This is a video of a waterfall in Hope, British Columbia that produces perfectly spherical ice balls, which “occurs when ice sheets break into smaller pieces and are repeatedly rounded by the constant pressure of a waterfall.” How about that! I wouldn’t be picking them up and tossing them around
This is a video of the Slow-Mo guys attempting to skip bullets across the water in an aquarium like stones across a pond. That’s cool. Maybe not as cool as my stone-skipping skills, but with the perfect rock I can get three or four bounces sometimes. Without the perfect rock
This is a video of a man who looks like he goes to a climbing gym very briefly wearing a water balloon for a hat, filmed in ultra slow motion. The way it conforms to his head but doesn’t pop, that’s wild. Watching the footage at regular speed you wouldn’t
This is a video of a crab man at what I assume is a swingers resort demonstrating the incredible power of refraction, with his body seemingly completely disconnected from his head in a curved glass (read: acrylic) walled pool. Physics! Still, as wild as this is, I imagine even crazier
This is a video of a ruptured pipe in the middle of the road (presumably exposed by this dump truck) showering a home’s driveway and cars with water and pieces of broken asphalt. That sucks. Well, for them. For me there’s little to no consequence, so what do I care?
This is a video of an aspiring waterbender experimenting with an inflatable tube in an above ground pool, managing to perfectly sync his jumping with the return of the wave against the sides of the pool. So satisfying. Well, as satisfying as a pasty shirtless man jumping up and down
This is a video of a professional barefoot waterskier (at least that’s what the video description says) performing a couple pushups while being towed behind a boat. Admittedly, pretty impressive, although how the person driving the boat didn’t pull a hard left turn in the middle of Aquaman’s workout clearly
This is a video from the Noboribetsu Marine Park in Japan of a seal that has a circular ring to swim through that’s above the waterline, which works on the same principle (atmospheric pressure) as those floating pond bubbles that fish can swim up into. Per Youtube commenter agerven on