3 Shocking Friendship Between Animals And Humans
3. Bear trainer Mark likes nothing more than to share his pool and his
bed with a big polar bear. Mark and his wife have owned Agee since she
was six weeks old and she even lived in their home as a cub where she
played with the family dogs and was bottle fed. The pair share an
incredibly intimate bond, which even extends to bear hugs. And when the
wrestling has tired both the animal expert and his amazing pet out, they
both take a nap together inside Agee's enclosure. Mark said: "If anyone
else tried this they'd end up as Agee's dinner. The only people she
likes are me and my wife.”
2. What do think about this couple? Chito found Pocho wounded and near
death on the shore of the River. The crocodile had been shot in the left
eye, and Chito nursed it back to health.. After the crocodile, named
'Pocho', improved to normal health, Chito released it to a nearby river
to return to its normal life. The next morning, Chito awoke to find that
the crocodile had followed him home and was sleeping on his veranda.
Living in the water outside Chito's home, the crocodile, who made a
'decision' and preferred to spend the rest of his life with the man who
saved his life, became a member of Chito's family, along with his second
wife and daughter. Chito's first wife had left him because he was
spending too much time with the crocodile. For more than twenty years,
Chito swam with Pocho the crocodile in the river outside his home,
mostly at night, talking and playing with Pocho while hugging and
kissing him. Pocho died of natural causes in the water outside Chito's
home in 2011.
1. Arnold Pointer a professional fisherman from south of Australia set
free from a certain death a big female White Shark that was caught in
his fishing nets.
Now the fisherman has a problem: He says: "It's been 2 years and she
doesn't leave me alone. She follows me everywhere I go and her presence
scares all the fishes. I don't know what to do anymore."
Arnold says: "Once I stop the boat she comes to me, she turns on her
back and let me pet her belly and neck, she grunts, turn her eyes, and
move her fins up and down hitting the water happily ..."