hit counter html code I lived underwater in tiny steel pod for record 120 days with no shower  – this is what I did first when I got out – Cure fym

I lived underwater in tiny steel pod for record 120 days with no shower  – this is what I did first when I got out


A WORLD record holder who spent 120 days underwater – without a shower – revealed the first thing he did when he came back to land.

German aerospace engineer Rudiger Koch, 59, subjected himself to four months in a 320-square-foot capsule.

Rudiger Koch, underwater in a room, being interviewed.
AFP

Rudiger Koch spent 120 days living underwater[/caption]

Man exercising on stationary bike in underwater room.
AFP

The 59-year-old broke a world record[/caption]

Man in underwater habitat.
AFP

The German aerospace engineer revealed what he missed the most underwater[/caption]

SeaPod Alpha Deep, an underwater living structure, with a person on a jet ski nearby.
AFP

His temporary home was just off the coast of Puerto Lindo in Panama[/caption]

Koch started his shock adventure on September 26, 2024, just off Puerto Lindo in Panama.

His underwater home – called the SeaPod Alpha Deep – resembled the inside of a soulless chamber but the engineer managed to include some essentials in his space.

Koch managed to fit a TV, computer, exercise bike, portable toilet, and fans in the tight space.

Despite living underwater in the Caribbean Sea, the engineer was able to use internet through satellites.

Solar panels and a backup generator supplied electricity into the space.

His underwater home was connected to another chamber above water through a vertical tube – which was how food would have been brought down to him during that time.

He even had his family, doctor, and journalists come into the special home to visit him.

Koch joked about this in December when he said: “The last time I checked, I was still married.”

Despite these necessities and luxuries, Koch missed having a real shower.

While underwater, he revealed jumping in for a good wash would be the first thing he did when back on the ground.


The engineer set a new world record on Friday for the longest time living underwater without depressurisation.

Koch was met outside of his temporary home by Guinness World Records adjudicator Susana Reyes to confirm his astonishing achievement.

The record was previously held by American Joseph Dituri, who spent 100 days living in an underwater lodge in a Florida lagoon.

When he left the capsule, Koch said: “It was a great adventure and now it’s over there’s almost a sense of regret actually.

Man in underwater room.
AFP

His home was just 320-square-foot[/caption]

Man eating breakfast in an underwater habitat.
AFP

He was able to have internet and his computer in his chamber[/caption]

Silhouette of a man in an underwater room.
AFP

His family, doctor, and journalists were able to visit[/caption]

“I enjoyed my time here very much.”

His chamber has several circle windows that gave the record-holder a view into the sea.

He revealed the beauty of this feature in his tiny but temporary home.

He said: “It is beautiful when things calm down and it gets dark and the sea is glowing.

“It is impossible to describe, you have to experience that yourself.”

He added: “In the night, you can hear all the crustaceans.”

“There’s the fish out there, and there’s all that stuff, and that wasn’t here before we came.”

Underwater view through a porthole showing two fish.
AFP

Fish could be seen through the window of the underwater part of the house[/caption]

Man celebrating a world record for living underwater.
AFP

Koch celebrated after breaking the Guinness world record[/caption]

About admin