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Weird - Wacky - Funny News

R

Robrites

Man hit by car, breaks leg, falls 50 feet into Snake River, and survives

Man hit by car, breaks leg, falls 50 feet into Snake River, and survives

An Idaho man not only survived being hit by a car on an icy interstate highway bridge but also a 50-foot-fall into a river and a swim through its frigid waters with a badly broken leg, authorities said.

Steven Arrasmith, 34, said the image in his mind of his 7-month-old son drove him to keep swimming for shore through the strong current in the Snake River in the dark.

He finally reached an island near the Oregon-Idaho border and awaited rescuers, unable to pull his legs and feet out of the water because of his broken left leg.

"Basically, when I hit the water I was, 'OK, I've got to get to shore,'" Arrasmith said in a telephone interview with The Associated Press as he awaited surgery in a hospital. "I was thinking about my son. I was wearing an Army field jacket and it weighed me down. I managed to get it off."

Arrasmith is a lucky man, three times over, said Oregon State Police Capt. Bill Fugate, a public information officer.

"He's very fortunate," Fugate said. "In any of those events, he could have lost his life."

This tale of survival started before dawn when the driver of a pickup truck lost control on a bridge on I-84 after hitting a patch of black ice, according to the Oregon State Police.

Arrasmith, of Mesa, who makes a two-hour commute each way to his new job with the Idaho Department of Juvenile Corrections in Nampa, said he saw the vehicle in the road and got out of his rented Jeep to make sure everyone inside was all right.

Another vehicle came barreling down the divided interstate and, hitting the ice, also lost control and crashed into the Jeep, which then struck Arrasmith, knocking him over a waist-high concrete-block barrier along the edge of the bridge, Arrasmith said.

"I tried to hang on, for about 10 seconds," he said. Then he fell about 50 feet into the river, according to the highway patrol. Instead of panicking, he coldly calculated where he was and what he needed to do.

"I am familiar with the Snake River, and I know in that section it has a northwest flow," Arrasmith said. "I was lucky enough to fall feet first, so I was able to orient myself really quickly. There's Oregon. Just continue west. My main concern was, get out of the water and the wet clothes, because the outside temperature was 36 degrees."

He calculates that he was in the water fully submerged except for his head for five to 10 minutes then another hour with his legs in the water until rescuers waded over from shore. The state police say the responders were drawn by Arrasmith's shouts.

"The main thing is, I wanted to see my son and that's what drove me to get to shore," he said. "The broken leg was quite a hindrance; I was kicking with my leg but my leg was just flopping around."

The driver of the pickup truck was unhurt, and the driver of the third car received minor injuries, state police said.

"The worst part is I lost my glasses in the river," Arrasmith said. "I can't drive without them."
http://www.oregonlive.com/pacific-northwest-news/index.ssf/2016/11/man_hit_by_car_breaks_leg_fall.html
 

al70

Active member
Veteran
Scientists have improved "the most important biological process on the planet" - photosynthesis.
The breakthrough, published in the journal Science, used genetic modification to increase the amount of sunlight energy crop plants can channel into food production.
That increased yield in an experimental crop by 15%.
Researchers say this is a critical step towards increasing crop production to feed a growing global population.
BBC science reporter Victoria Gill explains the findings
 
N

noyd666

pulled over in nsw for ?
picture.php
 
R

Robrites

Bungling burglar's rock-throwing technique fails to get him into store

Bungling burglar's rock-throwing technique fails to get him into store

BROCKTON, Mass., Nov. 22 (UPI) -- A Massachusetts store owner shared security camera footage of a bungling would-be thief completely failing to break into the shop.

Steven Davis, owner of 2 Debi's in Brockton, posted security camera footage to Facebook showing the attempted break-in early Sunday morning.

The video shows a man pull up to the store in a gray van, get out of the vehicle, and throw a rock at the store's glass door from only a few feet away.

The rock fails to break through the window and lands at the man's feet. He throws the rock a second time, and this time it bounces off the door and ends up under the man's van.

The suspect then gets back into the vehicle and drives away.

"The first time I saw the video I was tearing I was laughing so hard. I said this has got to be the stupidest son of a b," Davis told WFXT-TV. "He's got to be in the top five dumbest thieves I've ever seen."

Davis said he passed the footage, along with the man's license plate number, along to the local police.
 

al70

Active member
Veteran
Drugs worth £20,000 seized. READ TO END.
A quantity of drugs seized in Portadown on Tuesday (November 22).
A quantity of drugs seized in Portadown on Tuesday (November 22).
10:28Wednesday 23 November 2016
0
HAVE YOUR SAY
Police have seized a quantity of suspected herbal cannabis with a street value of up to £20,000.

The seizure was made on Tuesday night in the Garvaghy area of Portadown.

In a social media post police thanked the public for their help in making the seizure.

They said, “The seizure today is great news for everyone. It’s a significant dent to criminals who bypass legality and things like jobs, taxes and contributing to society by engaging in criminality like this.

“It was only made possible because someone spoke up. Someone who didn’t like criminals pocketing illegaly while the rest of us work for a living.

“Someone who doesn’t like the toxic effect dealers, with their threats and intimidation, have on the community. Someone who takes pride in where they live. Someone who cares.

“Keep talking to us, and who knows, we could be coming through a door near you soon!”

Police said they had also recovered a ‘massive amount of cash’ - somewhere between £5,000 and £10,000.


They also seized a quantity of white powder whih has been sent for testing.

And they had a message for the supplier, “DST would like to sincerely apologise. Somewhere in the Garvaghy area tonight, a dealer is going to be having a really awkward conversation with his supplier, and it’s our fault. That conversation is going to be about where a massive amount of cash; somewhere between £5k-£10k, and herbal cannabis with a potential street value of between £15k-£20k has all gone to.

“Well good news Mr supplier, we have it kept nice and safe! If you’d like it back, please call into any police station of your choosing and we’ll reunite you - Reunite you with our custody Sergeants.

“If you are that unlucky dealer, and you’d rather avoid that awkward conversation, we can offer you a taped conversation and a bed for the night. Your choice.”
 
R

Robrites

D.C. police charge vice president’s neighbor with dealing pot

D.C. police charge vice president’s neighbor with dealing pot

An illegal marijuana operation was discovered a stone’s throw from the vice president’s residence in Washington, D.C., police said Tuesday.

The Metropolitan Police Department said its officers made the discovery shortly after 3:30 p.m. Tuesday while executing a search warrant on the 2300 block of Wisconsin Ave. NW, a predominately commercial area north of Georgetown neighbored immediately on the east by the U.S. Navy Observatory, the official residence of every vice president since 1974.

The MPD said its Narcotics and Special Investigation Division Major Case Unit arrested four individuals inside and seized 3.25 pounds of weed worth an estimated street value of $58,880.

Three of the individuals — 24-year-old Conner MacLeod Donahue of Woodbridge, 42-year-old Marvin Alphonzo Harvison of D.C. and 29-year-old Sidi Mohamed Chendid of Alexandria — were arrested pursuant to warrants that had been issued by a D.C. Superior Court judge for distribution of marijuana, the MPD said in a statement. A fourth person, 29-year-old Gary Little of D.C., was arrested at the scene and charged with distribution of marijuana.

All four appeared Wednesday in D.C. Superior Court and were released on their own recognizance, according to online court records. They’re slated to appear next before Judge Sherry Tafford on Dec. 14.
http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2016/nov/23/dc-police-say-vice-presidents-neighbor-was-dealing/
 

growsjoe1

Well-known member
Premium user
Veteran
An illegal marijuana operation was discovered a stone’s throw from the vice president’s residence in Washington, D.C., police said Tuesday.

The Metropolitan Police Department said its officers made the discovery shortly after 3:30 p.m. Tuesday while executing a search warrant on the 2300 block of Wisconsin Ave. NW, a predominately commercial area north of Georgetown neighbored immediately on the east by the U.S. Navy Observatory, the official residence of every vice president since 1974.

The MPD said its Narcotics and Special Investigation Division Major Case Unit arrested four individuals inside and seized 3.25 pounds of weed worth an estimated street value of $58,880.

Three of the individuals — 24-year-old Conner MacLeod Donahue of Woodbridge, 42-year-old Marvin Alphonzo Harvison of D.C. and 29-year-old Sidi Mohamed Chendid of Alexandria — were arrested pursuant to warrants that had been issued by a D.C. Superior Court judge for distribution of marijuana, the MPD said in a statement. A fourth person, 29-year-old Gary Little of D.C., was arrested at the scene and charged with distribution of marijuana.

All four appeared Wednesday in D.C. Superior Court and were released on their own recognizance, according to online court records. They’re slated to appear next before Judge Sherry Tafford on Dec. 14.
http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2016/nov/23/dc-police-say-vice-presidents-neighbor-was-dealing/


sad...it's legal there too. Maybe a bit much but your not able to sell there...give it away, SMH
 

Green Squall

Well-known member
Woman uses pizza slice as ID to enter college town bar, gets nasty when bouncer says

Woman uses pizza slice as ID to enter college town bar, gets nasty when bouncer says

AMHERST, Mass. (TheBlaze/AP) — Police in Massachusetts say a woman tried to use a slice of pizza as a form of identification to get into a college town bar and slapped the bouncer when he refused her entry.

Monkey Bar co-owner Rasif Rafiq tells the Boston Globe the apparent college student had attempted to hand the bar’s bouncer a slice of pizza she had purchased at a nearby shop as proof of her legal age last week. She allegedly became aggressive and a nearby police officer got involved.

Police say the woman was issued a trespass notice to stay away from the club.

Rafiq says his phone has been “blowing up” since the early morning incident at the Amherst bar was reported by the Daily Hampshire Gazette and picked up by other news outlets.

“She said, ‘Just let me in.’ And he said, ‘You’re too intoxicated. I’m sorry,’” Rafiq, who’s owned the nightclub with his brother for two years, told the Globe. “When a girl gets [aggressive] like that, we are sort of at their mercy. All we can do is stand in their way.”
 

JKD

Well-known member
Veteran
Good old cops - $18k per pound according to their estimate, or $39 per gram... I'm sure they are bang on and that's exactly how much the growers are getting. War on Drugs for all these years and they still don't seem to know what its actually worth.
 

Stoner4Life

Medicinal Advocate
ICMag Donor
Veteran
thrmlpool_zpshlre86z1.jpg



An acidic hot spring in Yellowstone 'dissolved' a tourist — and it's more common than you might think



A few months ago, the vacation for a young pair of tourists took a turn for the horrific when one of them fell into a boiling, acidic pool in Yellowstone National Park and "dissolved."

Colin and Sable Scott, a brother and sister from Oregon, left the authorized area and walked around the Norris Geyser Basin in Wyoming to find a thermal pool to take a dip in. While Colin was leaning down to check the temperature in one hole, he slipped and fell into it.

"In a very short order, there was a significant amount of dissolving," Lorant Veress, a Yellowstone deputy chief ranger, told the NBC affiliate KULR 8 last week after a report was issued about the incident. Colin Scott, 23, did not resurface and is believed to have died almost instantly. Since 1870, at least 22 people have died from injuries related to thermal pools and geysers in the park. Below are a few reasons this can happen.


The pools are really, really hot

Yellowstone National Park sits atop a geologically active supervolcano. With magma bubbling so close to the surface, geysers and hot springs can reach burning temperatures.

The Scotts happened upon the hottest thermal region in the park, where temperatures can reach 237 degrees Celsius (roughly 456 degrees Fahrenheit). That's hotter than the temperature you cook most food at in an oven.


They're sometimes acidic

Most of the water in the park is alkaline, but the water in the Norris Geyser Basin is highly acidic. This is caused by chemical-emitting hydrothermal vents under the surface. Microorganisms also break off pieces of surrounding rocks, which adds sulfuric acid to the pools. This highly acidic water bubbles to the surface, where it can burn anyone who is exposed to it.

In 2012, a study published in the journal Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems examined water that came from the Heart Lake Geyser Basin. They found that safe and unsafe water originated from the same underground spot but separated en route to the surface.


Some microorganisms can live there, but humans melt


Microorganisms called extremophiles have evolved to live in extreme conditions. These are what make the water look milky in color.

The conditions are deadly for humans, however, and the water can cause fatal burns and break down human flesh and bone.

"It is wild and it hasn't been overly altered by people to make things a whole lot safer — it's got dangers," Veress said. "And a place like Yellowstone, which is set aside because of the incredible geothermal resources that are here, all the more so."

In other words, stick to the trail.


reprinted without permission from wherever.......
 
R

Robrites

View Image


An acidic hot spring in Yellowstone 'dissolved' a tourist — and it's more common than you might think



A few months ago, the vacation for a young pair of tourists took a turn for the horrific when one of them fell into a boiling, acidic pool in Yellowstone National Park and "dissolved."

Colin and Sable Scott, a brother and sister from Oregon, left the authorized area and walked around the Norris Geyser Basin in Wyoming to find a thermal pool to take a dip in. While Colin was leaning down to check the temperature in one hole, he slipped and fell into it.

"In a very short order, there was a significant amount of dissolving," Lorant Veress, a Yellowstone deputy chief ranger, told the NBC affiliate KULR 8 last week after a report was issued about the incident. Colin Scott, 23, did not resurface and is believed to have died almost instantly. Since 1870, at least 22 people have died from injuries related to thermal pools and geysers in the park. Below are a few reasons this can happen.


The pools are really, really hot

Yellowstone National Park sits atop a geologically active supervolcano. With magma bubbling so close to the surface, geysers and hot springs can reach burning temperatures.

The Scotts happened upon the hottest thermal region in the park, where temperatures can reach 237 degrees Celsius (roughly 456 degrees Fahrenheit). That's hotter than the temperature you cook most food at in an oven.


They're sometimes acidic

Most of the water in the park is alkaline, but the water in the Norris Geyser Basin is highly acidic. This is caused by chemical-emitting hydrothermal vents under the surface. Microorganisms also break off pieces of surrounding rocks, which adds sulfuric acid to the pools. This highly acidic water bubbles to the surface, where it can burn anyone who is exposed to it.

In 2012, a study published in the journal Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems examined water that came from the Heart Lake Geyser Basin. They found that safe and unsafe water originated from the same underground spot but separated en route to the surface.


Some microorganisms can live there, but humans melt


Microorganisms called extremophiles have evolved to live in extreme conditions. These are what make the water look milky in color.

The conditions are deadly for humans, however, and the water can cause fatal burns and break down human flesh and bone.

"It is wild and it hasn't been overly altered by people to make things a whole lot safer — it's got dangers," Veress said. "And a place like Yellowstone, which is set aside because of the incredible geothermal resources that are here, all the more so."

In other words, stick to the trail.


reprinted without permission from wherever.......
Burning to death or boiling to death have to be the most miserable ways to die. That guy was not overly bright.
 
R

Robrites

Man beaten up for offering to pay for sex with boiled egg

Man beaten up for offering to pay for sex with boiled egg

A prostitute in Zimbabwe beat a battered a man's head with a beer bottle after he offered to pay for sex with a boiled egg.
Moses Mushonga, 28, walked up to the young lady of the night in the town of Mvurwi in Mashonaland province.Firstly he manhandled her, leaning into her bra and touching her breast.
This did not endear him to the 23-year-old, called Chipo, but to add insult to injury he then tried to haggle with his only asset.,UK Daily Mail reports..
Mushonga told her he had just spent his last bit of money on buying two boiled eggs, which costing 0.25 Zimbabwe dollars, the equivalent of less than a penny or a centSadly he had already eaten one too.
Insulted by his attitude Chipo flew into a rage, hiting hit him with the beer bottle, and then punched him in the face, before knocking him out.
When he came round Mushonga was bleeding heavily from his head.
He told local media: 'She could have just said no.'
Chipo, who was not charged by police, said she simply felt he needed to be taught a lesson about respect.
 

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