We Took a 100+ Hour Greyhound From Boston to Seattle

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  • Опубліковано 26 сер 2024
  • This one was pretty insane.
    Thanks to my patrons: Adrian, Alex, Alexander Trout, andrew mullins, Andrew Schumacher, Andy Balonis, an engineer, Anthony Albence, aoumd, Autumn Bosco, Benjamin Ledbetter, Bob Smyth, breakfast, Brendan Shea, Brendan Nystedt, Brian Cudiamat, bsquiklehausen, Carl Freyer, Christopher Meler, Claudio Bickel, Damian L, Darrin Martone, David, David Lloyd, David N, Dani Baronofsky, Deo_1776, Dominic Lovechio, Doug Jones, Douglas Newman, Dr. Matt Lee, eliot, Eliot Chase, Elliot Hunker, emily, Eric Anderson, Eric Rivas, Ethan Winer, FailingSystems, Felix Mo, Flippy, Gabriel Brunswick, George Schneeloch, Graham Campbell, Hack a shaq, Harrison Leong, Harvey Logan, HJD.transit, Ian Westcott, Jack Tat, Jack Turner, Jacob Harrison, James Robertson, James Sleeman, Jason Rabinowitz, Jeb Rach, Jeremy Zorek, John R, John Whitington, Jon, Josh Powell, Joshua, Jules Wang, Just Jamie, Justin Bassett-Green, Kevin, Kian, Kieran Kentley, knope2001, Kyle Hubley, Lillian M., Marcel Marchon, Maria DeVoto, Matt Carnavos, Matt Goldman, Matt Wehner, Matthew Dezii, Matthew Galenas, MeaLynk, Mergatroid, Micah Craig, Michael Gruar (Chappington), Miles Jajich, Mike S, Murray Jaffe, Nate Tangsurat, Nick Lund, NYC Jonah K, Patio, Paul Rivera, PDX Productions, Peter, Piero Maddaleni, Philip Salen, Railrunner, Reid Fisher, Reyner Crosby, Rita Hao, Ryan James, Ryan Keefe, Sam Hebert, Sam L, Scott Fox, Sean Pruitt, shortypowers, Simon F., Simon Xu, Stormy Kara, Symmetry, Tim Hull, TheMan, Toronto Transit Channel, Thomas Malthouse, Warlord324, Will Tung, William Amara, William Wyckoff, and Wilson Calvert!
    Patreon: / milesintransit
    Website: milesintransit...
    Facebook: / milesintransit
    Twitter: / milesintransit1
    Discord: / discord
    Intro music:
    Epic Cinematic Trailer | ELITE by Alex-Productions | / @alexproductionsnocopy...
    Music promoted by www.chosic.com...
    Creative Commons CC BY 3.0
    creativecommon...

КОМЕНТАРІ • 2,3 тис.

  • @thompkins6796
    @thompkins6796 Рік тому +2012

    Greyhound is the only form of transportation I've taken that passengers will actively band together to protect each other from the company, because you'll start as a loose group heading in the same direction, but end up like sailors in a lifeboat trying to pull everyone onto the right bus and fighting off sharks. Greyhound is the great American equalizer, because you're all gonna be treated like braindead cattle regardless of race, creed, or origin.

    • @MilesinTransit
      @MilesinTransit  Рік тому +177

      Haha, truly - this is super accurate.

    • @de132
      @de132 Рік тому +41

      That's the realest comment I've ever read

    • @idkjames
      @idkjames Рік тому +5

      So true

    • @qjtvaddict
      @qjtvaddict Рік тому +8

      Lol what do you expect from 600 plus mile long trips?? Especially from a dispatch perspective

    • @timothymuldoon
      @timothymuldoon Рік тому +8

      Truest statement ever about Greyhound.

  • @coolnewpants
    @coolnewpants Рік тому +2062

    This would test any relationship. The fact that y'all came out of it with positivity says great things about y'all's future

    • @condor237
      @condor237 Рік тому

      She’s just lucky she didn’t get groped by a homeless guy

    • @lawrup
      @lawrup Рік тому +6

      Me i am joining the navy so i can climb my way up to naval officer so i can lead people
      I have a massive role to play
      for my girlfriend shes in law school and becoming a lawyer so she can earn a ton of money

    • @tinydream
      @tinydream Рік тому +80

      @@lawrup cool story bro, tell it again, especially the part about the dragon

    • @nashmourekson6764
      @nashmourekson6764 Рік тому +2

      y'all

    • @mimipeahes5848
      @mimipeahes5848 Рік тому +6

      @@nashmourekson6764man encounters common word.

  • @yaitz3313
    @yaitz3313 Рік тому +792

    The sheer poetic perfection of them selling the station the night before you would have arrived is hilarious.

    • @derekdestep40
      @derekdestep40 Рік тому +5

      I recommend you ride amtrak

    • @Clydesirota
      @Clydesirota Рік тому

      @@derekdestep40Amtrak! Amtrak is guilty of crimes against humanity!

    • @ronclark9724
      @ronclark9724 8 місяців тому +10

      @@Clydesirota Not nearly as guilty as Greyhound or Megabus...

    • @ronclark9724
      @ronclark9724 4 місяці тому

      And Flixbus and RedCoach... But the Dog Greyhound is the worst... If you wish to travel long distances in America ride on Amtrak trains in coach, especially if you use the Amtrak 30-day RailPass promotion... If Amtrak doesn't serve that destination, Greyhound may not either... In those cases rent a car for the short hop to your destination in the same manner as flying...

  • @mikebrady1767
    @mikebrady1767 Рік тому +61

    Hello. It seems you were passengers on the bus I was driving, the last part of your trip between Stanfield, Oregon and Seattle, Washington. I certainly recognized my voice over the PA system, and if it was July 27, 2022 as I think it was, it was also my last day working for Greyhound. The night before myself and a coworker (coming in from another bus) were supposed to check into a hotel in Spokane, Washington where we had a standing reservation before myself returning to Seattle (via Stanfield, Oregon) the next day, the day you were on my bus. However when we got to the hotel, Greyhound had canceled the contract meaning we didn't have a hotel room. I spent 2 1/2 hours trying to secure a room for each of us. About two hours into this I called Greyhound corporate in Dallas, Texas and told them if we weren't given a hotel room, I was going to return to my bus and drive it back to Seattle and park it there and go home. I was told that if I did that, they would call the Washington State Patrol, report my bus stolen and press charges against me. Assholes. Anyway a few minutes later they finally gave both of us each a hotel room. The following day, the day you were on my bus that is, I drove my schedule back to Seattle. After that I returned the bus to the Renton yard 13 miles away, parked the bus, got in my car and drove home never returning to Greyhound again. I have since heard from a former coworker that Greyhound has since cancelled more schedules in the Pacific Northwest because they can't find enough drivers to drive those schedules. So yeah, it was a bittersweet day for me, your bus driver as well. It's sad to see the once great Greyhound bus company dissolve little by little and be bought up by it's new competitor FlixBus. I'm sorry to say that if Greyhound hadn't finally got me a hotel room in Spokane the night before like they were supposed to have, I probably would have driven my bus directly back to Seattle that night even after being threatened by Greyhound corporate. Still I knew that there were passengers like yourself that had reservations the following day who were innocent pawns in Greyhound shenanigans, and I had a change of heart and decided to drive my schedule back the following day so those people with ticketed reservations wouldn't be stranded on short notice. And yes, the Seattle Greyhound bus station was closed when I got in, only opening at certain hours to save Greyhound money. I suspected that would happen before I got there, but I didn't want to announce it to the passengers until I pulled into the station to find it closed in the off chance that it might be open. It's a bad place to drop passengers off, homeless and high crime in the area and no place to find shelter if the weather is bad. If a passenger has to wait for a connecting bus there, it's very unsafe. Anyway for what it's worth, it was a pleasure to get you safely to your destination on the twilight of your journey and mine. Thanks for the video, it was a pleasant surprise. God bless†

    • @MilesinTransit
      @MilesinTransit  Рік тому +19

      What an amazing story, and I'm so sorry Greyhound treated you like that. I hope wherever you've ended up since then, it's been at a better job than THAT, which sounds just absolutely atrocious (how can they not give their drivers a HOTEL ROOM??). We made the trip on July 12th so it wasn't QUITE that last day, but I remember thinking that (as far as I can remember) you were the only driver that said thank you at the end, and that meant a lot. It was fitting that it was at the very end of our journey - and as you said, it was nearing the end of yours too. Thanks so much for commenting, and for getting us the final stretch of the way to Seattle!

    • @mikebrady1767
      @mikebrady1767 Рік тому +7

      @@MilesinTransit You’re very welcome!

  • @ducknorris233
    @ducknorris233 Рік тому +345

    Decades ago a friend got out of the military and took the bus from California to Texas. He told me the bus stopped at every little town. It took so long he met a woman, started a relationship and ended it all before making it home.

    • @bonniejosavland3227
      @bonniejosavland3227 Рік тому +14

      It’s called a one night stand 😂😂😂😂

    • @ducknorris233
      @ducknorris233 Рік тому +76

      @@bonniejosavland3227 3 day 4 state stand

    • @bonniejosavland3227
      @bonniejosavland3227 Рік тому +5

      @@ducknorris233 oh okay.😜

    • @MrRp25
      @MrRp25 Рік тому +13

      Married and divorced on one Greyhound trip lol😂

    • @ducknorris233
      @ducknorris233 Рік тому +4

      @@MrRp25 it was a lot of stops

  • @digaishere_5458
    @digaishere_5458 Рік тому +2654

    This is what I subscribed for, seeing nerds witnessing the horrors of the American interstate transit system. Cheers to you, Miles

    • @MilesinTransit
      @MilesinTransit  Рік тому +97

      Thank you!

    • @marryson123
      @marryson123 Рік тому +1

      Lol America was never built for public transit. Buses and trains are for communists. Us free people here have our own cars. We travel at our own pace, at our own time in our own space.

    • @Michael-db4sn
      @Michael-db4sn Рік тому +70

      The bus system isn't great. The interstate is pretty incredible.

    • @apt62
      @apt62 Рік тому +45

      I’m still very surprised why there’s no high speed railroad 🚆 in the US

    • @iZipTiedMyPenisToABrick
      @iZipTiedMyPenisToABrick Рік тому +21

      @@apt62 because cars and planes exist. Nobody wants a train except those in cities. There's zero point in having them outside the northeast Florida and maybe Texas. The USA is too spread out, but what do I know

  • @GaigeGrosskreutzGunClub
    @GaigeGrosskreutzGunClub Рік тому +1178

    Miles "I want to be able to travel across the country for free"
    and the monkey's paw curled

    • @MilesinTransit
      @MilesinTransit  Рік тому +100

      S-tier comment

    • @simplykathrynrebeca
      @simplykathrynrebeca Рік тому +8

      Raw ass line

    • @ronclark9724
      @ronclark9724 8 місяців тому +7

      If you join Amtrak's online club and receive notifications, Amtrak has wonderful promotions providing great fares... Ditto with the airlines... Of course that implies traveling during the slow times, not the very busy peak times during the year...

    • @jomama5186
      @jomama5186 7 місяців тому

      And he couldn't get it back out of the cookie jar ?

  • @DayleDiamond
    @DayleDiamond Рік тому +620

    What's messed up is this is a *private* transit monopoly that treats its customers like convicts.
    A public transit system doesn't do that.

    • @lutherabel2618
      @lutherabel2618 Рік тому +23

      Amtrak certainly does.

    • @mattymerr701
      @mattymerr701 Рік тому +67

      ​@lutherabel2618 Amtrak doesn't get any where near enough funding.
      A _properly_ funded public transit system doesnt

    • @qjtvaddict
      @qjtvaddict Рік тому +6

      @@lutherabel2618Amtrak outside of the NEC is utterly useless

    • @ExtraThiccc
      @ExtraThiccc Рік тому

      Fucking spoilt Europeans don't have to live in the real world

    • @zzane4677
      @zzane4677 Рік тому +9

      ​@@qjtvaddictThey basically turned it into tourism, but there is a route that I use though when travelling to and from college thats actually worth it from a practical perspective

  • @alanthefisher
    @alanthefisher Рік тому +734

    a dog of a trip, but a hounding success

  • @TenMinuteTrips
    @TenMinuteTrips Рік тому +1032

    As a former Greyhound driver, (like, waaaay before you guys were born) it was kind of nice to see in your video how some things have changed and some things remain the same. I worked there when Greyhound Lines was part of the Greyhound Corporation, which was also the parent company of Armour-Dial, famous for hot dogs and soap. Greyhound was struggling to survive unsubsidized in a newly deregulated interstate bus system competing with heavily subsidized Amtrak and also, recently deregulated low cost airlines offering cheap flights. Greyhound Corp sold off the bus company and rebranded to Dial Corporation. Most of the old classic bus stations were sold off as valuable real estate.
    When I drove for Greyhound, our longest scheduled route was between Seattle and Miami via San Diego and then I-8 rejoining I-10 to Phoenix and points east. And of course, the reciprocal westbound schedule. Extra sections (additional buses) were added based on demand. The “first section” bus always made the entire run even as drivers changed every eight to ten hours. Extra sections were added as needed or not needed. Some extra sections were made “express” between two points that skipped all of the small town stops. It was a system that was modeled after early railroading, as was the drivers’ union contract with the Almalgamated Transit Union. (Fun fact: Jackie Gleason, aka Ralph Kramden, was made an honorary member of the ATU for his portrayal of a New York City bus driver)
    I liked driving for Greyhound but as an extra board driver, I was strictly part time. That’s no way to make a living. I too had my share of threatened violence on the bus so it became an easy decision to change careers. I have been an airline mechanic for the past 33 years. Absolutely best career move! Note to Greyhound drivers: If they’re killing you with this shit, if you feel like you’re spinning your wheels, if you don’t have “learn to fly money,” find a community college with an aviation maintenance technician program. Two years and passing an FAA A&P license written and practical test, you too can get off the road and start working for a major airline! United Airlines is currently offering a $10,000 cash signing bonus to new technicians! Give it some thought. That goes for the rest of you kids watching these videos wondering what you’re going to be doing with your life.

    • @MilesinTransit
      @MilesinTransit  Рік тому +101

      Amazing stories, thank you so much! Miami to Seattle on one schedule is INSANE...I would totally try to ride that whole thing if it still existed. Now the longest is NYC to LA, which I did at the beginning of 2020.

    • @Token_Nerd
      @Token_Nerd Рік тому +13

      I would imagine that with a commercial bus license, the shift to a commercial trucking license, or even city bus operator (especially if your city has a regional transit agency/division, like the MTA express buses, or GO Transit in Canada), so for those that want a career change but can't afford college or don't have the time for it, that might be an option.

    • @SKS8080
      @SKS8080 Рік тому +21

      Very true. Forget college. Go to technical school. Be an electrician or a plumber.

    • @smitastic7030
      @smitastic7030 Рік тому +2

      My question to you is, with all cuts in the airline industry, is this spilling off into the maintenance dept?

    • @TransparentMediaTruth
      @TransparentMediaTruth Рік тому +3

      @@smitastic7030 cuts in the airline industry? I thought I heard there was a massive shortage .... pilots, fa's right through the line to gate agents > Blancoliro been saying this for over a yr now

  • @robertneblett4477
    @robertneblett4477 Рік тому +457

    It’s amazing that in the long history of passenger bus service that the experience is still so awful. In my youth (17-25 yrs old) I used to ride Greyhound and Amtrak a lot. I’ve seen things ON the bus that I’ve never seen anywhere else. I’ve seen the driver toss people off in the middle of nowhere. I’ve seen people having very vociferous adult relations. I’ve been on a bus that was raided by the DEA and people arrested. On my very last bus trip in 1991 this kid (14 yr old girl) sat next to me. Her mom in Philly was sending her to live with her dad in Miami and put on the bus with no food or money. I was getting of in Orlando which was a 28 hr ride and she was goin to Miami,a 34 hr ride. I ended up buying the kid all her meals along the way and left her a $5 bill so she could get another meal along the way to Miami. The one thing that’s always prevalent on greyhound and Amtrak is that travel funk that permeates your clothes and hair. You always have to hit the shower as soon as you reach your destination.

    • @fredmaxwell9619
      @fredmaxwell9619 Рік тому +100

      No food or money for that 14 year old girl, that is terrible. Glad you bought her something to eat and left her with some funds for more food.

    • @DavidDorrMD
      @DavidDorrMD Рік тому +58

      Vociferous Adult Relations is the name of my new band.

    • @twoodbeats
      @twoodbeats Рік тому +57

      sending a kid from philly to miami in 1991 with no food or money OR cell phone, yeah pay phones would be the equivalent I guess but jeez, i truly truly hope she made it

    • @Iceechibi
      @Iceechibi Рік тому +34

      I hope she made it (and she most likely did) and I'm sure she never forgot your kindness.

    • @CRneu
      @CRneu Рік тому +12

      I used to take Greyhound from Montana to Oregon, which doesn't sound so bad but it can be over 30 hours at time. I watched a drive once kick a guy off in the absolute middle of nowhere in eastern washington at like 3am. We were 20+ miles from any town. It was absolutely wild.
      The guy was drunk and bought a cheaper ticket but overstayed his ticket.

  • @diannebates2157
    @diannebates2157 Рік тому +118

    I feel your pain. In 1966 I took a Greyhound from San Francisco to NYC. I was 16 and Greyhound promised my uncle & father I would be safe and watched over (yes back then minors which I was had to be babysat). Well in Sacramento the bus broke down and I changed buses. That' where Greyhound lost me. In Reno I had to take a bathroom break but the bathrooms were on the other side of the casino. Had to have security follow me through the casino. Changed buses again in Omaha and on to Chicago. At that point I called my dad and he was panicking. He had been calling Greyhound for hours and they had no idea who I was or where I was. Finally got to NY and I think I slept 3 days to catch on sleep. Oh yea-had to take the bus because the airlines were on strike.

  • @matthewcron8842
    @matthewcron8842 Рік тому +524

    Can’t wait to watch another 20+ minute Amtrak ad

  • @Railfan56
    @Railfan56 Рік тому +219

    When FirstGroup sold Greyhound to Flixbus for $78 million it did not include the real-estate. ie: bus terminals and garages. That was sold to Twenty Lake Holdings of Stamford CT for $140 million. Such is the reason that Greyhound is kicked to the curb in so many cities.

    • @nickhiscock8948
      @nickhiscock8948 Рік тому +11

      This is so strange to me as such bus terminals in Australia are government owned and are for all bus companies servicing that area. They are not owned by any bus company itself.

    • @thud9797
      @thud9797 8 місяців тому +5

      Some cities do have transportation facilities that Greyhound can move into and that's good for bus passengers because company owned stations for Greyhound going forward will be few and far between.

    • @wednesday181
      @wednesday181 7 місяців тому +1

      Ah, this probably explains why the old-but-with-a-large-indoor-space Austin terminal on the north end of town is now sitting vacant.

    • @HarrisonPeloso
      @HarrisonPeloso 5 місяців тому +1

      I live in Stamford and haven’t seen grayhound since covid and what sucks if trying to go somewhere your forced down to NYC and at bad times.

    • @williamhuang8309
      @williamhuang8309 Місяць тому

      Everything WorstGroup touches is run into the ground.
      So far they've ruined:
      First Great Western/GWR
      First Capital Connect (aka Worst Crapital Disconnect)
      South Western Railway
      First TPE/Transpenine Express
      Avanti West Coast
      First Scotrail
      First North Western
      And now they've ruined greyhound too
      The only thing they sort of didn't ruin was First Great Eastern but that fell too

  • @sk1nzsk1nz34
    @sk1nzsk1nz34 Рік тому +54

    Marry the girl! She's gorgeous, brave, intelligent and has spirit. Your editing skills are second to none. I'm an old timer, I enjoyed the whole trip but, I found the pace a little too quick most of the time. Respect for being having the balls to do this in the first place.

  • @slimshady3374
    @slimshady3374 Рік тому +143

    What I loved was your realizing on day 4, you had become the strange homeless looking people you sometimes see. ......LMAO..... Very well done kids!!!.... I subscribed.

  • @Micg51
    @Micg51 Рік тому +68

    13:35 pax threatens to kill driver over a 15 minute delay. This is a certified greyhound classic.

  • @BrianJColby15YT
    @BrianJColby15YT Рік тому +219

    Over four straight days on a Greyhound bus?! I give you both respect for your fortitude.

    • @joemckim1183
      @joemckim1183 Рік тому +9

      I don't know if I could go that long without showering and mostly wearing the same clothes every day with very little sleep. At least not comfortable sleep. This is the type of trip that only people in their 20s or 30s could handle.

    • @davidchosewood647
      @davidchosewood647 Рік тому

      ​@@joemckim1183back when I was young I took Greyhound from the Midwest to California to visit a friend. Would never do it again. Got there and my buddy said we're going to a party. I replied nope take me to your shower. Met lots of interesting people. A Mormon evangelist, and a cool guy from Kentucky that shared his canned ham and loaf of bread with me, a professional gambler down on his luck and several other folks you'd not normally talk and visit with.

    • @kev4241
      @kev4241 3 місяці тому

      @@joemckim1183 right, I was thinking, it's good to be young

  • @isitrealgood
    @isitrealgood 7 місяців тому +30

    If you haven't already seen it, you should check out Noel Phillips' recent video of his Greyhound trip from NY to LA, via St. Louis. He and fellow passengers faced many of the same issues you did with the service, but mainly in the first half, getting to St. Louis. He tried crossing the country FROM LA, but because buses were late, he missed a connection in Texas and had to fly to his next destination.

    • @MilesinTransit
      @MilesinTransit  7 місяців тому +5

      It was a great video!

    • @HarrisonPeloso
      @HarrisonPeloso 5 місяців тому

      I’ve watched Noels video a bunch of times along with his other travel videos

    • @surf6009
      @surf6009 Місяць тому

      I just watched it.

  • @estelleadamski308
    @estelleadamski308 Рік тому +61

    Never separate yourself from your passport.When I was 18 my mom and I took a cross country bus trip from LA to NYC. It was Continental Trailways. There was a hostess on board who gave you drinks & snacks all day. We were also given lunch & dinner usually sandwiches, for breakfast you were given a menu and they radioed to the next town and it was served hot. It took 4 days, day & night. Met a lot of ppl. Loved it. The more east you went the greener it got. You did a good job on this! I subscribed!

    • @MilesinTransit
      @MilesinTransit  Рік тому +4

      Thanks so much! And that sounds like an incredible trip...definitely a different experience than modern Greyhound!

    • @miketwomey4923
      @miketwomey4923 Рік тому +6

      Wow, I'm an old guy and I never knew about the hostess and the pre order stuff. This type of thing can elevate a a modern bus company above the rest. Even if it's just a few A to B lines in the east where it is busy to start with...

    • @estelleadamski308
      @estelleadamski308 Рік тому +7

      @@miketwomey4923 This was in 1969, so I am old too! LOL! A fun way to travel for sure. I have since been to all 50 states.

  • @aottati
    @aottati Рік тому +207

    I can smell the stale, been on a bus for 24 hour air. I can feel the exhaustion of dozing on and off for multiple day, trying to sleep in the chair. I hear the constant rattling, that you just can't get out of your head after being on a bus for so long. But damn it, your video was so good, it captured the essence of experience so well, that I think I'll just have to get a cross-country greyhound trip in one of these days.

    • @MilesinTransit
      @MilesinTransit  Рік тому +11

      Haha, I'm glad we could be an inspiration! Thank you so much!

  • @atarikatari
    @atarikatari Рік тому +366

    I did this trip from Baltimore to San Francisco back in 1999. I met the strangest people on that trip, and we shared alcohol and painkillers to get us through it. I think it's a trip they should put people on in order to teach them patience. I learned a lot about myself and other people on that trip lol

    • @condor237
      @condor237 Рік тому +11

      Damn, and I thought Atlanta to Boston on Megabus was rough.

    • @QiuyuanChenRyan916
      @QiuyuanChenRyan916 Рік тому +13

      I done the Montreal to vancouver line before they shut it down entirely. That was the point I barely speak any good English. I met some real good construction worker and they changed how I see blue collar class. Now I am in pursuit my Canadian plumbing license.

    • @aeugenegray
      @aeugenegray Рік тому

      I smoked a joint with whatever random person was down with it from Maine to Vegas right around that same time. Even peed on a mail truck tire in Chicago. Fun times

  • @arturogranados1133
    @arturogranados1133 Рік тому +48

    It took me 25 hours to get from Orlando to Indianapolis back in 2016. It was an experience that I would not wish on any one. Thanks for documenting your experience that was 4x as rough!

    • @ramencurry6672
      @ramencurry6672 Рік тому +2

      I agree it’s rough but if you’re mentally prepared and have done it many times it’s not bad. For me, I put myself in “3rd world country” survival mode. Basically I think of myself as a soldier in a military operation to help tolerate the trip. Even though I’ve never been in the military but that’s what I imagine

  • @yonabrightstar6582
    @yonabrightstar6582 Рік тому +36

    so - about 2 years ago, I took a greyhound bus alone about 30 hours with 5 transfers to move out from my family and move in with my partner. I had no experience with long-term travel, no ability to take a plane and couldn't afford a train. It was basically 5 months of saving up for that bus ticket (I want to say it was around 180$ but I can't quite remember tbh.) and researching just HOW i was going to pull it off, without informing my family what I was doing. I had to carry all my luggage (I paid for the second tier of ticket so I had 2 checked in bags and 1 on board bag.) as a very small person alone in foreign cities, mostly in the middle of the night. And I was incredibly LUCKY that I somehow made it on time. The first bus was late, and I ended up catching a ride and taking the second bus instead, but after that, everything was smooth. It's funny because every OTHER greyhound experience after that was an entirely wild disaster. I genuinely think that my move only went smoothly because there was nothing I could do if it didn't. I willpowered the bus into behaving.
    All that to say, I really like you two's attitude of taking something so rough and stressful and turning it into an adventure. Looking through your tickets as they're reissued to see 'where you'll end up' sounds like a nicer thing than dreading where you'll get sent. This makes me feel a lot better about the couple of horrible trips I experienced, congrats on making it to Seattle ^^

    • @kstarr3555
      @kstarr3555 7 місяців тому

      You can find a spirit flight for cheaper than that

    • @cmmartti
      @cmmartti 5 місяців тому +1

      ​@@kstarr3555You don't know the route.

    • @kstarr3555
      @kstarr3555 5 місяців тому +1

      @@cmmartti don’t need to

  • @lelandunruh7896
    @lelandunruh7896 Рік тому +74

    My father used to take the Greyhound from Los Angeles to Upstate New York back in the late 60s. It is a testament to how absurdly expensive pre-deregulation airlines were that anyone in his or her right mind would do that.

    • @qjtvaddict
      @qjtvaddict Рік тому

      True cause no sane person should have to take such a long trip

  • @poorlittlebiker6476
    @poorlittlebiker6476 Рік тому +251

    As a greyhound driver, this was a real interesting video to watch. Intercity transit can be very effective within the states, but we are so car bounded that it's hard to make that switch, and that's a topic that can be discussed entirely on it's own lol. Trying to be politically correct here, I will say that greyhound should invest more into customer service. Seeing it from your guys' perspective, you've been on the road for days, and the last thing you should have to deal with is a representative of Greyhound talking down to you while you pay our checks. There should also be better communication.....and I'll just leave it at that. Buses that look presentable. Often times, I would get a bus that is road safe but as body damage, seats that have seen better days, no wifi, no charging ports, weak ac, etc. On the other hand though, I have had buses, with beautiful wood finishes, nice comfy seats, fresh scents, little to no body damage, and it looks like a bus I'd be happy to step on and off of as a passenger. I'm not saying go out and buy brand spanking new buses, but at least keep the old fleet looking presentable. From personal experience, I often get told I was a wonderful driver from how I treat passengers to my driving of the bus, and from the words of passengers- get told how previous drivers were yelling at them, running curbs over, hard braking, hard cornering, etc etc. Note that I'm not some customer service guru, I just talk to people the way I would want to be talked to and do what I can to help when asked questions. As far as my driving of a bus goes, I have had wonderful instructors that emphasized that I'm driving a bus with people as cargo, so you want to drive to where you're not throwing your folks side to side and forward and back and all that.

    • @MilesinTransit
      @MilesinTransit  Рік тому +40

      Thank you so much for the insight, and thank you for driving the 'hound - I have so much respect for you guys! I agree on all your points, especially the customer service angle...it's tough when you have to deal with angry people all day who are delayed by things outside of your control, but on the other hand, it kinda sucks that getting yelled at by a station employee is kind of a given on any Greyhound trip.

  • @jatoronto4375
    @jatoronto4375 Рік тому +45

    This is an excellent way to test your relationship!!! Since you two survived that, you'll probably still be together in the nursing home when you are 90!!!

    • @Yarrb53
      @Yarrb53 Рік тому +3

      Great observation

  • @jesseklansek2151
    @jesseklansek2151 Рік тому +33

    This is pretty accurate to my experience with Greyhound, including the one time that they closed a station and moved it 5 miles up the road, that didn't stop them from selling me a ticket online to the ORIGINAL station..........good times.

  • @cedricye1767
    @cedricye1767 Рік тому +305

    This was legitimately one of my favorite videos I've seen on this platform. The editing, the amazing energy from the two of you, the conclusion - Amazing job.
    And taking Greyhound for 4 days straight? Well... I am so sorry for your loss

    • @MilesinTransit
      @MilesinTransit  Рік тому +12

      Thank you so much, Cedric!

    • @dankelly5150
      @dankelly5150 Рік тому +2

      @@MilesinTransit Sounds like Bus, jet planes and trains are all suffering from the same problem....lack of organization !!

    • @keywestjj
      @keywestjj Рік тому +2

      It's vastly more pleasant than trying to deal with the airlines and airports!

  • @SupremeLeaderKimJong-un
    @SupremeLeaderKimJong-un 11 місяців тому +27

    Greyhound fun fact: The company's first route began in Hibbing, Minnesota in 1914 and the company adopted the Greyhound name in 1929. Founded by Eric Wickman, a Swedish immigrant from Våmhus in Dalarna County located in the central region. He originally used a Hipmobile to transport iron ore miners (since he was laid off from working at a mine, he wanted to help his fellow miners), for two miles for 15 cents per ride. He made $2.25 on his first run, or around $69 in 2023 money....nice.
    Here's some lore about the Gateway Arch: It is the world's tallest arch and the tallest monument in the Western Hemisphere. The park the Arch was in was originally called Jefferson National Expansion Memorial until it was redesignated as a National Park in 2018, making it the smallest in the NPS system with the designation National Park. The Arch's unique elevator tram was designed by Richard Bowser. He knew a normal elevator system of course wouldn't do, so for the Arch he combined elevator and Ferris wheel elements to create a unique system where a tram of eight elevator pods that by rotating, allows the visitors inside to remain leveled the entire way.

    • @joemckim1183
      @joemckim1183 11 місяців тому

      The Arch is also the only National Park in the state of Missouri and also no buildings in the city of St. Louis are allowed to be taller than the Arch.

    • @rickedwards6150
      @rickedwards6150 2 місяці тому

      I had a training class in St Louis and my work colleague wanted to have every meal at the Hooters in the train station. (He was outvoted)
      The waitress’ restraint was admirable; they had access to steak knives and nobody stabbed him in the neck.

    • @machirim2805
      @machirim2805 2 місяці тому

      What would we do without your venerable wisdom Supreme Leader

  • @Token_Nerd
    @Token_Nerd Рік тому +30

    Pro Tip: There are showers at pilot/Flying J, Loves, and TA. They're almost always super clean so if you're doing a cross country trip and need a shower those are great spots to do so.

    • @MsJLin
      @MsJLin 7 місяців тому +2

      I was in Cumberland md 8/2023 and the showers were 16$

  • @tgates0314
    @tgates0314 Рік тому +29

    My father was a Greyound Bus Driver for 30 years from the 60's clear through to the early 90's. I remember it being a respectable option for transportation. It makes me sad to see it this way.

    • @HotPeridot2
      @HotPeridot2 Рік тому +1

      It was either 2004 or 2005, when my son had to use Greyhound for a year a couple of times a month while in Job Corps in Eastern Washington coming back home here in Western Washington and he said it was fairly good back then. The stations in Seattle and Tacoma weren't too bad back then (he said the Yakima one was even smaller than the Tacoma station but still okay). He never had any issues going back and forth for that year. After that, he flew from Eastern Washington to Utah for the last 2 years of Job Corps so he was only back home twice a year (summer break and Christmas break).

  • @gabrielboisvert7306
    @gabrielboisvert7306 Рік тому +58

    I give you guys props for making it to the end. Unlike Noel Phillips who gave up when Greyhound stranded him in Amarillo.

    • @MilesinTransit
      @MilesinTransit  Рік тому +39

      I think he had to in order to make his flight back home, right? The big error was scheduling something so soon to the scheduled Greyhound arrival!

    • @brianweber4154
      @brianweber4154 Рік тому +2

      @@MilesinTransit was an ice storm predicted

    • @AviaRayne2
      @AviaRayne2 Рік тому +3

      I like Noel too, but yeah I was also disappointed he hasn't redid his Greyhound video yet! I know he was going to miss his flight back to London (which, yeah poor planning on his part 😂) But definitely those midwestern ice storms are no joke! So I completely understand why they cancelled those routes when they did!

    • @010bobby
      @010bobby Рік тому +6

      I think that British guy Noel Philips who loves flying gave up his idea of ever riding Greyhound again after being stranded in Texas when all greyhound operations were grounded due to winter snow storm… he chickened out and flew to NY heading home.. i bet he won’t do it again…

    • @ethankearl8771
      @ethankearl8771 8 місяців тому +2

      He has redone it

  • @Wes0602
    @Wes0602 Рік тому +60

    Holy shit, as someone who had to take a greyhound frequently between states as a kid, I could never imagine going that damn long in one, even with all the stops. You two are soldiers😂.

    • @MilesinTransit
      @MilesinTransit  Рік тому +2

      Thank you!

    • @CheNoriega
      @CheNoriega Рік тому +2

      my parents shipped me back and forth starting at like 10, going through st louis and kc often, and it was a nightmare lmao

    • @Wes0602
      @Wes0602 Рік тому +1

      @@CheNoriega right haha, I was lucky and only had to do like Idaho to seattle wa or cali.

  • @brigittewilliams2038
    @brigittewilliams2038 Рік тому +22

    You are brave . I took a round trip Texas to Virginia by myself and that was the last greyhound ride for awhile. I’ve had people getting on from jail and trying to steal my belongings if I fell asleep, outlet’s not working ,people crying bc of storms and 18 wheelers flipped over. You gain survival skills for sure

  • @AverytheCubanAmerican
    @AverytheCubanAmerican 11 місяців тому +17

    Here's some info about the Idaho flag on Aleena's hat: The seal of the former Territory of Idaho was adopted in 1863 and redrawn several times before statehood in 1890. The seal was designed by Emma Edwards Green, the only woman to design a US state seal. The flag of the state of Idaho was adopted in March 1927. The seal depicts a miner and a woman representing equality, liberty and justice. The symbols on the seal represent some of Idaho's natural resources: mines, forests, farmland and wildlife. The star on the seal's ring signifies a new light in the galaxy of states. The miner represents the chief industry of the state at the time of statehood.
    Inside the shield, the pine tree in the foreground refers to Idaho's immense timber interests. The husbandman plowing on the left side of the shield, together with the sheaf of grain beneath the shield, are emblematic of Idaho's agricultural resources, while the two cornucopias, or horns of plenty, refer to the horticultural. There's an elk head above the shield, and Idaho has a game law which protects them. The state flower, the wild syringa or mock orange, grows tall at the woman's right, while the ripened wheat grows as high as her shoulder. The river depicted in the shield is the Snake or Shoshone River.

  • @davidli782
    @davidli782 Рік тому +40

    As someone who has been stuck in the Pittsburgh greyhound station more times than I’d like to admit, god bless your soul for doing this

    • @Amtrak.taz.
      @Amtrak.taz. 8 місяців тому

      If I ever set foot in the Pittsburgh bus station again. My next stop will be the looney ward.

  • @justins3092
    @justins3092 Рік тому +71

    "But besides that, Connecticut came and went without a hitch" I loved Ned's portrait flying past along the guardrail

  • @larrybarrett5810
    @larrybarrett5810 Рік тому +8

    Thank You , my daughter did it back in the 90’s . She told me , never again would she get on a bus . Guess what , she never did . She always flies , now …

  • @jskelly1979
    @jskelly1979 Рік тому +18

    it's so nice to see families going on road trips together

  • @dbeaus
    @dbeaus Рік тому +38

    Nice to see not much has changed in 48 years. Wife and I took a break in 74 from college and decided to go to meet an Army buddy in Maine the trip was to Boston and was supposed to take about 20 hours from Chicago. Well, it ended up taking 57 hours. We stopped in Cleveland for a 7 hour lay over. 7 hours? When we asked, they candidly replied they couldn't find the driver for the next leg. We found a driver and left heading east for New York. We circled Cleveland for a long time until we started feeling something was wrong. The next is hard to believe, but it's true. The driver stopped the bus and asked if anyone on the bus was from Cleveland since he was new and didn't know how to get to the interstate. Well, of course no one was from Cleveland, so we suggested he flag down a cop and get directions. Which he did. When we got to the interstate he started to go down the up ramp and everyone screamed and he stopped. We had to back up the ramp onto the street. He got lost a couple more times but the fiasco in New York is to hard to explain. Maybe you shouldn't send a driver form California into NYC with a loaded bus by himself who has never been to New York? Well, we finally got to Boston only to find out our ride to Maine went home because there were no cell phones and Greyhound couldn't tell them where we were. I haven't been on a bus since. For the info of the younger crowd. Trailways was once as big as Greyhound and the terminal in Chicago was at 18th street and was larger than Greyhounds. You had an actual choice which one to take, both were the same money. I didn't know they were still around. they were gone from Chicago in the mid 70's.

    • @muhilan8540
      @muhilan8540 Рік тому +1

      megabus is still pretty big so you do have a little choice

    • @dbeaus
      @dbeaus Рік тому +4

      @@muhilan8540 Was no Mega Bus in the 70's. Really only Greyhound and Trailways. There were small regional ones sometimes they went places the big 2 didn't go.

    • @poorlittlebiker6476
      @poorlittlebiker6476 Рік тому +3

      Yikes! I'm a newer driver for them now, and we have GPS, and the bus tracker app (that passengers can use too) and that's how I determine how much time we have at each stop. When I'm getting sent to a new place you bet I use satellite images to look at where the stop will be at (a gas station, parking lot, side of the road, terminal, etc.), where it looks like the bus should be parked, and the best entry/exit for the stop. 45ft of bus, with up to 50 people judging you is not the time to try and learn where you're going lol. The only two incidents that happened was at a transit (not greyhound specific) station, where I made it to the location, I just didn't park where Greyhounds were suppose to park, but no going down the exit ramp or anything like that, considered blessed in that regard 😅.

  • @MooreAvery
    @MooreAvery Рік тому +26

    As a legally blind guy… and recovering politician. Your end of film commentary is spot on on so many levels that I’m running out of characters. Everyone who watches this needs to spread the word. This is very important.

    • @MilesinTransit
      @MilesinTransit  Рік тому +1

      Thank you so much!

    • @MooreAvery
      @MooreAvery Рік тому +3

      @@MilesinTransit I challenge you to come up to Alaska via transit (it’s possible)

  • @mrdaym
    @mrdaym Рік тому +84

    You and your gf are adorable
    EDIT: God I love random heroes like Tyler and Hailey, just nice people doing nice things for other nice people.

    • @MilesinTransit
      @MilesinTransit  Рік тому +7

      The total MVP's of the trip, along with our benefactors in Boise!

  • @khughes0402
    @khughes0402 Рік тому +34

    I don't have words to express how much I enjoyed this video...from beginning to end. I did not move from my laptop screen and was not aware of anything going on around me. What incredible energy, honesty, humor and just plain fun you put into this. I normally watch high-end airline videos on UA-cam but this was one of the most fun times ever for me on the platform. Thank you so much. I can tell from the other comments that I am in good company when it comes to how compelling and unique this video was.

    • @MilesinTransit
      @MilesinTransit  Рік тому +2

      I really appreciate the kind words! Thank you so much!

    • @Mr7c2ll
      @Mr7c2ll Рік тому +3

      I agree you guys were great. The sense of humor through the whole thing unreal. You being young helped a lot. I think most people my age would end up hospitalized trying to do it. Congrats on your endurance and the heroic success keeping it fun.

  • @croatiantransportchannel7103
    @croatiantransportchannel7103 Рік тому +10

    You two are right, people do deserve better. Trains. Everywhere; long-distance, overnight, high-speed, intercity, suburban, commuter routes.

  • @AlexCab_49
    @AlexCab_49 Рік тому +203

    Miles and his gf are couple goals. Traveling together on Greyhound

    • @kimberlywilson7929
      @kimberlywilson7929 Рік тому +39

      If they can survive that, they can survive anything.

    • @Token_Nerd
      @Token_Nerd Рік тому +6

      @@kimberlywilson7929 Until Flixbus makes everything worse.

    • @MistaIncognito
      @MistaIncognito Рік тому

      They only did it because the trip was free....

    • @antwonnyy
      @antwonnyy Рік тому +1

      @@MistaIncognito the time spent and delays weren’t though… so what does it being free have to do with anything? Would’ve been cheap anyways it’s greyhound.

    • @MistaIncognito
      @MistaIncognito Рік тому

      @@antwonnyy As someone that travels the country for a living the hassle that greyhound is makes traveling other ways more appealing. Plus the track record of Greyhound isn't & hasn't been that great over the years. I applaud them for getting better, but they have a long way to go.

  • @Amoebatirith
    @Amoebatirith Рік тому +5

    More power to you. I had to take a greyhound between my hometown (in Colorado) and college (in Texas) as I did not have a car at the beginning of college. Every trip had something go wrong. The first one was the worst though. Got on the bus heading south. It was a windy day and a dust storm happened so bad that visibility became negligible. The road was closed due to that. Not in Greyhound's control, however, they decided they would reroute all of us back north to Denver to catch new buses to continue traveling South toward Texas. Don't ask how this makes any sense. I had to make a transfer in Amarillo, Texas and that bus showed up late. I made another transfer in Big Springs, Texas, and there they tried to tell me the bus was overbooked and I would have to wait for the next bus but I was having none of that after going no where in Colorado for nearly 24 hours besides riding a bus in a big loop. My 14 hour bus trip had turned into over 48 hours by the end of it. The final kick in the shins? My checked baggage did not get transferred in Amarillo Texas and so was not on the bus when I arrived at my final destination. Thankfully they didn't lose it and it came in on another bus a day later, but still... I was never so happy in my life than when I got my first car and never had to take the Greyhound between Colorado and Texas ever again.

  • @MykelBBY1
    @MykelBBY1 Рік тому +8

    I rode the Greyhound from Salt Lake City to Paris, Kentucky in 1971. 2-1/2 days and it is still something I look back on a high spot of my youth!

  • @hetherpickwell5174
    @hetherpickwell5174 Рік тому +13

    I did that back in 1997....took a bus from Seattle with my 3 kids, 6mo, 3yrs, 5yrs, all the way to St. Paul Mn and then from StPaul to Boston.....what an adventure!

  • @mrmusiclover4178
    @mrmusiclover4178 Рік тому +14

    I have LOTS of sad experience with Greyhound when I was in the Navy in the early 60's. They treated us like crap. It is only marginally better than hitchhiking! It was before the Interstates and they stopped at every pig path. You two are brave!

  • @perkunas170
    @perkunas170 Рік тому +5

    Friend of mine took Greyhound from DC to LA in the early 90's. He described the trip as "Who's who in mental illness".

  • @tigerphid9677
    @tigerphid9677 12 годин тому

    Great video. I am probably one of your few viewers who has taken Greyhound across the US, from LA to New York in 1980. But you know darned well that most Greyhound riders are low-income people traveling relatively short distances - like between two cities or towns - and that its service is crucial for millions of people in filling that role.

  • @kimberlywilson7929
    @kimberlywilson7929 Рік тому +44

    This video is just so excellent. You and your girlfriend have a wonderful chemistry. I really liked what you had to say at the end of the video. You made some very good points. And there were more laugh-out-loud funny moments in this video than I've seen in any video in a long time. It really shows you don't need a huge budget to make great content. Just passion, grit, and great information. It's clear you are very informed.

    • @MilesinTransit
      @MilesinTransit  Рік тому +2

      I really appreciate that, thank you so much for watching!

  • @joe42m13
    @joe42m13 Рік тому +44

    Greyhound is great for trips under 6-8 hours with maybe one transfer. Anything longer than that and the Amtrak is preferable, especially cross country trips, and you can use the bus to connect to final destination if necessary. I've taken the Southwest Chief between Chicago and L.A. several times and it's a beautiful journey, much more comfortable, and only 40 hours or so.

  • @jacobf3310
    @jacobf3310 Рік тому +16

    It's like that one time when Alexis de Tocqueville took a Greyhound to learn democracy and freedom

    • @kev4241
      @kev4241 3 місяці тому

      he knew he company would go broke when the passengers could vote to make the fares cheaper haha

  • @EternalSand
    @EternalSand Рік тому +5

    I rode a greyhound from Pittsburgh to NYC before, it was awful. It rained the whole entire time and it was loud and uncomfortable. And then while in NYC it also rained the whole entire time I was there. Unreal. I can't even imagine doing the whole country. Kudos to you guys!!!!!

  • @NEPATransitnTravel
    @NEPATransitnTravel Рік тому +7

    Serious "America by Simon & Garfunkel" vibes, congrats on the journey!

  • @AverytheCubanAmerican
    @AverytheCubanAmerican Рік тому +19

    Here's a video suggestion: Try to ride on all of New Jersey's light rails in one day. River Line, Newark, and Hudson-Bergen. Not just for fun but also to give the Newark and Hudson-Bergen Light Rails some love because they are definitely underrated systems

    • @MilesinTransit
      @MilesinTransit  Рік тому +4

      That's a fun idea, I like that!

    • @fatima_amber
      @fatima_amber Рік тому

      @@MilesinTransit I second this!! You should also try Port Authority Trans Hudson (PATH).

  • @Zaiqukaj
    @Zaiqukaj Рік тому +6

    I’m so impressed and happy that you only had 1 scary person the whole trip. I’ve always liked if the driver is upset at someone they are willing to just park and wait for either the person to leave on their own or have police show up. Sure it’s another variable that makes the bus very additionally late but gosh when I’ve had people flip out it’s at the very start of the trip and I don’t want to see how they are acting 3 hours in.

  • @lindaniedringhaus8790
    @lindaniedringhaus8790 Рік тому +13

    You two are amazing! It's great to see young people with such energy!

  • @EricaGamet
    @EricaGamet Рік тому +20

    "There's a hill in the way." Dang, I live on that hill! Also, seagulls nest in the Rocky Mountains. When I moved to Colorado as a kid (from New England), I was shocked to still be seeing gulls!

    • @MilesinTransit
      @MilesinTransit  Рік тому +7

      It's a very nice hill, admittedly! And wow, the more you know...now THAT'S a fun fact.

  • @HandlewasNo
    @HandlewasNo Рік тому +14

    I really hope I find someone who looks at me the way she looks at you. Happy for you two. :)

  • @percussionoah
    @percussionoah Рік тому +5

    Every aspect of your Indy layover reminded me of my desperate attempt to get to a grad school interview a few years ago. Except that my Trailways connection had to go back to the station because the announcement was so quiet that half the passengers didn't hear it. I don't know whether that's nostalgia or failure to repress a memory, so good job!
    (Also that view in Oregon was so familiar, craziest curve I've ever seen on an interstate, but that was on a road trip with my parents driving...)

  • @NovejSpeed3
    @NovejSpeed3 Рік тому +7

    She kept such a positive attitude through the torture......🤔🤣.....This was fun to watch!

  • @AlpineShenanigans
    @AlpineShenanigans Рік тому +22

    This is one of the Great videos of UA-cam. It's part of the rare tier of videos that's going straight into favorites and I'm going to be periodically think about for years. Great vid, thanks for making this. I'm so entertained.

    • @MilesinTransit
      @MilesinTransit  Рік тому +1

      Thank you so much! I really appreciate that.

  • @AverytheCubanAmerican
    @AverytheCubanAmerican Рік тому +80

    Ah yes, the Port Authority Bus Terminal...with how much of a maze that place is, the Lumiose City music from Pokémon XY always plays in my head whenever I go through it. Folks, if the one you love is more than willing to go cross-country with you on a torture chamber like Greyhound...they're a keeper. Also, I've never seen someone that excited to go to Des Moines before. The Iowa tourism office should hire her! That is, if they could beat Boise to it.

    • @cloverisfan818
      @cloverisfan818 Рік тому

      Pokemon Fan Identified

    • @thetoxbloxer503
      @thetoxbloxer503 Рік тому +1

      I’ll always be a lil confused about just how everywhere I see your comments

    • @thetoxbloxer503
      @thetoxbloxer503 Рік тому

      I’ll always be a lil confused about just how everywhere I see your comments

  • @thistime1483
    @thistime1483 Рік тому +3

    This was surprisingly entertaining. You guys have a great sense of humor. They completely closed Greyhound down here in Canada. I don't miss it.

  • @peterpiper4722
    @peterpiper4722 Рік тому +2

    Crazy how much watching this video changed my mood. I was feeling down and you two actually lifted my spirits with a mixture of the scenes you uploaded and your banter. I thank you two for the uplift

  • @abhishekarghya
    @abhishekarghya Рік тому +15

    Thank you for making this video and for the closing comments. As a grad student, I used Greyhound on almost a weekly basis - back when road rewards were a thing - between Austin and Dallas. Greyhound was - and possibly still is - the backbone of public transportation in the I-35 corridor. I am saddened by the state of it - especially the stop closures. I see many comments about how cars and planes make Greyhound redundant. It's wild how privileged they sound. You hit the nail on the head about the need to have state-funded intercity transit options. People rely on it.

    • @MilesinTransit
      @MilesinTransit  Рік тому +8

      You're absolutely right, thank you! The Texas Triangle is a prime case of how Greyhound has gotten a lot more expensive too - pre-pandemic I was contemplating a trip between different cities in the area. Dallas to Houston was $20...now it's $38! I can't believe they've nearly doubled their fares and no one's talked about it...
      Also, you must've racked up some epic road rewards points taking the 'Hound that often!!

    • @abhishekarghya
      @abhishekarghya Рік тому +2

      @@MilesinTransit Ha ha, yes, it’s been over 4 years since I did that and moved to the Acela corridor. I did get their reward tickets very often. Their current prices are more than my round trip fares I used to pay back then.

    • @totalwar1793
      @totalwar1793 Рік тому

      @@MilesinTransit Yeah it’s crazy how expensive they’ve gotten.

  • @Spanderson99
    @Spanderson99 Рік тому +7

    Greyhound pulled out of Canada a few years back. We’re now stuck with a patchwork of local bus routes with questionable websites and no central fare system. Like Wyoming, many of out western cities see no train service at all. Hopefully, in a couple of years the gaps will close as operators expand service and fill up gaps. I’m still convinced you guys are crazy, I’d never pull a stunt like that here! I’d rather slum it for 6 days in a Via rail coach!

  • @simondavey7787
    @simondavey7787 Рік тому +7

    God bless US buses. You two are awesome. Thanks for a great video. Greetings from Reading in the UK.

  • @oil_moon
    @oil_moon 23 дні тому

    The way they spoke to you when you were trying to explain that your stuff was on the bus was as if they weren't registering a single word you were saying. Treated like cattle indeed!

  • @jerkytoo8184
    @jerkytoo8184 Рік тому +15

    My longest Greyhound trip was from LA to Seattle, 23 years ago. It was long, but I enjoyed it at the time. I got to see beautiful views, especially as we got into the Pacific Northwest. Fellow passengers were general nice and didn't encounter any threatening individuals. But my Greyhound-riding days are long over.

    • @michaelsuzio4268
      @michaelsuzio4268 Рік тому

      My longest was new Orleans to Seattle pretty much same distance Boston to Seattle

  • @rodeliot
    @rodeliot Рік тому +11

    Excellent video, I agree with your conclusion but let's be mindful that plenty of airlines have gone out of business while receiving subsidies. I rode Greyhound as a kid and it doesn't look like a lot has changed. Thanks for passing through Wyoming so I don't have to! Appreciate the both of you.

  • @andymonserud9029
    @andymonserud9029 Рік тому +5

    The last minutes were so nostalgic for me, i spent a lot of time in my college years and immediately following riding the greyhound from walla walla out to Seattle or Portland or Ellensburg to see my friends in those cities. Those trips were hellish in much the same ways your trip was in the Midwest but they nevertheless hold a spot in my heart.
    Also yall are so cute, couple goals

  • @missychan63
    @missychan63 Рік тому +16

    Never EVER let yourself get separated from your passport! I don't care if you have to stick it in your skivvies 😂... What would you have done if that bus pulled out and took your passport with it? You can always run to Walmart for shorts and a t-shirt, last time I checked Walmart doesn't replace passports.

    • @ketchup901
      @ketchup901 Рік тому

      Yeah this, ALWAYS keep your passport and wallet *on your person.* Not in a bag, you might lose it or forget it somewhere.

  • @SeaBassTian
    @SeaBassTian Рік тому +5

    I don't know if I could stand traveling on Greyhound for 4 straight days but I did enjoy coming along for the ride. Downtown Indy & O-ha looked awesome!

  • @lewnwdc
    @lewnwdc Рік тому +35

    I followed this trip live on Twitter 2.5 months ago and excited to finally see the video! What an amazing adventure.
    It wasn't clear during the tweeting, but I figured Aleena had to be your girlfriend Miles because what other woman would endure this masochism with you?! LOL

  • @kimberlythompson719
    @kimberlythompson719 Рік тому +1

    I took greyhound once from St Louis to Orlando and back and the hypervigilance you have to have is exhausting. Making sure you actually have a spot on the bus because they oversold, making sure you're going to the right place, keeping your stuff safe in sketchy stations, etc. I will never do it again.

  • @NotDanValentine
    @NotDanValentine Рік тому +3

    I'm currently on a cross country trip taking Greyhounds, and it's cool to see this experience.
    When my bus stopped in Indianapolis the driver told us to leave our stuff on the bus. I kept everything of mine directly on me, cause I got stuck at Indianapolis in the middle of the night with no driver, as well.

  • @j3lny425
    @j3lny425 Рік тому +9

    I once did NYC to Mexico City. It was about 73 hours. It was a mixture of youth and relative poverty.

  • @steelers3814
    @steelers3814 Рік тому +10

    I have been a fan of your channel for a while, and this is my new favorite video of yours. Everything about it was enjoyable. The editing, the commentary, the scenery, your attitude about everything, and the great chemistry between you and Aleena. It's already become your most-watched video and it's very deserved! It's also very awesome that the Boston Globe and the Washington Post decided to write about this.
    Everything about this video should tell me to never take Greyhound... but now I'm researching potential trips to take. I just want to be able to listen to "Greyhound" by Harry Chapin while riding on a Greyhound bus. I congratulate you on putting together a video that presents a lot of reasons why Greyhound is poorly run and treats their customers poorly but makes its viewers desire to go through the same experience you did. I'm sure it's probably a lot more fun with a companion that gets it.
    Keep up the great work!

  • @hawkkim1974
    @hawkkim1974 Рік тому +7

    It was a beautifully tiring bus ride. I can imagine what it felt like not to be able to lay down for almost 5 days. And it seems to be safer than expected.

  • @peaches3392
    @peaches3392 Рік тому +3

    That Was Fabulous!! I did Columbus To San Francisco what a trip!! But I am glad for the adventure!! LOL..I just discovered your channel, and enjoying your work. Thanks!!!

  • @The4905
    @The4905 Рік тому +9

    You look so excited in the thumbnail! Can’t wait for another @milesintransit video!

  • @conorontherails
    @conorontherails Рік тому +14

    Man put himself thru literally modern torture

  • @bartofilms
    @bartofilms Рік тому +6

    You could not pay me enough to sit on a Greyhound bus that long.

  • @mrthebunnyhuntr
    @mrthebunnyhuntr Рік тому +2

    Graehound is really bad at announcing bus arrivals and departures, love being stranded in Des Moines and Kansas City multiple times after they closed the terminals.

  • @cpcattin
    @cpcattin Рік тому +39

    Perfect adventure for young people. From a 68 year old that lived his life the same way.

    • @kewkabe
      @kewkabe Рік тому

      I thought the same. Oh, to be 25 again and traveling the world.

  • @Pinkkermit17
    @Pinkkermit17 Рік тому +4

    I took the greyhound from Nebraska to Florida in the 90’s , It took over 32 hours to get there , 3-4 transfers , I had to sit in front because I got so sick from the bouncy bus and the anxiety from some of the stops. Rarely on time , bus drivers not showing up and over crowding, mixed with the “interesting “ people you meet, it was an experience I don’t ever want to do again.

  • @bohunt8113
    @bohunt8113 Рік тому +4

    As young adults (late teens early 20s) made a couple trips via Greyhound to visit our family in Missouri, we were both on East Coast. Fond memories of bonding, but even in the 90s many of the stations were run down, and apparently zero upgrades have been made since at most of them.

  • @jazzyrock57
    @jazzyrock57 Рік тому +7

    Note: Wear crossbows bags to keep documents with you at all times. NEVER leave IDs unattended

  • @PixelatedLlama
    @PixelatedLlama Рік тому +11

    As an Indianapolis resident, I know you didn't really need a ride to Monument Circle from the Greyhound Station. I'm on to you... 😂
    As an aside, the Greyhound Station is part of our Union Station, which is was the first Union Station in the country. Unfortunately, the part of the station that Greyhound runs out of is pretty run down, but the main hall building is beautiful.

    • @MilesinTransit
      @MilesinTransit  Рік тому +2

      Hey, they offered and we took it! We walked back...

  • @842wolves
    @842wolves Рік тому +8

    This was such a beautiful journey. I love the commentary and editing too.

  • @michaelsmith-ws2mb
    @michaelsmith-ws2mb Рік тому

    I know I’m late responding but kudos to u two on that ride. I rode greyhound from dc to nyc once in 1992 and vowed to never do it again. Your patients and positive outlook is to be commended…

  • @vanadium5099
    @vanadium5099 5 місяців тому +1

    I've just taken my first bus trip between states (from Boston to NYC) and man I can't imagine spending 100 hours from coast to coast. I mean by the end of my 4.5 hr trip my legs felt like liquid. It at the very least gave me a greater appreciation of folks who do have to take these trips regularly

  • @keith2o9
    @keith2o9 Рік тому +7

    On one of my Greyhound experience, (luckily it wasn't a cross country ride) the bathroom door wouldn't close on its own (bathroom door malfunction), a passenger took a dump, walked out and left the door open and stunk up the whole bus. so someone close by had to close the door after the perpetrator.

  • @nairbvel
    @nairbvel Рік тому +7

    back in the late 1980s, a group of my friends did a "road trip" to visit another friend out west via Greyhound. (I was overseas or I would've likely been with them.) Decades later I still occasionally hear how none of them wants to ever ride a bus again...! LOL

  • @mikemonroy1
    @mikemonroy1 Рік тому +5

    Spring of 1980: traveled by Greyhound Shreveport Louisiana - Dallas Texas - Denver Colorado - Salt Lake City Utah - Portland Oregon - Seattle Washington and return. Travel time 3 days and 3 nights. Cost was reasonable. Met interesting people along the way. Experience I will not forget.

  • @Lynnya359
    @Lynnya359 11 місяців тому +1

    Came across your channel this week. Loved this episode, it was like having my life flash before my eyes if that flash were a Greyhound bus making unexpected stops. Fun fact: that dead mall you visited in Iowa had just opened when I moved away in 1977! Now I live in the beautiful Cascade foothills in WA not far from where you finished your trip.
    Thanks for a very entertaining episode and channel! You are wonderful video guides and companions.