Тёмный

Zoologist Reacts To Viral Animal TikTok 

Clint's Reptiles
Подписаться 668 тыс.
Просмотров 683 тыс.
50% 1

TikTok may be a poison to our society, but it turns out that it is full of crazy animal videos! From scary animal encounters, to unidentified animals, to crazy animal abilities, there is so insane animal content on TikTok! Zoologist Clint Laidlaw (of Clint's Reptiles) reacts to some of the craziest animal videos on TikTok. This video is sponsored by Ridge. Check them out here: ridge.com/clint. Use my code “CLINT” for 10% off your order and for an entry to win a Hennessey Ford Bronco or $75K through September 30th! US Only
#clintsreptiles #tiktok #animalvideos
====
/ @chandlerswildlife
www.tiktok.com/t/ZT8eoC5Jt/
www.tiktok.com/t/ZT8d18x4J/
www.tiktok.com/t/ZT8dR56kg/
www.tiktok.com/t/ZT8dR1AcU/
www.tiktok.com/t/ZT8d1PFEP/
fb.watch/lDjS9gq88I/
www.tiktok.com/t/ZT8dR2gkM/
www.tiktok.com/t/ZT8d1MNP5/
www.tiktok.com/t/ZT8d1jsAr/
www.tiktok.com/t/ZT8d1mT2V
www.tiktok.com/t/ZT8dRCTT4/
www.tiktok.com/t/ZT8d8fBRF/
www.tiktok.com/t/ZT8d8fbCL/
www.tiktok.com/t/ZT8d8Nk7s/
www.tiktok.com/t/ZT8d89kWA/
www.tiktok.com/t/ZT8ddASRM/
www.tiktok.com/t/ZT8ddA3jw/
====
Attribution: docs.google.com/document/d/1R...
====
Clint is a professional biologist and educator, but above all, Clint LOVES reptiles and he loves to share that love with everyone he meets. Whether you're lover or a hater of reptiles, you can't help but get excited with Clint!
We post a new video every Saturday morning! So stay tuned!
Be sure to SUBSCRIBE: ru-vid.com...
====
PATREON: / clintsreptiles
MERCHANDISE: www.clintsreptiles.com/merch
SUPPORT Clint's Reptiles by shopping AMAZON here: www.amazon.com/shop/clintsrep...
Schedule a virtual ONE-ON-ONE with Clint! square.site/book/JYBMZXG2X02F...
====
FACEBOOK: / clintsreptilevideos
INSTAGRAM: / clintsreptiles
TWITTER: / clintsreptiles
WEBSITE: www.clintsreptiles.com/
DISCORD: / discord
====
To contact us for BUSINESS purposes: clintsreptiles+business@gmail.com
====
You guys are so RAD!
====
Fan mail? Yes Please!
Clint's Reptiles
770 East Main Street # 127
Lehi, UT 84043
If you would like to send a LIVE animal - FIRST: please send us an email to make sure we can take it in. clintsreptiles+LIVE@gmail.com

Животные

Опубликовано:

 

18 авг 2023

Поделиться:

Ссылка:

Скачать:

Готовим ссылку...

Добавить в:

Мой плейлист
Посмотреть позже
Комментарии : 2,6 тыс.   
@ClintsReptiles
@ClintsReptiles 9 месяцев назад
Big thanks to Ridge for sending me this wallet and supporting the channel! Here’s the site if you want to check them out! > ridge.com/clint & use code CLINT
@HassanMohamed-jy4kk
@HassanMohamed-jy4kk 9 месяцев назад
Hey Clint, Why don’t you get to think of a suggestion and creating a RU-vid Videos all about the Origins and the Inspirations of the Reptiles in Myths, such as Dragons, Wyverns, the Loch Ness Monster, Sea Serpents, Nagas, the Hydra, the Leviathan, the Amphisbaena, the Cockatrice, the Basilisk, Medusa The Gorgon, Typhon, Quetzalcoatl, The Feathered Serpent God, Etc. on the next Clint’s Reptiles on the next Saturday coming up next?!⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐👍👍👍👍👍
@Snake_Therapy
@Snake_Therapy 9 месяцев назад
Oh, left a comment but the 10% off code doesn’t seem to be working. Not for me anyway!
@kirksealls1912
@kirksealls1912 9 месяцев назад
Jason might not be far off when he said the hairless raccoon was a chupacabra. According to Wikipedia (which cites the book “Tracking the Chupacabra” by Benjamin Radford, and the article “Disfrazado el chupacabras” by Miried González Rodríguez) “Sightings [of the chupacabra] in northern Mexico and the southern United States have been verified as canids afflicted by mange.” While not a canid, raccoons can be argued to be superficially canid-like, and it’s certainly possible that throughout history some number of people have misidentified hairless raccoons as small chupacabras (other than Jason 😜).
@MrDj232
@MrDj232 9 месяцев назад
​@@Snake_Therapy Same here. I tried entering it multiple times with different capitalization but I just kept getting the message that I'm already receiving their best deal. I even checked the site without using Clint's link and there was no difference in listed prices.
@RealMerryMary
@RealMerryMary 9 месяцев назад
29:00 is lancetfish edible though?
@Alicia.Marie.13
@Alicia.Marie.13 9 месяцев назад
The snake one made me laugh so hard 😂😂😂 the snake was doing the same thing she was! It's saw her coming and it felt the need to flee! I just imagine if snakes could scream they both would be screaming 😂
@charlottesmom
@charlottesmom 9 месяцев назад
The snake was like "get away get away....Ahhhhhhhhhhh!!" 😂 I felt bad for both of them. 🐍😩
@alveolate
@alveolate 9 месяцев назад
yea the snake was like "omg omg omg wtf do i do now" and saw the woman run across so it got the hell out too
@justinechaine5679
@justinechaine5679 9 месяцев назад
It started going away once she screamed too. It was just as terrified as she was😂
@ClintsReptiles
@ClintsReptiles 9 месяцев назад
🐍-Ahhhhhhhhhhh!
@hypergirl6703
@hypergirl6703 9 месяцев назад
​@@ClintsReptileshilarious that there's a "translate to English" button. You successfully screamed in Snake!
@catherinekonc
@catherinekonc 9 месяцев назад
I worked with a tiger in a zoo once. When I saw it in person for the first time I broke out into a cold full body sweat, immediate fight or flight reaction. They are one of those things that you don't realize how big they are until you're less than 4ft away from it. The keepers also had a prior incident where the tiger ripped thru one of its private enclosure fences like it was paper. Beautiful creatures but so terrifying and should absolutely stay in the wild.
@maxhu6121
@maxhu6121 8 месяцев назад
Tigers are one of the animals that really scare me. Angry gorillas too, but tigers are just different. You can tell by their eyes that they can kill you without reservations...
@natashab5969
@natashab5969 8 месяцев назад
I was extremely shocked at the size of hyenas
@The_Real_Mier
@The_Real_Mier 8 месяцев назад
I remember having that same physical reaction when I, years ago, entered the alligator enclosure at one of our National Zoos and one of the animals started to roar, that deep, deep, loud sound coming from the depth of its throat….at the exact moment I was literally in the doorway. And I immediately felt this primal fear! Which is of course absolutely not logically explainable, since I had lived my whole life in a big city in the Netherlands: impossible to encounter a crocodile or alligator anywhere else than in a zoo… So the effect must have been one of those ‘ingrained fears’ that humans are born with, after centuries of evolution it is STILL there. AMAZING!!
@Itsabeautifulday3201
@Itsabeautifulday3201 7 месяцев назад
There’s a rescue center near me and they had two tigers ones name was Jasmine and the other Jafar. They have lived a very long life but Jafar passed away,I think,probably two years ago. Jasmine is still there. She’s a white Bengal and is HUGE! She’s pretty old now I believe in her 20s and hilarious to watch. She’s learned that if she doesn’t grab the pieces of chicken and just groans and chatters about it eventually the handler will just give it to her without her, having to put any effort into it. I think they really don’t want her jumping up anymore to get it though. She’s so old. Such a beautiful animal. It’s crazy to only stand a couple feet away from her. Her paws are as big as my head lol
@silvermainecoons3269
@silvermainecoons3269 7 месяцев назад
@@maxhu6121. Gorillas look intimidating but they’re actually much safer to be around than chimps. Chimps scare the hell out of me. I can’t believe people that have them as pets.
@atashgallagher5139
@atashgallagher5139 5 месяцев назад
Gorillas: staring directly at someone and showing your teeth is extremely high level agression. Humans: always make eye contact and smile or else it's very rude.
@amandasnider2644
@amandasnider2644 3 месяца назад
Finally, a specific instance where non-masking autistics are vastly superior to neurotypicals lol
@CaptainAMAZINGGG
@CaptainAMAZINGGG 3 месяца назад
Neurodivergents: fully on the gorilla's side on this one. 👍
@annienewman8312
@annienewman8312 3 месяца назад
@@CaptainAMAZINGGG yes, agreed
@JubioHDX
@JubioHDX 2 месяца назад
us standing tall on 2 feet while staring at everything and showing our teeth constantly while talking all loud is alot of the reason so many animals are scared of us too lmao, we look bigger than we really are (though we are in no way small) and seem very intimidating to most animals. Not to mention especially all the african animals evolving next to human species and having to learn that we can genuinely be dangerous as well
@andrewbloom7694
@andrewbloom7694 2 месяца назад
​@@JubioHDXIts no wonder all of a groups most psychotic species live there lol. Mambas and forest cobras for snakes, hippos and rhinos for ungulates, hyenas for carnivores...
@breezyncj
@breezyncj 5 месяцев назад
The elephant trying to scare the man for the second time had me rolling 😂
@Doxymeister
@Doxymeister 3 месяца назад
IKR? It almost would fall into the gamer yelling "your momma!" category! 🤣
@migarsormrapophis2755
@migarsormrapophis2755 2 месяца назад
That text on the screen was nonsense. The man's 'calm energy' didn't influence the elephant to be calm, the man's calm energy freaked it out. The elephant probably wondered if he was some kind of bizarre venomous monkey or something.
@JubioHDX
@JubioHDX 2 месяца назад
@@migarsormrapophis2755 yea im surprised clint didnt mention what the video was saying lmao, elephants dont "read energies" theyre just very used to every other animal in existence high tailing it the other direction when they charge so it was confused💀. They know humans are dangerous so it didnt want to just turn all the way around while the human was still there but it also had no ability to scare the human away either so they were in a stalemate till the elephant decided the man wasnt gonna retaliate if they both just let it go
@kmhkennedy
@kmhkennedy Месяц назад
@@JubioHDXyou have to remember that poachers are a huge problem in South Africa. (Source: I am South Africa) so that elephant was absolutely vibing whether that dude was a ranger or a poacher. If it vibed that ranger was going to try hurt it absolutely would have gone down swinging. Calm, non threatening, but also I’ll put up a fight if needs be energy is a must when dealing with an (wild) elephant. Calm vibes won’t help if there is any intention to hurt the animal. If that elephant had read the sitch wrong and that guy was a poacher it would have been dead. It’s life or death. Likely, it helped that there werent a lot of them, just one guy with a stick (and someone with a camera), if there had been more it might have read the sitch as more threatening and attacked. Elephants don’t want to attack, it puts them at risk and not even for food. F ing poachers. My hatred of them… it makes me angry just thinking about it. That guy was a baller. His vibe was I don’t want to hurt you, but I will if you try fight me. Hard to give off successfully. 10/10 P.s that elephant reminded me of my dog, I don’t know why😂 it seemed almost tame in a strange way, but if it was in a park it absolutely was not.
@kmhkennedy
@kmhkennedy Месяц назад
@@migarsormrapophis2755yeah no, those game rangers are absolute experts at dealing with wild life. He dealt with it perfectly. Elephants know about humans, they know they are dangerous sometimes. Most elephants I’ve game reserves are pretty chill though with people, that one was probably being territorial for a reason. Like a baby elephant or something. I’ve seen rangers deal with elephants and they can tell when they are getting shirty and that’s exactly how the deal with it. I’ve seen other, more novice rangers, and they f it up and can make the sitch worse. That is not a tame elephant, it is not an elephant you can ride. It is a wild animal. There a very specific ways to handle a wild animal like that without getting maimed.
@brandy4530
@brandy4530 9 месяцев назад
About 20 years ago, a tiger was spotted in my small rural American town. People got pictures of it, and it was in the news. It was very alarming, but everyone eventually stopped talking about it. I learned what happened from a family friend who was a big game hunter. Apparently, a member of his hunting club, was some how able to get this tiger, illegally, for the purpose of hunting it, and it escaped. The story goes that the tiger killed some livestock, and a few hunters waited for it to come back and killed it. They had access to a backhoe and were able to bury it. It’s really scary to think that someone could have died because some jerks wanted to illegally hunt a tiger.
@jill7759
@jill7759 9 месяцев назад
Horrifying that this severely endangered cat lost its life because of some idiots. Humans are truly capable of the most detestable behaviour.
@courtney5796
@courtney5796 8 месяцев назад
We Americans shoot first and ask questions later. Edit: Some don't even bother with the second part. 😞
@thatdairykid1461
@thatdairykid1461 8 месяцев назад
Sounds like something from Secondhand Lions.
@margodphd
@margodphd 8 месяцев назад
I wish that the tiger would have killed the hunter. Frankly if we restored predator populations we wouldn't need hunters, at all and we could hunt the hunters instead. Now that's the only type of hunt an animal lover would ever want to participate in.
@melissaspake7727
@melissaspake7727 8 месяцев назад
I live near Pine Mountain, Georgia and we had a pretty severe tornado this spring. We also have a Wild Animal Safari here. Two Tigers escaped. It was pretty scary since so many were out cleaning up storm damage. Thankfully they caught them within a few hours.
@stacierosario
@stacierosario 9 месяцев назад
I would specifically love to see a whole video of clint identifying and discussing "unidentified animals" it is SO SATISFYING!!
@The420033
@The420033 9 месяцев назад
Same! I'm a bit ashamed to admit: I thought salp was fake. Never knew about them before!
@emmaharvey5494
@emmaharvey5494 9 месяцев назад
I loved it SO much!! I’ve always wondered whether the animals in the videos were fake or not and I ADORE listening to Clint talk about them all.
@MarcLL
@MarcLL 9 месяцев назад
I enjoyed it so much that I searched "identifying tiktok animals" but RU-vid just gave me a bunch of videos about people on TikTok identifying AS animals 😐 guess I will have to wait.
@lucifermorningstar8562
@lucifermorningstar8562 9 месяцев назад
​@@MarcLLBig OOF. Lol.
@wetbread6757
@wetbread6757 8 месяцев назад
​@@MarcLLLindsay Nikole has a tiktok series about identifying them and she posts them on YT as well
@laurenschmidt4880
@laurenschmidt4880 8 месяцев назад
That elephant: "bro... why you so calm? It's weird, man... Here, I'll give you one more so you can react normally. Maybe you just didnt see it. No? Still nothing? That's just weird... im just gonna go..." 😂
@angiadcock8196
@angiadcock8196 8 месяцев назад
That first clip is scarier than any horror movie. Tigers are beautiful, fascinating and absolutely terrifying animals.
@ILuvAyeAye
@ILuvAyeAye 2 месяца назад
And it's cut like a horror movie, because the first split second I thought it was being filmed from a (presumably enclosed) car, and then my stomach dropped when I heard the motor rev and realized there's nothing between him and the tiger. I'm amazed that human got home safely to share the video.
@BlueA_3545
@BlueA_3545 9 месяцев назад
ok as a Thai person, I have to say It is a place that preserves tigers very well. We have the second largest tiger population in the world. It's amazing to learn about them. But it's good that you're concerned because people who want to study these things should know about the potential dangers. However, there has been no case of a tiger killing a person in Thailand for a long time. (People still illegally kill tigers.) There are many ways to learn more about Thailand's wildlife up close and safely. Thai people are kind and happy to share their knowledge about the things they love. If you decide to come to Thailand I hope you have a good time.
@CaptainLuckyDuck
@CaptainLuckyDuck 4 месяца назад
I love hearing about the conservation efforts in other countries from the people living there. It reminds me of how much we all, as a world, love our animals.^^
@ILuvAyeAye
@ILuvAyeAye 2 месяца назад
Very good points, thank you so much for sharing that. I have heard Thailand is an amazingly beautiful country as well.
@BlueA_3545
@BlueA_3545 2 месяца назад
@@ILuvAyeAye I gave some incorrect information ! We don't have the second largest tiger population in the world. But there is an increase in the number of tigers from conservation that is second in the world! Yes, Thailand is a wonderful country especially about its people and wildlife ♥️ (about our sidewalks, not very much lol) thank you for your kind words !
@BlueA_3545
@BlueA_3545 2 месяца назад
@@CaptainLuckyDuck we love our animals to much sometimes 😂 now we have problems about the amount of elephants we have
@mite3959
@mite3959 2 месяца назад
@@BlueA_3545 5th place is not bad considering the size of the country!
@lindsyfish6704
@lindsyfish6704 9 месяцев назад
I'm rewatching this because I needed some fun in my day and I just realized that the tiger with over 400 human deaths Clint's talking about is the Maneater of Champawat. As I understand it, she survived being shot by hunters but the bullet broke some of her teeth. That made humans her best option for prey because she could hold on to them properly even with half her front teeth on one side missing or damaged. Her story is fascinating, if a touch sad.
@Ace-ace-baby
@Ace-ace-baby 7 месяцев назад
Yeah that is who he was talking about and it was about 436 kills sorry I am an animal nerd😅
@allysonlippert
@allysonlippert 7 месяцев назад
From the sounds of it, humans made their own killer there
@zaynes5094
@zaynes5094 7 месяцев назад
@@Ace-ace-babyI thought it was because she got hurt and then also had cubs to feed. I don't know if that part is true. Either way, scary nonetheless.
@IrieRogue
@IrieRogue 6 месяцев назад
Sounds like a perfect karmic climax. May she long reign as the queen she is in the ether.
@BooBuKittyPhuk
@BooBuKittyPhuk 6 месяцев назад
​@@IrieRogue thats a bit off. The people she killed likely had absolutely nothing to do with her being harmed and had loved ones who had to deal with the pain of them being eaten by a tiger... yes it was a humans fault. But saying that her killing other humans is "karmic" isn't at all accurate. 😕
@kw7378a1
@kw7378a1 8 месяцев назад
Oh the lancetfish story made me sad. Fishermen shouldn't deep sea fish unless they are going to keep them. Seems cruel to kill by decompression and throw them back anyway. Great video as always!
@Jenqh
@Jenqh 4 месяца назад
really, it's so depressing.
@glenngriffon8032
@glenngriffon8032 4 месяца назад
Yeah. That poor creature was not only going through decompression sickness but it jas those massive eyes and lives in low light areas. So it was probably blind from the excessive light. Don't deep sea fish unless you're going to put the creature out of it's misery and eat it.
@larrybremer4930
@larrybremer4930 3 месяца назад
Except in the ocean nothing is ever wasted. That fish became a meal for one or many other creatures.
@hoominbeeing
@hoominbeeing 3 месяца назад
Seems pretty cruel to k1ll fish in general when you can just eat plants rather than animals
@hoominbeeing
@hoominbeeing 3 месяца назад
​@@glenngriffon8032How is eating it any better? You're still k1lling it
@EDayAllDay
@EDayAllDay 7 месяцев назад
The reason the elephant stopped is because the cameraman was right behind that guy, and wasnt moving.. Everyone knows the cameraman never dies 😁😁😁
@fathomlives
@fathomlives Месяц назад
*coughs in Blair Witch*
@samanthapayne7162
@samanthapayne7162 Месяц назад
🤣🤣🤣​@@fathomlives
@ZVVWVVZ
@ZVVWVVZ 9 месяцев назад
Watching Clint talk about the gorillas at the end was so touching to me. Watching him with his face in his hands and then speaking about wanting a similar interaction with a gorilla with an emotional voice.. I was almost brought to tears. It’s lovely to see someone so passionate about an interest. ❤
@kerseykrewzoo
@kerseykrewzoo 9 месяцев назад
Same! You can totally tell how much he loves gorillas and wishes that were him in the video. I hope he gets to have a similar experience one day and that we get to see video footage of the encounter. 🤞🏻🤞🏻
@MrDj232
@MrDj232 9 месяцев назад
Find yourself a partner who holds you like that gorilla and looks at you the way Clint looks at that gorilla.
@kerseykrewzoo
@kerseykrewzoo 9 месяцев назад
@@MrDj232 I totally have! He's also got a pretty epic beard to bring in the "hairy" part of the gorilla. 🤣
@hopeadler507
@hopeadler507 9 месяцев назад
I cried lol
@curlygurly2112
@curlygurly2112 9 месяцев назад
Part of me can't help but wonder if Clint is neurodivergent. His reactions to things are very similar to mine. Then again, we could also just have similar personalities
@jonnylumberjack6223
@jonnylumberjack6223 9 месяцев назад
That gorilla was captive raised by the dude (Damien Aspinall) in England and released into the wild in their native range. They were visiting the gorillas they had released a few years after that release. So the gorilla knew the man, knew the people were trustworthy. Not sure a wild born gorilla would have been quite so comfortable with all the hugging!
@krankarvolund7771
@krankarvolund7771 9 месяцев назад
Yeah, I thought that he was acting more like they were family than they were strangers ^^
@envoltaemla6652
@envoltaemla6652 9 месяцев назад
it's very obvious that a totally wild born animal wouldn't have this response....
@Zombiesfromjupiter
@Zombiesfromjupiter 8 месяцев назад
clearly familiar with them but still a wild animal (as in, not domesticated) which makes the video amazing regardless i think!
@mattaku9430
@mattaku9430 7 месяцев назад
Doesn't they try to make those animals wild?
@emimonsterlicious
@emimonsterlicious 3 месяца назад
yes I would have thought that clint surely has seen the Aspinall video.
@Kingbimmy
@Kingbimmy 6 месяцев назад
My mother and I have raised and released orphaned baby raccoons, and I’ve never seen one hairless in my life, but I knew immediately by how it moved, that it had to be one, I was just SO confused because it had no fur 😭 hope lil buddy ok 🥺 That last gorilla video was SO heartwarming… he was so gentle and curious. They’re terrifying if they’re upset of course, because they’re massively stronger than us, but they’re such smart, intuitive, and lovely creatures. They want to learn and explore, they try to bond and form repertoire. Incredible creatures. All great apes are so fascinating.
@panyanabrd3183
@panyanabrd3183 8 месяцев назад
He got so excited when he pulled out the skulls, you can tell he loves this stuff 🥰
@Tribecasoothsayer
@Tribecasoothsayer 3 месяца назад
Yup. Like, he wants to show you this one, then he’s like No wait, this one shows it better, and then hol’ up- this one is so cool 😄
@cathyp92
@cathyp92 9 месяцев назад
If this video went on ALL DAY LONG, I'd watch the entire thing. I especially liked the unidentified animals. We definitely need more of this.
@lindsyfish6704
@lindsyfish6704 9 месяцев назад
LIKEWISE!! I'm on my second watchthrough in a row. I'd love to see more of these!
@Dee912
@Dee912 9 месяцев назад
Yesss came to the comments to say the same!! Liked the video but LOVED the unidentified animals segment!!
@AzazelsWings
@AzazelsWings 9 месяцев назад
Me too 😂❤
@petersmythe6462
@petersmythe6462 9 месяцев назад
"They don't necessarily want to fight everything that they could beat in a fight" Which is probably good because elephants could beat a lot of things in a fight if they remember not to inhale a chuckwalla.
@krankarvolund7771
@krankarvolund7771 9 месяцев назад
My thought was "everything they could beat in a fight? You mean everything on land?" XD
@scrubjay93
@scrubjay93 9 месяцев назад
few people realize that this is why there are no wild elephants in the American Southwest!
@WingedFish66
@WingedFish66 9 месяцев назад
@@scrubjay93 The TRUE reason American mastodons went extinct
@lucifermorningstar8562
@lucifermorningstar8562 9 месяцев назад
Chuckwalla?
@noway8259
@noway8259 8 месяцев назад
​@@krankarvolund7771Rhinos Hippos and Nile crocodiles could still cause them a lot of harm.
@jessicaswinbourn.320
@jessicaswinbourn.320 7 месяцев назад
Haoko, the gorilla, likes to play with his babies. He is super gentle and careful with them. He is not a wild gorilla, and lives in a zoo. The mothers don't always approve of his actions, but he has never hurt them, and he gives them back after a chase.
@cmdub97
@cmdub97 6 месяцев назад
I am more terrified of spiders than I am snakes. I've seen a diamondback up close and just kept my distance. My husband has seen bobcats, cougars, coyotes, and even a wolf. As long as you know what to do, animals are usually not scary. I just have an irrational fear of spiders I'm trying to face.
@sophia-helenemeesdetricht1957
@sophia-helenemeesdetricht1957 4 месяца назад
Arthropods broadly freak me all the way out. It's the way their legs move. Something about it is just intolerably creepy. I used to live in Florida, alligators are very dangerous but like... just stay out of their way.
@matthewlindsley3298
@matthewlindsley3298 4 месяца назад
I used orb weaver spiders to help my fear. The ones near me are large, round, orange and harmless. If you get one off its web it will start making a web in your hands because it thinks you’re a tree. Very pretty and very slow and docile
@serpentine16
@serpentine16 4 месяца назад
Have you heard of peacock spiders? They're about the perfect beginner level spider for getting used to them - tiny, harmless, beautiful, with a lot of character.
@melbapeach162
@melbapeach162 4 месяца назад
​@@matthewlindsley3298I encounter so many orb weavers while working, I used to be absolutely terrified of spiders but they really helped me get over it, I still struggle to touch them but I can move them gently with a stick or something when before even looking at images of spiders make me squeamish.
@rompevuevitos222
@rompevuevitos222 Месяц назад
The issue is that snakes will not approach you voluntarily. But spiders have very short ranged eye sight. They can't see you unless you are within a meter or so.
@TK0921
@TK0921 9 месяцев назад
Hearing Clint say "keep the chupacabra's name out of your mouth" made me laugh way harder than it should have.
@DWandLoZfan_and_Knuckles
@DWandLoZfan_and_Knuckles 8 месяцев назад
When was that in the video? I didn't hear it and can't find it. Was it around the hairless Racoon?
@TK0921
@TK0921 8 месяцев назад
@@DWandLoZfan_and_Knuckles During the outtakes at 43:37
@DWandLoZfan_and_Knuckles
@DWandLoZfan_and_Knuckles 8 месяцев назад
​@@TK0921 Thanks!
@drsanjayprajapati1583
@drsanjayprajapati1583 6 месяцев назад
E
@chesneymigl4538
@chesneymigl4538 2 месяца назад
I can't hear chupacabra without thinking of my old ornithology professor. Nighjars, nighthawks, and whipoorwills are all in the "goat sucker" family. They literally are the chupacabra.
@jameswoodard4304
@jameswoodard4304 9 месяцев назад
Who else immediate identified the hairless racoon? Racoons just have a very recognizable look and way of moving and behaving. Also, it was rifling through a dumpster while being completely unperturbed by the humans around it.
@lindsyfish6704
@lindsyfish6704 9 месяцев назад
I absolutely did. I took one look at it and said, "raccoon with sarcoptic mange". IIRC, alopecia is much less common than sarcoptic mange. I also made a Montauk Monster joke further up because I couldn't help myself!
@davidvento5481
@davidvento5481 9 месяцев назад
I thought it was the dreaded “Chupacabra” searching for a goat to suck! *Ba Haha!* 😂
@kyrab7914
@kyrab7914 9 месяцев назад
Yep. I thought at first maybe a hairless dog, but then you see the face and it's just v raccoon.
@MoeOuan666
@MoeOuan666 9 месяцев назад
Nothing but a full sequencing will convince me it's not a chupacabra 🤪🤣🤣
@Fox_961
@Fox_961 9 месяцев назад
@@lindsyfish6704 Mange typically has other symptoms like scabbing, infection, lethargy, and emaciation (especially in such severe cases).
@AndriaDarling
@AndriaDarling 4 месяца назад
As a vet tech who always wanted to work in zoo medicine, this was so amazing to watch! After hearing Mr. Laidlaw is an instructor, I feel so jealous of all the students who have had the opportunity to study under him, he seems like an awesome teacher!!!
@Crotchetea
@Crotchetea 4 месяца назад
I grew up around elephants in Zimbabwe and while they often would posture with their ears out we would just accept that warning and stop or maybe back out of their pathway a bit while they passed. Even when there were calves with the herds as long as you were calm and didn't come toward them, they left you alone. However, I once had the distinct misfortune of approaching the herd of what was believed to be the largest elephant bull in Zimbabwe (one of the last 'super tusker' elephants) when that bull was in musk. We immediately recognized our mistake and turned around, but like Clint said they want to fight everything during musk. He charged our vehicle for about a kilometer despite us being well away from the herd. Elephants are surprisingly fast for their size and in an old bush jeep in high brush we struggled to get distance between us.
@sashathayer6382
@sashathayer6382 9 месяцев назад
Oh my gosh yes! My family loved this video and we are hoping this segment, "Zoologist Reacts" stays around. This was very entertaining, and extremely educational. We learned so much from this video.
@charlottesmom
@charlottesmom 9 месяцев назад
I throughly enjoyed it too, Clint always entertains and educates. 👍🏻
@mercster
@mercster 9 месяцев назад
But you're exposing this rational grown man to TikTok; the costs aren't worth it for your family's enjoyment. Sorry.
@lunarminx
@lunarminx 9 месяцев назад
I would love more of it too, I also watch one where the young man does family safe, animal/reptile quick facts video.
@birbdad1842
@birbdad1842 9 месяцев назад
Oh, this was 44 minutes long?! Felt like 20 minutes, to be honest. Proves this was much fun.
@kodabear1996
@kodabear1996 9 месяцев назад
I had to check the length of the video, because it really didn't feel that long. lol
@gorway6807
@gorway6807 9 месяцев назад
Wow I also had to check the video length. Could easily have been 15 minutes, the time just flew by. Definitely a great new type of video for this channel
@nicolasheppard3541
@nicolasheppard3541 7 месяцев назад
It not only was so fascinating and wholesome and funny and educational and brilliant that it felt too short, but so ridiculously packed full of incredible knowledge that 44 minutes doubled because I had to watch it twice!😂
@synthwolfe8906
@synthwolfe8906 4 месяца назад
Kinda surprised you didn't have a blue-ringed octopus encounter in the "dangerous encounters" section. it's astounding how few people actually know about them.
@Albinojackrussel
@Albinojackrussel 2 месяца назад
Probably not a huge number of videos of people with them, since the encounters tend to either be kinda boring, or not TOS friendly.
@synthwolfe8906
@synthwolfe8906 2 месяца назад
@@Albinojackrussel there's a few on youtube shorts and tiktok.
@coyotleaucreepypasta4179
@coyotleaucreepypasta4179 8 месяцев назад
Watching this grown man be absolutely enthralled by these animal vids has brightened my day- thank you for this.
@glorygloryholeallelujah
@glorygloryholeallelujah 9 месяцев назад
The little pose he strikes/holds at 41:16 after putting her hat on…seriously makes my heart feel like it’s going to explode from a cuteness overdose!😂❤
@rob7476
@rob7476 7 месяцев назад
this is the comment I was looking for. The same exact reaction to that pose lol
@herec0mestheCh33f
@herec0mestheCh33f 6 месяцев назад
Monke moment
@suchnothing
@suchnothing 4 месяца назад
Reminds me of the zoo orangutan that gets some sunglasses dropped into the enclosure and models them for a while. So adorable. They see us wearing something all the time, and want to try it out when they get their hands on it, see what all the hype is about.
@albertonykus
@albertonykus 9 месяцев назад
Fun fact: there are two different groups of rodents called "mole rats" that evolved convergently! The mole rat in that video is a spalacid mole rat, which are also called blind mole rats because their eyes are not just small, but completely covered over by skin. They live in Eurasia and are more closely related to actual rats and mice than to the other group called "mole rats". That second group is formed by the naked mole rat and bathyergid mole rats (or blesmols). They are, as you note, African in origin, and are more closely related to guinea pigs and porcupines!
@ClintsReptiles
@ClintsReptiles 9 месяцев назад
I'm looking forward to digging into the rodents soon! Thanks for sharing your knowledge. Super cool!
@iseriver3982
@iseriver3982 9 месяцев назад
I'm guessing you mean old world porcupines, because old world and new world porcupines are parallel evolution like the two types of mole rat. And for that matter European moles and Africa golden moles are also two different groups of animal that evolved into the same niche with a similar body plan.
@albertonykus
@albertonykus 9 месяцев назад
@@iseriver3982 You are correct that the different porcupine groups also represent a case of convergent evolution. African mole rats are more closely related to both types of porcupines than to rats and mice, so I did not specify for the sake of simplicity.
@stickiedmin6508
@stickiedmin6508 5 месяцев назад
" . . . related to guinea pigs . . ?" Yeh, that makes sense, considering the noises it was making. My guinea pig Maverick would grunt/squek like that. He was a funny little dude, had the most beautiful, long, flowing mullet the eighties ever witnessed, was totally blind and had a pair of nuts bigger than mine. He was called Maverick because he zoomed around like a little rocket - being blind didn't slow him down, he had a seeing-eye-bunny friend who lived with him...
@SolHeizer
@SolHeizer 8 месяцев назад
If I’d had a teacher this knowledgeable, entertaining, and as easy to understand, I might’ve chosen a different path…but still extremely appreciate your content! Thank you!
@ZROGST
@ZROGST 7 месяцев назад
Enjoyed this, especially the unidentified creatures segment. Siphonophores are truly fascinating - if you're taking recommendations for a second round, there's footage from a 1991 Japanese ROV of Bathyphysa conifera that is absolutely bone chilling. I cannot imagine being on the other end of that ROV and stumbling on such an otherworldly siphophore
@thatffxiguy
@thatffxiguy 9 месяцев назад
I saw the bit on the fossa, and I've seen internet pictures. A male fossa's reproductive anatomy is nightmare fuel. It was hilarious seeing Clint describe it like that at the end to the camera man's horror.
@adiemuller5422
@adiemuller5422 9 месяцев назад
I need a non-censored version of that outtake xD
@Siberius-
@Siberius- 8 месяцев назад
Yea that's a lot of spikes... more than a house-cat for sure with it's tiny pee-pee. The females have spikes on their clit! that's fucking nuts. They also have a bone like males have for their penis (not humans lol), and it starts out long, but gets shorter as they age. Very unusual and cool.
@bogwife7942
@bogwife7942 5 месяцев назад
I tried looking for it out of morbid curiosity and all i found was furry porn :/
@CaptainLuckyDuck
@CaptainLuckyDuck 4 месяца назад
​@@bogwife7942 I giggled at this comment. XDDD
@ember9361
@ember9361 Месяц назад
@@bogwife7942 ew, i hate furries so goddamn much for sexualizing animals to that extent
@alexisthinking
@alexisthinking 9 месяцев назад
Love this. If you ever did make it to tiktok, you could legit just spend all your time stitching animal videos that you’re tagged in. 😂😂
@ClintsReptiles
@ClintsReptiles 9 месяцев назад
I just discovered that this is a thing. Crazy! That might just need to happen!
@goodminer2137
@goodminer2137 9 месяцев назад
​@@ClintsReptiles Oh my god yess!! you gotta do that id love to watch 😂
@Dee-nonamnamrson8718
@Dee-nonamnamrson8718 9 месяцев назад
@ClintsReptiles No Clint! Don't download the Chinese spyware that's banned in China! - Some random IT guy on the internet you have no obligation to listen to.
@CompanionBeans
@CompanionBeans 9 месяцев назад
I would get tiktok specifically to watch this
@kadenmoses2180
@kadenmoses2180 9 месяцев назад
@@ClintsReptiles no please don’t do ticktock. That app is a cancer
@natsinthebelfry
@natsinthebelfry 4 месяца назад
I've seen hundreds or maybe thousands of golden and bald eagles at one time before! When I went to Devil's Tower as a teen, they were nesting on it and circling it. It's an absolutely incredible structure and the entire area feels so strange and beautiful, but the eagles were honestly my favorite part.
@pastel7645
@pastel7645 6 месяцев назад
I'm extremely surprised it's taken me this long to find your channel, I'm autistic and have a special interest of animals, specifically birds and reptiles, these videos are amazing! I have so much to add to my fun fact roster
@amandareeves5101
@amandareeves5101 4 месяца назад
My son is too!
@deano1873
@deano1873 9 месяцев назад
I've worked around tiger country and met numerous people who have had encounters with tigers. They will monitor what people do and pay attention to our habits, which for the most part is just being curious. But for a group of people lost on a mountain side was a bit more sinister. Also I read a collection of stories from forest monks in Thailand prior to European arrival. They considered elephants a significant threat as most other animals will not molest a monk meditating under a tree, however elephants would randomly kill monks. The forest monks did have a high appreciation and affection for the intelligence of cobras. Possibly partly as a meditating monk is a nice place to curl up and stay awhile.
@ohnothepossum
@ohnothepossum 9 месяцев назад
Makes sense, a warm monk would also be inviting to me if i would be cold blooded
@davidvento5481
@davidvento5481 9 месяцев назад
Thai natives say elephants do possess an equal if not greater risk to people than tigers. Those venturing into the wilderness in areas frequented by tigers will often wear human face masks on the back of their heads. The reason for this being that tigers prefer catching their prey unaware and the rear-facing masks act as a deterrent to a tiger scoping them out as potential prey. Some people also paint rear-facing eyes on their cow’s backsides for the same reason! The herper Rupert (of “Rupert’s Reptiles” on YT) goes wandering all around the jungles in Thailand -alone & in a group apparently unconcerned by the possibility of tiger attacks. The diversity of species there is totally amazing! He also is currently organizing tours -perhaps consider contacting him as he seems to know all the hot spots for herping. TBH, I’d take what Chandler says with a grain considering the result of his recent careless free-handling of wild cobras in India. His cavalier, impetuous nature is not setting the best example for reptile keepers with organizations like FWC, etc..
@kyrab7914
@kyrab7914 9 месяцев назад
​@@davidvento5481granted, the results of Chandler's India adventure speak for themselves, but I don't think he does anything to support your point here considering he's also just gone through tiger country basically smile and don't think about it. Until you get back to ppl and learn those claw marks on the tree you were under were probably not in fact bears.
@Kittypaws90
@Kittypaws90 9 месяцев назад
What if they are fed? Like if I were to put out some food. I imagine tigers become like bears. Maybe some acclimate well to humans and others don’t? .. yes they are agile carnivorous wild animals (cats to boot are the hunters of all hunters) maybe so so much like bears although, I presume .. as long as they are not hungry and they are not provoked or threatened then they should be relatively harmless?? Like tarantulas. If they’re not hungry and there’s no reason to be defensive.. Cats and tarantulas have a lot in common already anyways.
@krankarvolund7771
@krankarvolund7771 9 месяцев назад
@@Kittypaws90 Most tigers don't attack people, it seems that only some "man-eater" tigers will go out of their way to stalk and kill people (most of the time isolated unarmed people, they don't like to attac groups of humans and won't attack armed people unless they're cornered). The most likely explanation is that man-eaters are sick or injured tigers, unable to kill anything stronger than a human, as it's thought that tigers don't like human meat. There's two exceptions however, some tigers took a liking in human meat during wars after eating many corpses, and in the Sundarbans, between India and Bangladesh, there's so much tigers that even healthy tigers attacked humans. However, those attacks have dropped considerably these last years due to better management from the local authorities (only three people per year are killed, versus fifty or sixty a year before ^^).
@danvitty5442
@danvitty5442 9 месяцев назад
I honestly love how you just looked so concerned about every category and then the second you heard gorillas you just looked so excited😂😂
@qalbi_ibn_lari
@qalbi_ibn_lari 7 месяцев назад
I worked on a tall ship in Washington State that sailed all over the state's waterways and coast. We had all kinds of animals around us before from Harbor seals to Sea lions, Harbor porpoises to Whales, orcas and more- but one of the coolest was a cormorant that landed on our aftmost rail on the stern, and dried it's wings on deck before flopping about the deck a bit and flying away.
@fineacorn
@fineacorn 7 месяцев назад
Seeing whales at work. What a dream
@jeannekepaan
@jeannekepaan 2 месяца назад
I think my kink is just watching nerds geek out on topics they're passionate about. I can watch Clint talking about animals for days.
@celtzen
@celtzen 9 месяцев назад
I loved this!! That Komodo really did look like he was regretting his life choices about halfway through dinner to be fair... and OMG Mole Rats are so freaking adorable!! That little grunt!
@lindsyfish6704
@lindsyfish6704 9 месяцев назад
The komodo really did! 😂😂😂 I was like, "that's a little big, but it's probably okay". Then you could practically hear it think, "ah, carp!" Halfway through.
@courtney5796
@courtney5796 8 месяцев назад
Heck no! He bit that guy two-four days ago and tracked it since. He expended A LOT of energy doing that. All I saw was THUROUGH enjoyment on the capture. Even ramming it into the ground to help it in! That stud has the next MONTH to bask and be lazy! If you are not human on this planet and you can go a month without worrying about food? You are top tier!
@sarahcallaway9969
@sarahcallaway9969 3 месяца назад
Can't believe I ate the whole thing!
@darkshadow851
@darkshadow851 9 месяцев назад
Clint, I just want to give a shoutout to how incredibly grounded you seem. Despite being as thoroughly educated as you are, you don't do things like assert yourself as "Dr. Laidlaw", or have any air of arrogance. While obviously I don't know you in person, I'd like to think your personality in these videos is somewhat reflective of your real personality, all the same. And yeah, just felt it's worth mentioning how much I appreciate being able to watch someone as knowledgeable as yourself, while not being put off by a stuck-up attitude!
@ClintsReptiles
@ClintsReptiles 9 месяцев назад
Thank you so much! I find that kind of thing rather off-putting personally. If your education makes it so you know your stuff, show me by the stuff you know, not the title you present.
@DeezNuggz
@DeezNuggz 9 месяцев назад
clint is BASED
@davidvento5481
@davidvento5481 9 месяцев назад
@@ClintsReptiles ​ Just fyi; for the longest time I thought that the testosterone- fueled state of “heat” bull elephants go into was called “musk.” I was recently corrected by Dr Russel Burke, (professor of bio at Hofstra U) who said the correct term is; “musth.” *I was understandably shooketh and said to him; “but professor, surely you ‘musth’ be mistaken...!* 😂 _Ba DumTissssssssssssssssssssss_ _(Seriously though, it’s called “musth,” pronounced “must”)_
@alicecain4851
@alicecain4851 9 месяцев назад
​@davidvento5481 I knew this also and wondered why such a knowledgeable person as Clint IS didn't use the correct word. Maybe they are used interchangeably?
@wildflower1397
@wildflower1397 9 месяцев назад
​@@davidvento5481Even when people pronounce it correctly, my closed captions always say "musk". It used to crack me up, but now I realize it is literally teaching people the wrong word. Sigh... 😂
@kendallchaos
@kendallchaos 11 дней назад
I love how this channel mainly focuses on reptiles (hence the name) but Clint’s also just so knowledgeable in general about so many animals
@warpdriveby
@warpdriveby 4 месяца назад
That tiger scene is unreal, the first time I had that "there is a dangerous predator around" you talked about the amazon not having was in Alaska seeing polar bear in the wild. I've seen black and brown too, and they deserve respect and caution but they're rarely interested in getting anywhere near humans. Being in tiger habitat seems like it would feel the same or scarier than polar bear ranges.
@AbeM.
@AbeM. 9 месяцев назад
That elephant looks more concerned than calm about the man just standing there 😂. It’s like he got creeped out.
@Badficwriter
@Badficwriter 7 месяцев назад
The elephant was literally side-eyeing the man!
@michel0dy
@michel0dy 4 месяца назад
I love how the elephant tried a second mock charge just to make sure. Seeing no reaction to a charge from a smaller animal must've been the weirdest thing to them!
@KatieDeGo
@KatieDeGo 9 месяцев назад
Clint is to me as an adult what Saturday morning cartoons were to me as a kid: excited all week to wake up and watch!
@kodabear1996
@kodabear1996 9 месяцев назад
YES!!! I usually watch while my clothes are in the washing machine...before I get into whatever messy chores I have planned for the weekend. Today I'm painting my closet.
@mystra13
@mystra13 9 месяцев назад
I literally said to my husband an hour ago, "I'm going to charge my phone & watch my Saturday morning vids of Serpa & Clint like cartoons when we were kids"
@alicecain4851
@alicecain4851 9 месяцев назад
This is SO true! The same excitement level!
@kassandralangenwalter2475
@kassandralangenwalter2475 4 месяца назад
"oh my God... SOOO MUCH DANGER." 😂
@MrsGump
@MrsGump 8 месяцев назад
I don't know why this popped up in my feed but I'm SO GLAD it did! This was absolutely fascinating! I very much enjoyed watching Clints explanations & his general excitedness he gets while talking about animals! Def sub here ❤
@eonarose
@eonarose 9 месяцев назад
The first time I heard a gorilla pound it’s chest, I was surprised it sounded less like King Kong and more like someone dropped a bunch of coconut shells. Also please do more of these.
@kaitlando636
@kaitlando636 9 месяцев назад
Neat!
@IrinaGreenman
@IrinaGreenman 9 месяцев назад
Oh, this was delightful! The elephant video reminded me of an encounter I had when I was on safari in Kenya in the 90s. My group was in a safari van, and we were photographing a family of elephants, including a teeny baby that didn't even have tusks yet. One of our group accidentally used the flash on his camera and it spooked them, and the adults flared their ears at us. The baby *freaked* and came at the van in full charge, and actually nearly skidded into us (our guide pointed out later that this was the one moment we were in actual danger, because if the baby *had* skidded into us it could have been hurt and then we would have had a bunch of *angry* adult elephants on our hands). There was this moment when we could see the wheels turning and the "ohhhh, this thing is much bigger than I thought it was" on the baby's face even as it never stopped moving, just kept running as it turned around and galumphed right back to its mama's side. 😂 Adorable and terrifying memory!
@rabevomrosenstrauch6782
@rabevomrosenstrauch6782 7 месяцев назад
My uncle once had an encounter with a wild gorilla male. He initially froze in shock when this huge ape rapidly approached him up to an arm length, but once it came close, he for some reason extended his hand and tried to introduce himself… yes, to a literal wild gorilla. (One of those brain short-circuit under stress reactions.) That ill-mannered gorilla completely ignored his hand though and instead briskly grabbed a colourful little bag of oranges he was holding in his other hand to quickly storm off with his loot. Later he (the gorilla) was seen happily munching away the oranges, while the bag had become a stylish new addition to this sharp if a little savage dresser’s hat collection. Unquestionably, every dandy in furs needs a proper orange bag hat, so he was completely in the right to enrich his wardrobe (and his breakfast) with Uncle’s fruit bag; who, as a polite and generous hooman in awe of Mr. Gorilla’s impeccable fashion sense, gladly yielded it. I like to think he was more than fairly compensated with this story though.
@jen3713
@jen3713 4 месяца назад
First time watching you. Liked and subscribed. I'm a documentary junkie and your presentation wowed me. Informative without being boring. Explained simply without dumbing down. You've got a new fan.
@The-Microverse
@The-Microverse 9 месяцев назад
The Smile on your face when the word Gorilla was uttered is Priceless 😁
@ClintsReptiles
@ClintsReptiles 9 месяцев назад
I love them so much!
@jadaestes5876
@jadaestes5876 9 месяцев назад
So do I, I love watching videos of D'Jecco and his boys Jabali and Ringo!
@china_sickness7005
@china_sickness7005 9 месяцев назад
You talking about the tigers and mountain lions reminds me of that big news story from a few years ago when a young mountain lion tried to kill a grown man. It turned into a wrestling match and the man choked the mountain lion to death, made it to the hospital, and survived. That’s a next level battle of survival right there. Very rarely do we see raw, hands on prey vs predator fights where the one being hunted actually kills the predator during the fight
@krankarvolund7771
@krankarvolund7771 9 месяцев назад
Hercules reincarnated XD
@rickandmorty9706
@rickandmorty9706 9 месяцев назад
Yeah it's not a fair fight vs the planet's Apex predators (humans)
@FoxtrotMouse
@FoxtrotMouse 9 месяцев назад
​@@rickandmorty9706 We're only Apex if we have weapons. Take away our weapons, and we get knocked down quite a few notches. No claws, small teeth, thin skin, a lot of very fragile areas that can incapacitate or kill you very quickly.
@remliqa
@remliqa 3 месяца назад
Was that the one where they determined that it was a juvenile mountain lion and found its starving siblings not far from where that guy killed that "kitten" ? Take a lot of wind out of his sail when it became obvious he killed a hungry cub.
@LizzyDel
@LizzyDel 7 месяцев назад
You are the sweetest person I think I’ve ever seen. Haha 😅 love how much you dig animals and sharing about them.
@jjackson4273
@jjackson4273 7 месяцев назад
Please do more of these. That was so fun! I love to hear your knowledge on these random topics!
@KayosHybrid
@KayosHybrid 9 месяцев назад
Your passion for all the different animals, their behaviour, their relationships, their biology - it’s so infectious! It makes me feel excited and curious about the natural world like it’s the first time again - and always fun when I can identify species along with a zoologist !
@myragroenewegen5426
@myragroenewegen5426 9 месяцев назад
This guy's blow-by-blow of the elephant encounter is everything. I nominate him to be the animal encounter sportscaster forever! Also, what I wouldn't give to know everything about how that footage of the tiger chasing the motorcycle came to be. Who is the driver, where was he and what did he do when he finally lost the Tiger and stopped the motorcycle? Where is the camera filming from? How does this footage even exist?!
@taagolarts3787
@taagolarts3787 7 месяцев назад
I'm guessing that was from a gopro or other small camera on the cyclist's head/helmet!
@thedarkside7508
@thedarkside7508 3 месяца назад
When I saw this video the first time, the caption said there was a second person sitting behind the driver froggy style and filming
@user-rl6hs3xo2n
@user-rl6hs3xo2n 3 месяца назад
There were 2 persons on the bike
@myragroenewegen5426
@myragroenewegen5426 2 месяца назад
@@user-rl6hs3xo2n Ah-HA! Now I get it.
@sarahlou7796
@sarahlou7796 7 месяцев назад
Can't believe I am just now seeing this video. Thank you, Clint, this was very entertaining and informative. Loved every bit of it, I hope there's more in the future.
@michellepetersen6597
@michellepetersen6597 8 месяцев назад
I just love all of your content so much, Clint. It really brings me joy and peace learning from you and I appreciate all you do for animal education
@congra5580
@congra5580 9 месяцев назад
Clint's absolute adoration for the animal kingdom is so infectious. These videos are such a treat. Gorilla lovers rise up.
@Gaspingindeath
@Gaspingindeath 9 месяцев назад
You know, it would be kind of fun to put together a super cut of all the times Clint identifies his favorite animals. At least anecdotally, it feels like there's a lot of different animals that are his favorite (which there is ABSOLUTELY NOTHING wrong with). I just think it'd be a cute and funny little video.
@dustinleftwich680
@dustinleftwich680 8 месяцев назад
Absolutely wrong it would not at all. It would be a cute and funny video yes, but not little at all. At least ten hours.
@MrXxz368
@MrXxz368 7 месяцев назад
Last video was heart warming as heck, thanks guys.
@Gshkent
@Gshkent Месяц назад
I’m loving how smart this guy is.. I could listen to him all day. His enthusiasm for animals is contagious!
@fetzie23
@fetzie23 9 месяцев назад
One time when my parents took us hiking in the Alps, we saw some paragliders being chased by a pair of Goldies who were clearly annoyed by the presence of the intruders into their territory. The paragliders must have been scared shitless.
@icewink7100
@icewink7100 9 месяцев назад
Non-vertebrate chordates are some of the weirdest animals ever! I’d love if you talked more about them in the future!
@bbyjscx
@bbyjscx 6 месяцев назад
You are SO full of knowledge, its brilliant to see, thanks for educating us! I love listening to you talk with passion about animals.
@BJDLove
@BJDLove 4 месяца назад
I love this video format. It’s like you never know which animal you are going to learn a piece about next, but it’s going to be super interesting. I really hope you do more like this!
@Kyle_Schaff
@Kyle_Schaff 9 месяцев назад
Hearing a father say TikTok is a poison on society is always nice
@zyephenz8466
@zyephenz8466 9 месяцев назад
I think what Clint identified as a Fossa is actually a Jaguarundi. They do look very similar, but to me the head structure looks more like a Jaguarundi.
@ClintsReptiles
@ClintsReptiles 9 месяцев назад
I agree
@maryeckel9682
@maryeckel9682 9 месяцев назад
You can see the rounder head and the steel gray body
@cherishloveart
@cherishloveart 8 месяцев назад
I was going to say haha, glad someone else mentioned this :)
@tiredCuttlefish
@tiredCuttlefish 8 месяцев назад
I'm glad you mentioned that! It was my first thought too, especially since I can't imagine anyone going to experience the ecological wonders of Madagascar and not know what a cutie like a fossa is. Who's a cute little killing machine?
@lachlanbell8390
@lachlanbell8390 3 месяца назад
I was pausing before Clint identified each animal to see if I could identify it correctly myself first, and I immediately identified it as a jaguarundi. I was rather taken aback when Clint said it was a fossa, and spent a few minutes examining pics of fossas to see if I was wrong. I still thought it was a jaguarundi, and just spent inordinate amount of time trawling the comments to see if anybody else had the same reaction as me. Good to know I'm not the only one 😁
@Dantalliumsolarium
@Dantalliumsolarium 4 месяца назад
Seeing how happy he got with gorilla’s feeds my soul
@killereverb3928
@killereverb3928 7 месяцев назад
Clint - you constantly entertain and astound with your seemingly endless fund of knowledge of so so many creatures great and small! You swiftly and expertly weaved your way through every category and section sharing your observations and making your points along the way. I was quite impressed and thoroughly entertained. Thank you as always.
@NoSanaNoLife
@NoSanaNoLife 9 месяцев назад
your description of how big eagles appear is so accurate. I was crabbing on a dock and heard a thud behind me. i turn around and see a bald easgle standing a foot away from me. It felt like he was almost 4' tall but this was likely due to the close proximity and shock. I threw him one of the crabs from my trap, and I am pretty sure it sat there for another minute just deciding if I would make a better meal.
@wildflower1397
@wildflower1397 9 месяцев назад
They have replica of a life-sized bald eagle nest at our zoo. It's big enough that children love to curl up in it. They don't look that big high up in trees, but they are huge.
@maggiee639
@maggiee639 9 месяцев назад
I saw them in Alaska a few years back and I wouldn’t be surprised if the one you saw was 4 feet tall. I felt like they were between 3 and 4 feet but I didn’t see them up close
@VictoriaEMeredith
@VictoriaEMeredith 9 месяцев назад
Saw some bald eagles at the Carolina Raptor Center. They certainly felt 4 feet tall to me (5’2”). At the very least, they could reach my armpit.
@lsswappedcessna
@lsswappedcessna 2 месяца назад
That eagle probably saw dogs begging for food and was like "Oh what the hell, I'll give it a shot, too." except instead of bribing you for a crab with cuteness it bribed you with FREEDOM.
@woschaebedip
@woschaebedip 9 месяцев назад
Clint's knowledge is incredible, the way he has those facts ready about all kinds of animals... but can we also acknowledge that he knows someone who's been on human centipede??? :D
@JordyAbsurd
@JordyAbsurd 8 месяцев назад
I want more of this. Clint reacts to everything!
@frittfoxx3488
@frittfoxx3488 2 месяца назад
35:08 I'm here from your second Tiktok video! My vote is on Jaguarundi for this guy, and here's why; Jags have smaller ears, nose, and eyes than the Fossa, which I think this guy has, but the ears are very rounded, giving them a similar look, especially when folded back. But the selling point for me is that the Fossa is more of a tree dweller, while the Jag is more at home on the ground. That critter reads Jaguarundi for me, for sure.
@AerisRising
@AerisRising 2 месяца назад
This! Jags also have a lot more of a boxy, squared face shape which you can see on the video at a pretty good angle when the creature turns its head before the jump. I thought I was going crazy!
@MizzzFizzz
@MizzzFizzz 9 месяцев назад
I need more of these, this was so fun. I dont go on tiktok because of all the other junk but curated animal videos are wonderful. I love the explanations and having no stress that if a video has potential for harm, neglect, or normalizing dangerous things it wont be ignored like so many "fun animal comiplations". This video was so refreshing.
@SolidSerpents
@SolidSerpents 9 месяцев назад
Videos like this remind us all Clint is WAY more than the typical PetTuber. The animal knowledge is AWESOME. When majority of RU-vid is fluff, so nice to see actual education vids. I have been going Podcast route lately for my animals smarts. GOOD JOB WITH THIS VIDEO. AWESOME.
@sonjarygg2331
@sonjarygg2331 29 дней назад
Love your channel! The reactions are awesome. Thank you 😁
@ThereminElectro
@ThereminElectro 7 месяцев назад
Randomly stumbled upon this. Fantastic. I love the enthusiasm and passion he has for animals. May go on a binge
@GibbonLord
@GibbonLord 9 месяцев назад
Hey Clint, maybe you can make a video about reptiles that take care of their young. Its not really an widely known fact that some reptiles make awsome parents.
@starlight0313
@starlight0313 9 месяцев назад
King Cobras and a lot of crocodilians
@GibbonLord
@GibbonLord 9 месяцев назад
@@starlight0313 butterfly agamas, crocodilians and monkey tail skinks came to my mind but king cobras I didn't know
@peggedyourdad9560
@peggedyourdad9560 9 месяцев назад
@@starlight0313I’ve heard that African rock pythons watch their young for a couple of weeks after they hatch.
@lindsyfish6704
@lindsyfish6704 9 месяцев назад
And crocodile skinks!
@azhdarchidae66
@azhdarchidae66 9 месяцев назад
birds
@WireSlinger
@WireSlinger 9 месяцев назад
I was on a hike somewhere I frequent and was... Stupidly comfortable. I walked through a couple bushes and there were a few snakes warming in the sun. Hadn't seen snakes there before so was quite surprised and even more so when I realized I was standing on one! Thankfully it didn't bite me and it wanted away from me just as much as I wanted away from it 😂
@bernieshort6311
@bernieshort6311 3 месяца назад
Most definitely Clint, please more of this. It was so interesting and gave us a little time to think of what we would say to each clip. Outstanding.
@badkneesone
@badkneesone 4 месяца назад
This was such a nice and fun session. A nice break from all the bad news and crap on TV. Thank you Clint and crew!
@thomniced
@thomniced 9 месяцев назад
I have never seen an elephant get that close, even pretending to charge. But that is probably because people move on after the first charge. Thank you to this guide for giving us this experience. I was literally tearing up having this staring contest with an elephant. Especially because of the ears. The view is just insane and then the 2nd bluff omg. Unless an elephant is at a circus, zoo, or being ridden on by tourists (which let me add is a VERY different situation) I've never seen one charge so close. Oh I wish I was there.
@margodphd
@margodphd 8 месяцев назад
Me too, but my underwear probably wouldn't have liked that 😂
@CompanionBeans
@CompanionBeans 9 месяцев назад
I just binged the whole zoologist reacts series a few days ago!! so excited for another one
@ClintsReptiles
@ClintsReptiles 9 месяцев назад
It's one of my favorite series'
@amandaszymczak388
@amandaszymczak388 7 месяцев назад
My first clint video, but automatic subscribe! I can tell this guy not only loves animals....but loves teaching. Im in!
@Sxcheschka
@Sxcheschka 3 месяца назад
I love Clint's voice and enthusiasm.
@MRptwrench
@MRptwrench 9 месяцев назад
Thanks to Clint, and other great communicators like him, I was able to i.d. most of the animals on the "weird" section! (Misidentified salp as a sinonophore and that weird fish, the lancetfish, got me.) Again, thanks to Clint who's channel is one of the few cherished things I have in common with my daughter and granddaughter.
@LBG420
@LBG420 9 месяцев назад
Found this channel like two days ago and have been binge watching every single video, not only is it super refreshing to listen to someone who actually knows what they’re talking about, he’s hilarious, what an amazing channel ❤
@trapdoorguppi
@trapdoorguppi 7 месяцев назад
Clint you are awesome! Please keep your enthusiasm forever!
@jaimejones3177
@jaimejones3177 2 месяца назад
I subscribed not only because the content is fascinating... but I LOVE watching someone who's so knowledgeable and obviously loves what he does. Well done! 👏👏👏
@karmataurus6009
@karmataurus6009 9 месяцев назад
At 35:16, Clint identifies the animal he sees as a Fossa. I don't believe this is a Fossa, it looks much more like a Jaguarundi, a small carnivoran native to South and Central America which is a true cat. If you look at the coloration it much more closely resembles the Jaguarundi than the Fossa (Dark blackish olive with lighter head as opposed to reddish all over), the head shape is much more in line with a true cat as are the ears. Lastly, the tail seems much more like a true feline. Not sure if Clint looks through the comments but would be very interested to see his take on this.
@ClintsReptiles
@ClintsReptiles 9 месяцев назад
I think you're probably right.
@miquelescribanoivars5049
@miquelescribanoivars5049 9 месяцев назад
I was looking at the comment section if someone else pointed it out, it looks also leggier than fossa's usually are, and a with a much more rised heel.
@amandiecandy
@amandiecandy 9 месяцев назад
Please make this a weekly series! I loved every minute of this video! I could listen to you educate me all day! 😂❤
@OceanStateSerpents
@OceanStateSerpents 6 месяцев назад
Clint, I love your work and how you go about it, never change :)
@GardenDew
@GardenDew Месяц назад
Just a little note, the period of hormonal surge (mostly testosterone) in bull elephants which can lead to very aggressive behavior (BTW, also the reasons adolescent bulls are kicked out of the all-female, matriarchal herd when they reach that stage) is called must or musth
@withatwistranch4388
@withatwistranch4388 9 месяцев назад
The pure joy in your expression watching the Gorillas was so beautiful. It made my day❤
@Denyel007
@Denyel007 8 месяцев назад
Absolutely loved this! Yes, please do more of these!!
@thisismetoday
@thisismetoday Месяц назад
I love his enthusiasm!!
Далее
Zoologist Reacts To Viral Animal TikTok 2
55:39
Просмотров 182 тыс.
The past and future of Pringles🥔
00:18
Просмотров 1,7 млн
This duo #UFC302
00:13
Просмотров 646 тыс.
If Tarantulas Are NOT True Spiders, Then What Are They?
20:47
Evolutionary Biologist Reacts to Creationist Arguments
32:37
Zoologist Reacts To Famous Movie Snakes
18:54
Просмотров 336 тыс.
ЭТО САМЫЕ СТРАННЫЕ КОТИКИ…
0:47
Невероятный поступок 🔥
0:32
Просмотров 1,1 млн