Friday, July 1, 2022

This Emergency Phone Charger Is The Size of Your Keychain

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Charge Your Phone On The Go

Power Pod
Never Be Stuck with a Dead Phone Battery
 

Are you ever outside with your phone and realize you have no battery left Imagine needing to call for help and not having the power you need! With Power Pod, this never has to happen again!

Get 33% Off
Power Pod

EMERGENCY PHONE POWER ANYWHERE

Power Pod is a small and lightweight device that fits on your keychain and you can take anywhere, yet is strong enough to deliver instant power to your mobile phone that will last for hours!

With Power Pod , you never have to worry about your battery running low or being stuck not able to make a call in an emergency! The perfect size to stick on to backpacks so the kids can call for a ride after school or practice!

Power Pod
 
Always Have Charge When You Need It

Power Pod sells fast, and with the 33% off sale, we don t expect inventory to last. Get yours now while they are still available!

Get 33% Off
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netrated a belt of pack ice and sailed into the Ross Sea, but whales were still elusive. On 17 January 1895 a landing was made at Possession Island, where Sir James Clark Ross had planted the British flag in 1841. Bull and Borchgrevink left a message in a canister to prove their presence there. On the island Borchgrevink found a lichen, the first plant life discovered south of the Antarctic Circle. On 24 January the ship reached the vicinity of Cape Adare, at the northern extremity of the Victoria Land coastline of the Antarctic mainland. Ross's 1841 expedition been unable to land here, but as Antarctic neared the cape, conditions were calm enough for a boat to be lowered. A party including Bull, Kristensen, Borchgrevink and others then headed for a shingled foreshore below the cape. Exactly who went ashore first was disputed, between Kristensen, Borchgrevink, and a 17-year-old New Zealand seaman, Alexander von Tunzelmann, who said that he had "leapt out to hold the boat steady". The party claimed this was the first landing on the Antarctic mainland, although they may have been preceded by the Anglo-American sealing captain John Davis, on the Antarctic Peninsula on 7 February 1821, or by other whaling expeditions. While ashore at Cape Adare, Borchgrevink collected further specimens of rocks and lichens, the








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