Bomber Glacier (Alaska)

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  • Опубликовано: 27 июн 2024
  • In November 1957, a US Air Force B29 bomber set out on a routine training mission near Anchorage, Alaska. The flight turned disastrous shortly after with a crash into a remote glacier north of Palmer, AK. Six of the ten on board were killed and the rest would have followed the same fate, except for a heroic rescue effort. The glacier came to be known as Bomber Glacier and the site can be visited via several routes including the Reed Lakes Trail.

Комментарии • 107

  • @r.awilliams9815
    @r.awilliams9815 24 дня назад +26

    In 1946 a Curtis R5C transport plane carrying 32 Marines went off course in very heavy weather and flew into the side of Mount Rainier. The plane, and the Marines, are still entombed in Little Tahoma Glacier, because recovery would have placed the lives of the recovery teams are serious risk and the families of the Marines formally asked that recovery efforts be dropped.

    • @LifeIsAdventureChannel
      @LifeIsAdventureChannel  20 дней назад +4

      Interesting! I just spent far too long looking into more details.

    • @herbertcourtesie2459
      @herbertcourtesie2459 11 дней назад

      In June 1947 while searching for the Curtiss Kenneth Arnold sighted some strange crafts over this range. The FS history started then in US. Stranger stories followed as investigators jumped in.

  • @GCL110
    @GCL110 24 дня назад +10

    I have to say i really enjoy your short form videos, for people that don't have time to sit through the usual 45min to an hour long videos, your uploads really hit the spot for some serious adventure without all the fluff. Cheers from Australia!

  • @finnberglander7816
    @finnberglander7816 19 дней назад +5

    A B-17 went down in Wyoming in 1943, at what has since been named Bomber Mountain. The wreckage wasn't found until some years later, when the OD paint had worn off and the reflection could be seen. Legend has it that the first guys at the sight found rock cairns built for the dead crew, and every machinegun was missing from the plane...

  • @user-cp5vl9ot9x
    @user-cp5vl9ot9x 17 часов назад

    Great video !..enjoy this while yer young. I'm 75 now... me and my brother wandered all over the Mojave Desert when we were much younger. Found many , many plane parts.... never took any home... probably still out there fer the adventurist ! Fun !

  • @blueman5924
    @blueman5924 24 дня назад +1

    My my, you certainly get to some remote and interesting destinations. Thanks for sharing the adventures. 🍁🤙

  • @normanmallory2055
    @normanmallory2055 19 дней назад +1

    Great find ! I like adventures like this ! Well done !

  • @Agislife1960
    @Agislife1960 22 дня назад +4

    I was an A&P for 20+ years I wish my health was good enough to check out old crash sites

  • @dalewilliams8001
    @dalewilliams8001 19 дней назад +2

    Good that there was grass and moss up there on those rocks. Much softer and warmer for locating your tent, rather than on the stone, for sure. ;)) Cool and interesting video; liked the hail also. Thanks.

  • @bunion8579
    @bunion8579 17 дней назад +1

    There truly are some amazing places on Earth. You're in one.

  • @AlessandroBottoni
    @AlessandroBottoni 14 дней назад

    Great video, congratulations!

  • @agesadventures
    @agesadventures 25 дней назад +2

    Quite a good adventure up there!
    It's nice to see that the plane does not have graffiti on it or anything like that.
    Tragic story, but glad at least four made it out.

  • @tubelectron1667
    @tubelectron1667 6 дней назад

    Amazing ! *****

  • @randallgd
    @randallgd 25 дней назад +1

    Looks like great adventure thanks for taking us along!

  • @lifeofluke
    @lifeofluke 25 дней назад +2

    Well that was epic!

  • @DanO530.8
    @DanO530.8 16 дней назад +2

    Sorry for the loss of the airman

  • @fsj197811
    @fsj197811 20 дней назад +2

    From the thumbnail I thought this was Kee Bird. Just the same, thanks for sharing.

    • @LifeIsAdventureChannel
      @LifeIsAdventureChannel  20 дней назад +1

      You sent me on a wild tangent researching Kee Bird - thanks for that!

    • @fsj197811
      @fsj197811 19 дней назад +1

      @@LifeIsAdventureChannel You're welcome. Hope you found and enjoyed the documentary even though it's rather sad.

  • @ralphwillian1758
    @ralphwillian1758 7 дней назад

    Your images are very beautiful. Friend, which camera model on the drone did you use?

    • @LifeIsAdventureChannel
      @LifeIsAdventureChannel  7 дней назад

      I was using a a DJI mini pro 4. It's sadly resting at the bottom of a lake now 😭

  • @michaelsteiger8509
    @michaelsteiger8509 18 дней назад +2

    Great try everyone. It clearly is a b-29. The give away is the nacelle. The aft facing scoop on top was on the 29 and the PBY did not have that. The square inspection hole at the 3 and 9 o’clock position is on a b29 and different shaped in the PBY. The exhaust ended pn a PBY on the top in line with the leading edge . The taper of the metal aft of the nacelle would be strait on a PBY.
    Cheers

    • @adrianw7011
      @adrianw7011 17 дней назад

      Wrong wing shape for a B29 and they aren't wright cyclone engine cowlings. The fueslage isn't B29, the shape is wrong. The engines on the B29 are staggered with the outer one being slightly behind the inboard, these are parrallel and too small for the cyclone engine cowlings.

    • @bunion8579
      @bunion8579 17 дней назад +1

      @@adrianw7011 Boeing TB-29 44-70039 on a radar-calibration flight out of Elmendorf Nov 15 1957.

    • @HM2SGT
      @HM2SGT 17 дней назад

      @@adrianw7011*_PBY or B29?_* There's been lively speculation, debate and argument on the identification (thankfully all civil and polite). I offer this thought: At 3:50 there is a very good high resolution shot of the area in question. I think we can all agree that whatever's going on a few feet right of the right most engine is buried in snow and ice, but the engines themselves and the wing from the snow and ice left to the wingtip is clear and unblemished. If this is a PBY, where then are the fuel fillers and vent tubes? Those are ubiquitous, plain and obvious on every PBY; this area shows no damage, & no fuel filler caps or vent tubes… so where are they? The logical answer with evidence fitting the conclusion is that this is not a PBY. What, then, is it? The Air Force, NTSB and FAA are all minded that it's a Boeing B-29 Super Fortress, & we have no evidence to the contrary.

  • @chipps1066
    @chipps1066 19 дней назад

    Do you use a drone to get your shots?That's a lot of work for those beautiful shots.

    • @LifeIsAdventureChannel
      @LifeIsAdventureChannel  19 дней назад

      For a 12 hour hike, getting a few mins of video here and there isn't much effort.

  • @daviddarrall9384
    @daviddarrall9384 18 дней назад

    Well done 😊 UK

  • @michaelschubel6330
    @michaelschubel6330 4 дня назад

    How do you get those long shots? Is there a second hiker with a drone?

  • @misterx8592
    @misterx8592 16 дней назад +1

    Where are the Sasquatches?

  • @nayumicraig5248
    @nayumicraig5248 18 дней назад

    Are you sure? Looks more like a Canso (PBY Catalina). Maybe there is more than one wreck on the glacier. Lorne.

    • @HM2SGT
      @HM2SGT 17 дней назад

      At 3:50 there is a very good high resolution shot of the area in question. The area is undamaged, clear and unblemished. If this is a PBY, where then are the fuel fillers and vent tubes?

  • @HM2SGT
    @HM2SGT 17 дней назад

    *_PBY or B29?_* There's been lively speculation, debate and argument on the identification (thankfully all civil and polite). I offer this thought: At 4:25 there is a very good high resolution shot of the area in question, and even better one at 3:50. I think we can all agree that whatever's going on a few feet right of the right most engine is buried in snow and ice, but the engines themselves and the wing from the snow and ice left to the wingtip is clear and unblemished. If this is a PBY, where then are the fuel fillers and vent tubes? Those are ubiquitous, plain and obvious on every PBY; this area shows no damage, & no fuel filler caps or vent tubes… so where are they? The logical answer with evidence fitting the conclusion is that this is not a PBY. What, then, is it? The Air Force, NTSB and FAA are all minded that it's a Boeing B-29 Super Fortress, & we have no evidence to the contrary.

  • @mtacoustic1
    @mtacoustic1 19 дней назад +2

    Eating a little crow here... One comment observed how one engine nacelle fairing is longer than the other; typical of a four-engine aircraft. Sure enough, the nacelles match the photos of a B-29 on wikipedia. I would like to see photos of this wreck more exposed with less snow and confirm it's identity. Some data plate info would be excellent.

    • @ikefrye847
      @ikefrye847 18 дней назад

      Takes strength and courage, valor and honor to succinctly state something like that. Bravo Zulu sir.

  • @adrianw7011
    @adrianw7011 17 дней назад

    Sensational country side and the wreck is well preserved. It is a PBY Catalina, not a B-29. If more of it were uncovered this would be easily identified.
    The engines, wing and pylon attaching the wing to the fuselage are all give aways as is the shape of the fuselage and the blister window opening.

    • @ikefrye847
      @ikefrye847 17 дней назад

      Since the fuselage is to the right of the wing which has two engines in the cells and no pylon as well as circular observation windows rather than the teardrop of the PBY obviously making this the left wing of an aircraft, we're going to list you with the minority of people who have identified this as a Catalina

    • @HM2SGT
      @HM2SGT 17 дней назад

      At 4:25 there is a very good high resolution shot of the area in question. I think we can all agree that whatever's going on a few feet right right most engine is buried in snow and ice, but the engines themselves and the wing from the snow and ice left to the wingtip is clear and unblemished. If this is a PBY, where then are the fuel fillers and vent tubes? Those are ubiquitous, plain and obvious on every PBY; this area shows no damage, & no fuel filler caps or vent tubes… so where are they?

  • @bryandale7125
    @bryandale7125 18 дней назад +1

    While living near Palmer, I visited this crash site several times in the summer, when you can see a whole lot more of the plane.

  • @jackkoveleskie2504
    @jackkoveleskie2504 11 дней назад

    My Wife's Uncle was a pilot on that aircraft.

  • @madmanmechanic8847
    @madmanmechanic8847 16 дней назад

    They need to go up and retrieve that plane there would be zero rust on that plane with the cold and snow to protect it the parts alone are worth millions . The engines could be salvaged and parts for other 29s out there such a shame to let it rot

  • @HootOwl513
    @HootOwl513 22 дня назад +10

    -That's not a B-29. [--4:25--]This wreck has twin engines. Superfort's had four. This looks like a PBY Catalina flying boat-
    [EDIT: Never Mind. It is a Boeing Superfort afterall...]

    • @buzztp5119
      @buzztp5119 22 дня назад +4

      I agree with you that's a Catalina

    • @costello521
      @costello521 20 дней назад +2

      I'd say it's a B-29. The wing that you can see I think is the planes port (left) wing due to the position of the star. The Star's on all USAAF and USAF four engined bombers where located to the left and right of the number one and four engines. The PBY Catalina's also had smaller radial engines compared to the ones used on the B-29. Another indication is at 3:42, the round opening is where one of the gunner sighting blisters is located for the upper aft turret.

    • @mypl510
      @mypl510 20 дней назад +5

      It's a B-29, it has rounded wing tips with no floats like a Cat would. Also, this is just one wing, hence only two engines.

    • @LifeIsAdventureChannel
      @LifeIsAdventureChannel  20 дней назад +3

      Crash report says Boeing B-29 Superfortresses

    • @HM2SGT
      @HM2SGT 19 дней назад

      🤔😒🙂‍↔️ Not a PBY... the fuselage isn't nearly flattened enough. 3:42 gives us a good look at one of the observation blisters abaft the wing root. Also, if it was a tugboat with wings there should be evidence of the pylon connecting the wing to the hull between those two motors.

  • @briansilcox5720
    @briansilcox5720 22 дня назад +11

    Definitely Consolidated PBY Catalina.

    • @andrewmacdonald4833
      @andrewmacdonald4833 19 дней назад +1

      Nope...it's a B29...well covered.

    • @HM2SGT
      @HM2SGT 19 дней назад +2

      @@andrewmacdonald4833 Indeed. Round observation blisters, no pylon, no fabric on the wings...

    • @bunkerrocketworks3190
      @bunkerrocketworks3190 19 дней назад +2

      Yup agreed - definitely PBY without the blisters. The B29 has mid mount wing with 4 engines and much larger wingspan. 👍

    • @bunkerrocketworks3190
      @bunkerrocketworks3190 19 дней назад +2

      @@andrewmacdonald4833The B29 has 4 engines and longer mid fuselage mounted wings. Plane geeks like me and others can see the PBY anatomy despite the snow cover. 👍 What bit of the plane reminds you of the B29?

    • @bunkerrocketworks3190
      @bunkerrocketworks3190 19 дней назад +2

      Actually - I changed my mind - I googled it and the two engines you can see are just one wing - because of the crash position the wing is laying over the fuselage making it look like a PBY twin - sorry honest mistake 🤣

  • @mtacoustic1
    @mtacoustic1 21 день назад +2

    This is definitely a WWII Consolidated PBY; not a B-29!

    • @HM2SGT
      @HM2SGT 19 дней назад

      🤔😒🙂‍↔️ Not a PBY... the fuselage isn't nearly flattened enough. 3:42 gives us a good look at one of the observation blisters abaft the wing root. Also, if it was a tugboat with wings there should be evidence of the pylon connecting the wing to the hull between those two motors.

    • @HM2SGT
      @HM2SGT 19 дней назад

      🤔😒🙂‍↔️ Not a PBY... the fuselage isn't nearly flattened enough. 3:42 gives us a good look at one of the observation blisters abaft the wing root. Also, if it was a tugboat with wings there should be evidence of the pylon connecting the wing to the hull between those two motors.

    • @mtacoustic1
      @mtacoustic1 19 дней назад

      @@HM2SGT Nope, you are in error. Definitely a PBY Catalina. The long wings with fabric covering on the outer panels is a dead giveaway, and the observation/gun blisters are right for a PBY. The pylon has collapsed along with much of the fuselage from the crash and ice action. Everything matches a derelict PBY that was parked at a local airport for many years.

    • @HM2SGT
      @HM2SGT 19 дней назад

      @@mtacoustic1 Perhaps you should look closer; 3:40, 3:55 all metal. Not a bit of fabric, never was.

    • @dominictroupin2211
      @dominictroupin2211 19 дней назад +1

      Left wing of a B-29

  • @Pilotc180
    @Pilotc180 19 дней назад +3

    That’s no B29; it’s a PBY Catalina

    • @HM2SGT
      @HM2SGT 19 дней назад +1

      Round observation blisters, no pylon, all metal construction, no paint... *_NOT_* a tug boat with wings

    • @HM2SGT
      @HM2SGT 19 дней назад +1

      How strange that people keep misidentifying an aircraft with no paint, no fabric, no pylon and round observation blisters as a PBY

  • @lowbudgetbob1155
    @lowbudgetbob1155 18 дней назад

    That's not a B-29, It's a PBY Catalina. B-29's were a 4 engine bomber, that clearly is a twin engine airplane. Get your facts straight....

    • @ikefrye847
      @ikefrye847 17 дней назад +1

      Bob can't tell the difference between circular observation blisters of a b29 and teardrops of a pby on the left side of the fuselage that is to the right of a wing with two engine nacelles of the B-29 type as can be identified by flaps and vents

    • @HM2SGT
      @HM2SGT 17 дней назад

      At 4:25 there is a very good high resolution shot of the area in question. I think we can all agree that whatever's going on a few feet right right most engine is buried in snow and ice, but the engines themselves and the wing from the snow and ice left to the wingtip is clear and unblemished. If this is a PBY, where then are the fuel fillers and vent tubes? Those are ubiquitous, plain and obvious on every PBY; this area shows no damage, & no fuel filler caps or vent tubes… so where are they?

    • @Blitzkriegssii
      @Blitzkriegssii 8 дней назад

      Its a B 29 I have been there a few times. I have a picture siting in the tail gunners seat.

  • @johnball4826
    @johnball4826 19 дней назад

    How can you be so wrong about identifying the aircraft ! Did you not do your research before hand ? So obvious a PBY - two engines, high wing. Dumb !!

    • @ikefrye847
      @ikefrye847 18 дней назад +4

      Didn't somebody once say it's better to be silent and be thought of fool than to type furiously and remove all doubt?
      The FAA, the NTSB, the Air Force are all convinced it's a B29. Most of the commenters can clearly see it it's a B-29 and at least one person who argued that it was a PBY as retracted their statement. One would think that someone who read the comments would Get a clue and refrain from removing all doubt... 🙄🤦🤷

    • @johnball4826
      @johnball4826 18 дней назад +2

      @@ikefrye847 Yes, I apologise for being so rude to the original Poster of this story. I am truly sorry for what I said. I should have looked at it several times and analysed the pictures.

    • @HM2SGT
      @HM2SGT 18 дней назад

      @@johnball4826 Hey, we're all human… Who hasn't stepped on their own dick from time to time? 😅
      It takes an especially strong, confident, mature individual to admit when maybe things could've gone better and then to do better. Bravo Zulu sir. 👍