5 Graveyard of the Pacific Tragedies

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  • Опубліковано 22 гру 2024

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  • @BigOldBoats
    @BigOldBoats  Рік тому +265

    Hey crew! This is a re-upload. Yesterday's video had some weird audio issues that I had to fix. Hope you all enjoy this compilation of some of my favorite videos!

    • @Red_Sea_
      @Red_Sea_ Рік тому +6

      And here I thought I was going crazy yesterday when it disappeared from my YT history

    • @tundrawomansays694
      @tundrawomansays694 Рік тому +4

      Thanks so much. Just found your channel, excellent content and research. Subbed!

    • @filmconnor
      @filmconnor Рік тому +7

      I love your videos but I've watched them so much I skip the ones I've heard a hundred times

    • @Xavier-jh8qy
      @Xavier-jh8qy Рік тому +3

      ​@@Red_Sea_same here 😂

    • @N7Turk
      @N7Turk Рік тому +1

      I was in the middle of watching the video and it went away and I was so blasted confused. Glad to see it back!

  • @Redblockish
    @Redblockish Рік тому +1229

    UA-cam: Sure you were looking up toilet valve replacement videos, but do you want to watch 2 hours of meticulously researched boat content instead? Me: ...Yes.

    • @taralynstevenson4016
      @taralynstevenson4016 Рік тому +20

      Everytime!

    • @bentboybbz
      @bentboybbz Рік тому +35

      Thats odd I was looking up toilet valve replacements too and here I am ! I think there is a weird glitch in the algorithm 😂

    • @sdriza
      @sdriza Рік тому +38

      The toilet can wait.

    • @SophiFike
      @SophiFike Рік тому +29

      Welcome to my favorite bedtime listening channel

    • @camous8540
      @camous8540 Рік тому +10

      Was just looking at a short about a plumber replacing a valve and here we are 😂

  • @erickvistad3078
    @erickvistad3078 11 місяців тому +131

    Outstanding video! Retired from Coast Guard after 30 years of service. Served several tours in the PACNW and Alaska. Homeported out of Astoria, Oregon and sailed across the Columbia River Bar in various conditions of sea state. Worst day was aboard CGC IRIS when we were overtaken by a white squall pelting us with 70+ knot winds and 50-yard visibility just after exiting the river. We got slammed by 50+ foot seas and wind howling through the halyards like banshees. After suffering significant damage we managed to cross the bar again and crawl back into the Columbia and into homeport. IRIS was a stout ship and she carried us safely back home but our fate was definitely in doubt. It was a memorable day for sure!

    • @kimhohlmayer7018
      @kimhohlmayer7018 11 місяців тому +9

      I would love to hear more of your service stories.

    • @nicholaswinebrenner5164
      @nicholaswinebrenner5164 11 місяців тому +5

      Thank you for your service.

    • @vanessacarraway5471
      @vanessacarraway5471 9 місяців тому +2

      I live in Astoria, Oregon that's an amazing story. Thank you

    • @slupot
      @slupot 9 місяців тому +4

      Thank you for your service. The Coast Guard doesn't get much recognition, but you all are SERIOUSLY vitally important, respected and make coastal life so much safer. I do all of my boating out of juneau AK, elfin cove mostly, in the Icey Straight / Cross sound. Your information on VHF channel 16 is absolutely critical in an area where no other forms of communication exists. From rescue swimmers, radio technicians to navigational aid repairers ALL deserve recognition and respect. Without that service many, many more lives would be lost. Again, thank you!

    • @slupot
      @slupot 9 місяців тому

      Also, the Columbia bar is NO JOKE! 50ft waves might as well be off shore tsunamis, yet the CG braves them,, risking their own lives, to save countless people who would SURELY perish without you all.

  • @spenceair1972
    @spenceair1972 7 місяців тому +56

    The old saying “passing like two ships in the night” never seems to apply to two ships at night.

    • @richardcranium3579
      @richardcranium3579 5 місяців тому +7

      They have a helluva time passing each other sometimes.

    • @dieselrichardson9055
      @dieselrichardson9055 3 місяці тому +5

      Feels like 50% of these shipwreck videos either go “two ships turned into each other and crashed” or “ship mysteriously sank with no explanation” and no in between lol so yeah no joke

  • @robertsnorrason2494
    @robertsnorrason2494 Рік тому +138

    I used to work on the Copenhagen-Oslo ro-pax ferries and I remember one of the captains telling me that he would only ever consider lowering lifeboats if the ship was on uncontrollable fire. His reasoning was simply that launching lifeboats, even in calm weather, is ridiculously risky because of how easily a group of people panic and take stupid and dangerous decisions. He said that as long as he had engine power, he would ground the ferry (he knew this route inside out) or steam at full power towards land as long as he could. I understand this reasoning perfectly, especially because on these ferries, the ratio of crew to passenger is very different to a cruise ship. I think we were about 150 in the crew on a ferry that could take around 2100 passengers, whereas on a cruise ship you usually have 2-3 passengers p. crewmember. Thanks for the great videos!

    • @NicklePickle426
      @NicklePickle426 11 місяців тому +7

      Smart! It just blows my mind when I hear about ships launching life boats in 50mph winds, 30ft seas, & in white out conditions! In my mind you're just dead either way! Whether it's a sinking 500ft ship or a life boat launching in those conditions- you haven't got a prayer!!!

    • @kurtk7521
      @kurtk7521 10 місяців тому

      @NicklePickle426 Context matters. If the ship is definitely sinking all the way, it is at least worth a shot to get on lifeboats and launch them. I think it mainly comes down to the competence and loyalty of the crew.

    • @Tomrainsallnight
      @Tomrainsallnight 8 місяців тому

      I believe you. I think you're solid

  • @tlane3641
    @tlane3641 Рік тому +139

    There's something so incredibly heartbreaking about the last message from the Princess Sophia being "Keep talking to me so we know that you are coming."

    • @victoriadiesattheend.8478
      @victoriadiesattheend.8478 10 місяців тому +12

      Yes. Strangely it felt very....modern, very right now. The same way you might tell a loved one, "stay on the phone with me, please" if you were someplace unfamiliar or dangerous.

    • @scottyfox6376
      @scottyfox6376 10 місяців тому +5

      When hope is the only thing left to one's self in a doomed fatal situation.

    • @GuukanKitsune
      @GuukanKitsune 8 місяців тому +5

      ​​@scottyfox6376
      When you know there's no hope, you cling to even the faintest glimmers you can imagine.
      When it's the end of everything, you hold on to anything at all.
      Robinson probably wanted to die thinking, believing, that any second he was gonna be miraculously rescued so all she had to do was hang on. Keep fighting. Keep on the line.
      And tell himself everything was going to be okay.
      A lie. Yes. But false hope is better than none.

    • @KenyanBunnie
      @KenyanBunnie 7 місяців тому +4

      @@GuukanKitsuneI think it's helpful. I felt like that when I'd listen to those 9/11 911 calls. 😢

    • @Jolis_Parsec
      @Jolis_Parsec 4 місяці тому +1

      That really hurt to listen to that part, not to mention that the captain chose not to attempt what he felt was a perilous attempt to evacuate the ship when it was a lot less stormy and dangerous due to the earlier shipwreck where the lifeboats were launched without proper personnel to captain them causing nearly everyone on board to drown clearly weighing heavily on his mind. All in all, a very tragic situation.

  • @hughwalker5628
    @hughwalker5628 Рік тому +74

    I live on a boat and the fact that a storm is raging outside as I watch brings the stories vividly to life. I won't let being on the Grand Union Canal, where I can step onto the towpath if I sink, shatter the illusion. I love the stories of heroism and calm, especially among passengers and the young. These are amazing stories and you tell them brilliantly. Especially in a storm.

    • @kumber
      @kumber Рік тому +4

      boat life in england always seems so zen compared to anywhere else 😅

    • @hughwalker5628
      @hughwalker5628 Рік тому +1

      @@kumber it really is!

    • @macgirl1231
      @macgirl1231 11 місяців тому +2

      Very 😊awesome. Live your dreams. 🎉

    • @stevemorris6790
      @stevemorris6790 6 місяців тому +1

      I wish i could live in a boat!

  • @GanzotheSecond
    @GanzotheSecond 7 місяців тому +11

    I’ve lived my entire life along the graveyard of the Pacific, great to see our local stories get some appreciation!

    • @dregonzalez6815
      @dregonzalez6815 3 місяці тому +1

      I lived in Mendocino the pacific northwest is another rocky foggy gray choppy waters

  • @elizabethfallert1963
    @elizabethfallert1963 10 місяців тому +60

    Ohhh the CLALLAM! I misheard several times at first, and I was like “well what did they expect after naming their ship ‘The Clown’”

    • @scottyfox6376
      @scottyfox6376 10 місяців тому +10

      I thought it was just me hearing that. Lol

    • @lsrose
      @lsrose 8 місяців тому +6

      I heard clown too!

    • @Immopimmo
      @Immopimmo 8 місяців тому +4

      Glad I'm not the only one 😂​@@lsrose

    • @deraldbolton7962
      @deraldbolton7962 7 місяців тому

      ​@@lsrosejoreoe5rii 7:13 jo😅ore 7:13 😊iiu oiuiiioi 😅ou

    • @deraldbolton7962
      @deraldbolton7962 7 місяців тому

      È😅😅 7:13 I 😊

  • @miapdx503
    @miapdx503 Рік тому +36

    Portland here. Our coastline is beautiful...and treacherous. I love the Pacific Ocean, from the land. Our rainforests are the same, beautiful, but do not underestimate the dangers.
    This is so well done. Everything. The writing, editing, photos and reenactments woven with actual footage...and your voice is perfect. You give dignity to those who did and did not survive, while telling the story honestly. 🌹

  • @deschutesmaple4520
    @deschutesmaple4520 5 місяців тому +6

    There obviously are no videos of these sinkings as described; so it's very creative to patch together random black and white historic video clips which fit the narrative. Well done!

  • @jordanuu-bernard6038
    @jordanuu-bernard6038 10 місяців тому +24

    I've watched a ton of different shipwreck stories. It's truly horrific and depressing that "Every woman and child would not survive" is almost always the recurring theme.

  • @HeadCheese-nm6dr
    @HeadCheese-nm6dr Рік тому +65

    2 hours of classic shipwrecks. Thank you for the content!! 🌎

  • @DFAMPODCAST
    @DFAMPODCAST Рік тому +22

    I really appreciate all of your hard work making these episodes. We talk about you in The Green Room before the podcast a lot. As someone who lives around the Great Lakes I find these stories fascinating!

  • @primigenius623
    @primigenius623 Рік тому +91

    The Pacific Northwest is mysterious enough on land; honestly can't imagine how it is at sea.

    • @oqihouqiop
      @oqihouqiop Рік тому +3

      Pretty good time imo

    • @zlavus8631
      @zlavus8631 10 місяців тому +10

      There’s a feeling you get when being on the pnw coast when it’s dark and cloudy it’s very haunting feeling at times

    • @primigenius623
      @primigenius623 10 місяців тому +1

      @@zlavus8631 I can only imagine...

    • @zlavus8631
      @zlavus8631 10 місяців тому

      @@primigenius623 I highly recommend visiting one day it’s a beautiful place even in its worst weather

    • @oqihouqiop
      @oqihouqiop 10 місяців тому +2

      @@zlavus8631 true,

  • @SANTANA89100
    @SANTANA89100 3 місяці тому +2

    There is a tremendously philosophical meaning to your Big Old Boat videos. Marvelously scripted narrations, excellent historical research, poetic, beautiful visual editing, exquisite photography and film !!! LOVE your work!!!!!

  • @jonathanabbott8579
    @jonathanabbott8579 9 місяців тому +14

    Great content as always! I love your storytelling, and the eerie backdrop is perfect. Your knowledge of the Great Lakes cargo ship disasters is riveting, particularly the November storm of 1913. Thank you for posting!

  • @flapjackfae
    @flapjackfae Рік тому +7

    I love hearing these frightful stories in such a soothing, charming voice.

  • @JrodsJourneys
    @JrodsJourneys 11 місяців тому +32

    Being more afraid of trains than boats is a wild proposition to me

    • @victoriadiesattheend.8478
      @victoriadiesattheend.8478 10 місяців тому +6

      Hard agree. I actually fear flying and so I have taken Amtrak several times to avoid not only the planes (but the ridiculous airfare and luggage fees too, unbelievable especially pre Covid!), and on Amtrak I have always ridden comfortably, felt safe with plenty of space for whatever luggage I had near.
      However I will say that lady lived during a time when trains DID crash more frequently and had plenty of problems themselves. So I don't blame her too much. A modern train is really safe stuff for travel, even with the few accidents that have occurred to me its really the safest way to get anyplace. And nowhere to drown in or fall from, I call that a win.

    • @Shacthulhu
      @Shacthulhu 3 місяці тому +1

      I get it. My grandfather was a train conductor and my father a USCG search and rescue sailor (Montauk, NY). I think both are amazing!

    • @Engine33Truck
      @Engine33Truck Місяць тому

      @@victoriadiesattheend.8478even in her days where rail travel was more potentially dangerous than it is now, sea travel was far more dangerous than any modern form of travel. If I lived back then, unless I had been in a bad train wreck, there’s no way you could convince me to travel by ship when train is an option.

  • @Anon_Spartan
    @Anon_Spartan Рік тому +57

    "Travel by train is too scary. I better get into a giant floating coffin traveling across unfathomable depths."

    • @debbybuff
      @debbybuff 4 місяці тому +3

      My thoughts exactly!

    • @Engine33Truck
      @Engine33Truck Місяць тому

      Right lol. I can’t swim and I’m scared of the water (basically any body of water bigger than a bathtub). You couldn’t pay me to take a ship when there’s a perfectly good train available. Especially back in the early 20th century or before, when sea travel was extremely dangerous

  • @paulsullivan3291
    @paulsullivan3291 11 місяців тому +4

    Thanks!

  • @Balrog-tf3bg
    @Balrog-tf3bg Рік тому +17

    Love your videos! Living in Oregon this just reminds me I gotta take a shipwreck tour. The Peter iredale is more exposed than I’ve ever seen in recent pics

  • @aubreycasler-qd1yl
    @aubreycasler-qd1yl Рік тому +38

    I’m a teen that loves maritime history. Seeing these old vessels is awesome and it’s sad watching their demise. Sail on folks

  • @mattlenehan4287
    @mattlenehan4287 Рік тому +15

    Your videos inspired me to write a screenplay about one of these wrecks! Keep up the awesome videos!

    • @BigOldBoats
      @BigOldBoats  Рік тому +2

      Love to hear it. Glad I can provide some inspiration!

  • @noravillarreal7261
    @noravillarreal7261 6 місяців тому +2

    From James and Nora Comstock in bee branch,ar

  • @jez6208
    @jez6208 Рік тому +16

    I love your stuff mate. I'm fascinated by the sea and the ships that sailed them. Cheers! 😊

  • @Jess4ever1
    @Jess4ever1 2 місяці тому +1

    I am so glad to find videos without AI voice covers! Subbed right away! Thank you!!! 😊

  • @raquellofstedt9713
    @raquellofstedt9713 Рік тому +4

    Thank you. I lov th way you summarise each segment. It+s a lovely tribut to the lives lost.

  • @stucook8622
    @stucook8622 Рік тому +37

    You have to wonder...those two ships captains that could access the Valencia turned back. The weather or were they cowards? Perhaps a little of both. And to watch the ship from a cliff break up and not try to help...unreal. Rip to those terrified folks. Thanks for another great video.

    • @norml.hugh-mann
      @norml.hugh-mann Рік тому +5

      Those other ships had themselves to worry about as back then a ships Capt could get the death penalty for placing his own ship in danger. The reefs were not mapped well and waves unpredictable and a wave pushing them into one meant that a captain ship *which their own family would lose their inheritance to the company for had he died in all likelihood) and all their crew leaving behind families unable to support themselves as there were no social safety nets then
      So easy to call those of the past cowards as you sit your butt safe at home
      Just pathetic
      And what were people on a cliff supposed to do? They can't get to it,
      Maybe read a book before slandering those who can't defend themselves and were more a human than you will ever be

    • @johnmehaffey9953
      @johnmehaffey9953 Рік тому +5

      Not to have even tried a rescue

    • @norml.hugh-mann
      @norml.hugh-mann Рік тому +2

      ​​@@johnmehaffey9953and the ONLY information they had was the Capt telling them to wait...wasn't a coast guard notifying themnof what's going on like now...and they did try...they were there. Ships were not as maneuverable them, very underpowered and with larger crews, less trained, and with NONE of the equipment like powerboats of waterproof insulation we take for.granted today
      .and if the ship in distress Capt tells them to wait WTF are they suppossed to do huh? Can't rescue passengers jf the ships crew aboard isn't assisting.
      Your also taking one youtube video by someone you don't know that wasn't there as an expert as you don't even know if that's what really happned...the stories past through dozens of people before getting to you..
      Maybe learn something about all this before slandering the dead

    • @Assasin2
      @Assasin2 Рік тому

      @@norml.hugh-mannnah, the dead don’t matter. They saw people, they literally lied and said they saw nobody and ran away, they’re cowards who should be given no respect

    • @2lipToo
      @2lipToo Рік тому +12

      @@norml.hugh-mann I don't believe anyone is slandering the dead. It's a difficult situation to accept, and to me seemed quite appalling that the "rescue ships" left everyone clinging to the ship to drown. No matter what points can be made about the times, it's still difficult to digest such indifferent behavior.

  • @victoriadiesattheend.8478
    @victoriadiesattheend.8478 10 місяців тому +1

    The fact that you are able to pack an incredible amount of information into the video, in a pleasant tone is amazing. I notice you even include photographs & illustrations taken out of newspapers long ago showing some of the people you talk about. But even your background music used is extraordinary. I can't help but notice it. It is melancholy, quiet, and calm, using both what sounds like string intruments and modern, generated sounds (done effectively, never too loud or fast when inappropriate during the story), periods of what sound like silence, high and low wind, birds calling, creaking wood and even slamming sounds to punctuate the mood and actual disasters as you detail them minute by minute. Incredible work, done so beautifully. I'm just so impressed by the quality you evoke with the combination. Subbed and fascinated.

  • @lorenzbroll101
    @lorenzbroll101 10 місяців тому +4

    Great account by you - I really enjoyed it.
    There are just some places on Earth that people should not go to and one of them is to sea with a badly trained crew & primitive boat!
    Those film clips of victims back in the day were amazing.

  • @punishernation436
    @punishernation436 Рік тому +13

    Will you do a video on the USS Cyclops or bermuda triangle related stories? I know its kinda cliche but i think you could add a lot to the stories or tell lesser known ones.
    Love the vids as usual.

  • @filakyle3663
    @filakyle3663 9 місяців тому +2

    Thank you for your documentary. So nice to listen to and watch.

  • @yply.o.7877
    @yply.o.7877 Рік тому +11

    That howling wind in the background really puts u there. Wet, traumatized, scared, and cold.

  • @SANTANA89100
    @SANTANA89100 3 місяці тому +1

    I believe your videos are a viable metaphor for the human journey itself through life on earth. EXCELLENT work !!!!!

  • @shawnrae4022
    @shawnrae4022 Рік тому +3

    42:52 - Nice creaking deck boards and Ocean spray & wave sounds....😏

  • @deschutesmaple4520
    @deschutesmaple4520 5 місяців тому +1

    Great video! Esp appreciate the production quality, for example the acoustic guitar used. Kudos for a great quality video!

  • @GeoffreyWare
    @GeoffreyWare Рік тому +2

    Thank you for posting this video I really enjoy your channel and the sound of your voice is very pleasant

  • @ethanreynolds4942
    @ethanreynolds4942 4 місяці тому +1

    Thank you for all of your hard work on these incredible videos. They are so good.

  • @benjamink1403
    @benjamink1403 4 місяці тому +1

    This is my first Big Old Boats video I ever saw. I subscribed even before the first scene faded in lol

  • @Just_Richard01
    @Just_Richard01 8 місяців тому +3

    born and raised in the PNW. the pacific ocean is no joke and combined with the weather it claims lives every single year. i think the best advice about the ocean is ALWAYS respect it and never turn your back on it.

  • @OceanViewLocomotiveMachineCo
    @OceanViewLocomotiveMachineCo Рік тому +6

    Cape Mendocino's tip is treacherous to this day. Perhaps a feature on it with adjacent Blunts Reef with the SS Northerner, SS Bear, Tricolor, and by a stretch SS Milwaukee?

  • @BTScriviner
    @BTScriviner Рік тому +4

    I probably watched these when you uploaded then individually, but they're always interesting to watch again. What do you use for the visuals? Is it stock footage? You have a very soothing voice. 👍

    • @victoriadiesattheend.8478
      @victoriadiesattheend.8478 10 місяців тому +1

      he's using stock footage from old black and white movies about shipwrecks (anywhere from the 1940s to the late 50's, I would say), some of which are film recreations of some of the most famous shipwreck disasters. Older films like this probably have no or way less copyright red tape. He is also using some stock footage of specific locations that he is talking about, taken at the actual time period and uploaded, and illustrations found in old newspapers of certain people he talks about on each ship. If he can find a photograph of someone (ex. the captain), he shows their actual photograph. Also appears to be some older nature and ocean footage, probably taken at least 50 years ago.

  • @Feline_Frenzy53
    @Feline_Frenzy53 Рік тому +3

    Wonderful video! Thank you for presenting it to us.

  • @xxechoesxx420
    @xxechoesxx420 7 місяців тому +1

    Your tone is so calm, sweet almost tranquil.. yet your subject matter is far from 😅 love it

  • @MOTOBRANDON
    @MOTOBRANDON 9 місяців тому +3

    Wonderful narration, well made. Thank you 🙏

  • @formisfunction1861
    @formisfunction1861 3 місяці тому +1

    Beautiful old films!

  • @crittykat
    @crittykat 16 днів тому

    Best channel I have discovered recently. Thanks for these works of art.

  • @xxechoesxx420
    @xxechoesxx420 7 місяців тому

    Awesome movies! Sadly most no one will see these classics. Really cool you use clips from oldies for your videos! Keep up the good work!!

  • @markcarpenter6020
    @markcarpenter6020 Рік тому +36

    I recently read a ghost story you might like. Its the story of a fishing boat that runs into a storm that doesn't show up on the radar. The boat suffers heavy damage their radio mast is torn off and the boat is taking on water fast. As all hope seems lost they spot a ship on the radar and desperately sail towards it. They find an old ocean liner with a black hull,white superstructure and two black and red funnels dead in the water and apparently abandoned. The caption suggests it might have slipped it's moorings in the storm and they board. Anyway the story ends wirh it heavily implied the ship they boarded is the Queen Elizabeth 1.

    • @sasha1mama
      @sasha1mama Рік тому +7

      Thought for a second there you were gonna say it was the Akademik Vladislav Volkov... XD

    • @norml.hugh-mann
      @norml.hugh-mann Рік тому +2

      Don't know who would like a fictional ghost story over history.

    • @markcarpenter6020
      @markcarpenter6020 Рік тому +13

      @@norml.hugh-mann who said anything about him liking it more. It is possible to like both.

    • @markcarpenter6020
      @markcarpenter6020 Рік тому +3

      @@sasha1mama lol. The start of it feels similar. Except the fact the storm can't be picked up on radar. Actually feels closer to Ghost ship than virus.

    • @B.nanana
      @B.nanana Рік тому +2

      Is this a book or an online story? Either way do you know the name or a link?

  • @KyMcAnnoudh
    @KyMcAnnoudh Рік тому +11

    At the Maritime Museum in Astoria OR, you can see a large wreck location map that shows so many shipwrecks along Northern CA, Oregon, going up to southern BC area. The biggest thing you will see on this wreck location map is the amount of wrecks at the Columbia River Delta. Now there are pilots to bring ships in and out of the Columbia River because of how difficult the area is to navigate; the tides, underwater barriers, and the way the ocean currents with the delta all mix makes it treacherous. It's a very interesting museum to visit if you have an interest in shipping and/or fisheries.

    • @TireSlayer55
      @TireSlayer55 11 місяців тому +1

      Worth visiting for sure.

  • @rachelmurray1228
    @rachelmurray1228 11 місяців тому +2

    Thank you for a fascinating 2hour story about five ships that were wrecked-four of them on rocks! It shows us, nature will always rule over human adventures(misadventures). The old visuals were a bonus. The narrator sounded clear but a bit soft. I had to use my earplugs. Nevertheless a marvellous but tragic story.

  • @Giaphaige
    @Giaphaige Рік тому +9

    Theres something so silly about coal powered boats with sails, a great visualization of the movement into the industrial age

  • @thenobleandmightybeaver4411
    @thenobleandmightybeaver4411 9 місяців тому +1

    I have sailed through that stretch four times and it is either rough or really rough. First five days at sea from Victoria to San Diego and we sailed through a storm. I was so sick I lost three days of my life...and as it turns out cured me of sea sickness.

  • @whydahell3816
    @whydahell3816 10 місяців тому +1

    HUGE video! Wow! Thank you for the hard work!

  • @Farceknight
    @Farceknight Рік тому +21

    It's ok, I didn't need to do anything important this morning anyway. (Sits down to watch this video)

  • @BrianHand-f6m
    @BrianHand-f6m Рік тому +1

    I love the ship history(I'm a nerd). And I love your voice! I'm Always happy when I see something new from you

  • @Johnsmith-yq2ji
    @Johnsmith-yq2ji 9 місяців тому +2

    ✔ Great work, Well done, Liverpool, England.

  • @Duhdummydum
    @Duhdummydum 7 місяців тому +1

    Woke up in the middle of the night to this video. Sooper Spooky

  • @channingmabbett6520
    @channingmabbett6520 Рік тому +2

    Can you do a video about the Falls of Halladale shipwreck. Interesting story.

  • @millenials_best
    @millenials_best Рік тому +5

    Shipwrecks just became an obsession for me. Today. Well yesterday. Now it's today

  • @HypnoticSuggestion
    @HypnoticSuggestion Рік тому +3

    Thanks for another phenomenal video.

  • @DuckMarauder
    @DuckMarauder Рік тому +13

    Hey, do you talk about the Graveyard if the Atlantic? There are a lot of stories where during a funeral, if there was a ship wreck spotted people would drop the coffin and run to it.

    • @2lipToo
      @2lipToo Рік тому +3

      Yes, like the SS Atlantic (1 April 1873) when it went off course and ran aground on Marrs Island (near Lower Prospect) in Nova Scotia. Amazing efforts - in the middle of the night no less AND a storm - of locals coming to the rescue in their rowboats - even walking their boats across the island to gain quicker access to the wreck. Truly heroic efforts.

  • @RazorNarwhal
    @RazorNarwhal Рік тому +3

    I really appreciate your content man

  • @gabrieldally6044
    @gabrieldally6044 Рік тому +1

    The king has returned

  • @katharper655
    @katharper655 11 місяців тому +2

    I was bummed to discover that I've watched ALL the videos by my favorite Great Lakes Shipwrecks Presenter: "Association Of Lifelong Learners" Jeff Thomas.But then I took a chance to watch THESE videos...hurray!
    GLAD I DID!!

  • @chriscusick6890
    @chriscusick6890 Рік тому +9

    The common denominator in these accidents is stupidity.

    • @jakemangi4815
      @jakemangi4815 10 місяців тому +3

      Hindsight is always 20/20.

    • @scottyfox6376
      @scottyfox6376 10 місяців тому +2

      Fear is the mind killer.

  • @roselightinstorms727
    @roselightinstorms727 7 місяців тому +3

    Sad and beautiful ending

  • @sinnedsinister
    @sinnedsinister Рік тому +4

    Could help but notice during the Clallam story you refer to the Princess Sofia (Soph ee a) and such, then where her story comes, it is the princess Sofia (Soph eye a)

    • @pendremacherald6758
      @pendremacherald6758 Рік тому +2

      I think it’s because the pronunciation was corrected in whichever of the original videos was released second.

  • @roselightinstorms727
    @roselightinstorms727 3 місяці тому +3

    It is part of the duty to keep all safe. Including themselves.

  • @roselightinstorms727
    @roselightinstorms727 11 місяців тому +4

    What is the rush? Safety is first!

  • @beardedgaming1337
    @beardedgaming1337 11 місяців тому +4

    that opening horn on this video - i totally didnt realize it was coming from the video and thought it was irl... woke up to this video playing - was like man its awfuly late in teh year for a ship to be coming through

  • @roselightinstorms727
    @roselightinstorms727 3 місяці тому +3

    RIP beneath the waves your at peace

  • @annmcleod8023
    @annmcleod8023 7 місяців тому

    Very informative . Sad stories but true 😢One has to be careful out there. Oceans can be brutal!☠️☠️☠️

  • @denepetzer9081
    @denepetzer9081 10 місяців тому +1

    Love these stories about mystery and historu

  • @kultingen
    @kultingen Рік тому +2

    This was a very very good video!

  • @delatlantico
    @delatlantico 11 місяців тому

    what is the poster at 1:24:18 that says "somebody blundered"

  • @GordonHouston-Smith
    @GordonHouston-Smith Рік тому +2

    Is there a volume issue? I know I'm a half deaf/blind old git but I'm struggling here and the subtitles are not really clear.

  • @reg4211
    @reg4211 Рік тому +2

    Cannot wait to watch this!

  • @wattsnottaken1
    @wattsnottaken1 9 місяців тому +5

    Pacific Ocean is my biggest Fear………..and I live in Minnesota 😂🤣

  • @kef103
    @kef103 Рік тому +5

    That cave sounds like the inspiration for the goonies movie

  • @melchizedek077
    @melchizedek077 3 місяці тому

    I looked at where vanderbuilt reef was located and it looks like it is only a couple miles from shore.

  • @CrystalMouse1
    @CrystalMouse1 11 місяців тому

    Wow! I took basic seamanship in high school and only heard about the Exxon Valdese no mention of the princess Sophia, which sun like 100 miles from me!

  • @k9spike235
    @k9spike235 4 місяці тому

    Your videos are amazing...

  • @roselightinstorms727
    @roselightinstorms727 3 місяці тому +2

    So sad. RIP❤

  • @UncleJoeLITE
    @UncleJoeLITE 11 місяців тому +3

    I do appreciate a real person, doing real research & reading a real sript.
    This may be rare on yt by 2025 imo. Subbed ofc, I love big old boats too.

  • @relic_rachel
    @relic_rachel Рік тому +3

    Cool channel, glad I found it

  • @roselightinstorms727
    @roselightinstorms727 3 місяці тому +2

    I've heard of Rio❤

  • @karenwalters7131
    @karenwalters7131 4 місяці тому

    As soon as I heard 'ran aground at the Columbia River Bar' I laughed-I grew up in the area and I've barely escaped with my life a few times at and near that spot. It's no joke.

  • @ryanmeech8630
    @ryanmeech8630 11 місяців тому +2

    I know the portion about Princess Sophia was made longer ago than this compilation, but I'd like to point out that the passengers & crew did NOT die of hypothermia as stated, but of asphyxia. Because engine oil had been leaking into the water for a day, creating a layer of oil. Passengers suffocated, not froze.

  • @brookelarocco9332
    @brookelarocco9332 Рік тому +2

    Hello! New subscriber here, would love to see a long video like this but about non-combat shipwrecks either during war times or by military ships in general. I look forward to listening to more!

  • @DarthStardom
    @DarthStardom Рік тому +2

    Oh thank god- I was dying of boredom at a slow day at work, THANK YOU!!!!

  • @jenniferjones755
    @jenniferjones755 Рік тому +1

    Loving it well done

  • @CharlesETerry
    @CharlesETerry 11 місяців тому +2

    I ,ve owned big old wood boats and now still love to see and hear about BIG OLD BOATS!

  • @skyedog24
    @skyedog24 9 місяців тому

    Thank you what a great story what a great job that you do thank you. The city of Rio.

  • @chzybean
    @chzybean 11 місяців тому +1

    @BigOldBoats Howdy! I just found your channel last night and I just want to tell you three things:
    1. Love your pfp. I have a tattoo that resembles the wave pattern.
    2. You have a very soothing voice and nice articulation.
    3. I subscribed and now I'm off to binge watch the rest of your content. Keep up the amazing work! Thank you for sharing it with us!

    • @BigOldBoats
      @BigOldBoats  11 місяців тому +1

      Thank you for the kind words! Welcome aboard!

  • @Morrisfactor
    @Morrisfactor 9 місяців тому

    I know divers who have visited the Valencia and the Princess Sophia - they report how eery it is to dive those wrecks - both of which are pounded nearly into oblivion at this point.

  • @TJH1
    @TJH1 Рік тому +2

    I have the strangest sense of déjà vu, is this a re-upload?

  • @barbaratavis2678
    @barbaratavis2678 5 місяців тому

    What is that background noise, can't understanding the speaker

  • @roselightinstorms727
    @roselightinstorms727 3 місяці тому +1

    Well told❤