Next summer take a couple weeks and come paddle across Missouri on the Missouri River with me. The MR340 is a "race" right up your alley Beau. Its hard, has zero reward for winning, and seemingly pointless other than an amazing story to tell.
There are so many Shortvideos, that leave you with a guilty feeling to have wasted your time… And then there is Beau. Never disappoints, and always leaves me in a good mood. Great guy, love everything about it. Thanks for your passion. ❤
My buddy and I while in college kayaked a small 30 mile section of the Mississippi down to the St Louis arch. All because we were inspired by your kayak to work! Love to see you actually on the river now.
To me I heard "there's more to this story soon" without him even needing to say it word for word. There's no way he visits the mighty Mississippi and gives up after a day or two. He's too smart for that.
The Mississippi is as grand and mystying as all the old tales lead you to believe but you’re right, I had myself a great long roadtrip all up and down the Mississippi last year, from Natchez, Missisippi up to Prairie du Chien, Wisconsin and it's strangely way too difficult to find a nice wooded spot along its banks to just sit and enjoy it. Either enclosed in concrete walls or fencing or just generally inaccessible. But if you look hard enough you can find the good spots. Like one in rural Arkansas I found that was pure sand banks. And I swam out into the river to a large wooded island in the middle of the thing and had myself my ultimate Huck Finn adventure. The river is just astonishing. Good place to be is just north of St Louis at the confluence of the Missouri. A spot that feels like the center of the universe and for many indigenous peoples it was. And it was for the white explorers and trappers as well. It feels like hallowed ground, a world of history before you and a world of water before you. So much water it is impossible to comprehend. The story of the Mississippi is the story of America and its full of tragedy and triumph, and such rich, rich culture. I just think of the music. All the American music that has been inspired by that great river. That’s what makes me proud of America, when it is often so hard to be. I’d love to just sit and talk about the Mississippi with ya Beau. Love the adventure, love the fort. Good on ya mate
It's cold, rode into work the 3 miles with 21F temps and while I was heating up my jalapeño chicken noodle soup saw Beau Miles and knew everything was going to be right in the digital world today. Thanks for all you do man. Genuinely appreciated.
It's a sad truth of a lot of America, if you're not in the middle of nowhere then you're on someone's property and even then you're probably being eyed up by some farmer. We don't have quite the same "right to roam," or "queens land" sorts ideas as other countries, we do have federal forests and lands etc, not sure of the exact term, but a good few states like mine have very little if any. I'd give a good deal to be able to wander to my hearts content without worry of being hollered at. Still, plenty to see and do if you take the backways and know how to keep yourself low profile.
I live in Sweden and we have a right to roam, that means having the right to pass through and camp for one night practically anywhere, including private property. The only places that are excluded are easily identified by the barbed wire and signs to keep out. I think I’ve seen two or three my whole life and that was at electrical substations. Don’t want to get near those. Sometimes you come across roads that say thay are private and you can’t drive on those but you can walk. As with all rights, the right to roam is a legal right but it also brings several responsibilities. You’re not allowed to litter, break off branches from living plants, pick endangered flowers, make up fires on bare cliffs or that risk spreading and causing harm. You also cannot disturb wildlife of domestic animals and you need to shut gates after you. It gives amazing possibilities for outdoor living and Swedes love to explore, pick mushrooms and berries etc.
At least you have some free land. Here in the Netherlands EVERYTHING is owned by someone and EVERYTHING is regulated. You are not allowed to go off the path in the forest. You are not allowed to be in the forest after dark. You want to camp. That's only allowed on official campsites for which you of course have to pay. You are not allowed to have an open fire. You are not allowed to hunt without getting all sorts of licenses and pay through the nose. You are not allowed to sleep a night in your car. And on and on.
Come to Oregon, Beau ... the beaches are all owned by the people (that's right, we're pretty Commie over here) and no one can block your access!!! I'd like to see you build something from driftwood on one of our beaches.
Saw it was the Mississippi and got excited it was on my end of it. You gotta make your way to the Minnesota end. I think you’d fit right in in the MN wilderness.
I've lived and grown up in Mississippi right near NOLA most my life, and until watching this video and hearing about your perspective about it, I didn't really appreciate the river for what it is. Your words have given me a new found love for it, I will say your video does show a factor in why I haven't really cared until now, and that is due to it's accessibility. Thank you for helping me enjoy nature even more in life
It’s also polluted AF down that way. I paddled the entire Mississippi from the headwaters to the Gulf, and be warned not to romanticize the adventure. The locks and damns in the middle third of the river make for harder work than the Huck Finn tales you’ve heard about. Cool experience though.
It's so damn sad and tragic how we are still treating rivers and the ocean as big sewers. They just flush all our pollution down the river, what could go wrong. I hope we learn in time to fix our past mistakes.
...and also, factually and technically Beau wasn’t actually on the MSR down in New Orleans. The natural flow of the MSR breaks off at the Atchafalaya River. The Army Corps of Engineers has diverted the river and created what you see in Baton Rouge & New Orleans for commerce.
On your jog you ran right into the industrial canal but trapped yourself behind the wall. Go out to Chartres and sneak behind naval base and you will hit the industrial canal. You were very close to finding the end of the world. Right across the canal is lower ninth ward / holy cross where the entire river bank is accessible to neighborhood (though maybe not for long due to new port Nola contract). Funny to see someone jogging my daily bike commute
If I ever get stuck somewhere, I wish I had two people by my side. Beau Miles and Uli Jacken! The first for the simple things that make life worth living and the second to fix EVERY vehicle and then we ride home to my wife and have coffee!
Your joy to see the Mississippi really hit me, I basically live on the river, I cross it almost once a day, its meaning has faded for me. I need to find a new appreciation for it. Maybe build a fort of my own!
As someone from the other end of the Mississippi, this is just as foreign to me. As a kid, I also built along the river; fort was about the same but the river was only 20ft wide.
Thats awesome. Welcome to the river fort club 😊. I grew up on the miss in central MN. We had a club valled the river rats. Up here sometimes in the winter the river actually freezes over and you can walk across without getting wet.
i am so glad to see your sub count climbing, you are amazing and so much fun and engaging to watch. you are a really great guy with a beautiful family. Been enjoying your videos for a few years now and you really are a excellent film creator
I wonder how long Beau's fort stood? If anyone else is like me and enjoys following Beau's run on Street View: 1:30 is 2398 N Peters St 2:02 is 4198 Chartres St The dead-end at 2:30 is because of a canal that joins the Mississippi River and Lake Pontchartrain. I'm reminded of here in Melbourne where the Yarra River is unreachable in the industrial area of Fishermens Bend/Port Melbourne, along Lorimer Street. Though as you head south and approach the West Gate Bridge the general public can access the river again. The part of the Yarra now known as Southbank in Melbourne was also not really "open" before Crown Casino etc was built in the mid-1990s.
what a lovely fort you erected Beau i hope it will still be there like some of the castles in scotland centuries old you should make a plan to go back in 10 years and see if its still erected.
you've inspired a yank like me to get out of the nest, Beau! I'll be coming to live in Australia for a year, will build me a nice driftwood fort in your honor!
A couple times when I was younger, when I stumbled upon wooden forts at parks or in the forest, I'd spend hours playing in them. Forts are very versatile!
Hearing you romanticize building a driftwood fort on the Mississippi fills me with memories of being able to just do it on a whim as a kid. I really do cherish those moments. :) I love your videos
My sister went on a river boat cruise on the Columbian river, they have boats on a lot of Rivers. I always wanted to visit the Mississippi, I've been fortunate to visit the Connecticut and Hudson rivers here in the east, and St. Lawrence river by the border of Montreal. We had a summer camp on Lake Champlain. That was beautiful ❤️
I drove past the turn off to Jindavick on the way to Traralgon the other day and thought of you mate. Should have stopped in for a Cuppa! Love your videos as usual, keep up the great work
Beau Miles: one minute he’s kayaking through the creeks behind his house in Victoria, the next he’s on the Mississippi River like he’s auditioning for Huckleberry Finn: The Aussie Edition. Talk about going from ‘backyard adventurer’ to ‘international waterway warrior’ overnight!
I’m from Louisiana, 25 minutes outside the city, river access isn’t great in the city like you said, but it’s easy access up the river, and down the river from the city. My property runs all the way to the river batcher, you could have camped down there if you wanted to 😂
Most of the Mississippi is totally accessible it just gets lock-downy near strategic ports like new orleans. They have to keep the traffic down for the ships as well as provide security from any pontial threats.
It’s ever changing, so much so that it was to change course and make the Atchafalaya River the most prominent river to flow into the gulf. But because New Orleans had already been established as the major port city, one man made it his mission to have enough structures upstream, as to not divert, and keep the Mississippi flowing through New Orleans. And from what I’ve heard, the flow of the Mississippi has decreased within the last few years, probably longer than that, but so much so, that not much longer now, the sea water from the gulf will take over most of the Mississippi there at the mouth, heading upstream, causing New Orleans to lose it’s major source of fresh water for drinking.
Restricted water is the same in Europe. Here in Melbourne Australia, I swim everyday (176 days straight so far) in natural bodies of water. Recently whilst driving all around Europe for a month, i was blown away at how difficult it was to access water to swim in. The situations that really blew me away was the fact that a giant giant giant lake would have a 10 foot fence all the way around it to prevent you from swimming without paying a crazy admission fee. I had to pay 25 euro to swim in a giant natural body of water because of the privatization of the water. It was so sad to see how private and restricted it was. As a bonus, swimming everyday (especially in really cold water) has been so amazing for my mental health. 365 days here we go!
I totally expected the police to show up, thinking you were homeless, and not believe a word of your explanation.
Lmaooo
he's got the look, but i think the aussie accent might save him
Next summer take a couple weeks and come paddle across Missouri on the Missouri River with me. The MR340 is a "race" right up your alley Beau. Its hard, has zero reward for winning, and seemingly pointless other than an amazing story to tell.
Appreciation for the dozens of times you positioned the camera, ran away, turned back, run past, turned back again to pick up the camera.
"What'd you do that for?" - I fort it was a good idea
got me in with that one
I fort that was funny as
To make a youtube video!
Groan - Dad joke time ;-)
Yea, my gf hates it when I fort …
There are so many Shortvideos, that leave you with a guilty feeling to have wasted your time… And then there is Beau.
Never disappoints, and always leaves me in a good mood.
Great guy, love everything about it.
Thanks for your passion. ❤
Totally agree
My buddy and I while in college kayaked a small 30 mile section of the Mississippi down to the St Louis arch. All because we were inspired by your kayak to work! Love to see you actually on the river now.
I like the links here mate. Goodonya.
@@BeauMiles YES SIR!! That's how I graduated College, it was my Outdoor ED Capstone!!
A driftwood fort of the quality displayed here is a clear and unquestionable example of Dr. Miles' expertise in outdoor education.
Mississippi Driftwood fort! Classic tourist trap
The last 3 lines are PERFECT PROOF Beau is a MASTER storyteller… ask the theme question at the very end, give NO answer, and go black… GENIUS!
he used to teach at a university, he is well educated and smart!
@ indeed, thus my label of genius!
To me I heard "there's more to this story soon" without him even needing to say it word for word. There's no way he visits the mighty Mississippi and gives up after a day or two. He's too smart for that.
@@zacharyhooley yeah i was just chirpin adding on, got excited to get on the beau train lol.
The Mississippi is as grand and mystying as all the old tales lead you to believe but you’re right, I had myself a great long roadtrip all up and down the Mississippi last year, from Natchez, Missisippi up to Prairie du Chien, Wisconsin and it's strangely way too difficult to find a nice wooded spot along its banks to just sit and enjoy it. Either enclosed in concrete walls or fencing or just generally inaccessible. But if you look hard enough you can find the good spots. Like one in rural Arkansas I found that was pure sand banks. And I swam out into the river to a large wooded island in the middle of the thing and had myself my ultimate Huck Finn adventure. The river is just astonishing. Good place to be is just north of St Louis at the confluence of the Missouri. A spot that feels like the center of the universe and for many indigenous peoples it was. And it was for the white explorers and trappers as well. It feels like hallowed ground, a world of history before you and a world of water before you. So much water it is impossible to comprehend. The story of the Mississippi is the story of America and its full of tragedy and triumph, and such rich, rich culture. I just think of the music. All the American music that has been inspired by that great river. That’s what makes me proud of America, when it is often so hard to be. I’d love to just sit and talk about the Mississippi with ya Beau. Love the adventure, love the fort. Good on ya mate
It's cold, rode into work the 3 miles with 21F temps and while I was heating up my jalapeño chicken noodle soup saw Beau Miles and knew everything was going to be right in the digital world today. Thanks for all you do man. Genuinely appreciated.
I find it so funny how many times you had to turn around and pick your camera up. great vid great commitment
It's a sad truth of a lot of America, if you're not in the middle of nowhere then you're on someone's property and even then you're probably being eyed up by some farmer. We don't have quite the same "right to roam," or "queens land" sorts ideas as other countries, we do have federal forests and lands etc, not sure of the exact term, but a good few states like mine have very little if any. I'd give a good deal to be able to wander to my hearts content without worry of being hollered at. Still, plenty to see and do if you take the backways and know how to keep yourself low profile.
I live in rural Australia, and you definitely can't just get access to rivers and creeks whenever or wherever you want.
I live in Sweden and we have a right to roam, that means having the right to pass through and camp for one night practically anywhere, including private property. The only places that are excluded are easily identified by the barbed wire and signs to keep out. I think I’ve seen two or three my whole life and that was at electrical substations. Don’t want to get near those. Sometimes you come across roads that say thay are private and you can’t drive on those but you can walk.
As with all rights, the right to roam is a legal right but it also brings several responsibilities. You’re not allowed to litter, break off branches from living plants, pick endangered flowers, make up fires on bare cliffs or that risk spreading and causing harm. You also cannot disturb wildlife of domestic animals and you need to shut gates after you. It gives amazing possibilities for outdoor living and Swedes love to explore, pick mushrooms and berries etc.
Oh wow! Being able to just camp on someone's private property seems wild to me lol,
Are there many bad situations occur?
At least you have some free land. Here in the Netherlands EVERYTHING is owned by someone and EVERYTHING is regulated.
You are not allowed to go off the path in the forest. You are not allowed to be in the forest after dark. You want to camp. That's only allowed on official campsites for which you of course have to pay. You are not allowed to have an open fire. You are not allowed to hunt without getting all sorts of licenses and pay through the nose. You are not allowed to sleep a night in your car. And on and on.
@@Audulf-of-FrisiaTrue, though the Netherlands doesn't have much "nature", so it needs to be protected
I'm a simple man. I see beau, I click beau
Immediately, Its like a force of nature.
Dont copy paste. Dont be a bot.
Dude I truly thought this when I clicked. It being the top comment is funny
Blissful to be simple
More please 😊
Come to Oregon, Beau ... the beaches are all owned by the people (that's right, we're pretty Commie over here) and no one can block your access!!! I'd like to see you build something from driftwood on one of our beaches.
A Beau Miles Fort. You just doubled the value of that piece of land.
Saw it was the Mississippi and got excited it was on my end of it. You gotta make your way to the Minnesota end. I think you’d fit right in in the MN wilderness.
I was thinkin' the same thing while watching this. He saw where the Mississippi ended, he should check out where it starts!
I've lived and grown up in Mississippi right near NOLA most my life, and until watching this video and hearing about your perspective about it, I didn't really appreciate the river for what it is.
Your words have given me a new found love for it, I will say your video does show a factor in why I haven't really cared until now, and that is due to it's accessibility.
Thank you for helping me enjoy nature even more in life
It’s also polluted AF down that way. I paddled the entire Mississippi from the headwaters to the Gulf, and be warned not to romanticize the adventure. The locks and damns in the middle third of the river make for harder work than the Huck Finn tales you’ve heard about. Cool experience though.
It's so damn sad and tragic how we are still treating rivers and the ocean as big sewers. They just flush all our pollution down the river, what could go wrong.
I hope we learn in time to fix our past mistakes.
This lower part of the Mississippi in the latter parts of Louisiana is called Cancer Alley because of all the oil and gas companies.
I have thought of doing that with the Columbia starting with the snake or at Lewiston Idaho. Sounds like a good time.
...and also, factually and technically Beau wasn’t actually on the MSR down in New Orleans. The natural flow of the MSR breaks off at the Atchafalaya River. The Army Corps of Engineers has diverted the river and created what you see in Baton Rouge & New Orleans for commerce.
On your jog you ran right into the industrial canal but trapped yourself behind the wall. Go out to Chartres and sneak behind naval base and you will hit the industrial canal. You were very close to finding the end of the world. Right across the canal is lower ninth ward / holy cross where the entire river bank is accessible to neighborhood (though maybe not for long due to new port Nola contract). Funny to see someone jogging my daily bike commute
So next time you do your commute can you check if the fort is still there?
Thanks sweaty dude, helps a lot! Nice fort Beau, good on ya
If I ever get stuck somewhere, I wish I had two people by my side.
Beau Miles and Uli Jacken! The first for the simple things that make life worth living and the second to fix EVERY vehicle and then we ride home to my wife and have coffee!
Your joy to see the Mississippi really hit me, I basically live on the river, I cross it almost once a day, its meaning has faded for me. I need to find a new appreciation for it. Maybe build a fort of my own!
As someone from the other end of the Mississippi, this is just as foreign to me. As a kid, I also built along the river; fort was about the same but the river was only 20ft wide.
You have to admire Beau's Fortitude
You Beau, are one amazing human!, thank you for all the things you do!
Cause it's better than being stuck in ya hotel watching Tv! Well done Beau! Thanks Champ once again!
I grew up on the Mississippi. It is indeed mighty. Crazy to see Beau enjoying it.
I have enjoyed watching Beau’s slow transformation into a beaver. Just building shit anywhere he pleases.
Beau'jangles, Good Driftwood is Worth an absolute fortune in the pet trade for detailing reptile enclosures, terrariums and Aquariums..
“Why’d you do that?” “Cause…”
Just because, just cause, just coz lol, explains a lot of my youth lol
Thats awesome. Welcome to the river fort club 😊. I grew up on the miss in central MN. We had a club valled the river rats. Up here sometimes in the winter the river actually freezes over and you can walk across without getting wet.
Adventure is everywhere! Someone has to tell it so it matters. Beau does exactly that. Brilliant storytelling as always with some solid wackyness! ❤🎉💪
i am so glad to see your sub count climbing, you are amazing and so much fun and engaging to watch. you are a really great guy with a beautiful family. Been enjoying your videos for a few years now and you really are a excellent film creator
I wonder how long Beau's fort stood?
If anyone else is like me and enjoys following Beau's run on Street View:
1:30 is 2398 N Peters St
2:02 is 4198 Chartres St
The dead-end at 2:30 is because of a canal that joins the Mississippi River and Lake Pontchartrain.
I'm reminded of here in Melbourne where the Yarra River is unreachable in the industrial area of Fishermens Bend/Port Melbourne, along Lorimer Street. Though as you head south and approach the West Gate Bridge the general public can access the river again.
The part of the Yarra now known as Southbank in Melbourne was also not really "open" before Crown Casino etc was built in the mid-1990s.
29°57'15"N 90°03'18"W should be where he built it. Go and find out.
find it if you can, would be awesome
What a bloody legend you are Beaudy!
what a lovely fort you erected Beau i hope it will still be there like some of the castles in scotland centuries old you should make a plan to go back in 10 years and see if its still erected.
@2:40 Port city, mate. Stuff has to unload somewhere. Not to mention, the Mississippi is dangerous af.
In my crazy life, your videos are always a source of peace & contentment. Cheers mate
This video gives me nostalgia from running in New Orleans, great way to see any place. Give it a run!
They need to make a movie about beau. So awesome and free thinking.
you've inspired a yank like me to get out of the nest, Beau! I'll be coming to live in Australia for a year, will build me a nice driftwood fort in your honor!
Absolutely wonderful start to a day! Beau building a fort in NOLA
"What'd ya do that for?" Because you have an active imagination and like to stay busy! As always, great film and story.
The real beauty of your videos is that it shows you you're allowed to be yourself. Just be. You're ok. The way you are.
Cheers Lego
Nice way to start a Monday morning before work. Cheers Beau!
Only thru the eyes of Beau. ✌️ 😊❤
“This is a good listing. It’d be silly to not put in an offer.” Couldn’t agree more. Thanks for the video.
A couple times when I was younger, when I stumbled upon wooden forts at parks or in the forest, I'd spend hours playing in them.
Forts are very versatile!
Dang good places to simply knock about
Many great philosophers in the world but Beau is my favourite ❤️
*G'Day from Cairns as always Beau - Your spirit is free my mate.... it's wonderful*
excellent video Beau 👍
Oh! You're taking Part in Pask Makes "Scrap Wood Challenge" 🤣
Hearing you romanticize building a driftwood fort on the Mississippi fills me with memories of being able to just do it on a whim as a kid. I really do cherish those moments. :) I love your videos
Ta mate
Hop in the kayak, Beau! Take the river all the way up to us in Minneapolis!
Random, entertaining, thought provoking. Yup, another goldie from Beaudie!
As always, so awesome
excellent video! Love the feeling of coming along in your ideas
I just left there! Super upset we didn’t cross paths, I was there for almost 3 years. Love the videos and content!
Always the kid at heart. Love it Beau! Why did you do that? Cos I felt like it! 😉😊
You are un unlimited source of simple and fun life times, thanks beau !
Good on yah! Come visit NYC and the Hudson River!
Love your work 😁
Welcome to the States Beau!
Wonder why UA-cam isn't putting this on my front page. Cracking wee video as always though!
Beau is definitely a man in touch with his inner child 😄
I am inspired by seeing different mediums and how they interact to make a new creative medium
... seems running gets you in the zone !
Really cool to see Beau running where I was last week 🙂
Might be my favorite video of yours just because of the novelty
Yeah it was novel! Ta for watching Prod
"It's a good question". Naw. It's a good answer. An answer to anarchy. A playful rebellion. Good on ya. ❤
Would love to see a video with "Geo wizard"
I was *just* thinking that!
My sister went on a river boat cruise on the Columbian river, they have boats on a lot of Rivers.
I always wanted to visit the Mississippi,
I've been fortunate to visit the Connecticut and Hudson rivers here in the east, and St. Lawrence river by the border of Montreal.
We had a summer camp on
Lake Champlain. That was beautiful ❤️
I drove past the turn off to Jindavick on the way to Traralgon the other day and thought of you mate. Should have stopped in for a Cuppa!
Love your videos as usual, keep up the great work
Love your real estate pitch. If it wasn’t in America I’d take it.😊
Beau Miles: one minute he’s kayaking through the creeks behind his house in Victoria, the next he’s on the Mississippi River like he’s auditioning for Huckleberry Finn: The Aussie Edition. Talk about going from ‘backyard adventurer’ to ‘international waterway warrior’ overnight!
My favorite answer when someone asks “why are you doing that”? Because I can!
I’m from Louisiana, 25 minutes outside the city, river access isn’t great in the city like you said, but it’s easy access up the river, and down the river from the city. My property runs all the way to the river batcher, you could have camped down there if you wanted to 😂
Happy Mondays Super Beau 🌍❤️ love from llondon
Most of the Mississippi is totally accessible it just gets lock-downy near strategic ports like new orleans. They have to keep the traffic down for the ships as well as provide security from any pontial threats.
A new American monument, thanks Beau
It’s ever changing, so much so that it was to change course and make the Atchafalaya River the most prominent river to flow into the gulf.
But because New Orleans had already been established as the major port city, one man made it his mission to have enough structures upstream, as to not divert, and keep the Mississippi flowing through New Orleans.
And from what I’ve heard, the flow of the Mississippi has decreased within the last few years, probably longer than that, but so much so, that not much longer now, the sea water from the gulf will take over most of the Mississippi there at the mouth, heading upstream, causing New Orleans to lose it’s major source of fresh water for drinking.
May the Forth fort be with you....
Restricted water is the same in Europe.
Here in Melbourne Australia, I swim everyday (176 days straight so far) in natural bodies of water.
Recently whilst driving all around Europe for a month, i was blown away at how difficult it was to access water to swim in. The situations that really blew me away was the fact that a giant giant giant lake would have a 10 foot fence all the way around it to prevent you from swimming without paying a crazy admission fee. I had to pay 25 euro to swim in a giant natural body of water because of the privatization of the water. It was so sad to see how private and restricted it was.
As a bonus, swimming everyday (especially in really cold water) has been so amazing for my mental health. 365 days here we go!
Beau is in his driftwood fort DOWN BY THE RIVER!!
Love this legend! LFG!
Imagine having a regular day in America and a wild Bodie in full getup runs past you silhouetted by the sunrise
Looks a lot different down there. I grew up half an hour from the headwaters.
New Beau vid is a gonna be a good one for sure
That's his forte.
My first time steering a ship was on that river, from the city out to the sea; it’s a special place.
Plenty of things do on on the Mississippi! You can count! One Mississippi!....errr...
this video weirdly left me with a better understanding of how it is to live in america, than enything i've erer seen before
Would love to see a collab with The Outdoor Boys and Beau!
Dangit! I wish I'd known you were in the south! I would have driven from alabama to meet you!
A fort! I like this. I like it a lot.
One of my favorite guys on UA-cam was in my backyard!?!?!? Crap, I've not done a good enough job tracking you, Beau!
My hometown. I’m very familiar with every shot in this vid! I also collect cypress driftwood that’s made its way down the mighty Mississippi.
You were at Old Algiers Point building the fort by the way.
Everytime I see your videos I think "damn this is what life is about" and then go back to worrying about exams
Well Beau, you were only about 2.5hrs from my home. Fish down that way quite a bit. You said it right, "bloody hot!"
We love you Beau ❤