the film-it was quite an experience getting the cats to the set etc. Most of that footage was shot 1974-79; when I left in 80 there were 68 cats living there-25 Siberian tigers, one bengal tiger, about 8 cougar, 2 cheetah(Rhett and Scarlet), 10 or so leopards (4 of which were black), 3 Jaguar, a Tigon,(father tiger mother lion), and two Jaguar, the rest lions.
San Junipero 46 idiots agreed with you, I am guessing that 40 of them can't even read. It's like saying if you are married and she kills you, you deserve it! Most animals are smarter then the writer of your comments.
My aunt and uncle had 2 cougars/mountain lions in Montana that they raised since little cubs. When visiting them we had to stay with other family and when going over to their home had to stay outside. When visiting one summer I spent nearly a month everyday over at that aunt/uncles home with their big cats. It was a slow process from outside to be able to gain trust of the cats to be able to go inside. Before going I had to make sure that I didn’t eat any food in the clothes I was wearing and washed any smells off me. Around the 3 week mark I was able to go inside with them but stayed out of the room that they would eat in. We would hand feed them pieces of meat with wooden spikes (similar to the ones use for kebabs) which helped give them some trust in me by feeding them outside the home from their feeding room. They always made sure to feed them plenty of meat before the few people who could actually come to their home that the big cats where cook with at that point. It was really cool but you always had to be on your guard and aware of where the cats where they aren’t ever changing their behavior to a hunting/overly playful demeanor. They kept them until they died of old age and never got anymore afterwards because the mother had gotten killed by a neighboring farmer so they took the cubs in so they could live full lives and tried to make sure that they worked with its natural behaviors without trying to build bad/dangerous habits to them or other people.
I've never had big cats living with me but I did volunteer at a place called the exotic feline rescue center that was near my residence at the time, which was basically a place that took in illegal exotic felines which usually meant tigers and lions that reached a certain age, I can't recall the number but in the state it was legal to own them specifically to that age and then they had to give them to a zoo or some such thing and more dumb rich people got big cats than zoos wanted to take in essentially. Anyways my point is that the tigers were generally only dangerous in the sense of wanting to play like a house kitten but being far too strong and big to do that without causing injury while lions truly wanted to eat us. I think it has to do with size however cause tigers would eye down small children and babies that passed by (you could walk through it sort of like a zoo).
Lions are more social animals, tigers don't even like other tigers. That's why you have more Christian the Lions and Siegfried and Roy scenarios that are pretty different.
Duchy of Mecklenburg-Schwerin all of those cats might not kill you but they could definetly fuck you up bad like you would need to de claw them at least and even still those bites are wayyy different than a cat haha and they aren’t tame like dogs their sketchy like cats so I don’t know if I’d trust anything more than a house cat
It's sad. I saw Mike Tysons leftover Lygers (Lion/Tiger). It was in a special zoo for discarded wild animal pets. Zoos can not take them all in so they get surplussed to makeshift rescue facilities that are dependent on donations.
if you haven't seen the movie "roar" watch it... 5 lions? try 150 lions, tigers, ligers, cougars, panthers etc. all untrained, just "friends" of Melanie Griffiths' step dad (and possessor of the worlds largest steel clad testes) Noel Marshall. Disclaimer at the start of the movie says "No animals were harmed during the making of this film. 70 members of the cast and crew were"
So one fine spring morning in 1975 I hop in my car and head down Soledad Canyon Road heading south from Palmdale. I knew Shambala was there, but it wasn't my intent to visit, just a nice drive and a couple of joints. I cross the bridge that's at the northern end of the preserve, and there, at the south end of the bridge and to my right, there's a guy sitting on the guardrail with both a huge mail lion and an even bigger tiger at his feet with big chain leashes and collars. I had to turn around a couple of times to take another look to make I sure I had actually seen what I thought I saw. They had a lot of big cats at the preserve at that time, along with several elephants, and on occasion I have also seen Giraffes wandering around... Side note, they also built the castle set from "Army of Darkness" very close to the preserve, on the other side of the canyon. They left it up for several years.
Have you seen the 1959 video of a young lion called Simba, going to the pub with his keeper? He apparently drank 12 pints?!?? It happened at the Red Lion in Isham, Northamptonshire, UK.
i walked to the store late at night and had a coyote follow me back home and was gettin close to me, that was scary and thats like a 30 pound dog i cant imagine a massive cat
lacrosseguy108 just to let you know If they did happen, there were at least 2 other coyotes following you that you didn’t see. Those are pack animals they don’t hunt alone
Male lions in a pride are for protection, yes, fending off other male lions, hyena's, etc; but they hunt too. They just are pretty useless against prey they need to sneak up on or outrun. Male lions will usually be in on bigger game, ambush style hunts (ie, cape buffalo, other larger ungulates) and that's just hunting with the Pride. Male lions may hunt on their own, or other male lions may hunt together after being forced out of the pride, (think young males growing to adulthood) which are themselves, brutally effective hunters not thinking twice about taking on the largest herbivores or approximating the kill of other large cats.
I remember I saw a video of 2 tigers working together to hunt pray and was unreal. One tiger would chase its prey in the direction of the other waiting tiger. The two tigers would work together and it was awesome to watch
As much as I'm fascinated by the life of Noel Marshall and his amazing experience with these big cats, I can't help but wonder what those cats did to deserve such a life. It would have been so much better if these animals where let to live in their natural habitat. Not to forget the wildfire that lead to many animals escaping and getting shot to death eventually. Also it won't be surprise if the couple accidentally killed some of the wild animals while they were babies since they didn't have proper training or trainers to tc of those animals. It's a really sad life .