I’m a Michigan native. I love seeing things about Michigan here. You should do one on the whitefish point lighthouse. Connections with the civil war and WW1
Agree with this. Also should do one about Drummond island and how it was a map error after the war of 1812 that Michigan even came into possession of it.
Lighthouses seem boring on the surface, but these structures really represent some of the toughest buildings built in the most inhospitable spots, crowned with glorious examples of the optical technology of the day.
Another Michigan native and I live in upper Michigan. It’s hard to quantify the size of the lakes other then saying they are inland seas. You cannot see across them and behave much more like oceans then one would initially believe. Tides, weather, waves that can top 25ft or more during storms. You can surf in a lot of places along the Great Lakes. There are thousands of shipwrecks recorded in the Great Lakes.
In 2017, a wave was recorded to be 28.8 feet on Lake Superior. Not sure how someone is able to measure a wave that precisely, but I'm not foolish enough to go measure ANYTHING on that behemoth! 🚣 😉
@@Mark-pp7jy NOAA buoys. The lakes are a major shipping channel for all sorts of stuff. There are only a couple industrial sailing colleges in the US one is in Traverse city. The amount of freight moved throughout the Great Lakes is staggering. I have a very good friend who pilots freighters all over them.
Thanks for highlighting Standard Rock! A few facts that weren't mentioned: One of the most impressive parts of the stone light tower is that it's built of large limestone blocks which are tied together with large iron bolts, which are set in pure Portland cement. Because of the bonding strength of the pure Portland, the tower is considered a monolith of stone. A typical stay at Stannard Rock would be 3 weeks on, and then one week of shore leave, if the boat could get out on schedule. Most keepers at the rock didn't stay long. Louis Wilks had the longest service at Stannard Rock which lasted 20 years. He also had the longest continuous stay on the rock at 99 days, mostly due to bad weather which delayed the boat coming to take him off. Along with the rough water, Ice was one of the biggest threats to keepers staying in the light. Some years the light couldn't be opened until June because of the feet of ice built up over the tower from the winter months of freezing spray. The worst freeze up happened in November 1913 when Keepers became trapped as the base of the tower, which was covered by 13 feet of ice when the freezing weather hit. When the Lighthouse Board made it out to the light to take the men off for the winter, it took them a week to break through the ice with steam hoses and picks.
Most of the lighthouses that were sold off are actually still in use as navigation aids, as boats are not expected to rely solely on their own systems. Things can go wrong, and if their computer equipment isn't working they need to be able to fall back on traditional methods. It was in fact a condition of the sale of these lighthouses that the new owners keep them maintained. Being automated and electrified they no longer require constant tending, but they do need just a little looking after.
Thanks for doing a video on this lighthouse! I'm a Michigan native and I enjoy Michigan's Upper Peninsula. Another extreme lighthouse would be St.George's Reef light in Northern California.
Another interesting topic in the upper great lakes region is the elf stations. One in the upper peninsula of Michigan, and one in Wisconsin. They would use extremely low frequencies to send messages to submarines during the cold war.
@@ZanyYooper I had a chance in the early 1990s to get into the E.L.F. facility south of Ishpeming, Michigan. It was quite impressive, and self-sustaining for weeks. It had a machine shop, underground diesel fuel tank/tanks, and tracked vehicles for maintenance where the antenna was layed. The only room we couldn't access was the control room, the computer room was quite large with banks of computers like storage lockers....
A grandfather (great great) of mine and his two brothers were all 3 keepers at Stannard Rock, and then later on the Big Bay lighthouse. Really cool to see Simon talking about it!
3:25 - Chapter 1 - Early attempts 6:05 - Chapter 2 - Construction 10:25 - Chapter 3 - Life in stannard rock light 13:15 - Chapter 4 - The end of an era 15:30 - Chapter 5 - Wrap up
@@joeyr7294 cheers! It's a wormhole I'm looking forward to exploring more that's for sure! I can't belive how much content this dude has out on RUclips!
Hey Simon! I'm a huge fan, an Upper Michigan native, and this was so interesting. Standard rock is such a fascinating piece of engineering and history. You should do a video on the history of the copper mining in the keewenaw peninsula. Absolutely fascinating stuff. Cheers, Simon!
I'm a lighthouse geek! I've been a radio operator at 2 of them, and never met one I didn't like. If you're looking a lighthouse with a really amazing history attached to it, ( they're all amazing, in their own ways ) check out Cape Florida Light, just hollering distance from the south end of Key Biscayne Fla., near Miami. I can guarantee you will not be disappointed!
It's not as epic a feat as this one in terms of construction but I'd love to see a video on cape hatteras lighthouse, it's the tallest brick lighthouse in the US and had to be moved almost 3000 feet away from the shore. Its my favorite lighthouse, very beautiful construction
Fantastic episode! I only heard of Stannard Rock Lighthouse because of its minor plot importance in Jon Bois' epic college football speculative fiction project 20020, so it was really great to experience a deep dive on its history.
I used to live near Saint George Reef Light house in northern California. its built on a reef that sunk a steam paddle wheel boat the same week Oregon became a state. Always cool to hear about the really crazy light houses America built.
It’s beautiful up there. My late mother loved lighthouses, and we spent many a Michigan summer including them in our adventures-yet I still haven’t seen all of the ones in Michigan. It’s on my bucket list for my mom’s sake, because she didn’t get to see them all, either.
Could you pretty please please please do something on one of your channels about Orlando Metcalfe Poe?? He's my favourite lighthouse architect. His life was, pretty awesome, and he's documented sufficiently. Everything from his roles in the civil war to how he ended up as a lighthouse architect. A lot of his lighthouses stand to this day. A lot of his civil war era structures, including forts, are preserved here and there in various national and state parks.
I've actually been fishing at Stannard Rock and seen the lighthouse there. It would truly be a lonely place to live. Thanks for sharing about this little known, but important part of the history of Lake Superior.
I love the idea of a series of lighthouses. You should consider doing a video on the Tillamook Rock lighthouse off the coast of Oregon. Locally known as “Terrible Tilly”, it was built on an island and was subject to immense storms and hardships during construction. A lot of really interesting history there.
Great episode. Perhaps you could do a list episode featuring extreme light houses or ones of historic significance. Bell rock light house is a good one.
Biltmore Mansion deserves an episode as it was DRFINITELY a MegaProject as it required its own railroad spur and blacksmith and brick masonry shop JUST to START construction
I have lived my entire life in Michigan. Im a history NUT. I read stories of my ancestors traveling. (weve been here in Michigan since the 1835) it took a week to travel from Grand Rapids to Cadillac (can do it in 1 1/2 hours now). and that was with "roads". you get into the UP (upper peninsula) and that time was doubled. to GET TO some of these land base light houses took many weeks. quicker by boat. You had to be the essence of a loaner and self sufficient. though there were cases where wife and children went with the light keeper to these "edge of the world" type places.
If that preservation group wants to save this place, they better figure out some type of ferry tour for public access. You run into this dealing with environmental groups often - they want to buy or improve something, then ban you from even seeing it. This would be a huge hit today in the age of selfies and drone photography.
@Megaprojects If you want to do a lighthouse then the logical one should be the Eddystone which predated this by 180 years and was the worlds first open sea lighthouse. Or you could do a biographics on the Stevensons and Smith who are without doubt the greatest family of lighthouse builds there has been
Finally, a Gitche Gumee story that doesn't mention the Edmund Fitzgerald even once. I'm not knocking the Fitzgerald. I'm just pointing out how disproportionate the amount of programming about it is by comparison to other topics owing to the same lake.
You've done some work to elevate your presentation skills. Thank you Simon. No more the bored arrogance of the landed gentry. I might even subscribe, after a few more 'verification' videos. Your subject matter would be a loss, as it was for me for years, I had clicked on the 'don't include in my feed' option. Then done a recent 'reset'
You’ve mentioned it many times on this channel, but is it possible to do a video on DARPA? I’m guessing it would all be classified information but it would be really cool. If not the United States interstate system?
They could of engineered a way to keep the interior warm and dry. Have the entrances be inclined with a right angle and a watertight door at the beginning and end of the entrance hall. Store oil and have an oil burning heater
There's a lighthouse off the coast of Crescent City California that I've flown over several times. I have a photo or two. How it was supplied and manned still makes me wonder.
Still waiting for my saviour, storms tear me limb from limb; my fingers feel like seaweed... I'm so far out I'm too far in. I am a lonely man... my solitude is true my eyes have borne stark witness and now my knights are numbered too. I've seen the smiles on dead hands-- the stars shine, but they're not for me. I prophesy disaster and then I count the cost... I shine but, shining, dying, I know that I am almost lost. On the table lies blank paper/my tower is built on stone/ I only have blunt scissors/I only have the bluntest home... I've been the witness, and the seal of death lingers in the molten wax that is my head. When you see the skeletons of sailing-ship spars sinking low You'll begin to wonder if the points of all the ancient myths are solemnly directed straight at you... No time now for contrition: the time for that's long past. The walls are thin as tissue and if I talk I'll crack the glass. So I only think on how it might have been, locked in silent monologue, in silent scream Anyway, I'm much too tired to speak and, as the waves crash on the bleak stones of the tower, I start to freak... ...and find that I am overcome... 'Unreal, unreal!' ghost helmsmen scream and fall in through the sky, not breaking through my seagull shrieks... no breaks until I die: the spectres scratch on window-slits-- hollowed faces, mindless grins only intent on destroying what they've lost. I craw the wall till steepness ends in the vertical fall; my pail has sailed into the sea: no joking hopes at dawn. White bone shine in the iron-jaw mask lost mastheads pierce the freezing dark and parallel my isolated tower... no paraffin for the flame no harbour left to gain 'Alone, alone,' the ghosts all call, pinpoint me in the light. The only life I feel at all is the presence of the night. Would you cry if I died? Would you cry if I died? Would you catch the final words of mine? Would you catch my words? I know that there's no time I know that there's no rhyme... false signs find me I don't want to hate, I just want to grow; why can't I let me live and be free?.but I die very slowly alone. I know no more ways, I am so afraid, myself won't let me just be myself and so I am completely alone... The maelstrom of my memory is a vampire and it feeds on me now, staggering madly, over the brink I fall. Lighthouses might house the key but can I reach the door? I want to walk on the sea so that I may better find ashore... but how can I ever keep my feet dry? I scan the horizon I must keep my eyes on all parts of me. Looking back on the years it seems that I have lost the way: Like a dog in the night, I have run to a manger ...now I am the stranger I stay in. All of the grief I have seen leaves me chasing solitary peace; but I hold experience in my head... I'm too close to the light I don't think I see right, for I blind me... WHERE is the God that guides my hand? HOW can the hands of others reach me? WHEN will I find what I grope for? WHO is going to teach me? I am me/me are we/we can't see any way out of here. Crashing sea/atrophied history: Chance has lost my Guinevere... I don't want to be one wave in the water But sea will drag me deep One more haggard DROWNED MAN... I can see the Lemmings coming, but I know I'm just a man; Do I join or do I founder? Which can is the best I may? Oceans drifting sideways, I am pulled into the spell; I feel you around me... I know you well. Stars slice horizons where the lines stand much too stark; I feel I am drowning... hands stretch in the dark. Camps of panoply and majesty, what is Freedom of Choice? Where do I stand in the pageantry... whose is my voice? It doesn't feel so very bad now: I think the end is the start. Begin to feel very glad now: ALL THINGS ARE A PART ALL THINGS ARE APART ALL THINGS ARE A PART.
Enjoyed the video as I live in Michigan myself. But not a fan of having to watch a minute and a half long ad when I pay for RUclips Premium so I dont have to watch ads.
Interesting. Would like to see a video on my great, great, great uncle Sir James Douglass of Eddystone Lighthouse fame and his rivalry with John Smeaton....
Hey next PowerBar jackpot winner! You could have saving a national monument to your credit without even significantly denting your stash!!! It could be the "insert your name" lighthouse.
Imagine your GPS failing for any reason at all, and your navigator tells you, "Sorry captain, they turned off the lighthouses last week. Said no one needs them anymore."
I'm having the worst day. Had a seizure on the bus, lost my wallet and then when I get home from the ER, everything wrong in my life starts stabbing me in the dick (metaphorically) and it all seems to be my fault. I'm balling my eyes out and can't do anything about my problems because they're really out of my control. Thanks for doing this Simon and Co. I need to just lay down for twenty minutes and try to calm down. This seriously helps. Doesn't cure anything, but definitely lowers the stress level.
Are you aware of Ripple Rock at Seymore Narrows, BC, the site of the largest non-nuclear explosion, used in an attempt to clear the channel? Interesting reading, if nothing else. Love your multi site programming.
So a grand wouldn't pay for a boat with a bell, but 3 decades later, 10 grand paid for the building of that beacon? Sounds like someone in the government made a bonus.
Any idea on how many labor hours were expended making this project happen? i imagine 450K plus. That would be an interesting stat to add to this already impressive project!
Leave it to Fact Boy to get me interested in a topic I clicked on jst cause i watched all the other videos in his other channels and ended up fascinated with Lighthouse 💡😮
Get 20% OFF + Free International Shipping + 2 FREE GIFTS @manscaped with promo code MGP20 at Manscaped.com! #teammanscaped
Simon we need DTU March 8 1994 Michigan Please make it happen also this light house isn't even nuclear powered lol
Video starts at 1:44
🇺🇸
You need to do one on the Tillamook Rock Lighthouse.
Big deal, you live somewhere, cold and miserable. Yeah
I've heard many Minnesotans say, when they see an ocean for a first time, "It looks like Lake Superior!" So yes, it's huge!
I’m a Michigan native. I love seeing things about Michigan here. You should do one on the whitefish point lighthouse. Connections with the civil war and WW1
Agree with this. Also should do one about Drummond island and how it was a map error after the war of 1812 that Michigan even came into possession of it.
Kalamazoo Baby!!!!
Michigander here
Traverse city here.
@@RussellRiker kalkaska for me!
Lighthouses seem boring on the surface, but these structures really represent some of the toughest buildings built in the most inhospitable spots, crowned with glorious examples of the optical technology of the day.
Another Michigan native and I live in upper Michigan. It’s hard to quantify the size of the lakes other then saying they are inland seas. You cannot see across them and behave much more like oceans then one would initially believe. Tides, weather, waves that can top 25ft or more during storms. You can surf in a lot of places along the Great Lakes. There are thousands of shipwrecks recorded in the Great Lakes.
In 2017, a wave was recorded to be 28.8 feet on Lake Superior. Not sure how someone is able to measure a wave that precisely, but I'm not foolish enough to go measure ANYTHING on that behemoth! 🚣 😉
@@Mark-pp7jy NOAA buoys. The lakes are a major shipping channel for all sorts of stuff. There are only a couple industrial sailing colleges in the US one is in Traverse city. The amount of freight moved throughout the Great Lakes is staggering. I have a very good friend who pilots freighters all over them.
Thanks for highlighting Standard Rock! A few facts that weren't mentioned:
One of the most impressive parts of the stone light tower is that it's built of large limestone blocks which are tied together with large iron bolts, which are set in pure Portland cement. Because of the bonding strength of the pure Portland, the tower is considered a monolith of stone.
A typical stay at Stannard Rock would be 3 weeks on, and then one week of shore leave, if the boat could get out on schedule.
Most keepers at the rock didn't stay long. Louis Wilks had the longest service at Stannard Rock which lasted 20 years. He also had the longest continuous stay on the rock at 99 days, mostly due to bad weather which delayed the boat coming to take him off.
Along with the rough water, Ice was one of the biggest threats to keepers staying in the light. Some years the light couldn't be opened until June because of the feet of ice built up over the tower from the winter months of freezing spray. The worst freeze up happened in November 1913 when Keepers became trapped as the base of the tower, which was covered by 13 feet of ice when the freezing weather hit. When the Lighthouse Board made it out to the light to take the men off for the winter, it took them a week to break through the ice with steam hoses and picks.
Most of the lighthouses that were sold off are actually still in use as navigation aids, as boats are not expected to rely solely on their own systems. Things can go wrong, and if their computer equipment isn't working they need to be able to fall back on traditional methods.
It was in fact a condition of the sale of these lighthouses that the new owners keep them maintained. Being automated and electrified they no longer require constant tending, but they do need just a little looking after.
Thanks for doing a video on this lighthouse! I'm a Michigan native and I enjoy Michigan's Upper Peninsula. Another extreme lighthouse would be St.George's Reef light in Northern California.
Another interesting topic in the upper great lakes region is the elf stations. One in the upper peninsula of Michigan, and one in Wisconsin. They would use extremely low frequencies to send messages to submarines during the cold war.
Definitely would love to see one this!
@Banter Maestro2 grew up down the street (nearly so) from Republic
@@ZanyYooper I had a chance in the early 1990s to get into the E.L.F. facility south of Ishpeming, Michigan. It was quite impressive, and self-sustaining for weeks. It had a machine shop, underground diesel fuel tank/tanks, and tracked vehicles for maintenance where the antenna was layed. The only room we couldn't access was the control room, the computer room was quite large with banks of computers like storage lockers....
I grew up on Ishpeming, joined the Navy, eventually serving on SSBN, so this all hits home. Thank you for what you shared; brings back good memories!
The lake is so large it creates its own weather
A grandfather (great great) of mine and his two brothers were all 3 keepers at Stannard Rock, and then later on the Big Bay lighthouse. Really cool to see Simon talking about it!
3:25 - Chapter 1 - Early attempts
6:05 - Chapter 2 - Construction
10:25 - Chapter 3 - Life in stannard rock light
13:15 - Chapter 4 - The end of an era
15:30 - Chapter 5 - Wrap up
Only recently discovered your selection of channels recently and already I'm hooked. Some really interesting and informative topics!
Man has 13 channels lol you're in for a lot of amazing content!
Welcome to the Whistlerverse 🍻
@@joeyr7294 cheers! It's a wormhole I'm looking forward to exploring more that's for sure! I can't belive how much content this dude has out on RUclips!
You have years of content ahead of you 👏
@@SneezingEagle he definitely produces more content than anyone I've came across on youtube
Hey Simon! I'm a huge fan, an Upper Michigan native, and this was so interesting. Standard rock is such a fascinating piece of engineering and history. You should do a video on the history of the copper mining in the keewenaw peninsula. Absolutely fascinating stuff. Cheers, Simon!
I wonder what happened to that hand-made glass lens from France. It looked like a work of genius!
I'm a lighthouse geek! I've been a radio operator at 2 of them, and never met one I didn't like. If you're looking a lighthouse with a really amazing history attached to it, ( they're all amazing, in their own ways ) check out Cape Florida Light, just hollering distance from the south end of Key Biscayne Fla., near Miami. I can guarantee you will not be disappointed!
It's not as epic a feat as this one in terms of construction but I'd love to see a video on cape hatteras lighthouse, it's the tallest brick lighthouse in the US and had to be moved almost 3000 feet away from the shore. Its my favorite lighthouse, very beautiful construction
Fantastic episode! I only heard of Stannard Rock Lighthouse because of its minor plot importance in Jon Bois' epic college football speculative fiction project 20020, so it was really great to experience a deep dive on its history.
Hello 👋 Susan, how are you doing and the weather there?
I used to live near Saint George Reef Light house in northern California. its built on a reef that sunk a steam paddle wheel boat the same week Oregon became a state. Always cool to hear about the really crazy light houses America built.
I worked on it in the coast guard in the 90s. Thanks for sharing this.
Thank you so much for doing this one! I requested it a little while ago, but I didn't expect it to amount to anything. Awesome to see!!
It’s beautiful up there. My late mother loved lighthouses, and we spent many a Michigan summer including them in our adventures-yet I still haven’t seen all of the ones in Michigan. It’s on my bucket list for my mom’s sake, because she didn’t get to see them all, either.
I've always wanted to go up there. I like travelling places just to see the scenery.
@@rubiconnn Come with, friend. It’s a lovely adventure.
I can't imagine enduring a November gale out there. Feeling the structure rock and be beat upon for days. It took a special breed of person.
Could you pretty please please please do something on one of your channels about Orlando Metcalfe Poe?? He's my favourite lighthouse architect. His life was, pretty awesome, and he's documented sufficiently. Everything from his roles in the civil war to how he ended up as a lighthouse architect. A lot of his lighthouses stand to this day. A lot of his civil war era structures, including forts, are preserved here and there in various national and state parks.
I've actually been fishing at Stannard Rock and seen the lighthouse there. It would truly be a lonely place to live. Thanks for sharing about this little known, but important part of the history of Lake Superior.
Stannard Rock, Tillamook Rock, and the Saint George Reef all have well deserved and fearsome reputations.
Now I want a sequel to Robert Eggers' The Lighthouse but here. The claustrophobia turned up to 11
I love the idea of a series of lighthouses. You should consider doing a video on the Tillamook Rock lighthouse off the coast of Oregon. Locally known as “Terrible Tilly”, it was built on an island and was subject to immense storms and hardships during construction. A lot of really interesting history there.
Thank you for this video, I am a Michigander and take pride in my state and our great lakes!
Great episode. Perhaps you could do a list episode featuring extreme light houses or ones of historic significance. Bell rock light house is a good one.
Bell Rock is a great story, I'd love to see that one too!
Superior is the largest lake by surface area if you exclude the Caspian Sea(which is a lake), but Lake Baikal is larger by volume
Biltmore Mansion deserves an episode as it was DRFINITELY a MegaProject as it required its own railroad spur and blacksmith and brick masonry shop JUST to START construction
Thank you for teaching me something about American history which I had no idea even existed. Thumbs up.
I have lived my entire life in Michigan. Im a history NUT. I read stories of my ancestors traveling. (weve been here in Michigan since the 1835) it took a week to travel from Grand Rapids to Cadillac (can do it in 1 1/2 hours now). and that was with "roads". you get into the UP (upper peninsula) and that time was doubled. to GET TO some of these land base light houses took many weeks. quicker by boat. You had to be the essence of a loaner and self sufficient. though there were cases where wife and children went with the light keeper to these "edge of the world" type places.
Video starts at 1:44
More lighthouses! Love this Simon :D
I caught a master angler lake trout at stannard rock, best fishing trip of my life!
thanks for posting! From Michigan
Very interesting. Hope it gets restored.
A video about St. George Reef Light would be pretty cool.
JAS 39 GRIPEN! Please Simon, i have been asking for this so long
If that preservation group wants to save this place, they better figure out some type of ferry tour for public access. You run into this dealing with environmental groups often - they want to buy or improve something, then ban you from even seeing it. This would be a huge hit today in the age of selfies and drone photography.
Love seeing you cover topic related to Michigan. Keep up the good work
@Megaprojects If you want to do a lighthouse then the logical one should be the Eddystone which predated this by 180 years and was the worlds first open sea lighthouse. Or you could do a biographics on the Stevensons and Smith who are without doubt the greatest family of lighthouse builds there has been
Stannard Rock Light House Bed and Breakfast, I can see the Tee-shirts now, "I survived the Rock" :-) !!!
Check the story of Minot's Ledge lighthouse. Amazing technique back then.
You'll have to check out the Eddystone Lighthouse in Cornwall. It took 4 attempts before a permanent structure was established there.
I adore lighthouses❤
In the summer there's daily fishing charters to the light many record lake trout have been caught near the light
Neat stuff. Never even heard of this place before. Thanks Simon!
Please do a video on the Fasnet Light house in Ireland.
As always Simon, great job
You can take a charter fishing trip out to Stannard Rock for epic lake trout fishing.
On the album "Hope," the band Klaatu has a mini-opera based on a lighthouse keeper who is the lonliest creature in the universe.
Finally, a Gitche Gumee story that doesn't mention the Edmund Fitzgerald even once. I'm not knocking the Fitzgerald. I'm just pointing out how disproportionate the amount of programming about it is by comparison to other topics owing to the same lake.
You've done some work to elevate your presentation skills. Thank you Simon. No more the bored arrogance of the landed gentry. I might even subscribe, after a few more 'verification' videos. Your subject matter would be a loss, as it was for me for years, I had clicked on the 'don't include in my feed' option. Then done a recent 'reset'
I've been watching too much Brain Blaze.
When Simon referred to the 'floating bell' (at 3:32), my mind when to a floating bell of a different kind.
You should do a video on the top ten engineering feats on America!!
You should look at the construction of Split Rock Lighthouse!
Should give them a boat and do some fishing maybe
For a long time I thought it would be a cool job, being introverted. Then I watched "The Lighthouse" 😳
Next time do Minot's Ledge Lighthouse, which was built on a rock below the water most time in ridiculously rough conditions.
You’ve mentioned it many times on this channel, but is it possible to do a video on DARPA? I’m guessing it would all be classified information but it would be really cool. If not the United States interstate system?
They could of engineered a way to keep the interior warm and dry. Have the entrances be inclined with a right angle and a watertight door at the beginning and end of the entrance hall. Store oil and have an oil burning heater
The Point Saint George Light off of Northern California is another light house that was amazingly difficult to build and staff.
Hello 👋 Anna, how are you doing and the weather there?
Sounds a bit like the Bell Rock lighthouse in the North Sea.
I love light houses.
Both the Eddystone and Bell Rock lighthouses in the UK are older and bigger. The Bell Rock is still the worlds oldest offshore lighthouse.
Excellent!
And if that were attempted today, it would be years behind schedule and millions over budget.
When your Light House mate begins to repeat "RedRum," you know its time to leave!
There's a lighthouse off the coast of Crescent City California that I've flown over several times. I have a photo or two. How it was supplied and manned still makes me wonder.
You should do a video on cape Hatteras lighthouse and how the moved it!
Still waiting for my saviour,
storms tear me limb from limb;
my fingers feel like seaweed...
I'm so far out I'm too far in.
I am a lonely man... my solitude is true
my eyes have borne stark witness
and now my knights are numbered too.
I've seen the smiles on dead hands--
the stars shine, but they're not for me.
I prophesy disaster and then I count the cost...
I shine but, shining, dying,
I know that I am almost lost.
On the table lies blank paper/my tower is built on stone/
I only have blunt scissors/I only have the bluntest home...
I've been the witness, and the seal of death
lingers in the molten wax that is my head.
When you see the skeletons of sailing-ship spars sinking low
You'll begin to wonder if the points of all the ancient myths
are solemnly directed straight at
you...
No time now for contrition:
the time for that's long past.
The walls are thin as tissue
and if I talk I'll crack the glass.
So I only think on how it might have been,
locked in silent monologue, in silent scream
Anyway, I'm much too tired to speak
and, as the waves crash on the bleak
stones of the tower, I start to freak...
...and find that I am overcome...
'Unreal, unreal!' ghost helmsmen scream
and fall in through the sky,
not breaking through my seagull shrieks...
no breaks until I die:
the spectres scratch on window-slits--
hollowed faces, mindless grins
only intent on destroying what they've lost.
I craw the wall till steepness ends in the vertical fall;
my pail has sailed into the sea: no joking hopes at dawn.
White bone shine in the iron-jaw mask
lost mastheads pierce the freezing dark
and parallel my isolated tower...
no paraffin for the
flame
no harbour left to gain
'Alone, alone,' the ghosts all call,
pinpoint me in the light.
The only life I feel at all
is the presence of the night.
Would you cry if I died?
Would you cry if I died?
Would you catch the final words of mine?
Would you catch my words?
I know that there's no time
I know that there's no rhyme...
false signs find me
I don't want to hate,
I just want to grow;
why can't I let me
live and be free?.but I die very slowly alone.
I know no more ways,
I am so afraid,
myself won't let me
just be myself and so I am completely alone...
The maelstrom of my memory
is a vampire and it feeds on me
now, staggering madly, over the brink I
fall.
Lighthouses might house the key
but can I reach the door?
I want to walk on the sea
so that I may better find ashore...
but how can I ever keep my feet dry?
I scan the horizon
I must keep my eyes on all parts of me.
Looking back on the years
it seems that I have lost
the way:
Like a dog in the night, I have run to a manger
...now I am the stranger I stay in.
All of the grief I have seen
leaves me chasing solitary peace;
but I hold experience in my head...
I'm too close to the light
I don't think I see right, for I blind me...
WHERE is the God that guides my hand?
HOW can the hands of others reach me?
WHEN will I find what I grope for?
WHO is going to teach me?
I am me/me are we/we can't see
any way out of here.
Crashing sea/atrophied history:
Chance has lost my Guinevere...
I don't want to be one wave in the water
But sea will drag me deep
One more haggard DROWNED MAN...
I can see the Lemmings coming, but I know I'm just a man;
Do I join or do I founder? Which can is the best I may?
Oceans drifting sideways, I am pulled into the spell;
I feel you around me... I know you well.
Stars slice horizons where the lines stand much too stark;
I feel I am drowning... hands stretch in the dark.
Camps of panoply and majesty, what is Freedom of Choice?
Where do I stand in the pageantry... whose is my voice?
It doesn't feel so very bad now: I think the end is the start.
Begin to feel very glad now:
ALL THINGS ARE A PART
ALL THINGS ARE APART
ALL THINGS ARE A PART.
Enjoyed the video as I live in Michigan myself. But not a fan of having to watch a minute and a half long ad when I pay for RUclips Premium so I dont have to watch ads.
I gotta look into lighthouse keeping
I really hope they get the funding for restoration. The government should be paying for that.
And th.ere are still some that say "the pyramids are impossible to build with modern technology!"..
Interesting. Would like to see a video on my great, great, great uncle Sir James Douglass of Eddystone Lighthouse fame and his rivalry with John Smeaton....
You could do the new capital city been built in egypt on your next video
I’m more impressed the U.S. Congress was full of a bunch of penny pinchers. Needed $20k, got $10k. Needed $300k, got only $50k to start! 🤯
Hey next PowerBar jackpot winner!
You could have saving a national monument to your credit without even significantly denting your stash!!!
It could be the "insert your name" lighthouse.
Imagine your GPS failing for any reason at all, and your navigator tells you, "Sorry captain, they turned off the lighthouses last week. Said no one needs them anymore."
I would love to stay a summer there, with modern equipment (starlink/radios) but back in the day I would imagine it being lonely and boring.
The man that was going to start swimming to shore had me crying 😂😂
My luck they would call my bluff on that 24 mile swim. I would have threatened to turn off the light instead.
It's the Alcatraz of light houses
I'm having the worst day.
Had a seizure on the bus, lost my wallet and then when I get home from the ER, everything wrong in my life starts stabbing me in the dick (metaphorically) and it all seems to be my fault.
I'm balling my eyes out and can't do anything about my problems because they're really out of my control.
Thanks for doing this Simon and Co. I need to just lay down for twenty minutes and try to calm down. This seriously helps. Doesn't cure anything, but definitely lowers the stress level.
Damn bruh, stay strong man, I hope you get better.
I wish you well.
I work at a foundry and we have a glass case showing things we’ve made over the last 140 years, that rot iron thing we helped make Apparently
Wrought iron*
Rot iron sounds horrible. lmfao
Have you guys looked into the Washington national cathedral? Those are some massive stones
I am surprised that you implied that radio communication existed in the 19th century, when, in fact, it was not utilized, until 1900.
Are you aware of Ripple Rock at Seymore Narrows, BC, the site of the largest non-nuclear explosion, used in an attempt to clear the channel? Interesting reading, if nothing else. Love your multi site programming.
That was cool.
Love this very clever. I was at first imagining some buider laying the first brick underwater 🤪
I really wish I would have had the chance to live there.
So a grand wouldn't pay for a boat with a bell, but 3 decades later, 10 grand paid for the building of that beacon?
Sounds like someone in the government made a bonus.
Michigan has a lot of lighthouses. Most are more assessable to the public than this one.
Michigan has the most light houses of any state.
Great video
Lake superior can be a wild body of water i live on the north shore in canada
Neat Lighthouse, it would be more impressive if there wasn't Roter Sand
Any idea on how many labor hours were expended making this project happen? i imagine 450K plus. That would be an interesting stat to add to this already impressive project!
Leave it to Fact Boy to get me interested in a topic I clicked on jst cause i watched all the other videos in his other channels and ended up fascinated with Lighthouse 💡😮