That kicked ass. I love octopi.
How did he kill him though? I am guessing suffocation as he flipped the shark over and kept him from moving through the water to breathe?
[quote="YourGrandpa"]I'm satisfied with voicing my opinion and moving on.[/quote]
Jackal wrote:I thought that if a shark turned upside down it dies. I could just be talking out of my ass here but I thought I heard taht somewhere before.
No. Maybe when a shark dies, it turns upside down...
Jackal wrote:I thought that if a shark turned upside down it dies. I could just be talking out of my ass here but I thought I heard taht somewhere before.
Transient wrote:That kicked ass. I love octopi.
How did he kill him though? I am guessing suffocation as he flipped the shark over and kept him from moving through the water to breathe?
That or he could have chewed into it's head with his beak.
Ok that video clip was retarded. I was expecting a tiny little octopus killing a giraffe or something, but that 8-armed queerbody was like 4 times bigger than that sharkfish.
If you turn a shark upside down, it actually puts it into a trance-like state where it doesn't move. You've probably seen the show on the Discovery channel about a guy who does it.
And most sharks do need to keep moving in order to stay alive, but there are a few exceptions. The nurse shark (as an example) is actually a member of the ray family, and it spends a lot of time lying still under ledges. But most sharks can't breathe without water passing through their gills, which means they have to stay moving.
I'm supposed to be impressed because some dude with 8 arms took out the deep sea equivelant of a thalidomide?
Give me 8 arms like durkha and I'll fuck that shark up. And what's up with holding him down? Who does that octopus think he is, Ricardo Arona? Fucking lay-and-pray faggot. If that was me, or feedback for that matter, two of those arms would've been holding shivs*.
R00k wrote:If you turn a shark upside down, it actually puts it into a trance-like state where it doesn't move. You've probably seen the show on the Discovery channel about a guy who does it.
And most sharks do need to keep moving in order to stay alive, but there are a few exceptions. The nurse shark (as an example) is actually a member of the ray family, and it spends a lot of time lying still under ledges. But most sharks can't breathe without water passing through their gills, which means they have to stay moving.