Thanks! I used to spend a lot of time looking at tiny towns like this on Google's street view and thought I was a weirdo for doing it. Turns out there are a lot of "weirdos" out there. Love this channel.
@@tina74166 Unfortunately, Google doesn't bother updating really small towns like this. If you look at Turon for example, they're still showing the scene from 2008 and the resolution is horrible.
@@richrobertson9457 Oh yes, you are so right! It can be quite annoying🙄And as you said, we're not not as crazy as we thought!!😂 Are you looking to move? Or just having fun checking these towns out?
@@tina74166 I live, and have always lived, in central New Jersey where we're packed in like sardines and one town blends into the next, and the traffic at times, is horrendous. So I'm intrigued by areas of the country where there's so much empty space and hardly any people. Part of me would love to live in a place like that, but realistically, I'm too used to having supermarkets and restaurants 10 minutes away where I can get anything I want and an abundance of choices for just about any service I need, so alas, it amounts to no more than fantasy.
Rural Kansas is full of amazing and kind people! You can imagine my initial deflation when all I could see were corn and wheat fields on approach to Wichita Airport in 1983. They were not the skyscrapers-filled America cities I envisioned, especially after coming in via JFK Airport. I wanted to return to Nigeria immediately 😂😂 All it took was a few weeks in Emporia State University in Emporia, Kansas, to show me how WONDERFUL the people of Kansas were and still are!! Though in Texas now, I will always LOVE Kansas!!❤❤❤
There is no potential because there is no industry. Automation in farming has wiped out the need for people. In another 15 years these towns will have half the population. But they keep voting for Republicans.
Me, too, but the local economies have been decimated. And much of the central USA is hot and humid and now becoming dryer and dryer. The federal gov would have to make big investments in small towns to encourage small, non-predatory businesses.
I 'm from Rotterdam, The Netherlands, and i must say i really appreciate your vids. But as i am living in a densely populated city, it always surprises me that i see so few people walking around in the towns you feature. Here it's always busy, but in rural America i see no people walking around, tending their gardens, making small talk with their neighbours, or heaven forbid, bicycling. It all looks so deserted.
Its very sad. Due to a variety of factors we bulldozed our cities for automobiles in the 20th century. Things are turning around though. In mamy towns and cities there is a large push to bring back walkable communities and make many downtown cores car-free. In the city of Knoxville, TN there is a large section called "Market Square" where cars arent allowed. It is always very nice and we have markets twice a week! I would love to live in The Netherlands though. Absolute gold standard for urban planning and prioritizing the community over cars. Dont stop making improvements but never stop being grateful for the wonderful improvements of your country! 😊
@@stephenmorton8017 Factory farms produce most food. There is a large amount of conservatives who idealize rural america as small groups of people who are more likely to be farmers and pool their resources. A very fake idealized version that from my experience is not the case. Most people I know that live in rural areas are not much different than your average suburbanite or urbanite. The biggest difference is that per capita rural folks cost their respective communities a lot more in taxes and services than suburbanites or urbanites. This is well known and can be looked up on a per-capita basis. It costs a lot of money to run power lines, roads, water, sewage, internet etc to these small communities. 😂
@@concernedcitizen6572 most people garden for pleasure and enjoy the results and a lot of folks will sit outside on a beautiful morning. not in the twilight zone, apparently. they seem afraid of snipers.
“Toto, I have a feeling we're in Kansas...” 🙃Thanks for the virtual tour of the heartland! I've driven though the state a couple of times-- despite its reputation for being flat and boring, I found some really interesting towns and places there. Sometimes it's just nice to get off the freeway, slow down and enjoy the low rolling hills with green grass and crops stretching out to the horizon. (For a day or so, anyway...🙂)
As usual you guys never disappoint me. I luv what you do for me. It just makes me chill for awhile & away from the insane world that is persistently driving me bonkers. Loads of luv & God's Blessings be yours.
I'm a Texan who moved to Kansas years ago. I love watching your videos. It's interesting to hear the different stats you provide. Spotting the cats are enjoyable as well
Thank you Joe for driving around rural Kansas. I used to live in Augusta KS. Brought back great memories for me and I remembered driving through through Preston. Love these quiet quaint towns.
OZ// Thanks Joe for another great drive. I LOVE THE TRAINS !! I live in a train town. In Turon- I spotted an Australian flag in a window of one of those old houses !! wow. Love ur work. Hello to Nicole.
All old Chicago Rock Island and Pacific railroad towns. All of the grain elevators are now too small to be served by the railroad and are served by trucks if still in use. Another excellent video, thanks much!
I spent my teen years in Turon. I lived there from 1985-1990, until I left for college. I know all those towns well! Thanks for driving through. Lots of memories for me.
Love Kansas! Thank you! I was born in SE Kansas and lived there until I was 10 1/2 when we had to move because of my Dad's employment. For me, it was the center of the universe and I'd live there now if I could.
I'm from Laverne, OK (30 miles directly north of Shattuck), but have lived about 7 years of my life in Protection, KS. I worked in Coldwater for about 3 years. But I've been on this stretch of road in this video more times since becoming an over the road truck driver than I ever did living in SW Kansas. Thank you for driving around these towns, I'm really only capable of passing through on the highway in a truck. About a month ago I did deliver to Halstead, just east of Hutchinson. It's a very nice town that would be worth checking out.
Yes, Halstead is very nice but the hospital closed down perhaps 25 years ago and that's when a lot of houses were built. We were through there the other week just tooting about and there's some new houses on the southside of town which really surprised me. The best Kansas small town would be Hesston. Major corps and small college and wealthy retirees.
@@keithwiebe1787 Hesston College was the BEST known American college in my Nigerian village of Alayi in Abia State in the 1970s😀. Four of my siblings attended Hesston College.
@@ucukaoma4551 My wife, my 2 sisters, and a brother in law, ex boss, wife's Uncle (he taught there) all had affiliations with Hesston College. Oh, and I think my dad may have attended a year of high school in the early 50s when they had a program for that.
I live in rural North Dakota. So I really appreciate your videos. I try to do some of my own, but my main joy is from yours. You show parts of the US that most people will never see. IT is an important part of the "discussion" we are having as a nation.
If I were in a position to leave my job and move somewhere else, this part of Kansas is where I'd consider. Moderately dry climate (good for sinuses), but not nearly as hot as Texas or Arizona.
Awesome, as always !! I agree with you about the lovely old buildings, it's such a shame when they try to "modernise" them with add-ons, so you can't see the full beauty of the building. Thanks so much for another enjoyable video !!😊
I really like your videos.....It really gives a chance to see some great small towns that most of us have never heard off..And a lot of these places are small but some can have some great things..I look forward to seeing some of these places in your videos Peace and Blessings
thank you for sharing this video. im from Malaysia but used to study Petroleum engineering at Univ of Kansas, Lawrence. i was there from 1984-1987. looking at the small towns that u visited, it brings back a lot of good memories during my days there. . thnks again and please keep up the good work. cheers😊
I am from that area of Kansas and it is beautiful and peaceful. If you’ve not already visited them, there is a town in NW Kansas called Speed, KS which boasts a hot wheels museum and also another town called Gas, Kansas which as a water tower shaped like a gas can with “Gas, Kan.” on it.
Awesome stuff as always man! You should start stopping by and talking with the locals a little bit, get their perspective and out take on these towns! Anyways I would love to do something like this with my channel one days back home in rural Brazil.
Never been to Kansas so I appreciate this video. Arlington looked very peaceful. Some nice architecture too. I like Zenith too! Agree that building a crematorium in a dying town is a great irony! Appreciate and love your channel !
The video is not representative of the majority of Kansas. There are other videos out there showing what a larger portion of the state and it's small towns are like. My wife and I explored this country, full time, in an RV for 11 years before finally settling in our current (not Kansas) location. This video shows the worst, which should not lead you to believe the entire state is like that. Not even close.
I usually like videos showing the ghettoes of America but this channel is cool because it shows towns that are small and you usually don't see on videos.
Who is doing the mowing in all those dying towns? The grass is not cut to military standards, but there appear to be huge areas that appear to have been mowed recently.
I wondered that too. Maybe the county sends a landscaping crew around periodically to keep these little towns from turning into hayfields. Or Forrest Gump and his riding mower live nearby
Fantastic Video I really enjoy watching this channel. Kansas looks very peaceful not to much going on. It must be nice driving around there there is absolutely no traffic that's a good thing!!!!
I agree, the add-on to the old brick building in Sylvia was definitely an eyesore. They didn't even try to maintain the style. Enjoying your videos, as always!
At the same time, it's easy for us to sit and criticize others' decisions. Yeah, the new addition was a bit garish, but for a small church in a declining small town, making the addition look like the rest of the building might have been literally beyond their pay grade
Love how you give us so much info on the towns. These videos show how much small town life is not desired by many people nor is the infrastructure of them able to be maintained long term with little to no tax dollars.
The infrastructure in the major city I left is crumbling because of poor city government and the taxpayers are moving to small towns like the one I moved to. The infrastructure is much better here, not to mention crime, schools and city services.
You're joking about the infrastructure, right? June of 2023 tanker truck crashes under Philadelphia's I-95. A major through fare Resulting firestorm makes overpass collapse. Rebuild is expected to take MONTHS. LOL!
Don't know how I stumbled upon your channel but this is cool. I live in Wichita. The largest city in Kansas. There are so many cool places off the beaten path to explore. Keep on keeping on.
On a trip to Colorado we went thru Kansas on 70, it was nice but also very run down. Almost impossible to find a local place to eat. This was 2019. Still no better on the way home trying different stops. Thanks, always enjoy these vids!
70 west of Salina once out of the hills is very boring. One needs to go hiway 50 further south for a more local flavor of the towns. Goes to Dodge City, Garden City and into Colorado where it follows the Arkansas river. Northeast Kansas is considered the armpit of Kansas. Very nasty snowstorms in the off seasons, etc. Only saving grace is that it cools off some at night in the middle of summer.
I came upon a book from the UK with authentic old photographs of the Henley Regatta from the turn of the prior century.....It was a glorious time for the british I hope they build that time machine for im not going forward Im going back
Love your videos. Currently live in NC. Lived in Hutchinson, KS, from '67 to '77 when I was growning up. Then I joined the USAF and moved away. Have extended family who live on farms near these towns. They live closest to the little tiny town called Penalosa. Been to all of 'em many times. They've all been going downhill since WW II at least. Keep up the good work. Bon Voyage! :)
There is something both impressive and noble about grain elevators. Form follows function we hear, and the elevators are the apotheosis of that aesthetic ideal. Looking at ‘em, each has a certain integrity and generally subtle shifts in line and volume. An American art-form as yet uncelebrated.
This one was neat to see! A dear friend of mine from college is from Sawyer, and Pratt was the closest “active” town. In 2011 my husband at the time and I went to her wedding which was in held in Medicine Lodge, but we drove in early and stayed at a house closer to Sawyer. We didn’t quite make it over to the little towns in this video - we MAY have explored close to Preston, but we drive down from 1-70 so I am pretty sure we didn’t. Sawyer in 2011 resembles these little towns. Cool to see. We loved the slower pace of life. A few years before I was in Hutchinson on a separate trip. All that said, to was neat to see the little towns in between.
Fascinating video, especially if, like me, you live in suburban UK where everyone is within 20ft of everyone else. While there are compensations, I could happily swap places to live contentedly in any of these small rural towns and think I'd gone to heaven. But then, I'm an old fart and would probably fit right in. The slight seediness and emptiness is hugely appealing if you can get the beauty of wabi-sabi. Appreciate all the videos Joe. Keep up the great work. I have no doubt that all will become historically important in the fullness of time. Much success, richly deserved.
I attended elementary school in Preston. My dad and both brothers graduated high school there. We moved to Colorado in 1965. The last class to graduate there was 1966. The high school consolidated to Pratt which is 13 miles away. The schools’ history in these small towns is at the heart of who these towns were. Thanks for sharing this video!
Lost you guys for some time because of the P C but have you back and sure do like your show all the luck for you both have a good time. Charlie and Cathy from Florida.
I've just discovered this channel! Probably got recommended to me because of searching a few places in Ohio. I'm from the UK and it's a real education to see these less publicised parts of the US
The towns, distressed properties, and architecture appreciation are really spot on, but when you take a few days off, your food reviews and hotel reviews are also very good, and short video's would add a little .
Interesting video. I grew up in NYC in the 60s and have always had a positive impression of Kansas through the film, The Wizard of Oz. Thirty years ago I was offered a job in Vietnam and the first thought when arriving here was, “I think I am not in Kansas anymore” given how different everything was. I have remained here in Vietnam all that time and now if I ever had reason to go to Kansas the first thing I would think is, “I think I am not in Saigon anymore!”. Reminded that our impression from this video is in its best light being beautiful morning sunshine and the bright green of late spring under beautiful blue skies. It would a a very different scene on a gray winter day. One little suggestion time and money considered would be for you to go into the town coffee shop (those that may have one) and have a few words with the people living there.
Joe you should have stopped at Carolyns Essenhaus in Arlington. Some of the best food and service I have ever had. Drive out there a few time a year from Wichita just to eat.
I love cruising rural America and see how I can't get out s often as I like to, I thank you for the ride along. looking forward to some more interesting trips.
My wife and I try to do a day trip to small towns like this. I've been on new roads I didn't even know existed 20 miles from where I live (north of Wichita, Ks). Found a Chisolm trail map coming home from a rural town restaurant and decided to go west out of town and ran into the historical markers and maps.
wirklich schöne Videos von Städten,die kaum jemand kennt und nicht nur die grossen.Dazu gibts interessante Hintergrundinfos,Ich seh mir eure Filme gern an,auch wenn ich englich nicht verstehe.. macht weiter so und alles gute..Grüsse
This is very Quiet... i was thinking if i wake up early morning get some Coffee and cokes....enjoying the Fresh air listening to the Birds.... What a perfect morning would be 👌🏻
I was born in Pratt, Kansas. I lived in Turon, Kansas a portion of my younger years. I always returned there to visit family. My grandparents house is still there. Unfortunately they are no longer living. I've always wished I could buy their house back. It was such an important part of my life.
I grew up in rural Kansas (Clay County) so I really appreciate seeing this! Any plans to come further north? Especially in my area, there's lots of tiny places to explore. If you do, Bala, Enterprise, Industry, Green, Greenleaf, Miltonvale and Morganville are all areas I've lived/spent time in that I think you'd enjoy seeing! (Edit - Clifton, Clyde, and Washington are a few more as well!)
When I was a kid in the 70-80's, Preston was one of the nicer "rural" communities in Pratt County. It's really gone downhill in the past 25 years. I still get my meat from the butcher shop in Preston, but I live in the Kansas City area. One of my brother's best buddies is the mayor of Turon. Lol! Most of the towns were founded around railroad stops not the grain elevators. Although, the two things basically became synonymous
Those were some boring towns haha. Always enjoy the videos just cant imagine living in these towns from this video. Everyone likes what they like. Thank you always.
I've been through Kansas on Rt. 70 years ago. It was an ocean of flatness with occasional dust devils. I also enjoyed the rolling terrain heading into Colorado on Highway 36 . . .. The Rocky Mountains were in the distance as I passed through an intersection in "Last Chance", CO.
You need to get off the interstate to see Kansas. Only a small part of Kansas is really flat. Usually in river valleys. I dare you to ride a bicycle through the Arikaree Breaks and Bad Lands of northwest Kansas or the Gypsum Hills area of southwest and south central Kansas.
Hey Joe. I did little more research on turon ks the closet Walmart is one hour by car the cafe that you showed has a buffet on Wednesday nights the closest gas station is 4 miles away
It’s the first time that I have ever been in downtown Sylvia KS. Driven through there on highway 50 several hundred times. Lived 70 miles east of there in Newton KS for 8 years back in the 1990’s. Would travel to Colorado to visit family a lot of times on my days off from work when I had time.
My great grandparents had a farm in Arlington & when my dad was a little boy, Friday nights there would be movies on the side of the building (throughout the summer) that was the Crazy Horse.
If you’re ever looking for other great small Kansas towns I highly recommend visiting Winfield, El Dorado, Manhattan, the entire Flint Hills. Also if you’re ever in north eastern Kansas I highly recommend visiting Falls City, NE. Falls City reminds me of how a city from the 50s would look today.
Passed through half of Kansas to get to Salina, a year ago. It was cool to see, but I didn’t really have enough time to stop and explore anywhere. It was pretty much a get there and back trip, from central TX and back over a weekend. One of these days I want to be able to explore some of the places where they filmed Twister in the state 👍🏻
That cat didn't run away because seeing you was the most excitement he's seen in weeks 🙀
Hahaha No kidding
the black bears, the coyote and even woody woodpeker left since Donald couldn't make America great again!!!🤧🤧
I live in a smaller town and there used to be a lot of stray cats until they opened up a Chinese restaurant 😂
@@FoelyZ89get a life....
@@jimdavis9084 Har har! Casual racism, so funny!
Thanks! I used to spend a lot of time looking at tiny towns like this on Google's street view and thought I was a weirdo for doing it. Turns out there are a lot of "weirdos" out there. Love this channel.
I did/still do the same thing richrobertson, but Joe has sure made it a lot more fun! 😊 Thanks again for another wonderful video Joe & Nicole!!!🤗
Thank you!! :)
@@tina74166 Unfortunately, Google doesn't bother updating really small towns like this. If you look at Turon for example, they're still showing the scene from 2008 and the resolution is horrible.
@@richrobertson9457 Oh yes, you are so right! It can be quite annoying🙄And as you said, we're not not as crazy as we thought!!😂 Are you looking to move? Or just having fun checking these towns out?
@@tina74166 I live, and have always lived, in central New Jersey where we're packed in like sardines and one town blends into the next, and the traffic at times, is horrendous. So I'm intrigued by areas of the country where there's so much empty space and hardly any people. Part of me would love to live in a place like that, but realistically, I'm too used to having supermarkets and restaurants 10 minutes away where I can get anything I want and an abundance of choices for just about any service I need, so alas, it amounts to no more than fantasy.
Rural Kansas is full of amazing and kind people!
You can imagine my initial deflation when all I could see were corn and wheat fields on approach to Wichita Airport in 1983. They were not the skyscrapers-filled America cities I envisioned, especially after coming in via JFK Airport. I wanted to return to Nigeria immediately 😂😂
All it took was a few weeks in Emporia State University in Emporia, Kansas, to show me how WONDERFUL the people of Kansas were and still are!!
Though in Texas now, I will always LOVE Kansas!!❤❤❤
Dust in the Wind by Kansas came into my mind while watching the video. 🇵🇭
Garden City is very solid, SWKS is highly underrated! Good people and a lot of natural beauty
I was born and raised in garden city.kinda miss it until I go home to visit.
Went to high school in Holcomb
I really like the way you open the video with the map of the USA and the line of your current trip.👍
Thanks, Kathleen! It seems the sensible thing to do. I feel like it gives the viewer a better idea as to where I'm at. :)
Wow the big sky , coming from Denmark I'm amazed at the size of America ;)
I'd love to see small town America grow. There certainly is a lot of potential. Thank you for visiting these towns!
There is no potential because there is no industry. Automation in farming has wiped out the need for people. In another 15 years these towns will have half the population. But they keep voting for Republicans.
Then move there! Land is cheap.
@@LibtardsareFuntotalkto problem would be a job!
Small towns are loaded with addicts and losers.
Me, too, but the local economies have been decimated. And much of the central USA is hot and humid and now becoming dryer and dryer.
The federal gov would have to make big investments in small towns to encourage small, non-predatory businesses.
I 'm from Rotterdam, The Netherlands, and i must say i really appreciate your vids. But as i am living in a densely populated city, it always surprises me that i see so few people walking around in the towns you feature. Here it's always busy, but in rural America i see no people walking around, tending their gardens, making small talk with their neighbours, or heaven forbid, bicycling. It all looks so deserted.
these are my exact thoughts. where are the gardens in an agricultural state? what are they all doing? listening to AM radio?
Its very sad. Due to a variety of factors we bulldozed our cities for automobiles in the 20th century. Things are turning around though. In mamy towns and cities there is a large push to bring back walkable communities and make many downtown cores car-free. In the city of Knoxville, TN there is a large section called "Market Square" where cars arent allowed. It is always very nice and we have markets twice a week!
I would love to live in The Netherlands though. Absolute gold standard for urban planning and prioritizing the community over cars. Dont stop making improvements but never stop being grateful for the wonderful improvements of your country! 😊
@@stephenmorton8017 Factory farms produce most food. There is a large amount of conservatives who idealize rural america as small groups of people who are more likely to be farmers and pool their resources. A very fake idealized version that from my experience is not the case.
Most people I know that live in rural areas are not much different than your average suburbanite or urbanite.
The biggest difference is that per capita rural folks cost their respective communities a lot more in taxes and services than suburbanites or urbanites. This is well known and can be looked up on a per-capita basis. It costs a lot of money to run power lines, roads, water, sewage, internet etc to these small communities. 😂
@@concernedcitizen6572 Don't get your hopes up. Europe, and The Netherlands in particular are going to hell in a handbasket fast.
@@concernedcitizen6572 most people garden for pleasure and enjoy the results and a lot of folks will sit outside on a beautiful morning. not in the twilight zone, apparently. they seem afraid of snipers.
Thank you for continuing to show us the cats of America. 🙂
I've seen toilet blocks larger than Langdon's City Hall! I love these rural videos the most, they're almost like time capsules from a time gone by.
“Toto, I have a feeling we're in Kansas...” 🙃Thanks for the virtual tour of the heartland! I've driven though the state a couple of times-- despite its reputation for being flat and boring, I found some really interesting towns and places there. Sometimes it's just nice to get off the freeway, slow down and enjoy the low rolling hills with green grass and crops stretching out to the horizon. (For a day or so, anyway...🙂)
No rolling hills but I noticed some old, gorgeous and majestic trees.
I agree. :)
Thanks Joe for adding the city halls. They very vastly from town to town and are interesting to see.
As usual you guys never disappoint me. I luv what you do for me. It just makes me chill for awhile & away from the insane world that is persistently driving me bonkers. Loads of luv & God's Blessings be yours.
Joe and Nic, Thanks for the great videos! I really enjoy them.
Thanks again for another eye-opening video, Lord Spoda. Very much appreciated. ❤
Thanks Nic for letting me ride around with Joe. Some fascinating footage. From The Lost Coast
It's great to see your channel grow. You guys do a great job. Looking forward to seeing more from you guys!
Thank you, Aaron. :)
I love quiet towns like preston, many old trees, no dogs freaking out. Nice. Thank you for the cat 👍
I'm a Texan who moved to Kansas years ago. I love watching your videos. It's interesting to hear the different stats you provide. Spotting the cats are enjoyable as well
Thank you Joe for driving around rural Kansas. I used to live in Augusta KS. Brought back great memories for me and I remembered driving through through Preston.
Love these quiet quaint towns.
Thank you, and I totally agree.
OZ// Thanks Joe for another great drive. I LOVE THE TRAINS !! I live in a train town. In Turon- I spotted an Australian flag in a window of one of those old houses !! wow. Love ur work. Hello to Nicole.
All old Chicago Rock Island and Pacific railroad towns. All of the grain elevators are now too small to be served by the railroad and are served by trucks if still in use. Another excellent video, thanks much!
My friend....I can't tell you how much I enjoy riding along with you and seeing rural America. Be safe out there. God bless 😊
I'm glad you're here, Michael!
I visited Lawrence, KS last year. It is beautiful town. Loved. I'm from Saigon, Vietnam.
I spent my teen years in Turon. I lived there from 1985-1990, until I left for college. I know all those towns well! Thanks for driving through. Lots of memories for me.
Love Kansas! Thank you!
I was born in SE Kansas and lived there until I was 10 1/2 when we had to move because of my Dad's employment.
For me, it was the center of the universe and I'd live there now if I could.
I was born in KS, lived in CO, raised in CA. So I love to see videos of my home state. My great grandpa was a successful homesteader in western KS.
I'm from Laverne, OK (30 miles directly north of Shattuck), but have lived about 7 years of my life in Protection, KS. I worked in Coldwater for about 3 years. But I've been on this stretch of road in this video more times since becoming an over the road truck driver than I ever did living in SW Kansas. Thank you for driving around these towns, I'm really only capable of passing through on the highway in a truck. About a month ago I did deliver to Halstead, just east of Hutchinson. It's a very nice town that would be worth checking out.
Yes, Halstead is very nice but the hospital closed down perhaps 25 years ago and that's when a lot of houses were built. We were through there the other week just tooting about and there's some new houses on the southside of town which really surprised me. The best Kansas small town would be Hesston. Major corps and small college and wealthy retirees.
@@keithwiebe1787 Hesston College was the BEST known American college in my Nigerian village of Alayi in Abia State in the 1970s😀. Four of my siblings attended Hesston College.
@@ucukaoma4551 My wife, my 2 sisters, and a brother in law, ex boss, wife's Uncle (he taught there) all had affiliations with Hesston College. Oh, and I think my dad may have attended a year of high school in the early 50s when they had a program for that.
Always enjoy my morning coffee better strolling through the country. Thanks.
The enormous mature trees were just beautiful. ❤
I live in rural North Dakota. So I really appreciate your videos. I try to do some of my own, but my main joy is from yours. You show parts of the US that most people will never see. IT is an important part of the "discussion" we are having as a nation.
Thanks, WS!
Thanks for the fun Video Can’t wait til our next adventure
I live in Toronto and it’s on my bucket list to go to visit Kansas. Thanks so much for this footage!
If I were in a position to leave my job and move somewhere else, this part of Kansas is where I'd consider. Moderately dry climate (good for sinuses), but not nearly as hot as Texas or Arizona.
And relatively mild winters. Yes, it can get very cold but then it is followed by many nice tolerable days.
Awesome, as always !! I agree with you about the lovely old buildings, it's such a shame when they try to "modernise" them with add-ons, so you can't see the full beauty of the building. Thanks so much for another enjoyable video !!😊
Glad you enjoyed it, CL! :)
I really like your videos.....It really gives a chance to see some great small towns that most of us have never heard off..And a lot of these places are small but some can have some great things..I look forward to seeing some of these places in your videos
Peace and Blessings
Thanks for watching!
thank you for sharing this video. im from Malaysia but used to study Petroleum engineering at Univ of Kansas, Lawrence. i was there from 1984-1987. looking at the small towns that u visited, it brings back a lot of good memories during my days there. . thnks again and please keep up the good work. cheers😊
Wow so crazy to see you in arlington grew up there haven’t been back since i was around 8
I am from that area of Kansas and it is beautiful and peaceful. If you’ve not already visited them, there is a town in NW Kansas called Speed, KS which boasts a hot wheels museum and also another town called Gas, Kansas which as a water tower shaped like a gas can with “Gas, Kan.” on it.
Awesome stuff as always man! You should start stopping by and talking with the locals a little bit, get their perspective and out take on these towns! Anyways I would love to do something like this with my channel one days back home in rural Brazil.
Never been to Kansas so I appreciate this video. Arlington looked very peaceful. Some nice architecture too. I like Zenith too! Agree that building a crematorium in a dying town is a great irony! Appreciate and love your channel !
Thanks, Alexandra!!
The video is not representative of the majority of Kansas. There are other videos out there showing what a larger portion of the state and it's small towns are like. My wife and I explored this country, full time, in an RV for 11 years before finally settling in our current (not Kansas) location. This video shows the worst, which should not lead you to believe the entire state is like that. Not even close.
It is great how you take the time to explore these hidden towns thoroughly.
I usually like videos showing the ghettoes of America but this channel is cool because it shows towns that are small and you usually don't see on videos.
Who is doing the mowing in all those dying towns? The grass is not cut to military standards, but there appear to be huge areas that appear to have been mowed recently.
I wondered that too. Maybe the county sends a landscaping crew around periodically to keep these little towns from turning into hayfields. Or Forrest Gump and his riding mower live nearby
Some sleepy quaint towns that are truly beautiful to retire to. Interesting to say the least. Have a great day and safe travels
Fantastic Video I really enjoy watching this channel. Kansas looks very peaceful not to much going on. It must be nice driving around there there is absolutely no traffic that's a good thing!!!!
Yes, I love it. :)
Thanks for showing that CASE tractor in Turon. Over the past years there were 3 different Case tractor dealers there.
I agree, the add-on to the old brick building in Sylvia was definitely an eyesore. They didn't even try to maintain the style. Enjoying your videos, as always!
At the same time, it's easy for us to sit and criticize others' decisions. Yeah, the new addition was a bit garish, but for a small church in a declining small town, making the addition look like the rest of the building might have been literally beyond their pay grade
@@actionsub Good point,
They did the same thing with my wife's church down the road. Same architecture style but added a 60s addition.
Love how you give us so much info on the towns. These videos show how much small town life is not desired by many people nor is the infrastructure of them able to be maintained long term with little to no tax dollars.
The infrastructure in the major city I left is crumbling because of poor city government and the taxpayers are moving to small towns like the one I moved to. The infrastructure is much better here, not to mention crime, schools and city services.
@@LibtardsareFuntotalkto and they're all moving to California
You're joking about the infrastructure, right?
June of 2023 tanker truck crashes under Philadelphia's I-95. A major through fare
Resulting firestorm makes overpass collapse.
Rebuild is expected to take MONTHS.
LOL!
@@willbass2869 The government spent 4.3 TRILLION in 2022 and they can't fix a major highway artery in a couple of weeks...🤷♂🇺🇸
Another good video Joe !!! Good job , heh , you’re getting good at this, Thanks
Thanks, George!! 👍
Thank you Joe, its is so interesting to travel around with you.
Thank you!
Thanks for sharing, a lot of vacant big houses that would cool to live in.
Don't know how I stumbled upon your channel but this is cool. I live in Wichita. The largest city in Kansas. There are so many cool places off the beaten path to explore.
Keep on keeping on.
I have been across Kansas many, many times, mainly on Hwy 54. Never saw any of those towns. Can't wait until you get here in Minnesota.
On a trip to Colorado we went thru Kansas on 70, it was nice but also very run down. Almost impossible to find a local place to eat. This was 2019. Still no better on the way home trying different stops. Thanks, always enjoy these vids!
Hays has lots of places,national or local eateries not far from freeway.
70 west of Salina once out of the hills is very boring. One needs to go hiway 50 further south for a more local flavor of the towns. Goes to Dodge City, Garden City and into Colorado where it follows the Arkansas river. Northeast Kansas is considered the armpit of Kansas. Very nasty snowstorms in the off seasons, etc. Only saving grace is that it cools off some at night in the middle of summer.
Loved the comment, "people don't know what they do", I'll use that. Great video, safe travels... Cheers!
Great video Joe, thanks for putting this together.
Thank you! :)
Much love to Kansas from Australia guys
I'm in the UK and love seeing this side of rural America, keep up the good work...your videos will be historical records in the future!
Thanks, Mark!
I came upon a book from the UK with authentic old photographs of the Henley Regatta from the turn of the prior century.....It was a glorious time for the british I hope they build that time machine for im not going forward Im going back
Love your videos. Currently live in NC. Lived in Hutchinson, KS, from '67 to '77 when I was growning up. Then I joined the USAF and moved away. Have extended family who live on farms near these towns. They live closest to the little tiny town called Penalosa. Been to all of 'em many times. They've all been going downhill since WW II at least. Keep up the good work. Bon Voyage! :)
Thanks for watching!
From Switzerland, thanks for your time and great explanation.
There is something both impressive and noble about grain elevators. Form follows function we hear, and the elevators are the apotheosis of that aesthetic ideal.
Looking at ‘em, each has a certain integrity and generally subtle shifts in line and volume. An American art-form as yet uncelebrated.
I agree. They're imposing and dare I say it, somewhat majestic.
This one was neat to see! A dear friend of mine from college is from Sawyer, and Pratt was the closest “active” town. In 2011 my husband at the time and I went to her wedding which was in held in Medicine Lodge, but we drove in early and stayed at a house closer to Sawyer. We didn’t quite make it over to the little towns in this video - we MAY have explored close to Preston, but we drive down from 1-70 so I am pretty sure we didn’t. Sawyer in 2011 resembles these little towns. Cool to see. We loved the slower pace of life.
A few years before I was in Hutchinson on a separate trip.
All that said, to was neat to see the little towns in between.
Fascinating video, especially if, like me, you live in suburban UK where everyone is within 20ft of everyone else. While there are compensations, I could happily swap places to live contentedly in any of these small rural towns and think I'd gone to heaven. But then, I'm an old fart and would probably fit right in. The slight seediness and emptiness is hugely appealing if you can get the beauty of wabi-sabi. Appreciate all the videos Joe. Keep up the great work. I have no doubt that all will become historically important in the fullness of time. Much success, richly deserved.
Thank you, Barry.
I attended elementary school in Preston. My dad and both brothers graduated high school there. We moved to Colorado in 1965. The last class to graduate there was 1966. The high school consolidated to Pratt which is 13 miles away. The schools’ history in these small towns is at the heart of who these towns were. Thanks for sharing this video!
Lost you guys for some time because of the P C but have you back and sure do like your show all the luck for you both have a good time. Charlie and Cathy from Florida.
I've just discovered this channel! Probably got recommended to me because of searching a few places in Ohio. I'm from the UK and it's a real education to see these less publicised parts of the US
G'day, Thanks for the video ❤
The towns, distressed properties, and architecture appreciation are really spot on, but when you take a few days off, your food reviews and hotel reviews are also very good, and short video's would add a little .
Thanks for hitting Kansas, that was nostalgic
you two are great, thx for Vblog, your new camera is excellent, wtg.
Thanks so much!
Interesting video. I grew up in NYC in the 60s and have always had a positive impression of Kansas through the film, The Wizard of Oz. Thirty years ago I was offered a job in Vietnam and the first thought when arriving here was, “I think I am not in Kansas anymore” given how different everything was. I have remained here in Vietnam all that time and now if I ever had reason to go to Kansas the first thing I would think is, “I think I am not in Saigon anymore!”. Reminded that our impression from this video is in its best light being beautiful morning sunshine and the bright green of late spring under beautiful blue skies. It would a a very different scene on a gray winter day. One little suggestion time and money considered would be for you to go into the town coffee shop (those that may have one) and have a few words with the people living there.
Joe you should have stopped at Carolyns Essenhaus in Arlington. Some of the best food and service I have ever had. Drive out there a few time a year from Wichita just to eat.
I've visited these areas before and always fantasized about cashing out and buying a home but I think it would get old real quick.
A wonderful Amish cafe in Arlington that has an honor counter, and REALLY GOOD food!!
Flint Hills girl here, Greenwood County 😊
I love cruising rural America and see how I can't get out s often as I like to, I thank you for the ride along. looking forward to some more interesting trips.
My wife and I try to do a day trip to small towns like this. I've been on new roads I didn't even know existed 20 miles from where I live (north of Wichita, Ks). Found a Chisolm trail map coming home from a rural town restaurant and decided to go west out of town and ran into the historical markers and maps.
More to come! :)
I love your work. Keep up the good work ❤.
Thank you so much, Lynda!
wirklich schöne Videos von Städten,die kaum jemand kennt und nicht nur die grossen.Dazu gibts interessante Hintergrundinfos,Ich seh mir eure Filme gern an,auch wenn ich englich nicht verstehe.. macht weiter so und alles gute..Grüsse
This is very Quiet... i was thinking if i wake up early morning get some Coffee and cokes....enjoying the Fresh air listening to the Birds....
What a perfect morning would be 👌🏻
Great stuff. Bring back the hotel and jack reviews
I was born in Pratt, Kansas. I lived in Turon, Kansas a portion of my younger years. I always returned there to visit family. My grandparents house is still there. Unfortunately they are no longer living. I've always wished I could buy their house back. It was such an important part of my life.
We played a soccer game in Pratt College in 1983.
Greetings from Australia. Thanks for sharing , Joe.
Thanks for watching!
I grew up in rural Kansas (Clay County) so I really appreciate seeing this! Any plans to come further north? Especially in my area, there's lots of tiny places to explore. If you do, Bala, Enterprise, Industry, Green, Greenleaf, Miltonvale and Morganville are all areas I've lived/spent time in that I think you'd enjoy seeing! (Edit - Clifton, Clyde, and Washington are a few more as well!)
Marvelous area in its own way when I explored it in 1984 I found wild hemp growing wasn't no good for smoking but it made people think ...
I`m, from Chile, Southamerica. Me and my wife enjoy so much your videos. We feel like travelling in situ by those hyden places of the USA...thanks.
That is awesome!
When I was a kid in the 70-80's, Preston was one of the nicer "rural" communities in Pratt County. It's really gone downhill in the past 25 years. I still get my meat from the butcher shop in Preston, but I live in the Kansas City area.
One of my brother's best buddies is the mayor of Turon. Lol!
Most of the towns were founded around railroad stops not the grain elevators. Although, the two things basically became synonymous
Those were some boring towns haha. Always enjoy the videos just cant imagine living in these towns from this video. Everyone likes what they like. Thank you always.
Fun video! Thanks. We are looking to move to Hutchinson. Chandler Arizona is too hot, too many people & expensive housing .
I've been through Kansas on Rt. 70 years ago.
It was an ocean of flatness with occasional dust devils.
I also enjoyed the rolling terrain heading into Colorado on Highway 36 . . ..
The Rocky Mountains were in the distance as I passed through an intersection in "Last Chance", CO.
Then you missed the beautiful golden green Flint Hills just to the south. Next time drive through there.
You need to get off the interstate to see Kansas. Only a small part of Kansas is really flat. Usually in river valleys. I dare you to ride a bicycle through the Arikaree Breaks and Bad Lands of northwest Kansas or the Gypsum Hills area of southwest and south central Kansas.
Very fascinating videos , very sad too.
Hey Joe. I did little more research on turon ks the closet Walmart is one hour by car the cafe that you showed has a buffet on Wednesday nights the closest gas station is 4 miles away
It’s the first time that I have ever been in downtown Sylvia KS. Driven through there on highway 50 several hundred times. Lived 70 miles east of there in Newton KS for 8 years back in the 1990’s. Would travel to Colorado to visit family a lot of times on my days off from work when I had time.
My great grandparents had a farm in Arlington & when my dad was a little boy, Friday nights there would be movies on the side of the building (throughout the summer) that was the Crazy Horse.
Thanks for showing us America's history
It's going to hail fast !!
Land of the free, home of the brave.
Slava USA.
Glory to USA.
We are seeing the usa through your eyes. We’ve loved your show.
If you’re ever looking for other great small Kansas towns I highly recommend visiting Winfield, El Dorado, Manhattan, the entire Flint Hills. Also if you’re ever in north eastern Kansas I highly recommend visiting Falls City, NE. Falls City reminds me of how a city from the 50s would look today.
Enjoy your show as always
Thanks!
What lovely squalid amenities.
Passed through half of Kansas to get to Salina, a year ago. It was cool to see, but I didn’t really have enough time to stop and explore anywhere. It was pretty much a get there and back trip, from central TX and back over a weekend. One of these days I want to be able to explore some of the places where they filmed Twister in the state 👍🏻
I like the pick up truck lawn ornaments