The Dying Towns Of Southern Saskatchewan

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 21 дек 2024

Комментарии • 1,5 тыс.

  • @oh8wingman
    @oh8wingman 2 месяца назад +663

    Saskatchewan is a victim of corporate farming. As the farming industry became more and more mechanized farmers could farm larger and larger tracts. These larger farms no longer required the manpower per acre that the smaller farms did so there was a reduction in the need for the small towns as the people moved on to areas where there was more work available. The same thing is happening in Manitoba and Alberta to the farm industry. In addition, the automotive industry and the building of better high speed roads has helped to kill small farming. At the turn of the last century it might take a day with horse and wagon to go to town 15 miles away and return home. Today, a pickup truck will go 150 miles and do much the same thing. It is sad but true, small farming is a thing of the past.

    • @donskuse2194
      @donskuse2194 Месяц назад +24

      I think an appropriate headline would be, “The Iron Age Hits the Prairies!”

    • @bovellois
      @bovellois Месяц назад +43

      @@oh8wingman each homestead was on its own quarter, so housewives in particular were terribly isolated. I imagine that they didn’t visit neighbours more than once a week for mass.

    • @ickster23
      @ickster23 Месяц назад +55

      This is a reality. Unfortunately the urban masters in BC believe that small farmers should be forced to farm their one or two acres. They are looking at punishing anyone who lives on designated agricultural land and isn't farming it. They believe that having land with the government designation of "agriculture" means it can be farmed. They forget, or don't care, that farming is a business. They also ignore small facts like water rights, accessibility to markets, extreme restrictions and fees for farming, etc.
      If one was a conspiracy theorist, one would think they are maliciously trying to force rural folk into cities. I however believe they are just stupid, arrogant, and domineering.

    • @DanoFSmith-yc9tg
      @DanoFSmith-yc9tg Месяц назад +19

      Lol 150 miles.
      I was putting 1800km per day on my truck at one point moving from Ontario to rural Sask.
      2 full tanks I'd burn in a day, 900km each tank. 18 hour shifts. 3-3.5 days straight one way. Drop off a load and turn around for another, or fly back and get another truck and trailer, depending on what number trip it was.
      I did the trip driving 7 times last year one way.
      5 times west bound, 2 times eastbound. Flew back twice.
      Bought a truck at 340000km, today 18 months later, it has 494000km. Lol.

    • @bradyelich2745
      @bradyelich2745 Месяц назад +14

      Did you see what happened to land prices? $6500/acre.

  •  2 месяца назад +541

    You went through my home town. Frobisher.
    I remember taking pop bottles into Rennie’s store. Mr. Rennie would give us 1 cent per bottle if we wanted cash or 2 cents credit if we wanted candy. And the lady that use to live in the house you showed when you mentioned times being more prosperous, made homemade peanut brittle every Halloween. SOOOO GOOD

    • @TimDawg-ot8jx
      @TimDawg-ot8jx 2 месяца назад

      And oh, those Halloween Firecrackers,BANNED like Our Handguns. Guess we're all Dumbing Down...Less guud people, less upkeep, less interest.

    • @rockhopperadventures
      @rockhopperadventures  2 месяца назад +46

      Thanks for sharing those stories!

    • @davegommer101
      @davegommer101 Месяц назад +23

      @@rockhopperadventures The 2 cents was the deposit that was yours not Mr. Rennie . Mr. Rennie like a lot of corner stores were small time crooks . When i was a little i had this pulled on me by these slime balls too . I lived in Regina 59 to 61 .

    • @IanRankin-y3q
      @IanRankin-y3q Месяц назад

      @@davegommer101 Anyone ever told you you are a sad bitter goof, a$$hole?

    • @diannemcbeth7428
      @diannemcbeth7428 Месяц назад +12

      ⁠Was the store required to take your bottles? No stores do that today so it seems the “cut” was fair business.

  • @forthrightnight
    @forthrightnight Месяц назад +241

    My dad grew up at the family farm near Carnduff. He just passed a week ago at 89. His sister lives in Estevan. This video was timely.

    • @Cookontherun7391
      @Cookontherun7391 Месяц назад +11

      Almost like Dad is sending you a message to let you know he’s content. I’ve heard that when someone really close to you passes on they communicate in different languages. I truly believe that my dad “talks” to me through music. Especially on those days I’m really thinking about him. So sorry for your loss. Love from Alberta.

    • @papermason
      @papermason Месяц назад +10

      My condolences on the loss of your dear father.

    • @papermason
      @papermason Месяц назад +7

      @@Cookontherun7391 When my Dad died, every sunny day, especially walking in the forest near my home, reminds me of him, or if I see an older man fishing. I smile and have tears in my eyes at the same time. I love you, Daddy! RIP.

    • @ultracurious
      @ultracurious Месяц назад +1

      My condolences ❤

    • @markusstewart9298
      @markusstewart9298 Месяц назад +1

      Carnduff! Fast Trucking/General Well Servicing (owned by the same family) are the greatest companies you could ever work for.
      Salt of the earth people.

  • @uj5436
    @uj5436 29 дней назад +11

    Lifelong Sask resident here. There's something about the vast nothingness and desolation that makes it feel so unique. You'll never find a more surreal looking place, especially the skies. There isn't a single day that goes by here without the sky looking like a masterpiece. I'm very proud to be from here and I don't think I'll ever leave

  • @bensanderson7144
    @bensanderson7144 Месяц назад +146

    Vancouver here. We used to take road trips to Saskatchewan to visit my dad’s grandparents in a town that no longer exists - Vawn. Vawn was swallowed up and folded into the Turtle Lake municipal area. Sometimes we’d visit Jackfish lake. There is something special about Saskatchewan. .. I think it’s the unpretentious people.

    • @annv8360
      @annv8360 Месяц назад +7

      Im from PA. As a child, we'd go to Jackfish Lake too, not often but a few times.

    • @jtmachete
      @jtmachete Месяц назад +9

      Vawn still exists as a small village. There is a great steak pit restaurant in the basement of an old convent that has been turned into the local hotel

    • @annv8360
      @annv8360 Месяц назад +2

      @@jtmachetemy folks knew someone who would rent us a cabin north of Cochin I think. Is Vawn the community that had the brick RC church with a funny name?

    • @jtmachete
      @jtmachete Месяц назад +2

      @@annv8360 yes, St. Hippolyte RC church

    • @chloescarf4097
      @chloescarf4097 Месяц назад +2

      @@annv8360 I'm from P.A. too. almost 5 decades ago., I dream of taking a road trip and seeing it one more time.

  • @absunshine6906
    @absunshine6906 Месяц назад +349

    Nothing better than listening to the birds in a Saskatchewan field.

    • @therainforest4314
      @therainforest4314 Месяц назад +7

      I couldn't agree more. :)

    • @stevedemoe1359
      @stevedemoe1359 Месяц назад +4

      Sounds amazing😊👍

    • @bradyelich2745
      @bradyelich2745 Месяц назад +3

      Except the recoil of the 12 gauge and birds dropping for supper.

    • @StevenJeffrey-h2g
      @StevenJeffrey-h2g Месяц назад +4

      I remember the sound of crickets at night, so soothing
      but you can't leave porch light on or you get literally thousands of them hopping up

    • @davidrussell8795
      @davidrussell8795 Месяц назад

      @@absunshine6906 and laying down in tge feikd naked all by yourself, and playing with your feel goods!

  • @Noah1997callahan
    @Noah1997callahan Месяц назад +174

    My town is Ituna. Was so lively in the 60s, cruising the streets listening to the Beatles and Beach Boys. Those days are long gone. Bar hotel pretty much everything gone.

    • @olympian3
      @olympian3 Месяц назад +11

      I’m from Calgary but my mom’s dad grew up in Fort quappelle. Raised my mom and her siblings here south of calgary but went back in the 90s and had a farm just south of balcarres. He just passed away last year sadly I was just out there last year and balcarres fort quappelle katepwa all pretty quiet even compared to twenty years ago I will miss my childhood summer trips out there to see him

    • @cleverusername6233
      @cleverusername6233 Месяц назад +5

      I'm from just down the road in Yorkton. Been in Ituna many times working with my dad and during hunting season!

    • @RealBoiJare
      @RealBoiJare Месяц назад +4

      I’m from Melville. Ituna always had a really cold rink when I played hockey games there

    • @Noah1997callahan
      @Noah1997callahan Месяц назад +2

      @ new one should be up and running here soon if it isn’t already

    • @wintertime331
      @wintertime331 Месяц назад +4

      Yep , my dad had a farm by Ituna , right by the Catholic Church that is still standing to this day about 8 km out of Ituna by the hall ( if that is still standing ) we lived in Ituna for a few years 69-71.

  • @jackfishcampbell6745
    @jackfishcampbell6745 Месяц назад +163

    Souris is for the Souris River ( French for mouse ) . It starts in Saskatchewan, then flows down into North Dakota through Minot , and then up through Manitoba , where it empties into the Assiniboine River not too far from Wawanesa .

    • @hms1
      @hms1 Месяц назад +8

      French settlements sprang up along the railway generations ago, many still remain today.

    • @Rick-S-6063
      @Rick-S-6063 Месяц назад +10

      I took French in the first two grades of high school. It seems like souris is pronounced soo-ree. But then, that was over 50 years ago, and the memory may be playing tricks.

    • @jackfishcampbell6745
      @jackfishcampbell6745 Месяц назад +6

      @Rick-S-6063 Not in Manitoba , it's suriss or souriss . Also , the death of many towns usually follows the loss of the hotel , where you can drink and buy beer , and the curling rink , which is also a gathering social spot .

    • @nanettesteward6632
      @nanettesteward6632 Месяц назад +1

      So creepy these places just abandoned?

    • @bcbconklin
      @bcbconklin 26 дней назад +1

      That river just misses being famous by not going south. Now, only 3 Canadian waters run to the Gulf
      via the Missouri: Milk River, Poplar River and the Big Muddy Creek.

  • @malisinimicus4358
    @malisinimicus4358 Месяц назад +125

    My Mom grew up in MacNutt SK.We would go there in summer and for Christmas quite often to see my Grandma. The summers were hot but it would thunder and rain and there would be dew on the tall grass as i walked over to my best friends place. I thought it was the best place on earth as a kid and wanted all of my aunts and uncles to move there. The people were truely awsome and so friendly. I believe this is where the term "salt of the earth" must have came from! I miss it

    • @annonymoushuman25
      @annonymoushuman25 Месяц назад

      Hello. I almost bought a home in Mac Nutt SK last year. Lived in roblin manitoba. I know the area well.

    • @zukikev
      @zukikev 29 дней назад +1

      Had hamburger soup for lunch at the McNutt bar in 2007, was the best I've ever had.

  • @Geoff240ti
    @Geoff240ti Месяц назад +157

    Estevan resident here. For 2 years I delivered Old Dutch Potato Chips down Highway 18. Gladmar, SK to Gainsborough, SK and all those small towns you listed between. The people I met and their towns were all wonderful. Really enjoyed your take despite still being here. Thanks for passing through.

    • @bradyelich2745
      @bradyelich2745 Месяц назад

      Fuck you for not visiting Kenaston.

    • @beyondfossil
      @beyondfossil Месяц назад +4

      Which is your favorite Old Dutch flavor? Mine is Ketchup followed by Dill Pickle.

    • @Geoff240ti
      @Geoff240ti Месяц назад +7

      @beyondfossil Old Dutch Dutch Crunch Jalapeno & Cheddar Kettle Chips, but if you're asking classic it would be sour cream and onion :).

    • @mayerzy
      @mayerzy Месяц назад +3

      ​@@beyondfossilMexican Chilli is the best. 🌶👌

    • @kyleklukas4808
      @kyleklukas4808 Месяц назад +3

      Nice drive there . Well if there's no blizzard , and no tornados.

  • @abctrucker8601
    @abctrucker8601 Месяц назад +11

    American truck driver here. Just did my first long haul run to Edmonton, AB, from St. louis MO. I crossed at the North portal SK. Saskatchewan and Alberta were beautiful but truly rural and unpopulated. people here in the states think they live in the country but haven't been to the plains of southern Canada, LOL. I liked that there wasn't really any traffic till I arrived in Edmonton. although the long open roads kind started getting to me., like a hour of driving felt way longer because the scenery doesn't change much for hundreds of miles. few stretches of road in the states are like that. maybe I-10 in western Texas.
    anyways thats definitly the farthest ive driven in a truck yet.

    • @ALuimes
      @ALuimes Месяц назад +1

      There's plenty of traffic between Calgary and Edmonton on AB 2, and it's a freeway.

    • @sadee1287
      @sadee1287 29 дней назад

      Scenery changes from Calgary to Edmonton. Mountains and foothills disappear and land become parkland. Guess you must have a ton of stories to tell of all the landscapes you've been through. Cheers.

  • @brendaz6794
    @brendaz6794 Месяц назад +12

    Thanks! I’m originally from Yorkton. Love the historic journey through time. 😊

  • @rhondahoughton790Canada
    @rhondahoughton790Canada Месяц назад +37

    I grew up in south west Saskatchewan in the 70’s and 80’s. So many of those towns and vehicles bring back so many memories.

    • @lesterdiamond6190
      @lesterdiamond6190 Месяц назад

      Ever party up at Cypress Hills Prov Park? Lotta memories from those days myself.

  • @Carolina-uf2ip
    @Carolina-uf2ip Месяц назад +55

    Born raised and still live in Saskatchewan. I’d never heard of most of these towns but do remember some. My grandfather was a grain buyer and ran some of these elevators

    • @DrewNagus
      @DrewNagus Месяц назад +4

      My dad was to, for the sask wheat pool in fillmore saskatchewan for 40 years

  • @stephandoyle7525
    @stephandoyle7525 Месяц назад +4

    My father grew up in Saskatchewan and I had cousins who lived down south near some of the towns you passed through. A few years ago I went on a Cross Canada road trip and made a point to drive through the southern desolate part you showed. It has a haunting nostalgic beauty that's hard to describe until you see it. Thanks for making this video. I really enjoyed it.

    • @rockhopperadventures
      @rockhopperadventures  Месяц назад +1

      You nailed it! There's a haunting beauty that one must experience by being there. Thanks for watching and your comment!

  • @AlexandraGem
    @AlexandraGem Месяц назад +68

    This video makes me nostalgic for times spent as a child at the family farm outside of Central Butte/SK in the 90’s and early 2000’s. Was in our family for many many decades - eventually was sold off in the 2010’s, and the last stragglers of our farming family moved to the cities. Looking back now - those were special, memorable times. 🙏🏻❤️🌾

  • @gsatiucla5139
    @gsatiucla5139 Месяц назад +18

    I know a very hardworking old man named Milton. He told me his family used to own a large farm in Saskatchewan. They moved to Alberta because of the drought decades ago. Sad. Thanks for the video.

  • @Jim-ku6ry
    @Jim-ku6ry Месяц назад +85

    Back in the late 70s I travelled from Toronto out to Elrose Saskatchewan to drive grain trucks for the harvest. Friend's of my parents had 5 or 6 sections out there. Great experience for me. Really nice folks. Hard work and long hours hauling grain to the elevators day and night. One of those once in a lifetime experiences

    • @gamerjorts
      @gamerjorts Месяц назад +5

      I used to live in Elrose a long time ago, I probably knew your friends parents.

  • @bobstuart2638
    @bobstuart2638 2 месяца назад +96

    During initial settlement, a standard farm was 140 acres. Even a big family couldn't handle any more. Then came the threshing machine, and tractors, and the bigger farms kept buying the small ones, only using the land and the grain bins.

    • @jimbaumann6579
      @jimbaumann6579 2 месяца назад +32

      160 acres …

    • @davidrussell8795
      @davidrussell8795 Месяц назад +16

      And that was the beginning of the end for the family farm! And the boomers headed for the big city jobs,and only a few stuck around!
      You can't make a living om 160 acres of land,has to be 1000 acre or more,up into 20,000 acres!

    • @iam1smiley1
      @iam1smiley1 Месяц назад +5

      ​@@davidrussell8795 I leased my farm land for $10k a year and lived in the house and had a huge quonset to could put a big tractor trailer 52' and close the door. It paid all my bills for someone else to "mow my lawn" and it was fun to watch the crops grow. Just darn cold...wow!

    • @tays8306
      @tays8306 Месяц назад

      ​@@davidrussell8795
      Yup, neighbours are around the 26,000 mark i believe.

    • @Chris_Garman
      @Chris_Garman Месяц назад +2

      160 acres.

  • @SeanEpoc
    @SeanEpoc Месяц назад +48

    i rarely watch an entire 20 minute video, well done! :D i enjoyed that

  • @valtraone
    @valtraone Месяц назад +5

    I have very fond memories of this part of Saskatchewan, as I worked on Freddie Streit's harvest crew in 1984 - starting out in Vernon, Texas. He had 6 combine harvesters and 6 trucks, and I, as a trucker, got to visit many of these now abandoned towns and elevators.
    We actually stayed (in our trailer homes) and cut crops at Torquay, which was so amusing to me as through the 1970's my family would holiday every summer in the seaside town of Torquay (known affectionately as the English Rivera) on the South coast of England !
    Saskatchewan left a lasting impression on me - the very friendly people, wide open spaces, the heat and dust of our work. It was an amazing experience, of which I am very grateful.
    Thank you so much for posting this video, and bringing back to me memories of one of the great experiences of my life.

  • @lefno498
    @lefno498 Месяц назад +17

    when i was a kid growing up in southern sk i used to ride my dirt bike to old abandoned homesteads, lots of them looked like whoever lived there just left ... many were still basically fully furnished.

  • @arquivoyager2010
    @arquivoyager2010 2 месяца назад +63

    Despite the empty towns and collapsing buildings, the region seems to be very busy and the birds and animals around the lake are amazing !

    • @donovanfraser9009
      @donovanfraser9009 2 месяца назад +3

      You went through my hometown of Carnduff. I really appreciated seeing it and other towns like it, as seen from someone with an outside perspective.

  • @Bobcagon
    @Bobcagon 2 месяца назад +202

    1896-1905…Settlement policy, set by the federal government, the Canadian Pacific Railway, the Hudson's Bay Company and associated land companies encouraged immigration. The key event was the decision to emulate the American Homestead Law by offering, at no cost, 160 acres of farmland to any man over 18 (or to a woman head of family) who settled there. Many Canadian citizens today identify with Saskatchewan as where their family started from over 100 years ago. I’m one of them…..Gravelbourgh.

    • @Rhdlm-yo1tv
      @Rhdlm-yo1tv 2 месяца назад

      Ah the spoils of racial theft 👍

    • @l.5832
      @l.5832 Месяц назад +14

      Mine too, from Mullingar ....now a 'ghost town'.

    • @Yowzoe
      @Yowzoe Месяц назад +13

      Wow. I just read the Wikipedia article on “Homestead Acts”, a real eye-opener for me!

    • @chippychick6261
      @chippychick6261 Месяц назад +16

      M y grandfather and grandmother lived in a literal shack for few years(1910+) near Dollard with their quickly growing number of children. I’ve seen the photo. Smaller than today’s desired “tiny homes”. They came up from N. Dakota.

    • @daveolafsson2017
      @daveolafsson2017 Месяц назад +7

      My grandmother arrived from Scotland as an 18 year old girl in 1921.

  • @Cookontherun7391
    @Cookontherun7391 Месяц назад +60

    Saskatchewan is so beautiful. It is sad that with mechanization comes death of towns. Thanks for sharing. Love from Alberta.

  • @sophiab7368
    @sophiab7368 Месяц назад +21

    I lived in Southwestern Saskatchewan as a kid in the mid-90s, and it looks like not much has changed. Feels like time has stood still there.

    • @davidrussell8795
      @davidrussell8795 Месяц назад

      @@sophiab7368 as are most small towns in Canada and tge USA! And a lot are dead or dying!

  • @bonnieboulter9486
    @bonnieboulter9486 Месяц назад +17

    Yup. Especially a Meadow Lark. Thanks for your kind words about Sask. Those BIG skies. Where you can see a storm approaching for miles...

    • @jackfishcampbell6745
      @jackfishcampbell6745 Месяц назад

      @bonnieboulter9486 I used to have cousins living in Lampman Saskatchewan not too far from Estevan . My uncle used to say that he liked living there because he liked to see what was coming down the road . I live in Winnipeg and feel much the same about Manitoba .

  • @matterhaz2980
    @matterhaz2980 Месяц назад +36

    Thanks for this video. I live was born and raised in Yorkton Saskatchewan. My family's been in Saskatchewan since 1920s and immigrated to Mikado Saskatchewan to farm. The log mud house they built still is lived in on the property today. I've travelled thousands of kilometres of abandon Sask roads there are endless time capsules of towns everywhere. Also that's a gopher not a ground squirrel!

  • @rhondathieson1156
    @rhondathieson1156 Месяц назад +45

    Great video, I’m an Albertan living many years in Edmonton. I come from southern Alberta originally and know little about our neighbouring province of Saskatchewan. I didn’t realize how empty the southern part of the province is, my husband has great memories of fishing up in the Canadian Shield of Northern Saskatchewan. A stunningly beautiful and untouched area with the most pristine lakes ever. I have heard many good things about Saskatchewan in general. Interesting how different one province is from the other.

    • @ianstuart5660
      @ianstuart5660 Месяц назад +7

      Yes, but that Canadian Shield landscape goes all the way into Southern Ontario. Less than 100 miles from Toronto!

    • @rhondathieson1156
      @rhondathieson1156 Месяц назад +5

      @@ianstuart5660 It’s truly massive isn’t it!

    • @ianstuart5660
      @ianstuart5660 Месяц назад +8

      @rhondathieson1156
      Yes, massive, beautiful, and so much water, wildlife and resources! Oh, and snow and ice!
      😄😄❤️

    • @rhondathieson1156
      @rhondathieson1156 Месяц назад +4

      @@ianstuart5660 Gotta love what nature offers us up here!♥️

    • @sadee1287
      @sadee1287 29 дней назад

      @@rhondathieson1156 Except for the mosquitoes, deer fly and ticks. Spent a night out in the open in Jeannette Lake at camp. Only thing to eat was half burnt/half raw bannock and I was nearly eaten alive all night long by skeeters. Gave the phrase "roughing it" a whole new meaning for me.
      I like camping, but I need a decent camper to enjoy it.

  • @donskuse2194
    @donskuse2194 Месяц назад +39

    On summer holidays my family and I would travel from east-central Alberta, first heading south on Highway 21 and on down to the Trans-Canada Highway. I always loved that moment when we reached the crest of a hill and suddenly the Prairies spilled out before us. We were on our way to Calgary and Banff/Lake Louise and yet that moment always stood out more in my memory than first seeing the Rockies rising in the west beyond Calgary.
    Times change and next generations find their way to places completely opposite to the big sky country. I lived for five months in one of the densest cities in the world - Manila, Philippines - and yet few places, if any, have impacted me more than the Canadian prairies. I wish I could drive over that crest in the hill every single day, my heart full of possibilities and my eyes full of endless hope.

    • @marcysmith2851
      @marcysmith2851 Месяц назад +4

      @@donskuse2194 I totally understand that “crest of the hill” feeling! Experienced it myself many times.

    • @bonnieboulter9486
      @bonnieboulter9486 Месяц назад

      Yup. Me top almost every year from BC

    • @Rick-S-6063
      @Rick-S-6063 Месяц назад

      Some family friends from Toronto drove the Trans-Canada Highway to BC back in 1968. I remember them saying the mountains came into view a day or two before they actually got right up to them.

    • @bonnieboulter9486
      @bonnieboulter9486 Месяц назад +1

      Chuckle. I drive between BC and the Alberta, Sask prairies every year. It doesn't take 2 days. Once spotted, the Rockies are only about an hour on the TransCanada. You can see the mountains from Calgary, Ab a city right on the prairie. It's about an hour to the Rockies from there.

    • @Rick-S-6063
      @Rick-S-6063 Месяц назад

      @@bonnieboulter9486 I'll take your word on it, but keep in mind 1968 was many years ago and I was 13 at the time. And, time does play tricks with the memory. ;)

  • @ppahl2166
    @ppahl2166 Месяц назад +21

    Manitoba is the same - as soon as the grain elevators were torn down, it changed the prairies forever in a sad way.

    • @johntomiski5719
      @johntomiski5719 Месяц назад +2

      They paid the highest taxes in their town. So the grain companies tore down the elevators to save money. But sad to see them go.

    • @farmersdotter7
      @farmersdotter7 Месяц назад +3

      @@johntomiski5719 As usual it’s more complicated than that. The railways realized that they could shut down hundreds of spur lines to small town elevators, save a bunch of money by forcing farmers to truck grain long distances to super terminals, transfer the wear and tear of the traffic on the railways to the roads and hence the taxpayer and it was win for them, lose for the farmer and taxpayer who picks up the tab for road repair due to increased heavy traffic. What used to be a short trip from the farm to the local elevator is now a trek in a Super B on secondary and main roads.
      So the grain companies taxes were killed by the closing of the spur lines by the railway who is laughing all the way to the bank. As usual, the farmer gets screwed and it was another nail in the coffin of the small town. Lose your grain elevator and you lose so much more.

  • @DanoFSmith-yc9tg
    @DanoFSmith-yc9tg Месяц назад +191

    I just moved to rural south east Saskatchewan from the Greater Toronto Area.
    I absolutely love how empty it is.
    Never have to deal with traffic again. That alone makes it worth it.
    I went from Hamilton, approx. 700000 people to Stockholm Sask that has 300 people. Bast decision of my life.

    • @davidrussell8795
      @davidrussell8795 Месяц назад +9

      @DanoFSmith-yc9tg :Have you ever spent the weekend out on your boat,blasting down the Detroit river,with the wind in your face,the sun burning and glistening off the water? And dun glare in your eyes!
      When I was young I did,and when I got home I was windburnt and sunburnt,and it's actually exhausting!
      But it was a great time!
      So,the prairies are like being on the river, getting windburnt,and sunburnt,and the wind NEVER STOPS BLOWING !
      But the rents a lot cheaper!
      But buy a case of chapstick,and skin lotion!
      The other thing about rural life is the loneliness, all by yourself or with your sweet heart!
      And there's not much to do!

    • @tedlivermore6955
      @tedlivermore6955 Месяц назад +14

      Yep GTA gotta be the worst traffic in the world

    • @rhondahoughton790Canada
      @rhondahoughton790Canada Месяц назад +16

      Welcome to Saskatchewan

    • @mbogucki1
      @mbogucki1 Месяц назад +12

      Sweet lord. I live in Hamilton and think its small potatoes with nothing to do past 9pm. I am actively trying to get back into Toronto where there is life and people. I can't even the imagine the sheer boredom I would experience in a village of 300 people. 😂
      To each their own.

    • @qxezwcs
      @qxezwcs Месяц назад +3

      @@tedlivermore6955I see you’ve never been to Brazil or Philippines. 👍🏼

  • @Jewelmind
    @Jewelmind Месяц назад +87

    This is so sad to see this beautiful land empty. I imagine all the great farming that was done

    • @Katepwe
      @Katepwe Месяц назад +27

      The farming is still great. The farms are just bigger than years ago…..ours is about 5000 acres which is close to average here.

    • @jimmiematho8082
      @jimmiematho8082 Месяц назад +10

      No they're not , I grew up on a Farm by Lumsden and I went back a couple of years ago and half of the fields that I remember my grandparents and their neighbors had under seed are now just Fields it was so depressing I couldn't actually believe it ​@@Katepwe

    • @Katepwe
      @Katepwe Месяц назад +13

      @@jimmiematho8082 I’m an active farmer east of Regina, everything is just fine here.

    • @jimmiematho8082
      @jimmiematho8082 Месяц назад +6

      @Katepwe how many farms still have animals though... how many mixed Farms are there?
      In the 70s and the 80s every single Farm was a mixed Farm.
      You saw cattle grazing in all the fields as you drove down the highway now you hardly see any cattle.
      🤷‍♂️

    • @iam1smiley1
      @iam1smiley1 Месяц назад +7

      Everything is fine with farming, I was near Blaine lake 45 mins north of Saskatoon. Farms have just gotten bigger in order to afford farming. 160 acre quarter section like mine was considered a small hobby farm, I leased the farmland out for $10k/yr....it covered all my bills to live there for someone else to "mow my lawn" 😂❤
      The reason the small towns are dying is because there was a town every 15-30 mins apart....it was the distance a horse could take grain in a day to the train elevator. The trucks today can go further, so most people now live closer to Saskatoon or Regina.
      I lived in BC, Alberta, Saskatchewan and now New Brunswick. I have many fond memories of Saskatchewan and wished I would've stayed in many ways but dam it's coldest place I ever lived, you need big brass balls to live there in the winter!!!!

  • @davidrussell8795
    @davidrussell8795 Месяц назад +48

    Look the hydro's still hooked up!
    Your dream home on the prairies awaits you!
    No construction permits required!
    Just needs a few windows and 50 gal of sealer paint! Even comes with a viewing platform to watch the sunsets on real exciting prairie days! Just 76 miles to town!😊
    That'd be a realtors listing!

    • @owenjbrady
      @owenjbrady Месяц назад +5

      most places just call it electricity not hydro we don't have any hydro plants here 😂

    • @davidrussell8795
      @davidrussell8795 Месяц назад

      @owenjbrady : When a company in Ontario,or other where sets up a generator using a waterfall ,such as Niagra falls,using water to turn the turbines, it often referred to as hydro power!
      So it's called either or! But my mother's electricity was a water and electricity bill,but I believe it was considered a hydro bill!
      Since it's water,that turns the paddle wheels in a generator!
      Now if you are familiar with hydraulic rams,same principle, some fluid is used to move or propell a device!
      So..there! Llooll.

    • @andrewfast6530
      @andrewfast6530 Месяц назад

      Yeah but its coal and NG in sask​ mostly@davidrussell8795

    • @Rick-S-6063
      @Rick-S-6063 Месяц назад +1

      That's right. Sell the sizzle, not the steak.

    • @Chris_Garman
      @Chris_Garman Месяц назад

      @@owenjbrady Gardner Dam slip your mind?

  • @annv8360
    @annv8360 Месяц назад +33

    My Norway-born grandparents came in the early 20s, bought a farm near Bromhead. Granpa did all he could to hang on during the Depression, but finally he moved his family up to the Weldon area.

  • @jasabr
    @jasabr Месяц назад +8

    I grew up in
    Saskatchewan. My mom stiĺl lives there, can't wait to see her at
    Christmas. Watching your video just brought back so many memories.

  • @CalistaRea
    @CalistaRea Месяц назад +7

    Born and largely raised in Eatonia, Saskatchewan. Have family in Kindersley area with one cousin still on the original family homestead. Every place I've lived since leaving has had to offer an expanse of sky from my window. I like the straight forward talk and kind, country ways of the folks who choose to live in the prairies and in particular, Saskatchewan.

  • @matttilley8620
    @matttilley8620 Месяц назад +9

    I spent the first thirteen years of my life living in a small town in Manitoba and this video brings back a lot of memories. One thing I remember is being able to see a rainstorm with fork lightening from miles away; it was awe inspiring. There's something about quaint little towns in rural areas that warms the heart. I really enjoyed watching this video, but I wish you elaborated more on why these towns have been abandoned. I guess I could just look it up. Anyway, great job, Rockhopper!

  • @johnconrad8796
    @johnconrad8796 2 месяца назад +30

    Nice trip along Hwy 18. Souris is the main river in SE Sask running down past Minot ND and back up into Manitoba. If you happened to see (or signs to) Rafferty Dam when approaching Estevan from the west, that's a dam on the Souris. Or Mouse River (French to English) in North Dakota. I grew up a few miles north of Estevan, was back for harvest 6 weeks ago.

    • @Yowzoe
      @Yowzoe Месяц назад

      When you go back every year at the harvest to help out? Is it still a family affair or are you working for a big business?

    • @Frances-fl5qf
      @Frances-fl5qf Месяц назад

      Remember certain articles imply that Mr. GATES owns hundreds of acres of Saskatchewan land..I loved Saskatchewan spent 20 years there.stil long for big sky. Thank you

    • @farmersdotter7
      @farmersdotter7 Месяц назад

      ⁠@@Frances-fl5qfSo do the Saudis and the Chinese. Look what they’ve done in Arizona. Regardless, most farms have had to expand to be competitive. Not all farmers children can or want to take over farms so they go up for sale to whoever wants the land. Most farmers back in the day worked hard to give their children opportunities that they didn’t have and many went on to be doctors and lawyers and teachers and accountants etc.
      Cargill pretty much owns the planet, so what Mr. Gates has invested pretty much pales in Saskatchewan. Check out their Wikipedia page for the parade of horrifying practices.

  • @ScottyFindsAdventure
    @ScottyFindsAdventure 2 месяца назад +50

    Great meeting you! This is a section of Canada I hope to explore. Abandoned places are always so interesting when they're frozen in time like that.

    • @rockhopperadventures
      @rockhopperadventures  2 месяца назад +4

      Great meeting you too! I hope you do explore this place. It's quite interesting!

  • @michellejalbert-deen1329
    @michellejalbert-deen1329 Месяц назад +19

    I can smell this video. Lived there many years ago, as a child.

    • @Moiratiki
      @Moiratiki 21 день назад

      Me too and I loved the grasshoppers.

  • @billfarley9167
    @billfarley9167 Месяц назад +50

    Currently living in Rockglen, SK. A bustling little village of about 450 people and still going strong. The surrounding terrain is quite hilly with long valleys and lots of coulees filled with mule and whitetail deer, the odd moose and cougar, coyotes, foxes, etc. You took a quick shot of our village sign but didn't stop. Oh well.

    • @bradyelich2745
      @bradyelich2745 Месяц назад +3

      Yeah, SK is flat. NOT! Rode my Harley twice through there.

    • @bradyelich2745
      @bradyelich2745 Месяц назад +2

      I grew up in the Alan Hills. Highest point? There is a plaque on a hill.

    • @Buzzkill-wn7tf
      @Buzzkill-wn7tf Месяц назад +8

      Rock Glen is awesome. And the #1 highway--or the railways--were not built to hit the "pretty" spots. It was all about flat, flat, flat easy to build. Of course! Get a few km off highway #1 and Saskatchewan is pretty damn cool. OK--I may be a bit biased but...what I am saying is not wrong. Northern Saskatchewan is a totally different landscape...twice over. We got a VERY "tall" chunk of real estate. Do some research.

    • @rhondahoughton790Canada
      @rhondahoughton790Canada Месяц назад +4

      @@Buzzkill-wn7tfas a resident of a place 2.5 hours north of the #1 highway, I agree that Saskatchewan is not all flat land with no trees. I go 15 minutes north of me and I am in the forest with amazing lakes and wildlife very different from down there. I grew up south of Swift Current so moving here was a shock 😂😂😂

    • @Yowzoe
      @Yowzoe Месяц назад +1

      @@rhondahoughton790Canada How do you survive the long winters, though?

  • @HarrisonFord69
    @HarrisonFord69 Месяц назад +8

    Spent every summer up until I was 13/14 in and around Mazenod, wasn't a lot there except a Co-op and junkyard back then. I could only imagine what's left now. The Hamilton family farm where my grandparents lived was just a few minutes south of it . Awesome place to spend summers as a young kid.

  • @johnmcgarry3335
    @johnmcgarry3335 Месяц назад +16

    Just found your channel, great trip my friend!! I've lived in Alberta for 25 years, trucked western Canada for 17 of them, never got that far south, despite bring all through central and northern Saskatchewan hauling fuel. Not sure where you're from my friend but thank you for showcasing part of Canadian old history that's sadly fading away.....FYI best hockey player from Saskatchewan is Wendel Clark, from Kelvington, Saskatchewan. They call our Canadas hockey factory, 6 nhl players from a town of 800 or so, i have subbed to your channel thanks again for you contribution to our great country

    • @robertacurrell8786
      @robertacurrell8786 Месяц назад +2

      I heard he’s building another sports bar back home in Sask. I’m from Oakville, Ontario where he built his first Sports bar/restaurant (since closed 😢) and his 2nd in the next town west of us (Burlington, Ont) but it closed for renovation during Pandemic, not sure if it’s re-opened yet. Have met him at Sports shows & he signed my selected Hockey card. Great guy.

    • @StirlingNash
      @StirlingNash Месяц назад +9

      Wrong!! The best hockey player is from Floral, Saskatchewan, Mr. Hockey, Gordie Howe.

    • @rockhopperadventures
      @rockhopperadventures  Месяц назад +1

      Thank you very much!

  • @K7classicrockfan
    @K7classicrockfan Месяц назад +7

    This was a great watch. My cousin, my brother and I took a road trip out west. I remember looking at the vast skies of the prairies in awe. The old buildings always intrigued me. We didn't go through the smaller towns, unfortunately. I'll have to revisit these small towns. Thanks for documenting this, as these buildings won't last forever.

  • @michellejalbert-deen1329
    @michellejalbert-deen1329 Месяц назад +20

    We lived in Gordie Howe's childhood farm, in a "town" called Floral.

    • @lovejoypeace9424
      @lovejoypeace9424 Месяц назад +2

      I grew up in Grasswood just down the road…. Saskatchewan was a true gift to me

  • @samuelplew5630
    @samuelplew5630 Месяц назад +14

    Our son married a Canadian gal in SK so we camp our way there. Pass through a lot of those towns.

  • @cl2045
    @cl2045 26 дней назад +2

    I visited southern Saskatchewan twice in my life and I still can't figure out why I found those places so interesting. You said it well, I wished those walls could talk.

  • @valeriedelaney5245
    @valeriedelaney5245 Месяц назад +13

    My hometown is Eatonia, SK but I’m in Edmonton now. It’s a thriving little town that is holding its own! My brother still lives back home and I’m always tempted to move back but my adult kids keep me from doing so. I wouldn’t miss this city life tho, especially with construction on the roads 365 days a year!

    • @JScottCee
      @JScottCee Месяц назад +3

      Live your life. Your kids would be happy if you're happy.

    • @sadee1287
      @sadee1287 29 дней назад +3

      I'm in Edm too. Yes we're up to our eyeballs in construction aren't we.... lol..
      Don't know how old you are but maybe you could retire there? Rural life has always attracted me but wireless coverage is scanty so a deterrent.
      I miss Sask and I hope to maybe head out next summer. Cheers.

  • @davep6278
    @davep6278 Месяц назад +10

    I love southern Saskatchewan, especially SW Saskatchewan. My grandparents had a farm near Crichton SK but nothing left of the town or the farm. Sad.

    • @marcysmith2851
      @marcysmith2851 Месяц назад

      @@davep6278 I remember Crichton. Grew up in Cadillac 1952-1964.

  • @BionicLynn
    @BionicLynn Месяц назад +6

    Your narration style reminds me of Dick Proenneke's documentaries. Very cool video, thank you for taking it all in.

  • @ellisandrews440
    @ellisandrews440 Месяц назад +25

    I was in the RCAF stationed in Moose Jaw in the mid to late 60’s. I few jets and our training area was south of Moose Jaw. and flew over Old Wives Lake, Mossbank, Gravelbourg, Congress, Assinboia etc. Had to be careful not the cross the border into the US. It was said if we ever got lost fly down to see what name was on the grain elevator. One guy said all these towns are called Pioneer

    • @DCM8828
      @DCM8828 Месяц назад +2

      I have totally heard of pilots getting their bearings by reading the names on the grain elevators!

    • @ianstuart5660
      @ianstuart5660 Месяц назад +2

      😂😂

    • @jasabr
      @jasabr Месяц назад +1

      That's funny 😅❤

    • @farmersdotter7
      @farmersdotter7 Месяц назад

      Yup, old bush pilot trick.

  • @donnadixon289
    @donnadixon289 Месяц назад +19

    Absolutely loved this video! Please consider filming more of this overlooked province.

  • @tomelifeisjustonebig
    @tomelifeisjustonebig 28 дней назад +16

    Every August I leave the Australian winter and fly to Canada to explore southern Saskatchewan. Heaven on earth.

    • @rikk1546
      @rikk1546 27 дней назад +2

      Your accent must really turn heads there!

    • @hareandquail
      @hareandquail 26 дней назад +5

      I am curious what caught your attention in southern Saskatchewan?

  • @MichaelSmith-yr8rb
    @MichaelSmith-yr8rb 2 месяца назад +16

    My grandparents had farms near Grenfell and Peebles
    I left for the west coast in the late 80s and my parents just after 2000
    Not an easy life and harsh weather
    Should have a capital system with basic income to make it easier to stay on the land
    Dont know how they did it but had to be resourceful with gardening raising chickens baking own bread doing things not using much money
    Last year drove from chilliwack to winnipeg return all on secondary highways and was reminded of how large that part of Canada is

    • @donskuse2194
      @donskuse2194 Месяц назад +1

      Took my family on a road trip from east-central Alberta all the way to Toronto and back. Neither my wife’s car nor my car had air conditioning, so we rented a large sedan with unlimited mileage on offer. I’m sure when I returned the car someone in corporate wondered about the continued feasibility of renting anything with ‘unlimited mileage’. We sure enjoyed the air conditioning and it was more difficult for the kids to hit one another in the large back seat! I’ve always loved driving through the Prairies and fortunately my wife and children slept a lot during those long, flat stretches. There’s something spiritual about those drives.

  • @goldrivers598
    @goldrivers598 Месяц назад +3

    The people of Saskatchewan were so, so kind to me when I was hitchhiking through Canada in my younger years

  • @mikelowe740
    @mikelowe740 Месяц назад +14

    The locations of the prairie towns were originally decided by the railroads when they first came through. Depending on the topography, they were usually 12 to 15 miles apart as that was a day's work for a team of horses to bring a load of grain in to the elevator. Most farms were a quarter section, meaning 4 families per square mile. These were the folks that supported the local community. Now, one family will have multiple sections of land and 40 tons of grain can be hauled 60 miles in a little over an hour. It's sad, but it's irreversible.
    Additionally, Souris is the name of the main river in that area. There's also a town in Manitoba with the same name.

  • @Ottotherepoman1
    @Ottotherepoman1 Месяц назад +11

    I remember visiting my uncle bob and aunt mabels farm just outside lang. After they retired in the 90s it became another corporate farm, and the house is no longer there. My entire family used to live in that area.

  • @poges
    @poges Месяц назад +11

    I lived and worked in Saskatoon for ten years so got to know lots of little towns around the province. Loved seeing this video more that I'm on the Westcoast.

  • @bruceprentice6441
    @bruceprentice6441 2 месяца назад +13

    Souris River runs through this area. And the Rafferty hydro electric dam is I believe on the Souris near Macoun Saskatchewan. Not too far from Estavan. Now I could have some of this not completely accurate, as I am born and raised in Ontario. But my Norwegian Grandfather homesteaded land near Macoun. And my mother told me how he would dig coal from the strip mine,and haul it back to their farm by horse drawn wagon, during the 20’s and 30’s. Beautiful area, I have only visited there twice, but I hope to go again. Thanks for taking us on your road trip

    • @johnconrad8796
      @johnconrad8796 2 месяца назад +1

      Rafferty is just a few miles west of Estevan - road goes across the top of the dam connecting Hwy 18 and Hwy 39. Not a nice paved road but it's there - the water backs up from the dam to/past Macoun. Rafferty is not hydroelectric - all the generating stations in SE Sask (Boundary and Shand at Estevan, Coronach) are coal-fired gens.

    • @bruceprentice6441
      @bruceprentice6441 2 месяца назад +2

      @@johnconrad8796 thanks for clearing this up for me, it’s been quite a while since I was out to visit my cousins in that area . I was quite amazed at the giant dump trucks going from the strip mine to the coal fired generator. I remember being in Macoun in the 60’s and visiting Mainprice Park, and seeing the community pasture, all of which became flooded when the dam was built.

    • @bradyelich2745
      @bradyelich2745 Месяц назад

      My Ex's Dad was the Economist that made the report Rafferty was not feasible. He got fired, won $250k for wrongful dismissal, bought a house in Vancouver, restored it, flipped it.

  • @joyjones8396
    @joyjones8396 29 дней назад +2

    The same thing is happening in the North Eastern Wheatbelt of Western Australia. Back when we were farming in the early 70's 5,000 acres was a reasonable size. We cropped 2,500 acres and ran 2,000 sheep, 200 odd pigs and 200 cattle. Made a comfortable living.
    That 5,000 acres sold for $50 per acre in 1973. Today in our old district you need to crop at least 10,000 acres to make a living. my cousin who owns our old property owns around 30,000 acres and crops at least 20,000 to canola and wheat. Old buildings on all the old 1,000 acre properties.

    • @walterprice8728
      @walterprice8728 18 дней назад

      Thank you for that, it was very interesting to this particUlar Welsh livestock farmer running 350 acres and being statistically 'average' size in the UK. Here, the main force for change is the lack of kids willing to take over, when urban jobs now pay much more ad enjoy easier conditions. Kind regards, Walter Price

  • @mutinypunisher666
    @mutinypunisher666 2 месяца назад +33

    Hey Rockhopper! It’s Scott from the shop in Estevan, how’s your mirror holding up? Was great meeting you that day. Safe travels!

    • @rockhopperadventures
      @rockhopperadventures  2 месяца назад +5

      Hey Scott! Good to hear from you! The mirror is still hanging in there, thanks! Great meeting you!

  • @craigsymington5401
    @craigsymington5401 Месяц назад +15

    Thanks for taking us along

  • @MrDavid-gg2kk
    @MrDavid-gg2kk Месяц назад +3

    Glad I found this channel. You strike me as a very pleasant person, and I'm happy you explored our country. Please come back anytime.

    • @rockhopperadventures
      @rockhopperadventures  Месяц назад

      Thanks! I hope to come back again and do more videos of your fascinating country!

  • @davewilson9772
    @davewilson9772 2 месяца назад +38

    That was a treat!
    Thank You.

  • @margyeoman3564
    @margyeoman3564 Месяц назад +10

    When in one's heart and memory, one wonders if you can go home again, seeing this nice empty land, this makes me feel maybe one could. ❤

  • @rikk1546
    @rikk1546 27 дней назад +2

    Sure it's a bit sad seeing towns abandoned. But watching nature reclaim them is beautiful and inspiring too. There's always two ways to look at things, choose the one that most uplifts you,

  • @jimmyzhao2673
    @jimmyzhao2673 Месяц назад +6

    I lived in Saskatoon for 8 years, I really enjoyed the lighting-thunder storms.

  • @MesoamericanTimes-wm3yi
    @MesoamericanTimes-wm3yi 2 месяца назад +46

    This was great. very well done.

    • @rockhopperadventures
      @rockhopperadventures  2 месяца назад +3

      Thanks so much!

    • @Yowzoe
      @Yowzoe Месяц назад +1

      @@rockhopperadventures yes, really well done, and just imagine how many people got a tour of a place they will never go to - thank you.

    • @rockhopperadventures
      @rockhopperadventures  Месяц назад

      @@Yowzoe You're very welcome!

  • @gaeldesmontagnesnoires1711
    @gaeldesmontagnesnoires1711 Месяц назад +9

    I just turned 50.. This video is helping me embrace the next phase of my life.. Cheers bud.

  • @Themheals
    @Themheals Месяц назад +15

    Great video. The people. The lives that must have been. The laughter. The hardships and the triumphs of lives long ago gone.

  • @erichaynes5826
    @erichaynes5826 Месяц назад +4

    I used to work on the Great Western Railway down in that area. Nothing like switching cars by starlight out in the very definition of the middle of nowhere.

  • @andrewcarpenter3991
    @andrewcarpenter3991 Месяц назад +2

    I grew up in Wynyard in the 60s and 70s and although Wynyard is still alive, so many small towns in the area are not. It breaks my heart when the sun goes down in Elfros, Kandahar and Wishart to name a few communities, they are a piece of my past and I feel a part of me is fading into the void along with this sad reality. When the secondary railway lines were abandoned so was a way of life. R.I.P. fond memories.

    • @conniedav
      @conniedav 27 дней назад

      I was hoping Wynyard might be mentioned. I grew up on West coast but recall a couple summer road trips in the 60s to return to where my mom was born and raised. The family name was Smith. You probably knew them all!

  • @pacificcoltrane7652
    @pacificcoltrane7652 Месяц назад +9

    I love exploring those old towns of southern Saskatchewan.

  • @CanadianPrepper
    @CanadianPrepper 26 дней назад +2

    Excellent video

  • @Formally_known_as_Teabag
    @Formally_known_as_Teabag Месяц назад +5

    Great video I am a first time viewer and you do a great job of telling the stories of these areas I can’t wait to check out your other videos keep up the good work

  • @Saskatchewanimals
    @Saskatchewanimals 20 дней назад +1

    The songbird at 6:03 is a Bobolink! They have amazingly complex songs!

  • @judyphilibert6921
    @judyphilibert6921 Месяц назад +17

    Thanks for sharing, was a nice, peaceful 'Sunday Drive' for me 😊

    • @Rick-S-6063
      @Rick-S-6063 Месяц назад +1

      The flat lands remind me of the Michigan Thumb, where there are plenty of old roads for taking a drive and catching a break from life in the suburbs.

  • @mitcht2717
    @mitcht2717 17 дней назад +1

    I just discovered this channel today Dec. 4, 2024 - your video brought on waves of NOSTALGIA and POWERFUL EMOTIONS FOR ME. I was the Lutheran minister in Lake Alma, Gladmar [12 mi.west] and Beaubier [5miles east and 2 south] from Dec , 1980 through May 1983. I grew up in Baudette, MN directly across the Rainy River from Rainy River, ON - I played hockey as a kid and we'd cross the river to Rainy River and they had MacIntosh toffee, Onion and Garlic Potato chips - we didn't have them in Baudette. It was a blast. I went to Jr. College in Int'l Falls, MN directly across from Fort Frances, ON. In Baudette for most my youth we only had CBC. Following Univ at Duluth [UMD - I was in my Senior living on London Rd just off Lake Superior when news that the Edmund Fitzgerald was in distress, then lost [Nov. 1975] - Gordon was my favorite Folk Singer [Bob Dylan grew up 170 miles east and little south of me in Hibbing, MN. After UMD, I went to Luther Seminary in St. Paul, MN. My first parish was Lake Alma [lived in the parsonage there], Beaubier and Gladmar - my 3 years there have stuck with me my whole life - I played hockey for the Lake Alma Flyers - farmers, ranchers and oil workers - what a blast! So many fine, hard-working, family oriented people. Hwy 18 was - I believe one of the worst highways ESTEVAN to probably MINTON and that was even more true when I visited a few times - almost like he NDP gov't in Regina made a decision to let the roads go, to drive the folks into Weyburn, Estevan and Regina: Now I live 100 miles south of Winnipeg in Karlstad, MN. Pardon the length - it's nostalgia, a big part of me wishes I hadn't left CANADA. P.S. I still have friends and acquaintances at Lake Alma [though most have retired to Weyburn or passed away]; A seminary friend of mine was pastor at Fallon, MT and we would drive 225 miles to visit once in a while - I drove 45 miles to Plentywood to go to Dairy Queen! Lake Alma had about 120 people in 1981 - now I'm guessing it's about 20. Not sure. I ate hamburgers and chips {French Fries} at the LA Hotel & Cafe and Bar in the other section.

  • @randy-i1h
    @randy-i1h 2 месяца назад +65

    I moved to Gainsborough, the water is free, it comes from a spring well water, so saved money there, beautiful home bought for 60K, retired, cost of living is low, the cost of food a little on the high side, but not much higher than Winnipeg for example. My first winter was reasonable, I'll see how it is this upcoming winter. So, I can save $12K a year living here. Yes it may be costly driving to and fro, but that drive to the store or bank, isn't all that bad, you get to see the most beautiful animals, sunsets, sunrises and landscapes in Canada. Flat as an ocean iin some cases. Yet the people are friendly and the nights are quiet. Furthermore, with the internet, television, and mobile phone, what's to miss about city life, where homes cost almost half a million dollars, there's traffic jams, pollution, high taxes, potholes, stop signs and red lights everywhere, not to forget crime. You are reborn out on the prairies with a feeling of regeneration, as you watch cities struggle to just keep up with their mass population and non stop construction. Take Toronto for example, no one's going anywhere but in debt, and this is happening all across Canada in every major city. So, I'm going to leave you now, go upstairs, smoke a joint and play chess. I'm loving my time here in the best kept secret in the country, of a life without any hassles and economically inexpensive.

    • @DonKnight-qi4tu
      @DonKnight-qi4tu Месяц назад +5

      Puff puff pass

    • @Yowzoe
      @Yowzoe Месяц назад +3

      Is your house warm enough? How do you survive six months of extreme cold? Those are two questions which come to my mind.

    • @randy-i1h
      @randy-i1h Месяц назад +7

      @@Yowzoe It's not 6 months, it's more like 3. As warm as any other house in a big city.
      Yet, being close to the US border, the area can catch a lot more warmth during the day. On top of that roads are kept clear and clean.

    • @mostthegames3723
      @mostthegames3723 Месяц назад +3

      Sounds like some heaven you got there ❤.

    • @islandwills2778
      @islandwills2778 Месяц назад +5

      ​@@Yowzoe most houses in Saskatchewan are built with thick insulation to withstand the cold. A line of shelter belt trees, usually coragana break up the wind to help with heating as well.
      During the summer out houses are surrounded by trees which helps keep things cool.

  • @joebush1663
    @joebush1663 Месяц назад +7

    Magnificent desolation. I drove from Havre to Fort Walsh (one of the original North West Mounted Police forts) on dusty gravel roads and through Cypress Hills Interprovincial Park. I plan on visiting Grassland National Park one of these days.

  • @davecurry3322
    @davecurry3322 Месяц назад +6

    Sad. I live in Northern Manitoba. Lots of small towns in Manitoba going the same way. I moved from a little company town in Northern Ontario called Caramat. Town had a max of 500 people back in early 70’s but now has a a couple people living in a few houses with everything else abandoned.

    • @margueritelahaye7457
      @margueritelahaye7457 28 дней назад +1

      I remember waiting for a CNR passenger train in Caramat in January about 60 years ago. That's where residents of nearby Manitouwadge had to wait if they wanted to travel by rail to Toronto.

    • @davecurry3322
      @davecurry3322 27 дней назад

      @ That must have been before we moved there. We lived in camp 12 and camp 15 I think before Caramat. I was actually born in Manitouwadge.

  • @kipperfan02
    @kipperfan02 26 дней назад +2

    My dad and his family lived in Oxbow for a while back in the 60s and early 70s. My Grandpa was in Oil and Gas back then. Still would like to go see it someday. Thanks for the video I enjoyed it!

  • @400calfix
    @400calfix Месяц назад +6

    My Great Aunt and Uncle lived in Stony Beach. I spent some time there. It was an adventure by train from Ontario. Completely different life.😊

  • @trevorneedham6691
    @trevorneedham6691 Месяц назад +3

    Good video. For future reference, pump jacks are not oil derricks. A pump jack is installed after the drill rig (which has the derrick) has done its job and left.

  • @DarthTrader707
    @DarthTrader707 Месяц назад +4

    Wow, what a fantastic video. I have a book, Abandoned Alberta, which I look at quite often and imagine the lives of the people who once occupied those old buildings. I wish you had spent more time at each location.

  • @privatename8228
    @privatename8228 Месяц назад +3

    The bird at 6:03 was a Bobolink, a songbird that loves open grasslands.

  • @timcat1004
    @timcat1004 Месяц назад +4

    My roots are from Southern Sask. A little further South than where you were. My Grandma lived in Courvelle. It's also now a ghost town.

  • @Matthew-n7v
    @Matthew-n7v 27 дней назад +2

    I appreciate this style of reporting and believe this is important

  • @cynthiahunter4510
    @cynthiahunter4510 Месяц назад +8

    Great video. Love the open space and open skies of the prairies.

  • @willshikabob
    @willshikabob Месяц назад +1

    I grew up in Esterhazy in the early 2000’s and had family all over the southern prairies, mainly in Estevan and Pangman. It’s sad to see the decline of these old towns I frequented for hockey games, family trips and drive ins. My family in Esterhazy are becoming victims of the potash mines closing up and poisoning the watershed. When big farming and mining corporations come then go, decline in the local community follows. I’ll never forget those crisp prairie mornings or incredible storm displays even as I’m out here on Vancouver Island.

  • @bdgies2721
    @bdgies2721 2 месяца назад +6

    Have travelled many of those roads on motorbikes and pickup trucks. Friends left Lake Alma in the 1980s after years of drought and moved to the South Peace country in Alberta, where we got to know them.

  • @TheMarky26
    @TheMarky26 Месяц назад +1

    My home and the place I love..I work in the oil patch all throughout the south..Over the years I've seen grain elevators dissapear and once bustling little towns slowly fading away. Even my town a few hours north of where you were use to have 3 working grain elevators, 4 service stations, a hardware store ,a grocery store and an impliment dealer..Their all gone now. It was a great place to grow up though. Alot of great memories.

  • @barbarahutchko3736
    @barbarahutchko3736 2 месяца назад +15

    Very interesting deserted towns. Beautiful descriptions. Enjoyed the ride.

  • @DisgruntledWatcher
    @DisgruntledWatcher Месяц назад +3

    In my childhood, my family used to make a trip twice a year from our home in Yorkton, SK down to Fort Benton, MT to visit our grandparents. The winter trips could be especially unpredictable due to weather.
    One winter, I think it was around ‘89 or so, we got caught in a blizzard on our way back across the border, which turned into a whiteout storm as we drove through southern Saskatchewan. Eventually, conditions were so bad that we were forced to stop in the nearest town - Climax. A billboard advertised the Climax Hotel, but the hotel had been shut down a few years previous and was now just operating as a bar. My family (mom, dad and two young boys) were given the hospitality of the barroom floor on disused mattresses to stay the night and weather the storm. 2-3 other families also found themselves sleeping there for the same reason.
    It was perhaps the most memorable of these trips from my youth. My family never forgot the hospitality of those folks in Climax and made a point of stopping in to say hello every following year that we drove through.
    It was a delightful surprise to find this video in my feed. Thanks for sharing and for visiting!

  • @magnuswettermark8293
    @magnuswettermark8293 Месяц назад +12

    This was interesting. Beautiful landscape and i love all these old cars and trucks standing everywhere...👍🙂

    • @perryelyod4870
      @perryelyod4870 Месяц назад

      Those truck owners may not know their Mercury trucks are quite valuable. The whole truck, or parts that spell out "Mercury' like tailgates and hubcaps. Mercury trucks were never sold in the USA, and thus, are a novelty for old car owners. Fargo trucks also.

  • @ColomboVanlife
    @ColomboVanlife 25 дней назад +2

    In a ever growing civilization, places like this are definitely a pleasantry 🇨🇦🇨🇦

  • @lucymartyn8205
    @lucymartyn8205 Месяц назад +7

    Great video, I’m from sask and it’s a great place to grow up in, some beautiful lakes still there and yes south sask, very empty🇨🇦❤️👍

  • @georgia130867
    @georgia130867 7 часов назад

    Beautifully written, magnificently shot. A legacy video for the ages. Thank you for this incredible gift! And all those Souris streets you ask about are named after the Souris River, which wends its way across the border into North Dakota a couple times. Thanks again!

  • @cletusanne
    @cletusanne Месяц назад +6

    Thank you for taking me back to Govenloch. I remember it when it still had people living in the village.