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iFlipPerhaps you'll find my guns while you're down there in the lake looking. I lost all of them in a very unfortunate boating accident recently.
TnskiTime to take up magnet fishing
NotaskibumMy best guess here is a crazy ex or some sort of ferry accident
brosasakiYeah pretty much. I think I have the general location pinpointed but honestly at this point most of it is prolly screwed
poles would have floated but were attached to the skis and are definitely ok
skis might be ok given the impact with the lakebed didn't coreshot them or something
boots might be recoverable? depending on if algae grows in the fabric
helmet/goggles probably similar situation
brosasakiYeah pretty much. I think I have the general location pinpointed but honestly at this point most of it is prolly screwed
poles would have floated but were attached to the skis and are definitely ok
skis might be ok given the impact with the lakebed didn't coreshot them or something
boots might be recoverable? depending on if algae grows in the fabric
helmet/goggles probably similar situation
safarisamHow good are you at swimming
BigPurpleSkiSuitDepending on the composition of the lake it could actually be pretty dangerous to dive and retrieve them. I used to play trumpet and could reliably hold my breath for 3 minutes at one point...
Hangry"I used to play trumpet" was just random enough it has me rolling. Quality advice tho
**This post was edited on Mar 30th 2021 at 4:18:06pm
Hangry"I used to play trumpet" was just random enough it has me rolling. Quality advice tho
**This post was edited on Mar 30th 2021 at 4:18:06pm
TRVP_ANGELwhen you try to pond skim a lake
BigPurpleSkiSuitDepending on the composition of the lake it could actually be pretty dangerous to dive and retrieve them. I used to play trumpet and could reliably hold my breath for 3 minutes at one point. I did freediving in the ocean and could get down to 40-50 feet without fins, and more like 60 or 70 and stay down for a bit with fins. The pressure mounts, and you just pop your ears and you're fine. One summer, when I was 16 I worked on a lake and saw the maximum depth in the middle of the lake was only 36 feet and figured, oh cool, I'll take a boat out to the middle and freedive it with fins. I went down and pretty much as soon as I made it down to 20 feet the water started to get absolutely freezing, to the point where it was making me shake and start to lose control of my body. I immediately started to kick back upward but I was scared and sluggish in my movements and let my air go involuntarily. Having your air is what helps bring you back to the surface so it was much harder to swim that 20 feet than 50 in the ocean where it stays warm. I didn't really almost drown, but I wonder how close it would have been if I hadn't decided to turn around. As it happened, with that particular lake, the bottom stays frozen, even in the summer due to lack of light penetration, and the water around that icecap at the bottom made it very close to freezing temperature. Cold water saps your energy so quick it's insane. Anyway, if they're at the bottom of a decently deep lake, make sure the bottom isn't frozen before you dive for them.
Notaskibumthis doesn't make sense, water freezes top to bottom so they water could be cold at the bottom but it wouldnt be frozen
BigPurpleSkiSuithttps://www.newschoolers.com/videos/watch/921348/pops-n-jazz-2013
HangryBlessed. Can I sample this for a house track?
**This post was edited on Mar 30th 2021 at 10:19:05pm
Notaskibumthis doesn't make sense, water freezes top to bottom so they water could be cold at the bottom but it wouldnt be frozen
asparagusuhhhhhh water heats top to bottom
BigPurpleSkiSuitDepending on the composition of the lake it could actually be pretty dangerous to dive and retrieve them. I used to play trumpet and could reliably hold my breath for 3 minutes at one point. I did freediving in the ocean and could get down to 40-50 feet without fins, and more like 60 or 70 and stay down for a bit with fins. The pressure mounts, and you just pop your ears and you're fine. One summer, when I was 16 I worked on a lake and saw the maximum depth in the middle of the lake was only 36 feet and figured, oh cool, I'll take a boat out to the middle and freedive it with fins. I went down and pretty much as soon as I made it down to 20 feet the water started to get absolutely freezing, to the point where it was making me shake and start to lose control of my body. I immediately started to kick back upward but I was scared and sluggish in my movements and let my air go involuntarily. Having your air is what helps bring you back to the surface so it was much harder to swim that 20 feet than 50 in the ocean where it stays warm. I didn't really almost drown, but I wonder how close it would have been if I hadn't decided to turn around. As it happened, with that particular lake, the bottom stays frozen, even in the summer due to lack of light penetration, and the water around that icecap at the bottom made it very close to freezing temperature. Cold water saps your energy so quick it's insane. Anyway, if they're at the bottom of a decently deep lake, make sure the bottom isn't frozen before you dive for them.
Notaskibumthis doesn't make sense, water freezes top to bottom so they water could be cold at the bottom but it wouldnt be frozen
gorbdawggybrentwe need a big purple trumpet album
HypeBeastLmao it's called the thermocline bro. Look it up.
And y'all downvoting the guy below are all retarded. This is like biology 101. Ice does not sit at the bottom. Water becomes more dense as it gets colder and when it freezes, its density decreases. Thus ice will always float. If water froze and sunk, life as we know it wouldn't exist.
**This post was edited on Mar 30th 2021 at 10:48:57pm
moist_velvetkind of purple
timdrachanYou should do your best to dry out the bindings cuz bein underwater for long really fucks with it. Thats how i destroyed my pair from 2 years ago
DolansLebensraumWhat the fugg is going on with this thread.
why are so many ppl dropping their skis in the water....
HypeBeastLmao it's called the thermocline bro. Look it up.
And y'all downvoting the guy below are all retarded. This is like biology 101. Ice does not sit at the bottom. Water becomes more dense as it gets colder and when it freezes, its density decreases. Thus ice will always float. If water froze and sunk, life as we know it wouldn't exist.
**This post was edited on Mar 30th 2021 at 10:48:57pm