Incredibly Rare Frozen ‘Slurpee’ Waves Spotted On The Coast Of Nantucket - 1

Incredibly Rare Frozen ‘Slurpee’ Waves Spotted On The Coast Of Nantucket

When the temperature gets below 30°F, the last thing you want to do is go outside. However, some people aren’t bothered by cold at all, so much so they don’t mind taking a dip in a literally freezing ocean. On January 2nd Nick Hayden and Jamie Briard got into their wetsuits and went out surfboarding. Their friend, photographer Jonathan Nimerfroh, joined in with his camera in order to capture the crazy surfers enjoying this rare phenomenon of frozen, Slurpee-like waves.

Although the idea of getting in the water when it’s only 12°F (-11°C) doesn’t sound fun at all, both surfers had a blast. “[They were] hooting and hollering and holding up giant icebergs above their heads in neoprene gloved hands,” described Nimerfroh, who was running up and down the shore the whole time taking pictures. The photographer counts himself as “very lucky” as it is the second time he’s witnessed the Slurpee waves (see our first post about it here ).

The ice crystals form in the ocean waves when the temperature gets below 28.4°F (-2°C), which is the freezing point of salt water. Still, the waters are usually too restless for the ice particles to appear, so this occurrence is extremely rare and often short-lived – the photographer told Live Science that the Slurpee-like consistency of the waves lasted only for about 3 hours.

Scroll down to look at the amazing pictures and the daredevils that took the challenge of surfing them.

More info: official page | facebook | instagram | Jamie Briard’s instagram | Nick Hayden instagram (h/t colossal )

These Slurpee-like waves were spotted on January 2nd at Nobadeer Beach in Nantucket

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This rare phenomenon happens when ice particles form in cold (below 28.4°F / -2°C) and calm ocean waters

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And they’re not just pretty to look at – they are also surfable

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Photographer Jonathan Nimerfroh captured his friends enjoying this rare occurrence

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The temperature of water that day dropped to biting 12°F (-11°C) but it didn’t stop the surfers

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Nick Hayden and Jamie Briard sported fully covering wetsuits to protect themselves from the freezing cold

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The first time Nimerfroh captured the waves on camera in 2015 the pictures instantly went viral

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“Slurpee waves are the kind of thing you might only be lucky enough to see once, so I count myself as very lucky to have seen them twice,” claimed the photographer

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The Slurpee waves, however, don’t stay like that for too long. According to the photographer, after about 3 hours the ocean was back to normal

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Check out the video footage of this amazing phenomenon

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Agne

This is your daily reminder that you’re good enough and you’re beautiful. Make sure to gift your smile to the world a little more often and continue spreading the word of positivity.

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20-Year-Old Engineer’s Idea To Make Ocean Clean Itself Will Be Launched Next Year

Boyan Slat is a 20 year old with an idea on how to clean plastic trash from our oceans. The Ocean Cleanup initiative wants to reduce the amount of trash in the oceans by employing floating barriers that are moored to the seabed. They would collect lighter-than-water plastic trash with the help of the ocean currents and without harming sea life.

The pilot, which will be deployed near Tsushima Island (located between Japan and Korea) in the first quarter of 2016, will test the durability and viability of the project. It will be only 2000 meters long, a far cry from the planned 100 kilometers length, but it will still be the longest floating structure on Earth.

Cleaning up plastic garbage in ocean, like the infamous Great Pacific Garbage Patch, is impractical with ships. However, the 100km stationary cleanup array could remove 42% of the Garbage Patch over 10 years, 70,320,000kg in total.

More info: theoceancleanup.com | Facebook | Twitter (h/t: boredpanda )

When it’s deployed in 2016, the 2,000m floating line will become the longest floating structure in the world.

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This concept will test out 20-year-old Boyan Slat’s plan to rid the oceans of floating plastic waste.

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This plan would use ocean currents to skim the plastic trash without harming the sea life.

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The eventual Ocean Cleanup Array would be a 100km long and able to collect 70,320,000kg of plastic waste over 10 years

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Estimated clean up cost would be roughly 4.53 euros (5.04 USD) per kilogram – 3% of the cost of other potential clean-up methods

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Martynas Klimas

Writes like a mad dervish, rolls to dodge responsibility, might have bitten the Moon once.