r/likeus

🔥 Hot ▲ 49.3k r/likeus+3 crossposts

That ape is unbelievably strong. It just picks its human up like it’s no problem.

u/Mundane_Sort_2238 — 1 day ago
▲ 457 r/likeus+5 crossposts

He never had the makings of a varsity primate [OC]

u/Kyzzz — 2 days ago
▲ 18 r/likeus+5 crossposts

The Starry-Eyed Puppy and the Magic of Wingate Field

Chapter One: The Morning of Wonders The sun peeked through my bedroom window like a golden friend tapping my shoulder, and I stretched my velvety white paws until they trembled with joy. *Today*, I thought, my tail thumping against my quilted blanket like a drumroll, *today is the day Lenny promised we'd go somewhere extraordinary*. "Pete! Pete!" Roman's voice tumbled down the hallway, rough and eager as a puppy's first howl. His sneakers squeaked against the hardwood floor, each step counting down to adventure. "Dad says we're leaving in twenty minutes! Get your tail in gear!" I bounded from my dog bed, my short white fur practically glowing with excitement, and nearly collided with Mariya at the kitchen doorway. She knelt, her hands warm and soft as fresh-baked bread, and cupped my face. "Look at you, my little star," she whispered, her eyes catching the morning light like two polished amber stones. "Those makeup streaks around your eyes make you look like a tiny warrior preparing for battle." "More like a tiny warrior preparing for *picnics*," Lenny rumbled from behind his coffee mug, his voice deep and comforting as a well-worn blanket. "Wingate Field, Pete. Have I ever told you about Wingate Field?" Roman dropped to his knees beside me, his brown eyes alive with the secret-keeping excitement of an older brother. "It's huge, Pete. Like, *ocean* huge. There's a lake, and trails that go forever, and—" he paused, dramatic as a thunderclap, "—tunnels. Dark ones." My ears flattened involuntily. *Dark ones*, I repeated in my head, and something cold touched my heart like a dew-soaked paw. Mariya noticed everything. She always did. "Roman," she said softly, that mother-tone that wrapped around worries like a soft bandage, "let's not overwhelm your brother before breakfast." She stroked between my ears until the coldness retreated like tide from sand. "Wingate Field is beautiful, Pete. You'll see." I pressed against her leg, breathing in her familiar scent—lavender and something uniquely *Mariya*, like hope and patience mixed together. But Roman's words echoed: *dark ones*. I pushed the fear down, buried it like a bone I hoped never to unearth. After all, I was Pete the Puggle, storyteller and adventurer. What was a little darkness to a dog like me? The car ride felt like flying inside a metal bird. I sat on Mariya's lap, my nose pressed against the window, watching the world transform from houses to trees to something vast and green that seemed to breathe on the horizon. "There," Lenny said, pointing with one hand on the wheel. "That's where magic happens." Wingate Field unfolded before us like a painting come alive—emerald grass stretching to kiss the sky, wildflowers dotting the landscape like scattered jewels, and in the distance, water catching sunlight and throwing it back in a thousand shattered pieces. I barked once, surprised by my own voice, by the joy that escaped like steam from a kettle. But then I saw the lake more clearly, and my bark caught in my throat like a swallowed bee. It wasn't a puddle or a friendly stream. It was *vast*, gray-green and shifting, with tiny waves that licked the shore like hungry tongues. My paws remembered their first bath, the way water had surrounded me, how I'd thrashed and sputtered and felt the world tilt wrong. *Water*, I thought, and the word tasted of drowning. "Pete?" Roman followed my gaze, followed my frozen stillness. His hand found my scruff, warm and steady. "Hey. Hey, look at me." I forced my eyes from the water to his face, that face I'd loved since I was small enough to fit in his palms. "We'll stay on the shore, okay? Just sand between our toes. Nothing scary today." I wanted to believe him. I *did* believe him, mostly. But fear is a stubborn thing, a weed with roots that wind deep. I licked his hand once, a promise I wasn't sure I could keep, and let him carry me toward our picnic spot beneath a spreading oak. The oak welcomed us with dappled shade and whispering leaves. Mariya spread our blanket like a magic carpet, and Lenny produced sandwiches from their basket-home with the flourish of a magician. But even peanut butter's sweet promise couldn't fully distract me from the lake's patient presence, from the way it waited like a question I didn't want answered. "Who's ready to explore?" Roman's voice cut through my spiraling thoughts, and I stood on wobbly legs, determined to be brave, determined to be the dog my family believed me to be. ---

Read more here ::: https://petethepuggle.blogspot.com/2026/05/starry-eyed-puppy-and-magic-of-wingate.html?m=1

🔥 Hot ▲ 16.4k r/likeus+4 crossposts

In Switzerland a woman raised a pair of lions. The authorities confiscated them for a zoo. 7 years later the woman came to visit the zoo.

u/NectarineThin7108 — 6 days ago
▲ 438 r/likeus+1 crossposts

A Blackpool family's new Lagotto Romagnolo puppy dug up 15 gold sovereign coins worth nearly $8,000 ten minutes into his first family walk. The breed is genetically wired for this - they're the only dogs specifically bred to hunt truffles

upworthy.com
u/ElvisIsNotDjed — 5 days ago
▲ 4.8k r/likeus+1 crossposts

Kitten's reaction to watching birds for the first time... 🐈🐾🐦😅

u/Syndra_Vith — 7 days ago
🔥 Hot ▲ 49.3k r/likeus+5 crossposts

Brazil's courts have ruled that dogs and cats are legally recognized as sentient beings, not property. The decision strengthens penalties for mistreatment and cruelty, acknowledging that companion animals can feel pain and suffering.

u/Loud-Firefighter-787 — 10 days ago
▲ 45 r/likeus

Capuchin monkey reacts to an unfair situation

The famous cucumber-grape study on fairness, done by Brosnan and de Waal.

Two capuchins were situated in enclosures next to one another. A researcher would ask them to do a task and if they succeeded give them a treat. The catch was one monkey was always rewarded with a piece of cucumber while the other monkey sometimes got a piece of cucumber and sometimes got a grape — a preferred treat among capuchin monkeys.

A monkey that received only cucumber appears perfectly happy until she sees her companion receive a grape. Then her behavior changes. She accepts the next piece of cucumber only to throw it back at the researcher, pounding the surface in front of the enclosure and shaking its Plexiglas walls.

“That video struck home with a lot of people,” Brosnan says. “Who hasn’t felt like that monkey that’s only getting cucumbers? Our research showed something about the evolution of the sense of human fairness.”

For those wanting to dive more into the science, you can do a search in Google Scholar for "inequity aversion"

youtu.be
u/OpenMindedScientist — 5 days ago
🔥 Hot ▲ 18.5k r/likeus+4 crossposts

Flamingo helps feed ducklings while mama duck supervises 🦩

I did not choose this audio but it sure is loud

u/ArmInternational3823 — 10 days ago