Bursa'da bir vatandaş, ölmek üzereyken zeytinyağıyla iyileştirdiği kazla birlikte yaşıyor.
"Komşum 'kesip köpeğe yedirin' diyerek vermişti. Kıyamadım. 10 yıl oldu."
When you graduate from the US Air Force, you can’t leave formation until a family member taps you out. This wife brought their baby daughter so she could touch her dad and set him free 🥹❤️
There was a Royal Navy captain in WW2 whose real name was Johnnie Walker.
In 1939 the Navy had given up on him. Passed over for promotion, marked down by his own superiors, quietly being pushed toward early retirement. His career was a dead end.
Then the Atlantic turned into a graveyard. German U-boats were sinking Allied ships faster than they could be built, sailors were drowning in the thousands, and Britain was months from being starved into surrender. Suddenly the Navy remembered the one man who had spent years obsessing over exactly how to kill a submarine.
They finally gave him a ship. He became the deadliest U-boat hunter who has ever lived.
He didn't wait for U-boats to attack. He invented tactics to go get them. His "creeping attack" had one ship silently guide another over the target so the submarine crew couldn't hear death coming until the depth charges were already sinking toward them.
When he charged into battle he blasted "A-Hunting We Will Go" over the loudspeakers. He revived "General Chase," an attack signal so old it hadn't been flown since Nelson's day. And when depth charges weren't enough, he simply drove his ship straight over a surfaced U-boat and rammed it under.
His group once sank 6 U-boats in a single patrol. He helped clear the English Channel so the entire D-Day invasion fleet could cross safely. He was decorated four times, one of the most honored officers in the Royal Navy.
And he carried all of it while broken with grief. In 1943 his own son, a young submariner, was killed when his sub was lost in the Mediterranean. Walker got the news and went straight back to sea to keep hunting.
In the end the war didn't kill him. The work did. Years of standing on that bridge in every storm, refusing to rest, burned him out completely. He collapsed from a stroke and died at 48. The doctors called it exhaustion.
They carried his coffin through the streets of Liverpool while a thousand people stood in silence. Then a warship took him out past the harbor and buried him in the same Atlantic he had spent his life defending.
Uncounted thousands of sailors made it home because of him. His statue still stands on the Liverpool waterfront today, facing the sea, watching for submarines that will never come again.
His name was Johnnie Walker. Don't ever forget it.
Cuando los camellos encuentran agua, pueden beber entre 100 y 150 litros en tan solo 10 a 13 minutos. Esta increíble capacidad les permite rehidratarse rápidamente para soportar hasta 10 días sin beber en climas desérticos extremos
Tarlada saatler süren balya toplama işini tamamen değiştiren o dahi mekanizma! 🚜🌾
Balya makinesinin arkasındaki bu düzenek, samanları tek tek bırakmak yerine otomatik olarak 8'li gruplar halinde istifliyor. İşleri 8 kat hızlandıran bu mühendislik harikasını mutlaka izleyin! 👇
Matt Damon says he felt awful after realizing he was the only actor letting the wardrobe team carry his armor on “The Odyssey”
“The first day we were in Greece, we were shooting up in a cave.”
“It was about a 20, 25-minute hike.”
“I got to the top.”
“And then I saw the guy handling my wardrobe, Corey, coming up the hill carrying my armor.”
“I felt awful.”
“Then all the guys who play my crew came up.”
“They were all wearing their armor so that the wardrobe people don’t have to carry it.”
“I apologized profusely to Corey.”
“I was like, ‘That will never happen again.’”
Just watched the most unhinged DIY masterpiece video.
Some guy built a jet turbine blower, computer controlled, auto-start, and it throws out 52 pounds of thrust. That’s basically a handheld jet engine🤯
Made for de-icing plane wings but also obliterates leaves, snow, ice, and probably your entire yard if you let it rip.
Just listen to that whistle as it powers up.
This man is a legend.
The Alpine Loop is a rugged 4x4 road in Colorado’s San Juan Mountains. Climb to 12,800 feet, explore old mines and ghost towns, wildflowers and abundant wildlife. With no services or cell signal, it’s a pure backcountry adventure.
Photo by @BLMNational