Been watching your videos on and off for almost a year now. I have always been fascinated by all things underground for some reason, and pipes and sewers are a big one for me. It's thrilling to see this whole different world under our feet that most people pay no attention to in their day to day life. Also something simultaneously calming and yet terrifying somehow about all that water. The power of it during some of your videos is very impressive. Please stay safe and thanks for giving us this opportunity to see the world that lies beneath the streets of our cities. Díky a hodně štěstí! Greetings from Atlanta, Georgia, USA. ✌️
I will never forget the group of young men and women who found this concrete tunnel in the Catskills of New York State. The tunnel was dry and it was a hot sunny summer day. They walked through the tunnel, about 2 1/2 hours. About 15 minutes after exiting the tunnel just below the New York State Thruway onto riprap that went down to the Hudson River, they heard what sounded like machines in the tunnel. A few minutes later a massive wall of water the size of the tunnel, 12 feet by 12 feet blew out the tunnel with an incredible force. Apparently the tunnel was part of the New York City watershed and they release water through the tunnel automatically without any warning. The tunnel was under the Catskill Mountain There were no manholes and nowhere to go if you were stuck in there. I will never forget that incident.
@@ocsrc Wow that's incredible, I would never want to experience something like that. That's why we always do proper research before entering new places.
Oh my god... How do you know that there is no drop that is covered with water when walk? What if there is a flooded vertical shaft where you are going to step?
Been watching your videos on and off for almost a year now. I have always been fascinated by all things underground for some reason, and pipes and sewers are a big one for me. It's thrilling to see this whole different world under our feet that most people pay no attention to in their day to day life. Also something simultaneously calming and yet terrifying somehow about all that water. The power of it during some of your videos is very impressive. Please stay safe and thanks for giving us this opportunity to see the world that lies beneath the streets of our cities. Díky a hodně štěstí! Greetings from Atlanta, Georgia, USA. ✌️
@@jackstone8074 Thank you! I appreciate that 👍
Ya casi vaaas a llegar a los 10k, la verdad me alegra si debe haber costado.
O5 super procházka a video. Moc se těším na další. 👍✔💯
Respekt 👍😎
Opět pěkná dokumentace. Povedený výlet 👍
Bardzo dobrze, Panie operatorze!
Another video from the sewer legend 💪🔥
Super ako obvykle. A na záver panter Moravia, tie som vídaval u mňa, v Bratislave počas leta, boli deponované v blízkosti Rendezu.
@@JOJAN-6059 V barvách IDS-JMK jim přezdíváme „ibalgin“ 😄
I will never forget the group of young men and women who found this concrete tunnel in the Catskills of New York State.
The tunnel was dry and it was a hot sunny summer day.
They walked through the tunnel, about 2 1/2 hours.
About 15 minutes after exiting the tunnel just below the New York State Thruway onto riprap that went down to the Hudson River, they heard what sounded like machines in the tunnel.
A few minutes later a massive wall of water the size of the tunnel, 12 feet by 12 feet blew out the tunnel with an incredible force.
Apparently the tunnel was part of the New York City watershed and they release water through the tunnel automatically without any warning.
The tunnel was under the Catskill Mountain
There were no manholes and nowhere to go if you were stuck in there.
I will never forget that incident.
@@ocsrc Wow that's incredible, I would never want to experience something like that. That's why we always do proper research before entering new places.
This time with rubber boots and fishermen trousers :) Safe travells to the underground!
❤❤🎉
Very nice.
You must make Trip to Istanbul, worldst biggest Sewer
@@sesekemann7792 Big city, big sewers. How big is it?
Oh my god... How do you know that there is no drop that is covered with water when walk? What if there is a flooded vertical shaft where you are going to step?
@@Stebanoid I've been there at dry conditions a lot of times, know the tunnel very well :)
This sewer looks very old.
1995.