@Jordan Lemke happy belated birthday 🎂 🥳 🎉 Now for a serenade: Through the eye of a needle Time to loosen your tongue Got a tip how to make ends meet 🎶
@@marsar1775 Rattlesnakes also often give dry bites About 1 out of every 3 Rattlesnake bites inject to venom. The bite may still need medical attention, but it won’t envenomate and kill you. Even when they fight, they offer a chance to live. Rattlers really just want to be left alone, and I respect that
@@ExhaustedScarf omg that’s honestly really cool. Where I live, rattlesnakes are the only venomous snake (various species) you would come across in nature. There’s a field/hiking trail a few min walk away from my apartment that I like but I know for a fact rattlesnakes live there because I can literally hear them sometimes Because of that I avoid going there as often as I’d honestly like to. But the new info I just learned from you encourages me to go for it, especially since it’s so close to home in case of an emergency Side note I am not afraid of snakes, I literally have a corn snake and a ball python lol, but I am afraid of venomous snakes especially wild ones Also I love biology and learning new things and fun facts so thank you!
I’m begging you to google snakes with hats, snakes in sweaters, and my favorite, snakes blowing bubbles in their water dishes. I know the fear of snakes is super strong and common, but pet snakes have so much personality, despite what people think! They’re good noodles I swear
@@chelmastly5802 Those guys in sweaters were adorable, and the one with hats were hilarious (they still kind of freaked me out at times). Also, for whatever reason, those guys blowing bubbles was goofy enough that I wasn't unnerved seeing them move around. Thanks for the recommendations! Also, just wanna clarify, I don't dislike snakes. They scare the heck outta me, and I don't want them on me, but I know snakes are pretty chill for the most part. I live where there are a lot of them, and if they won't bother me, I don't bother them. Snakes are cool in my book, and I honestly wish I wasn't scared of them, so I could own one.
They’re not the most venomous but they’re still venomous. The most venomous snakes live in Australia (Australian Brown Snake and Inland Taipan) because of course they do. You can also defang or remove the venom gland of venomous snakes so they’re incapable of inject venom into you, causing them to be safe as household pets.
That rattlesnake was too busy investigating that electrical cord looking like a "brown, angry shoelace" on the floor trying to figure out if it was friend or foe.
this channel is bizarre. Venomous snakes seemingly kept in the bedroom, weird thirst traps.... this content is weird but at least it isnt "bull frog vs hornet" tier
Well shit...as a 2nd generation north Floridian i can attest ..that yes thats a literal damn rattlesnake. Amd dont worry, as a southerner i promise im not here to tell you a story about a cottonmouth chasing me to my doorstep.
@@zamzaddy8535 I really feel like their should be a reddit thread dedicated to those stories. My closest neighbor is terrified of them but she'll stand out there and get close enough to take pics of a big fat timber rattler
Hey dude i have been wondering do you like have anti venom for all the venimis animals you have or do you have to get some at thr hospitals if you get bit
It’d have to depend on where you live, but your best bet when keeping venomous animals not native to your area is to live within an hour of a zoo with the same nonnative species. If you got bitten by a monocled cobra and went to the general American hospital, they’d just scratch their heads at you and be like “well shit” since they sure as hell don’t see that often enough to have that stocked. Antivenom is stupid expensive per vial and expires quickly if not kept cool, so it’s also not sensible to just keep it on hand, especially for nonnative species-you also need different antivenins for different species, so there’s that. So, again, live near a zoo or larger facility with the proper antivenom on hand, and be prepared for a hell of a fine, as well as maybe losing some fingertips or toes at the least and limbs at the most while not dying from the envenomation.
@@chelmastly5802 You could also ask the hospital to store a vial for you and offer to pay for it, I've heard of people doing that as well (definitely expensive, but safer than nothing if you don't live near a zoo) You could also keep some at home as long as you store them with proper refrigeratoration
Please include Bearded Dragon in one of these! My absolute favorite reptile I’ve owned so far, they are pretty low-maintenance, and if you have a chill one, you can just hold it on your shoulder while you do chores.
Same goes for leopard geckos. I had 2 (one unfortunately passed away last week. Doesn’t feel real tbh. Was very sudden. Suspected aneurysm) and both were/are obsessed with hanging out either on my shoulder facing the same direction I am, or wrapped around the skin on back of my neck since it’s so warm there lol
Goannas (number 1) would patrol the grounds of my highschool. If you messed with them they would rear up and come at you on two legs haha. But otherwise they were pretty chill.
Yeah, their actually really sweet pets if you don’t make them pissed or if you aren’t late to feed them, other then that their amazing, I really want one
You never know true fear until you walk through some tall grass in florida and hear an Eastern Diamondback rattlesnake warning you to come no closer. But you can't see where they are.
K but the angry shoelace yawning is so cute. Idk if you'll see this, but I know these pals (esp raptor) require a lot of work, and it'd be awesome to see how you do cages, enrichment, etc.