‘Into the Wild’ Bus MOVED | Everything You NEED to Know

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  • Опубликовано: 20 июн 2020
  • The quietly organized 'Operation Yutan' was executed on June 18th 2020, permanently removing Bus 142, affectionately known as the "Magic Bus," from what was supposed to be its final resting place.
    ***SEE MY FULL BUS 142 EXPERIENCE HERE: bit.ly/3119W3x
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    I did this trip with my friend Ryan Lester of ParklandFilms. Check out his take on this adventure over on his channel: / parkland. .
    A joint operation between the Alaska National Guard and the Alaska Department of Natural Resources was conducted airlifting the 80 year old bus to an undisclosed location for safe storage. The operation was conducted in order to prevent future fatalities and search and rescue missions retrieving unexperienced hikers attempting to make it to the bus as a pilgrimage.
    Fairbanks Transit System Bus 142 was redeployed and transformed from it's original purpose as a public transport vehicle to a remote housing unit at the Yutan Construction Company gold mine on the Stampede Trail. In 1961 on it's way back from the mine, it was abandoned and left as a backcountry emergency shelter.
    In 1992, Christopher McCandless (Alex Supertramp)discovered the bus on his soul-searching adventure with the goal of living off the land in the Alaskan wilderness. Days into his solo trek, he stumbled upon the bus and made it his home for ~112 day until he became stranded and ended up dying there due to starvation and other complications. Hunters found him weeks later.
    Known as "The Magic Bus", the 1946 International Harvester was abandoned by road workers in 1961 on the Stampede Trail where it remained until today.
    Now, people all over the world know Chris's story from the journals he kept from his time at the bus. He became a romantic figure to some inspired by what they see as his free-spirited idealism, but to others a controversial misguided figure. "The Magic Bus" became a pilgrimage destination for trekkers who camp at the vehicle, some of whom have also gotten into difficulties or even died due to the Teklanika River.
    Chris is the subject of 'Into the Wild', a nonfiction book by Jon Krakauer that was later made into a full-length feature film directed by Sean Penn. My personal interest in this seemingly un-reachable destination interested me from a young age as we studied the book in school and I have watched the movie plenty times over. Actually getting to be at the real bus in person was an experience I will never forget.

Комментарии • 1,6 тыс.

  • @simonmarthinsen1566
    @simonmarthinsen1566 4 года назад +990

    Imagine someone on their way to the bus as they were flying it out of there

    • @jonrebman1496
      @jonrebman1496 4 года назад +17

      🤣

    • @jameelahmed3080
      @jameelahmed3080 4 года назад +10

      🤣🤣🤣

    • @dapperdingo
      @dapperdingo 4 года назад +76

      I found the bus while hiking back there in June of 2002 and I find this comment exceedingly funny because I know of the challenge it was to get there, and the thought of looking up and seeing a flying bus at that very moment in time ...

    • @StanMovies
      @StanMovies 4 года назад +9

      Haha 🤣😂 I haven't laughed out loud from a RUclips as far back as I can remember!

    • @josie4065
      @josie4065 4 года назад +5

      😂😂😂😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭

  • @mkia4367
    @mkia4367 4 года назад +778

    I get why everyone is sad it was removed, but remember, Chris didn’t head out into the wilderness looking for a bus....... that’s not the spirit of his journey

    • @desert4seat
      @desert4seat 4 года назад +42

      Exactly. if you care so much about this bus, you're missing the point entirely.

    • @natedogg7376
      @natedogg7376 4 года назад +24

      There is an older video that shows a local dog musher interview and he talked about how there are 2 cabins out there 5 miles away that were broken into that summer and vandalised and he believed it to be Chris. He also had Chris's backpack from the bus for a few years before finding a hidden pocket that had Chris's wallet, multiple forms if ID and $300 cash showing he intended to come back to society. Even showed the ID's right down to his library card which I found interesting as the story goes he gave the last of his pocket change to the guy whom dropped him off. the dog musher also said Chris would have likely never found the bus as snow was everywhere including over river crossings and he likely followed the dog sled trail to find the bus. Chris wasn't stupid albeit unprepared but he had luck on his side a few times or he might not have made it as far as he did.

    • @jillybean3688
      @jillybean3688 4 года назад +22

      @@natedogg7376 I highly doubt Chris broke in and vandalized anybody's cabin and if it was really him wouldn't he have taken shelter there and
      have eaten something from the cabin so he wouldn't have starved to death? I don't believe that dog mushers story at all.

    • @MJG70
      @MJG70 4 года назад +20

      It is where he died and it should be left there

    • @joneubanks9686
      @joneubanks9686 4 года назад +4

      he essentially went out into the woods to kill himself

  • @kimbiggerstaff8609
    @kimbiggerstaff8609 3 года назад +123

    I read an article that said it was taken to be displayed at a museum in Fairbanks. The McCandless family has donated alot of his pictures snd journals to be displayed with it. Sounds like a cool homage to his adventures. He didn't set out for a bus, but thank God it was there for him. His story has inspired me to think about what life means. He has changed lives by his adventures and mistakes. God bless him and his family!

    • @dandolan3168
      @dandolan3168 Год назад

      Instead of rotting into the wilderness...I see the principle

    • @c.p.b1165
      @c.p.b1165 Год назад +2

      Imagine going to Alaska, one of the most beautiful natural areas in the world, and going to a museum to see a bus. The bus being in the middle of the wilderness made it an oasis, which is why it was special. They mime as well crushed it when they took it out.

    • @milesmayhem5440
      @milesmayhem5440 8 месяцев назад

      Are his family planning to sue the manufacturer of the bus.

    • @SIERRATREES
      @SIERRATREES 4 месяца назад

      @@c.p.b1165 naaah, the display is a homage to Chris, so whats the problem with going to see the wilderness AND dropping in on a display about a story, that captured the attention of so many people. The book by John Krakauer is studied in schools.

  • @larrylarryg9402
    @larrylarryg9402 4 года назад +442

    The BUS is only a metaphor. Go have your adventure and come back.

    • @naturegirl8248
      @naturegirl8248 4 года назад +18

      Wow, well said! I admire Chris McCandless in every way, but I want to be more prepared, when I do what Im going to do.

    • @josie4065
      @josie4065 4 года назад +1

      True. It is sad they had to remove it, though.

    • @millesrenquest7997
      @millesrenquest7997 4 года назад +7

      That's not true at all.... It's about the bus. The bus...

    • @BCrisp
      @BCrisp 4 года назад +3

      Thank you, that helped a lot. I'm gonna have my own story!

    • @tss3393
      @tss3393 3 года назад +5

      Emphasis on come back.
      *HAPPINESS ONLY REAL WHEN SHARED.*

  • @johnes0522
    @johnes0522 4 года назад +900

    I would bet that people continue to hike there even though the bus is gone.

    • @jodydolphin79
      @jodydolphin79 4 года назад +59

      I disagree.. some will go but very few.. the landmark is gone.. sad

    • @christopherscott8747
      @christopherscott8747 4 года назад +80

      I fully plan to go! The bus may be gone but the location will live forever

    • @kadebruce295
      @kadebruce295 4 года назад +17

      They probably will! Might as well just leave it there.

    • @PaintSlinger99
      @PaintSlinger99 4 года назад +29

      90% traffic reduction

    • @jdf9456
      @jdf9456 4 года назад +23

      Highly doubt it, most people wanted to see bus itself, as the memories inside were always respected, taking the iconic picture etc etc. Any Alaskan hike can resonate the "experience" but just going to an empty patch would be pointless

  • @markienatnots9479
    @markienatnots9479 4 года назад +113

    What amazes me with the whole story is that unprepared people were travelling to a location where an unprepared person died.

    • @ryanfischer2889
      @ryanfischer2889 4 года назад +5

      So true..

    • @phmwu7368
      @phmwu7368 4 года назад +11

      These days, those youngsters are called " Millennials " 😂

    • @tanyastille407
      @tanyastille407 4 года назад +5

      He didn't die because he was unprepared. He dies from eating the wrong plant

    • @jillybean3688
      @jillybean3688 4 года назад +10

      @@tanyastille407 yeah he was kind of unprepared too. If he knew how to properly store meat he would have been able to live off of that Moose for quite a long time.

    • @LetsGoFlyers2011
      @LetsGoFlyers2011 3 года назад +8

      @@tanyastille407 He really died because he didn't have a map(unprepared) and didn't know there was a cable bridge about a half mile away from where he couldn't cross, when he was still healthy.

  • @scottharper3353
    @scottharper3353 4 года назад +17

    Hiked there in 2006, slept in the bus, always wanted to go back.

    • @Velociraptor2000
      @Velociraptor2000 3 года назад +1

      Well, now it'll be in a much safer environment, it belongs in a museum.

  • @72marshflower15
    @72marshflower15 4 года назад +357

    “Happiness is only real when it’s shared” - Chris McCandless

    • @josie4065
      @josie4065 4 года назад +5

      Such an insightful statement. And I sincerely hope we go back to having real shared experiences very soon.

    • @jaymercha3859
      @jaymercha3859 4 года назад +2

      i learned that in kindergarten why did it take him so long?

    • @wingzfan102
      @wingzfan102 4 года назад +2

      People need to stop butchering this quote. It’s “Happiness only real when shared”

    • @user-dx7ne8eu6u
      @user-dx7ne8eu6u 3 года назад +3

      @@wingzfan102 "Happiness is only real when shared" you also got it wrong.......

    • @scaberouswretch3673
      @scaberouswretch3673 3 года назад +7

      No it isn't. Although I get what he meant. You can be happy on your own, although it's more fulfilling with others.
      The really sad part is that he had do what he did in order to realise that he actually did need people in his life.

  • @rubberdwellers3911
    @rubberdwellers3911 4 года назад +69

    This will not stop people from migrating to that location where he originally died. The location of that bus will always be a place of memorial

    • @survivortechharold6575
      @survivortechharold6575 3 года назад +1

      It was never a place of memorial, it was a fad celebrating spoiled rich kids stupidity.

    • @judywright4241
      @judywright4241 3 года назад +3

      The area will get overgrown, making it more difficult to even find it. I hope they don’t destroy the bus, it’s both a memorial of ‘free spirits’ still taking advantage of hard won knowledge of others who have gone before. Half the bus could be preserved and mounted in a museum. People can’t walk through it, stressing the metal more but allow it to remain as a living lesson. The Boy Scout motto about ‘Being Prepared’ shows wisdom that nature IS bigger than we are. Nurture the free spirit but hedge in with preparations not to always be at war with natural forces. They are designed to win.

    • @eeeeeeeeeeeee9651
      @eeeeeeeeeeeee9651 2 года назад +2

      @@survivortechharold6575 "spoiled rich kid"? Maybe go watch the ted talk made by his sister

    • @kikionthetrailoflove7036
      @kikionthetrailoflove7036 2 года назад +2

      @@survivortechharold6575 The real meaning of his story has obviously been lost on you.

    • @feralcatofthenorth
      @feralcatofthenorth 2 года назад

      Or they could just go to the museum in Fairbanks and see the bus and memorial there without the huge risk.

  • @upstateshenanigans430
    @upstateshenanigans430 4 года назад +158

    I remember being a kid and hearing supertramps story and thinking he was such a badass, now being 10 years older then he was at the time I see a kid, a brave kid and it breaks my heart knowing that he died alone. His story will never lose my interest.

    • @raec.638
      @raec.638 4 года назад +9

      He Chris died in a place he loved! He experienced things that most never will. I read the book and have the video. Riviting! Emile Hursh did an excellent job portraying Chris's adventure.. I am sad they took his resting place away. Did his family have any say in this move? PUT THE BUS BACK! This move should never of happened! .why wasn't thought about more clearly? Once again, government interfere! Anyone who chose to trek to the bus most. Likely read the book/saw the Vid. Once again, the government is telling us what we can or cannot do. PUT THE BUS BACK! Don't mess with a man's resting place, where his Spirit still resides. My final thought---PUT THE BUS BACK ! A grammie in Maine USA!

    • @A_name_is_a_name
      @A_name_is_a_name 4 года назад +3

      He experienced true freedom. I know where he’s coming from now that I’m 20. He knew what he wanted. The same as all the old and dying wish they could have done. Even the rich. Trust me, my family is wealthy and my uncle who is an ex congressman says he would in a heartbeat if he wasn’t about to die.

    • @anthonydavis9662
      @anthonydavis9662 4 года назад +2

      @@raec.638 Oh cripes, GROW UP with this "government telling us what to do" garbage already! Seriously -- GROW UP and realize that when irresponsible people make a habit of putting themselves in danger because of a dangerous attraction, it needs to be removed. Would you allow an old, rotting tire swing near an unpredictable river stay there if your kids always went down to the river to swing off it?

    • @raec.638
      @raec.638 4 года назад +4

      @@anthonydavis9662 no to swing. We are not talking about kids! Adult trekers would be making their way to the bus, to retrace chris steps. To enjoy all the sites, sounds and smells that CHRIS so loved. Too bad you don't get that. Now, straighten your tie and get back to your boring dull life! Let the real adventures enjoy their time....into the wild! Screw the government and anyone else that tells me at 71 to grow up! If my words offend you...... Good! RC

    • @edwardo737
      @edwardo737 4 года назад +1

      RHONDA CHANDLER with you 100%

  • @kamaliasc
    @kamaliasc Год назад +15

    In September 2020, the UA Museum of the North
    became the official repository for Bus 142
    (aka "Stampede Trail Bus", "Magic Bus", or
    “Into the Wild Bus").
    The bus and associated historical materials have
    been cataloged into the UAMN Ethnology & History
    permanent collection, and many of these objects
    will eventually be placed on public exhibit.

  • @valiant7357
    @valiant7357 3 года назад +90

    Would have been cheaper to build a walking bridge.. lol

  • @br1anmcc1
    @br1anmcc1 4 года назад +63

    Glad you were able to document it while it was still in place.

  • @andrews1376
    @andrews1376 4 года назад +63

    Nothing like that lasts forever, buses rust and government departments will save money. It is his story that will endure, his ideas and thoughts have been immortalised in print and film and we should celebrate and be grateful for that.

  • @earlsuman5985
    @earlsuman5985 4 года назад +158

    Maybe they will build an escalator to the top of Mount Everest.

    • @allenwu1149
      @allenwu1149 4 года назад +4

      And a couple more decades: An elevator!

    • @anthonydavis9662
      @anthonydavis9662 4 года назад +17

      They ought to close Everest. Ever see the litter that the pigs have left on it? It's truly disgraceful. And so many people do it now with expedition companies that it's basically become worthless as a true test of personal strength.

    • @jenbill
      @jenbill 4 года назад +2

      @@anthonydavis9662 I’m with you there they have so many climbing it now that a line gets backed up and have to wait their turn to reach the summit, not that big of a deal anymore but to much money involved to ever stop it something like $25,000 a head for the privilege of risking your life.

    • @andrews1376
      @andrews1376 4 года назад +2

      That's it exactly. Some people want things conveniently reduced in order for them to have an experience and it's not the same, it will never be the same.

    • @gibbethoskins8621
      @gibbethoskins8621 4 года назад

      😂

  • @klowkler1
    @klowkler1 3 года назад +51

    For all of you who are wondering
    '' On September 24, 2020, the Museum of The North, at the University of Alaska in Fairbanks announced that it had become the permanent home of Bus 142, which will be restored and an outdoor exhibit will be created. ''

    • @sotis1756
      @sotis1756 3 года назад +14

      Fuk.. should’ve just left it.

    • @abstract6758
      @abstract6758 3 года назад +9

      @@sotis1756 yep totally right dude, should have been left were it was, I find it incredibly disrespectful to move it on so many levels, not much bothers me as I’m super chilled but this shit got me pissed off, shit some things just need to be left alone and bus 142 was definitely one of them.

    • @Paul5520
      @Paul5520 3 года назад +6

      Whilst I’m not happy it was moved I understand why.

    • @chistinelane
      @chistinelane 3 года назад +1

      Neutering it

    • @Subjohny
      @Subjohny 2 года назад +2

      well ...at least they didnt destroyed it like they did to "Killdozer"

  • @greenmile9496
    @greenmile9496 4 года назад +26

    “All we are is Dust in the Wind”
    Over time, that bus would have melted into the ground....
    “Rust Never Sleeps”

    • @geezerpleasers_OG
      @geezerpleasers_OG 3 года назад +1

      And then there's the inevitable heat death of the universe.....

  • @victorcontreras9138
    @victorcontreras9138 3 года назад +5

    You are very fortunate to have toured the bus at it's place. To me, it would have been worth the money and time for such a memorable experience. If I'd had gone, just being inside the bus would have put me in a beautiful, nostalgic trance of time and memories to his being there. May he live forever in our hearts and memories!

  • @sailboatrn7372
    @sailboatrn7372 4 года назад +17

    Chris and his family went to my high school. I find this a bit sad. It is like the final end of Chris’s adventure.

  • @stephanieoregan
    @stephanieoregan 4 года назад +61

    We just watched Into The Wild this week, man did I bawl like a baby at the end.

    • @iyot1020
      @iyot1020 3 года назад +1

      i just thought he was a stupid hippie and died as a consequence of his ignorance. he should have read survival books instead of Tolstoy and poems

    • @michaelmoore1640
      @michaelmoore1640 3 года назад +1

      @@iyot1020 He was an unprepared dipshit, poacher, without enough sense to understand his surroundings. These kind of people come up here all the time and we have rescue/recover them. For some reason they never have to pay for it, we do.

    • @Jane_Friday
      @Jane_Friday 3 года назад

      Ne too

    • @survivortechharold6575
      @survivortechharold6575 3 года назад +1

      he only showed that stupid is as stupid does. Remember it was a movie not reality. Dramatized complete ignorance.

  • @paulcole4902
    @paulcole4902 4 года назад +142

    Hopefully it Will be put into a museum and all of the contents but to me it feels like his grave as been moved so sad that was the place he wanted to be why take that away from him RIP Chris.

    • @cyberpleb2472
      @cyberpleb2472 4 года назад +15

      He's dead. Funerals are for the living. If he was a decent person, he would have wanted whatever his family and loved ones wanted for his body. As for the bus, that wasn't his either.

    • @amazingabby25
      @amazingabby25 4 года назад +2

      Cyber Pleb people died going through

    • @MUFFINHEAD1985
      @MUFFINHEAD1985 4 года назад +5

      @@cyberpleb2472 I negatively judged him too but 5 mins or less ago I just finished watching this and it'll make you realise why he did what he did. He was a good guy. ruclips.net/video/XIUxM2X6uZw/видео.html

    • @jacksonfox2481
      @jacksonfox2481 4 года назад

      @@cyberpleb2472 ? Funerals are for the dead.

    • @grizzleypeak
      @grizzleypeak 4 года назад +8

      It won't go to a museum....
      Out of context now, it is an old rotten bus. It will be deemed unsafe, un-restorable, and scrapped.
      They should have just let it be.

  • @el9418
    @el9418 4 года назад +11

    The bus was carried away on a trailer by the Alaska Department of Transportation and Public Facilities. It was on State land and is now held by the State. As you explained, they did it because there were many expensive operations to rescue unprepared hikers.

    • @michaelebemis9746
      @michaelebemis9746 10 месяцев назад

      ruclips.net/video/8Z9wB_NHcoc/видео.html

    • @larryhullinger4141
      @larryhullinger4141 7 месяцев назад +1

      The bus was carried away by a helicopter No truck and trailor could ever get out there

    • @gregbaehring1656
      @gregbaehring1656 Месяц назад

      The bus was placed by a hunter due to the location, in order to wait out the weather .

  • @recoil2952
    @recoil2952 4 года назад +98

    I was lucky enough to hitchhike thru Alaska and made my own personal trip to the bus with my best friend. I'm deeply saddened they decided to move the bus and not build the bridge. I'm very happy I was able to spend time there my name is written inside . 2009 Colby and Justin

    • @nateboydickson7109
      @nateboydickson7109 4 года назад

      I see u got got the jar of flies as ur profile pic hell yeah

    • @cplcabs
      @cplcabs 3 года назад +4

      Yes, why not build a bridge, ruining more nature. 🙄

    • @alibhaigaming7102
      @alibhaigaming7102 3 года назад

      People are so greedy they all did it for money as out there are many rich collectors who would give huge amount of money for that stuff like diaries

    • @averyfountain5493
      @averyfountain5493 2 года назад +1

      why would they build a bridge

    • @c17mgospa74
      @c17mgospa74 Год назад

      A bridge???! And You think that is a good idea ruing such a Beauty just cause some ass holes are not able to understand when it is the right time to do this trip.
      I have been there in the 2011….it was not that difficult to find it…actually. Me and my dog friend…I am sorry but to write Our names I guess I delete also Yours...that’ life.

  • @vicshrily
    @vicshrily 3 года назад +13

    It would be an honor to our beautiful forever young Chris.. that the bus be set-up as memorial. Chris's life has touched so many of us.

  • @msvdronetube
    @msvdronetube 4 года назад +66

    A very sad day for explorers and adventurers the world over. There are many people who have been inspired by the book and the movie. They will never be able to see the bus in it’s original location again.
    I think you made your video just in time. We thank you for that.
    Like you, I understand the reasons for moving the magic bus but it still hurts.
    I only hope that it will be displayed somewhere. Perhaps even more people will have an opportunity to visit it.
    Thanks for sharing.
    Keep safe.
    M&L

    • @BetImRight
      @BetImRight 4 года назад +5

      Perfect response. Well said and I agree.

    • @SpreadingtheMuse
      @SpreadingtheMuse 4 года назад +3

      Those "inspired people" would go up there and act like a pact of baboons, turning the pristine location into a pig sty of garbage.

    • @arthurbttf
      @arthurbttf 4 года назад +1

      It was on my bucket list to go there, it would be the "grand prize" for a very long trip. Now I don't see a reason to stop by Alaska.
      But I'm glad morons won't die trying to get to the bus.

  • @tonygohagan2766
    @tonygohagan2766 4 года назад +46

    I hope they'll make some kind of Museum, so that people can satisfy their curiosity, complete their pilgrimages, celebrate his life, without having to retrace his steps and repeat his tragedy.

    • @vutEwa
      @vutEwa 4 года назад +2

      celebrating an idiot

    • @A_name_is_a_name
      @A_name_is_a_name 4 года назад +9

      People like y’all are a problem. If someone wants to run into the woods they can. You have no position to judge. Yet you do. Ignorant fools.

    • @Guy1105Fawkes
      @Guy1105Fawkes 4 года назад +2

      There's always been a way to do it all in a safe way. BEING FUCKING PREPARED. He wasn't, but he still survived longer than any of us here could, I think, so he wasn't that much of an idiot, huh?

    • @vutEwa
      @vutEwa 4 года назад +1

      @@Guy1105Fawkes you ignore facts. Chris destroyed cabins stole food and still died. Everything he touched turned to shit. Open your eyes. Pick better examples to model YOUR life after. Don't pawn away your self respect for a stupid movie produced by a total life loser, Sean Penn.

    • @Freekniggers
      @Freekniggers 4 года назад +3

      No. They seek to destroy our history and monuments and landmarks.

  • @animovie1
    @animovie1 3 года назад +39

    While it is a shame that the bus is gone Chris did not venture out into the wilderness to find a bus. The amazing part of his story is the journey. While Chris is an inspiration to many people, losing your life in order to find this bus is not worth it. Not to mention the massive strain this puts on the rescue service who could be dealing with other emergencies. There is nothing stopping devotees from actually training and preparing to do such a hike, I just hope that this will deter the truly unprepared.

    • @michaelebemis9746
      @michaelebemis9746 10 месяцев назад

      ruclips.net/video/8Z9wB_NHcoc/видео.html

  • @travis1190
    @travis1190 4 года назад +60

    This was a goal of mine for over 10 years. I can't believe this happened...

    • @ryanstein440
      @ryanstein440 4 года назад +5

      Snooze you lose

    • @tuliplover8862
      @tuliplover8862 4 года назад +7

      i’m sorry :( you can still go “into the wild”, i know the bus symbolizes a lot but the most important part of the trip should be the nature. don’t let this deter you from your goal

    • @A_name_is_a_name
      @A_name_is_a_name 4 года назад +2

      1StarProductions your opinion is less important than your life. And that’s saying something. You are nothing more than an ant on a rock.

    • @Fancypants117
      @Fancypants117 4 года назад +5

      I'd have to train to do it, but what some would consider miserable and shitty others would call almost a spiritual journey to pit yourself against nature and break from society for a time
      It's not for everyone, and people shouldn't be such careless tourists like all the people who try to hike Everest now. Rich people paying their way to the summit to feel accomplished

    • @MrChancebandit
      @MrChancebandit 4 года назад +5

      @1StarProductions you obviously don't understand it ....so keep too your paved roads loser

  • @buenavibra2484
    @buenavibra2484 4 года назад +83

    Is not the same, the trip and the wildlife was the coolest part, also all the history about the book, I kind of disappointed for this notice.!

    • @imcavdb5465
      @imcavdb5465 4 года назад +3

      Big Wheel
      You're so right!
      People often don't think about the people who put their lifes in danger to rescue people, or to remove skelletons of stupid idiots.
      I feel the same about brainless men and women that climb mountains and riscue the lifes of rescue workers.

    • @A_name_is_a_name
      @A_name_is_a_name 4 года назад +7

      Big Wheel they have the freedom to do as they please. You have no right to not let them adventure. You are the problem. How dare you be allowed to breath.

    • @A_name_is_a_name
      @A_name_is_a_name 4 года назад +8

      Imca vdB then. Don’t. Rescue. Them. You childish sensitive fools are the bane of humanity and the society you uphold. Brainwashed to think that everything revolves around safety.

    • @joneubanks9686
      @joneubanks9686 4 года назад

      @@A_name_is_a_name if you believe that, then you also believe that they have the freedom to be lost up there

    • @A_name_is_a_name
      @A_name_is_a_name 4 года назад

      Jon Eubanks yes I do. I believe you have the freedom to live in the woods. I believe you have the freedom to die of stupidity, accident, and bad luck anywhere in this universe if that is what your decisions lead to. You have a narrow idea of reality and outcomes. As does the person who replied before you. You naive fools think that anything possibly dangerous is auto banned because you can’t trust yourself. Like a helicopter parent does to their children. Ruining them. You telling people what they can and cannot do makes you no better than hitler and Stalin. Blinded by the idea that you’re helping in the short term when you’re not even doing that.

  • @poeticposturing3850
    @poeticposturing3850 4 года назад +13

    It's done. It's over. The location was an integral part of the bus finding experience. The bus was the habitat that kept him out of the elements in a place that was still wild. To remove the bus from the setting is to end the story.

    • @A_name_is_a_name
      @A_name_is_a_name 4 года назад +1

      rafaella rose for you but not everyone else weirdo

    • @poeticposturing3850
      @poeticposturing3850 4 года назад +2

      We can only ever speak for ourselves. That is a given.

  • @chrisgrabowski2678
    @chrisgrabowski2678 4 года назад +46

    Over the years, living in here in Alaska, I've seen the two sides of this; if you want to limit it. I think they did the best thing by removing the bus. It was not a Magic Bus. People, ignorant of the wilderness and preparation were going out there yearly. We can't have that. There was too much risk involved, particularly with the rivers.

    • @allywilkeforsenate
      @allywilkeforsenate 4 года назад +6

      Every nanny state do gooder is a commie pos.

    • @tylerhorne2125
      @tylerhorne2125 3 года назад

      @Bob okay, prove it

    • @pollocksjones7789
      @pollocksjones7789 3 года назад +1

      We can't have that! Who the frig do you think you are? Step aside fool and let people live and die as they see fit.

    • @arthurmorgan6087
      @arthurmorgan6087 3 года назад +4

      Those who trade liberty for safety deserve neither liberty nor safety

    • @Narovski
      @Narovski 3 года назад +5

      @@pollocksjones7789 Okay. But why use the tax money of Alaska state citizens to rescue people who called an emergency to rescue them, or in honor to their loved ones rescuers fly there and pick up their dead bodies? Don't you see why?
      Trust me, all the families and those people who got rescued before being dead are more than thankful for it.
      It costs probably at least like 10k-15k$ to resque lost people at one time. Helicopter pilot in Alaska told me that just to get it from the ground costs like ~2000$.
      I was in Alaska, I traveled on my foot from Anchorage to Deadhorse, alone all by myself. After 7miles up North from Fairbanks there's no any cellphone or mobile network connection. So it gets even harder to call the emergency and find those lost people(usually people have GPS signal devices which has emergency buttons)
      Actually for the movie they used different replica bus which is located near the main highway in the front yard of the brewery. And I saw it accidentally while passing through. I took some photos and looked at it for 10mins and it was enough for me. I don't have any logical reasons to go to 42miles hike(if I remember right) without any trails through the forest, bushes and rivers to see it. And trust me in Alaska you can go in the river just till your knees and streams can get you and you"ll fall and die that easy. If you never experienced or never heard about something like this chances that it will happen to you increases alot.
      The problem is the majority of people going there are lacking the knowledge of surviving in wilderness.
      I didn't wanted to visit the location where Chris died. Yes I like the meaning and moral of the story and I listened like 15 times that movie soundtrack while being in Alaska, so I'm one of those fan boys of it, I guess.
      But from my perspective it would more respectful not to visit that spot where he suffered very painful physical pain and died.
      So I clearly understand and I respect that they removed it. I'm not satisfied that they did it. But I understand why and it's their land and we foreigners must respect their choices in their own land.

  • @simonhargreaves5123
    @simonhargreaves5123 4 года назад +3

    It is sad in a way, but I find the sadness is more of a coming to terms with the fact that whether the bus is on-location or not, Chris's story has already been lived and cannot be re-lived by another person. Admittedly, I sometimes wrestle with the temptation to want to follow in his steps, but I think that in following his authentic steps too closely, one's own story becomes inauthentic - finding your story, your personal message, and clinging to it, is everything. Everyone has a 'bus' out there - make sure you find your bus and don't end up too long in someone else's. And when you find it, don't die in it! Don't let the mistakes of others drive you - I think that may have been Chris's mistake.

  • @jenereviensjamais
    @jenereviensjamais 4 года назад +15

    In France we sing:
    "Society, I hope you are not lonely
    if il est détruiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiit..."

  • @mdnrules1283
    @mdnrules1283 4 года назад +3

    OMG, I am from India and really inspired by this movie "Into the Wild" and included this place in my bucket list. But i am really sad to hear that bus is not available in its original location now and i will not be able realize this small dream mission of mine...

  • @xjoviex
    @xjoviex Год назад +1

    Went and saw the bus yesterday. So eerie and comforting at the same time! It was after hours, but will go back tomorrow to watch them work on it. Would add pics, but.. 🤷🏻‍♀️

  • @user-pp1fd4ev5b
    @user-pp1fd4ev5b 8 месяцев назад +1

    He was on a journey for his heart and soul I think.

  • @6ford9
    @6ford9 4 года назад +48

    Needs to go in a history museum

    • @marybishop6105
      @marybishop6105 3 года назад

      Maybe they are having bidding wars? Idk

    • @elliewilliams4118
      @elliewilliams4118 3 года назад

      Yes, the bus will now be on display at the museum of north in fairbanks, now it is safe for people to visit it

  • @allisonsherman7231
    @allisonsherman7231 4 года назад +3

    It is also awesome that you have been there and can bear witness to its contents so it can be preserved. Great job covering all of the story!

  • @Ananias03
    @Ananias03 3 года назад +2

    dont know if you have seen or read his sisters accounts of all this but it gives a lot more incite on why Chris left in the first place. A lot of this content never made the book or movie "into the wild"

  • @gavster023
    @gavster023 2 года назад +1

    Bus has done really well 1940s been there since 1961 wow. Put it in a museum and as a shrine preserve it from now. Chris is never going to be forgotten.

  • @mysticalmisfit1332
    @mysticalmisfit1332 4 года назад +17

    😢 I too get it but I also wanted to one day make the trek out there. However, I have no backcountry hiking experience & can’t imagine how I would have safely crossed the river. Christopher’s story resonates as I understand & can relate to the dysfunctional family & the need to do what he did. Hopefully, it will be moved to a museum or some safe location where people like me can safely visit the magic bus🚎 ❤️

    • @tommyshadow66
      @tommyshadow66 4 года назад +2

      I agree on all accounts but I still dream of heading out to places my knowledge and experience cannot follow 😂

    • @murtomlarinhughes9179
      @murtomlarinhughes9179 4 года назад +1

      I was ready in december of 2019 but failed to go now i regret it... Soo sad but i do hope it gets set up somwhere safe so whoever wants to visit the historic bus is safety... Still very sad.

  • @beckya1823
    @beckya1823 4 года назад +47

    I wonder if they removed the granite memorial. I really don't think removing the bus will stop people from going there. From what I what I have been reading the local government put pressure on the state to remove the bus. Even though the state patrol is in charge of rescue many locals are involved in the process and they were not happy. A bridge was discussed but shot down as it's not the only dangerous part of this trail. It will be interesting to see what happens now. Glad I went on the journey via you and Ryan. Thank you for that! God Bless!

    • @haebyong47
      @haebyong47 4 года назад +16

      I’m sure someone will erect a memorial shrine and pilgrims will still venture to pay their respects to Chris and seek their own enlightenment. You can remove the headstone, but people will still visit the grave...

    • @yecats50
      @yecats50 4 года назад +7

      The best and wisest time to go the bus was in the winter. There is a "ice bridge" across the river, and the ground is frozen. I did it several years before Chris, and it was a quick and easy out and back trip in just a few hours

    • @scottpepper7028
      @scottpepper7028 4 года назад +2

      @@yecats50 when you made that trip 7 years before Chris did you come across the bus then?and if so what shape was it in? And I enjoyed reading your comment 👍

    • @nesargent
      @nesargent 4 года назад +1

      I agree. I was planning to make the hike with I turned 30 next year and I still do.

    • @CalvinJakoby
      @CalvinJakoby 2 года назад

      @@yecats50 isn't it at least a few days to out and back? the trail is like 28 miles

  • @bensbees9761
    @bensbees9761 4 года назад +3

    Thank you for sharing and such a sad day. Alexander Supertramp’s spirit lives in all of us.

  • @HiddenOffGrid
    @HiddenOffGrid 3 года назад +6

    Just when I get ready to retire early they move the bus. It's been a bucket list item for me ever since seeing the movie. So pissed.

  • @sue7011
    @sue7011 4 года назад +5

    Extremely well done video. Thank You for all the background info. The series that you and Ryan did was awesome! I actually was sad to see it end. Thanks again for your side.

  • @clowd9931
    @clowd9931 4 года назад +5

    Wow! Impressive. I actually saw the movie when it first came out. The movie was powerfully sad, and this backstory is riveting. Great cover story and amazing footage.

  • @The_Word_Is_The_Way
    @The_Word_Is_The_Way 3 года назад +1

    I just watched Into The Wild for the first time a few hours ago.
    I wasn’t expecting something like this, AT ALL.....
    What an amazing tragedy and yet the beauty in his words.....

  • @leek487
    @leek487 2 года назад +1

    R.i.p Chris,you truly left us all with a better way to look at life. And to really appreciate life,and the people we meet along the way................ I love the film into the wild,so glad it was made,thank you for the life lesson.......

  • @joemoss8106
    @joemoss8106 4 года назад +20

    I journeyed to the bus back in 2011 with Walt, Billie, Jan, and Wayne. We had just completed the book, Back To The Wild, and we traveled back to the bus in celebration and memory of Chris. There was an article in Outside magazine shortly thereafter detailing our journey.

  • @daffy2115
    @daffy2115 4 года назад +4

    Chris did say that happiness is only real when shared, so maybe this means more people will get to see the bus and share happiness with one another, even if it isn’t in its original location. I hope it goes to a museum, because I will be first in line to see the exhibit. I’m sure I’ll run into many of you guys there 🌳

    • @lotusstreetpoet2876
      @lotusstreetpoet2876 4 года назад

      puking into my mouth. how christopher columbus became a hero. eck

    • @Jay-D92
      @Jay-D92 Год назад

      @@lotusstreetpoet2876 Are you trying to be funny? Or just dumb?

    • @lotusstreetpoet2876
      @lotusstreetpoet2876 Год назад

      Are you trying to be critical or just a c...

  • @SaabAholic
    @SaabAholic 3 года назад +2

    Nooooooooooooo! I understand why they removed it. God bless Chris and how he touched a lot of people. His life was not in vain. Prayers to his family and loved ones.

  • @msvlogcreation
    @msvlogcreation Год назад +1

    Thank you for covering this. Hopefully the bus is displayed and reserved for people to come and look at it.

  • @Sutterjack
    @Sutterjack 4 года назад +6

    Christopher McCandless has such a mixed legacy which I think is part of the fascination. Unbridled enthusiasm for adventure, but also a cautionary tale about naiveté and recklessness. I always felt he was very selfish about not communicating with his family for years -he put them through hell.

    • @jafquist27
      @jafquist27 4 года назад +3

      Many are all over identifying with Chris and, like you said, ignore the effects of his selfish and rather immature acts.

  • @MrEd8846
    @MrEd8846 4 года назад +15

    i can see why people like the story. its kind of turned into a folk hero tale. but reality is.... chris has gotten into these situations several times in his life and was always pulled out of it by someone. and we all know someone like chris "oh ill just go into the woods and live off the land" without really having the knowledge to do so. if chris has basic hunting/cleaning knowledge that moose he killed would of lasted him the whole winter.

    • @dapperdingo
      @dapperdingo 4 года назад

      He was eating, but consumed the roots of a toxic plant that disabled his bodily function of absorbing nutrients into his system.

    • @MrTeeye
      @MrTeeye 4 года назад +2

      @@dapperdingo Toxic plant or not, he wasn't making it out of there alive.

    • @milascave2
      @milascave2 4 года назад +2

      ed: He was offered help. A guy who picked him up hitching offered to far way out of his way to Fairbanks, get him better camping equipment and drive him back. But no, he had to get out there right away. But no. He ignored the advice and turned down the help of a local and went out there and died.
      I did that kind of thing too when I was young. Sometimes I wonder how it is that I made it through all that alive.

    • @SearchIndex
      @SearchIndex 3 года назад

      exactly...he had become habitual about criminal trespassing and poaching and getting himself into bad situations over and over relying on the goodness of others until his luck ran out

  • @jeaniemarczniec7755
    @jeaniemarczniec7755 4 года назад +1

    The best part that he has given to all is that go out and find your happiness whether your camping, living in the woods or living underneath the ground. To become balanced with nature, he died because he was unprepared a lesson to all who venture out. Is to be prepared just in case. That is a gift to all of us who like adventure and he gave his life for it.

  • @mattbowman2956
    @mattbowman2956 4 года назад +2

    guys as someone that actually lives here in Alaska so many people have to be rescued from there its about time this was done too many dreamers think it was poetic or whatever to go there he was not prepared for the wild and died for it damn it if you want to do something like that PREPARE and live through the experiance

  • @karenkroplinski9101
    @karenkroplinski9101 4 года назад +46

    I had just been discussing to possibly go out to the "Magic Bus" with my BF someday and a few days later I hear this on the news. Moving the bus will NOT solve the problem of people going out there! They should have built the "bridge" that was discussed by the McCandless family in another video on youtube and left the bus in it's original location. The "River" is the real danger (and possibly bears), NOT the "Bus"! Perhaps they could build a bridge and put the bus back??? I feel that the bus (and it's location) are an important part of history and as such is a historic landmark that should be preserved. I think alot of young people connected to Chris McCandless's story and made the trek out there. .......One question....if so many people were going out there to view or even, in your case, sleep in the bus or otherwise spend time in it, How did they regulate who got the right to sleep in the bus at any one time? Also, did you feel Chris's spirit in the bus, or experience anything strange in that respect?

    • @yecats50
      @yecats50 4 года назад +14

      Who is more foolish, the fool, or the fools who follow him?

    • @Girdwoodian
      @Girdwoodian 4 года назад +11

      Another bridge to nowhere in Alaska...no thanks. We have more important things to spend our money on up here.

    • @dlefd
      @dlefd 4 года назад +7

      Most of the people going out to that bus were more entranced by taking that picture next to it than they were with any part of the story. The fact that people can't post that picture on social media WILL keep people from going there.

    • @anthonydavis9662
      @anthonydavis9662 4 года назад +6

      Building a bridge would have been the worst and most wasteful thing to do. First of all, that's a flood-prone area as I understand it. Bridges need to be maintained and repaired. What is some fool tried to drive over a damaged or weakened bridge and it collapsed into a rain-swollen river? And building a bridge would have only commercialized and trivialized the very "wild spirit" of Chris's journey and ideals.

    • @josie4065
      @josie4065 4 года назад

      Anthony Davis exactly. They should have just left the bus there.

  • @patandedwardsreviews398
    @patandedwardsreviews398 4 года назад +6

    They saved many lives by doing this, should have been done a long time ago

  • @kparkz47
    @kparkz47 4 года назад

    I watched your video of you going to the bus for the first time the other day upon finding out about the Chris mccandeless story, I found out due to them moving the bus and doing research found you! I really enjoyed your video and this story has stuck me hard and has given me a whole new perspective on life Chris lives through every true adventurer!

  • @nesargent
    @nesargent 4 года назад +3

    The book tells how the bus ended up there. There were 3 originally pulled out there during the construction of the road for workers. They were pulled in place by bulldozer. 142 had a flat so they left it.

  • @marclayne9261
    @marclayne9261 3 года назад +37

    When someone tells you, 'we are doing this for your safety', run like hell...

  • @FireoftheGreeks
    @FireoftheGreeks 3 года назад +4

    Heartbreaking to hear that they stole the Magic Bus, was one of my bucket list items to go and experience. I hope those involved are haunted by his ghost!

    • @johncase1353
      @johncase1353 3 года назад

      Did you miss the part of his story were he was trying to get help because he didn't want to die there? He wasn't a inspiration he was an fool thinking he had the survival skills to survive in Alaska.

    • @emma2370
      @emma2370 3 года назад

      It is property of the state of Alaska. They didn’t steal it. It was their property. I get feeling disappointed but if people were prepared hiking to the bus they wouldn’t have needed to remove it.

    • @arsumbasra7179
      @arsumbasra7179 3 года назад

      @@johncase1353 Did you miss the fact that he survived 100+ days there

  • @ImranHunzai
    @ImranHunzai 4 года назад +1

    A very emotional moment for those who have been close to Chris and those who have been following adaptions of his life's experience and the tragic death that followed in the bus. However, no more people need to die on that route. I hope the bus finds its right place where people who get inspired by Chris's story could make a much safer pilgrimage.

  • @audreymuzingo933
    @audreymuzingo933 Год назад

    THANK YOU SO MUCH for explaining how it got there in the first place; that's the main thing I've wanted to know forever!

  • @DOGakaDefenderOfGems
    @DOGakaDefenderOfGems 4 года назад +7

    It was a place of refuge and healing for a young man trying to figure things out...it became the place his journey came to an end and therefore should be offered to his family..the people who loved him...and if they choose to share it with the world in a more public way then so be it..but it definitely should be the family's decision, ultimately, how to share it ... or not.

    • @Velociraptor2000
      @Velociraptor2000 3 года назад

      Well the bus is now in a museum so people can see it in a safe invironment.

  • @tanyastille407
    @tanyastille407 4 года назад +15

    With the way the world is now, it's a good thing to have moved the magic bus. Vandalism would have happened for sure. Preserve that icon. Long live Chris' soul.

    • @MJG70
      @MJG70 4 года назад +4

      It's been there since 1961. Vandalism isn't the issue. Visitors have treated the bus with respect. I doubt anyone would go on a dangerous hike to destroy it

    • @whirving
      @whirving 4 года назад

      There is noting magical about starving to death over a month.

    • @dapperdingo
      @dapperdingo 4 года назад +1

      Many parts of the bus had been removed and sold on E-bay when that site became popular to include (I believe) the steering wheel.

    • @LetsGoFlyers2011
      @LetsGoFlyers2011 3 года назад

      @@MJG70 Not that vandalism is the issue, but, the bus did have windows when CM stayed in it.

  • @capngeo2002
    @capngeo2002 3 года назад +2

    It was taken to The U of Alaska at Fairbanks, Museum for eventual display.

  • @jonwyrick3186
    @jonwyrick3186 4 года назад +1

    Very cool. Sad stair. Yet excellent Alaskan Story . I've lived here 50 years . Amazing you were able to be apart of that journey of the bus. I hope it ends up in Anchorage Museum

  • @cosaosa2855
    @cosaosa2855 4 года назад +8

    Chris McCandless' journey was 35% bravery and independence, 65% ignorance. His actions should serve as an example of what not to do, and yet in some circle he seems to be almost a hero.

    • @MatanuskaHIGH
      @MatanuskaHIGH 4 года назад +1

      90% ignorance

    • @jamesmyers9150
      @jamesmyers9150 4 года назад

      Dude was an idiot. Not any other way to look at it. Not only did he cause his own death I'm sure his story being glorified by Hollywood has indirectly contributed to many more.

  • @ncc74656m
    @ncc74656m 4 года назад +7

    It would've been a while I grant, but the bus would've rotted into the ground if it hadn't been moved anyway. Now it can truly be preserved and the people who want to see it but couldn't make that journey have a chance to see it. I agree it's a shame it had to be moved, but I do agree it HAD to. Too many people would continue to try to make it, and too many more would continue to be trapped, require rescue, or simply die.
    Carine talked about the possibility of putting a bridge over the river to alleviate the most risky part of the journey, but given the cost and limited benefit, it would be difficult to get it done.
    There isn't any real justification to my mind of the risks presented to rescuers to set out to help if someone else got stranded (even though the same case could be made for thousands of other situations). But too many people who are woefully underprepared go out there and it's not worth the risk.

  • @miss.behaving
    @miss.behaving 4 года назад +4

    Thanks for doing this video!
    I feel so many mixed emotions to be honest! Maybe it's good it's gone, but I too planned on going when well enough, again!
    But I guess the gift was always the spirit of Chris, himself!! We are connected via Love & I honestly dont believe I'd have survived my horrific illness (ironically, caused by massive starvation) without the guidance & lessons I learned from Chris!
    Love to Chris & his family!
    So many shifts happening recently & I hope it only brings them all (the surviving McCandless family) further peace, & resolution..
    💜💜💜

  • @johncase1353
    @johncase1353 3 года назад +2

    People need to understand this bus wasn't a tourist attraction, the nearby town and Alaska never wanted it to be a tourist attraction. They actually wanted to get rid of it even before what happened to Chris because it was an illegal shelter the hunters had placed out there but decided it would be to much trouble. They finally decided to get rid of after what happened to Chris because it brought it to the attention of the world and they started to have a influx of people wanting to see it and not realizing how difficult and dangerous the hike was to get there and get back. A lot of people that ended up having to be saved admitted they thought it was some tourist site that would somewhat easy to find and it would be along a well marked trail and and at worst would only take an hour or two to get to it.
    For the people that are complaining about how there isn't a shelter there anymore. The hunters that use to use it quit going there long before Chris even got there do to the buses location becoming public knowledge and random people started showing up. The nearby town and the hunters in that area have all said they are glad it's finally gone so people would stop trying to find it and stop bringing in the idiots that get some sick enjoyment going to the place that Chris died a very painful and slow death do to his own arrogates with him thinking he knew what he was doing.

  • @NachoTX
    @NachoTX 4 года назад +3

    They should have a museum exhibit for all of this! It would probaly be a permanent exhibit.

  • @vincentlagrange2329
    @vincentlagrange2329 3 года назад +6

    2:04 ''In total 15 bus-related search and rescue operations for visitors to the bus were carried out between 2007 and 2019.''
    Source: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teklanika_River

    • @geezerpleasers_OG
      @geezerpleasers_OG 3 года назад +1

      That is only the rescue operations carried out by the state. It doesn't include the operations carried out by local services. For example, the Healy Fire Department had to go rescue 12 different people in the summer of 2013.

  • @3DPT
    @3DPT 4 года назад +1

    Too many people read the book and thought they could just waltz to the magic bus, feeling like a pilgrimage would clean there souls... the bush of Alaska does not care about your quest for clarity, you're just potential food for bears and eagles to pick over. The cost to pull lost glamping hipsters and corpses would add up, which is why we can't have anything nice. But I'm sure we'll see the bus in a safe place like Anchorage, where you can see it in a museum and the state can recover some of the money spent fishing hipsters out of the bush.

  • @vic_vans7327
    @vic_vans7327 4 года назад +1

    Thanks for the info! I love the history about supertramp. Thanks for everything

  • @michaeltrue
    @michaeltrue 4 года назад +3

    Change is the one constant of life!

  • @SarahTree
    @SarahTree 4 года назад +4

    They should let the family decide where it goes. 😊👍👍

  • @gregfemrite3150
    @gregfemrite3150 3 года назад

    I’ve lived in this area year round since 95, on stampede rd for 9 yrs, I can’t tell you how many times I’d ride to the Teklanika with friends and find people unprepared or right out scared and help them back convenience, a lot of people would make it there successfully

  • @havevanmusttravel
    @havevanmusttravel 3 года назад

    What an incredible story and movie about Chris McCandless and his adventure living in bus '142'. I could watch the movie endlessly. And I can agree with your bittersweet emotions concerning the removal. Hopefully this bus will be placed for display to the public. I would like so much to see it and to just feel Chris's spirit.

  • @KingDavidV8
    @KingDavidV8 4 года назад +11

    The trek to the site of the Magic Bus is one that many hikers looked forward to. The Stampede Trail will always be there, but making their journey to the site will not be the same. I hope the government will at least replace the bus or provide some type of landmark because hikers will go there regardless of the presence of the original bus.

  • @patmetcalf3635
    @patmetcalf3635 4 года назад +14

    They could have a monument that says a guy who had no idea what he was doing came out here and starve to death here...

  • @sumangalrajkonwar2371
    @sumangalrajkonwar2371 4 года назад +1

    Please ensure you post an updated video on the Magic bus as and when any news come out. It was a dream of mine to visit it. But now that it is gone, though i feel a little shattered, I hope to visit the ground one day for sure. Thank you for both the videos.
    Good luck from India.

  • @jedigaming2969
    @jedigaming2969 Год назад

    Love your vid of you and Ryan Visted to this bus show Respect for Chris and his family and a dream come true for you guys . hope they display the bus as it is, means a lot to all of us.💯💗

  • @guntherschulz7709
    @guntherschulz7709 4 года назад +7

    I don't really think people stop going there!!!
    Greetings from Germany

    • @TheReverendJonnyNemo
      @TheReverendJonnyNemo 4 года назад

      they moved it because morons were costing hundreds of thousands in rescuing fucking idiots like him

    • @josie4065
      @josie4065 4 года назад

      The Rev then put up a notice that rescues will not happen and don’t rescue them.

  • @gabrielalamberti5860
    @gabrielalamberti5860 4 года назад +32

    They should display the bus in a safe location in Alaska

    • @shawnscrimsher2207
      @shawnscrimsher2207 4 года назад +9

      They should display you in a safe place Bubble Boy! Let the real explorers visit the bus and wussies like you need to stay home and read the book! Let's put Mount Everest in a safe place, let's make sure nobody ever goes in the ocean again, let's close down all national parks including the Grand Canyon and Utah! Jack off!

    • @WhatZitTooYaaa
      @WhatZitTooYaaa 4 года назад +8

      Shawn Scrimsher The problem isn’t about pro hikers going there it’s cocky pricks like you who think they’re Superman and end up drowning.

    • @shawnscrimsher2207
      @shawnscrimsher2207 4 года назад +2

      @@WhatZitTooYaaa in your eyes anybody that walks 20 ft to their mailbox is probably a cocky prick in a Superman, Joe couch potato! So should we make it illegal have any body of water in the United States like a swimming pool a lake a river a Jacuzzi. Do you know how many people drown every year in each City from going swimming every summer! The smallest town in the United States probably has more drownings then people that needed to be rescued from the Magic Bus. Take a place like Phoenix Arizona and their Superstition Mountain. They rescue probably three people a week from hiking that trail with either helicopters or ropes. And that's not even dangerous places such as every National Park and how many rescues they have to do every year. So what's your answer all that

    • @shawnscrimsher2207
      @shawnscrimsher2207 4 года назад +3

      @@WhatZitTooYaaa I'm laughing over here texting you, I can't believe people have mentalities like you! I bet you're one of those people that want to make cars illegals also! God knows how many people on a daily basis, thousands that have to be pried from their cars in wrecks everyday! We'd be better off if the government made it illegal and we walked everywhere LMAO

    • @A_name_is_a_name
      @A_name_is_a_name 4 года назад +3

      Neutral Guy then let them drown you sensitive turd

  • @Miyagi92
    @Miyagi92 3 года назад

    At least u got to experience it I watched both vids, cool man

  • @danahoran1935
    @danahoran1935 3 года назад

    This DEEPLY broke my heart, as it has been on my bucket list for quite some time, but now its one thing that will NEVER get 'crossed off. I can only imagine the sadness that his family must feel,,,HOWEVER, Chris' journey WAS INDEED about SO MUCH MORE than a bus... but I think it's just the fact of it being the exact place that his life had ended and feeling his spirit there....THAT'S the experience that so many wanted to feel a part of

    • @johncase1353
      @johncase1353 3 года назад +1

      His sister has said his death was pointless because he didn't know what he was doing and is glad it's gone. She also has said she was getting tired hearing about people needing to be rescued or people dying because they just wanted to visit the site where her brother made a stupid mistake going.

  • @wil8115
    @wil8115 4 года назад +4

    the bus is now on display in Healy just off the hwy.

    • @Jqweex
      @Jqweex 3 года назад

      Imagine they say that but it's still there just so they can keep people from going

  • @Guisk8POA
    @Guisk8POA 4 года назад +11

    I Hope the government understands that this bus has value for many people and didn't treat It like junk.. it's Sad but i think we all understand the reasons .

    • @SpreadingtheMuse
      @SpreadingtheMuse 4 года назад +3

      The bus was shot full of holes and the location was a garbage dump. The PEOPLE treated it like junk.

    • @Guisk8POA
      @Guisk8POA 4 года назад +1

      @@SpreadingtheMuse Sad...

  • @JamesClark993311
    @JamesClark993311 3 года назад +1

    Ever since I was about 10 years old I've wanted to live in Alaska, and I saw into the wild for the first time last year and now watching this video and knowing they removed the bus it makes me a little sad....... 😭😭😭

  • @thewaywardgrape3838
    @thewaywardgrape3838 Год назад

    Happens more and more with social media: People live vicariously through the internet and believe that they can do it, cause someone else has. It's like vlog channels - sure looks like sunshine and rainbows, yet you're not shown the other side of the story.

  • @mikep4823
    @mikep4823 4 года назад +9

    It was there for the last 20 plus years so anyone that wanted to
    go and see this had plenty of time. The movie inspired people that do not have the
    knowledge in being out in the open country like this not counting Grizzly bears neither.
    Its rugged and unforgiving to go there without being well equipped to do so and
    i am glad they did remove it. Nobody needs to die up there and every time they send
    search and rescue teams the they could be doing something else then fetching dummies
    that want to go see an old city bus put there by hunters for a camp. I worked
    in the Canadian Artic. I flew all over this land and its not for the amateur hiker
    or someone that sees a movie and all of a sudden thinks ohh il walk to there.
    This aint no walk in the park remember this !!!!

    • @dapperdingo
      @dapperdingo 4 года назад +1

      I was there in 2002. I'm glad it is gone for respect of the town of Healy, Ak. That town was put through Hell since Krakauer put the first writing of the story into the Outside magazine sometime in the '90's, after McCandless' death.

  • @johnhartley4721
    @johnhartley4721 4 года назад +24

    Leave it to the government to take total control of anything they want! If someone wants to risk their lives to see it, then the blame sits squarely on their shoulders. What's next??? Are they going to move Denali??? Bastards!!!

    • @josie4065
      @josie4065 4 года назад +1

      Exactly

    • @jonhartley7445
      @jonhartley7445 3 года назад +1

      I am freaking out, I just wrote pretty much the exact same comment and then I read this.... 🤪. To be clear, I'm talking about our names 😂

    • @protocetus499
      @protocetus499 3 года назад

      This is tourism

    • @damioncutler1115
      @damioncutler1115 3 года назад +1

      It's called duty of care, yes people have a responsibility for their own safety! But if people are going to be stupid and careless then of course the government are going to step in! And even more so if there having to fork out lots of money to save those people...

    • @cplcabs
      @cplcabs 3 года назад

      It doesn't work like that. Rescue teams have to go out to rescue these loons and that isn't free. That money could be used for rescuing people who legitimately are in trouble and not ones who are hero worshipping what could be classed as a loser.

  • @alenphillips4848
    @alenphillips4848 4 года назад +1

    Thanks for your honest and thorough feedback. Much appreciated. I too am conflicted.
    Itll be interesting on what theyll do with this bus. Hopefully something very thoughtful.

  • @SEALTRIDENT6
    @SEALTRIDENT6 4 года назад

    EXCELLENT review, videos and info. I thank you so much for taking your time to make this. Really professional. Regards from Argentina 🇦🇷

  • @smokeybear5460
    @smokeybear5460 4 года назад +5

    Oh what the hell I didn't know about this.. This was on my bucket list of places to visit. Why did they move it? Were too many people going out there and almost dying? Dammit.

  • @reythejediladyviajakku6078
    @reythejediladyviajakku6078 3 года назад +4

    That suitcase was left by his mother

  • @vk.amazingthings5741
    @vk.amazingthings5741 3 года назад

    I'm emotional to watch for lift the Bus.
    But still be inspired to many people through Christopher's natural beauty mind. Nature is ultimate Love, you were right Christopher

  • @jerry3579
    @jerry3579 2 года назад

    Thanks so much for bringing this sad news to light. A commenter on another channel said it was removed. I didn't believe it until I saw this.