Stalin's failed GULAG: The Trans-Polar Railway (Construction No. 501)

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 26 вер 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 446

  • @praisane
    @praisane Рік тому +131

    Very interesting, thanks for the video. It's great that someone still keeps making videos in English about out-of-the-beaten-path Russia. Politics notwithstanding Russia is an eternally fascinating country.

    • @robertwouterlood9994
      @robertwouterlood9994 Рік тому +8

      Only because so many people died there for nothing...

    • @FriendlyCroock
      @FriendlyCroock Рік тому +2

      Fascinating how many westerners speak of the soviets with fascination and enthusiasm.

    • @FriendlyCroock
      @FriendlyCroock Рік тому +6

      Think about what usually happens when a westerner speaks the same way about the "Naughtzis"

    • @UltraTotenkopf
      @UltraTotenkopf Рік тому

      @@robertwouterlood9994 *If these people had not died there, then the entire Russian nation would have perished, as a culture, and as a whole universe that is unlike anyone else in the world, the Western cannibals did not manage to realize their Hitler plan or Churchchel’s plan to destroy Russia as a state and Russians as a nation!*

    • @henrijs1733
      @henrijs1733 Рік тому +4

      @@FriendlyCroock except Soviets didn't want to genocide an entire nation for territorial expansion, so kinda apples to oranges there

  • @matthewcollins57
    @matthewcollins57 Рік тому +80

    I have to commend you for creating these fascinating videos of railways in remote parts of Russia, and for your excellent commentary on their origins. This is really interesting material so keep up the good work!

  • @Peter-MH
    @Peter-MH Рік тому +56

    Loving these mini documentary episodes - really interesting! 👍

  • @malfunctionjunction6212
    @malfunctionjunction6212 Рік тому +11

    Отличный сюжет, отличная камера и монтаж. Настоящий урок истории. Спасибо. Great narrative, excellent camera and edit. A real history lesson. Thank you.

  • @noahkoch9153
    @noahkoch9153 Рік тому +69

    Very interesting episode, looking forward to learning more about these obscure and long forgotten soviet projects

    • @philiprufus4427
      @philiprufus4427 Рік тому +6

      For an old guy that was reading everything Solzenhitsyn had translated into English in the 1970s in Scotland and also loves railways,that was really interesting. Thank you guys.

    • @artembolyak117
      @artembolyak117 Рік тому

      @@philiprufus4427Solzhenitsyns is a weak writer. Better read Shalamov and Mamin Mibiryak.

  • @JorvikBerserkir
    @JorvikBerserkir Рік тому +208

    I have to be honest, if I lived in one of those small provincial towns/villages with a lot of stray dogs I'd be known as the local nutter because I'd take them all in

    • @vincentas1
      @vincentas1 Рік тому +6

      ok flanders

    • @Sniperboy5551
      @Sniperboy5551 Рік тому +26

      Taking in a large group of dogs is nothing like a large group of cats, I’d strongly advise against it. You would go broke feeding them and if they’re strays they won’t be housebroken.

    • @JorvikBerserkir
      @JorvikBerserkir Рік тому +15

      @@Sniperboy5551 i know, i had 9 dogs at one point

    • @TheBandit7613
      @TheBandit7613 Рік тому +6

      I would quickly MOVE to a nicer climate.
      My policy?
      I only live where there are palm trees.
      Cold grey weather sucks.

    • @davidhughes4089
      @davidhughes4089 Рік тому +6

      You'd fall over one day and get devoured though, I suppose it's a personal choice if on balance it's worth it 😄

  • @tskedition
    @tskedition Рік тому +26

    Thank you for making this video. This infrastructure is not going to last forever and its good to have it documented.

  • @ekesandras1481
    @ekesandras1481 Рік тому +18

    Concerning the other rails, besides the Bochum one:
    The rails at 23:58 (Nadezhdinsky Rail factory) was made in Serov, Sverdlosvk oblast. That is in the Ural region East of Yekaterinburg. Before 1939 the town was called Nadezhdinsk and it had a large steel factory, 20% of all rails in the Soviet Union were made there. Later the town got renamed after some Bolshevik revolutionary. The rail was not made in Norilsk, where today there is a metallurgic factory called "Nadezhda". The town of Norilsk didn't exist in 1923.
    The other one from the Yugostal factory "Stalin" (югосталь = Southern Steel) must be from Taganrog on the Asov Sea. Taganrog is very close to Mariupol on the Ukrainian side. Both towns have steel works, already since before the October Revolution.

  • @georgepetrin1334
    @georgepetrin1334 Рік тому +13

    Very good sleuthing over difficult terrain, unfavorable weather conditions and sketchy transportation. Thank you for your efforts and the interesting information.

    • @the_kombinator
      @the_kombinator Рік тому +1

      Did you see that Lada's roofliner tho? Corinthian leather has nothing on that masterpiece.

  • @kixigvak
    @kixigvak Рік тому +156

    Very interesting video. I live in Alaska and am very interested in all Arctic regions. I suspect those rails manufactured in Germany in 1906 were removed from Germany as reparations after WW2.

    • @vetrieska11
      @vetrieska11 Рік тому

      haha as reparations absolutely NO. russian special engineer forces called "trofieyne bataliony" just robbed everything what can be useful from occupied territories and send it to russia. in western Poland they took about 10000 km of railway lines, of which about a half never had been restored. they even took electric railway equipment (tractrion wires, engines, substations, powerplants) which cannot be use is ussr due to another voltage. All that was scraped after few years storage in open filed - only small parts returned to DDR (communist-owned German Democratic Republic, est Germany), paid with new railway cars.

    • @ThorsMartell
      @ThorsMartell Рік тому +14

      That is very possible, though the reperations were not that high and Russia manufactured plenty of steel by that time itself.
      It should be noted, Russian railway has a wider spur than European/British/American/Chinese 5'8.5". For the rails itself, that doesnt matter, but at least the sleepers from Germany would have been useless to Russia.

    • @davidelliott5843
      @davidelliott5843 Рік тому +6

      Standard gauge is 4ft 8-1/2ins. Russian gauge is 1520mm just under 5ft. It’s enough to make rolling stock incompatible but functionally much the same.

    • @Pr_l
      @Pr_l Рік тому +19

      Approximately 25 years ago, walking in these mournful places. I found a metal lining under the railway rail. It was labelled... Made in Texas. U.S.A.

    • @DEFCON08
      @DEFCON08 Рік тому

      That would make sense

  • @williamlloyd3769
    @williamlloyd3769 Рік тому +16

    Steel railroad bridge over the river was riveted. Can’t imagine installing bridges in such a remote location and living in a labor camp for years. Tough dealing with the weather while building the northern railroad

    • @KJamesMellick
      @KJamesMellick Рік тому +11

      I'm guessing the bridges would have been built by actual bridge builders, and most of the forced labor used for manual labor building rail grade, etc. Unless they could find enough military or political prisoners with ironworking experience.

  • @B1ll1709
    @B1ll1709 Рік тому +13

    Thank you for researching and filming this, top job!

  • @bandatratata
    @bandatratata Рік тому +5

    Да ты молодчина! И эту мою мечту осуществил! Я как прочитал в своё время о стройке железной дороги там, так и всё мечтал там побывать.. Но кишка тонка.
    Очень-очень благодарю за съёмку и подробное распедаливание. Огромный тебе RESPECT и огромное уважение всем людям, которые там полегли.

  • @BerlinBerlin
    @BerlinBerlin Рік тому +36

    The rails from 1906 were coming from Germany, Bochum is a German town in the Ruhr region. The rails were part of post war reparations.

    • @Homo_Sapiens8bln
      @Homo_Sapiens8bln Рік тому +12

      Not only the rails were sent from Germany but also tens of thousands of Germans who were also included in the so-called "prisoners". Although we know that in the USSR people were a resource like oil, gas, coal, and human life can be burned on the inhumane projects of a tyrant.

    • @artembolyak117
      @artembolyak117 Рік тому +8

      @@Homo_Sapiens8bln After what the Nazis did on Soviet soil. The pay was very low. Germany should be grateful to Stalin for being a communist. And that's why I didn't grind it to powder.

    • @nebelparderde4503
      @nebelparderde4503 Рік тому +12

      @@artembolyak117 so you think evil should be returned with evil? Both dictators were evil and caused the death of millions of normal people like you and me. There is no point in comparing things like this.

    • @artembolyak117
      @artembolyak117 Рік тому +4

      @@nebelparderde4503 Stalin is't evil. Your position is like of a little boy.

    • @nebelparderde4503
      @nebelparderde4503 Рік тому

      @@artembolyak117 If you think the killing of at least 12 million people isnt evil then our talk is no longer useful to both of us.

  • @debeyes
    @debeyes Рік тому +15

    Very interesting video Excellent Narration as usual . Your hard work is appreciated & Congratulations on your Arctic circle crossing !

  • @DarkRuins
    @DarkRuins Рік тому +28

    thank you so much for this video. this project is so important and such a beautifully tragic part of history often forgotten. would love more videos on its history, the cities involved, and the ideas of the soviets in constructing it. stay safe out there and god bless.

    • @chaigonjenkins
      @chaigonjenkins Рік тому +3

      what is beautiful about this part of history?

    • @DarkRuins
      @DarkRuins Рік тому +4

      @@chaigonjenkins in my opinion, any attempt to connect a country through rail, is beautiful. i included tragic because of the slave labor used and the deaths that occured. or perhaps you didnt read my comment in full.

    • @chaigonjenkins
      @chaigonjenkins Рік тому

      @@DarkRuins I think you are an idiot, I obviously read your comment in full, however the railway connection is not the point of the project, rather, the slave camps. So I don't see the beauty. Proof that it was all about the slave camps is that the rails weren't repurposed to "connect the country through rail"

    • @DarkRuins
      @DarkRuins Рік тому +2

      @@chaigonjenkins calling anyone an idiot is very unhealthy and uncalled for. I hope you find the help you need to release your anger.

    • @shadetreader
      @shadetreader Рік тому +1

      The real tragedy of Stalin's time is that the world's reactionaries weren't ALL locked up.

  • @Triadii
    @Triadii Рік тому +21

    Your videos are so interesting,I do not think that many people would know the information you shared with us
    Keep up the good work

  • @Senor0Droolcup
    @Senor0Droolcup Рік тому +9

    Love this channel! Learning about so many rail roads that are new to me.

  • @tropicalpalmtree
    @tropicalpalmtree Рік тому +11

    The hardship that went into building that railway is hard to even imagine. So brutally cold and isolated, and the prisoners were poorly clothed, sleep deprived and hungry. I'm glad some managed to get out.

    • @nonameguy3665
      @nonameguy3665 Рік тому +3

      Sakha republic and chukotka are full of mountains range,extremely cold and few population so i think it's not impossible to build railway between sakha to chukotka and nowadays there are no highway link between 2 federal state only mud and small road

    • @SMGJohn
      @SMGJohn Рік тому

      Oh yes pity the murders, rapists, Trotskyists and foreign spies.
      Buhu

    • @tropicalpalmtree
      @tropicalpalmtree Рік тому

      @@SMGJohn What a load of horsesh!t.

    • @SMGJohn
      @SMGJohn Рік тому +1

      @@tropicalpalmtree
      You fiddle kids too? You better hope I do not find you in real life.

    • @tropicalpalmtree
      @tropicalpalmtree Рік тому

      @@SMGJohn Stop projecting.

  • @ejbowen91
    @ejbowen91 Рік тому +1

    Thank you for this fascinating video. I feel a deep sense of grief for the suffering of so many thousands of human beings imprisoned and forced to work for years in soul destroying conditions.

  • @eskosalaka5993
    @eskosalaka5993 Рік тому +6

    What amazing sights, thanks for another awesome video. I hope to see a lot more!

  • @HOmodeltrainfan
    @HOmodeltrainfan Рік тому

    Speechless on what to say about the connection to Norilsk....Thank you for learning and teaching me what is reality from news and media!!!!!

  • @TheDaf95xf
    @TheDaf95xf Рік тому +6

    Really interesting and very well documented guys 👍🏻🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿

  • @skiNclimb94
    @skiNclimb94 Рік тому +2

    You are so intelligent and truly produce extremely high quality content that is easy to digest. Thank you for all you do!

  • @SavageBeastChronicles
    @SavageBeastChronicles Рік тому +3

    Great video, really interesting, thank you so much ! Приветствую вас из Женевы, Швейцария.

  • @RioDeLaNorte
    @RioDeLaNorte Рік тому +6

    Vielen Dank für diese interessante Reise !

  • @daveshongkongchinachannel
    @daveshongkongchinachannel Рік тому +2

    Great video keeping the memory alive the memory of those darker times in history.

  • @reiner459
    @reiner459 Рік тому +4

    Hey people,
    im late to the video but i have Interesting information (at least i hope).
    At 16:13 you can see a rail with the writing B.V.G Bochum 1906. B.V.G stand for ,,Bochumer Verein für Bergbau und Gußstahlfabrikation'' (can be translated with Bochum Association for Mining and Cast Steel Production). As Vagabond got right Bochum is a city in Germany. So how does this rail come to Russia you ask? I will explain!
    After the Nazi lost the war the soviets wanted some kind of reparation for their big losses. So because there was not really a lot they could take they would take everything they could get, for example Rails. They would dismantle the rail and send them to anywhere they where needed. Well it seems that the rail in the video was needed in Stalins Trans-Polar Railway. So there is a very big chance that once German Locomotives with war goods rolled over this rail! Isnt it fascinating?

  • @wkgurr
    @wkgurr Рік тому +9

    Project 501 was what is today part of the Northern Latitudinal RR. Have you seen evidence that there is work going on on this part of the NLRR (Nadym-Salechard)? Have they started to construct the bridge between Labytnangi and Salechard across the Ob river? There is some info on the web on the NLRR but apparently nothing that is really up-to-date. Thanks again for your excellent reports. I enjoy watching them immensely. What you are doing is pioneering work. Cheers!

    • @ivantrainsLIVE
      @ivantrainsLIVE  Рік тому +9

      Construction of the bridge near Salekhard has not started yet, as well as reconstruction of Nadym - Salekhard stretch. It's entirely ruined.

    • @wkgurr
      @wkgurr Рік тому

      @@ivantrainsLIVE Thanks so much for you reply and good luck for your future trips. 😄😄😄

  • @the_lost_navigator
    @the_lost_navigator Рік тому +2

    Canadian 'Foamer' here - the green Diesel engine at 10:00 resembled the old CN colours...
    Enjoyed the video, guys. Cheers and Respect.

    • @railtrolley
      @railtrolley Рік тому

      The locos look a bit like EMD G12.

    • @jameshitselberger5845
      @jameshitselberger5845 Рік тому

      Hah! How about the tractor company or the Green Bay Packers football team?

  • @tankgirl2074
    @tankgirl2074 Рік тому +1

    Спасибо за создание видео. Приятно видеть, что люди интересуются историей... хорошей и плохой.

  • @KristianK9755
    @KristianK9755 Рік тому +6

    Hello my friend.Im watching for a long time to your videos and they are very good and well documented.
    Keep the good work.

  • @splendidx01
    @splendidx01 Рік тому +1

    Absolutely fascinating; thanks very much!

  • @dgSolidarity
    @dgSolidarity Рік тому +1

    I like your uniquely interpreted pronunciations. There’s always a few per video that really stand out. Adds some uniqueness.
    (and thanks to subtitles I can always find out what word it is meant to be)

  • @kookookala6251
    @kookookala6251 Рік тому

    Great videos! Be safe and keep on truckn!

  • @carloxr9
    @carloxr9 7 місяців тому

    Thank you so much for your videos

  • @bryannelson6139
    @bryannelson6139 2 місяці тому

    Very interesting and cool video thank you so much for doing this.

  • @BridgeandTunnelScooterClub
    @BridgeandTunnelScooterClub Рік тому +4

    great video, loved it... keep traveling.

  • @gravesclayton3604
    @gravesclayton3604 Рік тому +6

    I followed along your video trip using Google Maps satellite view, looking for all the places you stopped from Nadym to Salekhard. Was unable to find the bridge that was sunk in the river, all the others I found, as well as the 2 labor camps. Thanks for the journey!

  • @garyhooper1820
    @garyhooper1820 Рік тому

    Good to see history being preserved on video , and sites by local volunteers being restored .

  • @vijayanchomatil8413
    @vijayanchomatil8413 Рік тому

    Thank you very much for this video! We have many upon many videos and information on the Holocaust camps but absolutely nothing on the gulags!

  • @meanderingbird286
    @meanderingbird286 Рік тому

    Fascinating content. Thanks and may you continue for a long time.

  • @richardparker3924
    @richardparker3924 Рік тому +2

    "We have made it to the middle of nowhere.".......best line in the video!

    • @Pr_l
      @Pr_l Рік тому +1

      Parallel to the Sorrowful construction site 501, there is a automobile road. The guys were driving in passing cars.
      25-30 years ago (when there was no road for cars) you could only walk forward or backward on the railroad and it was a Big Adventure. Walk for 320 kilometers. Throughout the journey you will not meet people. They don't live there. Only if you are lucky will you meet a hunter or a fisherman.

  • @erickarian8663
    @erickarian8663 Рік тому +2

    bro you are so great, wish I could travel and see all the wild special places. keep it up!!!

  • @RoadsideChannelTX
    @RoadsideChannelTX Рік тому +8

    I ran across your channel by accident, but I'm happy I did. Excellent! Beautiful scenery, interesting commentary with just a hint of danger. I do have a suggestion for easily defeating the over head security cameras. It's actually quite simple. I noticed that most of the wagons you ride in are either empty or have coal as cargo. Take a photo looking straight down and have a bed roll made with one side lithographed with the photo of an empty wagon and the other side with coal. That way when the camera looks down all it sees is the empty trailer or coal, depending on what you're riding in.

    • @robertbalazslorincz8218
      @robertbalazslorincz8218 Рік тому

      Issue is: that doesn't work should the car be fully clean if the picture was taken of a dirty car or vice versa.

  • @tomatoes3
    @tomatoes3 Рік тому +1

    Thank you so much for producing such an interesting video in English. It must have been a terrible place to be sent to one of those camps , thank goodness there are people who give their time to saving them .

  • @xofuricacidmeetsthedruidva9660

    All of yer videos are fucking great. Yeah, returning to a monument from different direction years later closing a loop, history, scenery, insight, and taking us along for your rides - thank you!

  • @Crabneedspony
    @Crabneedspony Рік тому +1

    Excellent Thankyou 👍👍

  • @kevindowney4817
    @kevindowney4817 5 місяців тому

    Outstanding job on this top rate

  • @DarcyCardinal
    @DarcyCardinal Рік тому +1

    I can imagine the cost of maintaining the line (if fully built) would be crazy expensive.

  • @abaronsnumismatics
    @abaronsnumismatics Рік тому +1

    Nice video thanks for sharing

  • @rodmeisterful
    @rodmeisterful Рік тому +1

    So interesting to learn more about the heritage of your country.

  • @Bonky-wonky
    @Bonky-wonky Рік тому

    12:37 ‘northern nothing’, very inspiring words making me want to explore the northern part of Russia even more.

  • @DopravniPoradce
    @DopravniPoradce Рік тому +5

    It's so interesting to see such video. I've read Solzhenicyn and I'm familiar with those parts visually thanks to Snowrunner but to really see the Gulag camps... It's so sad that the state existed that one psychopath with moustache could decide to send anybody here as a slave for 10-25 years. In a country that many believe to this day was a 'worker's paradise'. Although objectively or was more of the hell.
    It's even sadder that nothing changed to this day whatsoever. There's still a Vozhd / Tsar that can send any Russian to death for no particular reason just by signing the paper. And he's even moustacheless and hairless. I hope that in some distant future Russians will be free of dictatorship for the first time in the history. But there is no sign of wind of change yet.

  • @johnpolhamus9041
    @johnpolhamus9041 Рік тому +2

    Brutal history.

  • @jouebien
    @jouebien Рік тому +1

    I would surmise that the bridge is as big as it is because the river swells after heavy rains or after snow melts.

  • @dirk_o7
    @dirk_o7 Рік тому

    Best channel on UA-cam. Keep up the great work Mr. Bond.

  • @benediktmorak4409
    @benediktmorak4409 Рік тому +1

    when i was working in Siberia, we made an excursion to a Gulag and the railway, or at least what was still left over, which was not much.... and we were told what the conditions for both working and - living -were there..

  • @floobious80866
    @floobious80866 Рік тому

    Well done VAGA BOND 008!!!.YAY EPIC MANN

  • @peterswatton7400
    @peterswatton7400 Рік тому +42

    Imagine the horror of being one of Stalin's slaves in such a place. Nice video work,

    • @Comrade_Akimov
      @Comrade_Akimov Рік тому +9

      11 an 17 years my both grandparents did. They met in Siberia, and my uncle was born there. Stalin was dead, but they still were not allowed to return.

    • @valuerc2664
      @valuerc2664 5 місяців тому

      my great grandfather was in a forced labour concentrarion camp in nazi germany

    • @robinwells8879
      @robinwells8879 5 місяців тому

      It’s good to see volunteers preserving the memory of the camps. We need to remember such things as a warning to the future. ❤

    • @tempejkl
      @tempejkl 4 місяці тому

      Slaves? Labour was paid, healthcare was provided - unlike US prison system.

    • @robinwells8879
      @robinwells8879 4 місяці тому

      @@tempejkl and each person got a cuddle from Uncle Joe at the end of their volunteering session!😂

  • @jdl7211
    @jdl7211 Рік тому

    What incredible history! Your video is just amazing!

  • @edwardilowiecki8925
    @edwardilowiecki8925 Рік тому +1

    Very amazing, interesting and sad at the same time...what a place!!!

  • @olafjensen4508
    @olafjensen4508 Рік тому +1

    Thanks, friend, interesting.

  • @dramriddell
    @dramriddell Рік тому

    Very impressive and wonderful to be on the journey with you...minus the mosquitos and other hardships. Seriously though, very educational and inspiring.

  • @Truthasvictim
    @Truthasvictim Рік тому +4

    What a waste of materials and resources, thousads of trees cut down for nothing, all that steel, the polluting tie creosotes, the labour for nothing.

  • @ecr-9341
    @ecr-9341 2 місяці тому

    Straight fascinating.
    I appreciate your effort.
    You speak English quite well.

  • @FJHooker
    @FJHooker Рік тому +5

    Класс! Мертвая дорога меня всегда интересовала, а тут еще и VAGABOND
    Лайк не глядя

  • @MoMakeMore
    @MoMakeMore Рік тому

    Amazing Video! Very different from the others so far. Really liked it!

  • @WindTurbineSyndrome
    @WindTurbineSyndrome Рік тому +1

    Great documentary. Excellent photos and maps. Stalin's ego and Soviet demand to rule over nature eventually led to terrible environmental damage throughout USSR. It was always interesting as soon as Stalin died his gulag system immediately broke down and everyone left for civilization.

    • @WindTurbineSyndrome
      @WindTurbineSyndrome Рік тому

      Your English is very good.

    • @WindTurbineSyndrome
      @WindTurbineSyndrome Рік тому

      Vasya in the Hay explores rural living in Russia east of Moscow outside Kalgan. They tell their stories of surviving in extreme poverty.

    • @WindTurbineSyndrome
      @WindTurbineSyndrome Рік тому

      Kaluga is name of closest city

  • @mercedes300gd
    @mercedes300gd Рік тому

    wow what a journey, would love to do travelling like that ! great video!

  • @dasokeii9635
    @dasokeii9635 Рік тому

    13:50 Bless you !

  • @davidallen2058
    @davidallen2058 Рік тому +3

    What a tourist location! Cold, wet, muddy. What more could you ask for? Great video though.

    • @TheBandit7613
      @TheBandit7613 Рік тому

      Russia is a horrible place to live.
      Even in Moscow, there is only about 10 hours of sunshine in the month of December.
      Cold, grey, damp, muddy, not my style.

    • @liliyaversus4051
      @liliyaversus4051 Рік тому

      @@TheBandit7613t is 7h 10 min of "sun" at the moment, in reality it is less because sun is very low. But it is not the whole year thing, some people really dig (pun intended) deep snow and occasional -30 degrees weather

  • @willwallacetree
    @willwallacetree Рік тому

    Really great, thank you for a look at a really interesting area

  • @Sniperboy5551
    @Sniperboy5551 Рік тому +2

    Holy shit, I didn’t realize you did the same climbing shit that Shiey does. Be careful brother, I love your videos!

    • @wavesnbikes
      @wavesnbikes 9 місяців тому

      Would be great if he does a colab with Shiey.

  • @clazy8
    @clazy8 Рік тому +1

    Fantastic adventure

  • @AdmiralBiach
    @AdmiralBiach Рік тому

    Great Video

  • @bobekvelky4129
    @bobekvelky4129 Рік тому

    outstanding

  • @luco3879
    @luco3879 Рік тому

    Awesome videos!!! Keep it up, you are an inspiration!!

  • @liliyaversus4051
    @liliyaversus4051 Рік тому +3

    Is there any way to map these tracks and things? and Your findings in general? This feels like an important history that is just being abandoned.

  • @Ruhrpottpatriot
    @Ruhrpottpatriot Рік тому +1

    The rails were produced by the "Bochumer Verein für Bergbau und Gußstahlfabrikation (BVG)", the "Bochum Union for Mining and Cast Steel Fabrikation" founded in 1854, now a part of ThyssenKrupp

    • @ekesandras1481
      @ekesandras1481 Рік тому

      probably confiscated in East Germany and East Prussia.

  • @mains8913
    @mains8913 Рік тому

    Awesome video once again, very interesting too 👌

  • @greghavers821
    @greghavers821 Рік тому

    brilliant video!! thanks for this!!!!!

  • @Евгений-б2с6э
    @Евгений-б2с6э Рік тому +1

    ГУЛАГ великое место все трудящихся

  • @Niels_Dn
    @Niels_Dn Рік тому

    Imagine you’re a German prisoner that survived Stalingrad, put into a Gulag where you were kept illegally for almost 10 years and see many die from starvation and exhaustion working on this railroad that nobody ended up using anyway. Great!

  • @JK-we1dr
    @JK-we1dr Рік тому +1

    Love watching the channel. Do ever get caught? And if you did what would happen.

    • @ivantrainsLIVE
      @ivantrainsLIVE  Рік тому +4

      I was caught several times and either was left alone or fined for 100 RUB

  • @PJS_PJS
    @PJS_PJS Рік тому +1

    Super!

  • @davidelliott5843
    @davidelliott5843 Рік тому +1

    Ewan McGregor discusses the Road of Bones and Stalin’s penal colony railways during the “Long Way Round” motorcycle journey.

  • @Radimkiller
    @Radimkiller Рік тому

    Excelent video, thank you!

  • @DavidWood-cz4sl
    @DavidWood-cz4sl 8 місяців тому

    Awesome video. I would love to assist you on one of your adventures. Very cool 😎

  • @wazza33racer
    @wazza33racer Рік тому +1

    nothing beats......"the road of bones"...........a death for every meter of road built.

  • @abc123gpl
    @abc123gpl Рік тому +1

    Great videos. Cheers from germany.

  • @MichalT
    @MichalT Рік тому +1

    Ваш попутчик должен быть поклонником "DUDE" из компьютерной игры "POSTAL 2". Он выглядит как "DUDE" из "POSTAL 2". Приветствую вас из Польши. Страна, из которой многие поляки были депортированы российскими/советскими оккупантами в такие лагеря принудительного труда, как вы здесь представили. // Your traveling companion must be a fan of "DUDE" from the computer game "POSTAL 2". He looks like "DUDE" from "POSTAL 2". Greetings from Poland. A country from which many Poles were deported by the Russian/Soviet Occupation to such forced labor camps as you presented here.

  • @patrickguth3796
    @patrickguth3796 Рік тому +1

    Awesome! I went to a dead end of this railway near Nadym and took a nail back home :) The worst were the moskitos :D We were also at the same camp as you, but saw some Stalin memorials there as well :).

  • @218philip
    @218philip Рік тому +2

    can people imagine the inhumane conditions that the conscripts existed? very few of them were guilty of any real crime, chewed up by a megalomaniac beast. if we're not careful we will see the same thing when the people of the world are enslaved once again.

  • @ProgPiglet
    @ProgPiglet Рік тому

    such a great channel. cheers

  • @rp2974
    @rp2974 Рік тому

    Amazing so many people are willing to pick up hitchhikers in US you would be lucky to have anyone stop.

  • @cobralyoner
    @cobralyoner Рік тому

    such fascinating landscapes. really love the tundra hope to be able to visit one day

  • @tim8513m
    @tim8513m Рік тому +2

    I'm in it for the hopscotch at 4:35. :)

  • @sentra0209
    @sentra0209 Рік тому +1

    Did you spend time in an English speaking country ? Your English is perfect. Great video.

  • @211ryo112
    @211ryo112 Рік тому

    Interesting.