@@livelurked4103no I don’t think I’ve ever been in the state. That’s kind of why I’m asking my question. Both Kansas and Oklahoma look kind of “vanilla” on videos I see. I’m asking to see if there is anything cool about the place(s) that people know about. I’m trying to become less ignorant 😊
@@kirktinsley5397the two states have some interesting places. The Kansas Flint Hills is very interesting and the eastern side of Oklahoma is very scenic. The scenery along the interstates can be quite boring at times. Every state can’t be judged unless you do some research and plan your route.
@@kirktinsley5397 Thats an honest question kirk. Winter in ks used to be white from snow almost the entire season. Those days are long gone. We still get some good snow for a change up, but it doesn't stick around like it used to. Spring time its like a different place with all nature's colors. If there's a dry summer, we might lose a little color, but not like in winter. Im in north east ks. Eastern ks tends to have more timber, so we have colorful Fall season. Western ks tends to be less populated, more flat land with large tracts of wheat fields. There are quite a few wind turbine farms in ks (cant remember the stats, but we are one of the top states for harvesting wind.) We have some big city grit if that's your thing or fancy gated communities. I personally like small town & rural living myself. Thats just me though. I've been fortunate enough to have traveled a lot of the lower 48. There are things I like & dislike about everywhere I've been. There are things I like & dislike about ks Its like anything /anywhere else; "You take the good with the bad"
Hi Joe and Nic. We watch almost all your videos (and subscribe) from OKC. My family grew up there in Peru, KS and Niotaze, which is just east of there. When I was growing up and visiting family through 60's and 70's there a great many building on that main street. Many of the houses you drove by where old family places my dad said his grandmother or grand-parents lived. I have some good memories with one that you drove by when you were on paved road right before you got to that abandoned church. Sad to see. The main building you come upon was a grocery store my Uncle Palmer owned. They hold a reunion once year in June at that very nice renovated church you commented on. I was there a couple of years ago but still sad to see and remember what once was. That you'd like some first hand info. Have a great Christmas.
I've been an over-the-road truck driver for 34+ years. I've been all over the United States and most of the Canadian provinces. I got into Trucking in the late 80s because I love trucks and I love to travel and I hate sitting behind the desk in a nine to five job. Trucking over the road is nothing like a nine to five job. In fact it's not even a job it is considered to be a lifestyle change. After just 4 years of being over the road in the trucking industry it gets in your blood. And it stays with you until the day you die. I recently lost my business in March of 2024. The Brokerage company that I used for years suddenly called and canceled my contract. So I just decided now being 59 years old. I was tired of all of the dangerous untrained truck drivers out there. So. I felt that it was time to come off the road. To this day. I'm still dealing with the lifestyle change back to a normal way of life of being off the road. It has been a struggle. Headaches. Waking up in the middle of the night. Aches and pains in my body. But I am glad for one thing. My body has finally began to reset itself. I'm working local now home every night 5 days a week and off weekends. I'm getting more exercise than I could have ever dreamed of. I am happy for that. I said all that to say this. I love your videos. It reminds me of the places that I used to go. There's only one thing I miss about the trucking industry. And that's the exploration of small towns not the big city's of the United States and the Canadian provinces. Traveling back through those small towns like the one in your video you literally go back in time. So much history that has been forgotten. Call it Bittersweet I guess. One day. I will get a rental car and revisit all of those old small abandoned towns that time has forgotten. But I have not. Thanks for your videos. Thumbs up as always. Stay safe Joe & Nic. Wherever you are.
@phoenix I've often thought that trucking would be cool work although it calls out to a specific character. I enjoyed your sharing of this part of your life. Thx. In my 30's I'd travel the roads early AM-5ish (in Canada) & I found the most trustworthy & considerate drivers out there were truckers. Merry Christmas phoenix.
I have a friend who was an Internal Medicine Doctor, went to school like it seems forever, then couldn't stand the politics in the medical field. He and his wife became Trucker's, bought their own Tractor and Trailer, and have been doing this for the last three years. They love it!
Hubby and I have lived in Kansas for many year's we never knew about this sad Kansas town, we live in wyandotte for county very close to Kansas City Missouri thank you for all your travels again both of you be safe
I was just waiting for the zombies, or dueling banjos and when they we’re gonna start playing. Good to be back watching your videos. Spent another stretch in hospital after more complications from my spinal surgery. Merry Christmas to you Joe & Neck, it’s good to see you.
Wow that old gray Chevy that was a classic right there nice, maybe a 52 three or four somewhere around there that was awesome, thanks for another great video Joe and Nick that's cool love it.😊
Another gem from the wheelhouse of Joe . At 7:39 where you see the dogs somebody is feeding them . All those abandoned vehicles , somebody in a metro area would love to get them and restore them. Another example of a town where there are a few affordable jobs in the area so the there is a slow death . The retirees living there are probably collecting their pensions. Keep them coming . Happy trails once again !
You have the gift of showing ideal destinations that provide a glimpse of reality. Thank you for bringing back real Americana, sad as it may be. You are the real deal.
I refer to these small, dying towns as "forgotten America" as well, because that is what they are. When they started dying, no one really cared. Wishing you and Nic Happy Holidays!
All these dilapidated, old dead towns everywhere fell victim to modernity.....one common thread in all your diagnostics points to how devastating the 1980s were....many of these "communities" (hardly ever were "real" towns) just fell apart.. old farmers sold land and/or died, leaving widows hanging on by a thread stuck in place... kids left town..any jobs vanished.. old poor people have no energy or money to maintain what they have, so there's junk everywhere.. whatever remains of the town structure has no money to clear the rubble ..
Hi Joe That was indeed a unique video. Land, roads, abandoned houses, cars, stuff all over for miles together! Only sign of life was a dog and a rooster!
Great video, as always you show us these small towns and show them respect, as you said, so many treasures there, those old cars are something my uncle would love to take and restore. I always wonder if anyone ever tries to find out who used to own them and ask to take them away.
I live in a "self sufficient small Town" Kansas, there are many, many towns like that here. My job takes to them a lot, old country cemeteries are cool.
No, very few self sufficient small towns in Kansas as most are in rapid decline or long past gone. Sabetha is an example of a nice town in Kansas that actually has a decent selection of employers.
Wow Peru's interesting. It was thriving 90 years ago, that old abandoned house, looked like it was built in the 1930s. But some of it looked like the movie Jeepers Creepers!😱 Happy Holidays to you both.🎄🤗
Thanks for another interesting look at a little piece of the country. Having lived in some economically depressed areas of upstate NY as a little kid I think that sometimes people are likely still living in some of the houses you think are abandoned. Sadly. I really enjoy your videos though! Getting to do road trips all over America! Happy holidays to you both!
I share with other fans here for Joe & Nic's videos...enjoy them all so much & look forward to the next one!! In my opinion they are the best!! Wishing you both a Merry Christmas & Happy & Healthy New Year 2025!!❤️🎉
Thanks for the video. I live in Coffeyville, Ks some 27 miles east of Peru. I notice an old 1950 Ford 8N tractor in a yard. I buy (pay about $500.00 for one) and restore them and sell them for $8000.00. Must drive over there soon. Money is to be made from finding wealth in old towns.
Thank you, Joe, for showing us these areas in our country. I never imagined that some places like Peru & others exist. And I don't understand why the States don't demolish the abandoned houses. Wishing the Merriest of Christmases to you & Nic!🎄🎄🎄🎄
I am impressed by the state of the pavement on those unused ghost roads. I wonder how long roads stay good when it does not freeze in the winter. Where i live roads need maintain every year cause the freezing cold makes the water freeze in every little hole or tiny crack. with the result the asphalt cracks wide open
MERRY CHRISTMAS Joe and Nicole! Another fascinating video....I really loved the more prolonged drive round. A very sad and desolate ghost town. These houses must surely have been abandoned pretty much SIXTY years ago. Did they own them and took a loss when they had to uproot and move?
We really love your shows watch as many as we can catching up on the old ones it's really weird that in none of these small towns do you see a McDonald's or Burger King or fast food it's really weird and no gas stations sometimes we sure do like watching them I get to see a bunch of stuff I've never seen in these towns
We need industry and that is all shipped to China and Mexico and NO ONE is bringing it back. But people who do ship their factories overseas should be forced to live there. Instead of living here and being rich and getting tax cuts.
Amen to that. 👊🏼 That's a great idea Robert, 💖 to see Joe & Nick in a snowy, winter location next Christmas 2025. Although the expense and logistics, may be tricky for Joe to organize?🤗
Hola joe and nics!Tantos sitios hermosos para vivir y la gente esta amontonada en las costas y ciudades. Pronto todos estos pueblos seran ocupados y veremos gran progreso.
Fantastic vidio ! Hard to believe a place like that. One house looked nice, and also the church. This really looks like the end of the world. Blessed Christmas for you both, and your family.😊❤
It is possible that folks have passed on, leaving no relatives or next of kin for the property and the town has no resources to expend on cleanup. Sad in many ways. Way off the interstates this time, stay safe.
Or next of kin live far away, and the time & cost of settling the estate for very little reward, if any, means they just cannot be bothered. Or people have moved away and just abandoned everything, no money to fix-up, and what they have in disrepair is too hard to sell off. So cut your losses and start again.
Thanks Joe and Nic, a great way to start the weekend ! To my fellow followers : please keep politics out of the comments, lets not pollute this awesome and enjoyable channel
Hey there, happy Saturday. It's interesting to see the cell phone tower rising up over the abandoned streets and ruined houses. Looks like you could pick up a fixer-upper RV for cheap (or more likely free) there. Hope you find a more festive spot to spend your Christmas 🙂
Is it cold? I thought you remained in the south (being a Texan) in the winter! The mid west can get pretty cold especially at night. Even Birmingham (Alabama) can drop to -7c
Kansas is more like the West, not the Midwest. It hardly ever gets very cold in Kansas any more but the summer temperatures are brutally hot and humid.
Hello, I wonder how far the people in this town have to go to get gas, food and medical. I would love to live in a small town like this so very few people. I wish for you and yours a really great and happy Holiday Season. Take Care
I read a few years ago about a man that was found dead in his house in a really nice part of North Dallas by the postman who was curious of all the mail that had been piling up. He was mummyfied in his recliner. It makes one wonder if one could find a few dead bodies in these old ruins that you show us weekly that have died of natural cause without family or friends?
That’s an interesting thought. We don’t know if the residents here don’t have family and friends checking on them. Apparently, in a big old town like North Dallas, that man didn’t have family and friends checking on him. It took the mailman to notice the issue -and only after his mail piled up to great degree.
Similar story in Prince Rupert BC a couple of decades ago where the poor soul was found after 9 months. No relations but he left $1 million to the local library.
Merry Christmas Joe & Nicole. Great vid, as usual. I'm hoping you share your Christmas vid like last yr when you had it in the Hotel rm with Christmas decor & the yummy fix'ns. I quite enjoyed that. Cheers.
Imagine working all your life, whether farming to help feed the nation, or traveling to work in the aerospace industry, or at the county school district, all your life, only to be rewarded in $650 social security and $250 electric bill. Life in small town America. Vocational education must be brought back to local school district to keep the next generation home IF they want to stay
The joint must have been a rocking rolling place during the Obama + Grandma years. Are you going to stop by Amelia Earhart's home town of Atchison, KS?
Early "barndominium" at 4:00. The town is fading but its setting/location is lovely. A fair amount of Kansas is hilly and has forested areas. Population: Males: 72%. Hoarders: 71%
Joe: Since I grew up outside Wash DC, where there was (back in the day) an "Uptown" movie theatre, I keep thinking that instead of calling the centres of these nearly dead towns "downtown", it would be more in keeping with the facts to call them "the central business district". You can omit "central" if so inclined.
That's an auto restorers dream, but as one gentleman said, you would just make them angry to offer a few bucks for them, income that low you would figure they would be happy with a offer.
I think some of these towns should be converted into parks or put to use for agriculture or green energy and the few people living there should be relocated to a sustainable small city or town in the same state, i do not see these ghost towns to be sustainable at all, they were in some distant past, not anymore.
Would love to know given your vast experience where you would choose to live if price wasn’t an issue and where you would choose to live in real life circumstances. Thank you
Problem with these little towns is the absence of any kind of industry. It would be almost impossible to revitalise a small town that might entice people to relocate with no employment available. Equally as difficult for someone to bring business to a small town with no customers to buy anything. Catch 22. It's a shame, really.
Junk towns in rural Kansas have no real estate value because the population decline is so rapid. No one wants to invest in any town that declines at a 10-15% rate every 10 years, there is zero point.
If those small towns are near big cities, why not build houses and apartments for commuters to live! Not everyone who works in the city would want to be piled on top of one another!
This would be the best place for home care aide to live. Also someone with lots of time on there hands to clean it up. Get a good business in there and it just might bring new people in
Honest question here: is there any part of Kansas that would be desirable to live in? Any video I’ve ever seen makes it look flat and dry and bleak.
Kansas is not flat, have you driven I70 through Kansas?
@@livelurked4103no I don’t think I’ve ever been in the state. That’s kind of why I’m asking my question. Both Kansas and Oklahoma look kind of “vanilla” on videos I see. I’m asking to see if there is anything cool about the place(s) that people know about.
I’m trying to become less ignorant 😊
@@kirktinsley5397the two states have some interesting places. The Kansas Flint Hills is very interesting and the eastern side of Oklahoma is very scenic. The scenery along the interstates can be quite boring at times. Every state can’t be judged unless you do some research and plan your route.
@@gdroege44this is exactly the kind of feedback I’m hoping for. Thanks. I figured these states CANT just have nothing to them.
@@kirktinsley5397
Thats an honest question kirk.
Winter in ks used to be white from snow almost the entire season.
Those days are long gone. We still get some good snow for a change up, but it doesn't stick around like it used to.
Spring time its like a different place with all nature's colors.
If there's a dry summer, we might lose a little color, but not like in winter.
Im in north east ks. Eastern ks tends to have more timber, so we have colorful Fall season.
Western ks tends to be less populated, more flat land with large tracts of wheat fields.
There are quite a few wind turbine farms in ks (cant remember the stats, but we are one of the top states for harvesting wind.)
We have some big city grit if that's your thing or fancy gated communities.
I personally like small town & rural living myself.
Thats just me though.
I've been fortunate enough to have traveled a lot of the lower 48.
There are things I like & dislike about everywhere I've been.
There are things I like & dislike about ks
Its like anything /anywhere else;
"You take the good with the bad"
I will never be able to say enough how much I love these videos. I love travelling, and seeing towns and nature. It's my favorite hobby in life.
Thanks! 😊
They are up to 500 subs. I bet Joey eventually hits a million
Hi Joe and Nic. We watch almost all your videos (and subscribe) from OKC.
My family grew up there in Peru, KS and Niotaze, which is just east of there. When I was growing up and visiting family through 60's and 70's there a great many building on that main street. Many of the houses you drove by where old family places my dad said his grandmother or grand-parents lived. I have some good memories with one that you drove by when you were on paved road right before you got to that abandoned church. Sad to see.
The main building you come upon was a grocery store my Uncle Palmer owned.
They hold a reunion once year in June at that very nice renovated church you commented on.
I was there a couple of years ago but still sad to see and remember what once was.
That you'd like some first hand info. Have a great Christmas.
@@michaelpalmer3540 That was really interesting. Thank you!
I've been an over-the-road truck driver for 34+ years.
I've been all over the United States and most of the Canadian provinces. I got into Trucking in the late 80s because I love trucks and I love to travel and I hate sitting behind the desk in a nine to five job.
Trucking over the road is nothing like a nine to five job.
In fact it's not even a job it is considered to be a lifestyle change. After just 4 years of being over the road in the trucking industry it gets in your blood.
And it stays with you until the day you die.
I recently lost my business in March of 2024. The Brokerage company that I used for years suddenly called and canceled my contract. So I just decided now being 59 years old. I was tired of all of the dangerous untrained truck drivers out there. So. I felt that it was time to come off the road.
To this day. I'm still dealing with the lifestyle change back to a normal way of life of being off the road.
It has been a struggle. Headaches. Waking up in the middle of the night. Aches and pains in my body. But I am glad for one thing. My body has finally began to reset itself.
I'm working local now home every night 5 days a week and off weekends. I'm getting more exercise than I could have ever dreamed of.
I am happy for that.
I said all that to say this. I love your videos. It reminds me of the places that I used to go. There's only one thing I miss about the trucking industry. And that's the exploration of small towns not the big city's of the United States and the Canadian provinces.
Traveling back through those small towns like the one in your video you literally go back in time. So much history that has been forgotten. Call it Bittersweet I guess. One day. I will get a rental car and revisit all of those old small abandoned towns that time has forgotten.
But I have not.
Thanks for your videos.
Thumbs up as always.
Stay safe Joe & Nic.
Wherever you are.
Thank you for this great post.
Here's hoping you get to revisit those places, man! ✊🏻
@phoenix I've often thought that trucking would be cool work although it calls out to a specific character. I enjoyed your sharing of this part of your life. Thx.
In my 30's I'd travel the roads early AM-5ish (in Canada) & I found the most trustworthy & considerate drivers out there were truckers. Merry Christmas phoenix.
I have a friend who was an Internal Medicine Doctor, went to school like it seems forever, then couldn't stand the politics in the medical field. He and his wife became Trucker's, bought their own Tractor and Trailer, and have been doing this for the last three years. They love it!
Probably my fav type of channel. Everytime I m watching feels like discovering something new or adventure or trip. Love from Denmark
Thank you!!
Hubby and I have lived in Kansas for many year's we never knew about this sad Kansas town, we live in wyandotte for county very close to Kansas City Missouri thank you for all your travels again both of you be safe
Ty Joe and Nicole have a Merry Christmas!
Thanks, you too!!
I was just waiting for the zombies, or dueling banjos and when they we’re gonna start playing.
Good to be back watching your videos. Spent another stretch in hospital after more complications from my spinal surgery.
Merry Christmas to you Joe & Neck, it’s good to see you.
good luck with your recovery
An awesome video! These "forgotten" towns are always so fascinating! Thank you so much, Joe and Nic.😊💖
Thank you CL!!!
You deserve so many more subs!
Wow that old gray Chevy that was a classic right there nice, maybe a 52 three or four somewhere around there that was awesome, thanks for another great video Joe and Nick that's cool love it.😊
Another gem from the wheelhouse of Joe . At 7:39 where you see the dogs somebody is feeding them . All those abandoned vehicles , somebody in a metro area would love to get them and restore them. Another example of a town where there are a few affordable jobs in the area so the there is a slow death . The retirees living there are probably collecting their pensions. Keep them coming . Happy trails once again !
Thanks, James!
A fire hydrant @6:32? And the paint wasn't faded, a rather stark contrast to its surroundings.
GOOD SATURDAY MORNING JOE AND NIC!!!👍👍👍🥳🥳🥳👌👌👌😀😀😀😁😁😁👋👋👋😎😎😎🌞🌞🌞🎉🎉🎉✌️✌️✌️🎄🎄🎄MERRY CHRISTMAS AND HAPPY NEW YEAR JOE AND NIC🎄🎄🎄
You have the gift of showing ideal destinations that provide a glimpse of reality. Thank you for bringing back real Americana, sad as it may be. You are the real deal.
Thank you. :)
I refer to these small, dying towns as "forgotten America" as well, because that is what they are. When they started dying, no one really cared. Wishing you and Nic Happy Holidays!
A,lot of America is looking like this town. Sad…
All these dilapidated, old dead towns everywhere fell victim to modernity.....one common thread in all your diagnostics points to how devastating the 1980s were....many of these "communities"
(hardly ever were "real" towns) just fell apart..
old farmers sold land
and/or died, leaving widows hanging on by a thread stuck in place...
kids left town..any jobs vanished..
old poor people have no energy or money to maintain what they have, so there's junk everywhere..
whatever remains of the town structure has no money to clear the rubble ..
Hi Joe
That was indeed a unique video. Land, roads, abandoned houses, cars, stuff all over for miles together!
Only sign of life was a dog and a rooster!
Right!!
Watching from Peru, NY located at the foothills of the Adirondack mountains. :)
Now we wait for someone from the real Peru to chime in.
As a resident of Peru, have you ever been to Lima, Ohio?
Great video, as always you show us these small towns and show them respect, as you said, so many treasures there, those old cars are something my uncle would love to take and restore. I always wonder if anyone ever tries to find out who used to own them and ask to take them away.
I live in a "self sufficient small Town" Kansas, there are many, many towns like that here. My job takes to them a lot, old country cemeteries are cool.
No, very few self sufficient small towns in Kansas as most are in rapid decline or long past gone. Sabetha is an example of a nice town in Kansas that actually has a decent selection of employers.
Have a wonderful holiday Joe and Nic. Looking forward to riding along next year.
Thanks, Peter!!
Always enjoying especially rural towns
Wow Peru's interesting. It was thriving 90 years ago, that old abandoned house, looked like it was built in the 1930s. But some of it looked like the movie Jeepers Creepers!😱 Happy Holidays to you both.🎄🤗
Thanks, Brian!!
You really need to come to Milburn and Tishomingo Oklahoma. Alot of history here and beautiful areas.
I think my mother went to school around that area of Okla. Brown and Nida I believe were also some towns around there.
Thanks for another interesting look at a little piece of the country. Having lived in some economically depressed areas of upstate NY as a little kid I think that sometimes people are likely still living in some of the houses you think are abandoned. Sadly. I really enjoy your videos though! Getting to do road trips all over America! Happy holidays to you both!
Thank you. 😀👍
I share with other fans here for Joe & Nic's videos...enjoy them all so much & look forward to the next one!! In my opinion they are the best!!
Wishing you both a Merry Christmas & Happy & Healthy New Year 2025!!❤️🎉
Thanks for the video. I live in Coffeyville, Ks some 27 miles east of Peru. I notice an old 1950 Ford 8N tractor in a yard. I buy (pay about $500.00 for one) and restore them and sell them for $8000.00. Must drive over there soon. Money is to be made from finding wealth in old towns.
These folks draw fat government checks , $ 500 is a drop in the bucket .
Thank you, Joe, for showing us these areas in our country. I never imagined that some places like Peru & others exist. And I don't understand why the States don't demolish the abandoned houses. Wishing the Merriest of Christmases to you & Nic!🎄🎄🎄🎄
it may be a little scary at nights i guess in this Peru town.
I am impressed by the state of the pavement on those unused ghost roads. I wonder how long roads stay good when it does not freeze in the winter. Where i live roads need maintain every year cause the freezing cold makes the water freeze in every little hole or tiny crack. with the result the asphalt cracks wide open
MERRY CHRISTMAS Joe and Nicole!
Another fascinating video....I really loved the more prolonged drive round.
A very sad and desolate ghost town.
These houses must surely have been abandoned pretty much SIXTY years ago. Did they own them and took a loss when they had to uproot and move?
Where are the 101 people living ? love your videos
Joe and Nic,
To paraphrase the quote about the world,
"This how the town ends,
Not with a bang, but a whimper".
So sad:(
Rik Spector
We really love your shows watch as many as we can catching up on the old ones it's really weird that in none of these small towns do you see a McDonald's or Burger King or fast food it's really weird and no gas stations sometimes we sure do like watching them I get to see a bunch of stuff I've never seen in these towns
Plenty of towns to revive! It can happen! Let's build this country back up.
What 21st century jobs do you think this absurd rural town cannattract?
@yvonneplant9434 takes time sweetheart
We need industry and that is all shipped to China and Mexico and NO ONE is bringing it back. But people who do ship their factories overseas should be forced to live there. Instead of living here and being rich and getting tax cuts.
Joe, next Christmas season put the winter tires on and load some snow chains in the car to deliver the small town Christmas vibe from way up north.
Amen to that. 👊🏼 That's a great idea Robert, 💖 to see Joe & Nick in a snowy, winter location next Christmas 2025. Although the expense and logistics, may be tricky for Joe to organize?🤗
Happy Holidays Joe and Nic 🎄
I moved from maine to small town called kismet ks we love it cheap houses and laid back lifestyle
Great video as usual 🥰🦋 thank you so much 🙏🙏
Hola joe and nics!Tantos sitios hermosos para vivir y la gente esta amontonada en las costas y ciudades. Pronto todos estos pueblos seran ocupados y veremos gran progreso.
Fantastic vidio ! Hard to believe a place like that. One house looked nice, and also the church. This really looks like the end of the world. Blessed Christmas for you both, and your family.😊❤
Thank you, Sarah!!
It is possible that folks have passed on, leaving no relatives or next of kin for the property and the town has no resources to expend on cleanup. Sad in many ways. Way off the interstates this time, stay safe.
Or next of kin live far away, and the time & cost of settling the estate for very little reward, if any, means they just cannot be bothered. Or people have moved away and just abandoned everything, no money to fix-up, and what they have in disrepair is too hard to sell off. So cut your losses and start again.
Oh, I saw an old Bronco 2. I really liked those back in the day, pre Explorer
I would really love to see you feature Leavenworth Ks, especially downtown 10th street and Fort Leavenworth.
I'll put it on my list!
@@JoeandNicsRoadTrip The old Leavenworth Prison is open to the public now. Make sure you see the hours it is open when you go there.
American Pickers need to visit that town.
Thanks Joe and Nic, a great way to start the weekend ! To my fellow followers : please keep politics out of the comments, lets not pollute this awesome and enjoyable channel
lol safe to say your correct!Thx again Joe for the tour!stay safe and god bless..
Hey there, happy Saturday. It's interesting to see the cell phone tower rising up over the abandoned streets and ruined houses. Looks like you could pick up a fixer-upper RV for cheap (or more likely free) there. Hope you find a more festive spot to spend your Christmas 🙂
Is it cold? I thought you remained in the south (being a Texan) in the winter! The mid west can get pretty cold especially at night. Even Birmingham (Alabama) can drop to -7c
Kansas is more like the West, not the Midwest. It hardly ever gets very cold in Kansas any more but the summer temperatures are brutally hot and humid.
Looks like a nice quiet place. I like it
oh wow! thats sad to know this town no longer has life in it!🎉
Most of Kansas is like this.
Hello, I wonder how far the people in this town have to go to get gas, food and medical. I would love to live in a small town like this so very few people. I wish for you and yours a really great and happy Holiday Season. Take Care
I read a few years ago about a man that was found dead in his house in a really nice part of North Dallas by the postman who was curious of all the mail that had been piling up. He was mummyfied in his recliner. It makes one wonder if one could find a few dead bodies in these old ruins that you show us weekly that have died of natural cause without family or friends?
That’s an interesting thought. We don’t know if the residents here don’t have family and friends checking on them. Apparently, in a big old town like North Dallas, that man didn’t have family and friends checking on him. It took the mailman to notice the issue -and only after his mail piled up to great degree.
Wow i never thought of that!
An interesting thought!
Similar story in Prince Rupert BC a couple of decades ago where the poor soul was found after 9 months. No relations but he left $1 million to the local library.
Merry Christmas Joey and Nic
Thanks, you too!
Merry Christmas Joe & Nicole. Great vid, as usual. I'm hoping you share your Christmas vid like last yr when you had it in the Hotel rm with Christmas decor & the yummy fix'ns. I quite enjoyed that. Cheers.
Kansas, Kenya
What's that supposed to mean?
I hate to see this kind of thing happening to small rural towns.
Wow! Thank you for your videos! Greetings from Lima, Perú 😊
The hawk around 3:30 added to the end of the world vibe.
We as a species have a lot of room for improvement
Really like your videos. Keep up the good work.
It reminds me of Draper, SD. Tumbleweeds rolling through the main drag and dead buildings. Almost scary.
Die Post steht noch . Gott sei Dank !
Imagine working all your life, whether farming to help feed the nation, or traveling to work in the aerospace industry, or at the county school district, all your life, only to be rewarded in $650 social security and $250 electric bill. Life in small town America.
Vocational education must be brought back to local school district to keep the next generation home IF they want to stay
How and why do these places always have a post office? There’s no one there. Surely a neighbouring town can cover 100 people?
Mabuhay! From the Philippines
Thanks Joe in Nick road trip.always watching your entertaining and educational video..have a wonderful Christmas..
Can’t be completely abandoned due to the trash cans by the side of the road.
The joint must have been a rocking rolling place during the Obama + Grandma years. Are you going to stop by Amelia Earhart's home town of Atchison, KS?
Early "barndominium" at 4:00.
The town is fading but its setting/location is lovely. A fair amount of Kansas is hilly and has forested areas.
Population: Males: 72%. Hoarders: 71%
I live in Tulsa and have never heard that name before. I've even been to Sedan which is just a few miles away.
I visit Sedan in the next video! :)
Thanks JOE & NIC see your next Video. 🍀
I think some of houses people are still living in. Some of these people have no were to go
Merry Christmas.
You mentioned Indonesia. I was born here. Yes, it is true that Obama spent some of his childhood here.
Ive come back here again to ask if one day soon youd do a Q and A video!
Unfortunately that town is so desolate, even the cats won't go there 😸
I'd go there
The cars, like the town, are screaming to be restored!
Merry Christmas America and a prosperous 2025!
I agree!
Joe: Since I grew up outside Wash DC, where there was (back in the day) an "Uptown" movie theatre, I keep thinking that instead of calling the centres of these nearly dead towns "downtown", it would be more in keeping with the facts to call them "the central business district". You can omit "central" if so inclined.
Well great video.. Do you see people in around those houses That are abandoned..👍🙂🙏
If you were to stop snd ask about those old cars they would tell you they aren't for sale and they'd be pissed that you asked.
Most would be okay with the asking, just be courteous and not a snob
I'd love it if you could find old photos of these towns to give us a comparison of what it looked like then, compared to the present.
Sometimes I think of Fallout 4 when I see almost deserted towns, so much junk to collect.
Literally "gone-to-the-Dogs..."
Always look forward to Joe and Nic every Saturday morning. First
Me too, I've loved these videos for years. I love travelling and seeing towns and nature.
Looks like some nice old "barn-find" cars in there!
That's an auto restorers dream, but as one gentleman said, you would just make them angry to offer a few bucks for them, income that low you would figure they would be happy with a offer.
You should check out the town of Blue Eye MO.
There are trash cans out for pickup. Those houses are occupied.
And lawns mowed within the last few months. A lot of those places look abandoned but aren't.
I think some of these towns should be converted into parks or put to use for agriculture or green energy and the few people living there should be relocated to a sustainable small city or town in the same state, i do not see these ghost towns to be sustainable at all, they were in some distant past, not anymore.
Would love to know given your vast experience where you would choose to live if price wasn’t an issue and where you would choose to live in real life circumstances. Thank you
Problem with these little towns is the absence of any kind of industry. It would be almost impossible to revitalise a small town that might entice people to relocate with no employment available. Equally as difficult for someone to bring business to a small town with no customers to buy anything.
Catch 22. It's a shame, really.
Thank you for brinhing me here
Will you go to Topeka?
We have visited Topeka and have done a video! It’s on the channel. 👍
@ wow cool I will search it, thanks!
Wow, what a sad little town. I guess people just left their homes because they couldn't sell them.
@@patm5594 more likely, grandma died and no heirs wanted to even bother trying to sell that broken down ole house, so it sits there "deconstructing"
@@julindahiggins1582 makes sense
Junk towns in rural Kansas have no real estate value because the population decline is so rapid. No one wants to invest in any town that declines at a 10-15% rate every 10 years, there is zero point.
And eastern Kansas is the nicest part of the state.
If those small towns are near big cities, why not build houses and apartments for commuters to live! Not everyone who works in the city would want to be piled on top of one another!
This would be the best place for home care aide to live. Also someone with lots of time on there hands to clean it up. Get a good business in there and it just might bring new people in
Gen-Zs don't want to live there. Places like this will never attract them.
Housing cost is probably very low because the houses are falling apart 🤓
Not one house is for sale.
That makes me think they've been relinquished to the state in exchange for ends days medical care.