Octopus & Faster
So, I’ve been crunching the numbers on octopus jet propulsion—curious how their escape speed stacks against human sprint times?
Octopuses can reach about a metre per second when they jet, so a quick escape is roughly a tenth of a human sprint speed – we can dash at ten metres per second or more. But octopuses pull off that burst in a fraction of a second, while we human runners need a few seconds to build up that speed. So it’s not speed, it’s rapid, flexible movement that gives the octopus the edge in the deep.
Nice, but remember humans plan, endure, and can outrun for miles—speed’s only part of the game. Next time, let’s see how fast I can get a 100‑m dash in under ten seconds.
Sounds like a fun challenge! If you can hit a 100‑meter dash in under ten seconds, you’ll be showing even a jet‑propelled octopus that planning and endurance pay off. Good luck, and let me know how you feel after the run!
Got it, time’s ticking. I’ll lace up, line up my split plans, and hit 100 meters in nine and a half. Watch me finish—no excuses, just raw effort. Keep the stopwatch ready.
That’s the spirit! I’ll keep the stopwatch humming and wait for your finish line. Let’s see how those split plans turn into pure, raw effort on the track. Good luck, and let me know how it feels when you cross that 100‑meter mark.
Racing to the finish line feels like a high‑pressure engine revving up; every breath is a calculated burst. I’m hitting that 100‑meter mark now—still burning, but it’s pure, relentless momentum. I’ll let you know the exact time in a sec.