Most Knives Caught in One Minute
The World Record of ‘most knives caught in one minute’ has been achieved by Ms. Matara Sammy from More, West Indies.
On July 31, 2015; Ms. Sammy caught Fifty Eight (58) knives in one minute.
The World Record of ‘most knives caught in one minute’ has been achieved by Ms. Matara Sammy from More, West Indies.
On July 31, 2015; Ms. Sammy caught Fifty Eight (58) knives in one minute.
The World Record of ‘largest collection of Didgeridoo’ has been achieved by Mr. Charlie Moyle from Perth, Australia.
On Aug 25, 2015; Mr. Moyle has a privately owned collection of Four Hundred Thirty Four (434) Didgeridoo of various designs, shapes and sizes.
The World Record of ‘fastest identification of national flags’ has been achieved by Master J. Jonathan Tait (04 years 10 months 13 days) from Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India.
On Jan 21, 2017; Jonathan from St. John’s Public School identified 255 national flags in Two Minute Thirty Three Seconds (2 Min 33 Sec).
The World Record of ‘most people dressed as Albert Einstein’ has been achieved by Black Pine Circle School from Berkeley, California, USA.
On Mar 05, 2015; Three Hundred Four (304) people wearing wig, moustache and blazer dressed as Albert Einstein.
The World Record of ‘youngest litterateur’ has been achieved by Baby Lachi Prajapati (9 years 112 days) from Jaipur, Rajasthan, India.
On Oct 13, 2015; the book of Lachi titled ‘sit a while with me’ containing short stories, poems, limericks etc. has been printed by Sakshi Printers.
The World Record of ‘widest waterfall of the world’ has been achieved by The Khone Falls from Laos.
The Khone Falls also known as Chutes de Khone is the widest waterfall in the world. It is Thirty Five Thousand Three Hundred Seventy Six (35376) feet wide, which is almost twice the width of second widest waterfall; Pará Falls. The falls are part of the Mekong River in Laos and occur where the river splits into seven large and many smaller channels. It is made up of several different rapids and falls, cascading down 69 feet. The most defined part of the waterfall is a 45-foot drop, at an angle of 60 degree. About 410,000 cubic feet of water rush down this waterfall every single second.