Ha. I'm actually picturing that in my mind right now. I'm D'awwwwing at the moment, it's so clever.Nimzar said:When I saw the Crowbar sequence I was hoping that it would be a crowbar with a bit of string tied to the end used to tease the cat into jumping several feet in the air.
Usually, it lands.Addicted Muffin said:Nice drop... Always wanted to see what happens when I drop my cat
And then how about the sticky-taping of a buttered toast onto the cat? Gravity defiance I tell you!DenUrs said:Normally I'm not really into Daily Drop, but just had to see this. Awesome to see how a cat absorbs the shock of falling in slow motion.
Yeah, at least to me that explained how cats are able to land so lightly. This truly is a great way to relieve the pressure from the impact.Distorted Stu said:Oh Alex you joker :')
Good stuff lol i find it freaky how the cats legs sort of take the impact then curl
My thoughts went down that line too, except I was thinking "Well, that cat wont break, but they wont use the crowbar in this episode... Oh god!"Mumorpuger said:"Hm... wouldn't it be funny if they did the 'Crowbar Ready' sequ...
... HOLY COW THEY'RE DOING IT!"
I laughed.... Hard.
It isn't the same cat...pigmy wurm said:Ted?
their was a Commodore Hustle episode that used his name just two weeks ago. were you worried about preserving his identity.
When we jump of a 2.5m ledge (1m translated to human length) we don't simply land on our legs: we bend our knees and allow our legs to act as springs, probably even touching the floor with our hands to maintain balance.Akalabeth said:Yeah but we don't use our hands. If we continually walked around on all fours and regularly jumped down different heights hands first then we'd be just as adept at doing that. Because conversly, I'd like to see a cat try jumping off a metre height and landing only on its hind legs as we can.Kargathia said:If he couldn't then it'd be a failure of a cat. Or really fat.Akalabeth said:Shoulda dropped it upside down and see when it lands on its feet. Though, given a concrete floor you'd probably want to test it on a bed first or something to make sure it would twist around in time.
Either way: still impressed with how flexible cats really are. You just try falling facefirst towards the floor from a good 3 meter high, and landing on the palms of your hands without smacking your head against the concrete.
Kargathia said:When we jump of a 2.5m ledge (1m translated to human length) we don't simply land on our legs: we bend our knees and allow our legs to act as springs, probably even touching the floor with our hands to maintain balance.Akalabeth said:Yeah but we don't use our hands. If we continually walked around on all fours and regularly jumped down different heights hands first then we'd be just as adept at doing that. Because conversly, I'd like to see a cat try jumping off a metre height and landing only on its hind legs as we can.Kargathia said:If he couldn't then it'd be a failure of a cat. Or really fat.Akalabeth said:Shoulda dropped it upside down and see when it lands on its feet. Though, given a concrete floor you'd probably want to test it on a bed first or something to make sure it would twist around in time.
Either way: still impressed with how flexible cats really are. You just try falling facefirst towards the floor from a good 3 meter high, and landing on the palms of your hands without smacking your head against the concrete.
Which was about the same behaviour I just saw when I dropped my own cat - except that he walked away on four legs instead of two.
And Matt would have been alarmingly indifferent if crowbar was applied. I was hoping for crowbar kitty toy to make him jump when I saw Crowbar is Ready.tehweave said:Three things:
One, I forsee this as becoming the most popular daily drop ever.
Two, I lost it when the 'crowbar' came up. Haven't laughed that hard in a while.
Three, "No animals were harmed in the making of this video." Yeah, no shit. Kathleen would murder all y'all if ya did.
People definitely don't land on knuckles, but there are safe techiques for landing from second-story window height.The Lugz said:i'm going to cite gorillas or chimps, seeing as we have a close genetic bond with them, and just say if we ran around on our knuckles all day we would have the same capacity to jump off things and land on all fours, albeit that i do think apes land on their toes first then their knuckles, but it's the same principle
the highest ive ever jumped off of was a wooden shed roughly 2m tall, that's fairly easy unless you are excessively out of shape, i imagine a 2nd story window would be possible without serious injury, beyond that the cat definitely wins