Misspoke at 2:35, it was out of 121 not 101 attacks
@braniganirby35864 ай бұрын
2:41 📱💻🔑🔑🚗🧑🏻🦽🏃➡️
@DavidKing-ue4et4 ай бұрын
Cheyenne Mtn Zoo in Colorado Springs, CO has a moose. Js
@KrystalMeek4 ай бұрын
Unrelated but can you please do a video on eels?
@redskyz44264 ай бұрын
@@mndiaye_97 ur okay honey bunches
@DiabloTheDesertSnake4 ай бұрын
Sss
@jaybee88624 ай бұрын
Lmfao... the orangutan escaping just to throw rocks at his rival is fucking hilarious
@Alf-gm7tf4 ай бұрын
Maurice vs raka
@godzilla445564 ай бұрын
@@Alf-gm7tfPlanet of the Apes reference
@UltraGalaxyify4 ай бұрын
Orange Instigator: Hey stupid, how's life on the other side!? "chucks rock"
@Mayla414004 ай бұрын
He's such a fucking chad for that
@iprobablyforgotsomething4 ай бұрын
@jaybee8862 -- When throwing shade through the grapevine just isn't good enough anymore, go face-to-face and make it rocks.
@NewMessage4 ай бұрын
10 years plus of zookeeping taught me one thing... Animals... people... all the same. Both get bitey if you're 15 minutes late with dinner.
@Xavier_Destalis4 ай бұрын
I just showed your comment to my wife, she said it's absolutely true. I gave her a bite on the arm and asked when lunch was going to be ready.
@realdragon4 ай бұрын
Humans are animals after all
@TheIntelligentElephant711334 ай бұрын
Yep would never work with a chimpanzee 🦍
@jdcONhizPC4 ай бұрын
@NewMessage Any advice for someone considering becoming a zookeeper?
@DragonTheOneDZA4 ай бұрын
@@realdragon we're just bald monkeys who are really good at recognition
@ryojimata37084 ай бұрын
Orangutan's really do be lookin like they have some sort of ancient wisdom they want to tell you.
@mndiaye_974 ай бұрын
I think they just don’t want to deal with taxes
@Grace-er9ep4 ай бұрын
@@mndiaye_97gotta respect that
@Plvsh_fox4 ай бұрын
@@mndiaye_97they even got locked up because of it 😞💀
@mikenovielli86254 ай бұрын
@@mndiaye_97 thanks for the info on the best times to hit the zoo, love your videos/content good stuff man always on point
@Sharky-b3x4 ай бұрын
@@mndiaye_97 is that why that orangutan kept escaping?
@audreydimmel66744 ай бұрын
11:19 “Man, they got pandas from Temu I can’t even be mad.” This line actually killed me help
@LilDragonkaijufan3 ай бұрын
LoL
@WiseSageBum3 ай бұрын
Didn't have to wait as long for shipping either
@gametest-37083 ай бұрын
Fr
@TheBowen7473 ай бұрын
i read some where that every panda bear on earth, thats not in china ... is rented out by china..
@Phoebe54482 ай бұрын
Srsly those panda dogs are adorable, I wouldn't be mad either!
@ApexGale4 ай бұрын
3:53 ok but I love that even the lioness pulls up to try and calm her husband down like "babe chill tf out they're just humans it's not worth it"
@grondhero4 ай бұрын
"Damn it, Roy, I told you not to bite the hand that feeds us!" - lioness, probably
@Sherr.y4 ай бұрын
@@grondhero😂😂😂😂😂
@Sherr.y4 ай бұрын
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
@GandalfTheTsaagan4 ай бұрын
Lioneses don't like it when males cause problems, so it's pretty likely that she was in fact intervening
@miab.36323 ай бұрын
I came to the comments to see if anyone else noticed it 😂 That was so good
@GrimmDelightsDice4 ай бұрын
There's a clouded leopard at my local zoo who's allergic to every meat they've tried to feed her except elk. High maintenance princess.
@mebreevee4 ай бұрын
At least it wasn’t a hunger strike decision and was a legit health thing. That makes it less painful to shell out the cost of care imo.
@MeadowsMiniFarm4 ай бұрын
Curious, if that’s legit considering they eat mountain goats.
@GrimmDelightsDice4 ай бұрын
@@MeadowsMiniFarm Feel free to look her up! Her name was Lisu, from Denver Zoo. She was apparently unfortunately euth'd earlier this year.
@mebreevee4 ай бұрын
@@MeadowsMiniFarm I learned about a lactose intolerant squirrel that exists. Would have died if the rehabber didn’t realize what the problem was. Usually, those animals would just die due to natural selection so we never tend to get a glimpse of stuff like this until animals are brought into captivity. Its interesting to think of how many animals pass without anyone ever knowing they had a negative reaction to their own diet.
@BLAQFiniks4 ай бұрын
@@GrimmDelightsDice isn't clouded leopard rare? So why was it offed then?
@nasis184 ай бұрын
The noise that gorillas make when they pound their chest will never not be funny. lol
@EpicRenegade7774 ай бұрын
its one of those sounds that really feel like they dont make sense Like certain bears not roaring, or cheetah chirps
@realdragon4 ай бұрын
It will not be funny in the wild
@celestewoodworth56274 ай бұрын
Heard it happen once. My younger brother was real little and decided to pound his chest, prompting one of the silver packs to run past pounding his own chest in return. It took a solid two or three years for me to realize the zoo didn't just have someone waiting to play that sound if one of the gorillas did that.
@nasis184 ай бұрын
@@EpicRenegade777 Ikr!! You would think it would sound a lot more doomy.
@nasis184 ай бұрын
@@realdragon True, but gorillas are really just vegetarian pacifists. I'd me a lot more worried about chimps. lol
@anondecepticon2 ай бұрын
1:33 The expressions of pure disgust they make as they skirt past that puddle of water like it’s raw sewage is too funny.
@francisgeistwald25 күн бұрын
omg I didn't even notice when I watched it, thanks for sharing 😂😂
@deecooper15679 күн бұрын
ROFL 🤣 I didn’t know they didn’t like water 🤔👵🏻❣️
@Ziorac4 ай бұрын
It's crazy to think that all of the animals that missed humans during the pandemic are actually pretty smart.
@realdragon4 ай бұрын
There are smart animals that don't miss humans at all
@Darius2010-r1g4 ай бұрын
Yeah eels are very smart
@DarthBiomech4 ай бұрын
I found it surprising that zoo ostriches _don't_ like humans, since there's load of stories on the web how ostriches apparently find humans _sexy_ and constantly try to perform mating dances at them.
@blaytzd.bermuda6474 ай бұрын
@@Darius2010-r1g Used to take car of a Moray Eel named Cheese, Smart little guy, almost managed to escape his holding aquarium while We were cleaning his tank.
@maryjane44324 ай бұрын
@@DarthBiomechthe ostriches at my local zoo love humans and they come up for treats and pets
@KazeMemaryu4 ай бұрын
I did an internship at my local zoo about 20 years ago. My naive ass really thought my job was cuddling, playing with, and feeding animals all day. My first week consisted of prepping food for small monkeys, all of which react very poorly to strangers, so I wasn't even allowed into the enclosures - my only hope spot was tapir treatment, which meant giving them very long belly rubs to alleviate their anxieties over the capybaras bullying them. On my second week, I got moved to the raptors. I got bit by a kea on my first day because he knew I had an egg, and on my fourth day, I watched as the keeper killed live bunnies by slamming their necks on a table and stuffing them with medicine for the vultures. The reality check had me reeling, and one of the younger keepers told me that part of their curriculum consist of learning and memorizing all animals by their latin names. I was lucky to not get assigned for cleaning duty at the giraffes, which everyone agreed had the most vile poop of the entire zoo. I respect the hell out of zookeepers specifically because I've caught a glimpse of what kind of effort goes into their everyday job routine.
@JeremyDelancy4 ай бұрын
I was believing your story until ".....capybaras bullying them". Those oversized plushies get along with everything and everyone.
@koroquette4 ай бұрын
@@JeremyDelancy they absolutely do not lol. Contrary to popular memes, capys can be territorial and aggressive.
@ald72824 ай бұрын
@@JeremyDelancy capybaras can be pretty chill... unless you're another capybara or in their territory. ben from urban rescue ranch had to separate his capys because one of the males tore chunks of flesh out of the other's face.
@Sunny-uz8cw4 ай бұрын
@@JeremyDelancy Media manipulation. They're chill until they aren't, a lot of us are only shown the chill side. They're still animals and animals can still be assholes.
@Undomaranel4 ай бұрын
@@JeremyDelancy Here we have an exhibit of someone exposed to animals only through the lense of social media. They believe that, somehow, an entire species of giant rodent, native to Central and South America among anaconda, caimen and jaguars, are only ever "chill". This specimen has abandoned logic and reason, relying entirely on hearsay and biased reports tailed to generate views. The capybara is a giant rodent, and just like every other rodent from rats to rabbits, has kick and hunger and a massive bite. -(read in your favorite narrator's voice)
@Urrelles4 ай бұрын
"Even a 95% vegetarian can make room for beef." 2024 best dad joke right there.
@julietfischer50564 ай бұрын
Numerous herbivores have eaten meat when the opportunity arose.
@austindaniel47734 ай бұрын
Banger
@Sanquinity4 ай бұрын
Just goes to show what kind of animals "survival of the fittest" creates. Some of the most dangerous animals on the planet belong to the herbivores, and very few animals won't go for meat if they're hungry.
@prodigalpriest4 ай бұрын
Like donkeys. I saw a video from China where one was munching on chicks. Like, WTF?!?
@brocephas85534 ай бұрын
Seems y'all missed the (very NON-dad, non-dietary) joke.
@FictionRaider0073 ай бұрын
I worked at a British Zoo for about a year. It was in the "Catering Department", running and cooking food in the stalls, shops and restaurants but I got to know some of the keepers. The best escape artist they all agreed upon? The freaking Anteater! Apparently guests all think the Anteaters are pretty lazy since they seems to do nothing but sleep all day. But apparently Oreo and his girls are just always saving energy for the next breakout. It was such an odd pick I almost didn't believe them until he wandered into the kitchen one day.
@Z.A.M.13594 ай бұрын
One time at a zoo, a male lion kept roaring and roaring until we all showed up at his enclosure. Dude wanted attention and knew how to get it.
@cheyennes76814 ай бұрын
I visited a Big cat sanctuary and keepers said the lions would have at least one roar off a day. There neighbors who were a few miles away could hear it when they really get going.
@dearthditch4 ай бұрын
Soo my cat except with a much larger food bill
@samtigerlilly10034 ай бұрын
our lion would roar an hour before everything closed, every day.
@o0bookwyrmknight0o4 ай бұрын
Our zoo’s lion enclosure is by the playground, so the male Lion Kaloo roared a lot, getting adults and kids to run over to see him, standing at the edge of his grotto…..and then he immediately walked back to by the door to his indoor enclosure 😂
@moistenvelopes3 ай бұрын
Literally just a cat with extra hair
@BroadwayBrittany4 ай бұрын
I work at the Riverbanks Zoo and Garden, and after 50 years, we’ve only had one animal escape: a gorilla. Allegedly, the night before there was a big storm. This resulted in a piece of bamboo being knocked down and falling on top of the enclosure. Yes. A giant gorilla used a single piece of bamboo to climb up and out of his enclosure, using it as a walkway. Once out, he reportedly wandered around for a little while before climbing right back into the enclosure, having satisfied his curiosity.
@Calmtimer4 ай бұрын
"This place sucks take me back" 🦍
@LILIAN_HOSHIMA4 ай бұрын
@@CalmtimerLMAO HELP😭
@BroadwayBrittany4 ай бұрын
We still have the legendary bamboo piece to this day, and it gets shown to every new hire (self-included) during orientation.
@orbboom61194 ай бұрын
Based gorilla
@knightmare91604 ай бұрын
I've seen enough, i'm statisfied ~ gorilla probably
@augustl88764 ай бұрын
I worked at a zoo for a time and I can say in my particular zoo, one of the Marabou Storks was the animal that escaped his enclosure most often. At least it seemed that way to me as every time he got out (almost weekly), he'd come and find me and rattle his bill at me before following me back to his enclosure. The only other animal that escaped to my knowledge in my time there was a two toed sloth on my first day. The trainer had forgotten to close the door to his enclosure and she refused to acknowledge that the new hires were trying to tell her that he was ever so slowly making his way out of the open door as she was talking. It was the slowest escape escape ever, but that sloth was determined.
@SrividyaS4 ай бұрын
Imagine being so stubborn about not listening to your new hires that you let a SLOTH escape! Somehow, that seems hilarious to me. 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 Definitely relatable for anyone working in corporate too.
@augustl88764 ай бұрын
@@SrividyaS Everyone present got a good chuckle about it except for the trainer. The sloth was safely returned to his enclosure shortly after his daring escape and was given some extra attention and a monkey biscuit as a treat for allowing himself to be captured without a fuss.
@Vinemaple4 ай бұрын
Apparently the sloth trainer was determined, too. Big rSlash vibes on that story
@Sanquinity4 ай бұрын
The stork probably liked you. :P Either that, or it was like "hah, I escaped again! You suck!" but didn't actually know what to do with it's freedom after escaping.
@herpderp39164 ай бұрын
I never think of storks as being particularly intelligent, but that story does make me wonder if that marabou saw his escaping as a game and you were part of it.
@ayobrowhatsthis4 ай бұрын
0:01 bro even looked back, swipes his hair, locked eyes for the ladies. he might have more charisma than all men.
@karawithgun81484 ай бұрын
The Rizzler.
@theraginginfernape94963 ай бұрын
@@karawithgun8148The gorizzla
@karawithgun81482 ай бұрын
@@theraginginfernape9496 Lmfao take my upvote. That was a good one.
@Jodie-G1982 ай бұрын
@@theraginginfernape9496 My man! 🤣
@GreengageGalАй бұрын
This is how Tarzan came to be who he is
@lonelystrategos4 ай бұрын
Ken Allen escaping from his enclosure just to chuck rocks at Otis is such a mood.
@WhiskerDooz4 ай бұрын
"I told you when I get out I'm coming for you"
@miragegrey41774 ай бұрын
"Oook!"
@bolbyballinger4 ай бұрын
I have to wonder if he even needed to. Like, usually animals of the same species are kept close to each other. Wouldn't surprise me at all if the escaping part was jut Ken Allen flexing on Otis.
@piedpiper11724 ай бұрын
“Kendrick was wrong, Ken is the world’s biggest hater”
@guyfaux39784 ай бұрын
Maybe Otis deserved it?
@keepercolby11374 ай бұрын
I’m a zookeeper of 12 years and a wildlife educator of 7 and I really appreciate this video for being both positive towards zoos but also honest. We’re not perfect, the field has work to do to improve animal welfare, but we’re working hard at it. Thank you for the support and sharing the information!
@Mermare4 ай бұрын
Zoos are so much better than they were just a few decades ago, and it's thanks to keepers like you who care about their charges.
@SarahAbramova4 ай бұрын
Much appreciated!
@geministrial9504 ай бұрын
You probably don't hear this a lot but I really appreciate your work. Big hugs and best wishes from this side of the pond
@contricepsn4 ай бұрын
I've worked in wildlife nature parks, and it's all a work in progress, but the right people with the right morales In the right position, at the right time make the difference. And pressure from others morales
@paigelavergne91253 ай бұрын
I'd love to hear how you survive with such low pay. That's my dream job, I even did an internship last year and loved it, but the pay kinda scares me
@alejandrojimenez1444 ай бұрын
Polar bears getting excited to see humans is probably like 10yo me when my parents took me to mcdonalds
@jaybee88624 ай бұрын
@@alejandrojimenez144 The polar bears probably - "Hey Bert, which one do you think looks the tastiest?" "The little ones of course, that or the reaaaaally big ones. Tender. Juicy. Meaty."
@abigailr.96014 ай бұрын
I had a similar thought at that part of the video lolllll
@nobodyspecial115Ай бұрын
Our local male is a diva, he'll only get up an play if there's a big crowd, if it's just a few people he'll literally show his butt to everyone an flop down
@Icanlogonnow4 ай бұрын
The female lion that comes to help the zookeeper by biting her husband in the ass had me rollin xD
@anadubar48198 күн бұрын
"Duncan ! Calm down ! You are getting both of us in trouble!"
@punkysnarks4 ай бұрын
I wish I'd been there for the escaping orangutan story. The mental image of a bunch of orangutans chilling on the zoo paths is hilarious.
@king_eti_plays24734 ай бұрын
give them cargo shorts and sandals and you wouldn't even notice they're there
@matthewyoung45204 ай бұрын
@@king_eti_plays2473but they gotta be named Dunston cus them be the ones lol
@MilloSpiegel4 ай бұрын
@@king_eti_plays2473 you wouldn't even notice that the orangutans escaped, you would just think they are a bunch of gingers
@Stranglethroat4 ай бұрын
"Omg the orangutans escaped, evacuate the zoo before they go on a rampa-wait they're just chilling"
@stillhere14254 ай бұрын
The funniest part was, they didn’t go anywhere. Just hung out in the trees just outside of their enclosure. As though the point was simply to prove they were free agents.
@starkiller344 ай бұрын
Every Canadian when you asked why there were no Moose in zoos: DONT EVEN THINK IT YOU ABSOLUTE MADMAN.
@Nazhrya4 ай бұрын
Joke's on the Canadians, I know a zoo that has moose and even a moose lodge from where you can watch them. They got some good space with some separated enclosures for male and female. Last I heard, they're doing alright and I think I remember even seeing a young moose several years ago, when I was visiting everytime we were at my grandma's. It's the Sababurg zoo in Solling, germany. I still love that zoo, it's huge, has history and quite a variety of animals. Also, the raccoons broke out into the garbage bins so often that the zoo just turned the little area into part of the raccoon enclosure xD
@starkiller344 ай бұрын
@@Nazhrya our moose have rage in their blood and hate in their eyes. I think the geese got to them...
@Nazhrya4 ай бұрын
@@starkiller34 Probably, the geese are spreading their rage and hatred 💀
@RENEGADEJon194 ай бұрын
@@starkiller34 it's the mosquitoes
@Electronicfort4 ай бұрын
😂
@Riomy134 ай бұрын
I remember talking to a zoo worker once who took care of dolphins. The dolphins usually do shows for the visitors several times a day. The worker told me in the pandemic the dolphins started to become really sad because no one watched them if they showed their tricks, no one reacted and applauded. So to combat that all the zoo workers regularly gathered at the usual showtimes and watched them, screaming and applauding as loud as they can. It made them very happy. Even if they still noticed the benches weren't nearly as full as usual.
@p.j.71434 ай бұрын
Sort of related, but whenever the zoos I work/have worked at close for the season, the petting zoo goats get really clingy bc they miss all the attention lol. Goats can be very affectionate, and of course they miss getting fed by guests. When we open and they hear the kids coming down, they all excitedly run up to the entrance gate!
@TheBKLD4 ай бұрын
Lol, that is exactly why my zookeeper dreams fell flat. I watched Animal Planet (especially The Crocodile Hunter) religiously and Zoo Tycoon was my favorite game. I begged my parents to let me be a "Junior Zookeeper" at our local zoo, but transportation ended up being an issue so I wasn't able to. By high school, I was like "Ah, lots of hard physical work and not a lot of money...hm..." So, I got a degree in education of course. Doh!
@DaughterofDiogenes2 ай бұрын
😂😂 I also wanted to work with animals and ended up being a teacher😂😂😂
@robertquick84102 ай бұрын
@@DaughterofDiogenes children are animals. So you got what you wanted.
@Thatbitch_93Ай бұрын
😂
@Thatbitch_93Ай бұрын
@@robertquick8410😂
@justcrazy7447Ай бұрын
So you are A ZOOKEEPER, just for a Different species
@1Mackinzoid4 ай бұрын
Zookeepers are definitely taken advantage of. It feels criminal to pay such a dangerous job such a low rate. If you are in contact with wild creatures that could kill you by accidentally stepping on you or one that could tears your limbs off with little effort, there's gotta be a higher rate just for the danger of it.
@lukeandrew33354 ай бұрын
One of the issues is a lot of people want to try it.
@RiveroftheWither4 ай бұрын
@@lukeandrew3335 Yes but a lot of people are also very quick to quit when the fantasy is shattered. It's the same thing with my job at a dog daycare/ grooming/training facility. A lot of people try to get in the door thinking it's an easy dream job only to realize it's way harder, more involved and less glamorous than they imagined, usually quitting in their first month. It takes so much more than loving dogs or animals in general to actually survive these jobs and the pay given is laughable. Long rant shortened, it doesn't matter that a lot of people are applying if a lot of people are also leaving. It costs more to train new employees constantly than to just weed out the weak and pay the ones that can handle the job well.
@tipoftheiceberg70344 ай бұрын
America in general pays bad for literally everything wtf are you talking about?😅
@SarahAbramova4 ай бұрын
@@tipoftheiceberg7034 they are talking about one job
@dyhhffjuojg4sd4 ай бұрын
That's capitalism for you, where the more dangerous and dirty it is, the less wage you get. Just work harder, vulnerable civilian! /sar
@ThoracJunaut4 ай бұрын
i always imagine going to a zoo, seeing a gorilla and remembering that smiling is a sign of aggression and instead giving a respectful bow to see how the gorilla reacts
@frougee4 ай бұрын
How *did* it react.
@edie43214 ай бұрын
@@frougee How can your reply be 23 minutes ago, when the comment was made 19 minutes ago? YT never ceases to mess with us.
@chey76914 ай бұрын
Well anything that shows you aren't a threat like becoming smaller is generally encouraged when dealing with gorillas. So it either was amused or confused but not annoyed.@@frougee
@hungrymusicwolf4 ай бұрын
@@edie4321 That is a good question.
@Gr3nadgr3gory4 ай бұрын
Remember, smiling itself isn't the problem as long as your mouth stays closed. It's the fact that humans tend to bare their teeth when smiling.
@avevee97084 ай бұрын
THANK YOU for talking about how zoos can be a great resource for conservation. I’ve been seeing an alarming increase in people making blanket statements about how all zoos are evil, ignoring the conservation efforts that many undergo as nonprofit organizations
@jamie16024 ай бұрын
My local zoo is AZA accredited and is participating in breeding programs to boost critically endangered species. There's a very good chance the zoo near you is, too. It's not the 1890s anymore and I'm really not sure how this discourse happened. People, read something.
@thecoolestofthe834s24 ай бұрын
nah shut them down slash funding you want healthcare thats how its done its either the poor or the animals genz doesnt go to there anyway and they will be forced to shut down soon anyway
@Darxide234 ай бұрын
Most ethically run zoos take in animals that wouldn't survive in the wild for one reason or another. They function like animal rescues in that respect. These animals have been around humans their entire lives and are dependent on us for their survival. It isn't as if they're out there randomly capturing wild animals to put in cages. That's what we did a century ago. We've moved past that.
@DeviSeren4 ай бұрын
A zoo can be a place saving and preserving parts of nature or a hellscape where helpless beings are tortured. That means you need a lot of evidence/facts/nuance to judge any given zoo. Blanket statements (in either direction) are easier for people to fall back on. I think we need a slogan or acronym describing what factors make for good zoos - something catchy that people could say instead.
@nirablackfire27924 ай бұрын
*EXACTLY.* I literally cannot stand people who see one or two cheap and abusive zoos and just assume all zoos are actively terrible quick-buck enterainment at the animals' expense. Especially when the situation is more complex than that. A well funded and credible zoo can work wonders for animal convervation and awareness. Allowing children the opportunity see these creatures outside of a tv screen and sometimes spark a fansciation that ends up turning into a job in animal convervation later in adulthood. Zoos have played vital roles in bring back species from the brink of extinction and teaching people that some of them get wrongful hate. (Like wolves, sharks, Hyenas.) Zoos can be both good and bad, and it's time people start putting in the effort to learn the difference.
@supersaint9854 ай бұрын
A Jaguar named Valerio at my local zoo in New Orleans busted through his steel enclosure early Saturday morning in 2018 and proceeded to act like a Jaguar, murking 9 animals before he was tranquilized . The body count was 5 alpacas ,3 foxes ,and 1 emu .
@neweden12413 ай бұрын
awww, poor foxes :C
@aa01blue383 ай бұрын
Damn it was stronger than the Australian government
@Handlesareawful20083 ай бұрын
I know someone who was there several days before it happened
@carlosschwambach92133 ай бұрын
Any idea if he wanted to eat or was having a fit of violence?
@Handlesareawful20083 ай бұрын
@@carlosschwambach9213 The person said the jaguar looked angry about something the day she was there.
@bratyihu4 ай бұрын
Ex-zookeeper here: worked 10 years in a small but exotic zoo. From that 7 years as a keeper and youth program teacher. Worked with small and mid sized mammals. From lemurs to mandrills. What you heard were true. We are not in it for the money, fame or prestige. We are over-qualified and underpaid. But we are in it because we like it, or we know how to do it. Because let me tell you, it is EASY to do it wrong. Worked together some miserable people. Zoos are great, if managed right, they can make difference and show you a good time. Toss a coin for them and when you see a keeper who might not be a seal or orca trainer with their own show, just say them a howdy. They will appreciate it. Love the channel. Keep up the good work!
@abebuckingham81984 ай бұрын
When I think of zoos I mostly think of all the poop you have to deal with. Thanks for cleaning that 💩up.
@sadbread24464 ай бұрын
That was the issue when I was looking into Zookeeping as a career path. It seems like the underpaid aspect is really exploitative and built on how Zookeeping is a very much passion-job. It's something where people are more willing to take a low pay because animal handling is something people get really really invested in. I decided to go with Ecology instead because it functions similarly, as a means of preserving studying & hopefully refreshing the environment in a way where I'm not getting screwed over. Hopefully that changes in the future and Zookeepers can get themselves out of the bind their positions have been in for so long. It really isn't fair.
@tarotakras64094 ай бұрын
My sister went to zoo keeper classes and school but backtracked due to what can be almost called a lack of payment... I find it sad, the animals should have the best of the best caring for them 🖤
@jbach17384 ай бұрын
I worked as a volunteer for our local park zoo. It's almost entirely native animals that could not survive on their own (a lot of illegal confiscated pets), with a dozen or so monkeys from labs. When I started volunteering there I was hoping to help rehabilitate some injured or young wildlife. Definitely scoop some poop and prepare food. Stuff like that. Nope. I was working the cash register at the gift shop most of the time. The only time I got to interact with any of the animals was when the keeper needed an extra hand to corral the coyotes into a small corner so they could be sprayed with insecticide to stop the fly strike on their ears, with a freaking pressure washer. It was absolutely disgusting the way they treated those animals. I stayed less than a month. I know they were trying to help, but there are better ways. I even offered some suggestions to make the process easier for the dogs, but they said this was the fatsest way to get it done. Those poor dogs were absolutely terrified and in pain. Disgusting. Do better people.
@Zombina6384 ай бұрын
Zoos definitely arent great
@deathreus4 ай бұрын
3:54 I like how she came over like "Honey, stop! They feed us!"
@A420TOWN4 ай бұрын
She teamed up with them
@Klaevin4 ай бұрын
plot twist : those were mountain lions and it's actually a male that saw an opportunity
@trappestarrgaming34224 ай бұрын
I was weak watching that. Its lik that 1 family member that always act up and sumbody gotta talk him down
@A420TOWN4 ай бұрын
Fr
@YochevedDesigns4 ай бұрын
I was thinking "Honey, save me a leg! Here, let me hold him down for you."
@PuffPiastri4 ай бұрын
I’ll always maintain, elephants are the most elegant and respectful animals. Treat them nice and they will return. If you’re assholes, you boutta get stomped.
@dummbobqqqqq4 ай бұрын
@@PuffPiastri yeah so maybe don't imprison them.
@marcusc99314 ай бұрын
the problem with elephant is not its attitude it's it being 50 times your weight.
@meredithgrubb44974 ай бұрын
No matter how respectful u r to one tho, a male elephant in any period of musth is super dangerous. For several months they get so sexually agitated and aggressive that nothing, absolutely nothing, is safe. They become stinky, horny aggressive freight trains that lose control and go off the rails. Other than that tho they seem to be pretty chill giants as long as ur being cool towards them.
@raynightshade83174 ай бұрын
@@dummbobqqqqqI mean part of its protection, then you also have elephant chat can live in the wild
@meredithgrubb44974 ай бұрын
@@dummbobqqqqqin America at least, many zoo animals nowadays r either born in captivity or rescued and r animal embassadors who can't be released into the wild for either physical or medical reasons or the fact they wouldn't be able to care for themselves. Unfortunately zoos r necessary as well for conservation as humans tend to care more about something when they r able to see it or interact with it though an experience. It's just the way our brains r hardwired. Most zoo animals, not all but most, would have no shot at survival if they were released unfortunately
@memomorph53752 ай бұрын
4:10 animals know when they’ve broken free. They get excited and run around. Those “people in costume” escaped animal drills wouldn’t prepare you to capture a real zebra with the zoomies!
@owboi3394 ай бұрын
Just gained a new respect for zoo keepers
@Ziythatguy4 ай бұрын
Fr
@valentinkambushev49684 ай бұрын
I have always had a respect for them.
@TheIntelligentElephant711334 ай бұрын
Me too
@koriw17014 ай бұрын
Especially at that pay rate! Yikes! That's about $37k/year. Basically starvation living in the diminishing middle class
@Pershath084 ай бұрын
@@koriw1701honestly its pushed up quite a bit by big cities with high cost of living. My last paycheck after 10yrs was $14.35/hr. No holidays (animals gotta eat), and an difficult/expensive degree in zoological science.
@peacefulgrotesque15104 ай бұрын
14:39 With my glasses off, it looks like that zookeeper is sitting with a group of attentive sweet potatoes.
@grondhero4 ай бұрын
🤣I took my glasses off and saw the same thing! 🤣
@MoralesCorner4 ай бұрын
Prairie dogs are basically furry potatoes indeed
@Jasmine-gk4re4 ай бұрын
Omg I can’t unsee it 😂 That is so cute haha
@CD-Gaming4 ай бұрын
Yeah, I jus tried and that bottom right one doesn't help!
@medusathedecepticon4 ай бұрын
It really does 😊
@punishedwhirligig33534 ай бұрын
2:15 I was honestly not expecting Big Cats as the answer especially since I heard that the animals zookeepers tended to fear the most working around were camels and donkeys
@ShinmegamiPersona4 ай бұрын
Big cats and chimps are the worst
@hoopa64774 ай бұрын
Although because of this they get more security, thus allowing other animals more opertunities to escape
@jebVlogs5564 ай бұрын
@@ShinmegamiPersonayeah I agree, look at a big cat wrong or a monkey wrong,and you'll see 👀 the wild side appear like that 🫰🏽
@pauciloquentflibbertigibbe52174 ай бұрын
The most feared animal has the most precautions taken around it. So probably the animals that are second or third on that list have the highest incidents because they have the capacity and the most opportunities for violence.
@amicableenmity98204 ай бұрын
It tracks, regular house cats are unpredictable as is.
@pisces25694 ай бұрын
I’m glad this wasn’t just zoo bashing and you acknowledge all the good they do. Too many people assume all zoos are mall attractions that steal wildlife
@terzetut4943 ай бұрын
they mostly do
@nobodyspecial115Ай бұрын
Unfortunately the hurricane hit the area hard but the biggest zoo in the US is in Ashville NC. The reason it's the biggest is because animals have actual paddocks and large areas to run around in... well most, of course some can't be allowed to roam too freely. No tiny cages, every enclosure is made to resemble their natural habitats. In fact sometimes you might not even see some animals because they're way in the back hanging out
@DanGamingFan24064 ай бұрын
Zookeepers don't get nearly enough respect or pay for what they do. Being one was my dream job for most of my childhood, too. I love animals, I wanted to be close to them, I was a master of Zoo Tycoon 2, I thought I knew everything the jod could throw at me. One internship, a macaw bite, and cleaning up rhino dung was all the reality check I needed. I still appreciate how zoos that are run right do to help endangered species. And I respect the hell out of zookeepers for having much more patience and grit than I ever will. I'll always miss feeding the penguins, though.
@mndiaye_974 ай бұрын
Yeah maturing for me was realizing being a zookeeper isn't just playing with wild animals all day, it's a grind that drains every aspect of your life, physical, emotional and social. I love animals and I don't even know if I'd make it 😭
@MrSponge564 ай бұрын
What career did you end up picking?
@Americanbadashh4 ай бұрын
@@MrSponge56 KZbinr from the looks of it
@CheckyliaChenille4 ай бұрын
If you love animals why would you work in a zoo where they are held captive and often abused?
@ChromaticEagle4 ай бұрын
@@CheckyliaChenilledepends on the zoo
@eowalton4 ай бұрын
I once petted a zedonk (zebra donkey hybrid) at a petting zoo. But there was a sign warning about the jealousy of his animal friend. I knew how to pet horses and gave him some nice pet/scratches on his nose. I've never been bitten by a equine animal. The Zedonk loved it. Sure enough, an ostrich came out and pecked me to stop me from touching "his friend".
@swara47042 ай бұрын
zedonk is such a funny name help
@scruffy-thejanitor2 ай бұрын
Typical Kevin
@P.H6912 ай бұрын
You got me then trying to pet the ostrich as everyone gets a headpat
@stephanniemorinАй бұрын
An ostrich, of all things.
@LukaszKarpuk_Hack4lk4 ай бұрын
according to my zookeeper wife, the best way to see if an enclosure is escape-proof, is to put a baby animal in there. According to her baby animals always find the weakest link.
@linneathesystemsdruid3084 ай бұрын
This sound’s about like what my family would do when they raised goats.
@Monsterboy11994 ай бұрын
This is a different story only reading the first sentence.
@grondhero4 ай бұрын
The first time I read your first sentence, I read it as "put a baby in there." I'm like WTF?! 🤣
@Camms964 ай бұрын
Tbh, human babies/toddlers also find the weakest link, cause not only they figure out how to both escape and do mischief, but also they'll do it in shortest amount of time lmao 😂
@LukaszKarpuk_Hack4lk4 ай бұрын
@@grondhero I made sure to put "baby animal" but I guess a human baby will do in a pinch.
@novaengliae782 ай бұрын
I've been watching your videos for a while now, and this might just be my favorite. I was a zookeeper for 10 years and it was incredibly rewarding and simultaneously thankless.
@Alliewolf-nk1wi4 ай бұрын
Im 8 hours late, but i worked/ volunteered at a zoo for a total of 8 years, and I had a Clouded Leopard obsessed with me. I wasn't even a zookeeper. I would often clean the building next to his enclosure, and he would literally sit as close to the entrance to that building as he could get. I would get calls from my zookeeper friends asking me to come over so he'd go inside at night. If I came in on my day off, we could spend hours walking back and forth along his enclosure as he would chuff and meow. He passed away of old age in the beginning of July (he was already 5 when I started volunteering), and I had to quit. I can't image working there without seeing him 5 days out of a week. RIP Bronze, you were a real friend.
@thecoolestofthe834s24 ай бұрын
he wants to fucking eat you you think he would of cuddled you
@franciscoguinledebarros44294 ай бұрын
One think that made me realize the value of zoos was to see the value of a museum No matter the exhibit area, the biggest contribution a museum would have is the lab in the back, a hub for universities to study with the best preserved material, that of course, is not the one you see I like to think many zoos are likewise, they may have big cages to show the animals, but in the back they're running rehab, study, conservation, all in a practice and scale unmatched by other efforts
@John_Weiss4 ай бұрын
Zoos have been moving away from cages since the 1970s, towards a model where the animals have free reign of an enclosure, and the people either walk above or on one border of the enclosure. And the enclosures are given sufficient space for the animals in it. And the animals are given various enrichments to care for their mental needs.
@franciscoguinledebarros44294 ай бұрын
@@John_Weiss yeah I was downplaying the public view side of things
@herpderp39164 ай бұрын
My local zoo runs a cheetah breeding program on acreage away from the guest paths. They've put new mamas and cubs on exhibit but at any given moment most of their cheetahs are probably away from the public view.
@eljanrimsa58434 ай бұрын
Zoos are very limited in what they do and can do for conservation. Most animals just don't do well in captivity. Conservation programs that preserve habitat in the wild and integrate locals to care for their wildlife are much more important.
@imperialhighcommand85354 ай бұрын
@@eljanrimsa5843 They are still important for educating the general public, though. I feel like that's one of the main benefits of them as an institution. A lot of the important conservation work is often done outside of public notice, but zoos are a good way to get people to donate, take an interest in, or volunteer for conservation. The downside, though, is that it also means a lot of idiots just treat animals as entertainment and don't even take an interest in helping the ones in the wild.
@VeWatchesVideos4 ай бұрын
As a Dutchwoman, I will answer the call and will like for your pronunciation of "Diergaarde Blijdorp", as it's completely correct. Plus any American who manages to pronounce our notorious hard "g" did something impressive in my book.
@StriplingJr2 ай бұрын
Crazy part is that giraffe NAILED that rhino at 3:01 without even really looking!
@SabitoxGiyuАй бұрын
It also sounded like a broken bone for the rhino
@Sawyer_LH4 ай бұрын
“A sinful liaison, that’s haram bae” might be the funniest thing I’ve heard all summer
@IntrusiveThot4 ай бұрын
SERIOUSLY it took me out
@TV-8-3014 ай бұрын
11:00 Reminds me of a joke: I went to the zoo and there were no animals except a dog. It was a shih tzu
@lisa2stewart4 ай бұрын
🍜🌌 😂😂😂
@sharHu10104 ай бұрын
😒
@heatherjones66474 ай бұрын
Good one, dad!
@fabianp.29864 ай бұрын
I was struggling to understand the joke until I pronounced the "t". Then it all made sense
@aleksandarvil57184 ай бұрын
BADUM-TSSSSS 🥁😂
@LawfulBased4 ай бұрын
7:20 Pandas: _" I am black, white and asian. Why can't we just all chill together? ... also take care of me, Human. "_
@drewbydoo89454 ай бұрын
When you put it like that, pandas are actually the perfect symbol for, not just equality, but also world peace.
@kovi-kovi-viko4 ай бұрын
@@drewbydoo8945 It's also ironic because some people really dislike pandas and want them dead. Doesn't really bode well for what they symbolize...
@Gr3nadgr3gory4 ай бұрын
@drewbydoo8945 well, that symbolism can be pretty bad if you remember the fact that pandas would have been extinct a long time ago without human intervention.
@drewbydoo89454 ай бұрын
@Gr3nadgr3gory I mean, wasn't it us that almost made them extinct in the first place? Pandas are kinda the frat boys of the animal kingdom, but they're not as dumb and lazy as people think. At least in the wild that is.
@drewbydoo89454 ай бұрын
@kovi-kovi-viko is humanity's opinion of an animal really relevant though? I mean, everyone hates spiders even though nearly all of them aren't at all dangerous to humans, and they control populations of insects that devour are crops. People love dolphins even though they're proof that animals can be evil xD
@RocioDiazS4 ай бұрын
4:22 “Lion”: gets tranquilized Lioness: Wth is going on? Other lioness: this is what happens if we make a break for it
@geoisacat4 ай бұрын
I live 30 minutes from the Norfolk zoo. I remember hearing about the red panda escape lol. Adorable little trouble makers
@juliemesser20534 ай бұрын
My heart.😊🙏🏻😌😭
@KrayzeeAssKrisReturns4 ай бұрын
That surprises me as there are two red pandas at Zoo Boise and their enclosure seems super easy to escape. I wonder if the tiger, which is perfectly visible from their enclosure, keeps them from trying to escape?
@aligaterr51374 ай бұрын
@@KrayzeeAssKrisReturnsI have also seen red pandas in an easy to escape enclosure, I think they just gave up on preventing the escape, the pandas may just like to stay in it's area.
@ANightattheOpera284 ай бұрын
I couldn't even be mad if I saw a red panda escapee walk past me. Bro is just chilling.
@ReleaseTheQuackers4 ай бұрын
Norfolk zoo is a awful place
@NewMessage4 ай бұрын
We had moose at our zoo, years ago. The old curator pretty much specialised in rehabbing them. My ex wife even raised one (they usually come in from the State FW guys pretty young). It is a slog. A 24/7 job for months, and they won't usually accept temporary surrogates. Ya gotta sneak away to shower while they sleep, and they try to catch ya at it! You can leave a baby deer for 12 hours if ya need to, and they just lay down and wait. Moose and Reindeer require constant misters available in the summer months, and again like reindeer, they don't do well anywhere that isn't famous for tourist worthy snowy winters. Nothing like seeing a short little blonde lady lead a full grown moose in rut down the fence line (so we can get in and clean/water/feed) with an empty baby bottle, or stop him in his tracks by pointing and stomping a foot though! The feed is imported from Sweden or Norway or somewhere. You can't use trotter or sweet or anything. And yeah, man... it's pricey!
@tobiaswedin4 ай бұрын
You need to import pine shoots all the way from Sweden/Norway? I live in Sweden and we have moose parks where youcan have guided tours but they'r not really zoo's. They are basically just fenced off pieces of pine forests with moose in them just chillin'.
@NewMessage4 ай бұрын
@@tobiaswedin We have to use a USDA approved feed to keep our license... but they did get plenty of browse :)
@tobiaswedin4 ай бұрын
@@NewMessage Sounds really weird to me where the moose just eats off the trees even in captivity with all those regulations and special feed 😅
@peterryrfeldt85684 ай бұрын
@@tobiaswedin they have them in Skansen but ig that technically isnt a zoo
@kh6284 ай бұрын
I mean, which kind of trees though? There's like 100 species of pine tree and 50 species of fir tree, plus plenty other gymnosperms. If moose do best on a certain mix, you don't want to just go off into the local woods to snag any old random tree branches that might be sub-optimal ya know? And most livestock feed (the trotter and sweet feed mentioned) is grass based so probably just not right at all.
@darkonyx69954 ай бұрын
"Red Pandas are the animals most likely to escape their enclosures" Fucking peacocks: 👹
@littlebear2744 ай бұрын
My local reserve doesn't even have a peacock enclosure. They just wander around everywhere, lol.
@nerdyninjatemptress4 ай бұрын
Can’t escape if you don’t have a permanent enclosure.
@ElpSmith4 ай бұрын
Real. I got chased by a peacock once
@cmsully14 ай бұрын
Detroit Zoo has them free-roaming. I am always SUPER LEERY when one gets close- them talons are BIG.
@arandomsystemglitch23984 ай бұрын
Oh yeah i forgot about them yeah every zoo i know of and have been to those guys are just helloooo as soon as you enter but then again it's not surpising because they can actually fly and cause of there size no cage or net would actually be viable option to hold em
@Lowman5622 ай бұрын
So much fantastic unique information. This is totally one of the best channels out there. Dude fact checks his self responsibly and is super considerate to peripheral jobs. This man is an educational Saint
@TheoVorster4 ай бұрын
Really appreciated your comments at the end about zoos, and how grouping and/or judging all zoos together (especially accredited and non-accredited ones) is reductively lazy if not dangerous.
@darcieclements48804 ай бұрын
Definitely and I also really appreciate pointing out how awesome rhinos are when properly handled and raised in captivity where they don't have to be terrified of predators their whole life. I don't think I would compare them to dogs, they are much more like the nicest horse you have ever met, but yeah they are truly awesome and it is so sad that so many of them are the last representatives of their species. I don't know how many people are aware but over the last 30 years we've lost more than one entire species of rhino to poachers, sometimes in a single week.
@Treeeboy4 ай бұрын
Seconded! It's nice to see a balanced view on the good and bad that can come from zoos
@ousamadearudesuwa2 ай бұрын
Agreed. Facebook is already infested with those kinds of morons already.
@faefiercevulpine69904 ай бұрын
I really loved the final message. I see so many people say zoos are just pure evil and that’s not true. What’s particularly tragic in zoos is not the captivity, but how guests treat certain animals.
@michaelj.beglinjr.28044 ай бұрын
The most evil animal in any zoo is most definitely the public.
@RadiantSharaShaymin4 ай бұрын
And the bad rep the animals might get for reacting to the nonsense people do. It's so stupid to think that someone can taunt or throw things at an animal and try to justify it at all. No, the internet and views isn't an excuse, and paying to see them doesn't give any form of entitlement. There should be a "moron law" that lets the zoo sue people for threatening the animals. (Maybe after a warning if it's not immediately harmful, like I didn't know gorillas took showing teeth as bad until seeing Casual Geo, but if a keeper tells me to not do something I'm gonna listen.)
@ericvanswoll46114 ай бұрын
Ask the San Francisco Zoo about a tiger named Tatiana and a couple of real A**Hole young men
@DanGamingFan24064 ай бұрын
EXACTLY! Most zoos do so much to ensure the animals live a happy life, and to help with conservation. Most people don't realize how screwed some species would be without them.
@nerysghemor57814 ай бұрын
Yep. You are so right about rude human behavior. On the upside, I at least found that the same cat courtesy you use with your house cat works on mountain lions. They also like slow blinks and the same mannerisms that make your house cat feel calm. I found a super chill mountain lion at my local zoo that I swear was people watching like a house cat in the window. And that’s literally what it was except with six inches of glass between us. To make a long story short, bonding through slow blinks and cat-friendly mannerisms ended up with me and a mountain lion separated by only six inches of glass napping together on the ledges on our respective sides.
@TheKiroshi4 ай бұрын
The fact that big cats raised in captivity are both the most anti-social psychopaths while also missing the attention of humans is VERY cat behavior. And its why i love them
@TheKiroshi4 ай бұрын
That's weird, I didn't seem to say that all big cats are interchangable, only that they missed the attention of humans.. But maybe you somehow seen some magical words no one else did! Thanks for letting me know!
@JMurph20154 ай бұрын
@@TheKiroshiyou did seem to imply that all big cats have similar demeanors which would be a quite fatal mistake.
@GinkgoBalboa1424 ай бұрын
Where did the tasty-looking fidget apes go? :
@TheKiroshi4 ай бұрын
@@JMurph2015 -- If the assumption is "anti-social psychopath" do you assume friendly?
@JMurph20154 ай бұрын
@@TheKiroshi lions are literally pack animals, so yeah they are social.
@megapiglatin25744 ай бұрын
5:57 💯 I did a lot of hands-on work volunteering at a raptor rescue/rehab facility for a couple years; they had a resident (non-releasable) turkey vulture that was *so* playful and adorable, I loved him! While cleaning aviaries or doing water changes, I would frequently take a little longer with his because we would *have* to play a bit. His favorite vulture games seemed to be (1) hunting for old rat tails on the ground, and (2) catching rat tails/bits of rat 😂 He was so funny though: like a dog bringing their ball to you to play fetch! 😄❤️
@michaelsilver2534 ай бұрын
As soon as the zoo escape headline came up I knew my boy Rusty was gonna get a nod. I'm a DC tour guide and I always tell the ballad of Rusty the red panda whenever the zoo comes up. Fun Rusty fact: the DC zoo is pretty close to a main nightlife area, and when Rusty got out that's where he'd always head towards. In reality he was just attracted to the smell of food, but that didn't stop folks from cheering for his freedom because lil' homie just wanted to rage
@j.elizabeth46214 ай бұрын
Imagine sharing a big slice with Rusty 😭😭😭
@michaelsilver2534 ай бұрын
@j.elizabeth4621 Rusty for sure would get his own Jumbo Slice
@turbopokey4 ай бұрын
Prairie dog; “YAHOO!!!” How could that not be the cutest, funny critter noise ever?
@loganskiwyse78234 ай бұрын
Largest known descriptive vocabulary of any non-human species. Not just funny, but amazing in their own right.
@LokiToxtrocity3 ай бұрын
POPPYYYYY!
@l0ne__ang3l43 ай бұрын
I love em
@l0ne__ang3l42 ай бұрын
@@LokiToxtrocity popppyyyyyyyy
@ActionYakPolice4 ай бұрын
those women are makin me feel normal. I may like a bit of spooky scary but at least it's not a whole ass gorrilla
@Gendotherendo4 ай бұрын
The gorilla was good looking tho.:v
@valentinkambushev49684 ай бұрын
They are probably the same women who ship Noa and Mea (oh, yeah, that's a thing).
@Manicthecreator4 ай бұрын
@@Gendotherendo wdym
@killgoretrout8774 ай бұрын
its cause they are basically docile bl ack men lol
@murphyduck4 ай бұрын
Same😭
@ZeroStako2 ай бұрын
Man, everytime I'm having a tough time, I get back to being obsessed with this channel and it honestly restores my faith in the world.
@quickestscoped76034 ай бұрын
Should've also mentioned Great White Sharks on the list of "animals you will never see in zoos"; no one has ever kept one of those in captivity successfully
@monstersociety33604 ай бұрын
Oh, totally. I remember the Monterey Bay Aquarium briefly had a Great White at their location in the 2000's when I was a kid and my grandmother and I tried to visit it, but when we got there, we found out they had JUST RELEASED the darned thing back into the ocean THAT MORNING. Disappointing to be sure, but we still enjoyed our visit. At the end of the day tough, it was a Great White in captivity, meaning its health was probably deteriorating & from what we heard it was eating some of the other fish in the tank (It was a BIG tank. A lot of fish lived in the thing, including Sunfish.)
@wilsonweiseng64854 ай бұрын
No aquarium is ever big enough to satisfy this one
@monstersociety33604 ай бұрын
@@wilsonweiseng6485 Yup.
@Malenkia4 ай бұрын
@@monstersociety3360 I used to watch the livestream cameras of it when it was there constantly. It was so beautiful, but I'm very glad they were able to release it.
@la4401Ай бұрын
Dr. John McCosker of the California Academy of Science in San Francisco's Golden Gate Park took care of an injured Great White Shark brought to him by the fishermen who found him in the 1980's. It was a first for any zoo/aquarium and there's PBS a documentary out there somewhere on it.
@TheJacyn3134 ай бұрын
Lmao the Japanese zookeeper dressed as a lion followed by lionesses chilling like they were watching was a priceless edit.
@DragonFiesta4 ай бұрын
I volunteered at the Omaha zoo, unfortunately years after fumanchu had passed away. but the rhinos were basically big puppy dogs, and they think every person they see is the one who takes care of them so I got special instructions on how to pet one rhino which was short fast punches and noogies. and extra special instructions to say as far from the elephants as possible, because "they have a cruel sense of humor"
@prasetyodwikuncorojati24344 ай бұрын
Very far from common animal stereotypes indeed; brutish bad tempered rhino and loving gentle elephant. Meanwhile here the real life example you said are rhino that basically giant puppy which appear dangerous because it doesnt know its own strenghth and elephant with twisted sense of humor
@StoryBird2Ай бұрын
5:48 last time I was at my local zoo I noticed 2 zookeepers looking up into a tree, at first I thought a penguin escaped and climbed it somehow (because it was right next to that enclosure) but it was some sort of exotic bird. My dude was just chillin up there and at one point tried pooping on the zookeepers who were trying their best to get it before it could fly away. Best video I've taken.
@alexthejew4204 ай бұрын
3:50 wow holy shit that lioness actually came to those zookeepers defense against the lion like “yo what’re u doing??”, there that was actually amazing to see wow the intelligence man
@pixystixnfairycrack3 ай бұрын
It reminded me of a video that Kevin Richardson (The Lion Whisperer) put out a while back. He was sitting in one of the big cat enclosures with a couple big cats. While he is talking to the camera you can see one of them stalking him from behind and another jumped in and saved him before he got hurt. It even took Kevin by surprise.
@Mello-2084 ай бұрын
1:07 i'm dutch and deadass, that pronunciation of diergaarde blijdorp is really good! you even got the g sound correctly
@TPRM14 ай бұрын
Well that’s something, because his pronunciation of “Nottingham” killed the last two northern white rhinos.
@LeonMRr4 ай бұрын
10:56 When you go to see an african Lion in the zoo and the animal description says "made in China".
@myrox87924 ай бұрын
The irony of this post is that the dog breed literally originates from China
@davidsulo85584 ай бұрын
In Stockholm, Sweden, we have a open-air museum called Skansen and their, we’ve got moose
@VarangianGuard132 ай бұрын
I have never heard of Skansen before, and noq I don't think I could visit Stockholm without seeing Skansen. It looks amazing.
@philippak77264 ай бұрын
I have to say I am so proud of our capital's zoo - Wellington Zoo. They do so much to make sure the animals have the best replication of their natural habitat, go nuts on the enrichment, and have world-class vets and the vet clinic on site. They are part of global conservation efforts, teaching kids and adults about ways to consume in more environmentally friendly ways, they work to have a neutral impact on the environment themselves, and are part of several breeding programmes. One of my favourites is that the tazzie devils they have are all males, so there is more room in other places for breeding populations. They have bred Sheltipusiks, one of the lizards that has been super hard to breed in captivity they have a display of Little Blue Penguins, made entirely of ones who've been rescued, brought to the vet there for specialist treatment, and suffered an injury that made them unfit for release into the wild - one who has only one fin and used to swim in spirals, and now can swim in straight lines!
@LukeC9084 ай бұрын
My wife was a zookeeper. The data about the most dangerous animal is misleading because there are a lot of big cat interaction with humans. Audiences love that stuff and zookeepers do it behind the scenes too. But if you’re in a tunnel with a tiger on one side and a chimp on the other, you speed walk your butt towards the tiger.
@paigelavergne91253 ай бұрын
I interned at a zoo last summer and I've had people ask me which animal I'm the most scared of. I always say the chimps. They scare me
@jgkitarel2 ай бұрын
@@paigelavergne9125 Chimps are one of the few species where it is kill on sight as normal practice if they escape their enclosure for a reason.
@tthappyrock3684 ай бұрын
A story from one of our zookeepers: if you erre to give a screwdriver to chimpanzees, gorillas and orangutans, the chimps would use it as a weapon, the gorillas would be afraid of it and the orangutans would use it to take their enclosure apart.
@ageishyena30354 ай бұрын
I can believe this. Orangs are deadly smart.
@devilkitty67254 ай бұрын
@@ageishyena3035 I heard a crazy story about keys from a gorilla keeper. He said they always had to be very careful they had their keys with them when they left the enclosure (they cleaned it several times a day with the animals in backup getting snacks). Gorillas would play with the keys. The chimps would try one key knowing what a key was for but then give up if it didn't work. The orangutans would try *every key* because they knew one of them worked.
@acesircombe-jellett10043 ай бұрын
@@ageishyena3035 Orang means 'human' or 'person' in Indonesian(Orangutan comes from 'Orang' and 'Hutan' which translates to 'Forest person') so your comment made me laugh like hell! We are pretty smart I guess!
@Aries-ku8uk3 ай бұрын
9:55 The Columbus Zoo actually *does* have moose. They're surrounded by the only electric fence in the zoo (that I know of)
@joemama226013 ай бұрын
That’s exactly what I was thinking I live in reynoldsburg and used to got the Columbus zoo all the time. But I couldn’t remember if there was a moose
@Aries-ku8uk3 ай бұрын
@@joemama22601 it's on an out of the way path in the North America area. Kinda by where the brown bears are. Easily missed
@mastersenna114 ай бұрын
Our zoo in Detroit is actually part of the Przewalski’s horse conservation effort! I remember being super excited seeing them for the first time because the OG Zoo Tycoon taught me about their endangered status.
@kittyelf14854 ай бұрын
And our zoo was also one of the first to have enclosures that were more like the animals’ natural habitats, rather than them just being locked in cages
@naymeequillo4 ай бұрын
The Bokito woman was utterly insane. I love how you pronounced Diergaarde Blijdorp, that was damn near perfect Dutch!
@runningcommentary21254 ай бұрын
She was lucky it was a gorilla she pissed off and not a chimp. Also he was far more patient with her than most humans would have been.
@Asherah_astal4 ай бұрын
I enjoyed it lmao
@killgoretrout8774 ай бұрын
lol it's cause its the closest thing to a docile b a l c k man they've seen
@BreakYourBubble4 ай бұрын
This! Great pronounciation! Not the easiest one neighter
@John_Weiss4 ай бұрын
I know, right? When he posted this video on Patreon, I said pretty much the same thing: excellent pronunciation of the Dutch name. Even getting the 'g' right, which is rough.
@MichaelSmith-zo3tf4 ай бұрын
My Junior High was right next to the San Diego Zoo, with one of the P.E. fields running adjacent to certain exhibits. Gasping for air while doing laps near the camel pens on a hot day was like having a heater blasting the scents of your hamper directly into your face. And some kids would "accidentally" toss a ball over the fence, get permission to retrieve it, and then stay in the zoo for the rest of the day. It was a fantastic experience. As students, we frequently had events where we could interact with the staff and animals of one of the largest and greatest zoos in the world right next door. It truly was a one-of-a-kind experience.
@mndiaye_974 ай бұрын
I'm honestly painfully jealous
@Torazuki22 күн бұрын
Just gotta say, binging your vids helped me out of my panic attack today. Thank you for your wholesome work
@josephmassaro4 ай бұрын
Japanese Zoo Worker: "I got tased today in a full body furry suit... It's my job! Not a fetish!"
@LongLostInideQueen4 ай бұрын
😂😂😂😂😂
@DEFC0NZER04 ай бұрын
The difference being one's a job, the other's mental sickness.
@OrlandoAguirre2224 ай бұрын
@@DEFC0NZER0 piss🫙
@blackpurple91634 ай бұрын
"but... Maybe.."
@sallytheuselessbird4 ай бұрын
@@DEFC0NZER0I will never understand the people who think that harmless cosplay is a mental sickness lol. If its a fetish though, then i agree.
@brennacoleman68154 ай бұрын
Hey, as an exhausted (AZA!) zoo educator who just got home from a 90 degree shift...thanks, man. My ultimate goal is becoming a keeper, and after five years of volunteer service before my current position where I'd shadow them, I can safely say keepers are a different breed with their sheer dedication and perseverance. Thanks for recognizing what they do :)
@1peidu4 ай бұрын
4:22 This lion facial expression, more than anything else, is the epitome of the word flabbergasted
@heibai11732 ай бұрын
At 3:50, the lioness tried helping the caretakers by biting the male. That was so sweet! Telling him to calm the heck down.
@msvaleriah4 ай бұрын
I worked in the membership department of the Denver Zoo for close to 10 years and got to experience so many different cool encounters with the animals there. Incredible memories! The hard work and dedication of the keepers and vet staff (and their crazy senses of humor) are still an inspiration. It really is love for them. Denver Zoo is heavily involved in conservation efforts throughout the world. I was proud to be a part of that place.
@vaguevex78604 ай бұрын
the learned grimacing behavior of that panda is fucking adorable lmao
@shadowslime36404 ай бұрын
Bruh his wordplay during the segment with the "Handsome Gorilla" was honestly the best ever. Also apparently it was recently discovered that komodo dragons have iron tipped teeth.
@mebreevee4 ай бұрын
They have venom and can give you tetanus?!
@Jodie-G1982 ай бұрын
That does it - next time I visit a zoo, I'm definitely gonna make an effort to profusely thank the employees there.
@Zanivox724 ай бұрын
The Panda grimacing story sounds exactly like those videos of kids copying their parents by licking their finger when turning a page or making an ”aahhh” sound after drinking. People seriously underestimate how smart and sentient a lot of animals(besides us) are, just because they can’t communicate in our way.
@swarthygiant14634 ай бұрын
Nah pandas are stupid they suck at CoD
@redskyz44264 ай бұрын
“im not about to catch an age restriction over an over-exposed lipstick dispenser”😭😭😭
@hoodgiyu96244 ай бұрын
12:32 naw fam that chimps the reason why those visitor's are missing
@deepwaters72424 ай бұрын
I have to point out a brief treasure- at the end with lots of clips included a woman getting yelled at by a walrus, and her face was so funny, unsurprised, and generally unfazed. That was hilarious and I'm glad y'all included it. One of my all time favorite Lord Casual, and I must share with the fans of elephants 🐘 and red pandas in my life!
@exxor91084 ай бұрын
6:04 I'm a guy. My heart melted seeing that cheetah approach that person and snuggle up with them. Those cats really need self-esteem boosts.
@Mightydoggo4 ай бұрын
I work with dogs. The amount of people thinking they´re "connecting" to an animal, while they´re actually pissing them off big time, is absolutely insane to me. No clue how you can loose connection with nature and common sense like that. Seeing that all the time when walking our LSGs or Wolfdogs. Every bone of the dog says "stay away" meanwhile random Jenny goes like "i ThInK hE wAnTs mE tO pEt HiM!" lmao
@julietfischer50564 ай бұрын
They misinterpret animal behavior, often by seeing it as a simpler version of human interaction. I _always_ ask if it's okay to touch a dog I don't know. Even the nicest dogs can have bad days, and there are breeds that aren't sociable.
@888Grim4 ай бұрын
Not to criticize, really only to answer the implied question of: "No clue as to how people loose connection with nature and common sense". It seems to me that any "sense" which *feels* common is one that people are taking for granted. In particular; to say that someone might "loose connection" seems to indicate an assumption that these are attributes that everyone is born with, rather than skills that are developed over time. Social animals such as dogs and humans are indeed born with a wide array of sophisticated tools that make it easier for them/us to, with practice, build deep intuitions regarding the emotions and intentions of others. For people who are normally doing a lot of this learning during early childhood it can be easy to lose sight of the fact that these intuitions are indeed skills. Skills that they did not always have. Skills which need to be learned, and even to some extent maintained. Yes people really can "loose connection", but I believe that it is by far more common for people to have not fully/properly built those skills in the first place. I have a very difficult time reading the emotions of animals (including humans). There can be any number of different reasons for social ineptitude; mental disability, phobias (partly cynophobia in my case), various commonly held misconceptions and misinformation, but all that is truly required is the *absence* of practice. Specifically if any animal is thoroughly isolated as a child, than later as an adult it can be very problematic to build any of those intuitions and social skills that most people take for granted. For myself at least, this social ineptitude extends to non-human animals. However, as you pointed out, where people get into serious trouble is if they somehow don't realize that they are suffering from any of these issues. Not just in failing to make a connection, but in completely and always failing, and yet still always able to operate on the assumption that they have completely succeeded. My persistent fears seem to ensure that I am constantly at least somewhat aware of my own limitations (such as whatever nonsense possessed me to write this apparently four paragraph long KZbin comment). I don't have a good justification for people that cannot acknowledge their own failings, and thus cannot learn from them (other than that self-reflection is also a skill which people take for granted, and of course the non-existence of free will). Sorry for the rant, best wishes for the health and happiness of you and all of the dogs that you work with =)
@Mightydoggo4 ай бұрын
@@888Grim Yeah you´re very likely spot on. It was more of a rhetoric implied question, but if we entertain the idea for a second here, it fits in line with your analysis. I have that with people. I often don´t understand them (as in communication) and half of the time what they´re doing doesn´t make sense to me anyway. But with animals it´s the polar opposite. For me it´s pretty clear what they´re doing and especially what they don´t want, since they´re usually very direct with how they communicate issues. (There´s exceptions especially in dogs though.) I guess growing up in a backwards village with more cats than people helped. lol Don´t worry, I don´t take it personally nor do I mean to disrespect anyone. It´s just something that facinates (and sometimes annoys) me. Thanks for the nice words at the end, I too wish you the best of luck and health for the future. :)
@YochevedDesigns4 ай бұрын
@SanityTV_Last_Sane_Man_Alive I've had cats all my life, and the two that I have now are weirdos. They both live for belly rubs, and will flip over and purr until you pay attention to them. One of the cats gets overstimulated after a bit and will give you a tiny warning bite, but the other one would lie there all day as long as belly rubs were being offered.
@syntheticsleep4 ай бұрын
People are insanely stupid with how they interact with dogs. It actually blows my mind. I learned a lot living with dogs, and then later on (while I was living with a 160+ lb Rott/German Shephard mix) I sort of accidentally started watching the Dog Whisperer and learned an INCREDIBLE amount from him. One thing I learned on my own is that a dog will love you to death if you play with it LIKE A DOG. Especially big dogs. Sure, you're going to catch claw or tooth here and there, but you will make them so happy it's ridiculous.
@slipspacesurvivalist94162 ай бұрын
I went to the Memphis zoo quite often back when I was in college. It's a nice zoo with healthy animals, about what you'd see in most good zoos. Because I was a local there and students got in free with college ID, I went there VERY often... For science. Of course. One day my groupies and I were planning on going in, but a pop-up rain storm struck first and everyone canceled. Except me, because I'm weird like that. I wanted to see how the animals reacted in the different weather with no crowd... It was wonderful. Elephants were markedly very happy to see a human rolling around, the wolves were rubbing themselves up against the fence, and the wildest thing I saw was a happy rain dance from a giraffe once it saw me walking up. It really was a different zoo.
@SplotchTheCatThing4 ай бұрын
I've spent a little while hanging around zoos, and if there's one thing I've learned, it's that if you have the time and you want to do something nice for any kind of captive cat, try to visit them somewhat regularly and spend a little longer with them. 'cause it's pretty safe to say cats are very individual beings -- it's how they know themselves, it's how they see other creatures, and it's how they'd prefer to get to know the people around them. They're watching you even when they don't seem to be -- even when they look like they're asleep, they're often fully aware -- and if you spend enough time with them for them to recognize you as an individual instead of just part of the crowd, they'll probably be very happy to see you.
@maninthesnow43934 ай бұрын
A lady named lilith told me zoo keeper was the worst job. Under appreciated overworked and you come home smelling like several types animal feces.
@Noperare4 ай бұрын
1:52 "He is and remains my darling" imagine your wife saying that about a gorilla.
@ellysemilton13094 ай бұрын
...after they put her in the hospital.
@krypticunlimited69254 ай бұрын
That would've been my last day as her husband bro. Imagine leaving your girl with a gorilla and she folds. There is no way
@ageishyena30354 ай бұрын
@@ellysemilton1309 In pieces, that were pushed out on the business end of a mop. That had been shoved up somewhere not so shiny in the first place.
@michaelj.beglinjr.28044 ай бұрын
lol Hell, neither one of mine never even said that about me.
@JoshuaHo-i6b4 ай бұрын
Dude you are amazing, your videos are thoughtful, respectful, insightful and moreover extremely enjoyable!! I wish you the best and thank you!!
@OfficerBarricade4 ай бұрын
that lil child and bear jumping up and down together was the cutest sight ever 😭
@bloomingblossom52694 ай бұрын
Ah yes, Ken Allen. Famously known for breaking out of his enclosure multiple times so that he can visit other animals, pose for pictures with visitors and throw rocks at a spiteful orangutan neighbour.
@darcieclements48804 ай бұрын
Orangutans are the best ape. They just are. All the species they're just great.
@hajarmdn48834 ай бұрын
@@darcieclements4880seeing them use tools is both fascinating and terrifying. He can freaking pick a lock and then hide the piece of metal. I can’t even do that in an emergency situation.
@John-mn1bp4 ай бұрын
The lioness biting the lion on the ass was hilarious 3:55
@BazilYat4 ай бұрын
"Look Dave, leave it out will you? These people feed us for fuck's sake!"
@Ramsey276one4 ай бұрын
"Knock... It... *OFF!"*
@kingace61864 ай бұрын
I thought she was gonna help him like out in the wild. That threw me off🤣
@corvuscorax74514 ай бұрын
"You idiot, that's the one that feeds us! If he stops bringing food because of you, I'm eating YOUR dumb ass! Like this!" -the lioness, probably
@gojiratanaka774 ай бұрын
@@kingace6186remember, lionesses do most of the work, and if the male starts getting disliked enough, the females will make it known
@darkgecko2 ай бұрын
Thank you for the shoutout to zoos! I'm a zookeeper/ vet tech and love your videos!! This one brought a lot of joy! I also agree with we can do a lot of a good and a lot of bad. Accredited zoos put so much towards the animal care and conservation of those same species that its heartbreaking to hear all the negativity. Not all zoos are the same and a lot are the reason some animals are no longer extinct in the wild!