09/05/2026
Animals World is 7 YEARS OLD today. 🐾
Started in 2011 from a small forest in Indonesia. Just me, a camera, and a love for real wildlife.
For years we were silent. But since 2019, we found our voice through Facebook In-Stream. And this morning, we went LIVE for the first time in years. 323 of you joined us. Thank you.
This 7-year journey is for you.
07/05/2026
The Bald Eagle surveys America with vision 4x sharper than humans, spotting prey from 2 miles away.
Chosen as America’s national bird in 1782, it mates for life and returns to the same nest each year, some weighing over a ton. It doesn’t flee storms.
It flies above them, using wind currents to soar higher. This is why America calls it the symbol of freedom, focus, and fearless leadership.
07/05/2026
The CEO? He’s awake.
6:00 AM sharp. The boardroom is a sun-bleached acacia log. The quarterly report is a herd of zebras in the distance.
He doesn’t do “morning meetings.” He does morning warnings. One low growl and the entire department—hyenas, jackals, even that one annoying intern gazelle—knows to keep their distance until he’s had his first coffee. Which, in his case, is a fresh kudu.
His management style is simple: Rule 1: I don’t do compromises. Rule 2: See Rule 1. Rule 3: My 4:00 PM nap is non-negotiable. Mark your calendars.
He’s closed more territory deals than any lion in the last five droughts. His roar is trademarked. His mane is the corner office. He fires employees just by looking at them.
Every animal in the savannah calls him “Sir.” Except one.
At 6:00 PM, the real boss clocks in. She doesn’t roar. She doesn’t need to. One silent stare from the Lioness and the “CEO of the Savannah” suddenly remembers he has to pick up the cubs from daycare, and yes, he’ll take out the trash, and no, he will not sleep on the rock tonight.
He may run the grasslands from 9 to 5. But she runs him 24/7.
Currently out of office. Currently out of excuses. 🥩
05/05/2026
They’re not hunting yet. They’re learning how to vanish. High in a North American pine, two mountain lion cubs turn a branch into a classroom.
Puma concolor owns the largest range of any wild land mammal in the Americas, thriving anywhere with cover and deer to stalk, from Yukon forests to rocky canyons.
Solitary and crepuscular, adults command territories over 100 square miles, ambushing prey at dusk with 45-foot leaps. But for now, survival is taught through touch.
The cub behind grooms its sibling, a quiet bond that will hold until they split up at 18 months old. Soon their blue eyes and faint spots will fade to tawny, and the forest will finish teaching them silence.
Today they’re just cubs sharing a branch. Tomorrow, they become the ghosts we almost never see.
03/05/2026
She is the fastest land animal on Earth, capable of reaching 70 mph in just three seconds, but in this moment, her entire world has stopped for the tiny, fragile life asleep in her arms.
For 18 months, she will raise him completely alone in a savanna full of lions, hyenas, and eagles, hunting every single day just to keep him fed while teaching him how to survive a world that wants him gone.
She will get no help, no thanks, and no days off, yet she performs this act of pure, selfless love thousands of times without ever expecting anything in return.
If this is what a mother's love looks like in the wild, what excuse do we have?
02/05/2026
Close your eyes. Feel that.
A cougar mother and her cub. For 18 months, she’s his entire world. She teaches him to hunt. To hide. To survive a brutal 90% death rate in the wild.
Don’t let this photo fool you.
That same gentle mom can sprint 50 mph and take down prey 8x her size. She’s not just cute. She’s a ghost. An apex predator. A queen.
In 6 months, she’ll chase him away to face the wilderness alone. That’s love in the wild. Beautiful. Brutal. Real.
What’s the most dangerous animal you’d still call cute?
01/05/2026
A tender moment between a mother cougar and her cub, showing how early life in the wild is all about learning through closeness.
Cougar cubs rely entirely on their mother for up to two years, observing her hunting skills, stalking techniques, and survival instincts in vast habitats ranging from North American mountains to South American forests.
Unlike social big cats, cougars are solitary, so this bond is crucial—once grown, the cub will venture off alone, carrying everything it learned during these quiet, intimate moments in the wild.
30/04/2026
Two tiny cheetah cubs share a quiet moment, but life in the wild is anything but gentle. At this stage, they have a special silvery “mantle” of fur along their backs that helps them blend into grass and even mimic the look of a fierce honey badger to scare off predators.
They rely completely on their mother, learning to stay hidden, move quietly, and follow her every step. Sadly, only a small percentage make it to adulthood, facing constant danger from lions and hyenas.
Those who survive will grow into the fastest land animals on Earth, turning these fragile beginnings into pure speed and survival.
29/04/2026
Witness the unparalleled strength and specialized physique of the elusive mountain lion (Puma concolor), a predator perfectly adapted to its rugged environment.
Captured here in a close-up that highlights its incredibly powerful musculature, this cougar exemplifies raw power in motion.
Unlike many big cats, the mountain lion doesn't rely solely on explosive bursts of speed. Its muscular frame—particularly the heavy front limbs and powerful shoulders seen here—is sculpted for stalking and executing precise, ambush-style attacks.
These dense, compact muscles provide the necessary power to deliver a decisive bite to the neck and the strength to subdue its primary prey: large ungulates. In North America, this frequently means white-tailed deer or mule deer, a considerable challenge for a cat that hunts alone.
This image, with its focused gaze and tensed form, captures a moment of calculated intensity. It’s a testament to millions of years of evolutionary engineering that have resulted in one of the most efficient, and muscle-bound, solitary hunters on Earth.