Sad, Undiscovered Towns In Middle Of Nowhere Texas (Near The New Mexico Border)

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 18 май 2024
  • I visited these small Texas towns: Bledsoe & Whiteface
    Joe's Instagram: / joeysroadtrip
    Travel Vlog 293

Комментарии • 566

  • @user-vf6hn1hi7u
    @user-vf6hn1hi7u 4 месяца назад +77

    I grew up in Bledsoe Tx. My kids spent at least two weeks of every summer in Bledsoe!
    I left Bledsoe in 1982 when I married and moved to Morton Tx My family moved to Mineral Wells Tx in 1985.
    Where I still reside.
    I owned the cafe from about 1980-83. I am not Definite about dates because I don’t recall dates well!
    The train caboose was a business owned by the family across the street from my family home! They had gas pumps there as well! There hasn’t been any business’ in Bledsoe except for Post office and grain elevators for many years!
    The town really began to dwindle when the state came in and took the schools money to disperse to larger schools that were not as wealthy as our community per student. The school closed in a few years after the government took it and began busing to the small town of Whiteface, Tx about 30 minutes east of Bledsoe!
    My parents generation where the main people left up until they died off!
    Bledsoe is located in Cochran county! In my opinion The peoples of Cochran county are some of the hardiest people in our nation!
    Bledsoe Baptist Church is still alive and has been since my days as a youngster!
    I have many memories of this off the beaten path community! It is a great place to live whether young or old. Very laid back and the stars at night are amazing!
    I could go on and on but I won’t. If you don’t know how to chill Bledsoe Tx is a great place to unwind !!

    • @JoeandNicsRoadTrip
      @JoeandNicsRoadTrip  4 месяца назад +9

      Interesting. Thank you for sharing your experiences there.

    • @TheArtisanbard
      @TheArtisanbard 4 месяца назад +1

      My college friend was from Bledsoe

    • @jaycawthon3463
      @jaycawthon3463 4 месяца назад +1

      Hey D. I was watching and thinking I needed to tell you about this video.

    • @HalieSmith-627
      @HalieSmith-627 3 месяца назад +1

      Hi aunt d 💕

    • @user-vf6hn1hi7u
      @user-vf6hn1hi7u 3 месяца назад +2

      ⁠Hello sweetheart! Love you!!
      🥰😘

  • @HalieSmith-627
    @HalieSmith-627 3 месяца назад +16

    You filmed my Hometown of Bledsoe tx !! My heart is happy. Look there isn’t anything there but my family is there and it’s everything!!

  • @majorlagg9321
    @majorlagg9321 4 месяца назад +23

    Even the cats have forsaken Bledsoe.

  • @jamesh1641
    @jamesh1641 4 месяца назад +76

    As a native Texas, most families that have been here more than 4 generations all come from those small towns. All of the towns started dying after the Depression and then WW2. Family Farming faded out and urbanization occurred on a mass scale. My family no different.

    • @Vladimir-hq1ne
      @Vladimir-hq1ne 4 месяца назад +6

      WWII Texan recruits... They tent upon them at WWI, what could go wrong?...
      In Russia there are a lot of deceased villages after that... Some 20 millions died fighting.

    • @jamesh1641
      @jamesh1641 4 месяца назад +6

      @@Vladimir-hq1neI understand your comment now.

    • @kd5inm
      @kd5inm 4 месяца назад +1

      ​@@jamesh1641He's talking about back in world war 1 and 2 in Russia the men mostly died off because they were killed off during war and so the towns died because there were no men. He is supposing that is what happened here in the USA as well.

    • @jamesh1641
      @jamesh1641 4 месяца назад +4

      @@kd5inmok. Yep. Makes sense. I reworded my original post some because I didn’t mean to imply all the men were killed or died.

    • @user-mi1eb7iu1p
      @user-mi1eb7iu1p 3 месяца назад

      As a native Texan.......
      .

  • @Madskillsuniversity
    @Madskillsuniversity 4 месяца назад +28

    Joe, only you can take us into the most boring - and sometimes depressing - towns in America and not only entertain us, educate us, by make the ride-a-long, GREAT! LOL. Thank you for keeping your videos clean and free of negativity! The wife and I LOVE your ride-a-longs. They are also helping us in our retirement decisions. 💰Thank you! 🙏 Looking forward to your NEXT video..as Always!

    • @JoeandNicsRoadTrip
      @JoeandNicsRoadTrip  4 месяца назад +2

      Wow, thank you!

    • @Madskillsuniversity
      @Madskillsuniversity 4 месяца назад +5

      Joe, you give us a calming, relaxed state of Peace - in a crazy world. LOL. Kinda taking us back a bit, for sure. Wishing you and yours the best in 2024! Marta and Ron.@@JoeandNicsRoadTrip

    • @wstroh5837
      @wstroh5837 3 месяца назад +2

      When ever I see these small towns and old fallen down homes. I ask myself who lived there what did they do where did they go?

  • @blaatgvd
    @blaatgvd 4 месяца назад +30

    Watching from the Netherlands 💗 Always AMAZED by the space you have over there.

    • @BaconIsNotBiceps
      @BaconIsNotBiceps 3 месяца назад

      Hello Netherlands from Boston Mass, America!

    • @kimballamram552
      @kimballamram552 26 дней назад +2

      Some people might say that USA stands for Unused Space in America

  • @jan-erikandersen933
    @jan-erikandersen933 4 месяца назад +44

    As a Norwegian growing up in the 70's and 80's in a small area in Norway with about 800 inhabitans, 4 grocery shops, 1clothing shop and a pub in to the 80's.
    Nowadays we are only 500 inhabitans and only 1 grocery shop left, but there is almost no blight and decay in small town Norway compared to the USA.
    I love these videoes, but the decay all over small town USA is shocking to see and it makes me sad.
    Keep up your eye opening work you two 👍.

    • @emergent3744
      @emergent3744 4 месяца назад +4

      that's because you have a population about the same as Washington DC sitting on massive oil wealth feeding the largest sovereign fund on Earth
      If Bledsoe was sitting on oil and had the largest pension fund in the USA, it wouldn't have blight and decay either

    • @frankmiller95
      @frankmiller95 4 месяца назад +8

      @@emergent3744 Your explanation is lacking at least one other critical difference between the USA and most other first world countries. Those other counties have much higher tax rates, especially on those whose incomes are obscenely high. As a result, those countries can and do take care of their population by providing for basic human needs.

    • @seppukusushi2848
      @seppukusushi2848 4 месяца назад

      @@frankmiller95 That's because the US is an empire and is spreading it's wealth all over the world instead of here at home. Take Ukraine as a recent example. Look at all the taxpayer $ wasted on that war. Those other countries you're comparing the US to don't have that problem.

    • @eamonnmckeown6770
      @eamonnmckeown6770 4 месяца назад +2

      @@frankmiller95 Envy is a deadly sin. One of only just seven. But one nonetheless. And he wasn't talking about other countries. Just Norway.
      Go to these other high tax Western countries with envy driven tax rates and you'll find they have neither eliminated obscene wealth and most certainly not closed the wealth gap and most importantly have few avenues to wealth generation which America has in spades if The People would just go out and do it.

    • @osiris0413
      @osiris0413 4 месяца назад +7

      It is of relevance that he mentions these other countries, because the United States is a marked outlier in our tax rates. No they have not eliminated inequality but there are many ways to measure this, and other first world nations are far less unequal when it comes to likelihood of obtaining security. In the United States it is less likely for someone born in poverty to escape it than in most European countries. And if we are going to discuss deadly sins, surely the GREED of the extremely wealthy who use their outsize power to influence our government to hoard even more wealth is worthy of condemnation...

  • @winstonsmith478
    @winstonsmith478 4 месяца назад +36

    Bledsoe was founded in 1925 as the terminus of the Panhandle and Santa Fe Railway, and named for Samuel T. Bledsoe, the line's president. The town gained its original prosperity through its function as a cattle-shipping station, and reached its greatest population of 400 in 1930. The Great Depression had dire effect on the community and throughout the remainder of the 20th century the population continued to dwindle; the last recorded figure put the 1990 population at 125.

  • @rlp8182
    @rlp8182 4 месяца назад +6

    I so wanna live there. Perfect peace and isolation.

  • @reggihc
    @reggihc 4 месяца назад +14

    You are close to my farm,,, Peanuts replace cotton on some farms out there thus the processing facility. They harvest tons of peanuts every year on land that once grew cotton. And now you know.

    • @JoeandNicsRoadTrip
      @JoeandNicsRoadTrip  4 месяца назад

      Interesting.

    • @reggihc
      @reggihc 3 месяца назад +1

      The thing about growing food crops on land that has been chemical farmed for 70+ years is that the chemicals retain in the soil such as aluminium,ect,ect. It may be safe I just don't know. My sisters a chemist and she says don't eat crops from this land.@@JoeandNicsRoadTrip

  • @joewenzel5142
    @joewenzel5142 4 месяца назад +13

    My town has 175 people - we're a thriving metropolis compared to Bledsoe.

  • @user-ko2pf6xq2z
    @user-ko2pf6xq2z 4 месяца назад +8

    Having grown up in a small town in rural Texas I was ready to leave when I got out of school.I did so as soon as I could. Bad thing is I spent the first half of my life trying to get out and the second half trying to get back. It wasn't easy but I finally got back to my hometown and I wouldn't ever leave it again. Lesson learned.

  • @janchristensen7993
    @janchristensen7993 3 месяца назад +3

    Yes when I saw the Bail Bonds building 😮. YIKES

  • @DUMPSTERDIVINGADELAIDE
    @DUMPSTERDIVINGADELAIDE 4 месяца назад +19

    Thanks for the video, Australia is one big middle of nowhere with a land size the same as yours, that's why our cities are on the coast, Happy New year 🎉😊

  • @JanesDough855
    @JanesDough855 4 месяца назад +17

    As far as Bledsoe, one could say they work for peanuts, literally. And they are part of the peanut gallery. One thing I noticed on a lot of your videos, the churches and government buildings are usually the nicest structures in the town while the homes are falling apart. Food for thought.

    • @johngalanti1010
      @johngalanti1010 4 месяца назад +4

      Working for 🥜🥜🥜 peanuts 😂😂😂

  • @JoeSmith-nz2ju
    @JoeSmith-nz2ju 4 месяца назад +4

    I was a little oil field worker in Whiteface Texas for several years... good people out there..

  • @gatorgogo2742
    @gatorgogo2742 4 месяца назад +9

    Bledsoe was interesting. The peanut shelling company is probably only open for the season. Sure looks desolate out that way. Not even a cat running around or a Dollar General. LOL Thanks, Joe.

  • @joewenzel5142
    @joewenzel5142 4 месяца назад +29

    If not for the vending machine, I'd have assumed someone turned the rail car into a home (especially seeing the TV Antennae) and used the other rail cars as storage.

    • @user-yg1uz1gm4h
      @user-yg1uz1gm4h 4 месяца назад +5

      That second rail car looked like a freezer car having the compartment in the front for the power plant and compressor. That upper vented area probably had a large evaporator unit. Those type cars are pretty rare today since most products shipping across country go by air.

    • @brenttoman5485
      @brenttoman5485 4 месяца назад +2

      I agree with your deduction! Good call! This Class CE 13 Bay Window Caboose did not venture to far off the beat’in track was at the AG Depot in Beldsoe Tx. it appears to have been moved to accommodate the place to live and storage in another location in Beldsoe!

    • @brenttoman5485
      @brenttoman5485 4 месяца назад +1

      Great show Joe! Just loved it! From the Santa Fe Class CE 13 Bay-window Caboose to the “Experienced statement that the children are bussed to Whiteface for school! Hope you guys had a wonderful Christmas and enjoy the new year wherever it takes you stay safe my friend!

    • @SwedeJr.
      @SwedeJr. 4 месяца назад +2

      Rail cars work great for living in. Many of them are insulated and well built. I live in Minnesota and have seen many of them around the state that were lived in!

  • @GrannySanny
    @GrannySanny 4 месяца назад +10

    The elementary school I went to in Mason Hall, Tennessee had a thriving community in the early 60's when I was a child. They consolidated the school with a larger town and now Mason Hall has pretty much dried up and blown away. The little Allen's grocery store where we got our groceries still stands (empty and abandoned), but the school building is no longer there. People want their kids to be able to attend school locally and our education system has gone way down with the bigger classrooms. Having our schools supported federally was supposed to improve things but the opposite has happened. I think those schools and the pride they felt in their little schools was what helped small towns thrive.

  • @Yzabeaux1
    @Yzabeaux1 3 месяца назад +5

    WE ABSOLUTELY LOVE YOUR HISTORY, JOE!!👍😁 YOU REALLY GIVE US A HISTORICAL RUNDOWN IN STATS, ETC., ON THE PLETHORA OF ALL STATE TOWNS; ESPECIALLY TEXAS WHERE IT'S LOADED WITH HISTORY. LOVE ALL THEM LITTLE TOWNS!!! THANK YOU SOOO MUCH, JOE FOR ALLL YOUR HARD WORK & DEDICATION! GOD BLESS YOU!! 🙏🏻👍😁👋

    • @JoeandNicsRoadTrip
      @JoeandNicsRoadTrip  3 месяца назад +2

      Wow, thanks!

    • @Yzabeaux1
      @Yzabeaux1 3 месяца назад

      @@JoeandNicsRoadTrip 😁😁👋👋👋👍👍👍

  • @juliejelgerhuis1574
    @juliejelgerhuis1574 3 месяца назад +2

    Watching your channel from the Netherlands I think there is so much value in all the abandoned houses and factories in the sense of old timber, iron and other resources. And so many opportunities for homeless people and growing your own food.

  • @alexandralovesgoats3360
    @alexandralovesgoats3360 4 месяца назад +28

    I love that road in your opening!!! There is something about these small rural Texas towns that fascinates me. I really appreciate viewing and learning about them up close. Texas is on my list of places I want to visit. I look forward to more. Happy New Year Joe and Nic! My favorite RUclipsrs.

    • @JoeandNicsRoadTrip
      @JoeandNicsRoadTrip  4 месяца назад

      Awesome! Thank you, Alexandra!

    • @dariusrucker7854
      @dariusrucker7854 4 месяца назад

      Being from one of the towns in this video. It absolutely blows my mind that you find this entertaining lol

  • @BluecollarBackcountry
    @BluecollarBackcountry 4 месяца назад +16

    I enjoyed the video. On my bicycle tour from the northwest corner to the southeast corner of Texas I encountered many places like this an it makes you wonder how some people still exist in these areas but I did meet very friendly folks. Best of luck in 2024 ✌

    • @BluecollarBackcountry
      @BluecollarBackcountry 4 месяца назад +1

      P. S. People out there refer to the petroleum smell as; smells like money.

    • @peterbeck-rasmussen8514
      @peterbeck-rasmussen8514 4 месяца назад +1

      @@BluecollarBackcountry , he he ........... thats what my dad always said of the smell of pig-manure on the farm back when I was a kid growing up on the family farm in Denmark :-) Guess that comment is universal ! :-)

  • @craigcanfield5474
    @craigcanfield5474 4 месяца назад +14

    I grew up in Snyder, which is not that far from Lubbock. Left West Texas after graduating high school & lived in the Ruidoso, NM mountains for 12 years. We moved to Los Alamos, NM (about 45 miles north of Santa Fe, NM) & have been here for 40 years. I sometimes get homesick for TX, but I do love these beautiful mountains! I sure enjoy all of your video's, so thank you for sharing your adventures! Happy trails & wishing the two of you a great new year! ~ Mrs. C.

    • @49558201
      @49558201 4 месяца назад +1

      Roscoe Plowboys ! class of 69

    • @JoeandNicsRoadTrip
      @JoeandNicsRoadTrip  4 месяца назад

      It's beautiful up there where you are.

    • @insertmyidentityhere
      @insertmyidentityhere 4 месяца назад

      From Lubbock, recently in a mountain town in CO! ❤

  • @user-pk8vx4um9k
    @user-pk8vx4um9k 4 месяца назад +3

    I grew up in Bledsoe. The old caboose was a store. The school consolidated with Whiteface.

  • @markmark2080
    @markmark2080 4 месяца назад +3

    I try to imagine these towns back in their hay days about a 100 years ago, before the Depression... A school, store, saloon, cafe, a blacksmith, horses, wagons, a car now and then, maybe a church, hard working men, veggie gardens in every yard and a few well cared for fruit trees...

  • @LyleFrancisDelp
    @LyleFrancisDelp 4 месяца назад +10

    I really love your videos. You take the time to show the other side of America...where REAL people live.

    • @JoeandNicsRoadTrip
      @JoeandNicsRoadTrip  4 месяца назад

      Thanks. Lyle!

    • @chrisv9186
      @chrisv9186 4 месяца назад +1

      Real people live everywhere. 🙄

    • @LyleFrancisDelp
      @LyleFrancisDelp 4 месяца назад

      @@chrisv9186 My emphasis was to indicate that these people are mostly forgotten by the rest of the world. I thought that would be obvious, but….I suppose it wasn’t obvious enough for you.

  • @dazirb
    @dazirb 4 месяца назад +4

    Can't wait for the Lubbock video.

  • @jennywilson9731
    @jennywilson9731 4 месяца назад +3

    Miles..an..miles of Texas, the clear Blue sky, it would be quiet enough to "just sit an think" if ya wanted too...interesting. .a good video Joe, thanks for showing us these places.🌼

  • @tulsabillh
    @tulsabillh 4 месяца назад +3

    You hit all the famous spots, Joe! Covered that one.

  • @WendyHannan-pt7ez
    @WendyHannan-pt7ez 2 месяца назад +2

    I love this, thank you, strange how you never see anyone. 🤷🏼‍♀️ I wish we could do this in Australia.🇦🇺🐨

  • @IamNow1111
    @IamNow1111 3 месяца назад +2

    Cool video. I have property located near the Cochran County line that I have not seen in person. This was very useful to me. Thanks for showing me around Bledsoe. 🇺🇸🖖

  • @user-yg1uz1gm4h
    @user-yg1uz1gm4h 4 месяца назад +5

    Those old rail cars make beautiful living quarters, I can imagine having that one with the pop out side windows, perfect place for the dining area. In 74 I remember a trip back from San Diego to Houston and I was entering Johnson Country so it was called, very near Llano Tx and the cut back to Austin to bypass San Antonio. I was driving a 65 Ford Galaxie and all the tires were bald, it was just about day break sun coming up and I hear a pfff noise and the right side rear tire blew out, not enough rubber to make a big bang. So I pulled over and put on the spare and drove on hoping I would not have another flat. This road your on reminded me of that feeling being out in the middle of nowhere on that highway which was actually very nice road just desolate. There were no highway patrol in those earlier days because the crime rate and traffic count wasn't high enough to warrant all the expense. Today it is so much different

  • @user-up8jx3mt6j
    @user-up8jx3mt6j 3 месяца назад +1

    I LOVE these nowhere-s-ville out in the middle of nowhere ancient virtually empty ghost towns.

  • @espuela4655
    @espuela4655 4 месяца назад +2

    Majority of peanuts used to be grown in other parts of Texas, now they are in the panhandle. When cotton prices declined some farmers started growing peanuts. Thus the Bledsoe operation.

  • @onrycodger
    @onrycodger 4 месяца назад +3

    That's a lonely stretch of Texas. You weren't kidding.
    Happy almost New Year 🎉👍

  • @agfan1
    @agfan1 4 месяца назад +3

    Imagine being there in the dust bowl 80 years ago,, great video sir

  • @jeffreywhite4962
    @jeffreywhite4962 4 месяца назад +4

    thank you again for the ride. I think your fans would like to know about Pyote-wink- kermit-wicket, - Monahans, Texas, lots of cool history.I was stationed in Pyote early 60's

  • @chrispearson8779
    @chrispearson8779 4 месяца назад +4

    I grew up in Roswell NM. Always loved the backroads of NM. Hope to see a few videos from there.

  • @larrygorst8749
    @larrygorst8749 4 месяца назад +2

    A real education. Thanks for bringing me along.

  • @Mariel_Moon
    @Mariel_Moon 4 месяца назад +4

    Thank you for a new video. This places looks so sad.😢

  • @mkr4922
    @mkr4922 4 месяца назад +5

    I have to say that every time you post a trip, I have to watch. Thank you for all of your hard work.

  • @ellebelle8515
    @ellebelle8515 4 месяца назад +5

    As a retired teacher who taught in some small town schools, abandoned schools make me the saddest along with abandoned churches.

    • @insertmyidentityhere
      @insertmyidentityhere 4 месяца назад

      🙏❤

    • @mrmarkymark77
      @mrmarkymark77 4 месяца назад +1

      I can see that, places that were important meeting places

    • @ellebelle8515
      @ellebelle8515 4 месяца назад +1

      @@mrmarkymark77Exactly..Decades past, these places were the center of the little isolated rural communities. These people didn't have much, but they lived meaningful lives prioritizing their families and community.

  • @cherienafo7676
    @cherienafo7676 4 месяца назад +7

    OZ// Thanks Joey (& Nicole) Another great drive. I love to see these 'fading' towns- makes my mind wander to the history behind all the falling down houses and I appreciate the drive through them and also imagine they might be great for film industry backdrops? Happy New Year to U2.

  • @rkmatt8761
    @rkmatt8761 4 месяца назад +7

    When I’ve past through small run down towns even abandoned houses out in the middle nowhere i often think of how many families were raised there and the story behind each house and store! I can picture the kids skipping and running to the store for 5 cent wax bottle candy and 25 cent soft drink

    • @stephenmoore7386
      @stephenmoore7386 4 месяца назад +3

      I remember nickel wax bottle candy drinks and ten cent soda pops.

    • @markmark2080
      @markmark2080 4 месяца назад +1

      Back in the '60s we still had a nickel coke machine at the gas station by the high school, everything else was a dime. When I got out of the navy in '69 all the pop machines had gone up to a quarter, I thought that was outrageous but not as bad as when we went up to Yellowstone in '73 and gas was 45 cents instead of the 30 cents back home...

  • @patm5594
    @patm5594 4 месяца назад +5

    You know it is a small when they don't have a Dollar General

  • @SajjadKhan-jn7cw
    @SajjadKhan-jn7cw 4 месяца назад +1

    Another interesting video thanks for sharing joe and Nic 👍

  • @Bear_58
    @Bear_58 4 месяца назад +12

    Another very interesting town. I always hate to see towns on their last breath. I want to thank you and Nicole for a great and adventurous year. May God bless you and keep you both safe in your future travels. Happy New Year 🎉🤠👍🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻

    • @JoeandNicsRoadTrip
      @JoeandNicsRoadTrip  4 месяца назад +2

      Thank you!

    • @demkad3629
      @demkad3629 4 месяца назад +1

      @@JoeandNicsRoadTripНУ ЭТО МАМА АМЕРИКА ОНА ТАКАЯ ПРОСТОРНАЯ БОЛЬШАЯ КРУТАЯ ЛЮБЛЮ Я МАМУ АМЕРИКУ КАК СТРАНУ КЛАССНАЯ ОНА ЭТО ФАКТ

  • @Bud1632
    @Bud1632 4 месяца назад +2

    I love the back road towns.
    Love the research you do.
    Keep up the great work.
    Happy New Year..

  • @davidpauling1670
    @davidpauling1670 Месяц назад

    Great viewing,We in New Zealand really cannot comprehend the scale of the vastness of Texas.Your video,s and Tom and Julie's mines explorations keep me watching for hours. Many thanks Dave P.Oamaru N.Z.

  • @davidroberson8030
    @davidroberson8030 4 месяца назад +2

    Right on the beginning of the video you can tell it's not too crowded out there at all pretty cool, I dig the wide Open spaces another good video Joe and Nick right on thank you again.

  • @DCI226
    @DCI226 4 месяца назад +3

    Now here's a town I can actually afford to retire to.

  • @MaryM-xz5fs
    @MaryM-xz5fs 4 месяца назад +2

    I love the history lessons you give!

  • @dennissmith304
    @dennissmith304 4 месяца назад +2

    love the small Texas towns, I was born in Denver City Tx. Would love to see a road trip there. Keep up the good work!!!!!!

  • @saritaluna8429
    @saritaluna8429 4 месяца назад +2

    I grew up near or around those rural areas. Back then bootlegging was a "business" then you had whiteface farms who housed temp migrant workers then all those migrants moved to Sundown,Texas. Farming
    Cotton,maze and peanut were prominent crops and of course alcohol,gambling,cock fights and horse racing were also a strong source of income for some.
    Good old days

  • @ENJIMEEREBAY
    @ENJIMEEREBAY 4 месяца назад +1

    Thanks for another well made informative presentation.

  • @catlover614
    @catlover614 4 месяца назад +4

    An awesome video, so interesting. These must be some of the quietest towns you've ever visited ! I always find abandoned buildings to be sad, but very fascinating and intriguing. The stories they could tell ! Thanks so much, Joe, and wishing you and Nic a very Happy New Year !😊💖

    • @JoeandNicsRoadTrip
      @JoeandNicsRoadTrip  4 месяца назад

      Thank you, CL. I have to say, places like this are my favorite.

    • @catlover614
      @catlover614 4 месяца назад +1

      @@JoeandNicsRoadTrip Mine, too ! I never get tired of these "middle of nowhere" towns !! 😊

  • @GarrettWorcester
    @GarrettWorcester 4 месяца назад +2

    7:04 - (Hits the speed dial): "Clark? Clark Griswold? I found the Truckster, but... you'll need a flatbed and maybe a couple of 'straps.'"

  • @poowg2657
    @poowg2657 4 месяца назад +3

    Bledsoe is at the end of an old Santa Fe branch line. Looking on Google maps a turning wye is clearly visible on the north side of town. Amazingly the rail line looks to be active to Whiteface. Great video, thanks much!

  • @darranbrown270
    @darranbrown270 4 месяца назад +1

    Another really interesting, informative video, looking forward to more in 2024.

  • @AceofCrazy89
    @AceofCrazy89 4 месяца назад +2

    Church sure does seem to be enjoying its tax free status as the rest of the town dissolves
    Crazy little gray towns with gray grass and gray trees

  • @theknow7557
    @theknow7557 3 месяца назад +1

    I love the sound of a gravel rock road!! I don’t know why it’s soothing to me. Thanks for sharing!

  • @oxycocus
    @oxycocus 4 месяца назад +1

    Man, you sure do get around. Thank you for a very interesting 2023. Happy 2024

  • @justjokinntokin5474
    @justjokinntokin5474 4 месяца назад +5

    🤔 it appears that the workers who work in the Bledsoe peanut factory make “peanuts” 🤣

  • @maggiemakedo
    @maggiemakedo 4 месяца назад +1

    Love your videos and information on all of these towns across the country. Thank you. Happy new year to you both snd safe travels!

  • @Ironweinersdad
    @Ironweinersdad 4 месяца назад +1

    My wife and I drove from San Antonio up to Yakima, WA one time and made it a 3 day trip. Drove 12 hours the first day to Albuquerque spent the evening there and then woke up early the next day and drove another 12 hours to Salt Lake to spend the evening there then drove home the next day. I love flying to get where we want fast but let me tell you. Everyone should drive west once in their life. From the Rockies on the terrain is so beautiful!

  • @stevetessier8532
    @stevetessier8532 4 месяца назад

    Good Morning to you Joe.Wishing you and Nicole a very happy New Year.

  • @davidmillar4479
    @davidmillar4479 4 месяца назад +1

    Love the videos. Watch them as soon as you put them on. Happy new year to you both!

  • @cecoya
    @cecoya 4 месяца назад

    The 2nd town looked like all that was needed is buy the lot knock down the house and move a trailer right in there on the foundation lol. Everyone be right at home. Wow some scary towns for sure no gas, no groceries, and no shopping but there was a bail bonds located there. Thanks for sharing and you have a great day with safe travels

  • @JCVACCARO
    @JCVACCARO 4 месяца назад +1

    5yrs ago my friend found a complete 69 4spd hemi roadrunner for 3,500$ needing complete restoration in a small Texas town like this. He flipped it for 15,000$. These small towns are the best for car hunting.

  • @danielheartsill4269
    @danielheartsill4269 4 месяца назад +2

    When you smell crude, you smell money. I grew up in Oklahoma and there is a refinery north east of town. When the wind was right you could smell the refinery. My folks always said, smell that money.

  • @45AMT
    @45AMT 4 месяца назад +4

    Bledsoe is a place you live when you want the Census to leave you alone. LOL!

  • @fiatcurrency8135
    @fiatcurrency8135 4 месяца назад +2

    The instant you see railcars you have what was once a railroad right-of-way. Look at the northern extremity of the town on Google Maps an you can see where the railroad line ran. It appears that the rail-line dead ends at the NM border. Oftentimes cars like this are used for storage - there is no 'museum' - they just use them like shipping containers.
    Immediately north of the 'Peanut Shelling' operation you see an inverted 'Y' shaped formation that would have been a locomotive turn-around.
    Towns like this are spaced at regular intervals so that steam locomotives can top off the water in their tenders. Another 'ghost town' in Texas is named Pumpville, for obvious reasons.

  • @marywalker2896
    @marywalker2896 4 месяца назад +2

    What depressing towns. Yikes. We lived in lufkin Texas years ago and it was a nice little town.

  • @jonathanlee5185
    @jonathanlee5185 4 месяца назад +1

    👍You're getting smart here, Joe: starting the upload with a mystery and promise to tell secret ! Happy New Year. 👍

  • @davidgarcia6315
    @davidgarcia6315 4 месяца назад +2

    May you and the family have a safe and happy New Year !!

  • @chrispena4582
    @chrispena4582 4 месяца назад +2

    I’m from Hobbs New Mexico, Bledsoe is a small town near our county. Ive delivered to oil rigs out there. There is also farmland there .

  • @Victory1981
    @Victory1981 3 месяца назад +1

    I saw those flaming oil things out there as well. I also went to Carlsbad, NM on that trip.

  • @bubbawalker4638
    @bubbawalker4638 4 месяца назад +2

    Ive been to Whiteface, there used to be 2 large feedlots, 1 for cattle and 1 for horses

  • @andrewlabat9963
    @andrewlabat9963 4 месяца назад +1

    That appeared to be a very nice school.. Lived in New Mexico for 5 years, Clovis, which is just north of there. Dove through that area once, about 33 years ago. Doesn't look much different.

  • @ananwongpinyochit4919
    @ananwongpinyochit4919 4 месяца назад

    Thanks for sharing.

  • @bdgies2721
    @bdgies2721 4 месяца назад +5

    Whiteface would refer primarily to Hereford cattle, there would probably have been Shorthorn as well. They were the British breeds that transformed the early ranching business in North America. And those big open spaces aren't "nothing" - they are where a lot of your food is grown and processed (the peanut processing plant). As urban sprawl takes over unholy amounts of arable land in both the US and Canada, those empty spaces are the last hope for keeping the population fed and alive. Modernized farming and ranching practices are responsible for the urban decline you are filming. Drought also plays its part.

  • @justjokinntokin5474
    @justjokinntokin5474 4 месяца назад

    ❤️ your videos looking towards the next 😃

  • @mandujanojuan437
    @mandujanojuan437 4 месяца назад +1

    Great video. I like that you share the statistics. ❤

  • @truckerswifelife8697
    @truckerswifelife8697 4 месяца назад +6

    Hope you see this... if you guys come back to ohio, you need to go to New Albany Ohio. The whole town is brick buildings, and surrounded by white fencing. It loks like something out of the movies.

    • @JoeandNicsRoadTrip
      @JoeandNicsRoadTrip  4 месяца назад +1

      Sounds interesting.

    • @paulabrick7610
      @paulabrick7610 4 месяца назад

      New Albany, Ohio used to be a small town but it has really grown in the last 20 years because Columbus, Ohio has grown out to it by housing and industry and now Intel is building there. Used to have to drive thru town. Now it has been by passed by dividing the major highway around it.

  • @zekrk504
    @zekrk504 4 месяца назад +1

    Wide Open Spaces!!!!
    Happy New Year Joe and Nic!!

  • @jansliger8655
    @jansliger8655 4 месяца назад

    I grew up in Hobbs NM. I had never heard of Bledsoe. Thanks for sharing.

    • @travisadams4470
      @travisadams4470 4 месяца назад

      I have been to Hobbs. My Aunt lived there. I gave ntp been there in over 20yrs. Maybe Nic will visit someday

  • @markholland5810
    @markholland5810 4 месяца назад +1

    Terrific!

  • @user-du1mz5zx7s
    @user-du1mz5zx7s 4 месяца назад +2

    Man..this place is combustible..

  • @malco49
    @malco49 4 месяца назад +2

    after graduate school. i had a brand new 4 wheel drive truck some free time and a few bucks and thought it would a good idea to just take a trip across the county and back. i remember being in lubbock and drving west to clovis new mexico , and was on a pretty major highway and marveled how i was pretty much the only vehicle on the road for what seemed like hours.

  • @Jay-Leigh
    @Jay-Leigh 4 месяца назад +2

    When you said is another world out here I couldn’t agree more. I’m guessing the people are all on their homes or working as to me it looked so empty. I think personally it’s sad to see these little towns dying.
    Thank you for showing us Joey.

  • @janerrahnoble
    @janerrahnoble 4 месяца назад

    Very good Joe and Nic, the channal shows the reality of the places you visit. Showing america. I always follow this trip because I,m getting toknow the USA. Congrattulations to the channel !!!

  • @stevenbailey1293
    @stevenbailey1293 Месяц назад

    Lived in Tatum NM early 80s.
    Drove thru Bledsoe many times. Oilfield. There used to be a bar not far from there on state line called Bloated goat

  • @diyhomeeverything
    @diyhomeeverything 4 месяца назад

    Just north of these towns is Maple, Texas. I went to school at Three Way High School, name because 3 schools were combined into one. There is only a historic marker there. The school was occupied for more that 75 years, but has been torn down, with not even a brick remaining.

  • @beverlybilbrey7815
    @beverlybilbrey7815 4 месяца назад +1

    My husband went to high school in Bledsoe. Water is what hurt the town and I have a sister-in-law that still lives there in the out skirts of town. The Mennoniites put in the peanut factory. Years ago there was cattle shipped out of there by railroad but the tracks have been removed.

  • @cnph7067
    @cnph7067 4 месяца назад

    Been watching your channel a while and really enjoy your videos. So I figured I watch enough I should be subscribing, so I did! Thank you for what you do! Safe Travels!

  • @kennethmattsson880
    @kennethmattsson880 4 месяца назад +2

    Phillips 66 sign looked nice.

  • @Slick2462
    @Slick2462 4 месяца назад +7

    I follow your travels and really enjoy them! Can't believe no cats and firehouses in that big of an area?

    • @TOCC50
      @TOCC50 4 месяца назад

      Drew Bledsoe

  • @dr.ramanandan
    @dr.ramanandan 3 месяца назад +2

    A very interesting video. Thanks.

  • @torza2
    @torza2 4 месяца назад +2

    This is a part of the US we never see, thanks for upload. Very good.

    • @JoeandNicsRoadTrip
      @JoeandNicsRoadTrip  4 месяца назад +1

      My favorite places. :)

    • @torza2
      @torza2 4 месяца назад +2

      those are my favorite places too@@JoeandNicsRoadTrip