Placeholder Image

字幕表 動画を再生する

  • Bangkok, 2016. A man is going to the bathroom. He is getting ready to relax when all of a

  • sudden, something crawls out of the toilet pipe and bites him. The man keeps his wits

  • about him and calls the rescue service. The intruder is soon pulled out of the toilet,

  • and it turns out to be a 10-foot python! Yes, a python in the potty! And this case is not

  • the only one. Rescuers pull out dozens of snakes from toilets around the world every

  • year. Kinda makes you want to hold it now, doesn’t

  • it? But wait, here’s the same story --from the

  • other side. Somewhere in the jungles of Thailand, a python has been sweating from intense heat

  • for three days. A small pond nearby has dried up, and it's too dangerous to go to the lake

  • too long a distance, and it can come across towns and villages along the way. The best

  • solution is to wait until the drought ends and rain starts. But it’s not only about

  • the heat: poor python is very hungry. This can't wait. So the snake goes on a hunt.

  • There's no lunch on the way. Birds fly away immediately, seeing the predator, monkeys

  • climb to the treetops. Even so, the python discovers something. The smell of its favorite

  • food. Rats. Yeah, today the python will have its dinner. Driven by the smell of food, it

  • doesn't even notice that the jungle has ended, and human dwellings are all around. But it's

  • okay, it just needs to be careful and people won't notice. The python crawls along the

  • alleys and trash cans for a while and the smell leads it to the sewer hatch. A little

  • scary, but the hunger is stronger. The snake gets inside.

  • It's pretty cold here, and there's water! A lot of it! It's smelly, though, and certainly

  • not drinkable. The python confidently crawls to the smell of prey. Now it hears the familiar

  • squeak of little rodents. It would catch them by surprise, but... the rats notice the predator

  • in time and scuttle. The python is an experienced hunter, so it immediately notices the largest

  • rat and swiftly slithers after it. The rodent runs into a small pipe. It seems the rat has

  • no chance of salvation in such a narrow tube. Unfortunately for python, though, it hides.

  • But it left the smell! The python crawls into the pipe, makes several turns and realizes

  • rat smells are everywhere. It's time to come back.

  • But now it has serious problems. It wanders around the sewers for a long time. These are

  • long and straight pipes with little water. Sometimes curved S-shaped channels appear,

  • but the python creeps through them without difficulty. Some tubes are entirely filled

  • with water, but it doesn't have any problems with thatthe animal swims underwater

  • for several feet quite easily. Smelly waste crashes upon the python from time to time.

  • The tight space and darkness make it nervous. Hunger is getting stronger. Panicking already,

  • the snake moves faster. There's less and less air, but suddenly it feels a faint stream

  • of fresh oxygen. It crawls that way. And what’s that? There's light at the end of the tunnel!

  • Great! Finally, the python gets out. …but this is not the place it came from.

  • It crawls to the source of air and light, out a long S-shaped pipe and... sees a human!

  • And it’s not his best side if you know what I mean. Now he’s really scared. Self-preservation

  • instinct triggers, and the python bites the threat.

  • In general, as you understand, pythons get into sewers because they follow the rats.

  • But now let's say you live in the concrete jungle on the twentieth floor. Unfortunately,

  • there is still a risk, albeit very small, that a snake makes its way into your toilet.

  • And no, they don't live in urban sewers like crocodiles. I'm kidding. There are no such

  • huge reptiles in the sewers at all.

  • So, your neighbor from five floors down is a fan of exotic animals. He’s bought a domestic

  • snake recently. One day, he stayed late at work and didn't feed the snake in time. The

  • hungry animal is trying to get out of the cage. It so happens that the neighbor hasn’t

  • closed the lid properly this morning. The snake takes advantage of this and quickly

  • crawls out of the cage. Now it slithers through the kitchen in search of food and water.

  • The smell of moisture from the toilet or sink attracts the snake. It crawls into the bathroom

  • and dives into the toilet bowl. Then, just like the python from earlier, it travels through

  • pipes and finally finds the exitin another apartment's bathroom. Such a case occurred

  • in Russia, in the city of Perm. A woman noticed a python in her toilet bowl. Rescuers pulled

  • it out and took it to the herpetarium (the place where they keep snakes). It’s interesting

  • that the owner of the python turned up almost at once. He lived in the same building as

  • the woman. He said that the python knocked out the terrarium's roof glass and escaped.

  • By the way, snakes can escape not only from home terrariums but from zoos too.

  • There were cases when snakes fell from tree branches directly onto a house's roof or got

  • into an apartment through air vents. There was a marten that entered an apartment this

  • way. It was so scared that it smashed the whole kitchen before the rescuers arrived.

  • They caught the animal, took it to the forest, and let it go. Also, there was a case when

  • a marten climbed into an apartment from the toilet pipe!

  • Rats also fall into the sewer pipes. They rarely climb high up, and mostly get off on

  • the ground floor. Pythons get lost in the sewers while hunting rats, and they appear

  • in your home by sheer chance. But rats do it on purpose: they know there is a lot of

  • good food in your apartment. Sometimes they even manage to get into the kitchen. Rats

  • and mice are well-known maze runners, so traveling through the sewers is a piece of cake for

  • them. And rats may also come with company. They appear out of the toilet or sink.

  • In some countries, such as Australia, funnel-web spiders can enter the sewers. They don't know

  • how to swim but can stay in the water for 30 hours. Frogs can easily end up in your

  • bathroom too. Of course, they're not so scary as rats, snakes, or spiders, but anyway, these

  • croaking critters aren’t welcome guests in the toilet.

  • Another animal that could theoretically end up in the sewers is an octopus. As you know,

  • these are very smart creatures, and they have tried to escape from zoo's aquariums or houses

  • many times. Octopuses can think up a real escape plan and slip out of the aquarium when

  • you replace the filter for example. Unlike other "toilet" inhabitants, octopuses don't

  • have skeleton, so they can squeeze into any gap. Fortunately, there aren't known cases

  • where an octopus ended up in someone's toilet. I'll say it again: there’s almost zero chance

  • that an uninvited guest will appear in your bathroom. But if this happens, here's what

  • to do: First, try to flush the animal. Obviously,

  • though, if it's a python, then it won’t help. By the way, that man from Thailand,

  • who was bitten by a python, grabbed the animal and tied it to the doorknob so that it wouldn't

  • float away. If you don't have a snake-grappling training, then immediately close the bathroom

  • door and call the rescuers. If this is some small creature, like a rat

  • or frog, then wash it off. Thanks to the fat on their fur, though, rats float in the water

  • easily. In any case, you need to close the toilet lid so that the animal doesn't get

  • into the apartment. Call rescuers or pest control.

  • Also, there are ultrasonic devices that produce a low-frequency sound. People don’t hear

  • it, but it’s making rodents go nuts. If it’s on, they will stay away from your apartment.

  • And if you live close to the nature, especially in hot countries, not far from the jungle,

  • I can only advise you to be vigilant every time you go to the bathroom.

  • Okay it’s over. You can uncover your eyes now. Me? I think I’ll go watch a few BrightSide

  • videos about the Titanic or airplanes or something to dilute those mental python pictures in

  • my head nowoy. Hey, if you learned something new today, then

  • give the video a like and share it with a friend! And here are some other cool videos

  • I think you'll enjoy. No snakes. Just click to the left or right, and stay on the Bright

  • Side of life!

Bangkok, 2016. A man is going to the bathroom. He is getting ready to relax when all of a

字幕と単語

ワンタップで英和辞典検索 単語をクリックすると、意味が表示されます

B1 中級

浴室に蛇が侵入する方法 (That's How a Snake Gets into Your Bathroom)

  • 9 0
    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
動画の中の単語