@@MrBryancslim I mean, tech is tech even if it's ancient tech. This is effectively a human-powered evaporative cooler, using the muscle power of people to disperse the hot water into a fine mist. The finely-divided hot water quickly evaporates into steam and carries away a lot of heat, and the remaining chilled water mixes back into the pool to reduce its overall temperature.
This is similar to how my mom used to cool down a cup of tea or coffee. You just dump the liquid from one cup into another cup back and forth, after a few times doing that the temperature goes down drastically.
It takes a lifetime to master the Kusatsu technique. These women have been training intensively since they were 6 years old, and they are still considered novices.
Brother there is a master for everything in Japan they do everything like it's an art and sell it at a premium that's why they have cube-shaped decorative watermelon that sell for above $800 👎
To everyone saying “why don’t they just fill a tank with it, let it cool, and pump it back,” it’s a tradition. If they have no problem doing it, why install a bunch of expensive metal/plastic fixtures that might ruin the simple wooden vibe? Technically the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier could be guarded by a sentry turret and security cameras, but I don’t hear any of you wanting to trash such a sacred American tradition…not hard to understand.
Which I'm guessing you bathe about 26 times a year, seeing how you'd start reeking after a week or so, and be fired. Starting the whole process over. Wait was that sarcasm I smelled? So it wasn't your pits?
@@qwasdninja what are you talking about ? There are measurable health benefits backed by science. You've picked a strange thing to be sceptical of. It's not Chinese medicine where they're grinding up rhino horn to cure diseases - which is about as useful as biting your toenails 🤣🤔
@@qwasdninja reasonably it does in a way have "healing"properties assuming its from a natural spring minerals can be benifical and heat therapy is great for some injuries
This reminds me of what my grandma taught me while cooking she used to tell me to be patient and (in certain foods) to not mix a lot when making something on the stove because it takes the heat away while taking longer to cook
Wouldn't having a cooling pipe with isolated cold water also work? Just saying. This is done out of pageantry, not because there're not better ways to cool the water without diluting it.
I'm not sure heat exchangers existed in the Edo period when this tradition started. Maybe it really was the best/only way at the time, maybe it wasn't, but the fact that there's a better way _now_ doesn't invalidate a 400-year old tradition, wouldn't be much of a tradition if it did.
@@robertwrightfonseca that's true but you know because of this, there's a scammer near selling hotspring Popsicle sticks so you can splash your own healing water at home or some junk.
@@Hiro-xe8rpits just kinda weird. Take liturally anything in japan, and they will claim that its some ancient craft honed with tradition. Its just silly.
No, adding water to the hot spring water, may either sediment the salts due to large temperature differences, dilute the concentration or cause chemical changes. Lowering the temperature though, has no such side effects.
Yes, they do. They're definitely doing it to celebrate tradition, but it's not just that. Adding cold water would dilute the mineral concentration in the spring water, and the health benefit from this particular spring's water comes from its high mineral concentration. Use cooling pipes, you say? Not that easy. The high mineral content I was talking about is sulfur. That area's springs have the highest sulfur content in the world. Cooling pipes are typically made of metals that will succumb to corrosion rather quickly and/or get clogged by sulfate salts. All these are surmountable problems, but there's nothing wrong with using the old method if people like it, is there? They don't do this tradition all day every day. They perform it once a day just to show people the tradition. There's actually a proper cooling tank, with plumbing, in Kusatsu in the town's central square, actually. Source: I live in Japan. I've been to Kusatsu.
I went there before Covid. If you pay and go in to watch, you can also have a go at playing with those paddles too AND you get a little certificate from them but the best part is hearing them chant in unison. It's pretty nice. The hotsprings is voted best, too.
Yo foreal i have watched prolly every NHK Documentary and Have a MAL list of bout 1500 finished animes (yes iam a weeb) but i never saw something like that how can such a small ahh country create so much unique Traditions is beyond me, i live in Germany and all we have left ist Schnitzel and even thats Austrian i believe 💀
Woah woah woah, yall are home the kraut, sausage, and some of the best beer. Never forget. I'm an American but pretty much everything but American food is my favorite
@@thymark i do indeed its just thats their line when you point out the lunacy of their archaic system ''there are two kinds of country those who use the metric system and those who put man on the moon '' the irony being as you say, nasa used metric
@@marvin2678 None of it's magic though. Hot water feels good unless it's too hot. They could add cold water or use an agitator, this way is flashy so they do this.
My husband a marine veteran he wants to go back to Japan after seeing this I told him just leave me in the bath healing waters he can do whatever he wants while I relax in these waters . My husband said it really heals people
@@66VNB in Glenwood springs colorado the water doesnt get mixed with anything, they run it through a series of cooling pipes until its just the right temperature.
@@66VNB No you dont, I promise you. Ive been here for 16 years and while there are plenty of attractions and beautiful sights to take in, the people are insufferable and the laws are getting more restrictive every year. I cant wait to leave next year
all i know is there’s a powerful person from a particular squad who operates that kind of hot spring, and his weapon is also a kind of giant popsicle stick
Uh. Bud. That hot of water would kill you, as you would go into shock from near-instant full body 3rd degree burns, which would drown you or cook you to death if it’s shallow enough.
@@barbarahuber9392 87 means its 13 below boiling you away... And ICE IS also hot then by your scale for me ICE IS cold Not some what Fahrenheit above 0
@@barbarahuber9392 by the way its wrong to do percentages in Temperaturen but If 100% would be boilingtemperature at 100 celsius then 87 indicates its Just there.
im so tired of AI voices for narrated videos. Theyre fine for silly memes but please just hire a voice actor. There's so many people trying to find work.
I can understand complaining about AI art but complaining about an AI narrator for short form copy and paste TH-cam shorts is stupid as fuck. This isn’t daily dose or vsauce this is a content farm.
This reminds me of the way cooling towers work - The hot water is sprayed over the air, which increases the area of contact and allows it to cool quickly as it falls into the reservoir below.
for anyone wondering the science behind it, its all transfer energy and surface area. Heat isn’t an infinite source, and is more like a battery, the more its used or in this case in contact with something colder, it will transfer its energy to that item until its reached its capacity. Heat finds a something new to transfer its energy into as its surrounding has taken as much thermal radiation as it can, so in this case they are just increasing the surface area of the water droplets, making more in contact with the colder air around it, and simultaneously circulating the water to bring new droplets to cool down.
Do we all understand there were absolutely metal japanese folk who went in, stayed in, and thats how they knew it was HEALTHY, /despite/ damn near COOKING THEM ALIVE?! And SO HEALTHY they kept GETTING. BACK. IN. ANYWAY.
This takes me back to mommy cooling our tea for breakfast b4 school....especially if is bush tea😂which holds heat the longest u grab another cup n start pouring from cup to cup..😂😂😂 island life....
People acting like this is some amazing ancient technique that’s so magical. They are literally stirring the hot water just like you do when you have a hot coffee. Absolutely hilarious. Oh sorry I mean oooooh Japan everything is better there whoahhhh fancy.
I was there last November. This is a ritual that now it just done for show/tradition, but it is how they used to cool the water down. Now you can go to baths there at your hotel, in a bath house, or out in the open in foot baths. I was surprised at how the water feels-at first I thought the tingling was from heat, but it’s actually a property of the water itself. It was a really neat place to visit. Another fun fact: Kusatsu is on the Romantic Road, which was made as a correlary to Germany’s Romantische Straße, so it has German signs at the town center. A fun find for my dad, who lived 9 years of his childhood/young adulthood in Germany and is still fluent although he and my mom live in Japan now. Another spot of the romantic road that we visited on the same trip is a Scottish stone castle (Lovelock). Not Scottish-style, but Scottish-it was dismantled, shipped to Japan, and rebuilt in a random mountain countryside in Gunma prefecture.
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This video is more suitable a culture content than tech content.
Fahrenheit...? I guess only American?
It's AI slop.
@@gawiekanjemba2410 °f = thumb down
@@MrBryancslim I mean, tech is tech even if it's ancient tech. This is effectively a human-powered evaporative cooler, using the muscle power of people to disperse the hot water into a fine mist. The finely-divided hot water quickly evaporates into steam and carries away a lot of heat, and the remaining chilled water mixes back into the pool to reduce its overall temperature.
Those are some huge popsicle sticks
Fr😂
I was just abt to say that
Normal size Japanese are small.
With the jokes too
Exactly my thoughts
This is similar to how my mom used to cool down a cup of tea or coffee. You just dump the liquid from one cup into another cup back and forth, after a few times doing that the temperature goes down drastically.
Yeah. That’s what I do when I need to drink my tea in a hurry.
That's something humans have been doing for centuries 😮
Wait till you find out almost all cultures do this. 😂
It's called "Teh Tarik" in my country, look it up 😂
my mom too !
those girls must be crazy strong now
my guy, think of it like a seesaw, it gets lighter the futher away you get from the pivot point, this is light, common sense
Yeah! Rock mommas! 😂💪
Its not light it’s clearly wood, smh didn’t you learn anything about matter in school
I heard they use one stick each hand
@@valyshknee4203you underestimate how heavy water is for that initial lift
Hot water: health benefits
Cold shower: health benefits
Water that's just right for human body: 🖕
lol
I like this.
I mean have you ever sat in a lukewarm bath? It’s not pleasant.
I mean,gym people bath in ice,I don't know why but they do that
@@Asm0sday Reduces swelling and inflamation.
Bless them for being able to stand there, fully uniformed with headwear as well, around that temperature of boiling water wow😮
I don't think they were uninformed, pretty sure those ladies knew what they were there to do
* I'm j/k
Uniformed, uninformed...
Its pretty close so i wouldn't blame you ;).@@TheThingoftheSky
Also the water splashing everywhere
I want to grow up to become a cooling water with wooden stick master.
Best comment 😂
It takes a lifetime to master the Kusatsu technique. These women have been training intensively since they were 6 years old, and they are still considered novices.
😂😂@@samuraijoke16
I was there and got the Yumomi Certificate.
Brother there is a master for everything in Japan they do everything like it's an art and sell it at a premium that's why they have cube-shaped decorative watermelon that sell for above $800 👎
To everyone saying “why don’t they just fill a tank with it, let it cool, and pump it back,” it’s a tradition. If they have no problem doing it, why install a bunch of expensive metal/plastic fixtures that might ruin the simple wooden vibe? Technically the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier could be guarded by a sentry turret and security cameras, but I don’t hear any of you wanting to trash such a sacred American tradition…not hard to understand.
That's actually a really good idea. Probably a lot cheaper to just use some security cameras.
Tradition is stupidity we continue for the sake of itself. So in both cases, yes it is a weird ineffective method.
Because the video made it seem that this is the only way to do it. It never explained the cultural/traditional aspect at all.
I am 100% in favor of guarding the tomb of the unknown soldier with a sentry turret.
Is this the way they do sea salt icecream😂
Why don't they...etc
The answer.. Traditionalism.
Why don't they just not wash? I only wash before an interview for a new job
Which I'm guessing you bathe about 26 times a year, seeing how you'd start reeking after a week or so, and be fired. Starting the whole process over. Wait was that sarcasm I smelled? So it wasn't your pits?
@@jamesrumbaugh3283 wasn't a sarcasm, my moto is 'new job - new underpants'
as one of his former employers, i can confirm that he smelt like shit
You can't be fired for smelling bad. You just get remote work :)
- what do you do for living?
- I stir hot water.
I always love seeing new interesting things about Japan❤
Cooling it with cold water wouldn't reduce the benefits if you just used water from the spring that you already cooled 😅.
It's not very difficult to avoid reducing nonexistent "health benefits".
@@qwasdninja what are you talking about ? There are measurable health benefits backed by science. You've picked a strange thing to be sceptical of.
It's not Chinese medicine where they're grinding up rhino horn to cure diseases - which is about as useful as biting your toenails 🤣🤔
@@qwasdninja😂
@@qwasdninja reasonably it does in a way have "healing"properties assuming its from a natural spring minerals can be benifical and heat therapy is great for some injuries
Yummy pre bathed water
Me painting the house on mushrooms 😂
😂
New bucket list item acquired, thanks! That sounds fun
STOPPP 😂😂😂
Omg yes! None of the colors stayed though…
Mhm mushrooms let me feel like im in Hawaii
Water: gets cold
Him: it's a miracle!
🥱.
Love a good miracle😂
I don't know why but anytime the Japanese or Japan or Korea do anything with they're culture I'm like wow that's amazing!!
This reminds me of what my grandma taught me while cooking she used to tell me to be patient and (in certain foods) to not mix a lot when making something on the stove because it takes the heat away while taking longer to cook
Wouldn't having a cooling pipe with isolated cold water also work? Just saying. This is done out of pageantry, not because there're not better ways to cool the water without diluting it.
I mean, you could just have cooled down water that came from the same spring - it doesn’t have to be tap.
But yes, heat exchangers exist as well.
I'm not sure heat exchangers existed in the Edo period when this tradition started. Maybe it really was the best/only way at the time, maybe it wasn't, but the fact that there's a better way _now_ doesn't invalidate a 400-year old tradition, wouldn't be much of a tradition if it did.
We don’t have to make EVERYTHING as efficient as logistically possible. It’s okay that it’s “pageantry.” It’s cool. Don’t be a spoil-sport
@@robertwrightfonseca that's true but you know because of this, there's a scammer near selling hotspring Popsicle sticks so you can splash your own healing water at home or some junk.
@@clydefrosch I'm not sure what your point is supposed to be. Because there's someone selling junk, the tradition itself is bad ?
They look like they're forging a new zanpaktou.
What I want to know is how long after stirring does the water get too hot again?
Until someone re-open the waterway
@@fltfathin Oh then my question should have been how long until it is deemed too cold and they have to stirred it all over again?
@@wraithflaire1639I hope the answer is found
I watched this 5 years ago when I went to that hot spring in Japan! I remember them singing, it was quite hypnotic
Think of the size of ice cream those sticks came from
a ritual for everything in Japan.
How old do you think our country is?
@@Hiro-xe8rpits just kinda weird. Take liturally anything in japan, and they will claim that its some ancient craft honed with tradition. Its just silly.
@@Obtitenot only Japanese but any other civilization without more intervention of abrahamic faiths we have rituals
Practicality is the question
Humans keep traditions and rituals to maintain the illusion that there is some control of their own lives.
That splash back gotta be crazy 😂
I doubt cooling with water would make any difference it's all about the ritual 😉 Japanese love their rituals
Very true. There's nothing wrong with that, of course! It just really shouldn't be overstated what's actually going on.
No, adding water to the hot spring water, may either sediment the salts due to large temperature differences, dilute the concentration or cause chemical changes. Lowering the temperature though, has no such side effects.
Eating turkey on Thanksgiving is a ritual too I guess.
wym? it's basic thermodynamics. Take a cup of boiling water and pass it to another cup back and forth and it'll cool off drastically
Yes, they do. They're definitely doing it to celebrate tradition, but it's not just that. Adding cold water would dilute the mineral concentration in the spring water, and the health benefit from this particular spring's water comes from its high mineral concentration. Use cooling pipes, you say? Not that easy. The high mineral content I was talking about is sulfur. That area's springs have the highest sulfur content in the world. Cooling pipes are typically made of metals that will succumb to corrosion rather quickly and/or get clogged by sulfate salts. All these are surmountable problems, but there's nothing wrong with using the old method if people like it, is there? They don't do this tradition all day every day. They perform it once a day just to show people the tradition. There's actually a proper cooling tank, with plumbing, in Kusatsu in the town's central square, actually. Source: I live in Japan. I've been to Kusatsu.
Kusatsu is an amazingly beautiful town. I often daydream about coming back.
I went there before Covid. If you pay and go in to watch, you can also have a go at playing with those paddles too AND you get a little certificate from them but the best part is hearing them chant in unison. It's pretty nice. The hotsprings is voted best, too.
Yo foreal i have watched prolly every NHK Documentary and Have a MAL list of bout 1500 finished animes (yes iam a weeb) but i never saw something like that how can such a small ahh country create so much unique Traditions is beyond me, i live in Germany and all we have left ist Schnitzel and even thats Austrian i believe 💀
Woah woah woah, yall are home the kraut, sausage, and some of the best beer. Never forget. I'm an American but pretty much everything but American food is my favorite
No way you saw 1500 animes
Bro you guys tried to take over the world twice in 50 years. EVERYBODY KNOWS YOU GUYS.
Bro you guys tried to take over the world twice in 50 years. Everybody knows you.
Instead of watching anime you can educate yourself on the very real Japanese culture
Hmm Fahrenheit degree, you have just forgotten to say how many elbows Long it is and how many elephants fits inside. 😂😂😂😂
let them have their thing, they put man on the moon you know (55 years ago ahem)
@@CHRISTIEMALRYLIBRARY using the metric system
@@CHRISTIEMALRYLIBRARY You know that NASA use metric, do you...
@@thymark i do indeed its just thats their line when you point out the lunacy of their archaic system ''there are two kinds of country those who use the metric system and those who put man on the moon '' the irony being as you say, nasa used metric
@@CHRISTIEMALRYLIBRARY Like
If they used the same kind of water the benefits should be the same. They could just take some water out until its cold, then put it back.
That would apply if this entire thing wasn't complete bullshit.
That's what I was going to say
@@wavyremixNot every water IS the same
@@marvin2678 None of it's magic though. Hot water feels good unless it's too hot. They could add cold water or use an agitator, this way is flashy so they do this.
You could, but this is faster.
You're telling me Japan isn't trying to hide giant popsicles? I see the sticks right there.
My husband a marine veteran he wants to go back to Japan after seeing this I told him just leave me in the bath healing waters he can do whatever he wants while I relax in these waters . My husband said it really heals people
i love japanese appreciation for quality 🔥🔥 in america they would definitely use cold water 😂😂
@@66VNB in Glenwood springs colorado the water doesnt get mixed with anything, they run it through a series of cooling pipes until its just the right temperature.
@@ChaotiX1 honestly thanks for reminding me of why i need to move to colorado 😁😁
@@66VNB No you dont, I promise you. Ive been here for 16 years and while there are plenty of attractions and beautiful sights to take in, the people are insufferable and the laws are getting more restrictive every year. I cant wait to leave next year
@@ChaotiX1 😂😂geesh.
Their normal 6th member burned the sh!t outta herself 😂
all i know is there’s a powerful person from a particular squad who operates that kind of hot spring, and his weapon is also a kind of giant popsicle stick
The rest of the planet: we wait 5 minutes for the water to cool a bit
Japan: USE GIANT ICE CREAM STICKS!!!!!
Far too hot for bathing hahahaha I take baths in waters up to 114-116 190 is only a few steps away
You must be very strong 😮😮
Idiot, 190 degrees gives third degree burns almost instantly
Uh. Bud. That hot of water would kill you, as you would go into shock from near-instant full body 3rd degree burns, which would drown you or cook you to death if it’s shallow enough.
...that's a 70 degree difference lmfao the fact that you think it's not much of a change is crazy
Bud you might need to reconsider your sense of scale
What is 190 Fahrenheit.... I only l know 0 Celsius and 100 celsius one IS ICE the other is boiling... Why so we need to calculate this still in 2024?
87 C by my calculator and 190 at least SOUNDS hot...87 doesnt indicate severe heat at all
@@barbarahuber9392 87 means its 13 below boiling you away... And ICE IS also hot then by your scale for me ICE IS cold Not some what Fahrenheit above 0
@@barbarahuber9392 by the way its wrong to do percentages in Temperaturen but If 100% would be boilingtemperature at 100 celsius then 87 indicates its Just there.
@@barbarahuber9392 again Not 0 for ICE indicates its still hot...
Because of Americans
im so tired of AI voices for narrated videos. Theyre fine for silly memes but please just hire a voice actor. There's so many people trying to find work.
I can understand complaining about AI art but complaining about an AI narrator for short form copy and paste TH-cam shorts is stupid as fuck. This isn’t daily dose or vsauce this is a content farm.
Theres definitely a Popsicle joke here i just cant put my finger on it
This reminds me of the way cooling towers work - The hot water is sprayed over the air, which increases the area of contact and allows it to cool quickly as it falls into the reservoir below.
“Hear me out
GIANT POPSICLE STICKS”
*ancient japanese audience claps*
Me: ... *fills 12 buckets with hot spring water, let's them sit and chill for later use*
This feels straight out of spirited away and I love it
Japan normally: high tech af.
Japanese traditional medicine: literally just a rumor.
Me stirring my coffee in the morning waiting for it to cool down lmao
So many anime bath house scenes just made so much more sense
"This 400 year old hot spring still does cooling the old fashioned way."
My first thought was: 'are those popsicle sticks?'
Hot pool with stick: boring, weird
Hot pool with stick japan: miracle, healing
japan never ceases to amaze me
Me at the hot springs: set me on fire now, if my high blood pressure doesn't sound like a freight train, it's not hot enough.
"Minecraft update, hot water now starts fires"
Therapeutic you say? Something tells me that this water is radioactive.
Imagine the dad jokes on those popsicle sticks.
Imagine training your entire life to mix water with big popsicle sticks
So fascinating that you find roots of culture in such a high tech country.
Allowing people to get into the cooled water that’s still on the boil. I’ll continue with my daily vitamin thanks.
These Japanese wood stirring people will probably say it took them 10+ years to master this while still being apprentices.
It is so funny to think that someone in old Japan said "hey let's make this a tradition with strict rules and routines to follow"
Those are the biggest popsicle sticks I've ever seen 😂😂
for anyone wondering the science behind it, its all transfer energy and surface area. Heat isn’t an infinite source, and is more like a battery, the more its used or in this case in contact with something colder, it will transfer its energy to that item until its reached its capacity. Heat finds a something new to transfer its energy into as its surrounding has taken as much thermal radiation as it can, so in this case they are just increasing the surface area of the water droplets, making more in contact with the colder air around it, and simultaneously circulating the water to bring new droplets to cool down.
They make even water cooling an ancient ritual.
imagine the absolute mad man who first thought of this and was like “hear me out”
I can literally use that long stick to make the world's most biggest popsicle
Do we all understand there were absolutely metal japanese folk who went in, stayed in, and thats how they knew it was HEALTHY, /despite/ damn near COOKING THEM ALIVE?! And SO HEALTHY they kept GETTING. BACK. IN. ANYWAY.
I love that they make this a formal ritual. 😂
190 Fahrenheit according to google is 87 Celcius
For people too lazy to google (like me but couldnt find the comment)
All fun and and games until a giant sludge spirit wants a bath
6 big popsicles sticks and a small pool of magic healing
Ah yes, my favorite tech moment! When people use zero tech to do things that are completely unrelated to tech!
My mom when I’m a toddler running my bath:
Someone should take a stick like that and make a giant icecream somehow
This takes me back to mommy cooling our tea for breakfast b4 school....especially if is bush tea😂which holds heat the longest
u grab another cup n start pouring from cup to cup..😂😂😂 island life....
Tiny humans flipping ice cream sticks
Miracles on water sounds like jesus made a band.
Why couldn't this be done automatically via robotic servos?
Somebody didn't show up for work today
People acting like this is some amazing ancient technique that’s so magical. They are literally stirring the hot water just like you do when you have a hot coffee. Absolutely hilarious. Oh sorry I mean oooooh Japan everything is better there whoahhhh fancy.
I didn't know i was always doing miracles with my tea.
I was there last November. This is a ritual that now it just done for show/tradition, but it is how they used to cool the water down. Now you can go to baths there at your hotel, in a bath house, or out in the open in foot baths. I was surprised at how the water feels-at first I thought the tingling was from heat, but it’s actually a property of the water itself. It was a really neat place to visit.
Another fun fact: Kusatsu is on the Romantic Road, which was made as a correlary to Germany’s Romantische Straße, so it has German signs at the town center. A fun find for my dad, who lived 9 years of his childhood/young adulthood in Germany and is still fluent although he and my mom live in Japan now. Another spot of the romantic road that we visited on the same trip is a Scottish stone castle (Lovelock). Not Scottish-style, but Scottish-it was dismantled, shipped to Japan, and rebuilt in a random mountain countryside in Gunma prefecture.
Japanese has always a way to do things with tradition and style and make it appealing to eyes
Ah yes “healing properties” 😅😅😅 Cough BULLSHIT Cough Cough.
Me: playing with the water in the tub
The Japanese: You're hired
Those must have been some MASSIVE popsicle’s
Me, “ I think I’ll just wait a bit for this to cool off”
I'm so glad you didn't pour in a little cold water and obstruct the magic
I remember seeing this in Outlaw Star AGES ago! I never knew what that water stirring was all about, but I still loved the anime to no end 😊
i feel like I'm watching a scene from spirited away
their back must be aching 😂
Paddles: ❌
Giant popsicle sticks: ✅
Stand in the shower then sit down and you’ll notice it’s cooler when you’re sitting. Not by much but it’s cooler. The air helps it go down in temp.
Wherever you saw this, watch again, and listen carefully this time 😂
That looks like a giant popsicle stick
Nature: Here's a hot spring full of health benefits, but it's inhabitable:(
Humans: sticks.
A miracle is having a hollow thing in a dwelling that you can turn a knob and fill with heated water
Ima just sneak some ice cubes into the pool
“does miracles on water” it just cools it lol
Is this how popsicles are made? 5 tiny geisha's? Respect!
I’m over here thinking they stirred it so much that it boils 😅
I like to swirl my leftover car drinks infront of the AC. Cools it in about 5 minutes