They are famous for being kinda chill snakes in the wild. Being a chubby slug with the most scary venom load provides a lot of What Up *sips drink* energy xD
@@Aliandrinid say its one of the most abundant, the refraction of light on the elements of the atmosphere make the whole sky blue, cant tell me thats not nature
@@CoyoteAUSgarbage. Survival rate for inland Taipan is still good if you follow good Australian snake first aid & RFD gets to you in time. Your internal organs will likely be pretty f*cked for life. But you'll survive.
@@jeffreyjewell75if I was bitten by one I will ask to not to be taken to the hospital. Its a waste of time. Just start saying goodbyes. One bite puts out venom able to kill 100 like me. 1 of me has no chance.
@@lemonsqweezy9532 That’s instinct, it’s just how they’ve evolved to hunt. All the snake understands is that things die a short while after the snake bites it, it does not understand anything beyond that.
@@peggedyourdad9560they can control how much they release much like spiders can but sometimes it's love bites and they just have slightly too much and they don't mean to end 😂
@@MoonLitChild Same here! Sorry for the late reply! RU-vid didn't notify me, and I only saw you commented because of the person under you. RU-vid decoded to notify me of their reply and not yours lol 🙄
Its a stunning colour indeed. Personally i really like the brazillian rainbow boa. As the name suggests it has the colours of a rainbow as a sheen over it its really pretty
Even if you did have poisonous pets you would have a 9/10 because you have to ingest poison and you wouldn’t eat your pets. You meant venomous. Even without venomous pets, it’s still 9/10.
Yea but no one but steve irwin has the balls to handle them. Dude let a wild one kiss him. Eastern brown and inland taipan are far more venemous thay any snake in this vid. Without anti venom, 100% chance of death, within an hr. Even with anti venom, some eastern brown can still kill you as for some reason their venom has become MORE potent in the last few decades. I know of a dude who got bit, got anti venom and still died in like 45 mins. Unfortunately they crossbreed and evolve 😂 props the fault of the cane toad
@@silenttitan416This bloke got hit by a Taipan in the 50s... big came cutter. Drove himself 130ks to hospital, he rekns it was like being paro... He lived (cos he's 6ft 5) but loss of taste & smell wd be fukt.
Shelby looks like they are contemplating their life choices and future the way they're looking off into the distance. and Darnell really like "pull up i dare you, your lucky i cant get you in this glass box"
Me noticing you gotta "Steve" and an "Irwin"... and I just know, he's smiling in heaven, knowing he reached the hearts of so many of us, and now he's got so many people carrying out his legacy. I consider his family as the presidential family of all animals.❤
It was my previous understanding that no animals were actually blue. The blue of birds and butterflies and such, is actually iridescence and not pigment.
@@Aliandrinthat was understanding as well but then there are frogs and lizards. I think it's just about being able to make dyes and idk how we'd turn a snake into paint 😅
The good, and slightly ironic thing about it, is that they're extremely reluctant to bite people so although your odds of surviving are low, your odds of never being bitten in the first place are pretty solid.
The gaboon viper suddenly noticing you recording is strangely adorable. Your snakes are all beautiful, even if some of them are "medically insignificant" lol.
Lil' Man will put you in a casket within 5 minutes and its a guaranteed death no antivenom available. Give him some meal worms and he'll let you live tho 😂
100% chance of death in 5 minutes or less... and there isn't an antivenom. and you'll be a historical figure for dying to the least aggressive death noodle in the world.
I think animals somewhat have thoughts but its more like they have predetermined instincts already in their brains that they rely on along with whatever survival tactics that species is able to use, most animals lack the ability of an intelligent thinking capacity though and thats why animals are categorized as things without conscience but i think they have a small bit of consciousness to a degree that could be unlocked through science, hell the octupus is one of the most intelligent creature's on this planet so much so, many people think they are aliens that came on asteroids, when the asteroids hit the dinosaurs along with mushroom spores, i think there is a lot we dont know yet and were not even close to knowing everything.
That would be a Boomslang...a highly venomous, super fast African tree snake(it's name actually means Tree Snake in Afrikaans) that waits in trees for prey to innocently walk under the tree...then it drops on them. The Boomslang is the epitome of a breathing war crime that aggressively hates anything and everything!! I'll add as a PSA: Never pick fruit from trees in South Africa...
I used to work on the sugar cane trains in north Queensland, Australia home of the inland taipan, at times over an hour away from any medical care, they're one of them snakes that if you get bit you don't call for help, you call your loved ones and make peace.
@@MissEmai0110 they're both in that region as it turns quite arid about 20km inland and immediately as you head south. The coastal is absolutely the one to be concerned about though. Notably more venomous.
@@EXZACHTPERFORMANCE The inland taipan inhabits the black soil plains in the region where Queensland, South Australia and the Northern Territory borders converge.. You best get in contact with the experts and let them know they are moving east toward the coast, then. You will also find that the Coastal isn't at all more venomous - the Inland Taipan is 4 times more toxic than the coastal - they just don't have as much of a venom yield and are more likely to not bite.
youd be surprised how much damage a dog can do really. my dog missed a treat one time when he was sick and just barely nicked me. Took months to heal with nerve damage.