Live Streaming: Great Adventure in the Wilderness-Chapter 792 - 788: Forge Ahead
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The appearance of the water tornado terrified everyone and made Bi Fang quickly raise his vigilance, or rather, his vigilance once again reached its peak.
Staying fully focused was not an easy task, as mental fatigue could sometimes come faster than physical exhaustion, especially for Bi Fang who had consecutively experienced all of this.
If he could, he really wanted to lie down and have a good sleep, without worrying that the wind and waves would suddenly increase, shattering the small boat, or that the remaining food would get wet from the surging seawater, becoming moldy and spoiled, leaving him with nothing.
The water tornado came quickly and left quickly; menacing on its arrival, it didn't drag or linger as it departed, which was one of its characteristics.
In about a quarter of an hour, it dissipated above the sea under Bi Fang's headache, leaving behind a faint mist.
[Damn, that just scared the hell out of me]
[Spinning a dragon in the water for everyone]
[It's my first time seeing a dragon sucking up water, what should I say]
[Typhoons are really too fierce, they're dangerous on land, let alone at sea, sigh, I hope Master Fang keeps it up]
[Tumble dryer]
The audience was equally unsettled, and it took a few minutes for the barrage of comments to start leaping up.
It was too dangerous; if we had been any closer, wouldn't we have been smashed to pieces?
It was also fortunate that Bi Fang had realized the danger in advance, or else a real disaster could have occurred.
With every adventure, Bi Fang felt more and more that, among all his abilities, Beastly Instinct was the most crucial.
It always sent out a warning before the real danger arrived.
However, repeated practice also made Bi Fang increasingly clear about the true nature of this ability.
Beastly Instinct is not precognition but an amplification of subconscious vigilance feedback.
The unpredictable cannot be investigated.
Beastly Instinct is not truly like sensing the autumn breeze before it stirs but sensing it early as it begins to stir.
Redwood Ants have sensors that detect changes in carbon dioxide and Earth's magnetic field; whenever an earthquake is imminent, they react in advance and no longer return to their nests.
Most fish have a line-pattern on both sides of their bodies, extending from the head to the tip of the tail, a vital sensory organ adapted to aquatic life. When the ocean's waves strike reefs and rocky shores, causing changes in water flow and vibration frequencies, the fish's lateral line detects these changes and accurately adjusts their swimming direction to safely navigate through reefs and hazards.
This lateral line can also sense low-frequency vibrations that the inner ear cannot, which is vitally important for finding food and avoiding being caught.
When the Krakatoa Volcano erupted, its infrasound waves circled the Earth three times, traveling tens of thousands of kilometers, causing countless animals that can detect infrasound waves to react anxiously.
Not to mention common poultry for now.
The source of this c𝐨ntent is freeweɓnovēl.coɱ.
Pigeons: Refusing to enter the nest, perching outside the house, suddenly startled into flight, and emptying the nest.
Rats: Coming out of holes in groups during daylight, appearing bewildered like they're intoxicated, fearless of humans, running around in panic, moving house carrying their young.
Snakes: Hibernating snakes emerging from their holes, freezing stiff in the snow, increasing in numbers, clustering together.
Fish: Floating in schools, swimming frantically, jumping out of the water, captive fish leaping chaotically, bumping their heads and tails until they bleed, jumping out of the tank, making noises, becoming lethargic, dying.
Toads: Coming out of their holes in groups.
The strange behaviors of animals before a disaster are seen by humans as a form of precognition, but in reality, there is no such thing as precognition in the world, only highly advanced detection methods.
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All manner of animals, all manner of organs.
Electromagnetic waves, infrasound, odors, vision, air pressure, humidity, wind direction, temperature, ultraviolet radiation.
They can see what humans can't see, hear what humans can't hear, smell what humans can't smell, feel what humans can't feel.
This is the essence of everything.
But do humans really not see, not hear, not smell, not feel?
Change is always there, scenery has already entered the eyes, odor molecules have already entered the nostrils, electromagnetic induction, air pressure, changes in humidity are always present.
It's just that they are too faint, not captured in the stream of thoughts, but humans' subconscious does have a sense of them.
The potential of the human brain is boundless, consider the common Iceberg Theory of the brain—could it be that what lies beneath is dormant?
Of course not.
Even an extra half a pound of fat has the ability to let you hold on a little longer when at the end of your tether; how much more so half a pound of brain?
Hormones, digestion, heartbeat, breathing, excretion, libido, eat when hungry, sleep when tired.
The subconscious processes all the vast and complex information from the body, accumulating information across layers of genetic inheritance from millions of years of human evolution.
Incorporating the most important instincts and autonomous nervous system functions for human survival with the laws of the universe, meaning all the best survival intelligence humans have acquired in the past is stored in the subconscious.
Therefore, as long as one knows how to develop this innate ability, there are hardly any wishes that cannot be realized.
Those faint signals, invisible to the conscious mind, are well within the capabilities of the subconscious, but only those who are sensitive enough can perceive them.
One may not be able to effectively identify what the danger is, but the subconscious can distinctly feel the difference, triggering an anomaly.
Bi Fang could sense the approach of a wolf pack on the Arctic tundra because the stench of the predators had already wafted in through the door cracks.
Being able to sense a typhoon is because the air pressure and wind direction had already undergone subtle changes.
Perhaps the conscious mind is unaware, but the subconscious has detected a discordance and thus sends a warning to the human brain.
The Beastly Instinct itself is to infinitely amplify this warning.
Bi Fang's enhanced senses, along with the ability to capture more information—olfaction, vision, electromagnetic induction—further aid in the capture of information, enhancing the Beastly Instinct itself.
With concentrated thoughts, Bi Fang focused his mind on the Viking, continuing the struggle against the wind and waves.
Strictly speaking, his current location was actually on the edge of the typhoon, and it was precisely because of this that Bi Fang could maintain forward speed. Otherwise, the wind and waves surging on the sea's surface alone would be enough to overwhelm him, let alone moving at high speed.
The power of a typhoon is too terrifying. The waves within its range could well be described as "turning rivers upside down," and any closer proximity would exponentially increase Bi Fang's struggle for survival, preventing him from leveraging this tailwind.
A mere few seconds of wind speed could break the original mast on the spot, capsize the small boat, and conjure up waves at least three meters high, with no escape.
That's not a storm lasting half a day, or a full day, but several days—something beyond the resistance of any individual.
Even if Bi Fang had enough skill, his physical strength would not permit it.
Luckily, thanks to this edge of the typhoon, the sail was always billowed, and his progress could almost be described as covering a thousand miles in a day.
Today's progress was at least equivalent to two days' worth from before.
This also meant that Bi Fang was now very close to Nemo Point. At most, by tonight, he would cross Nemo Point, completing the most crucial step of this mission.