RedDenver
New member
NTSB came and got stuff from the backyard of someone I know a couple blocks away. It's crazy.Holy crap, glad no one was hurt.
NTSB came and got stuff from the backyard of someone I know a couple blocks away. It's crazy.Holy crap, glad no one was hurt.
Yes. Ballistic missile subs stay submerged for about 2-3 months at a time, but someone else will have to comment on specifics since I was on a fast attack sub. I did a bunch of underways that were 1 month or less submerged and a handful that were 3 months or less submerged. We did have times where we surfaced and got out on the deck (called a steel beach or swim call depending if we were allowed to get in the water), but those were when we weren't on mission. I swam in both the Indian and Arctic Oceans on swim calls, so I have the claim to fame that I've swum in all 4 of the world's oceans. (Well, I "swam" in the Arctic as in I jumped in and got out as fast as humanly possible.)@RedDenver couldn't think of a better place to ask this but saw your chat about submarines and not seeing sunlight for months...
Is that true? Meaning, you would stay submerged for months at a time without ever being able to open up the hatch and get outside for a bit?
That's still really impressive (to me at least). I'm not overly claustrophobic but I would've probably been a little uncomfortable... constantly being aware that I'm surrounded by a compressing trillions of gallons of water, potentially hundreds of feet deep, all the time.Yes. Ballistic missile subs stay submerged for about 2-3 months at a time, but someone else will have to comment on specifics since I was on a fast attack sub. I did a bunch of underways that were 1 month or less submerged and a handful that were 3 months or less submerged. We did have times where we surfaced and got out on the deck (called a steel beach or swim call depending if we were allowed to get in the water), but those were when we weren't on mission. I swam in both the Indian and Arctic Oceans on swim calls, so I have the claim to fame that I've swum in all 4 of the world's oceans. (Well, I "swam" in the Arctic as in I jumped in and got out as fast as humanly possible.)
Yes. Ballistic missile subs stay submerged for about 2-3 months at a time, but someone else will have to comment on specifics since I was on a fast attack sub. I did a bunch of underways that were 1 month or less submerged and a handful that were 3 months or less submerged. We did have times where we surfaced and got out on the deck (called a steel beach or swim call depending if we were allowed to get in the water), but those were when we weren't on mission. I swam in both the Indian and Arctic Oceans on swim calls, so I have the claim to fame that I've swum in all 4 of the world's oceans. (Well, I "swam" in the Arctic as in I jumped in and got out as fast as humanly possible.)
Hahaha!I jumped in the water runoff of a glacier in Alaska, and immediately jumped out. Worst. Shrinkage. Evar.
Probably good that I never knew that until now.@RedDenver @Cdog923
I have a perhaps irrational fear of testicular torsion (which can sometimes happen when the area around the groin rapidly changes temperature, particularly warm to cold) and therefore will never jump in freezing cold water.