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  • School is almost over. I can’t wait to get out honestly, but being senior year I know I will miss it. Just kidding I hate all of you.

    School is almost over. I can’t wait to get out honestly, but being senior year I know I will miss it. Just kidding I hate all of you.

    • 5 months ago
  • edgypowell:

    This was taken from a 4chan thread entitled Mindblown

    Lololol

    Source: 4chan.org
    • 5 months ago
    • 69909 notes
  • pgdigs:


Jan. 1, 1962:  ”Gus Brickner prepares to swim the icy Allegheny River”
If you’re making a list of the toughest dudes in Pittsburgh history, Gus Brickner certainly has to be near the top. Brickner was a steelworker from Charleroi who gained fame as an endurance swimmer unaffected by cold weather. He’s probably best known for his annual New Year’s Day plunge into the Monongahela River, a tradition continued by our city’s Polar Bear Club.
But Brickner’s most amazing feat occurred on January 24, 1963. On that day, as temperatures dipped to 18 degrees below zero,  Brickner swam the width of the Monongahela River at Dunlevy. A towboat ahead of him smashed a path through ice 10-inches thick.  ”My whole body was encased in ice as soon as I got out of the water,” Brickner told a reporter.
The effort set a cold-weather swimming record will stand forever. Guinness closed the category for safety reasons after several people died trying to surpass Brickner.
Twice Brickner attempted to swim the English Channel. In 1957, he was pulled from the water 4 1/2 miles from his goal. He came closer in 1960, but lost consciousness 400 yards from shore. The swim took 18 hours. Gus lost 18 pounds.
Brickner swam every day except Christmas. By 1985, he had logged more than 38,000 miles.  After tacking on 500 more, he stopped counting. That was in 1986. Brickner was 75 years old. He kept swimming for pleasure until his death at age 79 in 1991.
(Photo credit: Unknown)
— Steve Mellon



This guy.

    pgdigs:

    Jan. 1, 1962:  ”Gus Brickner prepares to swim the icy Allegheny River”

    If you’re making a list of the toughest dudes in Pittsburgh history, Gus Brickner certainly has to be near the top. Brickner was a steelworker from Charleroi who gained fame as an endurance swimmer unaffected by cold weather. He’s probably best known for his annual New Year’s Day plunge into the Monongahela River, a tradition continued by our city’s Polar Bear Club.

    But Brickner’s most amazing feat occurred on January 24, 1963. On that day, as temperatures dipped to 18 degrees below zero,  Brickner swam the width of the Monongahela River at Dunlevy. A towboat ahead of him smashed a path through ice 10-inches thick.  ”My whole body was encased in ice as soon as I got out of the water,” Brickner told a reporter.

    The effort set a cold-weather swimming record will stand forever. Guinness closed the category for safety reasons after several people died trying to surpass Brickner.

    Twice Brickner attempted to swim the English Channel. In 1957, he was pulled from the water 4 1/2 miles from his goal. He came closer in 1960, but lost consciousness 400 yards from shore. The swim took 18 hours. Gus lost 18 pounds.

    Brickner swam every day except Christmas. By 1985, he had logged more than 38,000 miles.  After tacking on 500 more, he stopped counting. That was in 1986. Brickner was 75 years old. He kept swimming for pleasure until his death at age 79 in 1991.

    (Photo credit: Unknown)

    — Steve Mellon

    This guy.

    (via thepittsburghhistoryjournal)

    Source: pgdigs
    • 5 months ago
    • 92 notes
  • earthandanimals:

A pleasantly plump squirrel.

OMG

    earthandanimals:

    A pleasantly plump squirrel.

    OMG

    Source: earthandanimals
    • 5 months ago
    • 7345 notes
  • Ok

    Yeah I made one of these. Again. I never honestly understood them though so.

    • 5 months ago
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