That is a fair hypothesis. It could also have been mines set by aquatic drop bears though.
That is a fair hypothesis. It could also have been mines set by aquatic drop bears though.
Came here to post this, was not disappointed.
*Sea Shepherd *Japanese whaler *drifting while out of fuel
It could be, but the display of this exact boat at the Australian National Maritime Museum in Sydney has listed numerous attempts to beat this boat’s record. Every pilot has been killed in their attempt.
Commenting to say that I’ve taken my WRX upto 220kp/h on a straight country Australian road at night. As I was speeding along I narrowly missed a Kangaroo which was sitting on the side of the road as I drove by. It was so close, that my passenger could have reached out and slapped it across the face. Had I have hit…
I'm glad that someone else acknowledged this.
Let Mark Webber explain:
Can confirm, am Australian.
Everyone commenting here should move to Australia.
SS Commodores and HSV variants are super common. Doesn't make them any less awesome though.
That's kind of a prick of a thing to say, m8.
I used to live on one side of the Adelaide Street Circuit (within a suburban block) and my office at the time was literally no more than 50 metres away from the 90 degree right hander on Wakefield (the first long straight after the chicane from the start/finish line) St.
I'm super sad that I was made redundant at that…
It's a nice video with pretty pictures and (finally) decent sound design. I enjoyed it from start to finish.
Having said that...
It's just a shame that the Gymkhana series is just like a Saw series: The first three were great but after that they got repetitive.
There's a lot of wasted potential in this video. The fact…
Also, Barry Sheene's commentary is beautiful.
RIP Baz.
I came here to post this exact footage.
The one on the right is a Ford.
Except more deadly.
The claws on an adult Kangaroo's foot can easily disembowel a person.
I support this idea.
Have dropped a (relatively modern) Sony Betacam PDW 510 from the top of a camera case in the back of a station wagon onto a roadway. It had no obviously physical damage and was still completely functional.
That said, I've seen a man trip and break the lens mounting bracket and take that camera out…
As a professional news cameraman, this sight is all too common in the tropical north of Aus. One particular event I filmed, a woman tried to cross a flooded creek in a well set up Nissan Patrol, was swept away and drowned. When I arrived on the scene, I was not allowed to film because the vehicle was completely…