What Happens to Domestic Pigs in the Wild Shocked Everyone

2024 ж. 3 Сәу.
223 861 Рет қаралды

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  • I work alongside pigs. And this is very true, I found this video very relatable. They are the most challenging animals to care for out of all of them combined, because they keep escaping!

    @Moulton_Lava@Moulton_LavaАй бұрын
    • They're incredibly smart. Smarter than dogs.

      @kevingeezy5176@kevingeezy517627 күн бұрын
    • @@kevingeezy5176 VERY

      @00700556@0070055627 күн бұрын
    • "Challenging" , you want to kill them. What do you expect?

      @gyorgygajdos1657@gyorgygajdos165727 күн бұрын
  • Pigs are very smart. I have seen them plan ahead and use materials as tools.

    @lucystrider728@lucystrider728Ай бұрын
    • Animal Farm's book was right. No wonder they're that lead the farm after human removed.

      @prasetyodwikuncorojati2434@prasetyodwikuncorojati243429 күн бұрын
    • They said pigs, not in-laws...

      @chefscorner7063@chefscorner706326 күн бұрын
  • Steve, I want to thank you for entertaining me and not letting me get bored.

    @Filmeng172@Filmeng172Ай бұрын
  • I am over 70. Growing up I visited my grandparents on their farm. I sill remember their repeated warning to be careful around the pig pen. To not fall in because the pigs would eat anything.

    @ProfVRandall@ProfVRandallАй бұрын
    • I’m not 70, but I remember my Great Grandmother telling me the same thing! Wise advice

      @vsmooveatl7711@vsmooveatl7711Ай бұрын
    • Reminds me of a gangster movie I saw before where one of the bad guys raised pigs… for reasons.

      @LordBrittish@LordBrittishАй бұрын
    • @@LordBrittishit’s called Snatch

      @harrygreb3457@harrygreb3457Ай бұрын
    • @@harrygreb3457 Yes! The gangster was played by Bob Hoskins (aka Mario). Great movie, I need to watch it again some time.

      @LordBrittish@LordBrittishАй бұрын
    • ​@@LordBrittishsnatched... live that movie lol

      @user-de6on5zq2c@user-de6on5zq2cАй бұрын
  • I grew up with a hybrid pig I come from South Africa and grew up on a game farm and the pig I grew up with was nearly 4ft big massive black female pig but she was not aggressive at all but so intelligent she would break out of her pen and chill with our jack russle dogs we had about six of them she always thought she was a dog but in the bush there were was worse things then her so she helped keep it safe in many ways but don’t underestimate any animal ever what’s in their nature is in their nature any animal can become aggressive under the right circumstances because it’s a survival instinct in anything living do want to live and fight to do so

    @user-uh1tb3eq6z@user-uh1tb3eq6zАй бұрын
    • Good comment, but by gosh, that is the longest run-on sentence in history. Periods are everyone's friend, friend. 😀

      @jwawrzon@jwawrzon26 күн бұрын
  • Epigenetics is crazy.

    @zealgaming8161@zealgaming8161Ай бұрын
    • very. it's amazing.

      @Midnight0Mistress@Midnight0Mistress20 күн бұрын
    • 100%

      @tonitomei6323@tonitomei632320 күн бұрын
  • We raised pigs with feeder cattle in the brush. After farrowing, sows would be brought down to the pen to process the piglets. They raised hell. One sow climbed over a 5 foot stall wall and attacked Dad. He survived it but nearly lost an arm. As folks say, the hog is the only animal that will bite off the hand that feeds it.

    @user-hh3cz1km6h@user-hh3cz1km6hАй бұрын
    • And humans are the animals who will eat the very animal they feed.

      @Star_dragon@Star_dragonАй бұрын
    • ​@@Star_dragon😋

      @jamesmartin4902@jamesmartin490226 күн бұрын
    • wow so shocked a smart animal doesn't want to die?

      @arielthepom@arielthepom24 күн бұрын
  • I'm not sure if it happens in developed countries, but in tropical 3rd world countries, if you keep an intact, ordinary pink domestic pig alive long enough, it will develop full feral characteristics, even if it's in a domestic or farm environment.

    @richardhart9204@richardhart9204Ай бұрын
  • I can tell this channel is going into the right direction.If you keep making these science videos people are going to click on it smart thinking

    @mobile_games87@mobile_games87Ай бұрын
  • Dogs can. My daughters German Sheppard made a bolt on his way to the vet for his annual injections and lived wild for a couple of months its behaviour changed it was in survival mode. Did not trust anyone, no one could approach it and it hid in the day and hunted or scavenged at night. It was eventually trapped and brought back to her and it changed back to a pet,

    @tonysheerness2427@tonysheerness2427Ай бұрын
    • This is true. When i was a kid we had a German Shepard that would go missing for a month. He would do this every year or two. Sometimes he would have blood on his fur when he comes home. He would jump the fence and go. After many complaints about cattle being killed someone finally poisoned him. His name was Nick.

      @bluegem72@bluegem72Ай бұрын
    • Domestic dogs can't hunt on their own for food. They forage for scraps and handouts from people

      @kevingeezy5176@kevingeezy517627 күн бұрын
  • Some grow feathers and fly. Where do you think the phrase, "When Pigs Fly" came from?

    @dbx1233@dbx1233Ай бұрын
  • Wild boar change their behavior and physiology based on conditions and became passive faster than domestication which cut the process short.

    @grantflippin7808@grantflippin7808Ай бұрын
  • How about humans rewilding? Hi and greetings from Germany.

    @katipohl2431@katipohl2431Ай бұрын
    • I’m guessing most without experience will die. Would we have modern tools or Stone Age tools?

      @Watchtube-cq7lv@Watchtube-cq7lvАй бұрын
    • Never been to Chicago huh? 😂

      @heystarfish100@heystarfish100Ай бұрын
    • @@heystarfish100 Hilarious! Thanks for the laugh!

      @kristinebailey6554@kristinebailey655423 күн бұрын
    • Why don't you visit a neighborhood populated by "new germans" at night to find out an answer?? Neukölln in Berlin comes to my mind, also Saint Denis in Paris.

      @gerardsotxoa@gerardsotxoa20 күн бұрын
    • Modern (western) people surviving a state of nature for any length of time is fantastically unlikely. But even if we could there is not enough land or resources for it to be possible.

      @riffhurricane@riffhurricane19 күн бұрын
  • I want to drop a little kudos to your editors, today. They've really stepped up their game since I subscribed to this channel years ago, and I love the "scene transitions" where sections of a photo are changed, but only a little at a time. It's a creative way to illustrate your points, and I don't see it pulled off as well as this channel does, if I see it attempted at all. Also, much better placement on your reminder to like the video today! It has, indeed, reminded me to like this video, given me enough of a preview to feel confident that I'll still like the video enough to express it by the end (it helps that I've been following you guys long enough to feel confident in making this decision), and I really appreciate your "gentle reminder" approach. I think if you keep your obligatory begging sections structured similarly in the future, people won't mind so much that they exist in the first place, and hopefully be more receptive. I'm assuming closer to the midpoint of the episode would work better for people who don't know the channel as well, but I honestly have no idea beyond the criticism of giving people enough time to decide that they like what they're seeing, which you've done today just fine. Note: I do not use the phrase "obligatory begging" in a deprecating way. I use it because I acknowledge that there's a very real difference in video engagement when comparing between videos that a creator reminds their audience to engage, versus when they don't, and that to function well within the Almighty Algorithm one really does need to "beg" for engagement. No disrespect is intended, just an acknowledgement of the crappy institutionalisation of social media in general.

    @OlyChickenGuy@OlyChickenGuyАй бұрын
    • Thanks for the nice words I see you've been subscribed for over two years now, for which I'm even more grateful :)

      @WATOP_VIDEO@WATOP_VIDEOАй бұрын
    • ​@@WATOP_VIDEOI have also been a multi-year subscriber. However, the YT algorithm was not showing me your posts! It is only in the past week or so that WATOP has returned, and I am quite thankful, as I very much enjoy everything you post! Don't know why the hiatus, when I noticed you had responded, I thought I would let you know. Others make attempts, but IMHO, your posts are at the top of all others! Glad the algorithm had granted me your presence once again, bcuz I was missing you! Thanks, 69yr old from Idaho

      @roberthevern6169@roberthevern6169Ай бұрын
  • it's a known fact among pig farmers that you NEVER step in to the sty where pigs are kept. if you fall in some how, the pigs will descend upon you and literally eat you alive. and also, there have been some murders in which the murderer dumped the body of the person they killed in to a sty for the pigs to eat. pigs will eat ANY thing -- they are omnivores. which is also why, in some ancient books, they are considered to be "unclean" animals.

    @quinnoshaughnessy@quinnoshaughnessyАй бұрын
    • Bruh y’all gotta stop believing everything you see on the internet. No pigs will not eat you alive if you’ve fallen in. They do love boots tho. However, if you’re unconscious and can’t wake up, yeah you’re gonna be dinner. Source: I used to sit in the pen with pigs under a heating lamp to keep warm. I’m still alive.

      @fishvato1403@fishvato1403Ай бұрын
    • @@fishvato1403ok, I grew up in rural,East Tennessee , the Appalachian mountains. And many of my neighbors raised pigs for meat, as we did. So I have up personal experience wirh domestic pigs. And I know neighbors who have had family members killed by their own pigs. Domestic pigs , the boars, get very aggressive if there is a female in heat nearby or they are protecting their family group, and the females, sows, get very agressive during heat cycles, after they have been bred and are close to delivery or after they have had their piglets. When I was a child, I was chased by a sow who had babies and I barely made it to the fence ! That sow darn near destroyed that fence trying to get to me. And I saw a similar thing happen with a boar that cased my Dad. The neighbors had lived in that area for many generations and most were coal miners and farmers and kept pigs. So these people, my family included, has a lot of hands on experience wirh domestic pigs and wild pigs . Pigs can be put in a fenced wooded lot and they will scavenge for themselves in addition to being fed by their owners. Do,ethic pigs most definitely have tusks ( tushes) large overgrown teeth that the pig uses to fight other pigs,, help them get food, or as a weapon to attack any animal,or person that they feel,is threatening them. Those tusks can kill you. Go read some accounts and stories of people who have hunted wild boar! I heard many stories of people hunting, or taking a short cut through the woods, and stumbling onto these areas where the pigs were being kept …And people were killed by the pigs. Later on some of bones were all that was found . There were bones of other animals found ocassionally too, dogs, raccoons, possums etc. Pigs are omnivores and will eat acorns, fallen tree nuts and fruits, roots and tubers as well as carrion and they will also kill animals. It depends on the pigs, and how and what they are being fed. A very young pig, or a well fed pig that doesn’t have a reason to be agressive, and is t just agressive normally as its personality, is not as likely to kill an animal or person, as a pig that’s not fed well, not given a balanced diet, or has a reason to be agressive. The thing is , if an agressive pig wounds and disables an animal or person, then the chances are very good that pig will try to eat that animal,or person if they are left alone and no one tries to rescue the animal or person.

      @teresahiggs4896@teresahiggs4896Ай бұрын
    • @@teresahiggs4896 Big difference between a domesticated pig and a boar. I never said Pigs can’t kill you, I clearly stated they can. Unlike boars, pigs most likely won’t go after you for no reason. Thats why I’m saying the person above is exaggerating. Obviously there’s been casualties caused by pigs. Just like cows, horses, and even roosters have had cases where they were responsible for an accident. Yeah pigs can have huge tusks that can hurt you, but anyone that has raised pigs would give them something like a hanging tire to file down those tusks. Like I said, pigs won’t devour you if you step in a sow with them in there, because I’ve done it thousands of times.

      @fishvato1403@fishvato1403Ай бұрын
    • @@fishvato1403 no the pigs get there teeth clipped when piglets

      @huckstirred7112@huckstirred7112Ай бұрын
    • @@fishvato1403 I threw a road kill deer in a pen . It was scary to watch them descend on that animal . about seven hogs made it disappear in 20 minutes . Except for larger bones

      @huckstirred7112@huckstirred7112Ай бұрын
  • domesticated animals can often undomesticate themselves in order to adapt under the right context

    @raphlvlogs271@raphlvlogs271Ай бұрын
  • Heylo all! As a NYC Certified Food Handler, I'll say that people are halting Pork intake. Perhaps we should make habitats for unsheltered Pigs/Boar

    @Vladi_SpanosMotiv86@Vladi_SpanosMotiv86Ай бұрын
    • Pigs/Boars will try and escape your "habitat", they are well equipped to survive in wild on thier own and probably would prefer that as it gives them purpose to live. They are smart animals like humans and would prefer living on thier own terms with nature.

      @santosh_ramu@santosh_ramu26 күн бұрын
  • And here I thought they just joined The View. Learn something new every time!

    @PrecisionClays@PrecisionClaysАй бұрын
    • Shiiiiitttt 💀💀🤣🤣🤣

      @ShadowReaper1227X@ShadowReaper1227X25 күн бұрын
    • Hahaha

      @blade797@blade79722 күн бұрын
    • Whoop whoop Whoopie😂

      @Tiredofthecrap@Tiredofthecrap17 күн бұрын
  • Am I the only one who noticed significant changes in its content? I definitely like it!

    @gretud35679@gretud35679Ай бұрын
    • The graphics department got RedBull sponsorship😅

      @TheAndroidGamer254@TheAndroidGamer254Ай бұрын
  • In a lot of the south it was open range up to the 40's at least. The farms tryed to get all there hogs back but didn't always thats was a big part of the wild hogs

    @tbjtbj4786@tbjtbj4786Ай бұрын
  • Good stuff

    @jaydot007@jaydot007Ай бұрын
  • You need to clean your coffee machine

    @shaine9968@shaine9968Ай бұрын
    • I think this is an ingenious byte for a comment 🙂

      @Filmeng172@Filmeng172Ай бұрын
    • Lol

      @duumsdaddy4165@duumsdaddy4165Ай бұрын
    • That’s all bro got from the video😂

      @mugiwara6235@mugiwara6235Ай бұрын
    • Na, that adds flavor.

      @jasonkrohn5416@jasonkrohn5416Ай бұрын
    • Why does his machine have two nozzles?

      @soundspark@soundsparkАй бұрын
  • Why it was a big deal when Dorothy fell in the pig pen in Wizard of Oz. Thought city folk would not get the significance of that scene.

    @liveletlive0regrets@liveletlive0regretsАй бұрын
  • Amazing transformation/evolution which makes me think about man and our evolution and the fact that man and pigs share very similar DNA, so similar that we sometimes use pig parts to replace human parts. How fast can humans go back to being wild, one year, five years, a couple generations?

    @erents1@erents1Ай бұрын
  • Great, I have a diner of all-you-can-eat ribs this weekend, and now I feel less guilty

    @kevinchong5424@kevinchong5424Ай бұрын
  • I need to test this. My little pig needs to go to pasture.

    @iindium49@iindium49Ай бұрын
  • 7:33 WATOP ran out of money for installation 🤣

    @Rimas3923@Rimas3923Ай бұрын
    • lol

      @bort14124@bort14124Ай бұрын
  • * Arnold Ziffle gone mad! *

    @sharonannen8859@sharonannen885929 күн бұрын
  • So since I eat pork I should be able to change into ancient African gods at will 😭🤣

    @brandonbattle2996@brandonbattle2996Ай бұрын
  • 11:35 "Vulcans never forget to feed their Seelath."

    @christopherg2347@christopherg2347Ай бұрын
  • They fly with there pals 😂

    @torreygibb5653@torreygibb5653Ай бұрын
  • Sooo what about the pig island place? Why do they not look like wild hogs?

    @moremovioso@moremoviosoАй бұрын
    • Maybe there's no reason for them to developed into much tougher wild boar look, due to relatively safe island, pleasant climate plus human still frequently came to feed them like normal farm pig. More likely they will developed into something aquatic if human never came anymore to feed them, since they spend a lot of time around shore and swimming. Perhaps will appear marine hippo thing or even reappearance of "desmostylus" that actually evolving from domestic pigs

      @prasetyodwikuncorojati2434@prasetyodwikuncorojati243429 күн бұрын
    • They are replaced every few months. They are piglets

      @katestewart-taylor9736@katestewart-taylor973627 күн бұрын
  • The epigenetics of pigs has always made me wonder if we humans have something similar. What would happen to us? What would "feral" humans living outside civilization end up looking like after a few generations? Bigfoot?

    @ldl1477@ldl1477Ай бұрын
    • I fear humanity might find this out in a rather unfortunate way rather sooner than we thought.

      @Nphen@NphenАй бұрын
    • We do not, we have feral humans and they are exactly the same as us, the only difference is a stronger immune/digestive system which a "domestic" (yes humans have domesticated themselves) can achieve by eating/exposing themselves to different things.

      @splitdragon3004@splitdragon3004Ай бұрын
    • If you never wore shoes the structure of your feet would be different. We also develop natural immunity to some illnesses in the region we grow up in. There might be other things be I can’t think of anything noteworthy at the moment.

      @microchip5673@microchip5673Ай бұрын
    • I doubt it. I don’t think we would look like Bigfoot. I do wonder about our own epigenetics though. I think it would make our reflexes sharper and I think it would make us smarter in certain ways like problem-solving and tool using. We would certainly be more physically fit with far fewer cases of people being overweight. Anyway, we really don’t have to conduct any experiments by taking civilized people and turning them into Hunter gatherers over a couple of generations. Fortunately, we still live in a time where there are hunter gatherers on earth who live according to the ancient tribal ways of our species. They really don’t look that much different than the rest of us. They just dress differently and sometimes they decorate their bodies in different ways. They are still morphologically human in every particular though. Dress one of them up in modern clothing, give him a modern hairstyle and I really do not think anyone could tell the difference if they spotted him in a crowd.

      @philomelodia@philomelodiaАй бұрын
    • @@splitdragon3004 excellent response

      @philomelodia@philomelodiaАй бұрын
  • Yeah, I heard that Arnold Ziffel really went to hell after Green Acres. Really sad. 🐖 the wild parties, the trashing hotel rooms, swine orgies … ☹️ Arnold was never the same.

    @dave3657@dave365724 күн бұрын
  • I click the like button because you said it 😅

    @Boy__T@Boy__TАй бұрын
  • Was that Marty stoufer from wild America footage mixed in

    @jeremygourde9880@jeremygourde9880Ай бұрын
  • Coooool 😎

    @COOPERSCICHILDS@COOPERSCICHILDSАй бұрын
  • So my question is , do domestic pig genetics ultimately know that they get slaughtered? And if it does why does it take on a more relaxed form rather than a survival form?

    @jedi8362@jedi8362Ай бұрын
    • From my understanding of genetics and biology, there's no distinction between being slaughtered from dying of old age. The real driver of evolution are being able to live long enough to reproduce. A similar thing can be asked about the castrated male pigs. Their genes don't "know" they could be castrated.

      @homerodysseus4203@homerodysseus4203Ай бұрын
    • Good fucking question

      @rylo884@rylo884Ай бұрын
    • Why would a mammal know it's in a situation that leads to their death unless they see it happening or have seen it happen? Almost everything a mammal knows, it had to learn. For the most part mammals learn from their parents. If a farmer is an idiot and kills pigs in front of other pigs then the CURRENT pigs will know it happens, but humans have this strange notion that there is this thing called instinct and it's mostly what controls animal behavior. Even migrating birds have to learn how to migrate. There is very little mammals just "know". Pigs will figure out that when humans lead pigs away and those pigs never return, something happens. What it is they don't know. They only know their pig buddies never come back. So is there a chance that the pigs become distrustful? Yes. Can this distrust be passed to babies as instinct? No. Can older pigs teach younger pigs not to trust humans? YES. And I can tell you this is why if you raise pigs, as in you have breeders, those breeders are not kept with young pigs being grown for meat. You separate the young as soon as possible. You also give good care to the breeders. Male breeders do not get to mix with the other pigs at all, and the female breeders are kept in a breeding cycle so they are concentrating on bringing a new litter into existence. You want young pigs focusing on eating and playing with their buddies. Large pig farmers will take ALL of the pigs from a litter at the same time to be slaughtered. It should be apparent that from raising pigs in this manner that older pigs cannot teach younger pigs anything more than being a little distrustful of humans, but if humans take good care of the breeders, this is less likely to happen. But if you have a lot of pigs I recommend not being alone in a pen with them and have a club. Basically, the better you treat the animals the more they trust, and if a human has interacted with young pigs as soon as possible the more you become part of that pig's life and the less reason the pig has to distrust you. So, if small farmers have issues with their pigs they're doing something wrong. Large farmers on the other hand are more likely to have pigs that distrust.

      @johndoh5182@johndoh5182Ай бұрын
    • @@johndoh5182 very good explanation. So pretty much the pigs that get slaughtered don’t live to long enough to reproduce, and the pigs that do breed know as little as possible about their death, therefore keeping that “stress” at a minimum and out of their genetic code. In my opinion this sounds ideal , but It still has me wondering how after all these years of being domesticated if they still haven’t figured it out yet, or if they did already and are just content with the “domestic” way of life, more than having to work to survive in the wild for it

      @jedi8362@jedi8362Ай бұрын
  • My friend's, thank you so much for making this video about these creatures. I watch your videos every day, and I always make sure I like your channel. These creatures are exactly what you said you cannot have said it any better. My mother's husband used to own one of these creatures and have it in the house and I couldn't even eat because if I tried to eat he would come and try to eat me😅 know it sounds a little funny but he would come biting at my legs and my ankles and it hurt like hell and my mother's husband wouldn't do anything about it I eventually had to move somewhere else. People think that they can get a pig at the fair and it be cute forever people do the exact same thing with puppies in it makes me so mad because as soon as them puppies get to being dogs at least half of them people do not take care of their dog like they did when it was a puppy and it is not right. Anyway, I love the video, my friends.

    @yourname-mz1jo@yourname-mz1joАй бұрын
  • Aka boar taint. 10:05 is that Marty Stouffer? Where do Javelina fit into the porcine picture?

    @be6715@be671526 күн бұрын
  • This transformation is where the term “hog wild” comes from.

    @itsalwayssunnyinpahoa7631@itsalwayssunnyinpahoa763127 күн бұрын
  • Narrator said, almost preditors. Trust me, given circumstance one would not be concerned with nuances, seen them lay in wait, ambush kill/eat unsuspecting bird. Not underfed, not a sow with piglets. Just opportunity.

    @survidmt@survidmt21 күн бұрын
  • The narrators.voice reminds me of watching the military channel back in the 2000s can't remember which show exactly but it's very familiar

    @stinkusmaximus6621@stinkusmaximus662122 күн бұрын
  • Thanks

    @Reppintimefitness@Reppintimefitness29 күн бұрын
  • I've never heard that, wow

    @Movrus493@Movrus493Ай бұрын
  • Wow how 😮

    @pogodai7446@pogodai7446Ай бұрын
  • If one were to try to domesticate a wild boar would they change color and look more like a pink domesticated pig?

    @GoblinKnutz@GoblinKnutzАй бұрын
    • he said no

      @Goldenhawk583@Goldenhawk583Ай бұрын
    • Around minute 10:00

      @CordeliaWagner1999@CordeliaWagner199924 күн бұрын
  • It’s about time to wash that coffee cup don’t ya think 🤣🤣

    @ParkTimeDrillaTV984@ParkTimeDrillaTV984Ай бұрын
  • If you have a wild pig problem, just call a Obelix.

    @Bullminator@BullminatorАй бұрын
    • Sadly he's just a comic book character from bygone era

      @prasetyodwikuncorojati2434@prasetyodwikuncorojati243429 күн бұрын
  • It's not enough time for evolving, it seems to be a result of the wild lifestyle. I catch wild bees, since they are not native, they are all feral in North America. They crossed the continent long before European settlers.

    @got2kittys@got2kittys27 күн бұрын
  • They're pretty bad in Texas, I live in Downtown Houston and got rolled up on by a couple ferals at the park. It was intimidating because I was always warned to avoid ferals but I never thought I would have to worry about it deep in a city!

    @sevs9550@sevs955017 күн бұрын
  • I heard female elephants chose the male with the largest tusks but now chose the one with the smallest because they know they will not be there for them because they get poached for the ivory.

    @johnholohan2767@johnholohan2767Ай бұрын
  • When thinking about how close humans are related to pigs.. has anyone else consider a similar result??

    @4runner_rooney359@4runner_rooney35925 күн бұрын
  • coyote have been hammered and numbers kept in check... but yeh these pigs in australia grow massive& fast ...same our dingo have been hammered

    @ianmckinnon8461@ianmckinnon8461Ай бұрын
  • That’s actually crazy genetic coding

    @jedi8362@jedi8362Ай бұрын
  • This happens to humans too!

    @AhJodie@AhJodieАй бұрын
    • Yes just not to this extent but humans definitely adapt to certain environments.

      @thephilosopher5799@thephilosopher5799Ай бұрын
  • Smartest cleanest an the most personality i have ever experienced with an animal but very needy an high maintenance its this sounds nuts but raising my kid was easier lol

    @troykrause2719@troykrause2719Ай бұрын
  • They can have 20 piglets one or more times a year and about half of those will have offspring with in the year .

    @georgesheffield1580@georgesheffield158025 күн бұрын
  • Pigs gone wild!

    @ebipere@ebipereАй бұрын
  • Unknown facts on pigs, revealed here, 😊

    @user-wi8hj5dq9f@user-wi8hj5dq9f29 күн бұрын
  • They have to grow hair quickly to survive the cold.

    @ddbb3195@ddbb3195Ай бұрын
    • it is more tp prevent sunburn , pigs dont really mind cold

      @Goldenhawk583@Goldenhawk583Ай бұрын
  • Arnold, from Green Acres, was a really smart pig... Course they let him attend human school, which likely dumbed him down some... 'Smoke em & BBQ if ya got em'

    @berryscott3590@berryscott359024 күн бұрын
  • I got lost in the woods and turned into Big Foot .. I was so ashamed I had to hide from everyone!

    @SpireUtd@SpireUtd24 күн бұрын
  • Well… they look very healthy and happy living in freedom. I think they are tasting better because no chemicals are present in them.

    @mariawestman9026@mariawestman902624 күн бұрын
  • You can see it with old regional European races which are kept

    @napoleonfeanor@napoleonfeanorАй бұрын
  • Can't listen to that voice for more than two minutes!

    @Tuberesu@Tuberesu26 күн бұрын
  • Feral hogs are very dangerous and extremely destructive.

    @ThePhysicalReaction@ThePhysicalReactionАй бұрын
  • 3:43 holy balls

    @mhm6@mhm623 күн бұрын
  • I hope Some More News/Cody News Dude has seen this.

    @WeeCurious@WeeCurious2 күн бұрын
  • Why the video clip of the Javelina with the cactus? They aren’t pigs at all.

    @capt.stubing5604@capt.stubing560426 күн бұрын
  • Wow🤔. 🗣. 📢. 😯😯😯😯

    @stephaniewood9608@stephaniewood960815 күн бұрын
  • Before I became a vegetarian, I quit eating pork first. Why? During a war I was taking part in, it was multiple times that we've seen pigs eating human carcasses. There was no pork on the menu in our barracks after that.

    @FerdoFulgosi@FerdoFulgosi16 сағат бұрын
  • Wow I feel bad for that old man 😳😳😳

    @tnmtent5906@tnmtent590621 күн бұрын
  • Pigs were never, ever meant to be a household pet, so think twice or three times before doing this. You may live to deeply regret it. To me, pigs are only meant be outside and to raise to eat, NOT BE PETS!!! Wild pigs can be very dangerous!

    @patricialong5767@patricialong576723 күн бұрын
  • It’s all fun and games till they get possessed by a demon and a young warrior boy with a bow has to take it down.

    @ambersummer2685@ambersummer2685Ай бұрын
  • Depends on how many bikes they can steal per day

    @uncledanny4549@uncledanny4549Ай бұрын
  • before 40 views

    @oak6_@oak6_Ай бұрын
  • It's all in the "junk" DNA.

    @Andy-df5fj@Andy-df5fjАй бұрын
  • "Once you go feral, you never go back." Ferals and ferality. Can't turn a sow's ear into a silk purse. But you could turn a silk purse into a sow's ear (by the pigs eat the silk fibers for protein !). You can turn a quality-living elite into an impoverished homeless person - but you can't turn a feral and homeless person to (back into) a quality-elite. Pygmalion story (My Fair Lady) turning a lower-class Cockney into a high society London starlet.

    @johnlord8337@johnlord833714 күн бұрын
  • Feral pigs and domestic pigs are the same species. Sus scrofa

    @josephschmidt1751@josephschmidt1751Ай бұрын
  • What makes you think slurping is something good????????????

    @jerryburton6825@jerryburton6825Ай бұрын
  • What is wrong with that alligator/crocodile in the thumbnail? It looks like its lower jaw is extending wildly.

    @pyrogrimm7653@pyrogrimm7653Ай бұрын
  • "It wasn't hard for them to spread, as there's plenty of food everywhere..." Well, when damn near anything that is or was alive is food for you, what else? And the damn things breed like cats and rabbits. They are the only animal I consider a serious threat to humans, and the show has only begun.

    @TimeSurfer206@TimeSurfer206Ай бұрын
    • The way they breed resembles rats a lot more than either cats or rabbits in my opinion.

      @philomelodia@philomelodiaАй бұрын
    • @@philomelodia Well... I'll agree with you on that. I have, in fact, bred all 4, and I never suspected the cats of being born pregnant. Close, mind you... But everyone else? Yeah, it would explain a lot.

      @TimeSurfer206@TimeSurfer206Ай бұрын
  • You forgot that the wild boars infestation can't even be made useful by being eaten in large droves because of all the contamination and infection and worms etc. Sad

    @JohnnyFiction@JohnnyFictionАй бұрын
    • Pls explain more or send link to video explaining

      @thephilosopher5799@thephilosopher5799Ай бұрын
    • sows under 200 LBs are good eating , piglets are great .Boars are inedible

      @huckstirred7112@huckstirred7112Ай бұрын
  • Its just like humans in the ghetto vs suburbs

    @timothyandrewnielsen@timothyandrewnielsen21 күн бұрын
  • Because there tuff

    @troykrause2719@troykrause2719Ай бұрын
  • I came here to find out what is happening to Monique

    @morwickchesterham3875@morwickchesterham3875Ай бұрын
  • Silence the disgusting sound of steve swallowing the coffee please.. i loved the times without it.. no reason to skip in the beginning xD

    @Affenklappe@AffenklappeАй бұрын
  • The numerous pigs wandering in Hawaiian forests all came from domestic stock..

    @cynthiagonzalez658@cynthiagonzalez658Ай бұрын
  • Feeds how many people ? Texas immigrants hinters could eat like kings, wild hogs and wils Spanish goats.

    @TerriAnnNiemeier-dy3no@TerriAnnNiemeier-dy3no27 күн бұрын
  • The first pig you said was a domestic pig gone wild wasnt it was a wild bore

    @stevewilliams1754@stevewilliams1754Ай бұрын
  • JFC i thought that was a bison 🦬

    @blade797@blade79722 күн бұрын
  • Video seemed interesting, but I gave up due to the shouty delivery of the narrator.

    @KrisHughes@KrisHughes25 күн бұрын
  • 1st-Person-View-Drones operating with Night-Owl in swarms: consider man-hours-on-foot compared to mileage-of-pigs-in-minutes, based on pigs hearing, men can't chase pig down. Men need subtle earthen-stairs into a wide bottle-neck trench, bait-pigs-in by having camp-dinner down there, the using the area as a bathroom before leaving the trench overnight: literal-trench military-trench trench.

    @noelhutchins7366@noelhutchins7366Ай бұрын
  • coffee is unhealthy, don't drink so much.

    @le-johnny9236@le-johnny9236Ай бұрын
    • Coffee is healthy

      @gyorgygajdos1657@gyorgygajdos165727 күн бұрын
    • That’s literally not true lol

      @jkitty.@jkitty.26 күн бұрын
  • 3rd gen pig farmer here.... that's all pig crap!... but I guess you have to figure something to tell...

    @user-McGiver@user-McGiverАй бұрын
    • Really? Cuz my uncle has a hunting cabin up in the foothills, they take young domestic pigs up there and let them loose to hunt later after they’re big. The animals are then quite vicious and definitely look different than their non released siblings. They did grow courser hair and changed in physical appearance, more like a wild pig. They taste damn good too.

      @carolannroberts@carolannrobertsАй бұрын
  • Looks like we gota like bacon

    @CandyxKush@CandyxKush28 күн бұрын
  • before 5 views

    @goofyahhrobloxchannel2850@goofyahhrobloxchannel2850Ай бұрын
  • "What Happens to Domestic Pigs in the Wild Shocked Everyone" No it did not.

    @bgood2010@bgood2010Ай бұрын
  • Pigs are more dangerous than other wild animals

    @bort14124@bort14124Ай бұрын
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