There really needs to be more scary movies that take place in Antarctica.
@justinnewman13 Жыл бұрын
For real. The Thing was such a great idea, because in a remote place like that no one is coming to help
@ajrestivo Жыл бұрын
that octopus episode of the twilight zone was pretty good
@uncletiggermclaren7592 Жыл бұрын
The Thing from 1982 is the scariest movie that has ever been made. I watched it the week it was released, and I regretted that SO MUCH, then I made a point of never seeing it again. In 2018, I had my back to a nephew who was using his computer, when he played the theme music/sounds, which I had heard ONCE then not again for 36 years, and within a few seconds and BEFORE I understood what I was hearing, I was in a cold sweat, and I was deeply, shockingly agitated, not frightened, but apprehensive to the point that I was unable to reason accurately.@@justinnewman13
@JoeZUGOOLA Жыл бұрын
@@ajrestivothat sounds good
@JoeZUGOOLA Жыл бұрын
Last few levels of tombraider 3.. thank me later
@sarahriley898911 ай бұрын
Seeing everyone's solidified breath 💨🧊
@XSemperIdem511 ай бұрын
I wonder if sneezes travel just as far or not so far 🤔 I now need a science experiment.
@lorinbridges669911 ай бұрын
Everyone's garlicky lunch and snotty sneeze/germy cough (if there were germs) is preserved as your interior decoration
@sethmorgan669311 ай бұрын
Yes. Sometimes when ya’ get really lonely you go down there and eat a handful and it’s almost like being with actual people. I guess… I mean… what I’m saying is you could put it in your mouth and think- “Wow- this is what the lungs of some random scientist or engineer from the early 90’s must taste like.” and it helps.
@KindDmoN11 ай бұрын
You can make last years dinner flavored shaved iced using this
@christopherdawson754311 ай бұрын
All the new covid variants about to thaw into reality one day.
@Radonatos Жыл бұрын
"And here in the back we have some frost crystals that were exhaled by Amundsen himself."
@SecretSquirrelFun11 ай бұрын
I was thinking about this too 🤣🤣
@Carpedog220611 ай бұрын
Except he was never there.
@AskTorin11 ай бұрын
Best comment
@BaggyPop11 ай бұрын
@@Carpedog2206party pooper, fun police, pretentious guy
@MrOneNye11 ай бұрын
Decades of hot air lol
@Utogaro10 ай бұрын
As a sailor, I have this urge to sweep the walls.
@simonandreyevdestiny29 ай бұрын
Clean floors win wars ;)
@greazymcgeezy9 ай бұрын
Intestinal?
@krashd8 ай бұрын
"Sweep the leg!"
@GobbleTheRook11 ай бұрын
Dudes just casually hanging out at Hoth
@j__Shaww11 ай бұрын
You said that and i heard the OG Battlefront 2 “Bleep-Bleep-Bloop” loading noise in my head😂
@joshuagreifenstein98711 ай бұрын
Underrated comment 😢
@kcrtxbw.434911 ай бұрын
-50 fucking degrees. Thats like the same distance from body temp as boiling water, just in the other direction. What an experience.
@odoylerules450311 ай бұрын
the UFOs are in the next building
@andrewvalenzuela438311 ай бұрын
Makes sense, closer walls, plus you said fuel arch. Is their any water in that fuel? Like at all.
@NegativeProcess11 ай бұрын
This is what youtube is for. This was awesome
@1776foreverfollowed11 ай бұрын
It's what it was originally about when it did start.
@ianmorris492211 ай бұрын
Agreed NP!
@iammichaeldavis10 ай бұрын
@DioscuriDualitysave for KZbin commenters, of course
@iammichaeldavis10 ай бұрын
@DioscuriDuality Q.E.D.
@saturationstation144610 ай бұрын
@@1776foreverfollowed youtube wasnt meant to have high quality long form content. was supposed to be a proto tiktok that allowed long form content. but luckily enough people with brains between their ears put substance on this website and gave us a way to not lose brain cells when we use it. but yeah, the first video on here, was just a dude at a zoo, doing nothing interesting and in a quality that would make a gen z kid complain and refuse to watch it because there's not enough pixels or frames per second.
@BobC5911 ай бұрын
The mere concept of living in Antarctica is mind-blowing to me.
@Berstich10 ай бұрын
You can apply for a short term working experience.
@BobC5910 ай бұрын
No pun intended @@Berstich, but... cool!
@dougb630110 ай бұрын
So are the flat earthers..
@saintsinningsword10 ай бұрын
@@BerstichWas thinking about that, but might still need a trade degree in HVAC just to be a custodian.
@jessieyork450810 ай бұрын
Can't imagine how people were able to build anything there.
@chandlerc460610 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing. It's amazing that you have capability to communicate from there.
@vanpeltcollamer60799 ай бұрын
Probably starlink
@krashd8 ай бұрын
@@vanpeltcollamer6079 They use the Iridium array of satellites which is a Starlink-ish network of satellites that specifically targets the most remote regions of the planet so that people far from civilisation can get help via satellite phone. There's around 90 Iridium satellites and the latest ones can use VoIP (internet calling) just like any phone or computer.
@lorihamblin-longoria241711 ай бұрын
Being from Alaska, I love the hoar frost on the trees in the dead of winter. It’s just beautiful.
@amythystmoon86410 ай бұрын
My uncle lives in Alaska I can’t wait to go visit someday. My mom went up there for her honeymoon and the pictures were absolutely gorgeous mind she went in the summertime. I want to go in the winter lol I want to go skiing.
@justiceLaw000010 ай бұрын
Yes!!! I don’t live in Alaska but I’ve seen plenty of photos and its breathtaking, for you probably literally. 😊
@mackennaregoord473810 ай бұрын
I live in Alaska, and the trees have hoar frost on them right now, and it’s so pretty. Some of the trees look like weeping willows because the branches are so weighed down they droop.
@samholdsworth42010 ай бұрын
Are you talking about the frost on your vagina?!
@eMegMBea10 ай бұрын
@@amythystmoon864 If you go for the landscape, don't bother with Fairbanks - it's nothing special, not much to do there. Once you get south of Denali it's a little better. Once you get south of Anchorage - THAT'S where you find the BEAUTY! I went from Fairbanks down to Seward and Whittier. Anchorage is pretty, with the Alaskan range on one side of the city, but when I started the drive south out of Anchorage - my jaw dropped! I think my jaw dropped basically the entire 2 days on the Kenai Peninsula. I went in the spring though.
@akbychoice11 ай бұрын
Hoar frost is a major contributor to moisture in fuel tanks too.
@reedy_961911 ай бұрын
Really should be called whore frost then. Sounds like a pain.
@YouTubeBlowsDaily11 ай бұрын
@@reedy_9619bum bum tiss
@darkerdaemon779411 ай бұрын
@@reedy_9619 Some might argue whores give pleasure, though... That's only if you aren't related to them in some way.
@internziko11 ай бұрын
@@reedy_9619 "Bitch Frost" Lol
@anyascelticcreations8 ай бұрын
That's why you should always keep your tank as full as possible in the winter. Less air space in the gas tank = less frost inside. Less frost in the gas tank = less chance of frost getting into the fuel lines. Or something like that. I learned about that when I lived in Wisconsin. And that was a long time ago.
@earlmerrick766511 ай бұрын
As a northern Canada trucker I’d like to share that Hoars frost collects in the extreme cold on the mirrors and Antennas of trucks sometimes in the extreme cold and creates an extreme noise between a whistle and a growl that is absolutely unsettling, until I realized what it was I had stopped my truck several times to locate the problem that was creating this noise. It sounded like a transmission piling up or the engine on its way out. Not everyone in the north is aware of it but any old trucker knows of it and has experienced this.
@CtrlAltRetreat11 ай бұрын
How fast does it form? Is it fast enough to block the mirror visibility while you're driving?
@maplefoxxo11 ай бұрын
Now I want a horror game where you're a trucker or something along those lines in extreme temperature... And it just gets colder and more and more desolate
@earlmerrick766511 ай бұрын
@@CtrlAltRetreat it builds slowly usually just on extremities like mirrors and antennass.usually only in extreme cold.
@Albert4H11 ай бұрын
@@maplefoxxo That's the game of trucking in Northern Canada.
@Levi-wk2hg11 ай бұрын
It happens anywhere there's moist air and cold temps.
@Tim-is-short10 ай бұрын
I lived in a trailer in northern Canada, and this would happen on the windows and door hinges when the power went out. You have to have a wood stove as a backup just in case. A power outage is literally a death sentence up there.
@bludaizee2411 ай бұрын
I live in Northern Alberta. We also get hoar frost during the more severe cold snaps. On a clear cold sunny day, with a deep blue cloudless sky. When all the trees are brilliant sparkling white, it's so beautiful!
@pro-socialsociopath76911 ай бұрын
I love it when it gets so cold the ice completely sticks to the trees
@deanlollis917711 ай бұрын
Anything north of Tennessee is too cold for me. Brrŕrrr
@desertsavagery11 ай бұрын
That sounds incredible, I need to add that to one of my eventual travel plans.
@grahamvaneck890611 ай бұрын
I was just coming to say that; those mornings of high humidity and deep cold, every branch and twig of every tree is covered with sparkly white crystals glittering in the sun. Super pretty. Not sure where you're from but I'm from just north of Edmonton
@XSemperIdem511 ай бұрын
That sounds beautiful.
@lauraschaffer422611 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing this. Something I will never see firsthand.
@eetoved175811 ай бұрын
Something I won't see either. Please God.
@Mike-rm1lb11 ай бұрын
-40F/C on the thermometer in the evening visiting my grandmother in Abitibi Québec 50 years ago. In 2023 you have to go to the ends of the earth to find weather like this.
11 ай бұрын
You can do it a cold winter day in Sweden too. Doesn't have to go there.
@Flesh_Wizard11 ай бұрын
*frosthand
@Rozdw10 ай бұрын
I love how the music being played here is of an uplifting vibe like this is one of the world’s wonders, but in reality it’s just a really cold, air tight room underneath a frozen hellscape
@mattjack398310 ай бұрын
He didn't say that it was air tight. And it doesn't need to be air tight for hoar frost to form anywhere. Hoar frost can form outside on trees. Air tight doesn't even have anything to do with it. It forms when humidity is introducd to environments where it's extremely cold and extremely arid.
@KarinaSmith-ji4pn10 ай бұрын
@@mattjack3983 he meant the grim sad atmosphere, not the formation of the hoarfrost
@margiemarg0910 ай бұрын
Well, aren't you just a ray of sunshine! Someone I would want to do 9 months of research with, I'm sure. 😐🙄
@racecarrik10 ай бұрын
@@KarinaSmith-ji4pn He meant the atmosphere is air tight? That makes even less sense lol
@NomadUrpagi10 ай бұрын
FROZEN hellscape? Counterintuitive.
@teaklastein930810 ай бұрын
Wow. Reminds me of what a cave would look like but in a frozen way. Also, I'm super excited to see anything coming from the poles. I wish I could see more man. Thanks for the video. Truly mesmerising man. Super sweet!
@grandmasteryoda260511 ай бұрын
Gonna have to call an ice dragon's breath inside of a cavern "hoarfrost" now
@genericuser98411 ай бұрын
**childish dnd player noises**
@Fire-Queen11 ай бұрын
@@genericuser984the only thing childish, is your comment. D&D is very cool and entertaining, that is; when you can find a party that's stable and comes to play together on a regular schedule.
@mirjanbouma11 ай бұрын
@@Fire-Queendon't bother explaining it to them, they don't know what friends are.
@iHazRayGunz11 ай бұрын
Never played it, but I can tell you, they have more friends than you. & I’d rather be around them
@grandmasteryoda260511 ай бұрын
@@genericuser984 you know nobody cares right?
@loganl754710 ай бұрын
We have hoar frost that sticks to the trees in Canada, looks absolutely spectacular.
@aarongrimes649010 ай бұрын
FUCK the winter in Canada I just ate shit an hour ago biking home from work up a hill Because of a bunch of ice under the snow, after eating shit 2 times before that trying to turn
@kayceetaylor215110 ай бұрын
It's the most beautiful outdoors aspect of a Midwest January Sunday morning at 4 a.m. when you're the first person who got up to shovel the driveway so you can make it to Church by 9 o'clock. The only serene memories of living with my parents, 'way back.
@aliciacantin799310 ай бұрын
@@aarongrimes6490 Lol we'll definitely fuck BIKING in Canadian winter 😂😂😂
@loganl754710 ай бұрын
@@aarongrimes6490 ouch, but tbf, it was -51c day before yesterday, we weren't biking anywhere.
@Catterjeeo10 ай бұрын
Who did the ice sleep with?
@nazaxprime11 ай бұрын
If you haven't seen it under a microscope, you're missing out. It does some really interesting things, very different from snow crystal formations.
@heroinmom15311 ай бұрын
It looks like hoars
@nazaxprime11 ай бұрын
@@heroinmom153 😅
@evilsharkey895411 ай бұрын
@@heroinmom153Your mom looks like hoars.
@RaymondVanRiper-v5q10 ай бұрын
I was in Fairbanks Alaska when I was nine years old, I miss heard what this kind of processes that developed on trees was named. I enjoyed knocking it off the limbs. You can also see it get on the electrical wires too. I thought they were saying bore frost instead of hoar frost. Lol I kept that name until I was in my 20s! When I actually looked it up.
@brianbertram419811 ай бұрын
We need a lot more content online like this instead of challenges to hurt people
@EmpressLizard8110 ай бұрын
It's crazy that all those crystals are made of people's breath... and probably a few sneezes.😅
@dwbteehee10 ай бұрын
And farts
@lonetrader110 ай бұрын
TONS OF FARTS.....
@roberttanguay853210 ай бұрын
Add in a fart or two and gotten all the bases covered 😂😂😂
@thedutchman879310 ай бұрын
Queefs
@Merluch10 ай бұрын
Could you even sneeze? Like there are no plants, the base is so isolated there is no moisture in the air, and the medical checks prevent you from even getting colds!
@bethcushway45811 ай бұрын
We used to get beautiful hoar frosts in the Winter when I was a kid. I was absolutely fascinated by the crystal patterns they were so stunning. I havent seen a hoar frost for decades.
@mrstupiduniverse731c10 ай бұрын
Hmm and where is that? Cuz that would be almost impossible, even places that see a 30 year drought see rain at the very least 5 times a year.
@SuperYoshiInvasion10 ай бұрын
@@mrstupiduniverse731ccome to the middle of Canada. If you're in the prairies and go outside early on a cold winter day there will be hoar frost all over the trees
@NotQuiteSoThinLizzie64110 ай бұрын
Then try living where it actually gets Winter instead of Florida! We get it every single year! It’s not like a total eclipse of the sun, alright! Just move to where it happens!
@MrFatzo2410 ай бұрын
people getting mad at you for seeing hoar frost and then not seeing hoar frost is wild
@barbarasmith571410 ай бұрын
It’s like thousands of crystals falling when you brush you hand over them,it’s really cool.
@oriontikkit11 ай бұрын
This would make a great horror game map
@Gryphonzwing11 ай бұрын
Horror frost. 😂
@Elessar1a11 ай бұрын
@@Gryphonzwing freezer burn
@gooseofspooks250011 ай бұрын
@@Gryphonzwing Hoar-ror
@amyfreeze180810 ай бұрын
I LOVE hoar frost. Trees become magical!
@xntrikk918910 ай бұрын
I’ve experienced a few frosty hoars in my day as well
@_--____--______--___10 ай бұрын
@@xntrikk9189that's one way to lose your job at the morgue..
@BigUpsMandem11 ай бұрын
Last shot is like walking through a geode, yall are extremely lucky to experience that. Im glad you amazing people get to experince such beautiful things, like gifts from mother nature to say thank you for your work🙏
@Froezone10 ай бұрын
man i’d love to live somewhere like this and experience the snow and the silence
@MrVOODOO7610 ай бұрын
I have the same problem in my freezer. In America. In the summer.
@lisetta505210 ай бұрын
😂😂😂
@leadlime2910 ай бұрын
that music at the end paired with the progression of the crystals really sets a mood
@SHUT-UP_MEG10 ай бұрын
🌿🌿🌿🌿🍄🍄🍄🍄🌈🌈🌈
@adawg303210 ай бұрын
@@SHUT-UP_MEG facts
@steve-049310 ай бұрын
Yh,I really wanna hear it playing for a while,as I'm either driving, or hell,just being passenger lol,and letting that play,makes me contemplate, feel disconnected (that's not WHAT I want,keep in mind,but music like this proves to me how disconnected I am,we are etc,sad)...but yet I love hearing it,American Beauty really changes u when u watch/hear a story a simple plastic bag blowing in the wind haha!!and no,idc about the fucking,cheating,lying etc etc etc...I care about 2 or 3 phrases from that movie,and I love it when Kevin has to yell at narcissistic dumb ass wife,and her grip on physical things.."ITS JUST STUFF"... Good journey folks 😁✌️🍻🤟
@mevslife308010 ай бұрын
what is the name of the sound track actually
@steve-049310 ай бұрын
@@mevslife3080 id like to know too lol..didn't see anything for description,also,the last 2-3 Small Town Monsters videes has had some Awesome-tacular background music ,on drone shots and just showing beautiful scenery!!and the background music,chefs kiss!!check em out,even if ur not into the subject lol, the music is what ur after!!enjoy 😁✌️🍻🤘
@bobbygetsbanned6049 Жыл бұрын
Needs a self defrosting freezer mod.
@savagesarethebest7251 Жыл бұрын
Those are bad for the food it stores.. Especially near the walls..
@OnlyAchievingHere11 ай бұрын
@@savagesarethebest7251pretty much every freezer you can buy is self-defrosting now
@Bolt99K11 ай бұрын
A lot of people dont know that “defrosting” your freezer, is just the freezer warming up for a few minutes to melt the ice. Considering theyre in Antarctica, its not like they can just turn the cold off lol
@SlickRickTPB11 ай бұрын
If only they had someway to magically warm the inside of the room@@Bolt99K
@rocketman647811 ай бұрын
@Bolt99K and it's not really even the freezer itself that's heating up, it's just a small element running across the bottom of the evap. Unless the defrost timer, or control board goes out, the temp inside the freezer isn't going to significantly raise enough to be able to notice. However, I😅 was already wondering if they have to periodically have a crew to remove the frozen condensation off the walls, either due to it eventually closing in too much, or the weight it may be exerting on the structure. 🤷🏽 I mean, I know it's under how much snow already? so there's all that weight pushing on it, but I imagine if left to its own, the ice would build up enough to cause the structure to collapse, the snow pushing down and the ice pulling down. Sooner or later, I'd be coming down.
@ManSurRoMan10 ай бұрын
"Always a pleasant learning experience with You Joe!"
@kittykitty020410 ай бұрын
My first time experiencing hoarfrost was in Canada, driving between Calgary and Drumheller. It looks like a true winter wonderland! All the trees were covered in it. It looked like a painting.
@kayceetaylor215110 ай бұрын
Norman Rockwell- or Terry Redlin-type imagery!❤❤❤
@greenarrow52179 ай бұрын
❤😊
@keithallpress988511 ай бұрын
There is more moisture brought in whenever the doors are open. The big crystals grow because there is less air disturbance at the back.
@zazenwind11 ай бұрын
Fucking thank you. I was looking for an explanation.
@jacoblape11 ай бұрын
It's a smaller room and heat melts the ice and it refreezes as more moisture builds up having a compound effect
@quietone74811 ай бұрын
My friend Pete Rizzo just started a 15-month stint down there and he is finding all these crazy things to share with us, his friends, as well.
@joanodaly446411 ай бұрын
Share with us too!!:)
@colebangsund11 ай бұрын
Got any cool stories ?
@mayakuduwudu10 ай бұрын
Where I live it can pretty close to that temperature in winter while -17/-20 is frequent. There so many similar ice formations in storages, in caves (though we have few, mostly old mines). In the mines there are even stalactite-like formations made of ice. Winter and the cold is amazing and truly marvellous:)
@fuzzythoughts802011 ай бұрын
You get that kind of cold in Saskatchewan sometimes, and it's truly another level of cold. Once you get used to that kinda cold, -20 C weather feels like a beautiful day for yardwork.
@danifoxx746911 ай бұрын
I’m in Saskatchewan Canada and our winter are so dry so the slightest bit of moisture in the air causes ton of this stuff! Right now every blade of grass in our yard has a layer, every tree branch and it’s one of the prettiest parts of winter! Everything is so sparkly and fluffy looking!
@1g5efj7t11 ай бұрын
Was coming to say the same!!
@kaield476311 ай бұрын
Sask has brutal winters
@luke895211 ай бұрын
Sasky gang! It looks like we might be having a mild winter this year.
@5457kj11 ай бұрын
We have hoar frost in Ontario. It’s beautiful when the sun shines on it
@joetheperformer10 ай бұрын
This guy needs to stream his regular days. I’d watch it!
@MouthyMama37611 ай бұрын
We get hoar frost in our cold cellar of my 1937 home in the Cincinnati area. It's a very unique phenomenon & only happens when it's bitterly cold, but it is exquisitely beautiful - especially if you look at the individual crystals. Weirdly, it acts as insulation - the floor of the rooms above it are the warmest in the house and they're the only ones that have no HVAC ductwork running through them or around them.
@isjjcjw11 ай бұрын
Ice is a phenomenal insulator.
@rupe5311 ай бұрын
@@isjjcjw this is really more like snow, with lots of air space to do the insulating.
@12yearssober11 ай бұрын
Cincinnati 😂
@springpanda939311 ай бұрын
Its a great city.@@12yearssober
@austingardiner688011 ай бұрын
It's in the trees in Saskatchewan nearly every November. A week of Hunting a forest that's caked in hoar frost is one of the few joys I have in life that the current political class of leftists hasn't been successful in ruining or taking away from me.
@cl538-t1w11 ай бұрын
For the record, you're breathing out water vapor no matter how cold and dry your environment is.
@DavidKenny6411 ай бұрын
You nailed it! I wanted to say the same thing, but saw that you beat me to it.
@ollitiilimaki166711 ай бұрын
Excactly
@marthahawkinson-michau961111 ай бұрын
Yeah. It’s less obvious when it’s warm enough for your breath to not turn into clouds immediately. Not seeing something happening does not mean it isn’t happening.
@pjj.564911 ай бұрын
The key is he's in an enclosed space and he's explaining what happens when the water vapor has nowhere to go.
@whodahellru812411 ай бұрын
I wonder if you can see a very wet fart? I mean that has got to have some humidity in it. 🤔
@AlaskaKatt11 ай бұрын
Alaskan fisherwomen here, hoar frosts can build up the most in the front of the boat (bow) and then fall off into the water and creates a massive booming noise and all I can say.. those moments make me feel like I have minutes until I’m floating with the ice chunks..
@@AlaskaKatt ah right on I didn’t know salt water did that but idk much about boats tbh
@yanceyboyz11 ай бұрын
Not all sea water had the same salt levels. Hence the ice sheets form in Arctic and Antarctic, right in top of the water.
@yoeyyoey893711 ай бұрын
@@yanceyboyz that’s Interesting idk why I assumed it was mostly homogeneous
@phaedrabacker200410 ай бұрын
I'm glad you cleared up the hoar issue.😊
@marydavis813211 ай бұрын
INCREDIBLY GORGEOUS,THANX FOR SHARING THE BEAUTY AND WONDER.
@amandarose439911 ай бұрын
My mom gets hoar frost on her farm in Minnesota. Just beautiful.
@Adam-hp5hj11 ай бұрын
Yeah she does
@devonbradbury207411 ай бұрын
where my mother IS hoar frost.
@blitheringrando141011 ай бұрын
I had a buddy back in school, pretty sure his mom had whore frost 😂
@StarkIller-df7gw11 ай бұрын
@@blitheringrando1410 😂😂😂Yes she did!😉😂
@zackmano11 ай бұрын
😂😂😂 teeing one up for the crowd lol
@AceofTunes11 ай бұрын
I grew up where hoar frost occurs naturally outside, the other morning, because there was a heavy fog followed by freezing temperatures, the fog condensed on all of the surfaces and turned into hoar frost. It's unbelievably pretty the way it coats the trees
@MichaelHartzel10 ай бұрын
I’m in my little camper… And now I know what to call the frost on the inside walls my camper during this winter freeze. Thank you.
@viennperidot111910 ай бұрын
Moving to North America from Coastal Otago and having dry winters and not seeing hoarfrost has broken my brain for 5 years straight
@Wintercourse11 ай бұрын
As an Alaskan I am very biased when it comes to winter. I love it, it's beautiful, it's fun, it's empty, it's void, it reminds me of a better time and then when it's summer everything I don't enjoy begins to happen.
@Novashadow11511 ай бұрын
Feel it, grew up around Kenai, ice is just so calming
@kylematlock749911 ай бұрын
As a Californian, I feel the same way.
@towcat11 ай бұрын
I despise summer. It's hot and humid and uncomfortable. Too much sun, hard to work in. The guys in the shop can huddle against the heater in their sweatshirts. I'll gladly be outside in the cold. Good to work in
@Trauma28411 ай бұрын
@@towcat facts
@ptsdjoe495610 ай бұрын
Do you know what brand of jacket he's wearing? I can't read it, but thought you might know. I really want one!! Please let me know if you're familiar with these jackets or if they are specially made for the crew that he belongs to in Antarctica.
@PhoenixTide6910 ай бұрын
Hoar frost all the time in Canada. Looks awesome on the trees and chain link fences
@patches_10 ай бұрын
Same here in Finland.
@Valease-bc9ts10 ай бұрын
You just made it fun to learn something I never thought about
@vexusmalius938111 ай бұрын
Being at the south pole, I'm sure you've heard of Siple Station. The station, Mt. Siple, and Siple island were named after my grandfather Paul A. Siple, who helped develop the first calculation for wind chill. He was also the inaugural scientific leader at the Amundsen Scott station in 1956.
@bluefirefoxowo11 ай бұрын
Yo can you link me a document or a wiki page so I can look into this
@riccardo508911 ай бұрын
@bluefirefox1987 pretty sure with the info and names Google will gave something
@skinnybuddha898811 ай бұрын
@@riccardo5089stuff like that bugs me so much, like thats a super obvious easy Google search
@lilv72811 ай бұрын
That's super cool!
@oeliamoya979611 ай бұрын
Such a random comment. Does yhis guy go around looking for KZbin videos about the poles and copy paste this fact to every video?
@laurahess341710 ай бұрын
It would look cool to stick different colored little LED lights throughout the hoar frost.
@eskimoprime0911 ай бұрын
It's crazy to think you brought all that water into that chamber through your lungs...
@CharlesNorris-fv7ke10 ай бұрын
You can still see his breath after he walks away, thats awesome.
@Ghost3lite2111 ай бұрын
I love our existence..how could you ask for something more complex yet so simply beautiful. Unimaginable. Physics was always my favorite study and things like this are why. 👌
@redline191611 ай бұрын
If I ever get a job out there, I'm just going to keep spelling it "Whore frost."
@sumduma5511 ай бұрын
Might as well. Imagine all the bad breath and farts frozen to those walls. Imagine getting it on your shoes and tracking it back inside only to eventually melt and be enjoyed all over again. Now imagine where the term hoar frost originated from.
@bruceh418011 ай бұрын
Get back to work -Pimpfrost
@shy_dodecahedron Жыл бұрын
This is the reason to become a scientist to touch the limits of our understanding.
@teebob2111 ай бұрын
There isn't anything happening here that isn't well understood.
@teebob2111 ай бұрын
@@cyancyborg1477 Which part of this video was not well-understood? The fact that exhalations contain water vapor, or that hoarfrost forms via the process of deposition, in which a gas goes directly to a solid. At Antarctic temperatures, the carrying capacity of water in air is nearly zero, so there is extremely low humidity in the ambient air. If a person managed to graduate high school and didn't understand everything that happened in this video, they failed to learn some absolute basic facts about the world in which they live.
@daleburnfart684511 ай бұрын
Or manipulate the science to the liking of whoever is funding you to do it!
@JordanEmede_37611 ай бұрын
Antarctica is not the limit, it's further and less known. Laugh it off or research it yourself, from a critical thinkers perspective theres things we don't understand. Starting with he firmament.
@norbertnagy551411 ай бұрын
@@JordanEmede_376sir
@acid_milk10 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for sharing this!
@Advoc8te4Truth10 ай бұрын
"Hoar frost, not the other kind" ❤😂 classic. I have to admit this guy edited this short video really well 😮
@spudthepug10 ай бұрын
Makes me wonder if you can make the other kind…
@SwapPartLLC10 ай бұрын
I mean, if she's got that wet wet, then it could be the other kind.😂
@scribblecrumb11 ай бұрын
yeah i love hoarfrost, it's always the prettiest thing to wake up to. the world covered in crystals and sparkling
@LadyPallas11 ай бұрын
Antarctica is so beautiful it is a dream of mine to spend some time there. It really looks magical from what I’ve seen in photos and videos I can’t even imagine how magnificent it is in real life.
@danielsiegel861910 ай бұрын
Go to North Dakota, it gets down to -60 below
@poindextertunes10 ай бұрын
good luck. you’re spending at least 5k to go there
@Papatabb6910 ай бұрын
I think you underestimate how little there is to do or see there
@Dgoshy10 ай бұрын
@@danielsiegel8619hahaha
@feeberizer8 ай бұрын
I've seen hoar frost many times in the past, but the crystals in the fuel arch are A-maz-ing! 🥶 ❄️
@0kittykruger011 ай бұрын
I live in one of the colder regions of Canada, and I always love when we get a sudden dip in temperature (from temperatures when water vapor will stick around in the air to temperatures it will not) enough to bring out the hoarfrost. If you think it looks cool on metal pipes and indoor tunnels, you should see how it looks when every branch or every needle on a tree is covered in it. A little less fun when the air's so cold it hurts to breathe and you have to scrape the hoarfrost off of your car, but still, at least it's really pretty. :D
@hrodga11 ай бұрын
Ice fog and a light breeze was always conflicting.. on the one hand, it was really pretty, but on the other, it was like being sandblasted at -40 degrees.
@batintheattic729311 ай бұрын
I've seen it before. It's magical. Mind, I've also been in frozen blue/green fog at the top of a hill. I'm still doubting my own senses about that one.
@SeanMahoneyfitnessandart11 ай бұрын
Been out in Wyoming in -30f when it hurt to breathe!
@theowulfanxiesen134 Жыл бұрын
So that is literally a cave made of spit
@cobra6481 Жыл бұрын
OUR spit.. 😅
@Ogmarcus02 Жыл бұрын
It can only be pure water since it’s condensed from being water vapor.
@cobra6481 Жыл бұрын
@@Ogmarcus02 sure, but I will add that your definition of "pure" is not quite the scientific one.. Whateveh, doesn't matter.
@macewindow149 Жыл бұрын
Just water, nor spit
@christianpnorris11 ай бұрын
The waste particulate goes where?
@alexwyman838011 ай бұрын
Woah. Ive seen small hoar frost, but those crystals were massive. Even the smaller ones you showed first
@danadoozer999010 ай бұрын
I think it would be so awesome to spend a year there! I’m from Wisconsin, so I’m well acquainted with the winter, but this is on a whole nother level!
@linx.b524611 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing this. Looking forward to more ❤❤❤
@jawms11 ай бұрын
Was climbing a 300ft tower in 2018 and there was 6-9in crystals of hoar frost on the guy wires. Giving them a tap and watching the shockwave travel down was one of the most satisfying things I've ever done.
@Ramseas11911 ай бұрын
according to the ten second google search i just did, the word "Hoar" is apparently an old English pronunciation (and spelling, as it predates the standardization of modern English's rules) of the word "Hair" and in the case of Hoar Frost, is describing the "hair-like" appearance of the ice crystals that are formed. just in case anyone else was interested and didnt feel like going to google.
@michaelwebster896811 ай бұрын
Thank you.
@TheDirtyChef11 ай бұрын
Thank you for that
@JC06NJ11 ай бұрын
This was a nice bit of info. Thanks
@EamonWill11 ай бұрын
😁👍
@evilsharkey895411 ай бұрын
It’s often used to refer to white hair.
@tonyflatearther10 ай бұрын
Thats so cool bro, thanks for sharing this awesomeness
@michelenardo122111 ай бұрын
i'm amazed on the engineering for building such a place
@batintheattic729311 ай бұрын
Yes, why have they used arched coils? Arches - I get. What's the point of them being made of coils, though? Are they more structurally robust? Was the whole point to provide a place for the frost to accumulate? Imagine building that place!! The effort involved!
@Gvtteddybear11 ай бұрын
@@batintheattic7293i believe you are right
@Gvtteddybear11 ай бұрын
Structural robustness and easier and smaller crystals perhaps vs large icicles? Though icicles form from drips.
@user-pt1cz4ot1e Жыл бұрын
You keep making me add things to my bucket list, and I’m trying to decide how I feel about that.
@Nishye50111 ай бұрын
It’s really cool how you moving to a more confined space even in the same general room (at least seemed to) make the sound quality so much better
@WEFAILEDHUMANITY10 ай бұрын
This is cool!!!.. also i thought you were holding a sign above your head at the beginning 😂
@natazer11 ай бұрын
I hope it's mandatory for people in the antarctic to watch the thing late at night during a storm.
@ignaciovaccaro274510 ай бұрын
Stop scaring the eggheads!!
@PhoenixFireKMS10 ай бұрын
At least one station has a tradition of watching it all together before the last boat leaves for the winter
@ignaciovaccaro274510 ай бұрын
That's awesome, The Thing was the first horror movie that kept me up at night when i first watched it in my teens@@PhoenixFireKMS
@zedmelon10 ай бұрын
@@PhoenixFireKMSHahah that is awesome!
@amyfreeze180810 ай бұрын
Yes.
@tkbleavins10 ай бұрын
That is really beautiful. We don't get it in Illinois very often anymore, but I have always been fascinated with it
@popgibb348511 ай бұрын
We get this in Alaska, absolutely love it! So beautiful!
@dustenekoes2810 ай бұрын
I love that you can see that big cloud of breath in the air behind him after it cuts haha
@harrowgateguy11 ай бұрын
The part of Antarctica known as Bunger hills in the summer is too warm for there to be any snow and there is a chain of freshwater lakes there that are free of any ice. It is a 300 square mile “ warm oasis“. It is named after the man who discovered it and landed his plane there to shoot film footage of the area. He was a pilot in the American operation high jump mission shortly after World War II.
@dannylooney734811 ай бұрын
so snow ice all year except for dec-feb
@neilhamill31811 ай бұрын
Several months of the year are totally sunlight 24 hours of the day and the other months total darkness 24 hours of the day
@harrowgateguy11 ай бұрын
@@dannylooney7348 it is snow free most of the year because it doesn’t snow much. It is a very dry climate and the water only freezes when there is no sunlight, which is half of the year
@bruceh418011 ай бұрын
Operation high jump. Oh now you've just opened up a whole can of worms.
@everettplummer972511 ай бұрын
No snow, but the buildings are being buried, by the frost.
@BeeGuns11 ай бұрын
I just want to comment how much I love the art style in these videos. Makes me want to get back into drawing.
@door_productions489610 ай бұрын
Post some of your hyper realistic drawings
@0num411 ай бұрын
Almost took a job out there, with my buddy Chet (you may very well recall him, he's done several over-winters). It didn't work out in my particular scenario, but I've always been fascinated by the concept of working near the South Pole--even though I hate the cold :D
@jonathanswavely725910 ай бұрын
This is the reason they always told us in Scouts to leave to the tent open a bit so the water vapor can vent out
@rsl676711 ай бұрын
Flat earthers say you're not allowed to be there 😂🤪
@1776foreverfollowed11 ай бұрын
Lmao I just left a flat earth comment under a comment! 😂
@ED-es2qv11 ай бұрын
He's one of the lizard people who guard the wall. They make it cold so you won't want to go there. Who did you think caused global warming?
@darrennew821111 ай бұрын
I like to claim that the entire southern hemisphere is part of the conspiracy. There is no southern hemisphere, as that makes no sense on a flat earth. ;-)
@thevikingwarrior11 ай бұрын
No, the flat Earther's should be sent there and made to stay forever!
@ColonelMetus11 ай бұрын
@@1776foreverfollowed they are ice walls
@brandocalrissian329411 ай бұрын
I would never be bored living and working in a place like that.
@Ichibuns11 ай бұрын
They constantly hire as they rotate new employees in and out. Don't have to be a scientist. They need people to run registers, cook, clean, maintain, and more.
@robbybiddle923610 ай бұрын
But we all know this is a lie since anyone who isnt part of the Illuminati can’t be down here otherwise everyone would find out about the extra lands beyond the ice wall. Flat Earthers unite.
@tarawaukeri8928 Жыл бұрын
I keep thinking "ya got ya hands in someone else's spit bro"😂😂😂
@justindunlap123511 ай бұрын
Kinda, but that also kinda like distilled water from spit.
@tarawaukeri892811 ай бұрын
Like how my nostril hair "distilled" the poo particles from my fart? 😤😁🤣
@brrritoman11 ай бұрын
@@tarawaukeri8928that's enough Internet for my day
@joevans863611 ай бұрын
Halitosis ice crystals? Definitely forbidden.
@ThePayner111 ай бұрын
It’s mostly from moisture that’s in the air already.
@deborahlayne923710 ай бұрын
Wow! That is so amazing. Learned something new today!
@monotheis688911 ай бұрын
Under prefect conditions, the forests where I grew up were nearly magical in appearance, even more so as a child... ✨
@oliverjd2611 ай бұрын
It's like a living frost crystals time capsule. Because everyone is from everyone that's been there. Just remember, you're walking through moments Literally frozen in time.
@gagarin777 Жыл бұрын
Water vapor breathing, so from this video we have learned he is not the "Thing"
@mse3700 Жыл бұрын
That depends on which version you watch. The lighting is different in the original release and the remastered version, but you can definitely see Childs'' breath, and you can see the moisture on his lips. It's just far less pronounced than McReady's.
@raphaelargus298411 ай бұрын
Damn you, you made this comment before I did.
@HellbirdIV11 ай бұрын
@@mse3700 Usually that's a reason people give for why neither of them are The Thing at the end. It gives the movie the most hopeful ending - which is still grim, of course. Everybody dies, but The Thing died before them, so they still succeeded.
@agentmueller11 ай бұрын
@@HellbirdIVpretty sure the director confirmed that Childs was the thing.
@HellbirdIV11 ай бұрын
@@agentmueller That's actually not true. I looked it up, and according to John Carpenter, the video game sequel to the movie was canon, and in that game Childs is found to have frozen to death - he was human all along. Most other sequels to The Thing, like comics etc, tend to also have Childs be human, either freezing to death or somehow being able to escape with Mac because the writers want to continue the story. This, combined with the earring, the breath etc, makes me believe Childs was human at the end. Mac might have been The Thing in the end, but not Childs.
@jacquelinebraze763010 ай бұрын
It's "JUST"???? JUST??? It's just totally amazing and beautiful! It is another WONDER of our fascinating planet. (I bet Commander Bacon wrote a poem about it. Gonna go check it tommorrow.)
@LambentLark10 ай бұрын
We get a lot of hoar frost in Alaska. It gets so cold the water in the air freezez and attaches to what ever it lands on. It covers the tree up here making them look like they are coated in glitter. If you can figure out how to make a fake tree out of garbage, (resources being limited, trash is the best option) wrap it in LEDs and set it in there to sparkle and charm.
@evreet200011 ай бұрын
I got to see hoarfrost once; we'd been to Cripple Creek, CO (flatland TX tourists) and were leaving via Victor and Phantom Canyon road. It was COLD and there were small puffy clouds descending the canyon. As each green pine tree disappeared into the clouds, they would reemerge shrouded in white ice crystals. It was beautiful!
@mightymousejesse8647 Жыл бұрын
The breathes of the world! To think about contained within all of those hoar frosts clumps are the connections to people who have arrived there from so many places from around the world all there for a purpose of curiosity to further our knowledge on this journey floating around in this Cosmo's!!!
@LTV_inc11 ай бұрын
So does every blade of grass you see…😊
@westpole9 ай бұрын
If I had a dollar for every time the mere mention of the terms "Hoar frost" and "Horology" have given me some weird stares, I'd have enough to come join you in that awesome place!
@CrackyCreates Жыл бұрын
Vape kids at the back of the class be like
@petergibson231811 ай бұрын
The air in there is extremeny dry...almost Zero humidity. All the moisture in the air has frozen onto the walls to create the hoar frost.(Same as in your freezer at home.)
@kaleidoscope874311 ай бұрын
Freezers aren't dry. There's no hoar frost in cold desert. ALL frost is created by atmospheric humidity that rapidly cools.
@petergibson231811 ай бұрын
@@kaleidoscope8743 The air sealed within a freezer compartment becomes drier and drier as the water-vapour freezes onto the interior walls as hoar frost.....if there is too much frost you have to defrost the freezer compartment.
@petergibson231811 ай бұрын
P.S. Put a bowl of salt into a freezer compartment. It will never get damp and solid; unlike a similar bowl of salt you left out on the worktop in your kitchen.
@mse3700 Жыл бұрын
Does it have to be removed from time to time? I would think weight of the accumulated ice crystals would stress the structure if it becomes too thick.
@nathanz7205 Жыл бұрын
Been talked about in the past videos. No way that ice would effect a arch structure like that. These arnt some tent hangers. They are fully purpose built structral arches made for tons of pressure from the feet of snow and ice above.
@mse3700 Жыл бұрын
@@nathanz7205 I understand the engineering of the arches, but that doesn't answer my question regarding whether the ice is cleared periodically.
@tyrlant2189 Жыл бұрын
@@mse3700 obviously it isn't a huge deal or they wouldn't build it that way, they would put in dehumidifiers or defrosters or something.
@k7l3rworkman97 Жыл бұрын
@@tyrlant2189obviously? I see you’ve worked in the South Pole recently and just Know these things?
@ouyayucksayanmay Жыл бұрын
@@k7l3rworkman97he doesnt have to work there to assume whoever built and or is working there are smarter than himself.