When I lived in NW Ontario the wind finally stopped and the lake froze (it was about -20F at the time, maybe -40 - which is the same C or F the previous night). I stood on shore and watched (on and off - was seriously cold standing there) that happen. The ice went from clear to opaque in about 4 hours and the snowflake patterns that grew in the process of that happening were amazing. Then the sound started. Imagine blowing over the top of a glass pop bottle and getting that sound. Then imagine that sound zinging across the lake along the cracks in the ice. Seriously amazing.
Bubbles?
/youtube bubbles
/image Bubbles
/image Bubbles cartoon
/captionbot
I think it’s Michael Jackson standing next to a dog
and she seems .
I keep meaning to try this with the kids… I think is cool, the science behind it!
/image purple bubbles
Looks like it’s from a monster movie.
@Barney
/youtube purple bubbles
I really love the mouth breathing and gum chewing of the camera person.
hah I didn’t realize this was at the top earlier, teach me to pay attention
/image bubbles trailer park boys
/image trailer park boys gang
@RiotDemon Ooh, that’s incredible!
@luvche21 it’s always so mesmerizing to me. I love it.
He has other videos where he teaches you how to make the wand and the soap solution if anyone is interested.
@RiotDemon Once my kids get a little older, I think doing this with them would be awesome!
@luvche21 I’ve thought about doing this and going to a park or the beach or something to amuse strangers.
I’ve seen videos of random people doing that and everyone seems to really have fun with it.
That might make me a little weird though.
@RiotDemon I would love to do something like that with my kids when they’re older, they’d probably love showing off too!
@luvche21 I don’t have any kids though.
@RiotDemon I think I remember hearing a story of someone gridlocking traffic with 6 foot bubbles flying around.
@dashcloud That would not surprise me. People around here get caught up when there’s minor fender benders.
/youtube finding nemo bubbles
When I lived in NW Ontario the wind finally stopped and the lake froze (it was about -20F at the time, maybe -40 - which is the same C or F the previous night). I stood on shore and watched (on and off - was seriously cold standing there) that happen. The ice went from clear to opaque in about 4 hours and the snowflake patterns that grew in the process of that happening were amazing. Then the sound started. Imagine blowing over the top of a glass pop bottle and getting that sound. Then imagine that sound zinging across the lake along the cracks in the ice. Seriously amazing.