Navigație înfricoșătoare, navigație minunată și MULTE relicve ale celui de-al doilea război mondial în Insulele Marshall. Ep. 49 Hilma Sailing

Navigație înfricoșătoare, navigație minunată și MULTE relicve ale celui de-al doilea război mondial în Insulele Marshall.  Ep.  49 Hilma Sailing



Atolul Maloelap este un loc atât de interesant de vizitat! Există sute de relicve ale celui de-al doilea război mondial, peste tot. Există canoane, case, gloanțe, avioane pe țărm și snorkeling atât de interesant pe vechile nave de război. Dacă am avea mai mult timp, probabil că am putea petrece luni de zile pe aceste insule motu și totuși am putea vedea lucruri noi fascinante în fiecare zi. Mulțumim foarte mult tuturor celor care deja ne susținați!! Videoclipurile noastre sunt posibile datorită ta! Dacă și dumneavoastră doriți să susțineți producția noastră video, vă rugăm să deveniți Patreon: @iling Sau, contribuiți la contul nostru PayPal: @/83kJJrQJRN Dacă doriți să aflați mai multe despre noi, Hilma și călătoria noastră, vizitați site-ul nostru. @ Urmărește-ne pe Instagram. @ailing/ Nu uita să ne dai like pe Facebook! @iling/ Toată muzica este descărcată de pe Epidemic Sound și este disponibilă la: @

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35 thoughts on “Navigație înfricoșătoare, navigație minunată și MULTE relicve ale celui de-al doilea război mondial în Insulele Marshall. Ep. 49 Hilma Sailing

  1. Thank u for the beautiful  video… A sad reminder of what humans can do when at war. Shame all this can't be preserved some how better for future generations…

  2. Thanks for sharing guys,sometimes the wind and the current are against you no matter what you do,but you got there in the end,and more importantly,safely 👍
    As much as all these relics,the gun installations,bunkers and fortresses,busted up aircraft,and sunken ships are very interesting to explore,war and it’s atrocities are a sad reality,as I’m sure you agree.Best wishes for 2020🙂

  3. Spännande segling med läskiga vågor. WW2 usch vilken tid det måste ha varit. Vilka kontraster, paradisö med en otäch historia. Tack för att vi får se vad ni gör.

  4. The penetration holes in the concrete roof structures were probably not made by aircraft bombs but by 40 cm canon shells fired from battle ships. Maloelap Atoll wasn't invaded like Tarawa. After being fully military neutralized and totally cut off it served as naval target practice area for the US Navy. Most of the Japanese that weren't blown to bits died of starvation before Japan surrendered in 1945.

  5. A beautiful documentary of what we’ve done to each other thru Hate.. We fight not knowing that we Are all sisters and brothers who are destined to leave this world going out the way we came in no matter what we’ve Tried to take from one another… (we leave here with nothing except if we leave here with Love in our hearts! That is the ONLY Thing we Can Gather that we Are Allowed to leave this Earth with… I just hope those men who Died in these wars who fought each other in these mighty ships and plane that they’ve left behind here in these waters of sea were Blessed to Have LOVE!)

  6. Thank you for posting these! They remind me of my days in the US Peace Corps. I was based on Tarawa, and in your Tarawa video, you actually drove past where I lived and worked !! I hadn't seen those places in years . . .

    I would like to make a very strong safety recommendation : I notice that you wear open toed footwear: flip flops when you are climbing around sharp surfaces, like coral and wrecked boats. Please, please, please don't do this! In my 2 years out there, I saw many colleagues scrape or cut their feet – ever so slightly. In that climate and with the tendency to go in and out of the water regularly, it is a great way to develop a serious and very painful infection that takes months to clear.

    I saw this happen again and again, and I was gasping and wincing watching you guys climb over all that rusty sharp-edged metal and coral.

    May I suggest very strongly that whenever you are ashore, you wear something that covers your feet and toes – a reef runner type of shoe. Something that will protect your toes and heels from being scraped. Your skin is the battle ground, and your feet are precious. You can't sail if you are limping around with an infected foot. If you break your skint, in those latitudes, you MUST cover it and treat with antibiotics immediately before things get out of hand, like I witnessed many times. Up in the high latitudes, (North America, Scandinavia) you can get away without doing this because the cold water keeps the bugs down. Tropical waters are breeding grounds for them.You can get scrapes on the outside and back of your foot that you don't see or choose to ignore in norther waters, that will most certainly become infected and very painful in tropical waters. Then you're out of action for days.

    I know it's time consuming and frustrating to put proper footwear on each time when you're eager to get ashore, but compare that to the time and pain of mending a cut or seeing to an infection, and it's really a sensible investment of time.

  7. 12:03/ Even after the war,the Americans were still bombing the Marshall Islands but this time with atomic bombs when they tested 23 of them in and around Bikini atoll.They left a huge nuclear dump which today is leaking radioactive waste into the Pacific.

  8. In the next 30 years you can expect the same battles to be fought again on these islands for control of these islands. China vs The West

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