@1nl.m: #اهداء للخريجين🤚🏻.#fyppppppppppppppppppppppp #vira #foryou #Aldosery

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Friday 19 June 2026 11:28:16 GMT
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msb.g25
msb.g25 :
يلا باقي سنه😭🥺
2026-06-20 10:43:15
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7.0ue
Š :
عقبالي 2029
2026-06-22 17:18:06
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𝘁𝗷𝗰
Abdullah Al-Jabri :
1 week
2026-06-21 16:34:23
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This is not random movement. This is a blue whale trying to survive. What you’re seeing is a scientific tracking visualisation from the Gulf of Ancud in Chile. The blue line is the whale. The chaotic lines around it represent heavy boat traffic. Instead of moving calmly and feeding efficiently, the whale is forced into constant zigzags, sudden turns, and unnatural patterns just to avoid collisions. This is what stress looks like in the ocean. Blue whales are the largest animals to have ever lived, yet here they are, adjusting their entire behaviour to avoid ships. In some areas like this, they can encounter up to 1,000 vessels per day during feeding season. Imagine trying to eat, rest, or care for your young while constantly having to dodge traffic. That’s what’s happening here. And it matters more than people think. Because every time a whale changes its path like this, it uses more energy, feeds less efficiently, and increases its risk of exhaustion, separation from calves, or fatal ship strikes. This is not just “boats in the ocean.” This is pressure. This is disturbance. This is a giant animal adapting to a world that is no longer built for it. And unlike viral wildlife moments, this doesn’t look dramatic in real life. But this is where the real impact is happening. Not from predators. From us. Share this with someone who thinks ocean traffic has no impact. Follow for more real ocean stories you don’t usually see. ✨ 📹 Visualization by Luis Bedriñana-Romano (original creator) ✍️ Description by Ocean Calling Retreats ✨
This is not random movement. This is a blue whale trying to survive. What you’re seeing is a scientific tracking visualisation from the Gulf of Ancud in Chile. The blue line is the whale. The chaotic lines around it represent heavy boat traffic. Instead of moving calmly and feeding efficiently, the whale is forced into constant zigzags, sudden turns, and unnatural patterns just to avoid collisions. This is what stress looks like in the ocean. Blue whales are the largest animals to have ever lived, yet here they are, adjusting their entire behaviour to avoid ships. In some areas like this, they can encounter up to 1,000 vessels per day during feeding season. Imagine trying to eat, rest, or care for your young while constantly having to dodge traffic. That’s what’s happening here. And it matters more than people think. Because every time a whale changes its path like this, it uses more energy, feeds less efficiently, and increases its risk of exhaustion, separation from calves, or fatal ship strikes. This is not just “boats in the ocean.” This is pressure. This is disturbance. This is a giant animal adapting to a world that is no longer built for it. And unlike viral wildlife moments, this doesn’t look dramatic in real life. But this is where the real impact is happening. Not from predators. From us. Share this with someone who thinks ocean traffic has no impact. Follow for more real ocean stories you don’t usually see. ✨ 📹 Visualization by Luis Bedriñana-Romano (original creator) ✍️ Description by Ocean Calling Retreats ✨

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