The Secret Trap Door Under The Canal

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  • Опубликовано: 28 май 2024
  • In this family friendly video we get to see the Secret trap door under the canal. The Canal is Manchester city centres Rochdale canal. It has a trap door in the base near the canal lock 89 and this leads to the underground River, the river Tib. The river Tib is one of manchester's lost waterways. Lost rivers. This trapdoor is part of Manchester's history as it is over 200 years old. Its actually 215 years old and put in when the Rochdale canal was built. We were invited to see the conservation work the canal and rivers trust were carrying out in Manchester's Rochdale canal. This is a wonderful piece of canal and British history Thank you to www.substormflow.com for the pictures of the river Tib in this video. #canalandrivertrust #conservation #canal
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Комментарии • 8 тыс.

  • @MartinZero
    @MartinZero  5 лет назад +239

    Thank you to www.substormflow.com for the amazing pictures of the River Tib. Also check his website for some fabulous Underground Pictures and info its an eyeopener !!!

    • @theminiaturepaintingtutor7885
      @theminiaturepaintingtutor7885 5 лет назад +6

      Man i thought there was only me giddy about the tib! I walk by there a good few times a week.
      Thanks man

    • @bingokitty5822
      @bingokitty5822 5 лет назад +11

      Martin, thank you so much for this video! Brilliant! Your passion for this canal and drain was infectious and fascinating to me. I live in Napa Valley, California and that drain door is nearly older than my country. Fascinating!

    • @cubicinches18
      @cubicinches18 5 лет назад +2

      That is an amazing collection of photos

    • @cubicinches18
      @cubicinches18 5 лет назад +3

      @Grey Wild Wolf No That's only a rumour LOL

    • @hcostapintor7131
      @hcostapintor7131 5 лет назад +4

      It's not accurate call it a "Trap Door"!... This is a "secret passage" used by those "pikes" for "Masonic Reunions"!... The biggest is "Albert Pike", (the famous 33 degree Master Mason), the other is just a "Initiated" one!... Lol
      Thank you for sharing your contagious enthusiasm and your "semi Religious experience" and specially the Nostalgic "Neo Realistic" Poetic moment"!...
      It's not everyday that someone manages to catch the attention (for half an hour) of 40 thousand people looking at a "sewer whirpool"!... Hahaha... Cheers

  • @alexanderthornton147
    @alexanderthornton147 5 лет назад +2141

    I have never seen such a passionate video about a drain.

  • @johnstrange6799
    @johnstrange6799 5 лет назад +1292

    Not in the wildest of dreams could the craftsman of the trap door ever imagine that people around the planet would be fascinated by his work 200 years later over what would be called the internet.

    • @LateralNW
      @LateralNW 5 лет назад +45

      So true. How proud he/they would be. No doubt back then they were proud of their workmanship.

    • @1nvisible1
      @1nvisible1 5 лет назад +71

      @16:43 215 years ago a blacksmith in his forge
      made that chain and the hook on the top
      and a carpenter or a joiner in his workshop made that door and the frame that it sits in
      as commissioned work for the Rochdale canal
      older than our parents and our grandparents and older than their parents
      and during that 200 years wars have been fought...
      the Titanic sank,
      and nine British monarchs have lived, reigned and died.

    • @devonAFC
      @devonAFC 5 лет назад +10

      John Strange a million viewers.. he never expected that

    • @swappedoutZ71
      @swappedoutZ71 5 лет назад +13

      He knew it. Thing is everyone else probably thought he was insane. Thats the case for many great thinkers

    • @habibsspirit
      @habibsspirit 5 лет назад +14

      200 years from now someone will be reading your comment from a spaceship over light communication technology.

  • @romannod5191
    @romannod5191 3 года назад +139

    It is quite mind boggling that this trapdoor is sitting there for over 200 years, while important historic events passed by and that door just did its job

  • @sleeming88
    @sleeming88 Год назад +62

    Incredible to think that when the canal was being completed, just after this trapdoor had gone in, the people working on it were probably discussing whether or not Napoleon would invade.

  • @Ofirush
    @Ofirush 5 лет назад +486

    RUclips finally recommending genuinely good content. His excitement and passion is truely heartwarming. Good job youtube. Much appreciated.

  • @abandonedtnhistory7488
    @abandonedtnhistory7488 5 лет назад +338

    That blacksmith didnt know that 200 years from now we would all be excited to see the work they did all those years ago!

    • @acesul8811
      @acesul8811 5 лет назад +25

      And that's why you take pride in your work now.

    • @luigimarideleon6093
      @luigimarideleon6093 5 лет назад +4

      Probably the best comments I've read here

    • @kamak24
      @kamak24 5 лет назад +3

      And that I also can see this (in small carphatian village in east europe)

    • @jonjohnson2844
      @jonjohnson2844 5 лет назад +1

      He probably dreamed it would get millions of views on RUclips but didn't think it would ever happen.

    • @buenafamiliafarms9668
      @buenafamiliafarms9668 5 лет назад +1

      Like any good craftsman we build it to make it last

  • @68Squid
    @68Squid 2 года назад +8

    "Animals in distress distress me". Reason 1000 you're a good man, Martin

    • @blairrobinson4760
      @blairrobinson4760 Год назад +1

      The dredger pulled the plug out of the canal at Retford that nobody knew was there. It took some time to repair it!

  • @spankysmp
    @spankysmp 4 года назад +158

    I'm 54, lived in Manchester all my life and I never knew about the River Tib or the canal plughole. Freaking amazing video. Well done.

    • @beverleypearson2646
      @beverleypearson2646 4 года назад +8

      Im 56 and like you, lived in Manchester all my life too but never knew about all this. Wasn’t it a fantastic video? I loved watching it and I’ll have to go and find that arrow now, lol 😆

    • @spankysmp
      @spankysmp 4 года назад +4

      @@beverleypearson2646 Me too. I'll see you there 😁

    • @spankysmp
      @spankysmp 3 года назад +2

      @barry herpes I've not been on 28Days for years now. I'll have to take a look. Cheers Barry

    • @apollomemories7399
      @apollomemories7399 3 года назад +2

      Seriously? That's pathetic. Even I know of the River Tib and I live in Glasgow. Why? Because I bought a map in the early 1980s when I went to work there for a while. Every city I've ever worked in no matter where in the world - several dozen of, first thing I did is buy a map. I probably know Manchester better than you do.

    • @motorbike650
      @motorbike650 2 года назад

      I thought you looked older

  • @TheCymbalProject
    @TheCymbalProject 5 лет назад +308

    This is exactly kind of content I come to RUclips to see... unique, unusual, historic & interesting. Thanks for posting!

    •  5 лет назад +1

      If Martin's not on RUclips Rewind next year I'll be posting them a letter made from newspaper cut outs.

    • @JohnK-117
      @JohnK-117 5 лет назад +2

      Dang dude ur just like me lol

  • @EmptyGlass99
    @EmptyGlass99 5 лет назад +275

    The brickwork at the bottom of that lock is beautiful. Those Victorian engineers didn't cut any corners.

    • @JW-wp3yh
      @JW-wp3yh 5 лет назад +8

      EmptyGlass99 so it’s round, your saying it’s round.

    • @carlwheezerofsouls3273
      @carlwheezerofsouls3273 5 лет назад +3

      J W if they DIDNT (did not) cut the corners then it would be square not round

    • @travellingshoes5241
      @travellingshoes5241 5 лет назад

      @@carlwheezerofsouls3273 Think about it carefully.

    • @carlwheezerofsouls3273
      @carlwheezerofsouls3273 5 лет назад +3

      @@travellingshoes5241 yeah i fuckin did. they didn't cut any corners. he said "so its round. your saying its round"
      if they didn't cut the corners off then its still a square

    • @AlisonBryen
      @AlisonBryen 4 года назад +2

      Was your use of the word 'cut' a deliberate play on words?

  • @jaynealexander2771
    @jaynealexander2771 3 года назад +16

    I love stories about our hidden / lost rivers. Like the River Fleet in London (Fleet Street), the Tib is marked above by clues on the map. Canals are brilliant places to find thrown away history - one persons rubbish becomes social history years later. The great civil engineers who built Manchester's locks would be rightly proud of what they achieved, and the clean canal looked amazing. Loved the trapdoor. Lots of passion from the guys. Martin, you are a natural teacher. Thank you.

  • @brandonlink6568
    @brandonlink6568 4 года назад +125

    I'm not sure why the algorithm recommended this video to me, being in the US and all, but it knows I like weird and obscure stuff like this.

    • @Glenda70
      @Glenda70 4 года назад +6

      It was recommended for me as well - in Canada. I thought the whole thing was fascinating!

    • @tomshanks4092
      @tomshanks4092 4 года назад +9

      I’m from Manchester and all I get recommended is American stuff, I had to actively search for this and I live 5 mins away in real life lol

    • @timlazara1585
      @timlazara1585 4 года назад +2

      Brandon Link the same to me, but the difference is I am in Argentina. Much more strange.

    • @ashdonsimmons01
      @ashdonsimmons01 3 года назад +1

      i’m also from america, i’ve just found this channel and these videos are so fascinating! i’ve never really thought about canals or drains or anything like this kind of stuff.

    • @scholbe
      @scholbe 3 года назад +1

      Same!

  • @stephencarey5074
    @stephencarey5074 5 лет назад +43

    It's the enthusiasm for out of the ordinary things like this shown by Martin, that is the essence of being British!

  • @breadfan7433
    @breadfan7433 5 лет назад +267

    I've lived all of my childhood in Athens, where at every single moment everyone's walking indifferently past structures built over 2 and a half millennia ago, things that were already old during the time of Alexander. This man's excitement about a small trapdoor that was built just 200 years ago may seem ridiculous to the cynical, but I find it inspiring and moving. My fellow Greeks, walking past places like Plato's Academy without batting an eyelid, should appreciate their heritage (which gave democracy and philosophy to the whole world) a lot more. Thank you for this video.

    • @americanpig-dog7051
      @americanpig-dog7051 5 лет назад +15

      @ianjsutt People in England laughed at me because I was so excited to see castles, because they grew up with them and don't see them as anything special. Then I laughed at them because prairie dogs are in the London Zoo, because I grew up with them and used to shoot them because the holes they dig are dangerous to livestock. I guess it's all a matter of perspective.

    • @tstuff
      @tstuff 4 года назад +12

      I grew up just 150 miles from Niagara Falls and I was 26 before I ever saw it. Then I moved 90 minutes outside Manhattan and lived there 3 years before visiting the Statue of Liberty. It is always the belief that it's always been there and will be there forever so I'll get to it someday if I get around to it.
      When I lived in the Netherlands for a year I often took women out on dates to castles, tulip gardens, art museums... Almost every conversation was "I've never been here" or "I came here on a school trip when I was little but I've never been back..." To me it was stuff we didn't have much of at home. There are a few castles in NY and as a former Dutch colony we have tulip festivals but nothing in the amount as there is in the Netherlands.
      Enjoy what you have near you.

    • @lethaloutdoors001
      @lethaloutdoors001 4 года назад

      Amazing

    • @maheshbentotaa1981
      @maheshbentotaa1981 4 года назад +2

      Bread Fan in sri lanka many more places having like that old doors and gets over 600years . And Still working condition.

    • @peterclarke3619
      @peterclarke3619 4 года назад +2

      Great video, fascinating insight into our urban waterway. Love your enthusiasm.

  • @Mr91495osh
    @Mr91495osh 4 года назад +43

    I am impressed how the Brits take care of their canals.

    • @keironwarmington4878
      @keironwarmington4878 4 года назад

      We do better with our older population 👀👀👀👀👀👀👀👀👀

    • @jasongerrard8940
      @jasongerrard8940 3 года назад +4

      That's true in places, but lest we forget that Birmingham has got more canals than venice, just a pity that you can't pull a plug and then clean them out, stock a Tesco supermarket with trolleys, if they did, could use the prison population to clean them out, but the court of human rights would say that it's demeaning.

    • @winstonpaul3398
      @winstonpaul3398 3 года назад

      More like once every 200 years. hummmmm ...

    • @marvindebot3264
      @marvindebot3264 3 года назад +2

      @@jasongerrard8940 They actually do, the CRT drains sections and cleans them during winter closures, usually when gates are due to be replaced or maintained so every 20 years or so.

    • @master_Blaster91
      @master_Blaster91 2 года назад

      Huddersfield narrow canal closed in 1950 I believe and neglected and filled in in parts standedge tunnel was closed for 50 years and only in 2001 was the canal and tunnel reopened for boats

  • @spyidr1892
    @spyidr1892 4 года назад +70

    Imagine leaving ur canal boat to go out and come back to see it at the bottom of a drained canal

  • @SuperRover600
    @SuperRover600 5 лет назад +313

    I'm not joking, that was totally fascinating. All the cartoons we watched as kids always had a plug in a river or lake, well now we know it's real. Thank you lock 89!

    • @koolkid1702
      @koolkid1702 4 года назад +2

      Oh nooo he pulled the maindrain!!!!! Save bakini bottom!!!! SpongeBob gonna dry out!!!! 😂😂😂😂

  • @barbelmeister
    @barbelmeister 5 лет назад +18

    Why is it I can never find anything interesting to watch on TV but I can sit down in front of RUclips for hours!

    • @pulakification
      @pulakification 5 лет назад

      barbelmeister I don’t know who watches tv anymore.

  • @Shortzy54
    @Shortzy54 4 года назад +55

    It woulda been cool to have someone at the spot where the Tib meets the Medlock to see the water coming through!!

  • @kathleensteinmetz6844
    @kathleensteinmetz6844 Год назад +15

    This is such an epic piece of so much information. You have made me feel , as the viewer, that I was right there with you and your team! Thank you for sharing this information. I just loved the music, the photos , actual live footage and you are exceptional in explaining it all. Your excitement is real and it causes the viewer to share in that excitement. Job well done!

  • @coachingangels
    @coachingangels 5 лет назад +19

    True craftsmanship. Wouldn't last 2 years if done today

    • @jehnsehymere6092
      @jehnsehymere6092 5 лет назад +1

      So they can get that contract money for a second trapdoor...

  • @ScottEllerman
    @ScottEllerman 5 лет назад +380

    The best part of this video for me was seeing the obvious joy the whole experience gave you. Cheers from Texas!

    • @Euthymia
      @Euthymia 5 лет назад +2

      Indeed. People like him make the world go 'round.

  • @JeffDeWitt
    @JeffDeWitt 4 года назад +16

    This guy is totally nuts getting so excited about a trap door, and I love it!

    • @MartinZero
      @MartinZero  4 года назад +1

      Thanks Jeff

    • @Biggles2498
      @Biggles2498 3 года назад

      Jeff DeWitt :You should watch "Trapdoor Monsters" that was shown to kids on TV about 30 years ago but got banned for not being politically correct. Willie Rushton is the voice of the skull "Boney" I think and I still watch it on RUclips !

  • @curvs4me
    @curvs4me 4 года назад +6

    I watched it again, props to the old timber! 215 years!!!!!! Absolutely unbelievable how well it has maintained its strength. It is probably good for another 100 years.
    You should do a walk down the canal. It must be so much cleaner and clearer now. Who knows, maybe people will be taking a dip in it 10 years from now.

  • @Leonard_Lewis
    @Leonard_Lewis 5 лет назад +370

    Meanwhile, on the other side of town... "where is all this water coming from all of a sudden?...I don't know Margret, i don't know?"

    • @joshuafox3152
      @joshuafox3152 5 лет назад +6

      "Margo" Christmas Vacation

    • @EaterofWorlds-DN
      @EaterofWorlds-DN 5 лет назад +2

      @@joshuafox3152 I don't knooww Maarrgooo....

    • @scottm.franklinnc7942
      @scottm.franklinnc7942 5 лет назад +3

      LoL..love it...I can just imagine them setting at Park bench...👍

    • @kohedunn
      @kohedunn 5 лет назад +3

      Hhahahahhhahahahahahh Oh look ! a big fish !!!

  • @JordanRants
    @JordanRants 5 лет назад +266

    I love how enthusiastic and proud real Mancunians are of their culture

    • @Mmmmy123
      @Mmmmy123 5 лет назад +7

      I'd be afraid of the stuff you could pull out of a canal in Manchester 😶😶

    • @james07jamesjames
      @james07jamesjames 5 лет назад +3

      JordanRants when i read the title, the thumbnail hasn’t loaded yet. I thought i was gonna watch a rust video. lol.

    • @chxn_gus1616
      @chxn_gus1616 5 лет назад +1

      Jordan Rants idol

    • @vertical7747
      @vertical7747 5 лет назад +1

      Oh hi jordan

    • @mrglibb
      @mrglibb 5 лет назад +1

      Oh hecc, it's the guy who does the things.

  • @SlickWillyTFCF
    @SlickWillyTFCF 6 месяцев назад +3

    I just had this video show up on my feed, and it was worth the watch. I never thought I'd be jealous of someone for getting to see an trapdoor in a canal, but here we are. I will definitely be watching through your catalog of videos because I love odd, secretive, and forgotten historical tidbits like the ones you find and share.

    • @MartinZero
      @MartinZero  6 месяцев назад +1

      Thank you 😃👍

  • @moffatt43
    @moffatt43 Год назад +3

    I always find it interesting and pretty incredible when you think about the construction of the Canals,especially the aqua-ducts and tunnels and bridges when you think they didn’t have Cranes or 360’s/Diggers/Dump trucks etc so mostly everything was built by sheer brute strength and wheelbarrows and buckets.
    The same people who built the Canals were the same people who built the Railway probably,I’ve seen firsthand some of the Big Tunnels that were dug and some of the biggest bridges ( on the Railway ) and you just stand there looking at these impressive structures with awe !!.
    I used to be a Crane driver and a HGV Lorry Loader Operator ( 60 T/M ) and worked on General Haulage in Construction/Railway/Highways and Water Treatment Plants/Sewage Plants and Big Electricity Stations/Refineries so I’ve seen quite a lot of Things but there is something about the construction of the canals and bridges that just boggles the imagination when you think it was 200 years ago and a lot of it still stands and is still in Extremely Good working order !!!.

  • @sithompson74
    @sithompson74 5 лет назад +160

    I've no interest in Manchester, canals, or even canals in Manchester. Don't even know how I stumbled onto this vid but I'm so glad I did. Very interesting. I love all this secret underground stuff. And the way you present the video is just great - such enthusiasm

    • @EmpireGoldMining
      @EmpireGoldMining 5 лет назад +1

      Right and the Mason markings are very interesting to track down the spacific Mason

  • @lewisblackwiththenicehair
    @lewisblackwiththenicehair 5 лет назад +34

    Wow this is literally on the back of my workplace, I saw the canal being drained and then as it filled back up last week. Small world

  • @JohntheHuxter
    @JohntheHuxter 3 года назад +8

    As a Mancunian who has lived and worked in the city, I find these videos absolutely riveting. Now I live in West Yorkshire but I'm still fascinated by the history of my home city. Well done Martin.

    • @paulcritchley464
      @paulcritchley464 Год назад +1

      Dear John. Your like my aunty who went to the other side. She was lovely. There is us (Lancashire) them (Yorkshire) and the other lot don’t matter. That’s a bit rich coming from me I went to the other side of the planet
      Cheers enjoy your day

  • @sturdeehouse
    @sturdeehouse 3 года назад +1

    Yes yes for a mention of the Hac. A whole program about a drain, you have my respect. I love these films.

  • @moebius2k103
    @moebius2k103 5 лет назад +549

    I don’t know how I got here but that was fascinating, great video.

  • @dennis-lg2oy
    @dennis-lg2oy 5 лет назад +248

    No idea why this was recommended, but i enjoyed it., 👍

    • @bigmac9013
      @bigmac9013 5 лет назад +1

      dennis 0181 Is same pal

    • @hamsolous
      @hamsolous 5 лет назад +1

      I have no idea why it was recommended either, and I enjoyed it too...Took me 3 minutes to click through. Good click bait with the "hidden trap door" in the title.

    • @TheMajkla
      @TheMajkla 5 лет назад +3

      This happened to me once too. And since then - I'm hooked up:)
      Welcome on board, this is a great channel!

    • @Throwshub
      @Throwshub 5 лет назад +3

      @@hamsolous click bait? how?

    • @warrenokuma7264
      @warrenokuma7264 5 лет назад

      Weird. Me too.

  • @Fabrizio_Ruffo
    @Fabrizio_Ruffo 4 года назад +277

    Women: what is he thinking about?
    Men: there's a 200 year old door in that canal, I wonder if it still works?

    • @AlisonBryen
      @AlisonBryen 3 года назад +14

      Bit of a generalisation there...I'm a woman and am fascinated by drains, rivers and culverts.

    • @ankanspelar1508
      @ankanspelar1508 3 года назад +10

      @@AlisonBryen It's a joke man

    • @catzkeet4860
      @catzkeet4860 3 года назад +8

      Ankanspelar no, it’s an assumption, and not a very valid one.

    • @JC-yb3zb
      @JC-yb3zb 3 года назад +8

      @@ankanspelar1508 It's a joke that perpetuates stereotypes.

    • @haffolderhaus
      @haffolderhaus 3 года назад +2

      A door .. made by catalytic converters!

  • @georgevue8175
    @georgevue8175 Год назад +1

    Pretty amazing how the city got so built up over the River Tib. When I finish work on my DIY time machine this is Definitely on my list of places to watch.

  • @aidy6000
    @aidy6000 5 лет назад +472

    Praise the algorithm for giving you the exposure you deserve

    • @robinhooduk8255
      @robinhooduk8255 5 лет назад +4

      just like the fat kid that went camping in the snow whos video went viral.

    • @juliannesermon8057
      @juliannesermon8057 5 лет назад +7

      "Praise the algorithm" sounds like something we're going to hear a lot more in the future... ;-)

    • @user-vz7mu4su9n
      @user-vz7mu4su9n 5 лет назад +4

      @@juliannesermon8057 two hundred years from now there will be a cult centred around serving The Algorithm. All praise The Great Algorithm.

    • @suz1017
      @suz1017 5 лет назад +1

      Great content and thoroughly enjoyed ❤

    • @InDisskyS131
      @InDisskyS131 5 лет назад +2

      The algorithm chooses videos for each viewer based on what they have watched recently. It is not some magic thing that reccomends it to everyone.

  • @ComputerLearning0
    @ComputerLearning0 5 лет назад +197

    Thought I would watch a minute or two to see if it interested me and ended up watching all the way through. Very good story and your interest in the "trap door" was rather infectious because I found myself really wanting to see this infamous trap door made more than 200 years ago! It's amazing the sheer amount of rubbish people toss into water over time. Fencing, bottles, cans and general debris can really clog these waterways up. Great video! Respect from the United States of America.

    • @hcostapintor7131
      @hcostapintor7131 5 лет назад +3

      Your comment makes me think about Trump's promise in "Drain the Swamp"!... Hahaha

    • @iamthebroker
      @iamthebroker 5 лет назад +3

      Me too. Started thinking this is going to be boring however the host has a way of drawing you in with his knowledge and enthusiasm. Well done and thanks,

    • @scottm.franklinnc7942
      @scottm.franklinnc7942 5 лет назад +1

      Yep hooked me too...but I'm a history buff anyways.

    • @deborahsmith7586
      @deborahsmith7586 5 лет назад +2

      @john does your mum know your on the internet

  • @wauzdancer1556
    @wauzdancer1556 4 года назад +1

    That old trap door was super to see. Thanks. In Augusta GA, USA there is a canal system build by English mill owners back in the mid 1800's. It's be restored now. You were spooked by that Pike, the Augusta Canal has know to have six to eight foot alligators.

  • @avgrim7729
    @avgrim7729 3 года назад +2

    That's amazing that wood held up for 200 years underwater? Surprised they didn't replace it and put the original in a museum!

    • @manuelacruz5177
      @manuelacruz5177 Год назад

      Realmente acredito que seja restaurada de tempo em tempo.

  • @Asif19871
    @Asif19871 5 лет назад +111

    This was really random. I never watch this type of thing yet, when RUclips randomly suggested it, I thought I’d check it out. Boy am I glad I did. Thank you for that, friend. That was absolutely fascinating!

    • @Ed.E
      @Ed.E 5 лет назад +2

      Ditto!

  • @garyblake4296
    @garyblake4296 5 лет назад +96

    I love trawling around youtube especially when you find gems like this.....well done you guys.

  • @rujmah
    @rujmah Год назад +3

    Absolutely fantastic! Hidden rivers. Trap doors. River monsters. Civil engineering. It had everything. I love your passion for this subject. Look forward to watching more.

  • @dereklmcguire
    @dereklmcguire 4 года назад +1

    10/10 Canal and River trust , great work and inthusiam

  • @KirkHermary
    @KirkHermary 5 лет назад +8

    Finally RUclips has recommended something worth watching. The excitement this guy exhibits is like how I feel about food, especially all you can eat buffets.

  • @Tuberuser187
    @Tuberuser187 5 лет назад +53

    best 20+ min of finding a plug hole ever! Seriously though, fantastic to see something that might not be seen for decades again.

    • @MartinZero
      @MartinZero  5 лет назад +4

      Ha 😄yes thats a brilliant way of putting it 😁👍🏼

  • @terrywaite6756
    @terrywaite6756 3 года назад +11

    I never thought that I could be so interested in a trapdoor! Well done Martin in making this video and many thanks to the Canal and River Trust for giving permission. The more we see of the work you do on the canals the more we can appreciate what you do to maintain such a valuable part of our heritage.

  • @tonedaflex
    @tonedaflex 3 года назад

    Never in my life did I think I would watch a video about a canal trap door and enjoy it.

    • @MartinZero
      @MartinZero  3 года назад +1

      Thanks glad you enjoyed

  • @andrewbarrett9244
    @andrewbarrett9244 5 лет назад +48

    Amazing, the wood on that door was once a tree from the 18th century, the countryside in England would have been totally different. Mozart and Beethoven etc. would have been writing music whilst it's leaves were rustling in the summers of the 17 & 18 hundreds...

  • @Xenonalay
    @Xenonalay 5 лет назад +111

    Your excitement is tangible and I love the way you tie the event to other things in history. You are the kind of person that kids need as a teacher. You could awaken their desire to learn. Great video! Thank you for sharing.

  • @tonyworthy
    @tonyworthy Год назад +4

    Absolutely fascinating ! Brilliant commentary and such enthusiasm . I wish I had had a history teacher like you at school ! Thank you and keep bringing these amazing videos.

  • @rogermacarthur5044
    @rogermacarthur5044 4 года назад +1

    I used to work in Manchester city centre 20 years ago and often walked down the canal on my lunch break. I do remember one day that section was drained and I could see what looked like a square wooden bath plug and a big rusty chain. I guessed it was a way of draining the canal but I had no idea it drained in to the river Tib. Thanks for the video that's finally satisfied my curiosity.

  • @Bborg19
    @Bborg19 5 лет назад +100

    Can’t believe I just watched grow men pull a plug on a canal, and I really found it fascinating

    • @WarthDader74
      @WarthDader74 5 лет назад +1

      I think they should be very careful doing this, I've heard there is a passage to hell down there somewhere

    • @Ethorbit
      @Ethorbit 5 лет назад

      @@WarthDader74 😱😂

    • @tstuff
      @tstuff 4 года назад

      @@WarthDader74 I think that is in a canal in Venice.

  • @jmanthackdaddy
    @jmanthackdaddy 5 лет назад +22

    I don't know why this was in my feed but I am glad to have stumbled on this. Its amazing how a simple wooden door could withstand 200+ years underwater. Thanks for sharing!

  • @maggiesue4825
    @maggiesue4825 4 года назад +4

    WHY do I love stuff like this? Thanks for posting it!!

    • @glencalhoun9544
      @glencalhoun9544 3 года назад

      Cause its amazing and beautiful. Gorgeous work by thier crews!!! I love it.

  • @chrision2387
    @chrision2387 4 года назад

    Nothing better than staring down holes, except watching a video about men looking down holes. Thanks Martin.

  • @fritzfalkson2035
    @fritzfalkson2035 5 лет назад +9

    It was very satisfying to see the canal all cleaned up in the end, thanks for including that bit.

  • @TheF0nz1
    @TheF0nz1 5 лет назад +186

    I just wish people would stop putting rubbish in the canals! Great video interesting stuff.

    • @Hippychris2002
      @Hippychris2002 5 лет назад +4

      I live just at the back of where that video is taken and our patio area backs onto the canal, you should see the things that float past that have been thrown in there. Last year the ducklings were swimming round trying feed and it was heartbreaking to see them pecking at old crisp packets and plastic bits, they were all dead in a week :(

    • @willywonka7812
      @willywonka7812 5 лет назад +5

      Welcome to Capitalism, where things are only done for the promise of profit

    • @andrewtate4897
      @andrewtate4897 5 лет назад +8

      @Nevermind even worse it's filled with people like you

    • @davidkennedy1077
      @davidkennedy1077 5 лет назад +3

      Sad isnt it, people are just too lazy to walk a few steps and put it in the bin. I live near Chelmsford in Essex and that has waterways like this that have to be cleared of all the crap that people chuck in. I bet they find all sorts in there including stuff that's been used in crimes (guns, knives, those wallets had probably been pickpocketed, emptied and flung in the canal to get rid) I bet the canals in London are far worse though, as a lot of London is downright disgusting.

    • @princesssolace4337
      @princesssolace4337 5 лет назад

      I'm here coz of the rubbish.

  • @ChuckKirchner-se6ib
    @ChuckKirchner-se6ib 5 месяцев назад +1

    It's hard to believe that I've been watching Martins videos for FOUR years. It's Christmas Eve 2023, and I'm revisiting my favorite MZ video. Thanks again, Martin, and keep 'em comin'!!

  • @PNEKarl
    @PNEKarl 4 года назад +46

    I have to ask this question. Who are the four thousand people who down voted this excellent video? Can you tell us why? Why?

    • @slicedmango1715
      @slicedmango1715 4 года назад

      Karl Johnson ok boomer

    • @PNEKarl
      @PNEKarl 4 года назад +12

      @@slicedmango1715 Idiots! No respect :-(

    • @TheJohhnyrotten
      @TheJohhnyrotten 4 года назад +6

      Probably scousers Karl.

    • @josephdevine1152
      @josephdevine1152 4 года назад +17

      They probably found the content draining.
      I found it fascinating, layers of history.

    • @delboytrotter8806
      @delboytrotter8806 4 года назад +3

      Southerners.............

  • @johnmagus6341
    @johnmagus6341 5 лет назад +157

    Shout out to the Canals and River trust guys who let you go scope this out.

    • @ShawshankR3demption
      @ShawshankR3demption 5 лет назад +4

      That was pretty nice of them!

    • @wotever99ninynine
      @wotever99ninynine 5 лет назад +4

      yeah. they clearly do great work. good guys.

    • @TheFjmtb
      @TheFjmtb 5 лет назад +7

      I went to see the work they did on lock 92, Martin has done a vid on that two. The explainer spent 20 mins telling us all about the lock and work they were doing. Fascinating stuff. Obviously went to see this plug hole too!

  • @0796logsplitter
    @0796logsplitter 5 лет назад +59

    I worked as a site manager overseeing the earthworks on land regeneration projects around Manchester for 13 years. Was one of the best jobs ever! Saw some really interesting industrial archeology over the years. I understand your passion Martin. Great channel you have here 👍

  • @bethp1530
    @bethp1530 3 года назад +13

    Thank you to Colin and Shaun of Foxes Afloat for posting the link to this video ! So glad I got to see the 200 year old door and learn more about the canals.

  • @terryengland1880
    @terryengland1880 4 года назад +4

    Great video Martin, I seem to remember a video of a canal group were cleaning a streach of canal and they pulled up a length of chain with a lump of wood on it, thought no more about it. Came back the next day to carry on and found the canal completely dry!

    • @MartinZero
      @MartinZero  4 года назад +1

      Oh yeah I heard about that Terry

  • @IcyMidnight
    @IcyMidnight 5 лет назад +130

    It was interesting to learn about the buried river, but seeing the picture of the cleaned canal at the end was such a relief! 😂

    • @GoldBallTV
      @GoldBallTV 5 лет назад +5

      IcyMidnight it’s a shame that by the end of the weekend after it was refilled it probably had a good 20+ cans/bottles thrown into it.

    • @tstuff
      @tstuff 4 года назад +2

      I know. Once I saw the water drained out I got a bit of anxiety. I was "I hope they clean up all the trash and bricks after they finish what ever they were down there to fix." I want to see how the water looks after it was cleaned.

    • @frofrofrofro900
      @frofrofrofro900 4 года назад

      @@tstuff you can clean it too

  • @Bramsshed1913
    @Bramsshed1913 5 лет назад +2367

    I stumbled across this video and intrigued by the title settled down to watch it and so glad I did ,a truly fascinating piece of history . Brilliant video! and subscribed.

    • @MartinZero
      @MartinZero  5 лет назад +29

      Thank you, glad you found it and thanks for subscribing 👍🏼

    • @iantibbetts6871
      @iantibbetts6871 5 лет назад +9

      Same as Bram the wades thank you for your time and effort now a subscriber

    • @breaktofreedom
      @breaktofreedom 5 лет назад +8

      Couldn't have put it better Bram. Thanks for making the effort to share this with us Martin. Very kind of you to take the time to share such an important moment.

    • @lawrencethompson3805
      @lawrencethompson3805 5 лет назад +14

      I have to admit I came across it by accident and thought what a sad git but have to admit without people like him history like this would be lost in time fair play to the bloke

    • @lawrencethompson3805
      @lawrencethompson3805 5 лет назад +9

      Ps I have a mate that would love an hour in there with his metal detector

  • @chrisbishop1534
    @chrisbishop1534 4 года назад +1

    Excellent film ,i sit here and watch these for hours!Thanks!

  • @andrewlaverghetta715
    @andrewlaverghetta715 Месяц назад

    215 years ago (as of the recording of this). It's so crazy to think about the history that's everywhere else in the world, at least the history of life the way we know it, compared to where I live, Indiana in the United States. We had 17 states at that time. Heck, when this was made is when Lewis and Clark began their journey to the west of the Mississippi River.
    Thanks for your channel, Martin! It's so cool to learn about all this stuff from so long ago.

  • @TerminalPassage
    @TerminalPassage 5 лет назад +81

    Someone needs to drop a waterproof camera with a light down there

  • @19bob53
    @19bob53 5 лет назад +164

    Martin, your enthusiasm is infectious, from following your previous videos your professionalism and knowledge of the subjects you cover is increasing with each new episode. Keep up the good work.

    • @bandccoresohio
      @bandccoresohio 5 лет назад +1

      His clap and gonorrhea are even more infectious

  • @tba8241
    @tba8241 4 года назад +1

    Well presented,thank you Martin//

  • @devoranehila1412
    @devoranehila1412 3 года назад +2

    So cool! Thank You for taking me somewhere I will never get to go!

  • @Thost407
    @Thost407 5 лет назад +19

    This has got a BBC 4 Documentary vibe, very well made. That going down the ladder shot was a funny addition. Enjoyed watching this.

  • @utooth8114
    @utooth8114 5 лет назад +5

    Well done.
    The men that built it, a credit to their skills.
    Greetings from Australia 👍

  • @Andy-yh8cg
    @Andy-yh8cg 2 года назад +1

    History, mystery and engineering. Great stuff!

  • @nickharling1356
    @nickharling1356 4 года назад +13

    Magic, loved every minute of that - proper local history presented with passion! Well done mate 👍

  • @Creationeer
    @Creationeer 5 лет назад +6

    As a Mancunian myself, the Tib was always a bit of an urban myth, a bit of a joke, but to actually see it in action draining the Rochdale canal is fascinating. I also had to watch your lost waterways video, great stuff. I love urban exploring in central Manchester, there's so much hidden around and under the city! Thanks for sharing this :)

  • @sighteternal497
    @sighteternal497 5 лет назад +10

    I had a semi religious experience watching this video, this is one of the most entertaining videos I have been blessed to enjoy in years. Thank you for posting it!

  • @richardscally694
    @richardscally694 3 года назад +1

    Absolutely amazing fascinating video, thank you far better than TV.

  • @markprice1614
    @markprice1614 4 года назад +1

    Not sure how I got here but I'm glad I came. Cool story.

  • @rrp6405
    @rrp6405 5 лет назад +36

    See video about trap door in a canal, thats cool. Omg 26 minutes. But really good watch. Nothing better than watching a video with someone that is really excited about what they are doing :)

  • @drinxs505
    @drinxs505 5 лет назад +5

    Your excited?!I'm from Laguna Pueblo (Native American) and this is making me excited..I love architecture of all sorts..from the Inuits and there igloos to the great Wall of China to the Greeks,Roman,Incas, Egyptian's..thank you for the history lesson!

  • @navigator902
    @navigator902 3 года назад

    Thanks for sharing the old canal trap door, and I agree it has the pirates of the Caribbean flavor.

  • @PlasticAssasin8
    @PlasticAssasin8 3 года назад +2

    i find it amazing that 200 odd years ago someone said, "hey, that canal, lets put a trap door in it to be able to drain it into the river that was once here" amazing!

    • @MartinZero
      @MartinZero  3 года назад

      Great isnt it

    • @PlasticAssasin8
      @PlasticAssasin8 3 года назад

      @@MartinZero
      I used to work for a Gov Utility where i live. Every month or so we would go down into the communications tunnels under our capital city checking for gas leaks. All tunnels were name lower ___ and little lower ___ in sequence with the streets above. There is also a part that goes to a trap door, bolted that intersects with an old creek/river that flowed through the center of the city and exits down in the river, its now the main storm water drain. Most people don't know about it.
      I was never able to go it "alone" in the tunnels as we always had a "minder". There are stories that all the tunnels connect to everywhere and were built before the Telco came in as steam tunnels under the city.
      I tend to believe this, as there was an industrial accident many years ago , an explosion of welding equipment in the basement of the parliament house, i felt the movement of air when it happened as i was no more than 4 city blocks, in one of the 4 story tunnels/rooms inspection a leak.
      Long since stopped working in the area , but will never forget the amazing underground world under the city of Melbourne

  • @PaulCarterArt
    @PaulCarterArt 5 лет назад +30

    Great time capsule of the history. Thanks for sharing

  • @tomwilliam5118
    @tomwilliam5118 5 лет назад +10

    I'm not sure how I stumbled across this video but I and glad that I did. since I had a family in the UK Manchester area Liverpool area and wrexham. I was in Manchester back in 76 I remember walking along that canal I never thought that I'd be watching a video in 2019 about the canal and the history

  • @molluscturtle
    @molluscturtle 4 года назад

    What a passionate man - and thanks for saving the fish. 🐟

  • @BlanketVR12
    @BlanketVR12 4 года назад +1

    That was pretty awesome thanks for the history lesson.

  • @seaworthysloth2375
    @seaworthysloth2375 5 лет назад +69

    We didn’t half build stuff to last! The good old days. Nice vid!

  • @doctorfairlight2792
    @doctorfairlight2792 5 лет назад +31

    Sir, your passion for the Tib & the canal is heartwarming.
    There's something haunting about that trapdoor.
    I'm glad the pike wasn't left to die.
    Thank you so much.

    • @FoxDren
      @FoxDren 5 лет назад +1

      They do take care to try and save any fish they find while draining canals.

    • @cadenrolland5250
      @cadenrolland5250 5 лет назад +3

      Anything that survives that canal in the middle of the city deserves respect! I can't imagine what it eats in there.

    • @MartinZero
      @MartinZero  5 лет назад

      Thank you 😊 👍

    • @theartofwanderlust
      @theartofwanderlust 5 лет назад

      patrick lee we have them in the Northern lakes in Canada they can grow up to about 50 pounds they eat baby ducks, frogs and any other fish that gets in front of it we also call them jack fish or slew sharks. Damn good eating out of really cold clean water

    • @MegaPatricklee
      @MegaPatricklee 5 лет назад

      Colin we have them in ireland too and they eat pretty much anything 😀

  • @geoffhunter7704
    @geoffhunter7704 3 года назад +1

    Excellent video ,Martin a great day out for info re canal history,a huge shout out to the Canal and River Trust for allowing your "hands on" experience, marvellous!

  • @pauledwards2817
    @pauledwards2817 3 года назад +3

    Its great to know from looking at the map that a street has been named after Tony Wilson. I recall as a kid in my home town about some workers accidentally pulling the plug on a section of the Chesterfield canal in Worksop. As a kid it never crossed my mind that of course the water must go somewhere and wonder if it gets in to the nearby river. Seem to recall from press pictures the plug was about the size of a Monopoly board, perhaps a little larger. Thanks for another great video.

  • @Coondawgwoopwoop
    @Coondawgwoopwoop 5 лет назад +9

    Cheers from Boulder, Colorado. My dads from Preston and I always loved the trips to Manchester so needless to say I enjoyed this little peek back into the past.

  • @JosephmonopoliJr
    @JosephmonopoliJr 5 лет назад +28

    Not sure why this was in my feed but im delighted it was. I cant say I have ever heard of the trap door... the river tib or even that canal for that matter. But your enthusiasm throughout the video kept me watching to the end. Great bit of information there sir well presented.

  • @richhughes7450
    @richhughes7450 Год назад

    Thanks for sharing that. Blows my mind that men with shovels dug many canals out.

  • @virginiaorganbuilder
    @virginiaorganbuilder 4 года назад +2

    I would NEVER have imagined that such a thing would exist! Amazing! I agree completely with your excitement and your description of the workers who built it.

  • @kathryngagne5813
    @kathryngagne5813 5 лет назад +12

    Intriguing! Millions of people all over the world in big cities have no idea what lays beneath their feet. One city built on top of the last, forgotten. Thank you for keeping your history alive and well in Manchester.

    • @ianhodson9673
      @ianhodson9673 4 года назад

      Kathryn, It is said that Birmingham has more canals than Venice. They are truly a national treasure and renovation of these canals has been ongoing for years by the Canals Trust. Great for picturesque walks too. And try are all flat!

  • @CerealWIthIce
    @CerealWIthIce 5 лет назад +60

    Sometimes RUclips will recommend good videos... and this is one of them times

  • @gladius69
    @gladius69 4 года назад +1

    I wish I had as much passion for life as this guy does for a drain