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Something TERRIFYING Discovered On Submarine | Diving Gone Wrong 

Scary Interesting
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To join me in being better informed visit ground.news/scaryinteresting to check it out for free or subscribe for unlimited access. Diving Gone Wrong #4
Thalassophobia is an intense phobia or fear of large bodies of water. Nothing epitomizes this more than if you imagine being in the middle of the ocean, far from land, and poking your head under the water and seeing the vast empty expanse of dark water thousands of feet below you. You have no idea how deep it is or what lurks there, but you know that you are completely helpless to whatever it might be. These are true horrifying encounters of diving gone wrong.
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11 ноя 2022

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Комментарии : 1,7 тыс.   
@ScaryInteresting
@ScaryInteresting Год назад
To join me in being better informed visit ground.news/scaryinteresting to check it out for free or subscribe for unlimited access.
@FHBStudio
@FHBStudio Год назад
Could you please put the sponsor segments at the start (or at the end)? It was really jarring having it in the middle and really killed the suspense/immersion. I'd recommend putting it at the start so people will definitely come across it before tuning out as would happen with the segment at the end.
@goldthredz
@goldthredz Год назад
@@FHBStudio I thought the ad was placed well. It didn’t bother me as it was directly in between stories. @scary interesting, keep up all the good work, glad to be on this ride with ya!
@bostonsandatot4948
@bostonsandatot4948 Год назад
I like that I can avoid right leaning articles using the app. ☕🐸
@TheEye57
@TheEye57 Год назад
@@FHBStudio Nope, gotta hide it where you'll struggle to deal with it.
@ExSpoonman
@ExSpoonman Год назад
This is fucking hilarious. You, a channel that is quickly becoming known for being full of shit, are pitching a product by "join me in being better informed"....Get the fuck out of here. You are one of the most MISINFORMED channels I've come across! Just in this video so far you have: 1) Said the Chinese Navy boarded one of their own submerged submarines, and then you mentioned a Commissar of the North Sea Fleet....except the Chinese People's Liberation Navy (PLAN) does NOT have, and has never HAD, such an officer. Probably because the North Sea is over by the United Kingdom, literally on the other side of the god damned planet.
@davealmighty9638
@davealmighty9638 Год назад
I was a submariner. I remember the first dive on my first deployment. The sounds of the hull compressing is scary. The look on the experienced sailors faces was my reassurance. They were all smiles. I also remember the smell of fresh air after going topside for the first time in a month. Air never smelled better.
@PrettiePessimistik
@PrettiePessimistik Год назад
Another under the water. That would make me go insane I think. Wow. How far down were you. Probably so far you couldn't see the light of day. I feelnlike if i was just under the surface enough I could get out and swim up maybe but I doubt that where you were huh. Lol prop bc that is so terrifying. I don't even know about boats let anyone subs. That's cool. 😎
@Bruh-fc7ik
@Bruh-fc7ik Год назад
Grew up around the famous Submarine Capital of the US, spent a lot of time around submariners, still remember asking one of em what the best part of their job was. He told me “well, there’s no better feeling in the world than going topside and taking that first breath of fresh air after being stuck in a tube full of cigarette smoke and 100 other guys sweat for a month. Food is pretty great as well”
@lapislazarus8899
@lapislazarus8899 Год назад
I cannot even begin to imagine what living on a submarine must be like!
@anormalperson-9586
@anormalperson-9586 Год назад
i did not just read "i was a submarine" 😭
@Sheahova
@Sheahova Год назад
coming from someone whom used to underwater weld off shore having to go to decompression pods or dive bells and acclimate over a few days submarines scare the tf out of me. One day one of the adjacent pods were hit by an unknown object (i never found out what is was) and it hit the tank and they died pretty much instantly cause of the pressure (not because of drowning). After that week I quit after doing it for a few years. We had to work through the week knowing we lost 4 friends. It terrified me.
@classicmicroscopy9398
@classicmicroscopy9398 Год назад
That last story has to be one of the most amazing survival stories I've ever heard. That man's focus and willpower are beyond impressive.
@awoman3
@awoman3 Год назад
Not as amazing as mine..
@williamcorvinus8240
@williamcorvinus8240 Год назад
Clearly he's sexually active..
@wolffighter6769
@wolffighter6769 Год назад
@@awoman3 what's yours?
@awoman3
@awoman3 Год назад
@@wolffighter6769 So glad you asked! One day, I walked into McDonalds to buy myself a happy meal and get the sick new Minion toys. My friends walked in and sat down with me asking what I ordered. I didn't want to tell them I got a happy meal because then they would laugh and I would be embarrassed and they wouldn't be my friends anymore. My order was ready and I didn't want to pick it up because I was nervous! They would know I got a happy meal! I was so nervous and then I heard a sound. Pfff It all came out at once. A big poopy mess! I had to get to the bathroom quick! So I ran holding my pants up like a loser! My friends didn't know there were any poop but they laughed at me waddling fast club penguin style. While I waddled by the counter I quickly grabbed the happy meal and started holding my pants running! The poop was sliding down my leg and I reached the bathroom! I ran to a stall not knowing if anyone was in it or not. Luckily nobody was in the stall and I pulled my pants down and saw the mess. How was I going to clean this up and leave?! I grabbed a bunch of toilet paper and wiped as much poop off as I could. Once I was done, I stuffed my pockets full of toilet paper and ran out. Then I thought to myself, I FORGOT TO PAY!!! I ran over to the counter and threw a $10 bill at the worker and ran out of the store. I've never run as fast ever in my life. I got home and washed my butt off and changed as quickly as I could. I finally finished and ate my happy meal peacefully thinking of the horrors that just happened.
@OtterThing
@OtterThing Год назад
@@awoman3 respectfully, you're a little weird bro
@kolonarulez5222
@kolonarulez5222 Год назад
People who work underwater for such long periods are so brave. Honestly they have my respect it sounds like such a terrifying job
@milcunard1461
@milcunard1461 Год назад
We work in shallow water, under big ships, in harbor. There's never more than 5 feet, between the ship's hull and the bottom. It's dark, and scary, even though we know it's safe. There's 100,000 tons of steel over our heads.
@AimeeAimee444
@AimeeAimee444 3 месяца назад
I knew a man who did saturation dives. He had sociopathic tendencies and drove his motorcycle on 95 at insane speeds crashing 3 times that I know. I was amazed he survived these horrible accidents. He was always in major pain and on heavy pain meds. I’m not implying all brave men who work on saturation dives are sociopaths, just this one man that I knew.
@jessehutchings
@jessehutchings Год назад
That shark attack is so tragic and unlucky. However, Brett was very lucky to survive like he did. He truly stretched his strength and consciousness to the limit and barely made it out.
@humorous5953
@humorous5953 Год назад
The last story was the first story you have covered that actually gave me chills. The idea of being pulled into a seemingly bottomless pit by sharks is horrifying.
@Snapper314
@Snapper314 Год назад
I've never gone anywhere UNARMED. And the Ocean was no exception. People who think they won't need to defend themselves while in or under the water are what we call VICTIMS.
@dalebecause2467
@dalebecause2467 Год назад
Sharks don't scare me in the least.....I know how to deal with sharks...
@crossfire2045
@crossfire2045 Год назад
It sounds like something out of a game like Subnautica but it's real life. Creatures attacking in the water and a pit where the surrounding depth is like 30m and it drops straight down suddenly to over 400m depths.
@PiXie232
@PiXie232 Год назад
@@dalebecause2467 sure... they thought they did too. That’s why they were so comfortable diving with them around them. But sometimes, there’s just nothing you can do when two agitated 14 ft plus white tips decide to attack you, and pull you off a drop off- no matter how hard you try and fight. They’re *far bigger* and stronger than you, with *far sharper* teeth- and many of them, to boot. It’s ok to admit to have a healthy respect out of fear considering what they’re capable of doing to you. Even the most reputable divers who swim with sharks all the time say this.. if you don’t respect them in that sense- you could easily end up like these men one day.
@dalebecause2467
@dalebecause2467 Год назад
@@PiXie232 I don't swim in waters where sharks live...... :)
@angelofmusic1992
@angelofmusic1992 Год назад
Being cooked alive in the ocean has got to be one of the most ironic ways to die. And jeez, that last story had me on edge the entire time. You always find the most tense, nail-biting stories.
@gazepskotzs4
@gazepskotzs4 Год назад
Ironic like 10.000 spoons when al you need is a knife.
@lapislazarus8899
@lapislazarus8899 Год назад
@@gazepskotzs4 🙄
@ellena.8369
@ellena.8369 Год назад
​@@gazepskotzs4 no, alanis morissette's (sorry if i misspelled) song Ironic isn't ironic. The spoon line, no that's just bad luck mate.
@briancrawford8751
@briancrawford8751 Год назад
@@ellena.8369 Exactly. Nothing in that silly song was actually ironic. Most of it was just what I'd call "unfortunate."
@richardbowers3647
@richardbowers3647 Год назад
Training, training!!! Mmmh???
@KennedyRose
@KennedyRose Год назад
For anyone feeling freaked out by the last story, please know that this is not remotely typical behavior of most sharks. Oceanic whitetip sharks (not to be confused with white tip reef sharks) are actually some of the most aggressive sharks towards divers, more so than great whites, tiger sharks, and (debatably) bull sharks, which you often hear about as "the big three." But because oceanic whitetips very rarely stray from the open ocean, you rarely hear about them, and those who aren't familiar may underestimate their aggression. Honestly, two particularly large oceanic whitetips demonstrating atypical behavior (by being so close to land) should have been enough of a red flag to postpone the dive. If you're thinking about scuba diving and worried about sharks, I've seen sharks on every dive I've done. First of all, they're so much smaller than you think! They're curious but skittish, sometimes they'll hang out around 7-10ft from you to check you out but as soon as you look directly at them, they dart away. They're honestly one of the most fun parts of dives. PSA, this is based on personal experience and casual research that you can fact-check pretty easily, but if you'd like links lmk :)
@paulherbert5548
@paulherbert5548 Год назад
I ran into a curious Bull shark near a blue hole somewhere close to the Berry Islands. It was attracted by a chemical glow stick that my dive buddy was holding. It would not relent coming in close (2 to 3 feet) until he dropped the stick then it lost interest and moved away. Turn off those glow sticks when there's critters about.
@Cheskaz
@Cheskaz Год назад
@@paulherbert5548 The phrase "curious bull shark" fills me with horror! Glad that nothing happened!
@bradleye660
@bradleye660 Год назад
Bull shit. Sharks are not some conscious being with thoughts of their own. They are animals and they have no moral compass. They feel your heartbeat in the water and know you as nothing other as a source of food.
@marhawkman303
@marhawkman303 Год назад
I heard Oceanic White tips are known for eating people who fall overboard when ships sink :/
@HalfWarrior
@HalfWarrior Год назад
As someone who’s never been diving and grown up in the desert of Arizona; all sharks make me uncomfortable and I’m happy to stay on dry land. But I did see sharks swimming under a small boat I was on as a kid on a vacation in Mexico; that was enough for me.
@tinyky2598
@tinyky2598 6 месяцев назад
After reading more into who Bret is, it's difficult to overstate just how accomplished of a diver he is. Truly a pioneer in his craft and basically wrote the book on tech driving itself. I'm not sure any other person on earth would've been able to survive such in ordeal. His first word as a baby was "boat", he was born to dive!
@gabriellekahts6787
@gabriellekahts6787 Год назад
That shark story is crazy. The guy who swam down to save his friend is really brave. Thanks for the scary interesting stories!
@CharlieApples
@CharlieApples Год назад
Yeah, that’s one of those deaths where if I was the one about to die I would completely understand if my friend bailed lol. Like “don’t even try bro, I’m fucked”
@tom-oneil
@tom-oneil Год назад
And as a diver I can assure you it was completely fake.
@minnow1337
@minnow1337 Год назад
@@tom-oneil How so
@tom-oneil
@tom-oneil Год назад
@@minnow1337 said he went down to over 300 feet. On a technical dive And then shot up to the surface to run for help? That sounds legit to you?
@reitairue2073
@reitairue2073 Год назад
@@CharlieApples fr tho lol, so sad man
@Analog7orror
@Analog7orror Год назад
Nothing like being stuck in a metal object , under the water . Knowing your impeding doom is approaching . Nothing more terrifying
@johnr797
@johnr797 Год назад
While also cooking alive
@sosmotorcycles
@sosmotorcycles Год назад
I’m going to school for welding and I thought about being an under water for a while until I decided if I’m dying I’m breathing air and not water
@nomdaploom
@nomdaploom Год назад
Being stuck in a metal object 30,000 feet above the water, knowing that you're headed down at terminal velocity is just as terrifying. When you pay it some thought there's a long list of maximum terror options. Being eaten 'on the bone' by a shark or any other sea or land creature is one of them
@sosmotorcycles
@sosmotorcycles Год назад
@@cohenmandysangalang6302 mr ballen is the mf man
@JiggyGnorrus
@JiggyGnorrus Год назад
Except being stuck headfirst in a dark cave for days until you die
@urbanangst7630
@urbanangst7630 Год назад
Wow the last story with the sharks was incredible. The low frequency waves emitted by a passing ship may have been interpreted by the sharks as a school of fish or other food source. Very unfortunate. However, the survival of the second diver is nothing short of a miracle.
@cathybaldry7822
@cathybaldry7822 Год назад
Ship radar I believe is responsible for whales etc beaching themselves.
@cathybaldry7822
@cathybaldry7822 Год назад
A lot more research needs to be done on the dangers of Radar and frequency waves
@halfbakedmedia
@halfbakedmedia 9 месяцев назад
@@cathybaldry7822 On the old Cosmos with Carl Sagan he mentioned the frequency of the boat engines interrupting whale songs. There may be new research now, tho.
@user-jumbibead
@user-jumbibead Год назад
The oceanic white tip survives in the relatively prey sparse deep oceans. . It is fairly common knowledge among deep water mariners that this species of shark is unusually dangerous since it's opportunities to feed are infrequent. When it comes across an opportunity, it seldom "doesn't" attack. Quite a few shark experts would tell you, you are safer with a great white in this situation than with an oceanic white tip, let alone 2 or 3 white tips.
@reverenddmo8944
@reverenddmo8944 Год назад
When you said the last story was especially gruesome I immediately thought Byford Dolphin accident, was nice to hear a diving horror story that was completely new to me. Cheers man!
@animalia9114
@animalia9114 Год назад
Screenshoting your comment to check another level of gruesome later
@danielles3841
@danielles3841 Год назад
Delta P will getcha
@glassplanet5624
@glassplanet5624 Год назад
@@animalia9114 it’s probably the most gruesome story I’ve ever heard tbh. Something especially horrifying about it
@cassoIa
@cassoIa Год назад
@@glassplanet5624 ​ Honestly. I think it was either Horror Stories or Fascinating Horror who covered that tragedy and described it in such a way I struggled to get through it. Truly a horrific way to go.
@lisaperry5999
@lisaperry5999 Год назад
That was my guess as well. Its gotta be the worst.
@FHBStudio
@FHBStudio Год назад
That last story should be made into a movie. That survivor had such amazing luck.
@hitlord
@hitlord Год назад
Good lord, that last story the guy used the entire Luck supply he had for his entire lifetime. Imagine the INSANE luck you need to get out of the water, with the bends, muster up the strength to mutter exactly what you need to potentially survived, and have the ABSOLUTE INSANE LUCK of saying those "last" words to a doctor and a nurse, who even more luckily understand decompression sickness.
@bluejediforce
@bluejediforce Год назад
There is a major US submarine producer near where my hometown is on Long Island Sound in the US. My aunt, who is from the same area, was out fishing when she was younger, and found exactly what you said! A metal antenna sticking out of the water. She said she poked it with an oar but oops. It was a periscope. And some guard boats told her to piss off lolol. No one was hurt, luckily!
@swiftcastholy9034
@swiftcastholy9034 Год назад
Oceanic white tips and other open water species like mako and blue sharks are often found near those large drops like the wall - while a ship in the area might have been an additional lure for them the depth of the water there makes it a reasonable place to expect to encounter them. Still, 14 foot white tips... like, that's terrifying on its own, that's practically the length of an adult male great white!
@OnlyKaerius
@OnlyKaerius Год назад
@abigmonkeyforme Yeah, aside from whale sharks, the biggest I've personally seen was a bull shark around 12 foot long, absolutely massive. Also thankfully, really chill at the time, peaceful encounter.
@paulherbert5548
@paulherbert5548 Год назад
@abigmonkeyforme its really hard trying the gauge the size of a shark at any distance if you lack a reference of some kind. In the open ocean without a backdrop its even harder.
@paulherbert5548
@paulherbert5548 Год назад
@abigmonkeyforme when I was in San Diego a couple of years ago I ran into a group of divers who were doing their qualification dives in the kelp beds out there. Visibility, I was told, was about 10 ft that day. They had full wet suits on so I take it that that water must have been pretty cold.
@meep9963
@meep9963 Год назад
i love how you can tell if someone's died or not based on how detailed the narrator is.
@emmyhynes5827
@emmyhynes5827 4 месяца назад
i know when the story is really freaking me out a lot of times it's because the account is too detailed for them to be dead at the end which does make me feel better
@bunkle932
@bunkle932 17 дней назад
@@emmyhynes5827 the most terrifying thing is when you hear "Now, it's unclear what happened next, but at some point..."
@dannahbanana11235
@dannahbanana11235 Год назад
Saturation diving actually sounds like the worst. The terror of the pitch black ocean floor, the claustrophobia of living in a tiny metal chamber, the risk of being violently decompressed, and apparently being cooked alive too. Fun!
@ImperatorTheodosius
@ImperatorTheodosius Год назад
If you haven't already, check out the documentary "Last Breath."
@BBROPHOTO
@BBROPHOTO Год назад
@@ImperatorTheodosius That documentary is one of the craziest things I’ve ever watched. I saw it years ago but still to this day think about.
@StuermischeTage
@StuermischeTage 5 месяцев назад
Really scary how an incompetent supervisor can completely fuck your life over in any moment and you can't do anything about it.
@kylehill4437
@kylehill4437 8 месяцев назад
As a diver I always keep an eye on sharks, they are beautiful. I remember making eye contact with a 10 ft Sand Tiger Shark in the wild, its one of the most intense feelings Ive ever felt (and Im a combat veteran lol). Luckily I saw him heading my way in a calm swimming motion, I knew he wasnt attacking probably curious, but I assumed a position remaining calm, pulled my knife where I could attempt fighting without looking like prey. I felt my entire body trembling and the hair on the back of my neck stand up as we both stared at each other 2-3 feet apart. I would describe primal level of calm fear and respect being at the presence of a superior destructive entity. Nothing happened, it keep going on his way never bothered me, but those eyes would be seared into my soul forever.
@boiledliddo
@boiledliddo 6 месяцев назад
that's terrifying. Maybe the shark had already ate, so it was calm.
@Swishersweetcigarilo
@Swishersweetcigarilo 5 месяцев назад
I was wondering if the divers in the last story had knives on them. I'd carry at least a 12inch double edged blade. Would've been a lot more effective than punching it in the gills..
@booties012345
@booties012345 Год назад
as soon as you hear the words "diesel submarine" on a SI video you know it's going to be a rough one. i was mentally preparing for the last one to be the byford dolphin accident, but i appreciate getting a crazy survival story instead. well played. (on that note, any chance of covering mary vincent's abduction? that's one that always comes to mind with your videos.)
@captainotto
@captainotto Год назад
Byford Dolphin still gives me the creeps so many years later. Imagine being one of the investigators on that. In many ways it was better than the cooking one as it happened so fast, but not better at all for the people trying to figure out what happened.
@tiffnsniff
@tiffnsniff Год назад
I’m not gonna lie, his cave diver stories kind of scarred me for life. 😂
@ScaryInteresting
@ScaryInteresting Год назад
I have some new ones on the way!
@tiffnsniff
@tiffnsniff Год назад
@@ScaryInteresting Awesome!
@gazepskotzs4
@gazepskotzs4 Год назад
@@ScaryInteresting New scarres for everyone!
@foxyandlucy4730
@foxyandlucy4730 Год назад
@@gazepskotzs4 *scars 😉
@kyradebruin9522
@kyradebruin9522 Год назад
Right I don't dive nor ever had the feeling of wanting to, the stories still fascinate me though.
@DiscoPenguin8
@DiscoPenguin8 11 месяцев назад
I am a commercial diver and you are half right with the chambers for saturation divers. The living chambers are on the ship and they get into a dive bell that takes them down to working depth, staying at pressure the entire time.
@russellwilliams3209
@russellwilliams3209 Год назад
I'm a diver and have heard this story many times about the shark attack and ship emitting a frequency that lured and 'irritated' the sharks. I'm a skeptic and a part of me thinks they were doing something else, but it's tragic nonetheless and also beautiful how everyone came together in the end to save his life.
@SuPeRHeRoDuDe3124
@SuPeRHeRoDuDe3124 Год назад
"They"??
@EdgyDabs47
@EdgyDabs47 Год назад
Its for shark fishing, right?
@russellwilliams3209
@russellwilliams3209 Год назад
@@EdgyDabs47 Yes! So, you've heard of this? I witnessed something similar in Costa Rica last year where there was a shady lone vessel off the coast and sharks were in a frenzy around it. They were even acting aggressive near us and we were around 300 meters away! It was terrifying and very suspect! I thought I was nuts, until I watched this.
@CChissel
@CChissel Год назад
@@SuPeRHeRoDuDe3124 What’s weird about using the word, “they”? It’s just a way to refer to one or more people.
@angelicwolf909
@angelicwolf909 Год назад
Hmmmm .... one way to find out. You go in the water and I'll be on shore transmitting the frequency ... and you can tell me how the sharks react.
@tcockrell97
@tcockrell97 Год назад
A few years ago I went diving along a great barrier reef a few miles off of Yucatan. You could see the reef just barely poking above the surface of the water & I had the idea that I would swim through the reef & see what was on the other side. I expected the depth to be the same as the side I was swimming on (about 10m or so), but when I looked over it was a drop straight down into pitch black. I stared for quite a while & don't think I took a single breath as I did so, as I had never seen anything like that before.
@paulherbert5548
@paulherbert5548 Год назад
you experienced the abyss first hand!
@boiledliddo
@boiledliddo 6 месяцев назад
that is horrifying
@jeffreyrumbold9363
@jeffreyrumbold9363 6 месяцев назад
@@boiledliddo Horrifying? On the contrary - it's absolutely exhilarating. The contrast is unreal.
@wouldntyouliketoknow1840
@wouldntyouliketoknow1840 Год назад
Last story with the sharks I think is one of the weirdly scarier stories. Just being pulled down into an abyss with limited oxygen while being gnawed on by two sharks, that’s a horrifying way to go. I hope he passed out from oxygen loss before the sharks really went for the kill 😭
@TheRealestEric
@TheRealestEric Год назад
As someone with Thalassophobia, 11:00 kinda fucks me up. In a big way. I'm not afraid of water, I love water. I love swimming. I'm afraid of not being able to see the bottom, and not knowing what might be looking at me from down below. I couldn't do it. 40 feet? Alright, that's fine. 13,000 feet? Just fucking kill me. Let me die. The idea of that even existing on the same world where I am kinda makes me feel ill.
@lesflynn4455
@lesflynn4455 Год назад
Whoa Sean. That last story gave me goose bumps. Us humans are so poorly adapted to the underwater environment, and those three guys were completely at the mercy of those apex predators, despite their expertise, and the thousand dives they had between them. I'm sure poor Rod's remains ended up at the bottom of the wall, 13,000 feet down, to be consumed by whatever feeds at the bottom.
@AbysmalBen
@AbysmalBen Год назад
Bro just reading this comment and then reading the bot reply under it just feels disrespectful.
@minimusmax
@minimusmax Год назад
There are millions of things that belong in the ocean, and humans arent one of them
@peytonmac1131
@peytonmac1131 Год назад
@@AbysmalBen Did you mark the bot's comment as spam so it gets removed?
@EmberMcLain23
@EmberMcLain23 Год назад
Human’s really shouldn’t play ware they don’t belong
@katerinaaqu
@katerinaaqu Год назад
​@@EmberMcLain23what do you mean "play"? These people were there to get samples to help humankind have a better understanding of their own planet. Science has its risks but altogether people need this procedure because humans don't just wish to survive they wish to comprehend. You might say it is our nature to do so. That is to be said these people know the risk they are taking. Sometimes of course it turns out far bloodier than what they expected
@badwolf7367
@badwolf7367 Год назад
The snorkel device used by the Chinese submarines has a history of problems and there were least 1 other similar incidents to the first story. What is unusual about the first story is that the Chinese military acknowledged that it happened because such accidents are usually kept secret and news blackout on the subject.
@DadJeff-jo7pm
@DadJeff-jo7pm Год назад
As a Diver this shows the fact that even tho you try to plan for everything, you're still at the Mercy of the Denizens of the Deep. They did everything right, dive buddy or 2, constant awareness of surroundings, and still.......
@tessalyyvuo1667
@tessalyyvuo1667 Год назад
Oceanic whitetips are indeed considered some of the most dangerous sharks. Possibly because they usually live in open seas where food is scarce, forcing them to be quite opportunistic.
@deecilla5087
@deecilla5087 Год назад
That shark story was crazy only because I can't get over the fact that everything that could go wrong, went wrong. Then, everything that could go right, went right. Push and pull kind of circumstances that ultimately ended up with one dead and one alive. That's so bizarre.
@gwingcommander
@gwingcommander Год назад
I know hindsight is 20/20 and everyone on the internet is an "expert", but even so I'm still kinda shocked the divers weren't alarmed by the sight of large Oceanic White Tips. As an open-water species that frequently go long stretches without food, they are well known to be opportunistic hunters. They're kind of like deep water versions of polar bears - they can be very dangerous because their typical habitat demands they aggressively pursue anything edible. While the vast majority of sharks aren't naturally aggressive toward humans, it's pretty common knowledge that White Tips are definitely one of the few species that require extra special attention when spotted. Again, I know that's easy to say now, but it seems weird experienced divers would overlook this.
@IcyMan143
@IcyMan143 Год назад
The bass drop never gets old. I can’t get over it, it’s just to good.
@Gamble661
@Gamble661 Год назад
I read an article some time ago about an incident with a decompression chamber on an oil rig many years ago, I think in the North Sea but not sure. The crew chief didn't seal the hatches properly and a diver was sucked out of the pressurized chamber through a partially opened hatch and onto the deck. There was a photo of what was left of him after and it took you a minute to determine what you were actually looking at. The only thing really identifiable was one forearm with a wristwatch on it.
@CharlieApples
@CharlieApples Год назад
What a crazy twist at the end of the last story, about the vibration of a ship attracting sharks. That’s spooky as hell.
@Iamthelolrus
@Iamthelolrus Год назад
I remember a marine biologist on Catalina Island telling me "sharks only accidentally attack people" claiming that if you survive the initial bite you would be fine because they "don't like the taste of people" I'm calling bs on that...
@davidhollingdale5408
@davidhollingdale5408 Год назад
Agreed. I believe when they attack groups of people,they target just one individual...and don't stop.🦈
@ellesimon4149
@ellesimon4149 Год назад
I don't think people are their first choice and they would prefer a fish or a tasty seal, but humans are slow, weak, and easy to catch and kill if the opportunity arises.
@Alternate_Titles
@Alternate_Titles Год назад
A fish does not “like” or “dislike.” It is like an insect. It moves and eats.
@JimRFF
@JimRFF Год назад
@@Alternate_Titles that's not even true for insects... every organism that has the sensory capability to feel pain makes judgments to avoid pain and seek pleasure. They don't necessarily have complex judgments of value (ie, the shark will never stop eating a person "because it's wrong") but to suggest that animals don't have preferred/avoided foods and behaviors is pretty ignorant
@Alternate_Titles
@Alternate_Titles Год назад
@@JimRFF The reason for the preference has nothing to do with “liking” or “disliking.” What is this obsession with anthropomorphizing animals. Look at how butthurt you and this other person are about someone pointing out the obvious fact that sharks do not “enjoy,” they do not “like,” there’s nothing they won’t eat if they are hungry. We cut open shark and we find boots. Electronics. A chunk of wood with barnacles on it. Did the shark like to eat the boot? Was it his preference to eat the radio clock?
@hughgreentree
@hughgreentree Год назад
Regarding the third story, I've met the diver named Bret. He is a magnificent, amazing man and one of the best divers in the world. The event did not occur in 1996; it occurred on October 14, 1972. I have Bret's contact info. If you would like to get in contact with him I would be glad to help you make contact.
@lukas_prime
@lukas_prime Год назад
Love how the more i watch these videos, the more i'm 200% SURE im NEVER putting my feet on waters above the knee. ☺️
@email6743
@email6743 Год назад
Yes living in fear always gets people their dreams to come true 👍
@glassplanet5624
@glassplanet5624 Год назад
@@email6743 my dreams are all on land, Email
@YounesLayachi
@YounesLayachi Год назад
Including swimming pools ?
@TheTibetyak
@TheTibetyak Год назад
The first time I stepped into the Gulf of Mexico on a Galveston beach I was two minutes in the water and ankle deep. Something slashed the insides of both ankles as it exited toward deeper water. Those lacerations burned for 2 days solid.
@governmentisshit7140
@governmentisshit7140 9 месяцев назад
Grandpa was on HMS Tireless in WWII. Was a tough, quiet man but a very good man. Wouldn't tell me too much about the war, his brother died in a POW camp building the bridge on the river kwai. One thing he did tell me was that when they would hear the engines of the destroyers coming it terrified them. He said they sank ships with the top gun. Which tells me torpedoes may not have been that good in those situations. He said the depth chargers would shake his teeth. My Granpa was 6'5 in a submarine in WWII, legend. Love you Granpy💚
@governmentisshit7140
@governmentisshit7140 9 месяцев назад
Keith Forsey 🏅🇬🇬
@kentwilliams4152
@kentwilliams4152 Год назад
I served 7 years in the USN in the submarine service. I never heard the hull making any sounds as we went deeper. We were limited to 700 feet back then due to the "sub safe" program, so maybe that's the reason. Also, after a prolonged submergence when fresh air us brought into the submarine through the snorkel it smelled terrible!! Seems as the charcoal filters become less efficient in purifying the air that is released into the boat when venting sanitary tanks after having been pressurized to blow their contents overboard. That decreasing efficiency causes the atmosphere in the sub to slowly affect the crew by coating their sinuses and nasal cavities with fowl smelling "crap," for lack of a better word. The crew is not aware of this until fresh air is piped into the sub by running the diesel which burns the old putrid air thereby replacing it with fresh air.
@catdaddydonbrewer007
@catdaddydonbrewer007 Год назад
There’s a documentary called Last Breath… I’ve never felt such anxiety in my entire life. Watching this documentary is something I wish I could do again for the first time. Last Breath is this channel X 100. Well worth your time!
@jakoblittell8804
@jakoblittell8804 9 месяцев назад
I have seen A LOT of these diving horror story videos, but let me tell you that the last story on this video was by far the most riveting, brutal, and well-told I have ever heard. God did I want that guy to survive….
@dianesaienni5466
@dianesaienni5466 5 месяцев назад
The last man brett was incredibly lucky what a story! God was definitely on his side that day and im so happy he made it and is alive today!
@sarahr9894
@sarahr9894 Год назад
Well done, I hadn't heard of any of these. You continue to pump out high quality content and your success is well deserved!
@robinshishido3510
@robinshishido3510 Год назад
That last one was truly horrifying. Great video.
@DanielFrost79
@DanielFrost79 Год назад
Oh my god. The panic i felt during this episode. 🥺 Nicely narrated Sean. ❤️👍
@email6743
@email6743 Год назад
Anyone who can't capitalize God has no fear of Him.
@harrisonstonehouse2326
@harrisonstonehouse2326 Год назад
@@email6743 who cares
@BcFuTw9jt
@BcFuTw9jt Год назад
How do words "Panic" someone???
@DanielFrost79
@DanielFrost79 Год назад
@@BcFuTw9jt If you don't know, you're too ignorant and don't have the need to know.
@danielabackstrom
@danielabackstrom Год назад
@@BcFuTw9jt imagining that happening to yourself is one sure way to panic about it
@jeffpopiel7304
@jeffpopiel7304 Год назад
Excellent delivery, well narrated, and consistently able to pull new content that holds my interest. I'll take this channel over the predictable same storied, rehashed routine that many other channels follow. As always (Scary Interesting) is indeed, scary and interesting. Thank you.
@jamienicole2122
@jamienicole2122 Год назад
Another awesome video! Thanks so much Sean! 💕
@douggiles7647
@douggiles7647 Год назад
Just want to commend you on the quality of your videos and the amount of detail you give, I'm happy I found your channel because you make some great content!! I've never even heard about that saturation diving incident before now so good job bringing lesser known incidents out into the light. And the story with the sharks blew me away too, what are the odds of surfacing and basically running into a doctor trained in hyperbaric medicine?!? Odds are that that's a big part of what saved Brett's life
@Synystr7
@Synystr7 Год назад
3:33 So, the Leopard 2A6, the tank I drive, it can ford through water. Completely submerged. The crew commander is standing on, what is basically, a ladder through a tube the extends vertically from the tank. This also acts as a snorkle for the tank so suck air through to run. If the safety were to fail, and the engine went into deep fording mode with the hatches closed, it would turn the inside of the tank into a vacuum in 15 seconds. We wouldnt be able to open the hatches after 3.
@arianaajbeaverhausen8175
@arianaajbeaverhausen8175 Год назад
I nearly drowned as a kid so deep water scares the 💩 out of me, watching your uploads reaffirms my belief that I have no business in the sea. 😄 Respect to all professionals who risk their lives for research etc though, that is to be admired ❤
@tumslucks9781
@tumslucks9781 Год назад
I thought Beavers were good swimmers.
@email6743
@email6743 Год назад
Hope your 💩 will be safe now 😬
@arianaajbeaverhausen8175
@arianaajbeaverhausen8175 Год назад
@@tumslucks9781 omg 😂❤💀
@arianaajbeaverhausen8175
@arianaajbeaverhausen8175 Год назад
@@email6743 fingers crossed 😄❤😂
@catmeifyoucan4649
@catmeifyoucan4649 Год назад
All stories were incredibly tragic, but that last one was absolutely unbelievable..amazing that guy survived.
@courtneysuzannejudd2722
@courtneysuzannejudd2722 Год назад
Not sure if anyone else did the same thing but as I was listening to that last story, everytime he said the guy was low on oxygen or ran out of oxygen I would start holding my breath to the point my heart started racing and anxiety kicked in. Scary story! God bless the gentleman who lost his life.
@jackasschicken5922
@jackasschicken5922 Год назад
I can't remember a specific video, but I do that all the time! Don't worry, you're normal! Lol
@mdb1010
@mdb1010 11 месяцев назад
Cant wait for the new one
@et3182
@et3182 Год назад
Interesting fact about the final story: that shark attack is most likely the deepest shark attack on a human. Its hard to confirm though
@pattsw
@pattsw Год назад
These stories are becoming increasingly more chilling. I love it
@Boo-dawg.
@Boo-dawg. Год назад
These stories gave me a feeling of claustrophobia and that's not something I have problems with for the most part but the thought of going underwater that far creeps me out really bad. I have to not think too much about some of the details or I would never make it through a video. People that dive like that must have nerves of steel. I would have a horrible panic attack I'm sure of it.
@x0ThatGuy0x
@x0ThatGuy0x Год назад
I really enjoy the way you tell these people's stories! I look forward to more content! With only 400k subscribers, I feel you are truly underrated. I hope eventually you put your content on a podcast, so you're not restricted by RU-vid.
@lindasd7591
@lindasd7591 Год назад
Unimaginably terrifying being in a sub in that situation!
@wasdwasd609
@wasdwasd609 11 месяцев назад
I mean, they just fell asleep and died. One of the best ways to die. Still tragic all the same.
@TJ-qo2xu
@TJ-qo2xu Год назад
Great content as expected and congrats on the sponsors! Keep it coming!
@georgetait9831
@georgetait9831 Год назад
Great commentary, clear, using excellent grammar, brief, but complete. A rarity on RU-vid. Thanks!
@paranoidpony6861
@paranoidpony6861 Год назад
This diving series is great for binge watching lol. You make very good videos and I'm glad you help spread the memory of all these tragic incidents so that we may learn from them.
@behindtheglamour
@behindtheglamour Год назад
As far as the diving bells go, there's an old two-sided compartment that they used to use for filming underwater scenes before things like that even existed. If you haven't covered that one yet, it's an underwater hotel in Florida that I'd be interested in seeing what you could find out about!
@kowozy
@kowozy Год назад
I love your videos as they are well researched and very informative. Keep up the good work!
@oliviera5988
@oliviera5988 Год назад
Always a pleasure to hear you telling those stories. Sometimes it is good to hear a (quite)happy ending story. :)
@cassoIa
@cassoIa Год назад
I must say, I’ve really come to familiarise myself with your voice for bed time, it’s distinctive yet clear and you capture my attention. I really hope you continue with narration/ informative vids for a while because I enjoy your content and you’re really good at it! Cheers Sean
@JunkyCarrot
@JunkyCarrot Год назад
The way you tell the stories (and the pictures of course) really gives a great picture of what is happening. Your pronunciation and they way you tell it also makes it easy to understand for some of us none-English people (am from Denmark). Already looking forward to your next upload!
@DarkKitarist
@DarkKitarist 11 месяцев назад
Anyone remember that one x-files episode where they go on one ship where everyone starts aging really fast? In that episode there's some really spooky background music and the background music in these videos gives me the same kind of feeling :)
@AdamFerrari64
@AdamFerrari64 Год назад
The last story is chilling - thank you for your talented telling of it!
@chitownkitty4327
@chitownkitty4327 Год назад
Love these fascinating stories! And thank you Sean for talking at a good, slow pace! Usually I have to slow the speed down to hear stuff on RU-vid because my encephalitis makes it hard for me to follow things and I have to constantly backtrack. I love these stories. The horrible fates are awesome, too! Thanks so much and keep up the great work!
@aidanhart9871
@aidanhart9871 Год назад
Working in parts of Western Australia I can imagine how horrible the death those divers faced would be.... port hedland is hot and very humid ...especially in work clothes and welding... a truly horrible place and a truly horrible way to die..... but I knew as soon as you mentioned " multiple gauges" what was going to happen.
@Aliciapaige777
@Aliciapaige777 Год назад
Dam,, that’s scary as hell,, it blows my mind that people are courageous enough to do anything like this, I’m terrified of the ocean💛💛💛
@parkersilvia9594
@parkersilvia9594 Год назад
all these underwater stories are awesome man. please more similar content!
@cogitator1213
@cogitator1213 Год назад
Years ago I read a book about WW 2 u-boat warfare. I remember a story about the crew of an Allied freighter that was sank in the Indian Ocean. The crew was allowed to leave for their rescue boats, before the u-boat torpedoed the freighter. The shore wasn't too far away, just a day of rowing. But then a tropical storm hit the rescue boats and they were scattered. Some boats were never seen again, but others had strange marks on their hulls. The survivors later told that they were attack by a kraken and the kraken even pulled some out of the boats and into the water.
@tumslucks9781
@tumslucks9781 Год назад
The Kracken enjoyed feasting on creamy white flesh..
@uncletoodles8118
@uncletoodles8118 Год назад
My guy, what book was this in? This is so interesting and I’d love to read more
@cogitator1213
@cogitator1213 Год назад
@Uncle Toodles I am very sorry, I can't give you the title or author. It was a book from the public library I borrowed in the mid/late 2000s and I just don't remember the title. But I remember very well that it wasn't some kind of hoax book, but a serious approach to the topic.
@tylerskiss
@tylerskiss Год назад
As uncommon as the deaths may be, saturation diving seems to have the most painful, intense and prolonged ways of dying.
@Jaker2123
@Jaker2123 5 месяцев назад
Love this channel! Always keeps me on the edge of my seat, especially the last story!
@scottcline8941
@scottcline8941 Год назад
I served in the USAF and I couldn’t be on a submarine. My chemistry lab partner was a nuclear engineer on a los angles class sub and he would go on six month tour. Hell no screw that..
@NASkeywest
@NASkeywest Год назад
A good topic to cover. The USS Indianapolis. Not the deaths by sharks, the deaths by hallucinations and consumption of salt water. After 2 or 3 days afloat, 50 sailors died in 15 minutes from knife attacks. A chaplain said he was floating when he heard, “THE JAPS ARE HERE WITH US, KILL THEM ALL!” At this moment 50 sailors pulled their knifes and began to frantically knife each other to death. The chaplain said he remembered seeing the flash of 50 blades and the water turned red. A lot of other men swam out into the sharks, some thought they saw their ship floating deep down under the water and would swim down to their deaths. One sailor had his friend tell him “the ship is below us and the mess hall is still open and has ice cream!” Then he dove down, an after 3 minutes was seen floating dead below.
@Blox117
@Blox117 Год назад
must have been some dam good ice cream
@jjl6417
@jjl6417 Год назад
@@Blox117 god dammit this made me spit out my drink
@haka-katyt7439
@haka-katyt7439 Год назад
@@Blox117 damned good ice cream
@haka-katyt7439
@haka-katyt7439 Год назад
@@WoodyWard proof
@marcellepesek3038
@marcellepesek3038 Год назад
Dark Star King: Hi, I haven't come across this story before, despite finding out as much as I could about the SS Indianapolis. However, other people calling it fake and making fun of it strikes me as disrespectful and odd. There was one "I shouldn't be alive" story a woman related, in which she said that at least one of the few survivors in the dinghy with her had drunk salt water and went crazy. He insisted he was just going to pop down to the shop and fetch some cigarettes, I think. Needless to say, the sharks got him. May all those poor souls in every calamity, in the ocean or anywhere else, rest in peace.
@imtired927
@imtired927 11 месяцев назад
RU-vid recommending me this video on today of all days 💀
@greydearing
@greydearing 11 месяцев назад
Yeah you're not the only one
@abrahamben-dayan9843
@abrahamben-dayan9843 Год назад
Water-diving is way scarier than sky-diving, change my mind😅
@RonHutchCraft2
@RonHutchCraft2 Год назад
I love these videos and your channel is one I definitely look out for because these uploads are so well made. The warnings at the beginning are unnecessary but to each his own! Plz keep making videos as they are most entertaining!
@kevincostello3856
@kevincostello3856 Год назад
I was a fast attack submariner, that is a small submarine, not one of the big boats ( that's what we called submarines-- boats) missile boats are the big ones. Once submerged doing Angles and Dangles to make sure everything was stowed properly. Emergency blow main ballast tanks( forward group) and scream up to the surface and we were moving. Never really had a schedule , except going on an 6 month Mediterranean run. Could be at sea for weeks pull into port for just a few days and right back out to sea. I was a quartermaster that's navigation so always knew what part of the world we were in. Sleeping under the torpedo racks, watching the Dolphins jump across our bow when surfaced. I really miss riding the boats.Best days of my life:: Silent Service
@jaredmoyes81
@jaredmoyes81 Год назад
Been loving your channel for just over a month now. I look forward to our Saturday morning appointment now every week. Thanks for what you do
@Sheahova
@Sheahova Год назад
I worked welding underwater bridges these bells i thought were safe until seeing an adjacent pod get hit by an unknown object and it burst killing 4 people I worked through the week and quit.
@Sheahova
@Sheahova Год назад
im glad it was instant for them cause the implode/explosion would’ve instantly burst their brains. Sadly I lost 4 friends. It was a tragic event that terrified me.
@b-dub6865
@b-dub6865 6 месяцев назад
Wow! That last story deserved its own video. Could you label the pics presented in your stories to identify whether they were taken during these dives, or if they’re just images similar to the topic you’re discussing at the time? It would help to get a better understanding of the story & situation. Thx!
@bigd5080
@bigd5080 Год назад
The fishing boat contacted the Navy!😂 ‘Hello, Navy?’ ‘Yes. How may we help you?’ 😂🤣
@missywink1504
@missywink1504 Год назад
Every time I watch these videos, I hold my breath, and start gasping for air.
@shanejones4058
@shanejones4058 Год назад
That’s brilliant.
@WillowEve-rf7oq
@WillowEve-rf7oq Год назад
Love the content! I believe the last story actually was Oct 1972 per the international shark attack file. There was a substantial interview and article about it in Nov 1996 that may create the confusion.
@krashd
@krashd Год назад
That makes sense as by 1996 we already knew that sharks were agitated by EM radiation and not to approach them if ships are nearby.
@JudgeDrey
@JudgeDrey Год назад
"Hey, I was thinking of trying scuba diving for fun. Do you wan to come try it with...." "GET OUT OF MY HOUSE!"
@TheMichaelBeck
@TheMichaelBeck 11 месяцев назад
A big thank you to my brothers and sisters that serve or served in the Navy. My great grandfather served in WWI and my grandfather lied about his age to join the Army TWO YEARS BEFORE PEARL HARBOR and served in the Air Force for 28 years. I'm a retired U.S Army veteran and wanted no part of the Navy. You submarine guys are a breed apart. Cheers.
@taylorwiseman8078
@taylorwiseman8078 Год назад
Anyone else think that one of the scariest parts of these stories is how hard it is to figure out what happened underwater? So many of these stories end with "the body was never recovered" or "there are a few possibilities, but it's not known for sure". Imagine dying one of these horrible deaths, alone, and either your body is never found or no one, possibly not even you, can figure out how you died, preventing safety developments and making it harder on your family.
@CHMin-cl5wi
@CHMin-cl5wi 11 месяцев назад
Kinda sus a Chinese fishing vessel tracking foreign naval ships,can't catch many fish that way.
@DrewD76
@DrewD76 Год назад
That last story could be a movie and would be better than most out now. Good stuff man.
@Janelou42
@Janelou42 Год назад
The last story really shows what it means to have that survivalist mind. The lingering will even tho he passed out. So many obstacles he pulled through...
@alternativetheory9118
@alternativetheory9118 Год назад
Awesome video Bro! One of your best!!
@josch5305
@josch5305 Год назад
I really like the ideas of stories getting progressively gruesome throughout the video!
@monstersaint
@monstersaint Год назад
Very good stories. The wall at St. Croix, a 13,000 foot drop off, yeah... NO.
@darrylwebb388
@darrylwebb388 Год назад
Thank you for some great content again!
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