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Mystery light sparks anxiety in Southern California

Photographer captures awe-inspiring pictures of nuclear-capable Trident missile streaking over San Francisco after being fired off coast of California in test mission

US Navy fired a nuclear-capable Trident II (D5) missile off coast of California on Saturday as part of a top secret test
Photographer Abe Blair happened to be taking pictures of San Francisco when the mysterious streak appeared
He captured the dazzling blue light shooting across the sky after the ballistic missile was fired from USS Kentucky
Mystery light sparked a flurry of calls to police and posts on social media speculating that it might be a UFO

15 million T-mobile customers' data stolen in hack

15 million T-mobile customers’ data stolen in hack

The telecom operator T-Mobile US is the US subsidiary of German Deutsche Telekom, announced on Thursday What Personal Data of 15 million customer have been stolen T-Mobile the best Smartphone seller have been hack their accounts by the hackers. Hackers have stolen maximum 15 million customer private information of the mobile operator. Personal information stolen …

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The Dakota Fire Hole – Stealth Fire

What if I told you that you could make a fire that only you could see? Any passers-by will be totally oblivious to the presence of you and your fire. If you want to get into stealth camping, build a fire during gale force winds, or just want to lay low then the ‘Dakota Fire Hole’ is just what you need.

First things first, you’ll need to dig a pretty deep hole, about 2 to 3 feet deep is a good standard but, the bigger the fire you’re planning to build, the deeper and wider you’ll have to dig, so its ultimately up to your discretion. I’ll be making a small, personal fire so I’ll go 2 foot deep and 1.5 feet wide.

As long as you go balls deep and don’t be a bitch about it, you can get the hole dug in 5 minutes flat. I would suggest using some form of entrenching tool, you can use a stick and your bare hands but that will take significantly longer and you’ll probably want to kill yourself halfway through out of frustration.

Now step 2, you’ll need to dig a smaller hole about 1 foot away from the first hole, you don’t need to dig as deep for this one, but a depth of 1.5 feet is a best practice. This hole will connect to the primary hole via a tunnel. The purpose of this secondary hole and tunnel is to allow oxygen to flow into the fire, as the heat and flames of spewing out of the bigger hole won’t allow any oxygen to enter from above. This secondary hole also allows you to blow oxygen into the fire yourself with your breath, without risking burning your eyebrows off if you chose to do that over the primary hole. Keep tunneling your way through until you reach the other side.

But don’t stop there; keep digging away at the edges until its big enough for you to fit your arm through like a cheap hooker. the bigger the tunnel, the more oxygen that can enter, meaning a more sustainable fire.

Now that’s all done, it’s time to build a fire. The same practices of traditional fire making still apply, a raised wooden platform to keep your fire off the ground which will burn down into a layer of embers over time, utilize dead, dry materials that have been hanging above the ground, y’all already know the deal. Make the fire as you would make it on the surface.

You can fiddle about with the structure of the fire in anyway you see fit, make a tipi, a perimeter, a log cabin build, sup to you man. If you want to cook over this type of fire, then it’s just a simple matter of placing thick, living, green branches either over the top of the hole, or jam them into the side of the walls. Living, green materials won’t burn over the fire, so your cookware will be safe to rest upon it.

There’s a common misconception that these types of underground fires produce no smoke, this isn’t strictly true. An underground fire does hotter and more intensely than one that’s exposed to a colder atmosphere on the surface and that does limit its smoke emissions. There’s a lot of chemistry involved in explaining why that is so I’ll save that for another video. Don’t want to go too off track here. But if we refer back to the list of smoke generators I included in my signal and rescue video, wet materials, resinous and green materials will still produce smoke. So it’s best to utilize the driest and deadest possible materials you can find, if you really want to limit your visibility.

The smokeless fire pit comes from a rather unique way of building fire. We think of fire building as a bottom up process, we build a base fire, and then add material on top of it. For a smokeless fire we need to flip things upside down, and have our fuelwood on the bottom, with our fire on top. The fire on top is started with copious amounts of kindling, constantly fed with dry small twigs and dry wood shavings directly on top of the fire, which will burn the large pieces of fuelwood below. The reason this produces no smoke is because, as the air flow from the secondary hole works its way up through the fuel wood, it pushes all the gases and vapors (which we call smoke) which come from the moisture, resins and oils contained within the fuelwood, the air pushes it up into the hot flames, where it burns off because of the heat intensity of underground flames. If those gases and vapors didn’t have to travel upwards through the flame, like in a traditional fire, then you would have a smokey fire.

When you’re done, be a gent and fill the hole back up. No need to break people’s ankles as they pass on by in the future. Peace bros!

*** If you desire, then you can pack all of the mud you’ve dug up on to the outskirts of your hole, to give yourself a large wall to help you conceal the tips of your flames, if they ever reach high enough to emerge out of the hole.

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Butterfly Bomb

Popsicle sticks lock together, to make a butterfly shaped throwing star that explodes on impact.

Youtuber Said:

Project Inspired By: Childhood memories, and recently making these with my kids. I had a lot of fun with these as a kid, and I wanted to make a video tutorial with loads of different shapes and sizes you may not have seen before.

WARNING:

This video is only for entertainment purposes. If you rely on the information portrayed in this video, you assume responsibility for the results of your actions. Have fun, but always think ahead, and remember that every project you try is at YOUR OWN RISK.

Project History & More Info:

I remember learning how to make some popsicle stick bombs in my early years, but can’t exactly remember where or how. Probably some random kid showed me at school, but I never forgot how to make them.

At the time, it seemed really cool to be able to create a “throwing star” that would explode when it hit the wall, and now that my kids are a little bit older but still young enough to enjoy popsicle sticks), I thought this might be a great project to try with them.

I got a couple of bags of craft sticks and scoured the internet for different kinds of throwing stars or stick bombs that we could make. We ended up making 8 different kinds of stick bombs, which you’ll see how to make in a future video.

I’ve had hundreds of messages and comments asking for easy projects with simple materials, and this is about as simple as I can make it, however, I expect most of my viewers won’t like it because it’s a project geared toward a really young audience.

But if you’re a dad, your kids are going to love it .. so go have some daddy time, and make a bunch of exploding stick bombs!