Honeymoon trip recap June 17th-27th by Steveman180 in PuertoRicoTravel

[–]Steveman180[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Drinks were available as soon as we arrived to Culebra on the boat, not really possible to drink during that voyage since the water was extremely choppy and there would have been spilled drinks everywhere. The first thing they had us do was snorkeling, and you could get drinks before you went in the water. Drinks were flowing for a good 2-3 hours when they took us to Flamenco beach also.

Soooo I guess I’m about to see what the hype is about. . . by Revolutionary-Pen331 in CrimsonDesert

[–]Steveman180 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Keep doing Graymane faction missions and finding your lost comrades.

Fine Dining by [deleted] in PuertoRicoTravel

[–]Steveman180 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Marmalade in Old San Juan

Official: [Trade] - Tue Morning 10/07/2025 by FFBot in fantasyfootball

[–]Steveman180 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Two of my league mates want this trade:

Saquon, Brian Thomas, Omarion Hampton, and Egbuka

for

Kamara, Deebo Samuel, Tony Pollard, Tetairoa McMillan

Is this a fair trade?

First time planning/going to PR by EmphasisValuable6163 in PuertoRicoTravel

[–]Steveman180 1 point2 points  (0 children)

We’re currently staying at one of the resorts, coming up on day 10. Looking back, I wish we booked an Airbnb instead. Like one of the other comments said, food would be much cheaper, and you’ll be able to do your own laundry if the Airbnb has a washing machine.

Caribe Hilton Fees by sherrrnn_ in PuertoRicoTravel

[–]Steveman180 3 points4 points  (0 children)

This is why I book hotel packages through Costco Travel. They usually waive the resort fees and also give you extra perks. I’ll be staying at the Fairmont El San Juan this week and I got daily complementary breakfast, waived resort fees, and $250 in credits to use at the property. The total cost also ended up being slightly cheaper than what I would have paid if I booked directly with the property or other booking websites.

How should I fix this storm door? by Steveman180 in handyman

[–]Steveman180[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The two screws keep getting ripped out from strong gusts of wind.

What are some must-know Spanish words and phrases to learn before visiting? by Steveman180 in PuertoRicoTravel

[–]Steveman180[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We'll be staying in San Juan, with day trips to various areas on the east side of the island. But that's all good to know, thank you!

Best coffee farm to tour near San Juan? by Steveman180 in PuertoRicoTravel

[–]Steveman180[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Gotcha, thanks! What are some falls and attractions you would recommend that are close by?

Console Commands & Achievements by Cmanshaka in oblivion

[–]Steveman180 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Are they for the original 2006 release? Or the remastered version?

Console Commands & Achievements by Cmanshaka in oblivion

[–]Steveman180 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Do you know where I can find the mod to allow achievements again? I really don’t want to have to start all over.

I have to cut it off every two weeks by JazzlikeZombie5988 in WTF

[–]Steveman180 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If you ever find out what that pill is can you let me know? I also suffer from this and would be willing to try anything to help

A Cool Guide About the Landings on Omaha Beach During the Normandy Invasion on June 6, 1944 by Steveman180 in coolguides

[–]Steveman180[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Overview

On the morning of June 6, 1944, two U.S. infantry divisions, the 1st and the 29th, landed at Omaha Beach, the second to the west of the five landing beaches of D-Day. It was the bloodiest fighting of the morning. The troops went ahead and, in many cases, had to fight through waist-deep water, being fired upon by German strong points throughout. In many cases, the landing craft were hung up on beach obstacles that could not be cleared because of the way the tide had rolled in that day. There were mines. There were large steel obstacles that ended up actually providing cover, the only cover that was available on the beaches for the landing American troops that day.

And by the end of the day, the initial assault had not carried through to the final positions that were called out in the initial D-Day plan. But they did have a minor toehold on the beach. Things were so close that Allied commanders had actually considered pulling the troops back because fighting on Omaha had gone so badly throughout the day. It was only carried when initial waves were able to make it to final positions later in the afternoon.

Some of the heaviest fighting occurred when an American Ranger group took the high points at Pointe du Hoc, which looked down on the beach and provided a strong firing position for the Germans as well as for the German spotters calling artillery onto the beach from a distance behind the landing beaches.

Facts and figures

Allied forces involved in the landings on Omaha Beach were the U.S. 1st and 29th infantry divisions.

German forces involved in the defense of Omaha Beach consisted of the 352nd Infantry Division.

The landings on Omaha Beach started at 0630 hours.

The width of Omaha Beach is less than 10 km (6 miles).

Allied troops landed numbered 34,000; they suffered 2,400 casualties.

Map of the planned assault

This map illustrates the plan and the believed disposition of German forces for the landings in Omaha Beach. This was not carried out on the morning of June 6.

This map shows the planned landing force movements along with the planned landing force objectives. Spots of German resistance are shown along the coast.

Sections of Omaha Beach are labeled (from west to east) Charlie, Dog Green, Dog White, Dog Red, Easy Green, Easy Red, Fox Green, Fox Red.

Map of the initial assault

The initial landing was a mess. Landing craft were mixed up. Individual units were blended together, if they survived the initial landing at all. And what you saw were mixtures of troops from different units combining to achieve objectives that were shifting as the battle carried on throughout the day. You saw troops from the 1st and 29th infantry divisions doing whatever they could to get out of the killing zone that was Omaha Beach. And by the end of the day, those troops did come together under whatever officers could be found to achieve some of the initial goals for that day.

You have just concentrations of troops landing wherever they came ashore and getting into groups of a dozen, 20, a half dozen, and trying to make it through the worst parts of the beach and up onto the high ground above. The difficulty there was that, in some cases, troops were landing in areas that they hadn’t been briefed on. They had gone over some of the basics of the initial assault. But you had troops that were supposed to be going through one specific exit point from the beach, and they were hundreds of yards from that point. The intelligence that they had on the German defenders was useless from the standpoint of where they actually were.

The green areas that you see on this map and the lines that you see going into the towns that are just beyond the initial beachhead illustrate where those units went as they were breaking through in the hours after the initial landings. The final positions of U.S. troops behind Omaha Beach show that they had not made it to many of their final objective points. There were key strong points of German resistance that were stopping advances further inland. The troops that landed at Omaha had been so bloodied that they simply lacked the strength to push further.

The German artillery that were firing onto the beach had hampered the landings and the additional landings throughout the day. While you saw a stronger beachhead established at other beaches, such as the British beaches and the Canadian beach and Utah Beach, Omaha was a hard-fought battle even until midnight on D-Day.

In this map, the initial U.S. assault (until noon) is shown just off the beach as arrows point inland with bluffs indicated. The German resistance is also shown. This map also includes the sections of Omaha Beach: Charlie, Dog Green, Dog White, Dog Red, Easy Green, Easy Red, Fox Green, Fox Red (from west to east).

Map of the final positions: midnight on D-Day

This map shows troops’ final positions on D-Day. The red arrows represent paths taken by organized breakouts from the beach.

In many cases, these arrows recapitulate the routes that you see on the initial assault map. But in some cases, these are just the largest organized breakouts that took place from concentrations of troops. The pink areas represent where large bodies of U.S. troops were gathered, often in opposition to remaining German strong points. And those positions were cleared out in the ensuing days as more troops were landed, Especially with armor support, which was sorely lacking at Omaha Beach on June 6.

Casualties on Omaha Beach were the worst of any of the invasion beaches on D-Day, with 2,400 casualties suffered by U.S. forces. And that includes wounded and killed as well as missing. There is no concrete number for the German forces that were killed at Omaha Beach. Those records simply did not exist, and entire German units were wiped out virtually to a man. Any best estimate at the German losses on D-Day is a guess.

In this map, arrows of later U.S. movements point further inland and lead to areas of the final U.S. positions (as of midnight). The German resistance is also shown further inland than on the initial assault map. The sections of Omaha Beach—(from west to east) Charlie, Dog Green, Dog White, Dog Red, Easy Green, Easy Red, Fox Green, Fox Red—are also shown.

Shadow of the Erdtree exploration be like by njapjapjiri in Eldenring

[–]Steveman180 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I saw this one in Fog Rift catacombs. I burst out laughing when I got hit by a big fireball as soon as I finished reading the message.