Colorado Experience: Million Dollar Highway

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  • Опубліковано 27 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 434

  • @gardencompost259
    @gardencompost259 2 роки тому +121

    I grew up in Montrose Colorado, just a car ride north of Red Mountain Pass. Been over it countless times in my 66 years. I’ve gathered mushrooms in Ironton park, hiked many trails in the San Juan’s. I will have my ashes scattered there. Thank you for this presentation, well done.

    • @matildamarmaduke1096
      @matildamarmaduke1096 2 роки тому +3

      That's cool tell me what was the terrain like lots of trees any caves?? How did the soil feel between your fingers gritty fine/ course smooth /slick,???

    • @joybranscum4833
      @joybranscum4833 2 роки тому +4

      Hi, as a family. We used to stay in Lake City. 46-50. The road from Creed to Lake City was a glitch. Rough as a cob. The last time we were there we were on a road trip to Killaspell Montana.. it was a side trip.

    • @logicfirst7959
      @logicfirst7959 Рік тому +2

      This is not nothing, go and see the Karakorum/Old Silk Highway in Pakistan. Roads to see the splendors of Himalayas, the majestic peaks, views from heaven. You will never forget the experience.

    • @skibee50
      @skibee50 Рік тому +3

      I lived in Portland for ten years at Piece makers across from Cedar hill
      My favorite hike is horse thief up to the bridge then a brew at true grit my favorite store is nextdoor to salvation army in Montrose I worked at Ike's Mobil home park for awhile there on 50

    • @behremadra
      @behremadra Рік тому

      s'f'sa'g'f's'd'gsfsagfsdg

  • @markstephens5120
    @markstephens5120 Рік тому +24

    I grew up in Florida and seeing the Rockies has always been on my bucket list. My wife and I drove there in 2017. We stayed just north of Purgatory Resort for a week and traveled to Silverton, Ouray, Telluride, and surrounding areas. I have never seen anything more majestic and beautiful in my life. It was a great experience.

    • @c-w-h
      @c-w-h 7 місяців тому +4

      Well. If you like Colorado. Alaska makes it look like a toy snow globe.

    • @mark8337
      @mark8337 2 місяці тому

      @@c-w-hthere’s next to nobody living in Alaska though. And the ones that do - lots of substance abuse issues, family issues, mental issues, missing people issues, etc. But yeah, it’s a big place with very few people.

    • @c-w-h
      @c-w-h 2 місяці тому

      @@mark8337 more common everywhere in the U.S. lower 48, than you think. Some people think they can hide it from me too. 20 years ago I worked in Loss Prevention.
      I can see their drug addiction behaviour and smell their lies.

  • @aysasaga1
    @aysasaga1 2 роки тому +74

    Men built this road. I can't imagine the unbelievably hard work that those great men put into this road. Kudos to them and their families. This is my favorite road. Ever.

    • @hib723
      @hib723 2 роки тому

      today: women can do anything
      also today: what is a woman
      and yet they cry about 'equality'

    • @logicfirst7959
      @logicfirst7959 Рік тому +4

      This is nothing, go and see the Karakorum/Old Silk Highway in Pakistan. Roads to see the splendors of Himalayas, the majestic peaks, views from heaven. You will never forget the experience.

    • @christian7200
      @christian7200 Рік тому +1

      @@logicfirst7959 scenic byway 12. Best road in the world.

    • @terriejohnston8801
      @terriejohnston8801 Рік тому +6

      @@logicfirst7959 GIMME A BREAK.! Geezzz, we're NOT talking about the Himalayan area. Ok!? Its like someone's talkng about the biggest
      Fish THEY are so proud of..@ aling comes... aahh, mr.Logic. who you KNOW is gonna say, " well it aint
      Nothin'' like the one I GOT...up at the
      Blah blah blah... Etc.

    • @logicfirst7959
      @logicfirst7959 Рік тому +4

      @@terriejohnston8801 calm down mate - take a chill pill, all that blood pressure will give you a headache, it aint that serious at all

  • @nancylawson233
    @nancylawson233 9 місяців тому +2

    Learned to drive on this highway with my dad, Lloyd McMillan. We stopped frequently at the site of the minister and his daughters. Prayerfully. Lots of memories brought back by this documentary.

  • @gracienewman8919
    @gracienewman8919 2 роки тому +17

    I rode the Million Dollar Hwy. in the early 1950's with my parents and grandparents, it was a treacherous road then, very narrow, very dangerous. I have ridden and driven it many times since, mostly early Spring, Summer and Fall. To me it is the most beautiful Hwy in the beautiful state of Colorado, bar none!! The last I drove it was 2015 taking my grandson to see where his grandfather and I spent so many happy times in Ouray. We even took a jeep trip to the top of Red Mountain. Wish I could go back one more time.

    • @petecartwright5211
      @petecartwright5211 Рік тому +2

      Wow! You're living history. I'm not sure the road had been widened at that time. That means you were on the original Million Dollar Highway. Well done and thanks.

  • @j.b.9581
    @j.b.9581 2 роки тому +26

    First drove this road in the Summer of '72 with my future spouse. We slept on the ground in a pull-off in sleeping bags behind our 1962 Mercury Meteor. THOSE were the DAYS!!!!

    • @kiasax2
      @kiasax2 6 місяців тому +1

      What a great experience!
      Wado, which is "Thank you" in our Cherokee language, for sharing your memory with us.

    • @billyjackbuzzard
      @billyjackbuzzard 3 місяці тому +2

      Why did you sleep behind the car instead of in front or on the sides of it?

  • @timhuggins5656
    @timhuggins5656 2 роки тому +48

    A 1981 bicycle tour took me over this majestic highway after spending one night in Ouray. The descent from Red Mountain Pass to Silverton was more than exhilarating. So very sorry to the Ute Nation!

    • @jackmountain8503
      @jackmountain8503 2 роки тому +3

      Why they are still here, and they gave up this mountain pass, the UTE nation is an great example of we don't use it here have it.

    • @andybilakshow260
      @andybilakshow260 2 роки тому +4

      @@jackmountain8503 lol yeah here have it. It was already theirs.

    • @Happyfsscist33
      @Happyfsscist33 Рік тому +3

      Friend and I cycled the million dollar highway 91 🙏

  • @timhuggins5656
    @timhuggins5656 2 роки тому +8

    After a hair-raising descent into Silverton we were convinced to load our bike onto the narrow gauge train to Durango. After one night in Durango our next stop was Aztec, NM where my grandpa lived. What sweet memories!

  • @Javelina_Poppers
    @Javelina_Poppers 2 роки тому +9

    I can't count the number of times I've driven this road in all seasons and weather and it never gets old or boring.

    • @earlc8440
      @earlc8440 2 роки тому +1

      I did that in one day

  • @silkeeberle8484
    @silkeeberle8484 2 роки тому +4

    I used to see Sleeping Ute every day with my Eyes, now with my Heart. What a Joy and Adventure to ride through those Mountains ❤, so many times 🏍 ❤

  • @beckyburtis9977
    @beckyburtis9977 Рік тому +6

    In about 1918, My father when he was 19 years old drove a tour Pierce Arrow out of the Broadmoor Hotel thrilling terrified tourists up the then precipitous passages of Pikes Peak in about 1918. My grandparents and parents were friends of the Spencer Penroses. I remember them as being very fascinating yet 'earthy' unpretentious people. I remember as a child playing with their children on a huge trampoline in their backyard on Lake Avenue.
    I helped our parents celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary at the Broadmoor as that was their first honeymoon destination after their wedding in 1949. They both passed away about 15 years ago at ages 85 respectively.
    Those were the days...

  • @sammychicken3457
    @sammychicken3457 Рік тому +4

    I cannot get enough of Colorado's history. Thank you & kind regards from Adelaide, South Australia.

  • @michaellewis81
    @michaellewis81 2 роки тому +9

    During my vacation trips from Texas to Washington I always made it a point to drive that road. My favorite part of Colorado to be sure. Those fall trips just can't be matched anywhere. It is sad though the Ute were basically driven out of their beautiful homeland there for others to take it over. It's truly one of God's masterpieces. It's one road you can't just travel once but many times to fully enjoy the beauty of its nature.

  • @CplSkiUSMC
    @CplSkiUSMC 2 роки тому +25

    I remember my first trip over the Million Dollar Highway. It was September 1984 and I had just gotten out of the Marine Corps and gotten married. My wife and I took our honeymoon at her uncle's cabin near Gunnison. We were told that we HAD to drive south from Montrose through Ouray and up to Red Mountain Pass. So we did. I was a Michigan kid and was not used to the vertical world of the mountains so to say that I was a white knuckled nervous wreck driving along that road would be an understatement. Despite having faced down machine guns, rockets, mortars, and just about every other weapon of war that can be hurled at you in Beirut a year before, I was scared witless by those dizzying heights. I thought it was a thousand feet down and I was annoying the locals because I was driving so slow. LOL. I've now lived in Wyoming for more than 15 years. I've gotten used to the vertical world of the Rockies and no longer have that nerve wracking fear of heights. A few years ago a friend and I drove that highway once again, the first time I'd been through there since 1984. I had to laugh at the me of so many years ago, it wasn't a thousand feet down, more like 300. I wasn't bothered by the drive and since I was relaxed, I could very much enjoy the stunning beauty of that country. The nearby Beartooth Highway is very much like the Million Dollar, except it has guard rails... in most places. The beauty is jaw-dropping in both places. I'll get down there again to be sure.

    • @commontater8630
      @commontater8630 2 роки тому +5

      A mere 300 feet down. Oh well!

    • @CplSkiUSMC
      @CplSkiUSMC 2 роки тому +5

      @@commontater8630 Well, it's a matter of perception. The old me saw a thousand feet... which it ain't. After living in the mountains for all these years now I see it for what it really is.

    • @catherinetester8365
      @catherinetester8365 Місяць тому +1

      I lived 30 years in CO and had the pleasure of driving the Million Dollar Highway and Beartooth in WY. Both spectacular 😮

  • @10actual
    @10actual 2 роки тому +29

    One avalanche area is now "roofed" so the avalanches now slide over the road. The gold that was discovered during a highway widening and paved over has been mined out after the road was widened. The trucks that carried the ore out parked on the highway as a conveyor loaded them.
    Been over it in all seasons. Neat road, really wide now.

  • @pudatoo3417
    @pudatoo3417 2 роки тому +28

    I freakin love your videos on Colorado history, you can't imagine how much i let people know about them!

    • @rockymtnpbs
      @rockymtnpbs  2 роки тому +4

      thanks!

    • @markspc1
      @markspc1 2 роки тому

      GLOBAL WARNING induced by man, climate crises.

    • @thatdude3977
      @thatdude3977 2 роки тому +3

      Very racist history. Worse than na5is

  • @joseleswopes1400
    @joseleswopes1400 2 роки тому +6

    I've been over that Mountain over 100 times being from Delta Colorado. My dad used to haul log's over it. I have always been afraid of it even though it's so Beautiful. I took my husband over it, the first time he drove it. I had to tell him to follow the speed limit, when it says 23 miles an hour it means it. I remember some of the stone guard rails. I remember the 3 crosses, more have been added.🙏💕

    • @petecartwright5211
      @petecartwright5211 Рік тому +3

      Wow! your dad was a log hauler over Red Mountain. Logging trucks and City Market trucks were the kings of that pass. City Market hauled groceries over those passes almost every day, rain or snow. Logging trucks were everywhere but on Red Mountain, that's a different animal.

    • @joseleswopes1400
      @joseleswopes1400 Рік тому +2

      @@petecartwright5211 I know I still have my City Market card for Gunnison. I shop there and Safeway when we go to Delta and Gunnison or Pagosa. Yes growing up we traveled Red Mountain Pass all times of the year. It's a crazy road 😎

  • @skidudester6334
    @skidudester6334 Рік тому +3

    My Grandfather of Hartman Brothers Ford Dealership in Montrose drove the first motorized vehicle over Red Mountain. 🤘

  • @petecartwright5211
    @petecartwright5211 2 роки тому +6

    My dad spent decades in the maintenance shop that kept the snowplows going that plow that road. Coalbank, Molas, and Red Mountain passes were all under their charge. To this day, they keep them open all year round.
    I don't have the intestinal fortitude to be a plow driver over Red Mountain.
    The Riverside snowslide on Red Mountain could run almost a mile wide. (There's a snowshed over it now)
    I don't know what they use now, but back then, they would pull a small howitzer behind a truck and would shoot slides to get them to run. Then, they had a recoilless rifle mounted in the back of a Dodge Ram. They also dropped plastic rockets filled with charges from helicopters. Rock slides were/are common.
    Plow drivers would live in cabins provided by the state at the base of the passes.

    • @anneboban2002
      @anneboban2002 2 роки тому +3

      I probably followed him up the pass while it was snowing. I always waited for a truck to be ahead of me in bad weather.

    • @petecartwright5211
      @petecartwright5211 2 роки тому +2

      @@anneboban2002 That would have been the safe place to be. Red Mountain is hairy on a bright sunny day. Before the snowsheds, those slides would run, and the Highway Dept. would clean it up usually with D-9 bulldozers and gigantic snowplows. The plows were made with augers in the front that would eat the snow and spit it out whatever direction they needed. They were "SNO-GO 's" and built by Oshkosh.
      They could eject snow what must have been a hundred feet, maybe more.
      My old man was the final o.k. before they went back up the hill for the winter and needed to be certain it all worked. I got a couple cool test rides.

  • @rolexmd69
    @rolexmd69 2 роки тому +2

    Imagine what this area looked like during the Younger Dryas epoch. I love Colorado. I absolutely love it.

  • @dougcfrary
    @dougcfrary 2 роки тому +5

    Been on that road over 400 times from 1966 to 2018…had several spooky trips.

  • @louisianaguy2661
    @louisianaguy2661 2 роки тому +3

    I used to go backpacking on this area every summer for 16 years in a row. I have driven this highway many times and I never get tired of it. Once I drove it at night. That is not something I really want to do again.

  • @Redfour5
    @Redfour5 Рік тому +2

    Regarding the artillery blowing the avalanches... I was there in the late 70s for a couple of weeks while in College in Indiana visiting a friend. I had gotten out of the Marines in 1975 and was artillery fire direction control with a Marine Corps battery of the SAME 105's shown in the video... My friend introduced me to the guys on snow patrol who were his friends.
    I was 24/25 years old, out visiting and skiing Berthoud pass when it was still going and CHEAP compared to everywhere else and within a few miles of Denver. I had beers with them got to know them and one night over beers and pizza they found out what I'd done in the Marines and they were just going to be getting their first 105's for avalanche control... I was offered a job right then and there... Oh, it was tempting as Colorado was still before the world had found it back then and I'd always wanted to live out there, it was fun and I got along with everyone I was meeting...but I ended up saying no and that was another road not taken in my life...

  • @adventuresamNfam
    @adventuresamNfam 2 роки тому +8

    Drove over this with my dad in the middle of the winter in a 1980 Buick Regal during a blizzard! The snow was so heavy the wiper’s wouldn’t work. I was leaning out the passenger window manually removing the snow and ice with an ice scraper. I t felt like 20 hours going over that mountain at 5-10 mph scraping snow and ice all the way.

  • @air4334
    @air4334 2 роки тому +2

    Amazing history I was not aware of. I would like to drive on🏔🛻 Thank you PBS Colorado

  • @thatguyisbackagain
    @thatguyisbackagain 2 місяці тому

    The only thing better than PBS, is the ability we have now to watch programs unique to individual states on UA-cam. Keep it up!

  • @lisawillis8227
    @lisawillis8227 Рік тому +2

    We drove it last summer (2022), an absolutely gorgeous and thrilling drive. Would definitely do it again.

  • @RecipesOfHope
    @RecipesOfHope Рік тому +2

    Such a great documentary, thanks to everyone who put their heart into this one. Now I got a new one on my bucket list to do with my son

  • @30smsuperstrat
    @30smsuperstrat 2 роки тому +9

    My great grandfather and grandfather worked in the mines during the World war era, ending at WWII when my grandfather went to war. My great grandfather was in a shaft elevator failure and broke his back. Fortunately, he was not paralyzed but suffered the effects the rest of his life.

    • @petecartwright5211
      @petecartwright5211 Рік тому +1

      Modern-day folks don't realize how hard and dangerous that work was. Most of those mines were hard-rock drill and blast.
      There are not a lot of folks out there now with the fortitude to do such work.

    • @billyjackbuzzard
      @billyjackbuzzard 3 місяці тому

      There are many people.

  • @john-dm4qd
    @john-dm4qd 2 роки тому +4

    Silverton Colorado is my hometown I lived in ouray and 74 with my dad my mother my sister and my brother. We moved to Silverton in 76. My dad worked in the mines we had a gift shop I grew up in Silverton and I drove the million dollar highway more times than I can remember.

  • @BenSHammonds
    @BenSHammonds Рік тому

    sure enjoyed this and seeing the Galloping Goose at the beginning. Was there where it used to sit back in 1970 when a wee boy, my mother and her family are from the area and we had gone there from east TX to visit, is a early memory of mine, Ouray and that area.

  • @beautifulflorida
    @beautifulflorida 2 роки тому +9

    What a beautiful and informative video! Thank you for sharing!

  • @wildbillsheiressusa
    @wildbillsheiressusa 2 роки тому +4

    This road is no joke to drive in the Winter!

    • @jdmather5755
      @jdmather5755 2 роки тому +2

      White knuckle driving in summer - I can’t even fathom attempting in winter. I didn’t even know about it till I was on it. Everybody should see it, but I wouldn’t go in winter.

  • @lenasmith2046
    @lenasmith2046 2 роки тому +2

    I will be 84 come November 19 -2022
    First rode over it in a pickup camper, then on a Goldwing motor cycle, then a dune bugging my husband built, it’s is beautiful , but oh so scary ,

  • @rcroninfweiss
    @rcroninfweiss Рік тому

    I can also remember visiting Silverton when it has a dirt main street with wooden sidewalks. i worked at a high school and my boss's brother was a federal judge in Silverton. I actually had the pleasure of meeting him. The meeting took place in his chamber, when I entered, it was like history a few hundred ago. The judge looked like a man who has just come out of the mountains. We had an interesting conversation and then my buddies and I left Silverton. We continued north to Oray and then rode over the Million Dollar High Way. This happened many years ago though..

  • @BIGLOVE4TRUTH
    @BIGLOVE4TRUTH Рік тому +2

    On July 4 2017 I drove a truck with a 53’ trailer from Grand Junction CO to Farmington NM. I had been that route many times by car before. I was sure glad there were no vehicles in the oncoming lanes when I needed to use them to round the many curves.

  • @darinbell6982
    @darinbell6982 Рік тому +3

    One of the greatest routes to take on a motorcycle. A friend and I rode it in 2015 and I still think it was one of the most scenic routes I had ever taken.

  • @MarlyAdventures
    @MarlyAdventures 2 роки тому +12

    I'm so excited to see another Colorado experience video!!!

    • @SegoMan
      @SegoMan 2 роки тому +5

      Yup people like this built this once great state, then we left the gate from KommiFornia open
      RIP KommieRado...

  • @edkrassenstein5534
    @edkrassenstein5534 2 роки тому +21

    Colorado PBS is lit. The documentaries on this channel are all so well done.

  • @gabbyshutup8802
    @gabbyshutup8802 2 роки тому +1

    Rocky mountain high Colorado softer than a lullaby .

  • @gregGould
    @gregGould 2 роки тому +26

    Thank you for telling the Ute Natives side in this historical program instead of only the white man's side. This area is extremely beautiful. I need to schedule a visit here.

    • @petecartwright5211
      @petecartwright5211 Рік тому +4

      For hunter/gatherers, the Four Corners area was a paradise.
      Think Mesa Verde. The oldest condo project in the country...Native tribes knew exactly what they had and built condos (cliff houses) all over that area. Most are on private land.
      The Egyptians built gigantic tombstones for pharaohs while Native American tribes were building extensive and elaborate housing projects.

  • @usaturnuranus
    @usaturnuranus 2 роки тому

    An exceptional story, and the history a tale of heroic accomplishment. Well worth the time to watch.

  • @gladegoodrich2297
    @gladegoodrich2297 2 роки тому +10

    Showed up at Silverton in shorts and T shirt September 12th. I now own a hundred dollar coat that says Silverton on it.

    • @austindenotter19
      @austindenotter19 2 роки тому

      I hate when that happens!

    • @TheStickinator
      @TheStickinator Рік тому +2

      That's why most all Coloradins keep a coat in the trunk year round. I've been in a light snow ❄️ in July at Mt Evans 14,000+ feet above sea level.

    • @bootman26
      @bootman26 10 місяців тому +1

      lol...That'll teach ya!

    • @donnamarie9593
      @donnamarie9593 3 місяці тому +1

      😂

  • @carolinebray82
    @carolinebray82 2 роки тому +2

    Amazing how far we've come!! I drove this route the million dollar highway in my Nissan leaf, and can't wait to do it again, and actually stop and enjoy!! Thanks for the video, makes me love it so much more!!

    • @andybilakshow260
      @andybilakshow260 2 роки тому +1

      Oh boy, If I ever got up that way, I'd disappear into the mountains.

  • @roylenehollis7924
    @roylenehollis7924 2 роки тому +7

    I grew up in Farmington, my mother's family from Durango. As a kid we went to Ouray several times. The last time I was on that road was 46 years ago traveling from Grand Junction to Farmington, with my baby daughter with me. Scared the @#?#!! out of me. Beautiful drive, but never again.

  • @donald7212
    @donald7212 Рік тому +1

    I'm from Canada I live where the caribou gold rush happened in quesnel BC we have a similar situation with the Frasier river canyon road I enjoy watching and learning about our mining history and the hardships endured by those worked so hard to open up the back country I lived in a cabin I built myself in the high country and have a small idea of what those brave hard working folks lived through I really enjoy the old time pics. Of the early equipment they used, thank you for your efforts it is appreciated.....

  • @_skud
    @_skud 11 місяців тому +1

    what an incredible asset that we have. Think i found my next summer trip. Thank you so much for publishing on youtube

  • @sarahtco3230
    @sarahtco3230 8 місяців тому +5

    Chief Ouray and his wife Chipeta were my cousins great great grandparents. We are from Saguache Colorado

    • @billyjackbuzzard
      @billyjackbuzzard 3 місяці тому +2

      My great grandfather was a bottleneck dolphin.

    • @toddmayta7615
      @toddmayta7615 2 місяці тому +1

      ​@@billyjackbuzzard I believe you.

  • @bigsparky8888
    @bigsparky8888 2 роки тому

    STUDIED CREEDE, CO...BUT NOT THIS HISTORIC AREA...SILVER & GOLD...PRICES HIGH & LOW...INCREDIBLE...THANK YOU...

  • @edchenal821
    @edchenal821 2 роки тому +3

    The area is beautiful. The highway is dangerous. I've been there and explored many of the trails and high mountain passes.

  • @knucklehead4233
    @knucklehead4233 Рік тому +8

    I'm more than halfway through and haven't heard anything about a highway yet. Bait and switch.

    • @tebelshaw9486
      @tebelshaw9486 11 місяців тому +2

      PBS: Program Bait & Switch

  • @jag1963
    @jag1963 2 роки тому +6

    It's actually a road to paradise. And it's heaven being on it.

  • @justplanebob105
    @justplanebob105 Рік тому +1

    We drove from Ouray to Grand Junction one year. When we came around a blind corner there was a 4ft boulder sitting right in the middle of the highway. No mishaps and we called someone to report it, but it was eye-opening.

  • @michaelminton1224
    @michaelminton1224 Рік тому

    I remember doing that road in June 2006 on my "Mile High Colorado" tour.

  • @ToysToolsandTales
    @ToysToolsandTales 2 роки тому +3

    I live about 2 hours for this highway. Completely and unbelievably amazing! There is said to be over a million dollars worth of gold in the rocks under the highway but that's likely billions now. Dangerous and definitely not a road you want to take when it snowed. Monument Colorado the dessert million dollar highway.

  • @ronduff4325
    @ronduff4325 2 роки тому +2

    We've been over it 6 times . It's AWESOME

  • @Starfish2145
    @Starfish2145 2 роки тому +30

    The Utes are such beautiful people. So sad we stole their land.

    • @phaedrussmith1949
      @phaedrussmith1949 2 роки тому +2

      Land Back.

    • @TheBandit7613
      @TheBandit7613 2 роки тому +9

      Everyone on Earth was conquered at some point in history.
      It's time for them to move forward.

    • @analogguy5548
      @analogguy5548 2 роки тому +10

      Have traveled through out the American West. I believe Native Americans should celebrate their culture much as I celebrate my Irish heritage. But it’s time to move on - So sad to see the deplorable conditions on many reservations. Opportunity in this country is unlimited - It’s depressing to see so many Native Americans satisfied to live on welfare and government handouts. Anyone can can become very successful through hard work, common sense and determination. I wish the best for everyone.

    • @secretamericayoutubechanne2961
      @secretamericayoutubechanne2961 2 роки тому +1

      They were savages that are better off with technology. Horses, guns, glass, metal weren't even available until the white men came. Its interesting, they really were wild and living off the land. But the Natives numbers were scarce. 300 k spread across the whole U.S. That's empty. The buffaloes far outnumbered the MONGOLS who crossed the bearing straight. Too small a number to say you own or control the land.

    • @secretamericayoutubechanne2961
      @secretamericayoutubechanne2961 2 роки тому +5

      If you look at a portrait or photograph of the Ute 'beautiful' is not what comes to mind. They look rather brute, very large nose, it's Colorado that is beautiful. It's beautiful that they chose colorado

  • @paulcoggins
    @paulcoggins 2 роки тому +1

    A wonderful drive.
    I kept stopping to take in the beauty around me

  • @ernestclements7398
    @ernestclements7398 2 роки тому +4

    Try driving this in a Saturn SC2, with a gasoline tanker in front of you, and an eighty year old driving a full size Winnebago behind with darkness coming on the way I did from Silverton to Ouray back in the summer of 97, I was never so glad to get off a piece of road in my life as I was that night.

    • @thatsmrharley2u2
      @thatsmrharley2u2 2 роки тому +3

      Cool...but try driving the gasoline tanker.

    • @anneboban2002
      @anneboban2002 2 роки тому

      I always disliked summer driving the pass due to trailers, etc.

    • @anneboban2002
      @anneboban2002 2 роки тому

      @@thatsmrharley2u2 Driving a car is enough for me, lol.

    • @jeffjansen582
      @jeffjansen582 Рік тому

      That is a great car, still have my 99, would drive through a foot and a half of snow and never get stuck, wipers on high and snow coming straight over the hood. Cheers

    • @kinikinrd
      @kinikinrd 4 місяці тому

      there were lots of places to pull off if you were uncomfortable.....

  • @unchargedpickles6372
    @unchargedpickles6372 9 місяців тому +1

    My 16 yr old son and I accidentally drove the entire length of the million dollar highway. We'd had to drive a road we thought was scary so to avoid it on the way home we let the GPS reroute and decided we'd rather drive an extra hour than the one road again. Annnnnnd we ended up driving this road instead. Much scarier. Made at least 6 cars of locals hate me. It was breathtakingly beautiful though!

  • @markrowland1366
    @markrowland1366 2 роки тому +1

    On a coastal Highway in 1950s New Zealand, grass grew where a white line might have been painted. Every month a new track of a car that had rolled down the ocean cliffs into the ocean.

  • @catherinemcbride8001
    @catherinemcbride8001 10 місяців тому +1

    I was at the top of red Mountain and saw a little pond with a beautiful white Lilly Flower and I ask my husband if it was possible for him to get the Flower He said the water was so cold that had ice in it , but that it was not deep he might be able to just walk out and pick one of the Flowers. So he stepped into and it went up to his chest and he say oh well and he swam out and got it. but he almost froze. Just to pick me that Flower. THAT IS WHEN YOU KNOW A MAN LOVES YOU.

  • @ThatOpalGuy
    @ThatOpalGuy 2 роки тому +2

    highway 14 west through Poudre canyon is also a fantastic drive

  • @steveroberson1488
    @steveroberson1488 2 роки тому +10

    I live on Hwy 550 it's the most beautiful land in America but today's drivers drive too fast on this road making it a stressful drive .

  • @altarique123
    @altarique123 2 роки тому +9

    Excellent video but I feel sorry for those who were killed

    • @billyjackbuzzard
      @billyjackbuzzard 3 місяці тому

      Flippity Floppity was my cousin and he died from Kratos the killer.

  • @klaytonpeterson1596
    @klaytonpeterson1596 2 роки тому +2

    Excellent...thank you

  • @larrychrisler5414
    @larrychrisler5414 Рік тому +1

    My father, a trucker, hauled gasoline to silver ton when the road was pretty much a one lane gravel road. Said he would have to back up often to let cars get around

  • @StevenG.Reeves
    @StevenG.Reeves 6 місяців тому

    Experiencing Colorado is like stepping into a postcard-perfect landscape, where rugged mountains, pristine lakes, and expansive forests beckon outdoor enthusiasts and nature lovers alike

  • @oldredcoonhound2182
    @oldredcoonhound2182 2 роки тому +1

    Never seen it, but went through the going to the sun road in Montana twice and it was awesome and scary without guardrails.

  • @peterpark3656
    @peterpark3656 Рік тому

    Learned a lot. Thank you.

  • @whaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
    @whaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa 2 роки тому +1

    The waters from Red Mountains being acidic is an understatement. Much of the waters from Red Mountains mines have a negative pH value.

  • @Meekerextreme
    @Meekerextreme Рік тому

    The Thumbnail is Lime Creek Rd nowadays as the wall is still there. That was the original route.

  • @angelyncampbell820
    @angelyncampbell820 2 роки тому +2

    Great program

  • @ourv9603
    @ourv9603 2 роки тому +1

    When this $M highway was built $M was really something.
    Today, most freeways cost MORE then $M per mile.
    !

  • @captivesojourner
    @captivesojourner 2 роки тому +3

    i accidentally took that route in a tractor trailer in the winter. Google maps said it was a shortcut and i was a rookie.

  • @jayempress4203
    @jayempress4203 Рік тому +2

    Many years ago I drove to western Colorado to visit friends. I drove over Wolfcreek pass for the forst time, myself. It was then I discovered that the work we'd had done on our car just a week prior, had ended up eliminating a low gear. So, coming down Wolfcreek pass was a frightening experience for me, especially since it was my first time driving that kind of road. So we finally get to Montrose and our friends decided to show us the sights. We started up the million dollar highway and I had a pa ic attack. We turned arou d and returned to our friend's house. What little I saw was beautiful, but I never had any desire to return. That was over 40 years ago. After seeing this vid, I'm glad for that panic attack! And I wasn't prone to those. But since it was the same day as the Wolfcreek experience, my friends thought that the mdh would cure me. That's not how my drum rolls. It's beautiful seeing the sights through the video from the safety of my lazyboy! 🤣

  • @crankybuzzard6867
    @crankybuzzard6867 2 роки тому

    Enjoy going up that way.... several times. Nice job on the video, for sure!

  • @nextwave1314
    @nextwave1314 2 роки тому +1

    So impressive what men could do back then!

  • @realemonful
    @realemonful 2 роки тому +3

    I, for a minute, thought this could be an interesting video but that literally only lasted a minute

    • @TheStickinator
      @TheStickinator Рік тому

      White man bad. All of our shortcomings are their fault. We take no responsibility. 🥱👌

    • @realemonful
      @realemonful 11 місяців тому +1

      @@tebelshaw9486 Aren't you a rebel?
      I bet you wear your camouflage jacket at the beach in July too, don't you? lol

    • @billyjackbuzzard
      @billyjackbuzzard 3 місяці тому

      ​@realemonful a lot of people are like their competitors but only a few people have no searchlights.

  • @raginroadrunner
    @raginroadrunner Рік тому

    I ran this road for 35 years in a truck. Parts of it are tricky. Got to watch it or it will bite ya!

  • @danbusey
    @danbusey 2 роки тому

    The first time I drove that was at night. It didn't seem all that spooky. Two days later I drove back through in the daytime. Boy, was I wrong.

  • @roadkingdream
    @roadkingdream Рік тому +2

    Colorado belongs to the Ute...GIVE IT BACK!!!!

    • @billyjackbuzzard
      @billyjackbuzzard 3 місяці тому

      No

    • @thatguyisbackagain
      @thatguyisbackagain 2 місяці тому

      Not to be dismissive, but human history is written by whatever resources were most valued at any given time. As a species, we seem to be hardwired to trample others in search of greed. It’s a horrible shame the North American continent’s history was nearly totally destroyed in a span of less than five generations of European ‘settlement’.

    • @billyjackbuzzard
      @billyjackbuzzard 2 місяці тому

      @@thatguyisbackagain no

  • @zalix512
    @zalix512 2 роки тому +4

    We all suffer trauma. My ancestors fought in every war. There would not even be a country to grease without their blood.

    • @billyjackbuzzard
      @billyjackbuzzard 3 місяці тому

      My trauma comes from having robust haunches.

  • @residentpotato6023
    @residentpotato6023 2 роки тому +6

    Keep Colorado great! Keep Californians out!

    • @codykurschner8399
      @codykurschner8399 2 роки тому

      I agree. Born and raised here my whole life, and Californians do not belong here, along with Texans. Both different sides to a horrible coin.

    • @austindenotter19
      @austindenotter19 2 роки тому

      To late you guys are ultra liberal already.

  • @janebennett-zc6ec
    @janebennett-zc6ec 11 місяців тому

    My great grandfather was a photographer in Silverton and also owned a silver mine there in the 1880s/1890s. His photos were signed HM for his name Herado Maxwell Dearborn. In the 1930s he still had photos of Natve Americans, but those photos were not found when he died. I would love to find out more about his time in Silverton, Denver, and New Mexico if anyone has any information.

  • @Shogun459
    @Shogun459 3 місяці тому

    I grew up there.
    The white line disappeared because the road was so narrow the sprayer was just spraying the road. They widened it about 10 years ago.
    They came for Lead and Zinc but found Gold in the waste rock. The race was on. I worked in the Sunnyside Mine above Silverton and commuted from Ouray.
    Pronounced "Your A", not oh raw.

  • @geraldmorain3166
    @geraldmorain3166 2 роки тому +1

    Thank you

  • @danieljorden8455
    @danieljorden8455 2 роки тому +1

    beautiful

  • @kurtwomack6473
    @kurtwomack6473 2 роки тому +1

    Nice history documentary, including the dark past which has to be told. Been several times as a passenger, only a couple times driving, car enthusiast heaven. If this scares you, stay away.

  • @cheesecakefan4880
    @cheesecakefan4880 Рік тому

    I live very close to this Hwy but I dont go up there much cause it makes me sick.
    Its very scary especially in winter
    The plows are crazy

  • @reneedennis2011
    @reneedennis2011 Рік тому

    Thank you for this video.

  • @goodolbronco
    @goodolbronco Рік тому

    I love that highway

  • @andrewlast1535
    @andrewlast1535 Рік тому

    I still have nightmares about that road.

  • @veeherreraJanecka
    @veeherreraJanecka Рік тому

    Well done. Loved this !

  • @alicecampos-ayala3290
    @alicecampos-ayala3290 11 місяців тому

    This was Beautiful
    Great camera
    Concepts were fantastic.
    56:40

  • @geraldmorain3166
    @geraldmorain3166 2 роки тому +1

    Thank you grampa ,and dad .

  • @lmmillette1
    @lmmillette1 Рік тому

    Going over today!!

  • @resynthesizer4565
    @resynthesizer4565 3 місяці тому

    My dad drove that with me in the passenger seat circa 1975 ish. He said it was called that because of all the gold in the road.

  • @gunsup-0331
    @gunsup-0331 Рік тому +4

    It's funny when people want to piggy back on what their ancestors did it's always "we did this" and "we did that"... In reality nobody did any of it that is living today.

  • @pizzahog5912
    @pizzahog5912 9 місяців тому +2

    If PBS want's to do a Ute documentary great.
    I wanted to see the million dollar hwy.