Including crushing apples with the palm of the hand .. the most prominent Guinness records in strength

Including crushing apples with the palm of the hand .. the most prominent Guinness records in strength
Including crushing apples with the palm of the hand .. the most prominent Guinness records in strength

Among the different talents and abilities in all fields, the Guinness Book of Records is always keen to present the highest records in all that is strange and unusual.

Among the records for strength and physical abilities, there are some talents that have distinguished themselves more than others, so the official account on Twitter, for the Guinness Book of Records, published a group of those unique talents, we get to know the most prominent of them in the following lines:

Al-Turki Ali Bachebe broke the largest number of cement boards in one fell swoop, with 37 boards.

As for the American Ashrita Foreman, he smashed 85 bottles on his head in just 30 seconds.

While the Pakistani Mojtaba Hassan set a record by crushing 118 walnuts using the Nanchanko weapon in one minute.

And the one-minute challenge continued with American Matt Dobson, who managed during this time to break 19 baseball bats on his back.

The Pakistani, Mohammed Rashid, was able to smash 77 soda bottles with his elbow, within one minute as well.

It is usually used near hot water for therapeutic purposes, but the American Brian Jackson had another opinion, so he blew within a minute in five nears until the explosion.

To show how powerful his palm is, Britain’s Donny Baxter crushed 13 apples with just his hand in a minute.

As a testament to his stamina, American John Ferraro managed to smash 45 concrete slabs on his head with a bowling ball, in just three minutes.

While the Italian Luigi Di Michele managed to launch one arrow through 38 water-filled balloons, before hitting the target with great accuracy.

As for the strangest of all, it is what the British Jay Weedon did, which is smashing 88 alarm clocks using his foot within one minute!

PREV Astronomers discover the “largest” cosmic explosion ever recorded
NEXT Standard & Poor’s: Qatar is a strong competitor in the gas market even after 2030