This video is taken from the back end of a chinook cargo holding helicopter. They partially submerged the back side so the soldiers could speed right into the back for a quick water extraction.
This "piece" of driftwood washed up on the beach at La Push, a small community in Clallam County, Washington. On our visit there in early spring, a very strong gale was blowing. Powerful winds accompanied by high tides are required to bring monsters like this ashore. The entire length of the beach was strewn with driftwood of all sizes. La Push, surrounded by the lush forest of the Olympic National Park, is located on the northwest coast of Washington's most westerly peninsula, at the mouth of the Quillayute River. La Push is the home of the Quileute Tribe.
Photo details:
Camera Maker: FUJIFILM; Camera Model: FinePix S7000; Image Date: 2010:04:05 01:43:01; Focal Length: 22.0mm; Aperture: f/5.0; Exposure Time: 0.0031 s (1/320); ISO equiv: 160; Exposure Bias: none; Metering Mode: Matrix; Exposure: program (Auto); White Balance: Auto; Flash Fired: No; Color Space: sRGB
Awesome! Thank you sir. I had a feeling it was sunken wood washed a shore. It's a huge business out on the west coast. Some of those trees are 2 hundred years old, and being under water all that time makes them very unique and interesting. Salvage companies were recovering it until the gov stopped them.
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__________________ I am a sinner in the hands of an angry god
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Originally Posted by pisceschef
Too late. The siren song of skinny jeans and skittlerex lured him back to his people. We won't see him for another 3 months.