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The machete was blunted in the spot the used it on you. Or it was swapped during a quick cut. The rock was thrown at such an angle as to glance off and intentionally jot cause harm. How big was your bruise from that? Please don’t lie. I am medically trained.
For lack of copious amounts of water in desert areas and dry sandy climates..bathing for thousands of years has been done with aromatic oils..and plants…quite disgusting …IMO…but you do what you gotta do..that’s why people didn’t live long..perfect warm breeding grounds for deadly bacteria that is rubbed aggressively into the skin…. Amazing what years of intellectual evolution and science can do for a species…
good times, that drive was one bumpy ass ones! Will never forget that special pee break moment where we heard the monks chanting, whilst indulging on the local greens
Sungai Watch are doing a great job in ridding the waterways in Bali of waste. They also educate the children in schools and advocate with government for better rubbish solutions. They are logging what they collect and are approaching the companies who produce the items to come up with better packaging solutions. Part of Bali's pollution problems come from the sea currents coming from Java where the pollution of rivers is even worse than in Bali. Fortunately Java is also beginning to tackle this problem too.
I am jealous! I visited Fort Drum with the Coast Defense Study Group in 2001. We rode in bancas, leaving from Corregidor, and first touring the ruins of Fort Frank, on Carabao Island. By the way, the surface of Manila Bay is littered with floating medical waste. Nice, when it splashes up onto the canoe hulls. The banca boys took us to Fort Drum and deployed a bamboo ladder, lashed with polypro twine. It is dark and terrifying, as so much of the interior has been scrapped for the re-bar. The lower levels have been flooded for years, and there is nothing left inside, except for the 14" guns. The two in the upper turret had not fallen in when we visited. Their mountings were also victims of scrappers. Next time, it's a helicopter for me!
The history I reference has not changed, but maybe the landscape? I was in Tirana three years ago. There are a couple videos I made on @JonathanLeggAdventure. The Pyramid was still abandoned at the time, and the bunkers are still everywhere. Give us the update, Dion. What's new in Tirana?
thats what I call sweet pain. hurts but feels so good at the same time. like a muscle knot releasing. my adrenal reflexes are always super sensitive too. i think i've watched this video over 100 times. lol.
Yeah, good to see but as with all places, ultimately a tragedy amongst the millions of others writ large from conflict. 60-70 Japanese soldiers met a grim end here, burned or suffocated to death. No qualms about the actiona t the time but peacetime gives the perspective to see it's all a shame. A lonely, sad place, that.
Naw. People are super friendly. I only felt in danger when I snuck into the pyramid on a different trip and saw someone had scribbled "SATAN -------->" on a wall. Of course, I followed the arrow, quietly, and saw a homeless encampment (That video is on my channel). You can find areas like that all over California, and yes, best to be cautious in those environments. Especially when you are isolated (like trapped inside a structure). But out in public, Tirana is as safe as most European cities.