5:12
Blasterjaxx - Snake (Original Mix) [OUT NOW]
You guys have been waiting a long time for this, but it's finally here. We are proud to an...
published: 15 Nov 2013
Blasterjaxx - Snake (Original Mix) [OUT NOW]
Blasterjaxx - Snake (Original Mix) [OUT NOW]
You guys have been waiting a long time for this, but it's finally here. We are proud to announce that our latest track "SNAKE" is out now on Steve Aoki's DIM MAK RECORDS! http://www.beatport.com/release/snake/1190214 --------------- www.blasterjaxx.com www.facebook.com/BlasterjaxxOfficial www.twitter.com/Blasteraxx www.instagram.com/Blasterjaxx www.youtube.com/BlasterjaxxTV- published: 15 Nov 2013
- views: 28394
28:03
Snake Island (Full Length Documentary)
Check out the Best of VICE here: http://bit.ly/VICE-Best-Of
The highest concentration of ...
published: 29 Mar 2014
Snake Island (Full Length Documentary)
Snake Island (Full Length Documentary)
Check out the Best of VICE here: http://bit.ly/VICE-Best-Of The highest concentration of one of the most venomous snakes in the world is located about 90 miles off the coast of Santos, Brazil, on a small, craggy chunk of otherwise uninhabitable land. It's known as Ilha da Queimada Grande, or Snake Island, and it's the only place you will find 2,000 or so of the wholly unique golden lancehead viper, or Bothrops insularis. When you step ashore, with a keen eye you spot one of these snakes roughly every 10 to 15 minutes after clearing the base of the island, and as many as one every six square yards in other parts of the island. This means, as you are walking through the waist-high brush, even with some good boots on, it's like walking through a minefield that moves and, instead of blowing you into chunks, slowly paralyzes you and liquefies your insides, as the golden lancehead does to the migrating birds it feeds on in the treetops. Well, "liquefying your insides" may be a stretch, but no one knows for sure because no one bitten has lived long enough even to be admitted to a hospital, or at least none of the researchers who accompanied VICE on their journey to Snake Island owned up to that fact. Nor did the Brazilian Navy, who allowed VICE exclusive access to document their annual maintenance inspection of Snake Island's lighthouse—which has been automated ever since the 1920s, after the old lighthouse keeper ran out of food and disappeared while picking wild bananas in a small grove near the shore. According to legend, he and the members of his rescue party died one by one, all alone and in search of one another after each had been missing for some time. The golden lancehead is so unique and its venom so potent that specimens procured by snake-smuggling "biopirates" can fetch up to $30,000 apiece on the black market (with prices going much higher depending on the location of the rich weirdo snake collector or, some have speculated, the black-market biopharmaceutical chemists attempting to beat Brazil on a patent). Is that the craziest fucking description of a documentary you've ever heard? The answer is yes. So of course VICE's editor-in-chief, Rocco Castoro, and senior producer, Jackson Fager, had to go there and nose around for themselves. On their return they said things like: "It was like a David Lynch movie through the prism of Satan's asshole. The anti-Galápagos. Darwin in reverse." "[It's] cut off from the mainland and perhaps the land of a long-buried pirate treasure, according to the stories from local fishermen. But they also told us there were aliens on the island, so pretty much anything goes. It's scorched earth. It's where I would send my worst enemies to live, and I look forward to setting up a business with the Brazilian government to do just that. After the World Cup, of course." "What I can tell you is that there are stone fucking steps hand-carved into the face of one of the prominent cliffs, all the way up. But you can't dock anywhere near there. There's also the possibility that [the venom] could be used for an anti-cancer drug, or perhaps anti-aging. Maybe it could save mankind. Whatever. They wouldn't have saved my ass." "There are blue locusts and so many of these weird, prehistoric-looking cockroaches on the ground at night that it crunches when you walk. Place is fucked. No one is allowed there for a reason. Don't ever go." "All that said, great shoot. Great diving, too." Check out the Best of VICE here: http://bit.ly/VICE-Best-Of Subscribe to VICE here! http://bit.ly/Subscribe-to-VICE Check out our full video catalog: http://bit.ly/VICE-Videos Videos, daily editorial and more: http://vice.com Like VICE on Facebook: http://fb.com/vice Follow VICE on Twitter: http://twitter.com/vice Read our tumblr: http://vicemag.tumblr.com- published: 29 Mar 2014
- views: 3263
9:59
Spotted Bush Snake fights huge Gecko.mov
A large HD version of this movie is available at vimeo.com/62258055 ---- A 1m long SPOTTED...
published: 21 Jan 2013
author: Justin Waldman
Spotted Bush Snake fights huge Gecko.mov
Spotted Bush Snake fights huge Gecko.mov
A large HD version of this movie is available at vimeo.com/62258055 ---- A 1m long SPOTTED BUSH SNAKE (non-venomous) was seen before lunchtime in the rafters...- published: 21 Jan 2013
- views: 182510
- author: Justin Waldman
0:47
Caught On Camera: Snake Devours Crocodile After 5 Hour Battle
Caught On Camera: Snake Devours Crocodile after 5 Hour Battle
SUBSCRIBE: http://bit.ly/Oc...
published: 03 Mar 2014
Caught On Camera: Snake Devours Crocodile After 5 Hour Battle
Caught On Camera: Snake Devours Crocodile After 5 Hour Battle
Caught On Camera: Snake Devours Crocodile after 5 Hour Battle SUBSCRIBE: http://bit.ly/Oc61Hj A SNAKE fought, wrestled and then ate a crocodile whole following a dramatic five-hour long battle. The incident was captured on camera by author Tiffany Corlis at Lake Moondarra in Queensland, Australia. The snake - thought to be python measuring around 10ft - constricted the croc to death, before dragging it to shore and eating it whole in front of a shocked crowd of onlookers. Videographer / Director: Marvin Muller Producer: James Tegerdine Editor: Joshua Douglas For more amazing footage of the amazing side of life, visit the Like Barcroft TV on Facebook: http://goo.gl/7ayYgY Follow Barcroft TV on Twitter: http://bit.ly/10vFLY9 Barcroft Media website: http://bit.ly/19OYwp- published: 03 Mar 2014
- views: 158
3:40
Indigo Snake Eats Rat Snake 01 Snake vs Snake
http://Ojatro.com http://Ojatroblog.blogspot.com The eastern indigo snake is carnivorous, ...
published: 14 Jun 2013
author: ojatro
Indigo Snake Eats Rat Snake 01 Snake vs Snake
Indigo Snake Eats Rat Snake 01 Snake vs Snake
http://Ojatro.com http://Ojatroblog.blogspot.com The eastern indigo snake is carnivorous, like all snakes, and will eat any other small animal it can overpow...- published: 14 Jun 2013
- views: 55904
- author: ojatro
9:06
Snake Bytes TV - Huge Snakes! : SnakeBytesTV
Huge snakes! This week we look at some monster snakes and talk about some of the things yo...
published: 06 Apr 2011
author: SnakeBytesTV
Snake Bytes TV - Huge Snakes! : SnakeBytesTV
Snake Bytes TV - Huge Snakes! : SnakeBytesTV
Huge snakes! This week we look at some monster snakes and talk about some of the things you'd want to think about if you ever decide to get into keeping snak...- published: 06 Apr 2011
- views: 657496
- author: SnakeBytesTV
5:44
Man Selecting Cobras For Snake Show
A crazy guy known as Cobra Man has 1000 Cobras as pets and for every show he selects a new...
published: 16 Jul 2012
author: FunKickAss
Man Selecting Cobras For Snake Show
Man Selecting Cobras For Snake Show
A crazy guy known as Cobra Man has 1000 Cobras as pets and for every show he selects a new Cobra.- published: 16 Jul 2012
- views: 2561913
- author: FunKickAss
47:06
National Geographic 2013 - Snake Killers: Honey Badgers Of The Kalahari
...
published: 29 May 2013
author: Hoang Nguyen
National Geographic 2013 - Snake Killers: Honey Badgers Of The Kalahari
National Geographic 2013 - Snake Killers: Honey Badgers Of The Kalahari
- published: 29 May 2013
- views: 13129
- author: Hoang Nguyen
3:37
DJ Snake & Lil Jon - Turn Down for What
Download the single on iTunes: http://smarturl.it/TD4W
Music video by DJ Snake & Lil Jon ...
published: 14 Mar 2014
DJ Snake & Lil Jon - Turn Down for What
DJ Snake & Lil Jon - Turn Down for What
Download the single on iTunes: http://smarturl.it/TD4W Music video by DJ Snake & Lil Jon performing Turn Down for What. (C) 2013 Columbia Records, a Division of Sony Music Entertainment- published: 14 Mar 2014
- views: 78674
3:24
GIANT SNAKE KILLS TWO GIRLS - Fake or Real?
A guy in Brazil sent me a video. He claims it shows two teenage girls when they were pulle...
published: 09 May 2014
GIANT SNAKE KILLS TWO GIRLS - Fake or Real?
GIANT SNAKE KILLS TWO GIRLS - Fake or Real?
A guy in Brazil sent me a video. He claims it shows two teenage girls when they were pulled under under water and killed by an Anaconda snake. It was recorded on a cell phone, and looks pretty authentic, but is this for real or is it fake? that's what I want to know. I looked to my normal sources at Snopes, but nothing about this incident was recorded there. So I turned my attention south - to Brazil - where I found many reports of the incident. The girls were real enough. They were two teenagers from southern Brazil. They went with friends to go swimming in a local river. Everyone was having a good time, until one of the girls screamed. Then the other girl screamed and seconds later they were both gone! The police eventually found the girl's bodies. An autopsy was performed and the cause of death for both girls was recorded as accidental drowning. Looking carefully through the video I spotted a number of clues that tells me something was really in that water. Just before the girls disappeared, some of their friends were playing with a log on the other side of the river. And right here, something that looks like a snake appears to be disturbed and moves into the water. Then here, just before the first girl screams, something pops its head out of the water. Under careful examination, it looks like it is an authentic part of the original video and not added on later with photoshop or anything like that. The creature disappears back under the water and that is when the girls start to scream. Ok, so while the families of these girls and most of the local townfolks are convinced it was an anaconda that attacked the girls, I am not so sure. Anacondas kill their prey for food and they kill by first hooking their teeth into you and then coiling around you and squeezing you to death. Neither of these girl's bodies showed any signs of being bitten by a snake. Nor did it look like anything tried to eat them. The death of these two girls is tragic and I am sure their families still miss them greatly, but as for the claim that they were killed by an Anaconda -- That's just not realistic. What do you think really happened to these girls? Let me know what your opinion is in the comment section below! Maybe together we can figure out the truth.- published: 09 May 2014
- views: 8438
3:00
9-Year-Old Snake Handler Krista Guarino
For more information go to: http://www.youtube.com/snakehunterstv
9-Year-Old Snake Handle...
published: 26 Feb 2014
9-Year-Old Snake Handler Krista Guarino
9-Year-Old Snake Handler Krista Guarino
For more information go to: http://www.youtube.com/snakehunterstv 9-Year-Old Snake Handler Krista Guarino SUBSCRIBE: http://bit.ly/Oc61Hj LITTLE Krista Guarino is only NINE years old -- but she's already proving an expert snake handler. The brave schoolgirl lives with a staggering 30 reptiles, including anacondas and a 12 ft python at her home in Michigan, America. She eats, sleeps and plays with the creatures -- some of which are twice her size. And she's even been bitten a few times but none of the snakes are venomous - and courageous Krista says it doesn't hurt. Krista, the eldest of three children, was first introduced to the animals by dad Jamie, 33, who is a snake specialist. And she held her first when she was just two years old. Despite her young age, she has already set her sights on opening her own reptile zoo when she's older. And she's determined to change perceptions about the misunderstood snake. Videographer / Director: Laurentiu Garofeanu Producer: Hannah Mouland Editor: Ian Phillips For more amazing footage of the amazing side of life, visit the Like Barcroft TV on Facebook: http://goo.gl/7ayYgY Follow Barcroft TV on Twitter: http://bit.ly/10vFLY9 Follow Barcroft TV on Instagram: http://bit.ly/1b84Ku0 Barcroft Media website: http://bit.ly/19OYwp- published: 26 Feb 2014
- views: 6987
3:40
[VIDEO] Flying Snakes. They Don't Need A Plane - The Physics Of Snakes That Fly
Tree Snakes Fly: They Don't Need A Plane
Mystery of flying snakes may be resolved
Ophid...
published: 31 Jan 2014
[VIDEO] Flying Snakes. They Don't Need A Plane - The Physics Of Snakes That Fly
[VIDEO] Flying Snakes. They Don't Need A Plane - The Physics Of Snakes That Fly
Tree Snakes Fly: They Don't Need A Plane Mystery of flying snakes may be resolved Ophidiophobics Beware: Flying Snakes Have Great Aerodynamics Paradise tree snake turns into a flying saucer to perform UFO trick Flying Snakes Surprisingly Aerodynamic Secrets of flying snakes revealed Flying Snakes Take On UFO Shape To Glide From Trees To The Rainforest Floor Snakes don't always fly, but when they do, they glide with a grace unparalleled in the animal kingdom. Tree snakes in the species Chrysopelea paradisi undulate side to side as they soar downward from branches — fall would be too inelegant a word — and land 100 feet away. As they twist and turn, they also flatten their bodies, curling inward from the bottom. This unique combo of moves and morphing gives them the power of controlled gliding flight, like swimming through the air. Jake Socha and his colleagues figured out how they do it by building a 3-D snake model, running lots of simulations, and growing sensitized to three-foot snakes leaping into the air around them. Socha, an assistant professor and biomechanist at Virginia Tech, showed a few years ago that these snakes move their cord-like bodies in two ways simultaneously as they fly. They wriggle like a whip, possibly using the same muscles they would use to slither on the ground. And they flatten their bottoms, which Socha thinks they achieve by extending muscles along their entire bodies, kind of like how a cobra hoods by splaying its ribs. Either way, this bottom-flattening makes the snakes resemble a gumdrop (or Darth Vader head, or jellyfish bell, or Grimace). Socha explains it this way: "Imagine you took your snake, which is just a long cylinder, and you virtually cut it in cross sections. You chop it in half and look at it end-on. Once you get past all the blood and guts and stuff like that and look at the shape, it is like a circle, it's round. But in the air, it takes on a triangular shape. It has two little edges that point downward on the bottom; it's almost concave." The team wanted to figure out the snake's lift coefficient and other properties of aerodynamics. But they couldn't exactly drop snakes into a wind tunnel, so they used a 3-D printer to create a flight-configuration-shaped plastic rod, which they then tested in a water tank with lasers. Sensors on the model reported the forces of water flowing around the rod, which served as a proxy for air flowing around a flying snake. In repeated tests, they tilted it at varying angles of attack from -10 to 60 degrees. Angle of attack works like this: If you put your hand out a moving car's window and hold it flat into the wind, your angle of attack is zero. Hold it up like you're saying STOP, and that's a 90-degree angle of attack (a bad place to be for creating lift). Throughout the model snake's journey of tilting, the team found a 35-degree tilt created the most lift — but the snake creates lift even at extreme angles. "We think that helps to explain how it goes through its trajectory. When it jumps out, it is mostly falling, and it's going down at a steep angle — but despite that, it can generate lift," Socha says. "We weren't surprised that it produced a little bit of lift, but we were surprised it did so well." Across more than a decade of work with flying snakes, Socha has observed C. paradisi flying out of trees in zoos and in the wild. He has worked with some of its close relatives, but they don't flatten out in the air the way this species does. That configuration may have to do with why they're such good fliers. Socha has about 20 tree snakes in his lab, and next he wants to study their three-dimensional flight envelope, including how their undulating waves come into play. All this could come in handy for robotics designers, too, he notes. "If you could make a robotic snake that was able to do cool snake-robot things, like wrap around poles and climb up them, or get in small spaces between rubble, it would be neat if you could also make that same robot fly through the air," he says.- published: 31 Jan 2014
- views: 421
1:05
World's biggest snake found alive in Mexico 2013
which was caught alive and it tried to attack a person but with lots of team efforts it wa...
published: 22 Dec 2013
World's biggest snake found alive in Mexico 2013
World's biggest snake found alive in Mexico 2013
which was caught alive and it tried to attack a person but with lots of team efforts it was caught and the snake was found to be 60 foot in length and it was resting or hiding behind a mountain river valley. Some snakes which growing up to 30 feet long, the reticulated python Python reticulatus of southeastern Asia and the East Indies is the longest snake in the world. These giants have an average weight of 250 pounds, but the largest known specimen in existence weighs in at a whopping 350 pounds. Unlike anacondas, these snakes bite their prey and swallow it whole, after squeezing it to death — slowly. Despite their unpredictability, pythons are popular pets for exotic snake owners. Medusa, a captive reticulated python in Kansas City, Mo., earns her keep as part of a haunted-house exhibit. But neither the sprawling python nor the giant anaconda can hold a candle to their prehistoric predecessor, Titanoboa cerrejonensis. The fossilized remains of this 42 foot long and 2,500 pound monster were unearthed in Colombia some years back. Scientists used the mathematical relationship between the size of vertebrae and its length of the body in living snakes to determine the ancient snake's mass. These reptiles or snake are believed to have slithered around the Earth from 58 million to 60 million years ago(THE WORLD'S LARGEST 60-FOOT SNAKE FOUND ALIVE IN MEXICO(ALONG WITH VIDEO)-BELIEVE IT OR NOT) well all this where history's and research behind it is still moving on with lots of efforts. Anaconda which was found to be the most largest snake ever found and it is in Africa as we all know but much more larger snakes other then Anaconda do exist with proofs and some other tips about this will be coming soon.- published: 22 Dec 2013
- views: 2844
Youtube results:
6:53
Catching Wild Rabbits using Snakes: BAREHANDED Rabbit Catch
Wild man Andrew Ucles teaches you how to perform rabbit catching using his unique understa...
published: 04 Mar 2013
author: Andrew Ucles
Catching Wild Rabbits using Snakes: BAREHANDED Rabbit Catch
Catching Wild Rabbits using Snakes: BAREHANDED Rabbit Catch
Wild man Andrew Ucles teaches you how to perform rabbit catching using his unique understanding of animal predator-prey relationships. Watch as Andrew collec...- published: 04 Mar 2013
- views: 2688542
- author: Andrew Ucles
3:13
World's Deadliest - Eagle vs. Toxic Snake
World's Deadliest: Animal Battles : THU FEB 28 at 7P et : http://channel.nationalgeographi...
published: 25 Feb 2013
author: NatGeoWild
World's Deadliest - Eagle vs. Toxic Snake
World's Deadliest - Eagle vs. Toxic Snake
World's Deadliest: Animal Battles : THU FEB 28 at 7P et : http://channel.nationalgeographic.com/wild/episodes/animal-battles/ The banded sea snake packs enou...- published: 25 Feb 2013
- views: 2020745
- author: NatGeoWild
10:34
Snake Bytes TV - 5 Meanest Snakes In The World!
5 meanest snakes in the world. We take a look and try to handle some of our meanest snakes...
published: 28 Jul 2010
author: SnakeBytesTV
Snake Bytes TV - 5 Meanest Snakes In The World!
Snake Bytes TV - 5 Meanest Snakes In The World!
5 meanest snakes in the world. We take a look and try to handle some of our meanest snakes. These snakes bite us almost everytime take them out. Although mos...- published: 28 Jul 2010
- views: 3613808
- author: SnakeBytesTV
24:38
Snake Becomes a Chef : SnakeBytesTV
Snake becomes a chef ; We'll have celebrity chef Jason Quinn from FoodNetworks Chopped, Th...
published: 07 May 2014
Snake Becomes a Chef : SnakeBytesTV
Snake Becomes a Chef : SnakeBytesTV
Snake becomes a chef ; We'll have celebrity chef Jason Quinn from FoodNetworks Chopped, The Great Food Truck Race as well as MTV's new show "Snack Off" over for a visit and to share his passion for reptiles and food! SnakeBytesTV is produced by BHB Reptiles, one of the world's largest snake breeding facilities, and is hosted by Brian Barczyk. New episodes every Wednesday! Follow me at:http://www.twitter.com/snakebytestv Facebook me at: http://www.facebook.com/SnakeBytesTV http://www.facebook.com/BrianBarczyk The Reptile Report Spotlight: http://thereptilereport.com/category/sbtv-spotlight/- published: 07 May 2014
- views: 11594