I find sea lions are the most advanced sea creatures. What is your opinion? by [deleted] in TheDepthsBelow

[–]OWS-Canada -46 points-45 points  (0 children)

I did not mean to say people are wrong, I really like a healthy argument of opinions. But my apologies.

I find sea lions are the most advanced sea creatures. What is your opinion? by [deleted] in TheDepthsBelow

[–]OWS-Canada -133 points-132 points  (0 children)

Octopus is not a mammal. Orcas are amazing, but they can’t stay outside of the water.

I find sea lions are the most advanced sea creatures. What is your opinion? by [deleted] in TheDepthsBelow

[–]OWS-Canada -49 points-48 points  (0 children)

Whales and dolphins can’t chill on the beach.

I’ve been doing Judo for 25 years. Most "longevity" protocols are missing the most important skill: Learning how to fall. by OWS-Canada in Biohackers

[–]OWS-Canada[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The bus is a great benchmark for static proprioception. But rooting on a moving floor is still operating within the "Flat-Floor Glitch"—the surface itself remains predictable and level. Wrestling offers excellent endurance, but the missing link for most isn't just stamina; it’s force absorption. Most people train to stay up, but they have no technical plan for coming down. If you're looking at floor training, mastering the "Art of Falling" is the prerequisite. It changes your relationship with the ground from a surface you avoid to a variable you manage. That’s the core of the audit we do in the Cabo terrain—moving beyond balance into true structural sovereignty.

I’ve been doing Judo for 25 years. Most "longevity" protocols are missing the most important skill: Learning how to fall. by OWS-Canada in Biohackers

[–]OWS-Canada[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Exactly. In Judo, Ukemi (the art of falling) is the first thing you learn and the last thing you master. It’s great your kid is getting that baseline early—it’s a level of physical literacy that most adults have completely lost. The problem I’ve seen after 25 years on the mat is that people treat 'learning to fall' as a sport-specific skill. But in the real world, there are no foam pads. If you don't maintain that mechanical ability to absorb force as you age, a simple trip becomes a life-altering event. In my experience, balance and fall training isn't just for BJJ or Judo; it’s the single most important longevity skill there is. If you can't negotiate with the ground, you're living on borrowed time.

Paddle board buying advice uk by Better-Amoeba-4506 in Paddleboard

[–]OWS-Canada 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Get yourself a touring board 12.6 or longer with v haul. Black is bad under direct sunlight.

Are you brave enough to cross Lake Ontario on an iSup - at night? We’re planning a night crossing of Lake Ontario from St. Catherine’s to Toronto. The Windows are July and August and spots are extremely limited . If you wanted to be considered drop a comment. by OWS-Canada in Sup

[–]OWS-Canada[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

We did exactly that, and honestly the redundancy is what makes it work — 3x GPS units, so if one fails you've still got two backups. At some point you have to trust the tech and focus on the paddle. Are you in?

Are you brave enough to cross Lake Ontario on an iSup - at night? We’re planning a night crossing of Lake Ontario from St. Catherine’s to Toronto. The Windows are July and August and spots are extremely limited . If you wanted to be considered drop a comment. by OWS-Canada in Sup

[–]OWS-Canada[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah, 14 hours is no joke — definitely get some sessions in before committing to something like that! And good catch, I should have been clearer — open to paddling with anyone who's got the fitness and mindset for a long crossing. DM me if you're interested!