I love when I know the answer to a question before it's asked. Do cheetahs prefer cold concrete or warm blankets and company?
These captive cheetahs were bred and born at cheetah breeding centers in South Africa; one at Cheetah Experience. All are quite tame as they are groomed for the breeding program so when they have cubs, they can be monitored closely. An accepting and approachable mother allows that. There is a plan to release one of these cheetahs into a protected wild in the near future.
I was granted special permission to spend my nights with the three because I had watched them grow up and built up a relationship with them during past volunteering.
It is natural for a family or friends of animals living together to share warmth. It is a survival behavior that is innate. In our human survival schools, we are taught to huddle together if lost in the wilderness; conserving heat by sharing warmth. They recommend you do it without clothing because fabric acts like an insulator and you don't get the maximum efficiency of heat transfer to your body.
I think it is really cool these cheetahs trust and like me enough to share their most vulnerable time at night to snuggle, purr, and share their warmth and sleep with me. It is an extraordinarily rewarding feeling.
I don't get much sleep due to the constant getting up, readjusting, and laying back down. Cheetahs are very skittish and wake up at the slightest sound or vibrations, so I don't get much sleep, but I don't do this to get rest but to experience something quite unique and special. I don't sleep with these cats, they sleep with me. They come to me which makes it more special. They enjoy the company almost as much as I do.
There is a cameo visit from Lucas the Jumping Spider at 01:45. Even spiders enjoy warm blankets, pillows and good company. Who doesn't?
"Sleeping With Cheetahs; Three Cheetahs At A Time," Dolph C. Volker
I love when I know the answer to a question before it's asked. Do cheetahs prefer cold concrete or warm blankets and company?
These captive cheetahs were bred and born at cheetah breeding centers in South Africa; one at Cheetah Experience. All are quite tame as they are groomed for the breeding program so when they have cubs, they can be monitored closely. An accepting and approachable mother allows that. There is a plan to release one of these cheetahs into a protected wild in the near future.
I was granted special permission to spend my nights with the three because I had watched them grow up and built up a relationship with them during past volunteering.
It is natural for a family or friends of animals living together to share warmth. It is a survival behavior that is innate. In our human survival schools, we are taught to huddle together if lost in the wilderness; conserving heat by sharing warmth. They recommend you do it without clothing because fabric acts like an insulator and you don't get the maximum efficiency of heat transfer to your body.
I think it is really cool these cheetahs trust and like me enough to share their most vulnerable time at night to snuggle, purr, and share their warmth and sleep with me. It is an extraordinarily rewarding feeling.
I don't get much sleep due to the constant getting up, readjusting, and laying back down. Cheetahs are very skittish and wake up at the slightest sound or vibrations, so I don't get much sleep, but I don't do this to get rest but to experience something quite unique and special. I don't sleep with these cats, they sleep with me. They come to me which makes it more special. They enjoy the company almost as much as I do.
There is a cameo visit from Lucas the Jumping Spider at 01:45. Even spiders enjoy warm blankets, pillows and good company. Who doesn't?
"Sleeping With Cheetahs; Three Cheetahs At A Time," Dolph C. Volker
SUBSCRIBERS!!! Be sure to turn on your NOTIFICATIONS in your YouTube account to get an email from me when I post new videos! I don't want you to miss even one! And THANKS!
Please like and share this video if you like it ;)
Chapters 00:00 Into- It's a dangerous world. 02:22 The walk! 04:41 Difference between Gabriel and Kimi walk. 05:27 Kimi Looks for prey, finds a Giraffe. 06:21 Kimi finds antelope poo (eats some!). 07:57 Conclusion - Future for Kiki.
Kimya, or Kimi for short is the 1st daughter of Abi and brother to Kayzer, the young cubs 2 years ago. How time flies. Abi is with NEW cubs (3 of them). I take Kimi for a nature reserve walk next door. Kayzer and Abi also went, but I didn't film them. This was a one on one fun trip for just us.
Kimi discovers pro-biotics! Many cheetahs and predators lick and eat antelope or other prey poo. I found it quite revealing! Some cheetah projects provide Rhino patties for them to play with and chew!
I want Kimi to bond with me as much as possible because eventually, I will splinter off on my own cheetah breeding and rewilding project and take Kimi, Gabriel, and the two cub boys Shango and Jengo with me. Bonding with my cheetahs is very important as they get the best care possible due to it. And remember you can STILL rewild a tamed cheetah. Many tamed cheetahs have been successfully rewilded. The location and their preparation is key, plus monitoring.
SUBSCRIBERS!!! Be sure to turn on your NOTIFICATIONS in your YouTube account to get an email from me when I post new videos! I don't want you to miss even one! And THANKS!
Please like and share this video if you like it ;)
Really wanted to post something about Gabriel today for his 11th Birthday! Showing his reaction to his new young cheetah cub friends is one of the best gifts he could get. He does not typically like ANY male cheetahs and becomes quite aggressive and obsessed with it. These are Zakira's cubs from last fall. They are 8 months old now.
If you remember, Zakira was Kiki's daughter and moved to a different project. I helped purchase her for Running Wild Conservation and she was so happy that her mind and body decided to become a mother! Another male cheetah RWC owns bred with her and resulted in these cubs!
I worry about Gabriel. He's already beat the odds of cheetah longevity. If he can reach 16 years old, it would be beyond most expectations of any male cheetah, captive or wild. I pray he makes it beyond in good health. He is very special and especially to me. Happy Birthday Gabriel!
SUBSCRIBERS!!! Be sure to turn on your NOTIFICATIONS in your YouTube account to get an email from me when I post new videos! I don't want you to miss even one! And THANKS!
Please like and share this video if you like it ;)
The NO COMMENT theme is a take on CSPAN's way. Making fun of them and trying it out myself.
Just Abi and her 3 cubs she is raising at Running Wild Conservation, a cheetah breeding and rewilding project where I have my cheetahs cared for. She is so happy and so are the cubs. Abi and the (2) male cubs Shango & Jengo are legally owned by me, and Storm (the female cub) is owned by the projects due to a breeders agreement. The father of the cubs is Skyler, who is owned by Running Wild Conservation so the female cub Storm, is owned by RWC.
The cubs are doing great and much bigger today and health and happy. Could not ask for more.
Was trying something different, and wanted to remove any narration and show the progress of the cubs. They are about 2 months old in this video and doing GREAT!
SUBSCRIBERS!!! Be sure to turn on your NOTIFICATIONS in your YouTube account to get an email from me when I post new videos! I don't want you to miss even one! And THANKS!
Please like and share this video if you like it ;)
People have asked "Have you ever been injured by these cheetahs?" I think everyone who cares for an animal long enough has been injured by them. I know as a small child I've been bitten by my dog, pet mice, and others. It can be on purpose or by accident. But it will most likely happen. Everyone I've ever known working with big or small cats gets injured to varying degrees. So, yes I've been injured and I show you my worst... which isn't really saying much, but it did send me to the hospital for stitches.
I have not been bitten and that is on another level of aggression that is rare for cheetahs, especially of you build a bond with them and show consistent love and respect. Even among themselves, they do not bite to kill or injure among siblings, family or friends. Biting is reserved for their enemies or if someone was dumb enough to harass one to the point it must. You build a positive bond with a cheetah, your chances of getting seriously bitten by one is quite minimal. A friendly cheetah will absolutely SLAP you and that is how they correct your behavior.
SUBSCRIBERS!!! Be sure to turn on your NOTIFICATIONS in your YouTube account to get an email from me when I post new videos! I don't want you to miss even one! And THANKS!
Please like and share this video if you like it ;)
Thanks to Running Wild Cheetah Conservation for re-introducing Gabriel's harness training so he could go on these walks in the Game Reserve next door. They have been working with Gabriel in some enrichment exercises and it has really paid off. It has allowed his life's experiences expand from outside his natural wild, large but confined enclosure.
Gabe had been on walks as a cub, but when he got to an adult, he became more to handle and he walks stopped for him. He was at a different cheetah project and I didn't own him at the time so had zero influence on his life. I bought him at 5 years old, then moved him to this more natural property and cheetah project. The game reserve next door was a super bonus. The cheetahs get walks and hunting practice!
I wish I had known Gabriel would not have minded the harness or I would have began walks in the veld sooner. He LOVED it! Even examining the human horse inhabitations. He would not stop walking! I followed him across the reserve, only directing him away from hazards and not going to far.
I don't think he would come back on his own unless he was very hungry, or know where to go. He would need lots more walks. He enjoyed experiences the senses of this reserve habitat as it was natural for him and his species. Gabriel is very independent and rarely comes when I call except for food or a groom. He would hurt himself or get lost or injured from all the hazards there. He does not know how to hunt or what not to hunt and might try attacking something out of his league.
So, I hope to continue the walks and get him used to it. I need to train him to come on command, maybe use a bowl of treats to place his harness on to return to the enclosures. For most all the other cheetahs, he harness to the reserve then let them go, and retrieve them on the way back. They may walk, play, rest, or even hunt. If probably want to place a GPS collar on my Gabriel to find him again.
SUBSCRIBERS!!! Be sure to turn on your NOTIFICATIONS in your YouTube account to get an email from me when I post new videos! I don't want you to miss even one! And THANKS!
Please like and share this video if you like it ;)
WOW! Abi The Cheetah had THREE MORE CUBS! Everyone was SO shocked but elated! It was not expected as Abi was become a rescue cheetah education the public about captive but handicapped cheetahs! But several vets said she could mate and bare cubs if so desired. She DESIRED!
Abi has progressed far beyond Everyone's expectations. We are so proud! She has matured so much in the past year after acquiring her for my project and moving her to this one. Her confidence rose as well as her her condition with her bad hip and mental state. She started relaxing and trusting the folks caring for her and she OPENED up to everything to include breeding! Her mind and body opened up to the prospects of becoming a mother. Conditions were right! She selected a mate, one from this cheetah breeding project who is genetically diverse and viable, and they bred twice at two different times and the 2nd time succeeded in pregnancy!
The cubs are doing super! Nursing from mom from moment one. I'll be preparing future updates and posts about the cubs and mom. This video is few months old but everyone is doing SUPER!
Abi is legally owned by me but the cheetah father who bred with Abi is not. From a breeders agreement, only the female cub will be owned by me while the male is owned by the fathers owner. Both cubs will be FULLY raised to adulthood by Abi. As a first time mother, she is doing VERY well. SO protective all sudden and calling to them and nursing. She LOVES them. It's best to have mom cheetah raise their cubs because no one can substitute mothers milk. It has all the special nutrient inside to include antibodies, growth hormones and fats. So important!
I was amazed how Abi's hormones and instincts kick in for her new cubs. I mention no one taught Abi what to do from displaying while in heat, breeding, rolling, eating , more, then giving birth, nursing, calling, licking, and protecting her cubs. Since she trusts certain people (now even more people) she and her cubs get the best nurturing care possible and why I mention I am a HUGE fan of captive interactive care. It just means better success and better overall care for the animal. Just look and observe here and in the future.
SUBSCRIBERS!!! Be sure to turn on your NOTIFICATIONS in your YouTube account to get an email from me when I post new videos! I don't want you to miss even one! And THANKS!
Please like and share this video if you like it ;)
20% off promotional volunteer discount at Running Wild Cheetah Conservation. Simply sign up through their website! www.runningwildconservation.org and tell them in the comments/email "THE CHEETAH WHISPERER SENT ME"
20% off volunteer promotional code phrase is "THE CHEETAH WHISPERRER SENT ME"
Abi the cheetah JUST had her 2nd litter of cubs! Three perfect cubs. One female and two males. She spent her last 2 years with her previous cubs at the project Kimi and Kayzer and raised to adulthood. Now she wanted to do it again and is LOVING her new cubs. Watch them fight for survival as they tussle for one of moms 8 milk producing nipples.
The two males will be legally mine while the female is Running Wild Conservations. This is due to a breeders agreement. My plans for the two males cubs is to train them for rewilding and have them become breeders before that day. I want them humanized and asking RWC to tame them, like Kimi who is approachable and easy to work with. I explain a little about rewilding tame and wild captive cheetahs, but basically you can both. It requires working with them, and selecting the best game reserve for release and monitoring throughout. It's already been done successfully for dozens of captive tame and wild cheetahs.
SUBSCRIBERS!!! Be sure to turn on your NOTIFICATIONS in your YouTube account to get an email from me when I post new videos! I don't want you to miss even one! And THANKS!
Please like and share this video if you like it ;)
I've known Abi off and on since she was an 8 month old cub, similar to Gabriel but didn't spend the time with her like Gabe's. I acquired her as a rescue cheetah and ambassador for her kind at my future cheetah breeding and rewilding project. I didn't expect her to want or even be able to bear cubs. The vet said she could, even though she has a large part of her hip bone removed due to an inury during birth. What a pleasant surprise when I heard she went into heat at Running Wild Conservation where they care for her and Gabriel... and now Kimi!
She did so well at the new project that she became a mother of 2 wonderful healthy cubs, Kimi and Kayzer. Now that the cubs are almost adult, 2 years old, Abi wanted to leave them... She no longer enjoyed their company and it is very natural. She went into heat and started the life cycle all over again. She selected her old mate, Skyler again and now Abi is pregnant again and possibly with more than 2 cubs! Look at the end picture of her TUMMY!
I hope to have more pics and video of the cubs, but unfortunately I cannot be there for the event. I have a career outside of my cheetahs that prevents me from spending my time I want with them. I hope to end my career (which pays for the cheetahs) in a couple of years... I pray.
This video scoots through the 8 years I've known Abi and the cubs growing up FAST! They are doing well and Kimi had her own kill recently of an impala female and shared it with her mom and brother. I plan on Kimi being a breeder for my project and future cubs will all be considered for release... into the wild.
SUBSCRIBERS!!! Be sure to turn on your NOTIFICATIONS in your YouTube account to get an email from me when I post new videos! I don't want you to miss even one! And THANKS!
Please like and share this video if you like it ;)
The summer had arrived and Gabriel was shedding fur excessively. Typically, coalition brothers assist with grooming, or they rub it off by rolling on the ground, rubbing against trees and branches, or it sheds off over the months. I wanted to assist by trying a cat and dog over the counter pet shop rubberized brush. It worked and Gabriel actually LOVED it.
Most encounters I have with Gabriel, and I'm either laying down or he lies near me, it ends up in a play fight. It's scary for me because we don't do it often. The growls, rough action, play biting and claws are intimidating. I got a dew claw in my hand on this one, but only a scratch. It's expected when being this close to the predators you care for. I just hope Gabriel's friendship and affinity for me prevents him ever escalating to a point where he would purposely injure me. It's why I always end it sooner than he wants... like this time. So far, so good. But I realize there is always that chance, and I accept the risk to make the animals in my care happy. That means greater mental health that I combine with better physical health.
SUBSCRIBERS!!! Be sure to turn on your NOTIFICATIONS in your YouTube account to get an email from me when I post new videos! I don't want you to miss even one! And THANKS!
Please like and share this video if you like it ;)
00:00 Grudges People & Animals Cheetah 01:20 A Tiger's Grudge ROAR! 01:53 Calm Before The Storm 03:30 Gabriel Gets Angry With Me 05:53 STILL Angry Day 1 06:28 Refuses To Groom Me 07:12 Bribe Gabriel With Food 13:33 Both Cubs Nurse On Abi 11:03 Day 2 Wants To Forgive 11:20 Gabriel FINALLY Forgives Me
I've mentioned before, Gabriel is a TUFF customer! Demands lots of respect or gets mad, growls, strikes and even holds a grudge. But, happy to say, he can forgive you. Even when he's mad about you, he still purrs but sulks and won't allow any close contact with him. Guess his way of training humans that cannot read his mind, but can read his behavior.
It's happened before. Gabriel got mad at me for touching his underbelly one time years ago. He snapped at my face and would not come to me or groom for 2 days. I'm just glad Gabriel and cheetahs are NOT like tigers or wolves, who will hold that grudge for a lifetime. Even forgetting why they hate you in the 1st place. There are probably ways to mend that, but would be a HUGE risk with a tiger. You could die.
Anyway, spoiler alert! Gabriel DID forgive me, but it took 2 full days... :) So glad we are back to being friends again. I had to do some close health checks on him and broke some interaction protocols to do it. I thought he was sick and had a enlarged gonad and needed to look closer.
SUBSCRIBERS!!! Be sure to turn on your NOTIFICATIONS in your YouTube account to get an email from me when I post new videos! I don't want you to miss even one! And THANKS!
Please like and share this video if you like it ;)
Just James the cheetah doing what comes natural for him. To purr while in your presence. Sadly, I didn't have a wind filter on the camera but will have other PURR videos with better audio.
SUBSCRIBERS!!! Be sure to turn on your NOTIFICATIONS in your YouTube account to get an email from me when I post new videos! I don't want you to miss even one! And THANKS!
Please like and share this video if you like it ;)
I try introducing mopani worms "caterpillar larvae" of the Emperor moth as a snack for Gabriel The Cheetah. It went about exactly how I thought it would, and even more. Actually got annoyed.
SUBSCRIBERS!!! Be sure to turn on your NOTIFICATIONS in your YouTube account to get an email from me when I post new videos! I don't want you to miss even one! And THANKS!
Please like and share this video if you like it ;)
Neo the cheetah, playing with a broom while volunteers were cleaning up the platforms of the cheetahs. Neo is a half sister of Gabriel.
SUBSCRIBERS!!! Be sure to turn on your NOTIFICATIONS in your YouTube account to get an email from me when I post new videos! I don't want you to miss even one! And THANKS!
Please like and share this video if you like it ;)
*** This is an old video I posted where I used some music that was discovered copyrighted recently. I removed and replaced the music with another free one, so I re-upload this video with some free music. ***
Spent some quality time with the African Wild Cat at Cheetah Experience in South Africa when volunteering. I was petting one of the yearling female when she started to knead onto a giant stuffed teddy bear. Kneading is a cub/kitten behavior that all cats do to help stimulate milk production from the mother. It serves to get the milk to flow better through her teats. It's like when we squeeze the air out of an air mattress to get all of it out we can. They do this normally when kittens, but if they are removed from their mother, the behavior can extend into adulthood. Many of a domesticated cat does this and is why. Wild ones are no different.
Once she was finished kneading, she laid down on top of her surrogate mother stuffed teddy bear and went to sleep... Comforted and content. Thought it was awfully cute, so decided to share it with you.
People may wonder why these kittens were taken from their mother. I do not know the answer, but usually when projects get animals that are NOT endangered, some other circumstance has occurred and these projects offer up a home for them. I think these were bred by some breeder that didn't want them. CE did NOT breed these Wild Cats.
SUBSCRIBERS!!! Be sure to turn on your NOTIFICATIONS in your YouTube account to get an email from me when I post new videos! I don't want you to miss even one! And THANKS!
Please like and share this video if you like it ;)
00:00 Gabriel As Cub 01:44 The 1st 10 Years Hugging 02:27 Paws In Face When On Back 03:17 Cut In Face By Paw Slap Asking To Play 04:33 How Gabriel Asks To Play Scratches Ear! 05:42 Gabriel's Aggression Toward Other Cheetahs! FIGHTS! 06:13 Gabriel Needs Another Cheetah Friend (Has Me Instead) 07:20 How I Enrich & Play With Gabriel Toys Scents 07:54 Aroused By A ROPE!!! Huh? 08:21 Try My Best To Enrich Gabriel - Make Friends 08:36 Conclusion Gabriel Gives Back Love In BIG way
Remember, Gabriel is a captive but non-releasable breeding cheetah at this rewilding project called Running Wild Conservation. I have the privilege of knowing Gabriel and enriching his life, while he enriches mine throughout his life. He's still in great shape and condition at 10 years. I pray for another healthy 10 more.
I've known Gabriel for 10 years, and what a blessing and challenge it's been being his friend. He chose me long ago for friendship as a cub and never forgot. We've both had to learn each other's tolerances. I have more of course and just happy to be his friend, so I had to learn what he likes and dislikes. It's difficult as we don't share the same language, not even body ones, but I've learned.
I show some of the quirks about Gabriel and how he communicates them to me. I need to become a better observer of behavior to understand him. Species all have similar behaviors, like whining, growling, position of body parts, like ears, tail, shoulders and such, but every individual in is unique in how they personalize their common behaviors. Gabriel is no different.
From the paws in my face to Gabriel's love of the Play Fight, I've learned what mostly makes him tick. It has helped me bond with him, and he shows the appreciation in his loving grooming, purring response to me. When he's REALLY happy with our relationship... he does this HUGE RUB I really like. It's at the end of this video.
SUBSCRIBERS!!! Be sure to turn on your NOTIFICATIONS in your YouTube account to get an email from me when I post new videos! I don't want you to miss even one! And THANKS!
Please like and share this video if you like it ;)
00:00 Abi & Her Cubs 00:21 Gabriel SWATS - Food Possession 00:32 Hand Feeding Reduces Food Aggression 01:50 Hand Feeding Tick Meds & Laxative 06:10 Slow Motion Run To Food 06:21 Gabriel The Cheetah Tries An Egg 07:19 Kimi The Cheetah Tries An Egg 09:51 Conclusion Gabriel Plays Hand Feeding Is Good
I'm a big fan of interactive care for the animals I'm responsible for. It's added risk, but overall safer when something goes wrong (an opened gate for instance). It is far less likely that something bad happens when the animals in your care are calm around people; especially when feeding.
It's best to start young in hand feeding, but Abi show that old cats can learn to be nice too. Hand feeding earns trust from the animals that allow it. Hunger is one of the top three instincts where an animal will become violent protecting it. When you earn that trust, it helps overall with that relationship with that animal. Thus I hand feed. There will be others who care for my animals and with them calmer around feeding, it help s in the overall temperament of these predators who meet new people. They learn that most all folks are not after their food and can be trusted. THEN you can progress to things like checking on health.
I don't hand fed all the time, but enough that it reinforces the trust between us and others. With a predator allowing hand feeding, you can also make SURE they take required or needed meds and supplements. Then you can progress to enrichment things like I did at the end of this video where I test whether my cheetahs will eat a hard boiled egg! They eat chicken... so why not an Egg?
"Hand feeding an egg to my cheetahs, one animal at a time," Dolph C. Volker
Check Out My Books I Wrote 1: amazon.com/DIRE-ENCOUNTERS-Man-Meets-Wolf-ebook/dp/B00UEHUB2G 2: amazon.com/dp/B072N5M7KBThe Human Ant Glove | Jutsu Jedi Mind Trick (The Force) Used On Wood Ants | ShortsDolph C. Volker2023-11-18 | Just me being me if you ever knew me. Fascinated by ALL life and suppose I'm the Animal Whisperer really. I know folks rather see cheetahs, but I have other interests as well and so went halve'zies with you. Post one of mine 'personality' SHORTS and one about Gabriel at the same time. In the future I'll separate out my channels to cute behavior cheetahs, research and the WILD THINGS like this ant video and the obscure about the living. I really like insects too.
SUBSCRIBERS!!! Be sure to turn on your NOTIFICATIONS in your YouTube account to get an email from me when I post new videos! I don't want you to miss even one! And THANKS!
Please like and share this video if you like it ;)
Video recorded at Running Wild Conservation in South Africa www.runningwildconservation.org The reason I own captive cheetahs is to raise the population of this endangered cat and rewild them.
00:00 Abi & Her Teenaged Cubs 00:23 Kimi & Kayzer Play W/Toys 01:21 Gabriel Smells Kimi On Toy 02:53 Gabriel Meets Kimi & Kayzer 03:48 Kimi INJURED HER LEG! 05:28 Wildlife Veterinarian Visits X-Rays 06:40 Cubs Get A Zebra Tail | Fuss Over It 08:05 Abi STILL Hissing At Me | Hand Feed 08:37 Conclusion | Bye Abi Kimi Kayzer
Spent some weeks with Abi and her cubs. They are 1.5 years old now. Growing and maturing. Last time they hunted down a Blesbok. This visit they got to relax. Kimi is doing better than expected. Her personality and temperament is what I was hoping for. Kayzer is more of a boy maturing... Abi is great too and they STILL live together.
I suspect Abi will want to separate from her cubs within the next 6 months as that is when female cheetahs have completed their duties of raising their cubs (2 years). She may want to breed again and that's when she will want her own camp, away from her cubs. Kimi will have similar desires in the near future. It;s my plan for Kimi... when she decides and why I want her so calm around people and strangers. One day she may visit a cheetah project to breed and when fearful of new things and people, that does not work well in breeding. Remember I don't own Kayzer so his future will be decided by Running Wild Conservation.
SUBSCRIBERS!!! Be sure to turn on your NOTIFICATIONS in your YouTube account to get an email from me when I post new videos! I don't want you to miss even one! And THANKS!
Please like and share this video if you like it ;) SHORTS
Some cheetah meows! Yes cheetahs meow. Some better than others but we ALL have different voices and sounds we make as individuals. These cheetahs are meowing because they wants something. Mostly food but sometimes it's to be let out of their feeding pens after feeding or when we are cleaning their enclosures. Occasionally they will meow when talked too from a distance. They can also meow when bored. Never seen them meow for any other reasons.
I love how some cheetahs make BIG smiles when they meow. Their teeth are so impressive and amazing all that fits in their jaws.
Hope you enjoy the pleasure of seeing these cubs and sweet Abi. Much more to come.
SUBSCRIBERS!!! Be sure to turn on your NOTIFICATIONS in your YouTube account to get an email from me when I post new videos! I don't want you to miss even one! And THANKS!
Finally did a video explaining why Gabriel and these cheetahs LOVE grooming so much, me, themselves and others. A single answer is not encompassing enough, but entails many facets as to why. It basically comes down to a survival behavior that is instinctive and pleasurable so they will do it. Gabriel and some of these cheetahs can groom and purr for up to 15 minutes and I allow it so I can bond physically and socially to enrich their lives and bond with them so I can examine them him without sedation.
CHAPTERS: 0:00 CHEETAHS & LEOPARDS GROOM ME! 1:18 IS IT THE SALT? 2:59 BECAUSE WE'RE FRIENDS! 3:50 IT'S PLEASUREABLE! 4:28 WHATS ON YOUR BEARD? 5:36 TO KEEP FUR CLEAN (FRIENDS AND SELF)! 6:52 CAT SALIVA HAS DEOPDORIAING AGENT! 7:50 ITS PLEASUREABLE (THE JACOBSON'S ORGAN) 9:09 CONCLUSION IT'S A SURVIVAL INSTINCT!
SUBSCRIBERS!!! Be sure to turn on your NOTIFICATIONS in your YouTube account to get an email from me when I post new videos! I don't want you to miss even one! And THANKS!
Please like and share this video if you like it ;)
African WILD cat kittens perform the 'Chattering' 'Chirping', or 'Twittering' sound while relaxing and warming up on my stomach . It was really cute when I laid down with them, they all gathered on top and then started the chattering calls to a bird that flew by.
These Wild cat kittens are grown now and lost the collars (for identifying them as they all looked exactly alike). They are probably hybrids of house and Wild cat and not pure breds. This was an old video I though would be great chopped up into a SHORT for folks liking to hear just the chattering sound.
Main consensus is the chattering is a mimicry to help them get closer to their prey but some think it might be a instinctive feeling of longing after their prey and simply a stimulus response of wanting what they can't get at the moment. I like the mimicry idea as other cats mimic bird calls to catch birds.
SUBSCRIBERS!!! Be sure to turn on your NOTIFICATIONS in your YouTube account to get an email from me when I post new videos! Click the YELLOW BELL. THANKS!
Please like and share this video if you like it ;)
Chapters: 00:00 Intro 00:55 Cubs Calling For Mom 'chirps' With Narration 02:21 Finding Momo 02:45 Suckling From Mom | Conclusion 03:50 Cubs Calling For Mom (No Narration)
On one our the cubs enrichment walks with their mom Abi, in the game reserve next door to the cheetah breeding and rewilding project, Abi, Kimi and Kayzer lost track of each other. As a young inexperienced cubs, at about 6 months old, you can get lost out there in this BIG BIG world easily. Abi wanted out of the direct sun and waltzed over to lay down in the shade of a tree not far away. The cubs didn't notice her leaving and felt a terrible sense of loss when they realized she Mom was gone...
Cheetahs chirp like birds to call to each other. Adults and cubs alike. The current accepted theory is they do this to confuse larger predators that would kill them. A large lion, hyena or leopard is not going to waste time looking to hunt a small bird and so ignores the sound the cheetahs make. But, predators are smart and it they ever learn that sound is a cheetah, then their cover is blown. Time to use that superior speed to avoid capture and death. Cheetah cubs that reach 6 months old can our run any predator or prey that would kill them.
This was recorded at www.runningwildconservation.org. I've asked for a video biography of my cubs as I cannot be there very often and and they graciously record the moments I miss and thank them for it.
SUBSCRIBERS!!! Be sure to turn on your NOTIFICATIONS in your YouTube account and Click The Bell to get an email from me when I post new videos!
This is Kinji the Cheetah whom I bought years ago for a cheetah project so his life would be secured from an auction he was about to be subjected too. (years ago). I didn't legally own him but rather gave him to this project.
Kinji was VERY clever and the smartest cheetah I've met so far. He was always finding new ways to entertain himself. He would come RUNNING when he heard the toy box opening. He could not open it but he could pick out the toys he wanted to play with by himself or have his human caretakes play with him.
Unfortunately Kinji passed away 2022 from renal or kidney failure. It is the greatest reason for deaths of captive cheetahs. Everyone involved in captive cheetah care is researching the causes and mitigating the possibilities to include myself and my three cheetahs.
Please like and share this video if you like it ;)
SUBSCRIBERS!!! Be sure to turn on your NOTIFICATIONS in your YouTube account and Click The Bell to get an email from me when I post new videos!
This hunt was conducted by captive and bred cheetahs at Running Wild Cheetah Conservation which much of the video comes from. If you want to learn more about their program for rewilding endangered cheetahs, please visit www.runningwildconservation.org. My cheetahs, Gabriel, Abi and 1yr old Kimi are cared for there. This was Kimi's & Kayzer's 1st hunt.
With Abi's cubs growing into subadults, it was time to un-harness them onto the neighboring Wildlife Reserve and train them to hunt for with another female cheetah. All in preparation for a potential release one day (or their cubs). The cubs have been on enrichment walks many times to prepare them and get experience. 'Aunti Kiara' (not related to the cubs) is a cheetah with the best hunting success and skills. She LOVES the cubs and allows them to join her on a hunt. Better yet she and Abi tolerate each other so the interaction can happen.
I was AMAZED how natural it was for the cubs to chase and hunt down a Blosbok the Aunti Kiara caught. It was the cubs (10 months old) first direct encounter with a live prey. They have been watching Kiara on previous hunts, but this is the first time they were allowed to assist Kiara.
I show the start, middle and beginning of this hunt with some graphic content, but that is the nature of the balance between predator and prey and I want to show reality. I always wanted to show the total nature of cheetahs from the personal up close to their survival techniques which include hunting and killing. These predators adapted as meat eaters and cannot survive off anything else.
At the end of the video, I provide a BONUS footage of me sharing the blesbok with Gabriel, so he can benefit from the good nutrition as well. Gabriel cannot hunt due to never doing it, bad spinal growth, smaller, and shorter tail. So we share in the meal together.
Please like and share this video if you like it ;)
CHAPTERS: 0:00 Aunti Kiara Trains Cubs To Hunt! 2:46 The HUNT Begins! 4:05 Kayzer & Kimi Join The Hunt! 06:58 Kiara Loses Blosbok - Cubs Take Over Hunt! 07:22 KAYZER Rides Back Of Blesbok! 07:36 Both Cubs Struggle To Kill Blesbok! 08:20 Kayzer Gets Death Grip! 09:40 Hunt Ends - Blesbok Humanely Euthanized (no show)! 09:53 Kayzer Tries Burring Blesbok! 10:08 My Thoughts About Cubs 1st Hunt! 10:46 Conclusion - Drag Blesbok To Some Shade! 12:06 BONUS VIDEO - Sharing Blesbok With Gabriel.
SUBSCRIBERS!!! Be sure to turn on your NOTIFICATIONS in your YouTube account to get an email from me when I post new videos! I don't want you to miss even one! And THANKS!
Please like and share this video if you like it ;)
Thanks for watching!
Cubs born June 2022. A Shorts celebrating Kimi's and Kayzer's the cheetah first birthday. Cheetahs don't seem to bother with boxes... like the ambush cats do, so placing some meat toys inside gets them inside!
Some wild cheetahs have cub mortality rates up to 90% before reaching adulthood. Inside an ethical and proper nurturing captive cheetah breeding project, that rate is reversed. Abi The Captive Cheetah bore two cubs and both are doing very well.
Music with African melody... Accralate - The Dark Continent by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license. creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
SUBSCRIBERS!!! Be sure to turn on your NOTIFICATIONS in your YouTube account to get an email from me when I post new videos! I don't want you to miss even one! And THANKS!
Please like and share this video if you like it ;)
Chapters: 00:00 ASMR Cheetah Crunching 6lbs Chicken 00:54 Slow Mode Cheetah Teeth 01:02 ASMR Cheetah Crunching 6lbs Chicken 05:02 Slow Mode ZOOM Cheetah Teeth Eating 05:15 Back To ASMR Cheetah Crunching 6lbs Chicken 08:55 CHEETAH SPEED==} Fast Forward 09:20 Conclusion - Meeting Gabriel After Meal
4K. I setup a camera to capture feeding Gabriel 6lbs or 4kilos of chicken as an ASMR relaxing observation of a cheetah peacefully eating. He tries to take the chicken out of his feeding pen but that is not good for him. He takes it to the grass and dirt and gets all kinds of dangerous debris in his stomach and intestines, not good. So he must eat larger piece of food in his pen. Thus me closing it. He growls, thinking I'm taking his meal. Never.
I toss in a couple slow modes and fast forwards in there for time sake and interesting motion.
What amazes me is that all this food ends up in white broken down bone and tiny amount of poo! His body uses most all of this food to maintain his body. All cheetahs are like this. ENJOY!
SUBSCRIBERS!!! Be sure to turn on your NOTIFICATIONS in your YouTube account to get an email from me when I post new videos! I don't want you to miss even one! And THANKS!
Please like and share this video if you like it ;)
Chapters: 00:00 Enrichment MEERKATS 01:05 Pablo The Meerkat Hunts Scorpion! 03:17 Meerkats As Pets? 04:10 Meerkat Play - Need Family (MOB) 04:21 Conclusion - Observe In Nature Or Sanctuary/Zoo
We take a couple of rescue meerkats on an enrichment walk into a game reserve next door from where the cheetah project is located and let them experience the wilderness. I looked under a bunch of rocks until I found one that had a burrowing scorpion under it. Pablo, one of the meerkats, waltz over and smelled it! Hiding inside its burrow. He worked his legs and claws and extracted it with precision! Nicely, I was there recording it to watch this natural event take place.
Meerkats are omnivorous, meaning they eat both plant and animal. Grubs, insects, fruits, scorpions and even snakes are on the menu of meerkats. Amazingly, meerkats have some immunity to regional snakes and scorpions. It's an adaptation like their cousins, the mongoose which also have immunity to certain snakes and scorpions.
Meerkats are quite cute and smart but I emphasize how they are NOT pets and don't make good pets. Wild animals should be personal pets for folks. Rescues, rehabilitating ones for release, in a sanctuary because they can't be released (like found on a farm alone or parents killed) and certain quality zoos are the places where I agree a meerkat or wild animal could be housed and cared for. Pablo and Zulu are rescue meerkats that someone found alone and needed a home or would die. Running Wild Conservation brought them in and care for them.
SUBSCRIBERS!!! Be sure to turn on your NOTIFICATIONS in your YouTube account to get an email from me when I post new videos! I don't want you to miss even one! And THANKS! Shorts!
Please like and share this video if you like it ;)
A SHORT about Gabriel getting defensive about a cheetah neighbor that gets too close next to his camp. This hissing behavior is not really being angry, but defensive. When a cheetah sees something it is either surprised by, something unfamiliar, or does not like and these things breeches a comfortable proximity, cheetahs will 'HISS" at it to scare it away or just keep hissing by the annoyance of 'said' object. House cats do this as well.
SUBSCRIBERS!!! Be sure to turn on your NOTIFICATIONS in your YouTube account to get an email from me when I post new videos! I don't want you to miss even one! And THANKS!
Please like and share this video if you like it ;)
Chapters: 00:00 Enrichment Cheetah Cubs 01:43 Gabriel At 8 Months 01:58 Trying to enrich Gabriel NOT 03:26 Gabriel Can't Hunt 03:49 Gabriel Enjoys Sniffing Pee & Stink 04:34 Box enrichment For Gabriel & Abi! 05:00 What does Gabe do with box! 06:02 Gabriel chews Ear instead 06:45 Why Gabriel chews ear and grooms so much? 06:40 Sounds Of Kimi Yelling Brother 08:30 Conclusion - I am Gabriel's favorite enrichment
Ever since Gabriel has matured from his cub and teenaged years, he's mellowed and changed what enriches his life. In this order it is Females, Food then Friends. Gabriel is a non releasable breeder at this Cheetah Breeding Center called Running Wild Conservation. Abi and her two cubs Kimi and Kayzer are there as well. I show how cubs are easily entertained but adults are much harder. They all seem to enjoy chasing things, but Gabriel is limited in that respect. I can get him to chase me or he sometimes chases other cheetahs along the fence.
I build a LARGE cheetah box to see if cheetahs enjoy boxes. Abi and Gabriel had zero interest in it. I try hard to enrich the lives of my captive cheetahs and go all out. The key is finding what stimulates them and positively and safely work around those things.
Ultimately, I have to admit it is ME that enriches Gabriel's life the most as he explains over and over after I bring his something to enrich is life, he always turns back to me. Grooming his friend is one of his top pleasurable experiences Gabriel enjoys. He'll roll his eyes back while doing it. So that is what we do most together. He likes play fighting too and I allow that limitedly because I don't want to get injured.
SUBSCRIBERS!!! Be sure to turn on your NOTIFICATIONS in your YouTube account to get an email from me when I post new videos! I don't want you to miss even one! And THANKS!
Please like and share this video if you like it ;)
I discovered this very strange but beautiful fungal formation life form inside Gabriel's camp. I know some funguses can infect cheetahs and people. I'm no expert and could not find his species of mushroom from a quick search so built a barrier around it so Gabriel would not step on it.
A savvy viewer identified this mushroom as a Earthstar! One of the Pokémon characters. Myriostoma is the Genus, Family Geastraceae. Not poisonous but not very edible either as they taste like cardboard.
SUBSCRIBERS!!! Be sure to turn on your NOTIFICATIONS in your YouTube account to get an email from me when I post new videos! I don't want you to miss even one! And THANKS!
Please like and share this video if you like it ;)
00:00 Update- Abi's Cubs Nursing 0:32 Young Cubs First Meat Meal 00:55 Hand Feeding Kimi To Tame Her 02:55 Feeding Kimi Zebra Rib 03:15 Kimi is Food Aggressive! Attacks Mom! 04:00 Kimi Kayzer Eat Culled Zebra Head & Legs! 04:51 Kimi Kayzer Eat Play With Zebra Legs 06:01 Abi Plays With Zebra Tail 06:15 Kimi Kayzer Eat Pigeon, Mouse, Yuck! 06:40 Sounds Of Kimi Yelling Brother 07:35 Abi Kimi Kayzer Groom Each Other After Meal 07:56 Conclusion Cubs Out In Game Reserve Training. 0:30 My Thoughts About Predator/Prey Foods Provided
A wonderful encounter with Abi's cubs again, Kimya (Kimi), & Kayzer as I do some handfeeding, interact and show the variety of game foods they are being fed to prepare them for 'Live' hunts in the future. To feed these cheetahs by hand makes them trust you more and reduces aggression. The cubs show aggression towards each other but not YOU! That is safer and it helps when giving medicines to make sure they eat it.
From wart hog, zebra, antelope, pigeon, to a MOUSE! we give the cubs a variety of foods they might be exposed to in nature if they are to be released in the wild. The hide, bone, tissue, cartilage is all very good for them in their development as they grow. My plans are to have Kimi become a breeder but if she produces cubs for the project, I may release her one day to bare cubs on her own. Kayzer is not my cub so I don't know the planed for him and only time will tell but the owners have the best intentions and will either be a breeder or released for sure. Taking the cubs out into the open game reserve that resides next to the project, is essential training for them.
I hope to show some live hunts with the cubs but Abi cannot participate due to her bad hip. Another female cheetah that likes the cubs will be the training hunter.
My cheetahs are being housed and cared for at www.runningwildconservation.org They have a wonderful and respectful volunteer program where you can even escort the cubs and Abi mom on the game reserve! And so much more. Check them out.
SUBSCRIBERS!!! Be sure to turn on your NOTIFICATIONS in your YouTube account to get an email from me when I post new videos! I don't want you to miss even one! And THANKS!
Please like and share this video if you like it ;)
I wanted to see if Gabriel behaved differently at night versus in the daytime. There was no difference until a light bulb I was using to film him fell from a tree branch I had it hooked to and spooked the hell out of him. He leaps in panic right through me. I was uninjured because a cheetahs claws are not sharp, accept for the dew claws which missed me.
Gabriel's comment about the show being over was a reference from an old Clint Eastwood movie he used to watch. Fist full of dollars or one of them.
SUBSCRIBERS!!! Be sure to turn on your NOTIFICATIONS in your YouTube account to get an email from me when I post new videos! I don't want you to miss even one! And THANKS!
Please like and share this video if you like it ;)
CHAPTERS: 0:00 FINDING GABRIEL! 00:55 GABRIEL COMES TO VISIT! 1:47 SELFIE BEGINS! 02:46 GABRIEL LOVES EARS! 03:18 TALK ABOUT GABRIEL | WHAT HE THINKS OF ME! 3:53 GABRIEL AGGRESSIVE TOWARD MALE CHEETAHS 05:30 GABRIEL CLEANS HIMSELF! 06:40 GABRIEL FOLDS CROSSES HIS PAWS! 06:50 GABRIEL PURRS FOR ME! 07:40 PLAY FIGHT BITE TIME! 09:40 MORE PLAY FIGHTS BITES UNDER A TREE! 10:04 CONTENTED LOOK PASSIFYING BITE! 10:25 I ALMOST GET BITTEN - INJURED! 10:32 PRIMORDIAL PREDATOR LOOK ON FACE! 11:02 CONCLUSION!
I spend some quality time with Gabriel, The Cheetah. He really loves the visits and I show his behavior before, during, and after our encounters.
Cheetahs roll around on their backs for various reasons. Gabriel rolls and rubs the ground when I approach him. It is his way of telling me he is very happy to see me. He often rolls around and then looks to see if I am watching. Once that is done, he typically gets up for a physical interactive visit with me.
So, I filmed some clips of us during my visits on the ground in mostly selfie view to show what he does. Our encounter and his behaviors are quite predictable and how I can predict what he'll do. It normally begins is affectionate purring and grooming and ends with a cat play fight session. He loves to play fight and practice his predatory skills on my arm and hands. It is actually a bit scary for me as I only get to visit Gabriel twice a year due to a career that supports my project. But, he loves it so much that I accept the risks and allow the play bite sessions. I think in the end, it strengthens our bonds rather than risks it.
No on one else in the Universe enriches Gabriel as I can and why we are such good friends. He is alone in that wild camp and cannot have many visits from others as Gabriel has a history of some naughtyness and slapping so off limits except minor encounters. He is very dominant and can express that dominance on people and other cheetahs and why. I love him so take all the risks for him to enrich his life when I can.
SUBSCRIBERS!!! Be sure to turn on your NOTIFICATIONS in your YouTube account to get an email from me when I post new videos! I don't want you to miss even one! And THANKS!
Please like and share this video if you like it ;)
00:00 Intro Abi Nursing Cubs Feeding Abi 0:46 Kayzer Kimi Snuggling With Toy Bear 01:28 Abi Cleans Eats Cubs POO! 02:22 Holding Cubs While Cleaning Den 03:50 Weighing The Cubs 05:11 Baby Kayzer Climbs In Lap Screeches! 06:12 Cheetah Cubs Pretend TO Be Honey Badgers 07:12 Cubs Walk In Wooded Camp & Game Reserve 08:02 ABi Nursers The Cubs - Show NIPPLE! 09:02 Abi Kimi & Kayzer At 5 Months Old!
Here's an update I owe the followers or Abi and her cubs. They are doing just GREAT! Product of mom's milk and great care and observation. This video fast forward from 5 days old to 5 months. Sucking, weighing, playing and growing! I talk about the MANTLE, the whitish grey colored fur on a cheetah cubs back that appears when young and disappears around 5 months old. It makes them look like honey badgers that is a survival trait against predation! I talk about the mammary glands and how each nipple has its own gland and when one nipple is empty, the cubs go to the next one. Finally showing them nursing again and the at 5 months old and very happy.
Next video about the cubs I show how they get exercise away from their baby camp (which is temporary for the safety for now) and let loose in a larger wooded camp and a large 400acre game reserve with MOM! I'll show an outing of them in this game reserve and a HUNT!!! And Kill! Oh my...
Abi, Kimi and Kayzer are being cared for at... www.runningwildconservation.org Visit their site and even volunteer! They help provide video while I am away so I can share with you! They also care for Wonderful Gabriel! The male cheetah of my project.
SUBSCRIBERS!!! Be sure to turn on your NOTIFICATIONS in your YouTube account to get an email from me when I post new videos! I don't want you to miss even one! And THANKS!
Please like and share this video if you like it ;)
I love enriching cheetahs and one of the best way is presenting then something stinky. This tree is a centralized communication signaling post of all the cheetahs that get to visit the passageway where all the other cheetah camps are connected. The cheetahs get some free time to relax and visit the cheetahs between the fence in other camps. This tree is marked by other male cheetahs that get free time in the common passageway.
My post is a an anthropomorphic snide about us, and thought it was cute to be wrong why Gabriel was smiling about a tree It's called the flehmen response, like horses and lions do. Cheetahs have a Jacobson's organ in their upper palate that collects tiny particles that helps identify the smell.
The urine on the tree lasts for months and soaks in to the bark and why Gabriel is giving the phlegmon response to the stinks he smells on it. It allows him to detect other males that had used the tree and then mark it himself.
SUBSCRIBERS!!! Be sure to turn on your NOTIFICATIONS in your YouTube account to get an email from me when I post new videos! I don't want you to miss even one! And THANKS!
Please like and share this video if you like it ;)
My 1st LIVE encounter posting... It's Gabriel The Cheetah! Wanted to show a short video of what it's like visiting Gabriel unedited and RAW. He decides how long the encounters last and I wait for him to come to me. I hate disappointing Gabriel so I wait for him to walk away before I end my encounters with him. He enjoys it so much. It's like a reward for him each day I greet him. But, like any cat. The moment is generally fleeting and you have to wait another cycle of affection before you get that affection again. Sometimes a day.
Thanks for watching and commenting on my 1st "LIVE" video. It has to be Gabriel that stared in it. And thanks for those who actually got to participate in it LIVE like I did. :)
SUBSCRIBERS!!! Be sure to turn on your NOTIFICATIONS in your YouTube account to get an email from me when I post new videos! I don't want you to miss even one! And THANKS!
Please like and share this video if you like it ;)
CHAPTERS: 00:00 Cheetah Discoveries Due To Friendship 00:44 Do Cheetahs STINK When Wet? 01:59 Cheetah Breath Smells Like Soap?? 02:32 Why Cheetahs Have Little Scent 03:57 What Does A Cheetah Feel Like ? Back & Sides 05:05 Cheetah Head And Neck 05:44 Cheetah Neck What's The Purpose? 06:42 Scruffing A House Cat & Cheetah 08:08 Cheetah Undercoat Summer & Winter 08:20 Belly Hair Wiry! 08:30 Cheetah Tail Rudder Shaped! 09:00 Cheetah Chest Hair Coat Winter & Summer 09:57 Cheetahs Woley Ears 10:23 Cheetah Legs Paws Pads & Claws 11:11 Conclusion! Why Petting A Cheetah Is So Rewarding
Thanks for watching!
A bunch of folks ask me what a cheetah feels like. I go into as much detail as possible to describe and show you! All areas of a cheetah are covered from head to tail! Just click on the Chapters I provided for you above and in the video! We humans have highly sensitive hands and feet of which touches most of the things in our world.
We take in the tactile messages and senses from our hands (mostly)... the fingers are very sensitive. It is a sources of pain feedback from danger as well as provide pleasurable feedback like petting a cheetah that wants petted! I explain my understanding about it. The reward or benefit I get out of my cheetah conservation project is of course holding, petting, and touching these wonderful animals that seek out connection with me.
I pulled this from an earlier video to focus on the MAIN subject matter of the longer video. Abi The Cheetah gave birth to two cheetah cubs. Decided to upload more Shorts in the future for those folks liking shorter videos of cheetahs and my goings on...
SUBSCRIBERS!!! Be sure to turn on your NOTIFICATIONS in your YouTube account to get an email from me when I post new videos! I don't want you to miss even one! And THANKS!
Please like and share this video if you like it ;)1
Hope you enjoy the pleasure of seeing these cubs and sweet Abi. Much more to come.
Abi Lets Me See Her Cubs! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uK-4o... Abi Giving Birth! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vw5gb... Abi First Time At New Project! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8-OVd...
WOW! Abi The Cheetah had TWO CUBS! Everyone was SO shocked but elated! It was not expected as Abi was become a rescue cheetah education the public about captive but handicapped cheetahs! But several vets said she could mate and bare cubs if so desired. She DESIRED!
Abi has progressed far beyond Everyone's expectations. We are so proud! She has matured so much in the past year after acquiring her for my project and moving her to this one. Her confidence rose as well as her her condition with her bad hip and mental state. She started relaxing and trusting the folks caring for her and she OPENED up to everything to include breeding! Her mind and body opened up to the prospects of becoming a mother. Conditions were right! She selected a mate, one from this cheetah breeding project who is genetically diverse and viable, and they bred twice at two different times and the 2nd time succeeded in pregnancy!
The cubs are doing super! Nursing from mom from moment one. I'll be preparing future updates and posts about the cubs and mom. This video is few months old but everyone is doing SUPER!
Abi is legally owned by me but the cheetah father who bred with Abi is not. From a breeders agreement, only the female cub will be owned by me while the male is owned by the fathers owner. Both cubs will be FULLY raised to adulthood by Abi. As a first time mother, she is doing VERY well. SO protective all sudden and calling to them and nursing. She LOVES them. It's best to have mom cheetah raise their cubs because no one can substitute mothers milk. It has all the special nutrient inside to include antibodies, growth hormones and fats. So important!
I was amazed how Abi's hormones and instincts kick in for her new cubs. I mention no one taught Abi what to do from displaying while in heat, breeding, rolling, eating , more, then giving birth, nursing, calling, licking, and protecting her cubs. Since she trusts certain people (now even more people) she and her cubs get the best nurturing care possible and why I mention I am a HUGE fan of captive interactive care. It just means better success and better overall care for the animal. Just look and observe here and in the future.
SUBSCRIBERS!!! Be sure to turn on your NOTIFICATIONS in your YouTube account to get an email from me when I post new videos! I don't want you to miss even one! And THANKS!
Please like and share this video if you like it ;)
00:00 Acquainting With Abi 02:48 Meeting Abi's Cubs Kimi & Kayzer 05:46 Kayzer Comes To Snuggle 06:53 Kayzer Cub PURRS 08:01 Cubs Visit Me Talk About Milk 10:34 Abi Calls To Cubs 11:30 Abi Gives Approval Me Holding Cubs 12:26 Baby Kayzer Plays Upside Down 13:33 Both Cubs Nurse On Abi 15:28 Sound OF Cub Suckling 15:55 Conclusion What Is Next For The Cubs & Abi
Abi had become highly hormonal after the birth of her cubs. A survival instinct. In the beginning, only one female staff member could baby sit them. After working with Abi to earn her trust, she allows me to visit her cubs.
It's important to me for everyone caring for Abi and her cubs to be trusted. Time, love and respect heals. Abi is totally good now with her caregivers coming to visit and care for them. Even volunteers are trusted as I have asked for everyone;'s help in taming the cubs for better care going forward. I intend to place Kimi (the female cub I named her) back into the breeding program and that means I need to friendly with caregivers, whether familiar folks or strangers as I my place her on loan to a qualified breeding project years from now.
In this video I talk about why I am taming the cubs and how it benefits their overall care in the future. I also get permission from Abi to hold and experience the cubs which are only 5 days old! It was amazed how developed there were already and how the constantly move and exercise, nurse from mom and sleep to grow. I see a lot of instincts in both mom and the cubs expressing themselves and was simply fascinated. no one taught Abi to call to her cubs or be protective. It is a survival instinct.
I show glimpses of the future for these cubs and Abi as I've asked for them to be tamed to allow everyone to care for them, place a harness on them for controlled escorts to a large closed game farm (next to the project) and practice free roaming walks off lead on this veld area with prey animals.
Hope you enjoy the pleasure of seeing these cubs and sweet Abi. Much more to come.
SUBSCRIBERS!!! Be sure to turn on your NOTIFICATIONS in your YouTube account to get an email from me when I post new videos! I don't want you to miss even one! And THANKS!
Please like and share this video if you like it ;)
0:00 Acquainting With Agi After 3 Years Apart 3:21 Abi Selects A MATE! 3:58 Mating & Birth 5:57 Nursing 6:36 Both Cubs Nursing 7:33 Conclusion & Next Time Abi lets ME visit the cubs
WOW! Abi The Cheetah had TWO CUBS! Everyone was SO shocked but elated! It was not expected as Abi was become a rescue cheetah education the public about captive but handicapped cheetahs! But several vets said she could mate and bare cubs if so desired. She DESIRED!
Abi has progressed far beyond Everyone's expectations. We are so proud! She has matured so much in the past year after acquiring her for my project and moving her to this one. Her confidence rose as well as her her condition with her bad hip and mental state. She started relaxing and trusting the folks caring for her and she OPENED up to everything to include breeding! Her mind and body opened up to the prospects of becoming a mother. Conditions were right! She selected a mate, one from this cheetah breeding project who is genetically diverse and viable, and they bred twice at two different times and the 2nd time succeeded in pregnancy!
The cubs are doing super! Nursing from mom from moment one. I'll be preparing future updates and posts about the cubs and mom. This video is few months old but everyone is doing SUPER!
Abi is legally owned by me but the cheetah father who bred with Abi is not. From a breeders agreement, only the female cub will be owned by me while the male is owned by the fathers owner. Both cubs will be FULLY raised to adulthood by Abi. As a first time mother, she is doing VERY well. SO protective all sudden and calling to them and nursing. She LOVES them. It's best to have mom cheetah raise their cubs because no one can substitute mothers milk. It has all the special nutrient inside to include antibodies, growth hormones and fats. So important!
I was amazed how Abi's hormones and instincts kick in for her new cubs. I mention no one taught Abi what to do from displaying while in heat, breeding, rolling, eating , more, then giving birth, nursing, calling, licking, and protecting her cubs. Since she trusts certain people (now even more people) she and her cubs get the best nurturing care possible and why I mention I am a HUGE fan of captive interactive care. It just means better success and better overall care for the animal. Just look and observe here and in the future.
SUBSCRIBERS!!! Be sure to turn on your NOTIFICATIONS in your YouTube account to get an email from me when I post new videos! I don't want you to miss even one! And THANKS!
Please like and share this video if you like it ;)
Hear the sounds of 10,000s of thousands, perhaps 100,000s or more flies buzzing together. Almost sounds almost like a bunch of killer bees. Thought this was interesting and a nice way to test out my new RODE remote microphone. I had been using it to record Gabriel and Abi and myself.
This is at a burn pit. One designed for animal waste, carcasses and human food. In South Africa, these remote Game Range projects don't have municipal public garbage collections so they have these burn pits. Typically one for solid waste, like paper and such and one for animal ones when you have a predator project like this. You can't always burn every day due to weather and bannings, so there tends to be an accumulation at times that attracts millions of flies and other scavengers. You can't always bury it right away as well. The pit needs to fill up as needed so you don't have too many of them. Anyway, that is why these millions of flies are around and so LISTEN! Fly power!
SUBSCRIBERS!!! Be sure to turn on your NOTIFICATIONS in your YouTube account to get an email from me when I post new videos! I don't want you to miss even one! And THANKS!
Please like and share this video if you like it ;)
Enjoy Gabriel's antics over females, food, and his friend.
I show examples of the priorities in life for male Cheetahs in captivity and probably the wild as well. Gabriel demonstrates how important the instinctive drive to reproduce is and how it's important to saving his species. The instinct of hunger is next in line of priorities and THEN friendship.
It's funny but interesting how life is. In there somewhere in between is also aggression, which is used to sustain personal survival, such as food aggression, defending territory (for wild cheetahs) and fighting off other predators to include other coalition of cheetahs. Many male and female cheetahs decide to fight for various reasons in captivity, but limited to protect them. Some aggression promotes the breeding response, like coalition of males slapping each other over a female the both like. Fence aggression is a real thing for captive cheetahs and controlled. Males could decide to kill each other if given the chance.
But in a captive breeding program like this one, problems are mitigated and controlled. Not so in a wild environment where many a cheetah dies to predation, injury, and sickness. Noit many cheetahs reach adulthood and far less die of old age.
Gabriel is so funny ditching me for females and food. But I am so glad he has enough room in his heart and mind to find a friend in me. THAT is my reward for giving loving care for him and all my cheetahs; past, present and the future.
SUBSCRIBERS!!! Be sure to turn on your NOTIFICATIONS in your YouTube account to get an email from me when I post new videos! I don't want you to miss even one! And THANKS!
Please like and share this video if you like it ;)
I've known Abigale since she was a lil cub, but only 'blips' of her life with her sister Joyce. Abi (her nickname), was one of five cubs born to her mom Abby, who was a super nice friendly loving cheetah mom. Abigale was caught in the birth cannel and an emergency C-Section surgery was required to save the cubs and Abby. All cubs and mom were saved but Abi suffered irreparable damage to her back right hip. When she was old enough, surgery was required to correct it so she could walk and run again. It was a success, but it meant Abi could never be released so she stayed with her sister until last year 2021 when I went through the process of legally adding her to my project with Gabriel.
Well, fast forward and when I moved Gabriel to this new project, I brought Abigale with me and she has matured SO much that I cannot believe it. She was in the shadows of her sister and it is natural for a female cheetah to live isolated lives in the wild. Joyce and Abi are doing well. Abi has excelled in the months she has been at the new project. She has become brave, bold, confident and I have worked on both her fear of men and food aggression. She has huge wild camps to live in and share with a surrogate sister named Hunter. The results of her enrichment walks, improved confidence, good wild game nutrition, patience and love, she has shown signs of wanting to breed! I was satisfied with having Sweat Abi as a rescue animal to show the female side of cheetahs, but she wants more out of life! It means we are doing the right things that Abi's mind, body and sole have come to the conclusion that motherhood is a possibility too.
I consulted three different wildlife vets for their onion about Abi getting pregnant and any health and safety concerns for Abi's welfare. They all said she could easily bare cubs and would not be a problem and it it was, they could be ready with a C-Section surgery to help. I thought it would be worth the risk and allowed Abi to nurture her drive to breed. What comes next is fully up to Abi.
It would be a wonderful contribute to cheetah species and the world if she did. They would not be my cubs to Abi's and the worlds; adding to the endangered numbers of cheetahs in our world. Depending on the number and gender of the cubs, my plan has always been to divide them between breeders back in the program and/or designate for release. We shall wait and see. It would be a wonderful dream come true for me.
SUBSCRIBERS!!! Be sure to turn on your NOTIFICATIONS in your YouTube account to get an email from me when I post new videos! I don't want you to miss even one! And THANKS!
Please like and share this video if you like it ;)
I've left Gabriel to express his behaviors naturally and only trained him to come when called and learn his name. I wanted him to to natural as possible as a captive breeding cheetah. But, I was charmed by his 'rubbning' behavior, like a house cat. So, I started to re-enforce the behavior to help our bonding and eventual training for future basic health care, like examining his paws. Gabriel would rub between the fence all the time and so I wanted to see if he could be encourage and trained to rub face-to-face. I had some success and here it is! in 4K in most clips.
Eventually, I want all my animals to allow basic healthcare examination. It can be done quite easily with some basic operant conditioning, where the animal chooses to do a behavior you want. Some examples of the things I wish to train my animals in my care is to allow me to examine their bodies, to include inside their mouths, between their toes, in their ears, and accept needle injections so I can administer medication, give vaccinations, and draw blood WITHOUT sedation. Sedation drugs are very dangerous and damaging to cheetahs or any animal. Bad reactions can occur and lasting damage to their immune systems and kidneys. I don't like it and will do everything in my power to avoid sedations.
Gabriel and I only get about 6 weeks a year to re-acquaint. I don't have the best trust and relationship I need with him to train and get the results I wanted to train him for simple medical examinations. I hope to change that for future cheetahs and animals I have, but it requires me to have my project in order, which I do not... yet.
SUBSCRIBERS!!! Be sure to turn on your NOTIFICATIONS in your YouTube account to get an email from me when I post new videos! I don't want you to miss even one! And THANKS!
Please like and share this video if you like it ;)
I show some meat feeding to predators in this video. 4K quality. It is natural but some might find it squeamish. Just a warming.
My Jean Shepard reference and my impersonation is from where the movie A Christmas Story, where Ralphie's brother Randy was a kid that wouldn't eat. What a great movie that was. Gabriel can be like Randy and not eating and needs encouragement like Randy's mother gave him.
Getting captive wild cheetahs to eat varied quality meats is not always easy. Lions and leopards don't have that problem. I share a newly introduced ostrich meat to Gabriel to get him used to varied wild game meat. It helps to grant better care for these captive animals when they eat varied wild meats. It also helps identify if they are sick, when they won't eat certain favorite foods. Some cheetahs are extremely finicky and would rather STARVE! than eat some meats. Quite amazing to me.
I have fun introducing ostrich to Gabriel. Sometimes a bird comes in on donation that has perished on a farm. May cheetahs will eat ostrich but Gabriel had never experienced it before. I show him a wing with feathers and then buy a local ostrich filet and share it with him DIRECTLY! I cook my ostrich but Gabriel decided he wanted my cooked on and his raw.
My cooked ostrich was cooked special without any flavoring in case Gabriel eat mine, which he did! Spices are not natural and the reason I cooked it without any. It could possibly harm his intestinal system or give him diarrhea.
SUBSCRIBERS!!! Be sure to turn on your NOTIFICATIONS in your YouTube account to get an email from me when I post new videos! I don't want you to miss even one! And THANKS!
Please like and share this video if you like it ;)
From some older clips and a few new, I finalize my turning back to cheetahs to demonstrate the nature of ambush, stalking and difference between leopards, cheetahs and cubs. Ambushing is a survival trait for the BIGGER cats like leopards, tigers, jaguars and to some degree lions but not so much for cheetahs. It is because cheetahs are adapted/designed to RUN... and so fast they don't need to ambush and need open area to run 60mph to outrun their prey.
I also address folks who think these cheetahs would attack or ambush me turning my back if they were wild. I show a two wild cheetah and how they are nervous and avoid contact rather than engage. Cheetahs are skittish and non aggressive by nature and helps them survive in a wild where the top three predators kill them. Cheetahs cannot fight well due to their design to run. Tall bodies, less muscle, can't grapple well, can't bite hard, less endurance and many other factors. Both the leopards and cheetahs I show here (except the semi-wild cheetah cubs) are tamed and a leopard will pounce on you for play and food. In this case, tamed leopards are all playing when they practice ambushing me.
As for these cheetah cubs and leopards, they are not owned by me and had the privilege of encountering and studying them but they all were sent off to other project destinations shortly after this video. Only Gabriel is legally owned by me but I don't "own" him, I am his friend. Gabriel moved to another cheetah breeding and release project where I am trying to get him to become a breeder along with a female I own. I plan on talking about Abigale in the near future!
SUBSCRIBERS!!! Be sure to turn on your NOTIFICATIONS in your YouTube account to get an email from me when I post new videos! I don't want you to miss even one! And THANKS!
Please like and share this video if you like it ;)
Just some of the things done to improve the lives of captive cheetahs. Flattening lookout mounds and removing killer bees from their water ponds. This and many things are considered to help these cheetahs live in a natural environment as possible for their comfort. Stress, nutrition, clean water, large wild spaces and enrichment are all critical for a happy life for a captive cheetah and to stimulate the breeding instinct. For the 1st time I've known Gabriel, he is calling to a female; asking to mate. He never did that until moving to this new project and location. Things have improved for Gabriel and I could not be happier for him.
I have another female cheetah I have not introduced yet but will in the future. She is also going into 'heat' for the 1st time in her life since moving to this project. The new sites, sounds, smells, new cheetahs and stimulation has inspired her to become a mother. She is trying and shows me that things are in place that allows a cheetah to breed. I try and make these cheetahs lives as close to wild as possible yet believe in interaction to relieve stresses. But always allow them to chose to visit or not.
Enrichment walks, good wild foods, clean water, exercise, LARGE wild enclosures and lower stress promotes a healthy life which their biological clocks start ticking and they begin to breed. Captive cheetah breeding has been labeled difficult but I've seen quality cared for cheetahs go into heat and want to breed and produce cubs. I'll keep improving the entire process as I learn more about cheetah animal husbandry.
SUBSCRIBERS!!! Be sure to turn on your NOTIFICATIONS in your YouTube account to get an email from me when I post new videos! I don't want you to miss even one! And THANKS!
Please like and share this video if you like it ;)
Lat post of the European murder hornets. Pet them and say goodbye. They are not as aggressive as the Japanese hornets or attack bee hives like they do and more nectar collectors but do bring home the meat bacon on occasion too as I show SOMETHING all balled up in a mush in the mandibles of one of the hornets.
This was an experiment of the #Shorts but have to admit, not a fan. I like telling the bigger story and can't do that in just 60 seconds. The other thing very annoying about YouTube Shorts is that fact you cannot select your own customized thumbnail. Both posts placed a horrible thumbnail of my face. YouTube needs to fix this. I will post more #Shorts later but will make sure I have a pic in there to trick the algorithm to select my thumbnail I want and be something truly Short and worth it. You also don't get much in AdSense revenue using #Shorts, I noticed.
As for the Japanese murder hornets, they do seem to target honey bees and more aggressive. Still, would not suggest people PET any hornets. It is my way but I take calculated risks and accept the consequences of my decisions. It could be these hornets have not gotten the pheromonal signal to defend and attack their hive... the tiny larvae were no where near metamorphizing, so maybe that is why they did not attack me. They may be aggressive when the larvae are about to hatch! My guess. Or maybe European hornets are JUST that nice and like petting.
SUBSCRIBERS!!! Be sure to turn on your NOTIFICATIONS in your YouTube account to get an email from me when I post new videos! I don't want you to miss even one! And THANKS!
Please like and share this video if you like it ;)
I get closer this time and film my interaction with some European Murder Hornets; testing their aggression or not. I discovered they are not very aggressive but are defensive... some of them and BITE rather than sting for defense! Amazing! It is because they are so HUGE they are more powerful than most of their prey insects they tackle, so no need to waste energy on venom from the stings. They tear apart their victims with their strong mandibles. They also use the mandibles to carve up certain trees they like the sap from, drinking it up.
Next time I try and PET some European Murder Wasps... which should not be shocking to those who know me. I break the barriers of animal behavior and the best why I know to study and learn from them is direct contact. Filming from a distance only gives one side of the lives of animals and has its place as well.
SUBSCRIBERS!!! Be sure to turn on your NOTIFICATIONS in your YouTube account to get an email from me when I post new videos! I don't want you to miss even one! And THANKS!
Please like and share this video if you like it ;)
Welp, my 1st #shorts video to go with the flow. This is the first part of a small series of my encounters with a really cool nest of European Murder Hornets near my home. I get as close as possible to determine their nature and behavior, as is my way with life. It helps me better understand the living and how best to live with them.
I get close to these hornets. The next couple of shorts I get CLOSER and try petting them; the kind of thing I do if you have not noticed. I needed to know how murderous these insects really are. Love to observe behavior and interact. It helps me determine how dangerous things are. I may publish a LONG 10min Murder Hornet activity ASMR of them placing the finishing touches on their hive on my other YT channel. Not really for this channel where i supposed to be the Cheetah Whisperer! But I LOVE insects too, so this is me.