20 Incredible Moments Caught On Camera
20 Incredible Moments Caught On Camera
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Пікірлер: 1 500
This HAS to be praised for not being a clickbait title AND thumbnail. I salute you, sir.
@RedCloudBeechWaveAhh
3 ай бұрын
YES, To know what happens to any people involved, to learn about the awesome forces involved and to avoid celebration of death or destruction, those are really important to me! So far this account, is ok by me. But it's the first video I am watching, so, we'll see.
@AbdulSamad-rx4mx
Ай бұрын
😅😮😅😊❤❤❤❤😂🎉🎉😮😢😅😮😊 0:08
@AbdulSamad-rx4mx
Ай бұрын
😂❤🎉😮😮 Jhfhwjfleuvhsw
@TennesseeHomesteadUSA
Ай бұрын
We hate phony thumbs.
@RaquildisJiminian
14 күн бұрын
ok
Wow!!! The GLACIER was SPECTACULAR!! THE DEEP SAPPHIRE BLUENESS of the glacier and it's SIZE IS JAW DROPPING!! I AM IN AWE!! ❤️❤️
@MindSpanincrediblemoments
Ай бұрын
Kudos to you for avoiding clickbait tactics with your title and thumbnail!
5:20 Thank GOD Ray was there to point out we had a, "train wreck...train wreck...we have a train wreck!" Thanks Ray! 😂🚂💨
The deep blue color on those glaciers are stunning!
@trae4529
Жыл бұрын
Mother Nature does it best, doesn’t she
@hellhappy84
3 ай бұрын
normal lifhtprismatic colours... reflektion
@Brett_S_420
2 ай бұрын
Enjoy it while you can, since there will be NO SURFACE ICE LEFT ON THE PLANET by 2050.
@kingxgaming3961
2 ай бұрын
Makes me wanna drink it soooooo bad I literally looked up real glacier water For sale but it’s not as blue:(
@user-oc6gr7hs7x
2 ай бұрын
It’s just Mio
The color of that ice was so navy blue it must of been 1000's of years since that ice saw the light of day, amazing stuff.
@MrNobody91
Жыл бұрын
That’s what I was thinking, such a beautiful color.
@MindSpanincrediblemoments
Ай бұрын
Kudos to you for avoiding clickbait tactics with your title and thumbnail!
It showed only a glimpse of the gigantic plane landing but it was a little cool how it cut through the fog
When the RPM and FPS matched up I was in awe! Amazing photography
Holy moly, that glacier!! The piece that popped up from underwater was HUGE!
@RWBHere
5 ай бұрын
90% of any iceberg is under water. He keeps calling them glaciers, but they're not. They are calves from the glacier, and therefore become icebergs once they break free into the water.
The Earth will continue to change, evolve, and take back its property 💯 always has and always will 💋
@lindajennings2189
Жыл бұрын
Exactly!!!
There is nothing more pure than the colors inside of a Glacier 💙
@thebackyardbear
Жыл бұрын
I couldn't help but think that dark blue ice looked a lot like The Water Boy's secret weapon...
@stoneysscapes7544
Жыл бұрын
@@thebackyardbear ✋ high quality H2O
@mamapetillo8675
Жыл бұрын
Always makes me thirsty, even just thinking about it.
@flowerchild777
Жыл бұрын
😍
@shaybarfield4946
Жыл бұрын
That Glacial calving was fantastic. Almost mesmerizing and oh so beautiful.
The man directing the ship in the first clip is pure comedy gold to me.
Dont know why i am but anyone else kinda obsessed with glaciers calving????
@darabennett4316
Жыл бұрын
✋ Here.
@gazzaboy84
Жыл бұрын
Also here ✋
@johnpowell6386
Жыл бұрын
Yup
@patriciaschuster1371
Жыл бұрын
Me, as well. Is there a Calving Anonymous?
@danclare3266
Жыл бұрын
Not obsessed as you say,but when I see them it is pretty awesome.
That helicopter looking like it wasn't spinning was a thing of beauty.. Kudos to the captain and crew! Excellent job parking..
@Trouble-Clef
8 ай бұрын
Kudos to the person filming it. That’s why it looks like the blades aren’t spinning.
@philw1603
5 ай бұрын
9:29
I hope KZread is paying you well for these wonderful, exciting, awe inspiring and very well produced videos of events we would probably not get to see otherwise! Thank you for all your outstanding work ❤!! Keep them coming!!
@dragulia_venaro
4 ай бұрын
you can go wrong with 1M subscriber salary.
All are great! But the Antonov splitting the clouds as he landed was amazing!🔥👏
@bulkozavr1980
3 ай бұрын
Only it wasn't Ukrainian engineers who created it, but Soviet ones.
@ 33:00. Nothing "went wrong" with that airplane because it was a GLIDER. 🙂 Thermals come and go. And when they go, you MUST land somewhere. In this case, a wheat field.
5:42 "We're all lucky Ray was there to catch this on camera" sent me 🤣
@erniegagnon
Жыл бұрын
Canadian National Railways?
@gr-os4gd
3 ай бұрын
@@erniegagnon Locomotives are often lent back and forth between railway companies.
That glacier ice looks like it tastes absolutely devine. The darker the blue, the more heavenly it gets.
@shirleylebovich309
Жыл бұрын
I love eating ice myself
@FeatheredWingz
Жыл бұрын
That was my thought too. Looks like a tasty blue popsicle lol
@bryanzam1412
Жыл бұрын
The more oxygen and fresh water too .
@randolfo1265
Жыл бұрын
I want that ice in my whiskey glass! Mmmm
The Speaker of this video is a joy to listen to. Such clarity and intensity. Thank you!
In about 1958, m;y husband was stationed at Forbes AFB in Topeka, KS. The Blue Angels were going to be there and we went to see them. Wow, what a show. But the best demonstration of flying was one of the jets surprised everyone by coming in from nowhere to cruise very low above the airstrip and the plane was upside down! Truly incredible!
@ryanreedgibson
Жыл бұрын
Yeah, they are the best of the best.
@judyshort38
Жыл бұрын
@@ryanreedgibson yep and nice to know someone else appreciates their skill! Thanks for replaying.
@raysplace6548
Жыл бұрын
I've been to a few of their events.. Every time I've seen them, they've been absolutely amazing.. The Thunderbirds are cool, put on a damned good show, and are way better pilots than I could ever be. But the Blue Angles are second to none.
@judyshort38
Жыл бұрын
@@raysplace6548 You ae ver fortunate to have seen so many of these performances! I have only seen one.
@raysplace6548
Жыл бұрын
@@judyshort38 Yes Ma'am, I know.. I grew up near Quonset Point, In Rhode Island. The Blue Angles performed there once a year, for a few years. The things they do, is absolutely incredible..
Number 12 is not in South Africa but somewhere in Argentina or Uruguay. The worker speaks in Spanish, “No te puedo creer” meaning “I can’t believe it!”
@hell-n-degeneratesjeffreydogma
Жыл бұрын
Because no spanish people visit africa? It's called tourism buddy sorry to burst your bubble unless I see a sign saying welcome to Africa or welcome to uruguay il stick with the facts the narrator speaks instead ;)
@PapaSchlumpf78
Жыл бұрын
who says that was filmed by a worker! By the way, in Spain they also speak Spanish!
@hell-n-degeneratesjeffreydogma
Жыл бұрын
@@PapaSchlumpf78 and Mexico and south America central america and literally most countries and cities have a melting pot of different nationalities cities religions and dialects, markus gets it
@ChristLink-Channel
Жыл бұрын
"No te puedo creer” does not mean "I can't believe it". Rather, it means "I don't believe you". IF you wanted to say "I can't believe it", that would be "No lo puedo creer".
@heinrichrothmann6728
3 ай бұрын
NOT South Africa. Our port workers are not Spanish speaking. Also, SA does not have river docks. All our ports are sea based. Yes, I am South African.
I didn't realise how deep the water was to hold that much glacier. Even though I intellectually knew that 7/10th's of the glacier was underwater,seeing it in this way was eye opening.
That glacier was AWESOME
33:35 I could be wrong but I think that is a glider not a powered aircraft. Dudes were still pretty damn calm while landing in a wheat field, lol
@annmarston4667
Жыл бұрын
I'm pretty sure you're right about the aircraft being a glider, a major clue being a lack of engine and engine instruments in the panel. And yeah. Landing in a wheat field isn't exactly SOP.
@billythekid3234
Жыл бұрын
@@annmarston4667 Yes Ann, that is a glider and it makes that type of landing every flight. Most the times it would be landing on a short grass runway or field. And also large airliners never practice touch and go landings,,,,,, it would cost way to much in fuel. They do them in a simulator,,,,,, Peace!
@rustygunner8282
Жыл бұрын
With gliders that’s referred to as “landing out” and is not that uncommon. Pilots learn to look out for places to land at every point during a flight no matter how favorable condition are, because you just never know. Worse is finding yourself setting down in a field that turns out to be a scummy green pond, or is inhabited by a very irritated bull.
@ChristLink-Channel
Жыл бұрын
@@billythekid3234 "And also large airliners never practice touch and go landings" Exactly! What the video shows is called a "go around", not a "touch and go". Two very different things. A go-around is done when the landing is rejected or aborted by the captain for safety reasons: he didn't like it, so he decided to "go around" and try again.
@billythekid3234
Жыл бұрын
@@ChristLink-Channel Yes I know that! when the spoilers did not deploy I knew they would be on the go. BTW when I was working on my solo license in 1972 we did lot's of touch and goes,,,, I flew for 26 years. I know what a go around is. ty
The overhead of the glacier calving has to be one of the most beautiful things I've ever seen.
The glacier footage is the most beautiful and bluest I’ve ever seen
Wow, the power of nature captured in these extreme weather moments is simply mind-blowing
I was born and raised in Ostend (Belgium). As a child I've watched the Pride Of Calais countless times leaving port, standing on the pier with my parents hoping one day I'd be on it. Good memories. Kinda hurts to see it go this way.
@mamacitabella1759
7 ай бұрын
Dude I'm pretty sure I was on that ferry at least once in the nineties when I was touring Europe on the cheap... Anyhow my brother, don't be sad. We're all recycled someday. Ashes to ashes.....dust to dust.... We are all born of the dust of the stars. This is a truth neither atheist or theologian could contest. There is a beauty in all.of it, although sometimes nostalgia hurts. I've found this out as my children have grown and left home.
@InDecemberOfficial
7 ай бұрын
@@mamacitabella1759 Yeah, hit me up, that's better advice than my shrink gave me in the last 5 sessions combined.
@mamacitabella1759
7 ай бұрын
@@InDecemberOfficial jeune ami, hello my friend from across the pond! Sometimes older people have better advice and offer more solace than those with advanced degrees, lol. Anyhow, it's a pleasure to meet you!
@InDecemberOfficial
7 ай бұрын
@@mamacitabella1759 Likewise! Welcome anytime to visit the new pier in Ostend. If you make it past customs that is. Stay in the EU next time will you 😜 Cheers!
@jeanmerritt2021
5 ай бұрын
@@InDecemberOfficial😊😂
Gotta love how as usual, pretty much everyone who's filming flings the camera away from the action the second it happens. Even if they knew it was going to happen and they were filing it the whole time, they always fling the camera away when it happens.
@juliecook6057
Жыл бұрын
As ALWAYS the narrator's on these sorts of channels NEVER get their info right...they NEVER research NOR get relevant CORRECT facts about what's actually being shown in the clip !!! 🙄🤦 It's REALLY poor and little to NO effort about what's actually occuring in the clip !!!
@davelowets
Жыл бұрын
@@juliecook6057 And what information presented here was SO incorrect? 🤷🏻
@anoekbreeden7486
Жыл бұрын
Affcourse you fling away the camera, you want to see it with your own eyes 😂
@juliecook6057
Жыл бұрын
@@davelowets I'm not analysing and explaining every single clip for you !! Re-watch it and pay close attention to his narration ,which is just simply wrong on certain clips !! He has just assumed or guessed what is happening , and some were just blatantly incorrect that WE could see with our own eyes without having extensive knowledge or education about the topic !! Never just assume the info from a narrator is correct , because this channel like MANY others just simply gather clips and show them just for the sheer ' entertainment ' value aspect of it , and don't report the actual ,real , true or correct reality of it !! For example and my point being... many of these videos feature on various channels and are reported differently and when you see extended videos and see what actually happened BEFORE during and AFTER the video... it's context is completely different and that is the actual true account and correct narrative of the clip !!
@davelowets
Жыл бұрын
@@juliecook6057 Typical response from someone who just copied someone else's comment, and really has no clue. Thank you for proving what I had already thought. 👌
The "forced landing" of the small 2 passenger airplane is actually a sailplane, or glider. It was not a forced landing at all.
@jrtulls
4 ай бұрын
Ideally, he would land at the airport he was towed out of, being towed by a small plane to an agreed upon altitude, then the glider disconnects the tow rope and looks for thermals to circle in for lift.
I remember that tornado in Hattiesburg. I did storm damage repair in a neighborhood and it was rough. It traveled by the university and sucked all the blinds out of the windows at the dormitories.
Parts of glaciers and ice-sheets don't always break off because of gravity pulling them down but because of buoyancy pushing them up.
Did y'all see where the giant plane, Antonov AN-225, aka Maria @ 8:58 left a perfect line in the sky of blue with perfect edges on the clouds? That's pretty cool! I didn't know they could do that :-)
@Serucipe
11 ай бұрын
Too bad it will never do it again thanks to Vladimir Putin :-(
@Netram007
11 ай бұрын
@@Serucipeit will they are restoring it + they build another one
@Johnboy33545
10 ай бұрын
They evaporated the low hanging cloud cover, it is impressive.
@magorzataodynska4642
9 ай бұрын
It's not Maria it's Mrija
@garystackhouse5787
9 ай бұрын
Did y'all see where the giant plane landed "for the last time" in Poland and then was destroyed... in Ukraine?
I can't tell you how grateful I am that, just like those present at the time, you had the good sense not to talk over the glacier footage.
@s3cr3tsquar333
Жыл бұрын
so so SO agreed
@davelowets
Жыл бұрын
Huh? Then turn your volume down
@Bunkerdwarfputin
11 ай бұрын
@@davelowets Huh? The volume of the video is not the issue; the narrators who talk and drown out the actual sounds of the videos on KZread are the problem... This commenter is grateful that the narrator didn't talk over the sounds of the glacier footage - something that adjusting the video volume itself will not fix.
@lyndsayms
9 ай бұрын
@@davelowetswe want to be able to HEAR the glacier, it’s a much better experience when there isn’t anyone talking (people in the video AND the narrator). Hopefully that explains why the comment was made 😊
i've just discovered your channel, and i'm already hooked. can't wait to binge-watch more of your content!
That helicopter looking like it wasn't spinning was a thing of beauty.
@onlythewise1
Жыл бұрын
yes
@nickerzzbell4811
11 ай бұрын
And what a thing of beauty they are, mans only airborne machine that doesn't actually fly. They just beat the air into submission and subsequently find themselves airborne.
The different colors of blues of the great glacier are wild 😮
I love the way they slot these scrap ships into a narrow space like that. There are videos of much bigger bulk carriers being brought into scrapyards in India on KZread. They have a special crew and a very experienced Master and they come in under full power with no ballast from about five miles out when the tide is high so the ship rides up the beach. They often light a fire on the beach or fly flags so the ships can aim and they slot them in between two other ships.
the yacht sinking is actually kinda hilarious LOL
Fun Fact: Electricity is generated at 60Hz, but used to be generated at 50Hz. AC electricity cycles from positive to negative at this frequency, meaning your lights are shutting on and off at twice this frequency, once from positive to negative and once from negative to positive. AT 50Hz, your eyes could see the faint flickering caused by this, but the brain harmonizes at around 114 FPS meaning it can't see any flicker on anything higher than 57Hz. So, they changed the frequency to 60Hz for this and many other reasons. (I'm referring to America, not all countries made the change.)
@michaelm.1947
Жыл бұрын
To add to your fun fact, Japan is split into halves. The western half of Japan uses 60hz electricity and the eastern half uses 50hz.
@Bambisgf77
Жыл бұрын
Now that is interesting!
@konradgreen2567
Жыл бұрын
Unless you live in Europe, which still uses 50hz.
@scottmyers10
Жыл бұрын
@@konradgreen2567 I was referring to the U.S., where I live. There are countries in South America that stayed 50Hz too. It's not so bad with LEDs and fluorescents, their drivers remove a lot of the flicker. I was under 50Hz incandescent lighting on one of the mines once, hurt my eyes pretty bad and gave me a migraine. For most people though, it's a mild annoyance you get used to in a few minutes. It's good to know that, if I ever visit Europe, I need to make sure I'm avoiding incandescent lighting. lol
@TheSiriusEnigma
Жыл бұрын
Fun fact, in North America, we never used 50Hz. Because, in North America, we used the first electrical clocks. 60Hz… 60 seconds… Thank M. Tomas Addison for this. And you eyes sees at 24 images per seconds. To see flickering with a heated filament is unlikely.
now that's what you call making an entrance. great video underworld
Ok, the helicopter thing with the fps and rps was super cool.
One thing I love about this channel is the narration. Simple explination then let the segment do the talking. Babbling channels take note...
Kudos to the captain and crew! Excellent job parking.
16:40 the issue had nothing to do with the crane taking the weight. The issue was the front sling was located to far back and so the center of gravity overall was far forward enough it was able to tip forward in the slings at which point the front sling slid back and the boat was dropped. If you go frame by frame you can clearly see no cable or strap is broken and that the front one slides all the way back in line with the rear sling.
@gayeinggs5179
Жыл бұрын
And it was not I. South africa that sounds like Spanish
@aishamstout
Жыл бұрын
Bad mathing. I hope they have insurance.
@davelowets
Жыл бұрын
The narrator never directly said that it was a crane OR a strap failure. He said that the crane was supposed to carry the weight, which it DID, and then he said that someone miscalculated, to which they DID, by putting the strap in the wrong location. It was YOU who didn't correctly comprehend what he said. 🤦🏻
@rockwellcollins6768
Жыл бұрын
@@davelowets Narrator implied some kind of failure in the lifting gear by mentioning weight and miscalculation. But you go right ahead and compensate for your inferiority complex by berating people on the internet.
@Bunkerdwarfputin
11 ай бұрын
@@davelowets The narrator inferred it was a miscalculation of the weight to crane ratio; if he thought it was a miscalculation of the location of the front strap - or a strap issue at all - it's safe to presume that he would've mentioned THAT issue instead, since he mentioned a specific miscalculation in the first place.👍 It was YOU who didn't comprehend the nuances of his narration. 😉
21:25 - watch carefully. a 20+ foot 2X4 flies in from the left side of the screen, gets momentarily stuck in the tree on the far side of the parking lot, then tumbles out center screen! Incredible!!! Especially considering how far the tornado is from this lot! That glacier calving in Chili was something else as well!!! I couldn't believe how thick it turned out to be once it laid itself over! And the intense blue color of that ice at the bottom is amazing! The pressure that must be needed to create that!
@alexbarber1566
Жыл бұрын
it was probably guttering or downpipe, 2x4 won't fly like that. Still cool though.
@flowerchild777
Жыл бұрын
3 miles wide? Wow
@motomuso
11 ай бұрын
I wonder if it had been airborne, picked up miles away, and what we see is it "landing".
@wallyman292
11 ай бұрын
@@motomuso Could be! Although as one of the other replies mentioned, it could be siding off of a house or some such (lighter) thing rather than a 2X4. . .
@manymustfall
11 ай бұрын
Chile
That glacier calving was wonderful I really really like those colors that's awesome
32:42 That "emergency landing" is nothing of the sort. It's just a glider doing an "out-landing", a landing outside an airfield. It's something every glider pilot trains for and is familiar with. The calm of the pilots that the video comments on reflects that. It's not an emergency, it's just something that you have to do once in a while.
@johapunkt3053
Жыл бұрын
Do you know if the pilots have to compensate for damaged crops, or does the airfield have an insurance for such events?
@Bird1964
Жыл бұрын
@@johapunkt3053 good question!
@pudmina
Жыл бұрын
@@johapunkt3053 Sailplanes and their owners carry insurance for that.
@juliecook6057
Жыл бұрын
And it WASN'T a " tragedy " ... NO-ONE was injured or KILLED...THAT would be a TRAGEDY !!! It was a VERY minor INCIDENT !!!
@AndecIunson
Жыл бұрын
@@pudmina AFAIK in sweden the reimbursement for the damage is about the same as 2 pizzas. so most, if not all farmers dont go through the hassle to claim it. most farmers thinks it is just interesting to talk to the pilots. it is customary though, that the guys who does the outlanding gets to supply the beer for the barbeques that starts when it gets too dark to fly.
That’s not Canadian National, It’s CSX owned and operated by a company in America
@scottreich1207
Жыл бұрын
Was wondering how long it would take to point that out 😅
@kateboyd9374
Жыл бұрын
Any decent intermodal transport fanatic would know!
@TalariaJourneys2024
Жыл бұрын
@@kateboyd9374 I agree, I’m not even that big of a rail fan but I still know it’s not Canadian National
@kilo9496
Жыл бұрын
As a CN conductor the train itself was Canadian Nationals the engines are swapped all the time to make their way back to their railway but the locomotives don’t identify the trains
@hughpurcell8898
Жыл бұрын
y
Slight correction on the train derailment video. The C in CSX stands for Conrail, not Canada. CSX and Norfolk Southern co-own the railways up and down the East Coast from Ohio, to Florida The accents of the people talking are definitely Southern, U.S., not Canadian. Not that it really matters, all railway companies have a derailment here and there, mostly just carrying coal.
@healerniki
10 ай бұрын
Was going to say the same. My grandfather was a switch for man for CSX so was definitely scratching my head on that one. Also any wreck in the US are investigated by the NTSB
@Thankz4sharing
8 ай бұрын
Conrail was divided between Norfolk Southern Railway and CSX Transportation in 1999. CSX was and is a lot more than the part of Conrail it took over.
That ship parking skills are absolutely Amazing
Beaching of that ferry was superbly done. That glider was ridge-soaring in instrument conditions, which was inadvisable. So they dropped out of the cloud, and found themselves with only enough potential energy to land in a field.
In story number 20 that ferry brings back great memories, as I worked the night shift, we used to pre-book a cross channel ferry as in the story, to take me and my late wife in the late 1880s and early 1990s from DOVER UK to CALAIS FRANCE for Monday shopping in France, years before CITE EUROPE was built, 2 ADULT tickets plus the car, shopping done had to get an early PM ferry back to the UK as I had to get the wife and shopping home AND be at work by 7PM. Hectic but fun years we had.
I really enjoyed watching this and many thanks for the noise warning, greatly appreciated
Thank you for the time and effort you put into these videos. No clickbait. Fascinating clips. Great narration and backstory. Excellent pronunciation and information about the areas. This is really a top-tier channel and I hope you know how appreciated your hard work is.
Thank you for providing pertinent information and some context to the imaging. That is something I hadn't seen before.
This video is filled with some truly incredible moments that are sure to leave you in awe. However, the clip featuring the Pride Of Calais leaving port struck a personal chord with me. As someone who was born and raised in Ostend, Belgium, I have fond memories of watching this iconic ferry depart from the pier with my parents, dreaming of the day when I could be on it myself. It's truly heartbreaking to see it being dismantled in this way, especially after all the memories and joy it brought to so many people. Nevertheless, this video is a testament to the power of human emotion and the enduring impact of the moments that we capture on camera.
@suzannedawson6330
11 ай бұрын
That magnificent plane destroyed by the Russians. Makes me sick. Putin’s a little Hitler
@InDecemberOfficial
10 ай бұрын
Lol what? Did we say the same thing at the same time? Mohow, nie te hutten zeg.
@voyaristika5673
9 ай бұрын
That would be sad, nostalgic. As children we just assume that our world will always be what we see and feel. Of course we come to realize life is ever changing, but still, seeing the ferry dismantled is seeing a part of your world, your childhood taken away. All hearts know that feeling.
@peggyenglish5521
9 ай бұрын
Midsomer murders
@Listembourg_out_of_Molvania
8 ай бұрын
Och, ge hebt de Mercator in dok 😜
My jaw was dropped and mouth still open even after you explained why that ship beached itself! 😮
@runejohansen3332
Жыл бұрын
🤣🤣🤣👍
@suzannedickson7522
Жыл бұрын
I think it went there to die?🤔
@nancyargenbright8208
Жыл бұрын
It was so obvious and stupid***
@trae4529
Жыл бұрын
Heckuva parking job!!!
@lindalewis5066
Жыл бұрын
@@trae4529 😂 True!
I LOVE glaciers, I had the opportunity to go to Matanuska Glacier in Alaska. Lots is fun!!!!
FYI. CSX is NOT the Canadian national, but one of the five largest US rail companies - it is the result of the merger of the B&O and C&O rail lines (plus a bunch of other stuff)
Our river Severn in the west country of England has terrific bores and many surfers have a great time braving the wave.
The glacier didn't flip end over end. The iceberg that recently calved off of the glacier did.
@jacquelineb3475
Жыл бұрын
We saw that, Einstein.
@AJ_1namillion
Жыл бұрын
@@jacquelineb3475 No need to be rude. The narrator literally said it flipped end over* end. He was just correcting them
@jacquelineb3475
Жыл бұрын
@@AJ_1namillion Rude? Sarcasme. Nothing more snowflake.
@Alsatiagent
Жыл бұрын
@@jacquelineb3475 Your attention seeking behaviour reveals more than you intend.
Air Force One does touch-and-go maneuvers at our local airport in North Carolina. Quite a few people hang around near the airport to watch it go over.
I thoroughly enjoyed this video. Each clip was actually unknown to me! Usually they're all the same. This one was awesome
The F22 wasn’t pulling more than 1.5G in the vertical climb. It would have pulled 6-9 Gs transitioning from horizontal to vertical, however.
33:30 Emergency landing? That small 2-seater airplane is a glider, and they don't "fall out of the sky" ! I was a member of a sail glider club in the mid-sixties and that landing in a corn field always secured the glider pilot a permanent membership of the Farmers club!
Magnificent glacier calving. TY for sharing something I will never witness live. Happy New Year. 🇨🇦
The fact they broke character when they were showing the merch, shows how much fun they have making videos
Terrific clips! Just a little correction on #3 regarding the British Airways B777 conducting a 'Go Around'. Aircraft don’t have 'accelerators', they have throttles. Before landing the tech crew (pilots) set the automation up for such an event with the desired profile and target altitude. If at any stage during the approach, including immediately after the wheels are on the deck to miss the approach/go around, the 'pilot flying' will press to TO/GA (Takeoff/Go Around) buttons which are usually on the throttle handles, sometimes on the panel. The aircraft responds with Auto-Throttle powering up disarming the Auto Brakes and Speed Brakes and will climb up to the preset altitude. All very calm and very much in control. Others have likely pointed this out already, but in case not; #4 landing in the cornfield was a Sailplane/Glider, they were in controlled flight but no longer had sufficient lift to return to the airfield or alternate landing zone. Therefore they conducted an unplanned landing in the closest most practical and safe location. I’ve seen clips with all types of unique places to land, the one that stands out the most was where the pilot made an unplanned landing on a curved suburban street, other than knocking down a couple of letterboxes and rubbish bins he also walked away completely unscathed! It is just the nature of flying sailplanes, you could be aloft for hours in ideal conditions and head back to the airfield when ready, but once you’re no longer able to catch any thermal updrafts, it’s time to identify an improvised 'runway'!
The Antanov flew over my house on final to KIAH. My jaw dropped
Absolutely astonishing! Nature's fury is showcased in a way that's both shocking and deeply humbling.
Well produced video. Good copy, narration, and editing. 5 out of 5 stars!
#9 - that same Bore Tide can be seen in Alaska and South Korea. If you’re out on the mud flats when they come, it causes the mud floor to grab and squeeze your feet, and it can be fatal. Few can outrun it
@jerryrobison3262
Жыл бұрын
Another place is the Bay of Fundy, Nova Scotia. It has one of the most extreme differences between high and low tides in the world.
@alexbarber1566
Жыл бұрын
where are these few from and are there videos of them out-running a tidal bore?
The "Glacier" did not flip end over end. Calvings result in icebergs that settle to a 90/10 rule; 90% below the surface, 10% above. This large calving simply adjusted itself accordingly.
@1961casey
Жыл бұрын
I agree. This is probably the best demonstration of the 90/10 rule that I have ever seen. I was not expecting to see how far out from the glacial face the bottom of the ice berg was going to emerge.😯
@Shimonotoki
Жыл бұрын
Why is the ice so blue?
@konservation6205
Жыл бұрын
@@Shimonotoki because the red light within white light (longer wave length) is absorbed by ice, where as the shorter wave length blue light is diffused or scattered. The larger and more compact the ice, the bluer it appears.
@Shimonotoki
Жыл бұрын
@@konservation6205 Nice. Thx for the reply.
I love that you use google maps imagery. I visited the shipping yard in Turkiye and saw a cruise ship and some others. The falling glaciers are truly heart breaking.
Nature at it's best ❤
the F22 climb video is paled in comparison to watching an F15-E at full afterburn doing a vertical pull. it is the only aircraft in the world that can ACCELERATE while going straight up. it has more thrust per pound than any fighter aircraft ever made. they are currently (in 2023) working on a new version of the F15 to put back into service because it was just such an incredible platform
@williamspurrell2257
Жыл бұрын
Seen done ECT ECT
@billythekid3234
Жыл бұрын
Sir there are many jets that can go vertical these days, But you are right,,, the Eagle was the first to do it back in 1970, I still think it;s a great plane that can be used today at a fraction of the price of a F-35. Which can hardly stay flying! take care! BTW it;s the only plane I know of that flew with the complete right wing missing! BY a Iseral fighter pilot!
@DrivermanO
Жыл бұрын
@@billythekid3234 English Electric Lightning went supersonic in a climb way back in the early 1960s. And incidentally, all aircraft accelerate when going up, or they'd never get off the ground!
@kronop8884
Жыл бұрын
@@DrivermanO Lift doesn't require acceleration (after they reached the required speed for takeoff), if that was the case level flight at constant speed would not be possible. What you are talking about is rockets, not aeroplanes.
1:31 Imagine randomly chilling at a scrap yard eating your delicious ice and then you see this thing coming to you💀
@Serucipe
11 ай бұрын
Just like in Jurassic Park 2.
The helicopter floating away looking like its blades aren't spinning always makes me laugh so fucking hard.
I can't stop laughing at these moments! 😂 Thanks for bringing such joy to all of us!
That was not a Canadian National Rail Co.
@mikefoehr235
Жыл бұрын
CPR
@1985HabsFanForever
Жыл бұрын
Was a CSX engine. Could have been a CN train using leased CSX equipment.
@Mikey.M.V.P.1
Жыл бұрын
What was it then ?
@mikefoehr235
Жыл бұрын
@@Mikey.M.V.P.1 crazy train 🚆 coming off the rails
@jacklyons5943
Жыл бұрын
seaboard coastline rr
This was absolutely amazing videos very well done like always,
Thank you so much for the warning about the train carts lol I lowered the volume immediately.
Standing filming a tornado…Darwin award candidate🙄
The ships engine didn't fail, it was running in full reverse as you can see the prop wash pouring out the side of the ship.
@edphillips2998
Жыл бұрын
That looks like docking thrusters to me. Full-power prop-wash is much more violent.
@ockiedavel7318
Жыл бұрын
@@edphillips2998 Those are called bow thrusters.
I'm from South Africa. Which river is so wide in South Africa for that falling yacht?
@ockiedavel7318
Жыл бұрын
Presies my vraag ook!!
The nature surrounding us always amazing
The cargo ship hauling coal into a power plant whose main engines failed. The piglet did not just sit there and watch it hit the conveyor pier. You could see him using green bow thrusters to slow the ship. Let’s give him credit. He tried everything at his disposal.
The train was NOT Canadian. Canadian National marks their cars (and engines) with the company logo - a white lettered CN on a red background. The video clearly shows a BLUE engine and a white CSX. You got the wrong company!
My dream is to be on a Harrier Jump jet. Scared off heights and deep water but still want to go in one.
I was camping near Hattiesburg during that tornado. We were part of a big SCA event (like a renfair) called Gulf Wars. That year, we called it gulfnado.
We saw a glacier next to us n Alaska calfing on our cruise. Amazing and very loud!
Gliders don't have motors, just that whatever form of lift they were chasing disappeared.
The largest glacier calving on record was a 1,667-square-mile block of ice and was more than three times the size of Los Angeles. So yea, a bit larger than a three-storey building 😉. I'm guessing your size reference was specifically talking about that glacier in Chile?
That old ship reminds me of parallel parking my 1981 Fleetwood Brougham on Wilshire Boulevard back in the day.
The amount of fun those guys were having towing that boat through the seas.
That parasail clip reminded me of a Guideposts article I read years ago of a middle-aged woman who went parasailing for the first time. A storm came up on the horizon, but the boat operators didn't bring her in quickly enough and the line snapped, sending her flying solo high above the water, beach and even the coastal city. Wind gusts lifted her up over streets and several-stories-high buildings, all the while remarkably avoiding walls, antennae, electrical lines and other obstacles. The victim said a number of times the chute brought her within reach of the roof of a building, only to scoop her up again and take off with her. Emergency responders, tracking her throughout this perilous ride, were powerless to aid her. Thankfully, the wind blew her back out over the water within yards of the shore. At this point, the wind miraculously died down and she plummeted into the ocean, only to struggle to get out of the harness before the whole apparatus pulled her under. Some horrified onlookers from shore swam out and assisted her, after which she was taken to the hospital where she recuperated from shock, cuts and abrasions. All in all, the calamity lasted only about 40 minutes, but it was a trip she would never forget!
@amarillocowboy6709
Жыл бұрын
I have read my Mom 's copies of "Guideposts" over the years, and I have come to believe that every story in every issue is made up. They are the original click bait.
@godlypursuit5134
Жыл бұрын
@@amarillocowboy6709 I'm sorry you feel that way. Any Christian reference is attacked these days. What do YOU read for inspiration? reddit?
@sydyidanton5873
Жыл бұрын
Crikey! What a ride! I’ll bet she was having a very in-depth conversation with G-d while being blown about like an Autumn leaf. There is no way I would take a ride in one of those. I’d be terrified the boat would slow down initiating a descent into the water as you notice a couple of sharks swimming within close proximity to where you’re about to splashdown! I recall a British/Irish family living in the US who had gone to the Caribbean on vacation. On the last day before returning home their adolescent daughter went out for a ride in one. The operator of the boat didn’t have an extra person onboard to be a lookout as he ought to have had. The girl being towed and up very high developed some issue with her harness if I’m recalling correctly, she was unable to get his attention as he was looking where he was going, consequently he was unaware that she was in distress despite other witnesses on the water who could see something was not right. Sadly the poor girl fell to her death. Absolutely hideous for all involved.
Excellent video & thank you for putting your hard work into making these videos. Just want to clear up a very minor thing about that train derailment video. The railroad belongs to CSXT & not CP (Canidian Pacific) 😊
@drkskyes
6 ай бұрын
CSX is the child of Chesapeake and Ohio (C&O) which is the child of Baltimore and Ohio (B&O). Absolutely nothing to do with Canada!
Did you see the way that plane cut through the fog in the sky that was freaking great
6:08 - The An225 wasn't built to be the world's largest aeroplane, it was specifically built to be the carrier for the Buran spaceplane.