• lolrightythen@lemmy.world
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      8 days ago

      I feel like I left it all on the field. I wasn’t even a dare devil, but I broke more than a few bones. Ribs, wrist, ankle, several fingers. Tearing ACLs is where I drew the line. Some stuff doesn’t heal.

      It’s still good to have a sense of what is possible if necessary.

  • prettybunnys@sh.itjust.works
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    9 days ago

    We jumped off buoys and navigation markers as a kid.

    Sure it was water below but under the water … the supports and ladders of the buoys, mangled barnacle mess.

    And the ospreys.

    Goddamn did an angry osprey make jumping off the buoy that much more exciting, a little bit of “and maybe we’ll get attacked by a raptor” excitement….

      • prettybunnys@sh.itjust.works
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        9 days ago

        Veeeeery few sharks in the bay I was jumping into.

        Osprey on the other hand will actively rip your face off for getting too close to their nest.

        • Comrade here forgetting that not only do sharks predate dinosaurs, but - unlike birds - have hardly changed.

          Orcas are still kings of the oceans, and it seems they’ve finally decided they’ve had enough of our shenanigans, so maybe we should be more worried about them that either of the others.

          • Trainguyrom@reddthat.com
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            8 days ago

            not only do sharks predate dinosaurs, but - unlike birds - have hardly changed.

            They at least lost their armor. Imagine a shark with one of these covering its head!

            • Oooh, what’s best about Dunkleosteus is that modern theory is that this was just their skull, and that they had skin over it:

              Less bizarre looking than earlier renditions, which made them look a bit like turtles, but still… bad ass!

              • Trainguyrom@reddthat.com
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                8 days ago

                modern theory is that this was just their skull, and that they had skin over it:

                I was curious about that! My recent trip to the field museum in Chicago indicated that they believed the armor to be external but it would make more sense for it to be beneath the skin if there’s not evidence to suggest otherwise

                Edit: Also turtles are fucking badass. You do not want to meet a snapping turtle on the Riverwalk!

                • There’s so much media representing Dunk with external armor, it’s going to take forever and cost a lot to clean everything up. AFAIK, the “internal” theory only became dominant recently, and I think it might have been because they found evidence of skin patterning in a recent fossil? I might be conflating that with the (also recent) Ankylosaurus find, which had spectacular preservation of skin patterns.

    • chuckleslord@lemmy.world
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      9 days ago

      Completely off-topic, but apparently in UK English they pronounce buoy like “boy”, which, like, phonetically is fine but it’s definitely wrong. Or feels wrong. "We jumped off boys. " Utter madness

  • Flummoxed@lemmy.today
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    9 days ago

    Maybe it is just the angle, but why are the kids jumping out those windows and not the ones that seem to be directly over the mattresses? I guess this shows my age: my first reaction was to ensure these kiddos were safe! It does look wicked fun!!

    • marcos@lemmy.world
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      9 days ago

      They aren’t falling straight down.

      Those windows seem easier (even safer) to climb than the others where they would have to support themselves on the frame.

        • marcos@lemmy.world
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          9 days ago

          You say that based on Doppler effect or you have more frames?

          He’s clearly facing a diagonal that will lead to the mattresses. People usually jump on the direction they are facing, but there isn’t enough information on the image to tell if he’s doing the things people do most of the time or if he’s laughing after jumping to his death in a very unusual position.

          • DannyBoy@sh.itjust.works
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            9 days ago

            I don’t know what’s going on haha but it looks to me like the kid is jumping beside the mattresses which is kinda funny.

      • Flummoxed@lemmy.today
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        9 days ago

        See? You are the one I want to have around when I’m doing these kind of things. You are completely right, those other windows aren’t as easy or safe! I just didn’t notice and would have fallen to my death with the sash most likely. Having smart friends who think more clearly than “yes, let me do something dangerous for fun!” is awesome and the reason I have to still alive.

    • rumba@lemmy.zip
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      8 days ago

      Maybe it is just the angle,

      I suspect they jumped from one more floor up and pushed off hard toward the landing zone. Ballsy maneuver either way, you slip wrong on that jump probably your last.

  • Llamatron@lemmy.world
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    9 days ago

    Well shit, 80s kid here and we kinda did this. We had a pile of old mattresses and cushions. The mattresses were the super cheap and crappy kind with no springs so were actually really good for landing on. The ground floor of our house was maybe 6ft higher than the back garden and we had a kinda small raised patio at the back door with steps down into the garden. We piled up the mattresses on the lawn, beyond the flower bed. And threw ourselves off the wall at the edge of the patio down onto the mattresses. Lots of fun.

    My siblings and I used those same mattresses to slide down our stairs, crashing into them at the bottom. That was fun too.

    I also remember finding these long smooth metal sheets somewhere and using them to make a slide down our garden steps. Then using a sledge sliding down it and crashing into the mattresses.

    I miss those days.

  • lipilee@feddit.nl
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    9 days ago

    slightly (or absolutely) unrelated story, but I remember we built cross tracks in the forest for ourselves and our crappy bikes (I’m talking early-mid 80s on the other side of the Iron Courtain; the best bike I had was a rusty Csepel BMX, then my father’s Sputnik race bike). once we decided fuck it why don’t we do the same in our own street (a mud/gravel street at that time), and took shovels and stuff and destroyed the street. when the first adult residents got home, they were very pissed for some reason and commandeered us to restore the street. I remember the feeling of betrayal / injustice to this day! :-D

  • Dem Bosain@midwest.social
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    9 days ago

    We used to jump off the roof into a snowbank. Then when the snow got deep enough we would just sled off the roof onto the snowbank.

  • aramis87@fedia.io
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    9 days ago

    Comment from an old reddit post:

    Ashfield Valley estate in Rochdale. It was completed in 1969 and while it was initially popular, like many housing estates at the time, it quickly declined and by the 1980s was a haven for drug users, glue sniffers and squatters as well as being home to a large number of families, OAP’s and single people. In January 1987, frozen water pipes cracked, flooding 15 of the 26 blocks. Many of the tenants were evacuated, with some having to sleep in a local church. 23 blocks were demolished in 1992.