Into the Wild | Exploring the Real Abandoned Bus

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  • Опубликовано: 7 сен 2024
  • ***UPDATE: The bus has been moved! WATCH MY VIDEO ABOUT IT HERE: bit.ly/3ekGk4N
    On July 7th 2019 I spent 24 hours at the long abandoned Fairbanks Bus 142 ('Magic Bus') on the Stampede Trail near Healy, Alaska. The bus was made popular by Christopher Johnson McCandless also known by the pseudonym Alexander Supertramp.
    I did this trip with my friend Ryan Lester of ParklandFilms. Check out his take on this adventure over on his channel: / parklandfilms
    He 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.
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    Chris 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 remains 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" has become 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.

Комментарии • 3,7 тыс.

  • @danrodrigues3531
    @danrodrigues3531 4 года назад +4209

    I’m stoked about the fact that people have been completely respectful to the bus and all of the ‘artifacts’ that are there.

    • @MatanuskaHIGH
      @MatanuskaHIGH 4 года назад +136

      Dan Rodrigues most internet searches say the bus has been moved to Healy but reality is that’s a copy to try and keep people from going out to the real bus.

    • @andyb4796
      @andyb4796 4 года назад +32

      It`s an ugly and creepy bus.

    • @DivergentDroid
      @DivergentDroid 4 года назад +73

      So a guy with no brains lived in an abandoned bus.. this happens every day in every major city.. I totally fail to see how this stupid dead guy or the shelter he used is in any way relevant to society.

    • @ejod_who
      @ejod_who 4 года назад +261

      @@DivergentDroid And that is because you are part of society's trap and another battery to help keep the matrix running. To be honest, the only reason why Chris's life got so much attention is that someone wrote a book about it. Otherwise, he would just be another guy who saw life's trappings and wanted no part of it. Read the book or watch the movie if you haven't, it resonates with many people like me who live "the American dream" even though I consider myself better off than many.

    • @DivergentDroid
      @DivergentDroid 4 года назад +27

      @@ejod_who "that is because you are part of society's trap and another battery to help keep the matrix running." - LOL You know Nothing about me, why make up assumptions? I agree with getting away from the rat race so much in fact i'm an anarchist - a person who believes Man has the right and ability to rule themselves without draconian government interference as is happening now with this Coronavirus scare. The wife and I are planning to move off grid soon. The problem is when people try to do these things without educating themselves about the dangers and are unprepared for them. That's why I say this guy had no brains. He wasn't Smart and it got him killed.

  • @markusssulte1
    @markusssulte1 3 года назад +1848

    "i can really relate to him" *flies in with a chopper*

    • @eggboimcgee6050
      @eggboimcgee6050 3 года назад +101

      Gave me a good chuckle

    • @VT-tz5bm
      @VT-tz5bm 3 года назад +33

      Lmao

    • @tremecabattle2418
      @tremecabattle2418 3 года назад +11

      LOLZZ

    • @cajagress6806
      @cajagress6806 3 года назад +35

      Exactly. This sjw snowflake hipsters have had their asses wiped their whole life. U think they're gonna hike for reals? Hahaha

    • @BHayes-jv2rz
      @BHayes-jv2rz 3 года назад +35

      @@cajagress6806 well they do the helicopters cause when you did hike there you risk your life you have to pick the perfect weather spot to cross the river and you better be ready to hike about 10-15 miles to get there

  • @justinboner4217
    @justinboner4217 3 года назад +710

    My first reaction is pure amazement that the bus hasn't been entirely ransacked. After some thought I realize that anyone who actually made the trek is almost always going to be someone who respects nature and respects Chris. You don't travel that distance in that terrain just to steal shit, as there is much easier shit to steal within a few miles of one's house, most likely.
    If we're being honest though, it's certainly mostly just because he didn't have any valuables. Still though, it is refreshing to see that so many people had respect for this space.

    • @andrewjessicahersh9466
      @andrewjessicahersh9466 3 года назад +20

      I was thinking the same thing. It's a surprising testimony of human nature that that amount of sacred respect has lasted through the decades.

    • @cup_and_cone
      @cup_and_cone 3 года назад +10

      The bus is gone now...

    • @DethPotatoSkinz
      @DethPotatoSkinz 3 года назад +9

      It was never ransacked because of where it was and if you wanted to get there it was for the one soul purpose of going there to respect it. Like it's WAY out in the middle of nowhere I don't think you really understand

    • @sstills951
      @sstills951 3 года назад +6

      @@DethPotatoSkinz I don't understand how the bus got there in the first place.

    • @merritttrucker
      @merritttrucker 2 года назад +10

      @@sstills951 it was hauled in there by a construction company in 1960 with a Cat D8 bulldozer

  • @InfinityFishing
    @InfinityFishing Год назад +81

    Amazing to see how respectful all the people are to the memory of Chris, may his soul rest in peace.

    • @bibekjung7404
      @bibekjung7404 Год назад

      ALMIGHTY GOD KABIR---FATHER OF ALL SOULS

    • @decarosbro7422
      @decarosbro7422 24 дня назад

      “Kabir strongly denounced the Idol-worship, pilgrimages, bathing in the holy rivers” … everything these people do when going to this spot where a man died a horrible death.

  • @AdventureswithBeck
    @AdventureswithBeck 4 года назад +87

    What I love is that it's kept how he had it and how respectful people that go there are... Truly amazing.

    • @xBiiiGCat
      @xBiiiGCat 4 года назад +1

      Adventures with Beck I dont know it looks vastly different than when i went in 2016, people do however take and leave stuff its kinda neat, I found some sunglasses that i took and i left a zippo in its place but anything that was left of his is gone

    • @XuliusCaesar
      @XuliusCaesar 4 года назад +1

      except for the shotgun blast where 142 used to be written, it looks almost exactly the same

    • @lodizle1
      @lodizle1 4 года назад +3

      In 2013, Dave Gill from the United Kingdom visited the bus as part of a British documentary publishing project. The post on his website shows that as of 2013, visitors have shot at the bus and caused damage, resulting in its accelerated deterioration.

  • @gardenia24sugarfoot.36
    @gardenia24sugarfoot.36 3 года назад +49

    A adventurous young man decided to explore & exist on his own but missed the right time to leave. A wonderful but a sad true story that illustrates ones idea about life - R.I.Peace Christopher McCandless you were a brave fellow.

  • @thelatearthurmorgan6158
    @thelatearthurmorgan6158 4 года назад +164

    "Happiness is only real when shared." Perhaps not a happy quote but one shared by millions.

    • @wingzfan102
      @wingzfan102 4 года назад +6

      “Happiness only real when shared” you mean

    • @Dubstaaaa
      @Dubstaaaa 3 года назад

      @@wingzfan102 I was thinking the same thing

    • @wingzfan102
      @wingzfan102 3 года назад

      @@Dubstaaaa Too many people get it wrong unfortunately

    • @ramonazamora1924
      @ramonazamora1924 3 года назад +9

      I learned this when I lived in Alaska for two years. My dream, as a teen, was to live there alone. I hated people ath that time, because I witnessed all the cruelty they could do. I thought going to live by myself was the solution. I realized quite quickly that a person NEEDS others to survive. There would be no way to survive in that place without the help of others. I learned that not all the people in the world are horrible, that most are helpful and kind, actually. This was a life changing experience that I will never forget. I came back home and loved my family and friends with a vengeance!

    • @wingzfan102
      @wingzfan102 3 года назад

      @@ramonazamora1924 What part did you live in?

  • @ggg123331
    @ggg123331 4 года назад +389

    I tried to hike the Stampede trail on July 19th, 2019. I had asked the locals about the best way to get to the trail and my uncle and I concluded that it would be best to park our RV right at the beginning of the trail, next to other vehicles that were already there. The locals tried to warn us time and again not to hike the trail, that it was very dangerous. And indeed, being 18 miles deep into the Alaskan bush with no service whatsoever and carrying limited supplies in our backpacks does sound dangerous. As soon as we started hiking that morning, it started pouring. The path turned into a river itself, which unfortunately led to me slipping and falling in the mud, and dislocating my shoulder. We couldn't even get to the river but I believe everything happens for a reason, so we decided to turn around. I am glad that we did that, because only 2 days after my return we heard in the news about the woman that dies trying to cross the Teklanika.
    Please, please, please, if you're thinking of hiking the trail, be prepared. It is no joke. I turned around after the incident because I know I'm only 19 (18 when I tried to hike the trail) years old and have my whole life to go back and try again. And I will! I also felt connected to Chris in many other ways, the bus is not necessarily the "climax" of his existence even though it does encapsulate part of his spirit.
    Anyway, thanks for the video. I loved to see what I would have encountered if I had been able to get to the bus. Much love.

    • @anthonywindham7229
      @anthonywindham7229 4 года назад +27

      nope they moved the bus

    • @user-ze3kn3cf1g
      @user-ze3kn3cf1g 4 года назад +16

      bus has been removed :(

    • @joeg5414
      @joeg5414 4 года назад +18

      Thanks to idiots like you the bus has been removed now. Thanks idiot.

    • @ale347baker
      @ale347baker 4 года назад +37

      Calm down people. She can be whomever she wants to be. We all can. You people dont know what happiness is if you get joy out of putting others down.

    • @CATELlegend1
      @CATELlegend1 4 года назад +4

      You should try again some years from now. Get some experience. I know i will get there. Someday.

  • @ThaCyNiQ
    @ThaCyNiQ 3 года назад +597

    Laying on a bed in an abandoned bus someone died on, really creeped me out.

    • @laurad2589
      @laurad2589 3 года назад +19

      It pissed me off. People trying to look like Tolstoy when they are just stupid hipsters

    • @chrishandsome4267
      @chrishandsome4267 3 года назад +5

      @@laurad2589 Based

    • @flareshamin4779
      @flareshamin4779 2 года назад +6

      @Mjira Achieng No such thing exists off the grid like that, keep in mind hunters found him.

    • @grimmywizard
      @grimmywizard 2 года назад +34

      It's okay. My father literally slept somewhere his cousin aunt burned to death. Death is death. It's happening everywhere, you could be somewhere deaths happened and wouldn't ever know. Don't fool your mind into thinking otherwise

    • @ThaCyNiQ
      @ThaCyNiQ 2 года назад +44

      @@grimmywizard yes but I wouldn't go actively searching to sleep in the same spot someone died in, that's creepy.

  • @aayushkhadka6763
    @aayushkhadka6763 4 года назад +129

    The river were huge but we were determined to go so we...
    Flew in lol 🤣

    • @ale347baker
      @ale347baker 4 года назад +5

      Better than turning back and never seeing it at all!

    • @billsmith6884
      @billsmith6884 4 года назад +4

      How many times have you been there?

    • @huntertierney5495
      @huntertierney5495 4 года назад +2

      Bill Smith it’s good they never tried idiot multiple people have died trying to get to the bus

    • @billsmith6884
      @billsmith6884 4 года назад +5

      @@huntertierney5495And many people have made it. And many people have died trying Everest, and many people have died crossing the street. Just stay at home and do nothing with your life, continue to support people who criticise others, you seem comfortable with that. Don't call me an idiot, it only serves to show that your ignorance is only surpassed by your ignorance.

    • @aayushkhadka6763
      @aayushkhadka6763 4 года назад

      @@huntertierney5495 atleast they died trying what they loved to do.
      Not on a deathbed regretting life spent every single day on a rat race.

  • @pellerichardsson2709
    @pellerichardsson2709 4 года назад +297

    Lovely to see the Magic bus again. Me and a friend hiked to it in 2014, a memory for life. We went from sweden to Alaska to see the bus❤️

    • @rokitman5753
      @rokitman5753 4 года назад +13

      Wow im amazed the bus has touched so many ppl so far away. God bless

    • @Killuhhh
      @Killuhhh 4 года назад

      Hur tog ni er dit? Gick ni Sverige -> Finland -> Ryssland och sen över till nordamerika (alaska). Väldigt fundersam då det är en tanke jag alltid har tänkt på. Hur lång tid tog det?

    • @pellerichardsson2709
      @pellerichardsson2709 4 года назад +5

      Fabian Tar du den rutten får du nog börja gå nu. Vi flög till Fairbanks sen hyrbil till Healy och parkerade vid Eight Mile lake. Sen på med ryggen och vandra 36km. Good luck!

    • @Killuhhh
      @Killuhhh 4 года назад

      @@pellerichardsson2709 Ah okej, trodde ni vandrade hela vägen till Alaska. Tack för svaret! :)

    • @user-ch5xc2ne7u
      @user-ch5xc2ne7u 4 года назад +3

      Is this a real bus of Chris or the bus from the movie?

  • @AcidGlow
    @AcidGlow 3 года назад +64

    What a tragic but touching story. Thank you for sharing. 😕

  • @pitstop_calvin
    @pitstop_calvin 4 года назад +1979

    Everyone is debating on how he died and I’m over like, “ How did the bus get there?”

    • @Supadrumma441
      @Supadrumma441 4 года назад +204

      Workers left it there as a shelter.

    • @MustObeyTheRules
      @MustObeyTheRules 4 года назад +218

      Logging was done there in the 60s. The bus was dragged back there behind a bulldozer is what the book claims

    • @matthewburris769
      @matthewburris769 4 года назад +58

      @@MustObeyTheRules .....Mining.
      More specifically, road improvements for the mine company.

    • @out43
      @out43 4 года назад +35

      Someone will eventually need to go out there with some serious welding tools and patch that thing up

    • @joshuapotter1869
      @joshuapotter1869 4 года назад +5

      Zephurr's - cordless drills and a divot gun would do a lot

  • @bigchief70
    @bigchief70 4 года назад +755

    I walked out there 10 years ago and slept a night in the bus. It was quite a profound experience.

    • @stevenp6761
      @stevenp6761 4 года назад +4

      Ghost_Bear how is the bear situation there? Are there many grizzlies around?

    • @bigchief70
      @bigchief70 4 года назад +27

      @@stevenp6761I was out on the trail 3 consecutive summers. I never saw a bear, but I saw *a lot* of tracks and scat that was fresh-ish. I would recommend bringing a firearm with you out there, if you're planning on going.

    • @stevenp6761
      @stevenp6761 4 года назад +4

      Ghost_Bear thanks! I would certainly do. Although I am an EU citizen, so I am not sure if I would be allowed to purchase one, probably not. (Any idea regarding this?) Yes, I might visit Alaska but definitely not this year. This story really resonated with me. I also had some difficult family experiences etc., but luckily I am over it. So for me, it would be more for the scenery, to experience the wilderness.

    • @bigchief70
      @bigchief70 4 года назад +5

      @@stevenp6761A lot of people would recommend pepper spray, but sometimes that's not enough. It's good to bring either way though to have options. This might sound silly, but bringing a melee weapon like a spear might not be a horrible idea. You can buy real spears that people use for hunting still. If a bear was getting aggressive it could help maintain distance and possibly double as a walking stick.

    • @hisham031170
      @hisham031170 4 года назад +2

      Did you see a ghost?

  • @sullystevens956
    @sullystevens956 3 года назад +33

    It feels like there are people who understand and relate to Chris’s story, and those who are so swept into society already that they look down on those of us that understand. The young at heart no matter how old still understand.

    • @tyfallon
      @tyfallon 10 месяцев назад +2

      I completely relate to this and understand it, and it's amazing to me that people can look at what he did and not get it. Really opens my eyes that most people don't have that young youthful explorative energy anymore.

    • @superbloom_3
      @superbloom_3 4 месяца назад +1

      ⁠@@tyfalloni agree so much!!

  • @calvingrinds5818
    @calvingrinds5818 3 года назад +83

    whats sad is that two weeks after he died he was found by hunters if he wouldve survived for two more weeks he could have told the story himself

    • @PatrickPierceBateman
      @PatrickPierceBateman 3 года назад +21

      And if my grandmother had wheels she would be a bicycle.

    • @Jordan__Sloan
      @Jordan__Sloan 3 года назад +2

      Yeah but then the book would have never been written

    • @jccornerstone
      @jccornerstone 3 года назад +4

      @@Jordan__Sloan but then he may have lived, what you have just said is a very sad thing my friend.

    • @yamkaw346
      @yamkaw346 3 года назад +1

      @@jccornerstone Of course that would have been great, but point is no one would have heard of him

    • @teeks8951
      @teeks8951 3 года назад +7

      Or if he wasn't an idiot he would of had a map of the area, and would have known that there was a cable car crossing I mile down river from where he tried to cross.
      Nothing about his death was "tragic".

  • @bruceblais7958
    @bruceblais7958 4 года назад +112

    That was touching, thanks I was 32 when he died I remember. I'll never make it, so thanks for going for us. And Happy New year

    • @MILE30Adventures
      @MILE30Adventures  4 года назад +14

      His story continues to soar and touch people 28 years later. I can only imagine hearing about his story for the first time in your 30's.

    • @kevinwelsh7490
      @kevinwelsh7490 4 года назад +3

      it was his own fault really. now he's famous. maybe these vloggers can suck some of that fame from this guys death

    • @crook7493
      @crook7493 4 года назад +4

      kevin welsh we don't need your negativity. Thank you :)

    • @kevinwelsh7490
      @kevinwelsh7490 4 года назад +2

      @@crook7493 you're being negative and lacking critical thinking. Take that as constructive criticism.

    • @kurtchester7073
      @kurtchester7073 4 года назад

      @@kevinwelsh7490 Stop it, get some help. Michael Jordan

  • @jameslandonjr
    @jameslandonjr 3 года назад +221

    It's so crazy that 1 person can change so many people around the world, including me

    • @_Nonplussed
      @_Nonplussed 3 года назад +5

      How what did he do. It’s like I’ve always wanted to do what he did way before I saw this movie. All he did was live his life how he wanted.

    • @Sanne_Sanne
      @Sanne_Sanne 3 года назад +14

      But would he have changed your and many lives if he'd survived tho? His story is being romanticized to the max, but he was just a spoiled, arrogant boy who wanted to kick society in the nuts by leaving his parents and sister crushed. Yeah, what a bloody hero he was.

    • @cplcabs
      @cplcabs 3 года назад +6

      Yep, shows how dumb people are in this world being inspired by a dude who killed himself because he didn't know how to survive.

    • @rozrommelofficial1882
      @rozrommelofficial1882 3 года назад +4

      Into the Wild has definitely changed me brother.

    • @rozrommelofficial1882
      @rozrommelofficial1882 3 года назад +11

      @@cplcabs He ate berries that weakened his entire body preventing him from literally moving, that’s what killed him. I bet you couldn’t last a month in the Wild like McCandless did. And no he wasn’t some spoiled brat, that assumption tells me you never read the novel in the first place. Read his journals, his father Walt led a secret life where he had another entirely separate family. Further, Mcandless and his sister were subjected to years of emotional trauma as his sister speaks about in her Ted Talk (it’s on RUclips). He was a man who was fed up with a corrupted society where everyone values materials over others. Very based, very libertarian.

  • @HoneyandMe
    @HoneyandMe 4 года назад +628

    Maybe it's because I'm older (but not necessarily 'wiser') that I have a different perspective on Chris's story. I read the book many years ago, long before the idea of it being made into a movie was ever thought of. As a young person, I had dreams of living off the land, getting back to nature, getting away from it all. I watched Grizzly Adams, My Side of the Mountain...and other Hollywoodized shows about people living in the wilderness. And I read tons of books about people who did just this. While some tell the real story, others glamorize it. It's not all sunshine and free living! It's tough, it's hard work, it can be dangerous, and it is definitely not easy. It takes preparation, determination and a bit of craziness. And it's all worth it. But, not being realistic was Chris's downfall. Alaska is beautiful. It's wild and natural. But it's also harsh and cruel and unforgiving. I have always thought Chris's story was sad. A young man with so much potential, brought down by not thinking it through, not planning or doing enough research. His dream was commendable, wonderful! But he let his idea of the dream stand in the way of planning to make the dream a reality.
    I always enjoy your videos, Justin, and this one is no exception. I just feel like there is another side to Chris's story. A sad side that could have been avoided if he had planned. A wise man once said " If you fail to plan, you are planning to fail" (Benjamin Franklin). And yes...I have followed my dream of living in the woods, far from civilization, and I have succeeded. I look forward to your next video!

    • @rokitman5753
      @rokitman5753 4 года назад +16

      @Robert Ranciato and?

    • @jodyoalaska
      @jodyoalaska 4 года назад +35

      Well said. It’s good they listened to local advice and took a helicopter in. Sadly, others have perished to get to this much romanticized destination.

    • @AlaskaBushratJohn-st7sm
      @AlaskaBushratJohn-st7sm 4 года назад +27

      @Robert Ranciato I live in Alaska and have for 72 years and I live in a remote part of Alaska. I have Internet as well. What's your point?

    • @lesduffey6032
      @lesduffey6032 4 года назад +12

      I'm hoping your really not this ignorant, but your comment does you no justice. Your missing the whole point of the commentors observations. To cross a flooded river, just by happenstance if one becomes between you and survival, you will need at least 100 ft. of cord, something Chris did not have.

    • @lesduffey6032
      @lesduffey6032 4 года назад +4

      I meant this reply for Robert.

  • @1955DodgersBrooklyn
    @1955DodgersBrooklyn 4 года назад +2749

    Who’s here after they removed the bus?

    • @isipredicted
      @isipredicted 4 года назад +180

      I just read it in the news 😂😂😂 they said that they removed it because a lots of people get them selfs in danger by getting to the bus! As well 2 people died by crossing the river..... but let me tell you something what a wonderfull story man🤩🤩🤩

    • @rxianjayant6873
      @rxianjayant6873 4 года назад +6

      Me🥰

    • @atifkhateeb6957
      @atifkhateeb6957 4 года назад +80

      So sad in my opinion

    • @Hcortezalaska
      @Hcortezalaska 4 года назад +82

      yep. Its a pretty cool piece of our history in Alaska but now it will be less dangerous for others to enjoy. Alaska is not for the weak!

    • @Baddad36
      @Baddad36 4 года назад +42

      Me too! Didn't read the book but might now. Did seethe film. Thought it excellent. My wonder is, being it's so far into the wilderness, how did it get there?

  • @itrasheditgood
    @itrasheditgood Год назад +10

    People talk about places that have a scary haunted vibe, but no one talks about places that have a real peaceful, very joyful kind of vibe. I imagine Christopher didn’t feel despair in his last moments alive, his eternal optimism must still radiate from that bus. I have lived in two very different houses, one felt like it had a dense kind of presence that was both ominous and at times frightening. There was a room where I felt watched. The other house wasn’t particularly special, it was drafty and the downstairs kind of dark. But for some unexplainable reason, it always felt so very welcoming. People visited quite frequently unlike the scary house. There was a kind of joy that was very infectious. The house I live in now, doesn’t have a feeling either negative or positive.

  • @iiPurpose
    @iiPurpose 4 года назад +512

    Btw, chris died after eating a fungus on the potato seeds he had been eating. This fungus caused his digestive system to stop working, causing him to starve to death. It wasn’t any berries that he ate

    • @TheJohnnyKnott
      @TheJohnnyKnott 4 года назад +22

      Dino Straw can I get a source on that? I figured he really just starved like normal. No poison no fungus

    • @iiPurpose
      @iiPurpose 4 года назад +32

      John Knott not sure the exact article. We just read this book in English class and our teacher told us there was a group of scientists that took a sample of a bag of potato seeds and found a fungus growing underneath them. Could just be another conspiracy, could be the COD but I’m sure there were many factors leading to his death

    • @esscate
      @esscate 4 года назад +11

      John Knott Sais so in the book by Krakauer

    • @Drifter6942
      @Drifter6942 4 года назад +32

      @@iiPurpose in the movie it was a plant. Chris was reading edible plants and mushrooms and the plant he ate looked identical to what was illustrated but the grain in the leaf was different but by the time he figured that out it was too late.
      The movie was very well done. if you haven't seen it, I recommend it.
      I haven't red the book, but I am sure they kept it as close to his journal

    • @iiPurpose
      @iiPurpose 4 года назад +6

      Drifter6942 Nomad ah. I’ve never seen the movie. Only read the book

  • @asiatheasia863
    @asiatheasia863 4 года назад +33

    Im so jealous of everyone who had the chance to visit the bus and experience the same feelings chris himself did ! It will be On top of my bucket list to go there exploring the area, reading all of his notes with curiousity, reading my fav qoutes from the book,listening to the movie's soundtrack album, few photographs ..... 💚🙏

    • @anti-ethniccleansing465
      @anti-ethniccleansing465 3 года назад +4

      You missed your chance, bud.

    • @xtort92
      @xtort92 Год назад +1

      Yeah the bus is gone… sorry 🤷🏼‍♂️

    • @chlieb
      @chlieb Год назад +1

      @@xtort92 its not gone its just in a museum

  • @RunDub
    @RunDub 3 года назад +29

    I love how respectful all the visitors to the bus are to leave everything there. So rare these days. Definitely warms my heart.

  • @JC-xg1zi
    @JC-xg1zi 4 года назад +306

    I hope nobody was on the Stampede trail trying to get to the bus, then looking up as they were crossing the Teklanika and seeing it being lifted away. That would have sucked big time. Lol...

    • @OgGuak420
      @OgGuak420 4 года назад +44

      Why isn’t this comment blowing up it’s actually pretty hilarious “ I might be tripping but I think the magic school bus is flying away from us”

    • @davidirving4138
      @davidirving4138 4 года назад

      @Roger Balcer how so?

    • @camcamwatt
      @camcamwatt 4 года назад +17

      Hahahaha RIght.... once in a life time spiritual mission, next minute you see an army helicopter take your dreams away! haha FML LOL

    • @damiansaucedo9951
      @damiansaucedo9951 3 года назад +1

      D'oh! (In their respective language)

    • @ereynoldful3974
      @ereynoldful3974 3 года назад

      😂😂😂😂 Some hippies look up like "huhhhhhh????" 😂

  • @icedclips725
    @icedclips725 4 года назад +166

    there's some Supertramp in all of us. A lot of people dream of doing what he did but few have to courage to take that step.

    • @icedclips725
      @icedclips725 4 года назад +1

      @Rob Morlan He ran away.

    • @hisham031170
      @hisham031170 4 года назад +8

      Maybe we realized that one should not temper with the wilderness without being prepared to live in the wilderness.

    • @stanleyhape8427
      @stanleyhape8427 3 года назад +6

      It's not a lack of courage it's having the intelligence to not wonder off into the wilderness unprepared.

    • @buckmurdock2500
      @buckmurdock2500 10 месяцев назад

      yes, everybody dreams of hiking into the wilderness, completely unprepared, no survival skills, and hang out until they die.

    • @SmilingGriffon-lk7um
      @SmilingGriffon-lk7um 2 месяца назад

      I took that step. And Nazi pig cops have made my life shit for being different and a pothead hippy.

  • @PearlJamAndBiscuits
    @PearlJamAndBiscuits 3 года назад +26

    Thank you for sharing this with everyone. This story moved me so much for alot of reasons. I first learned of it through a counselor was talking to, as I was telling her I dont need any friends in my life. I was pretty jaded by my experiences with humans and truly wanted nothing to do with the majority of them. She recommended this book to me and I have since also seen the and own the movie. Chris and I are very close in age, and we had similar childhood's as far as our parents go. I totally understand what drove him up there to Alaska, and his whole journey. To this day, I take what I learned from his experience and I try to teach my son. We are not put on this earth to be solitary, we NEED one another whether we like it or not. And if you think about it, its really not that easy to be happy when you are all alone. Happiness needs to be shared. I truly believe it's what God wants for us, he wants us to love one another as He has loved us. Chris may have lost his life up there, but what he learned will go on forever and will continue to teach those of us still here. And with every fiber in my body, I do know without a doubt, Christopher has now found his true happiness and is loved beyond measure. He is home.

  • @barques95
    @barques95 4 года назад +193

    Had he not found the bus, he likely would have spent a lot less than 100 days in that area......and not been trapped in by the river.

    • @GeniuneLime
      @GeniuneLime 4 года назад +19

      IDK, maybe without the bus, he would've died of cold, or attacked by a predator. Many things went wrong for him to die, but I wouldn't blame the bus...

    • @BarackObama-zh9od
      @BarackObama-zh9od 4 года назад +13

      GeniuneLime 1148 I think the bus more so provided comfort rather than much safety

    • @scottpepper7028
      @scottpepper7028 4 года назад +6

      @@GeniuneLime I think without the bus he would have turned around after a few days, the bus was good for the shelter and the stove staying there for so long among other things is what cost him in the end.makes me wonder with all that free time did he not keep an eye on the river did he do any recon of the area,so many questions 🤔

    • @ivanlagrossemoule
      @ivanlagrossemoule 4 года назад +14

      @@scottpepper7028 The guy had no idea what he was doing, is it really surprising that he fucked up yet another thing?

    • @Marquis-Sade
      @Marquis-Sade 4 года назад

      You mean he would have died earlier?

  • @spoderman2886
    @spoderman2886 3 года назад +158

    I slept in that bus about 10 years ago alone. It was quite a profound experience not for the faint of heart.

    • @Praetoria113-zm3no
      @Praetoria113-zm3no 3 года назад +23

      I'm curious, being cautious while camping is normal, but a profound experience sleeping in a bus where a delusional person died? There's nothing magical about a person fully unprepared to live in the wilderness for whatever reason. His stupidity, coupled with his fan base has caused deaths of others who apparently like Chris, didn't read the manual either. If you're going to seek enlightenment, make sure you'll survive the journey.

    • @spoderman2886
      @spoderman2886 3 года назад +47

      @@Praetoria113-zm3no I did survive the journey which is why I’m here commenting on the video. I had 4 tabs of acid that night alone in the bus. You could say it was a profound experience hearing things off in the bushes and feeling the presence of our hero, Chris.

    • @Praetoria113-zm3no
      @Praetoria113-zm3no 3 года назад +24

      @@spoderman2886 Ok, burn out, it's nice you baked in a deceprit bus that some schmuck died in. By the way, Chris isn't a hero, and never committed any heroic acts to achieve that title. He was an delusional idiot who died in a place he should never have been to without proper gear and skills. No one in their right mind walks into the the wilderness with a bag of rice, .22 long rifle for fucks sake, and can't find a secure water crossing less then 2700' where he was staying. He was so smart supposedly yet died from a simple mistake because he didn't read the manual. Hero's are people who put their lives on the line to help others. Chris did the opposite, he cost taxpayers money, he cost his family money, and because his notoriety, caused others by following his lead to die there also. Real smart.

    • @kylehardy8562
      @kylehardy8562 3 года назад +60

      @@Praetoria113-zm3no will never understand people getting so upset in these comments. Get a grip, he made his own life choices, who tf are you to judge.. you're making about like he committed acts of terrorism all because he went into the wilderness unprepared. Have a day off...

    • @Praetoria113-zm3no
      @Praetoria113-zm3no 3 года назад +3

      @Jason Avery While Chris didn't pull the trigger so to speak, his story encouraged other mentally unstable people to attempt the same thing by romantizing what he was doing. One guy even said he went there and took LSD just to feel the "vibes". The bus was never intended to be some shrine. It was left there as shelter for others to use. Now, even that is gone. So, while Chris didn't kill anyone, his story did. Even the movie tried to make Chris out as something special. He wasn't. He was an emotionally immature person whose idea of responsibility was to knowingly disappear while costing others time and money trying to find him. Add on the costs of interning the bus to a different place, the money used to either rescue or retrieve others that just like Chris, had no business being there in the first place. For as smart as Chris was, he had zero common sense which freely flows through most academics that feel the rules don't apply to them. Chris could have died in Arizona when he woke to find his car flooding out from a thunderstorm. That was his first brush with death that most civil minded people would never succumb to.

  • @Maniaco1612
    @Maniaco1612 Год назад +4

    At 8:05 I had chills down my back as I saw the message left by a person from Bulgaria. It is my home country and it amazed me that a person from far Eastern Europe managed to get to the Magic Bus of Chris. Unbelievable. This was a fantastic video which gave me a surreal experience for a moment. Thank you.

  • @NomadLand666
    @NomadLand666 4 года назад +27

    Just thinking about that place and Chris's story makes me tear up, that is a very unique place with so much energy and such an astounding history it immediately evokes deep emotions of gratitude for that ability to gather understanding from other people's experiences. It is such a lucky and unique thing to be human and share dozens of generations of knowledge and share so much with each other without ever even coming in contact with one another. In that bus you were with all the other people who have been there. Thank you for sharing this.

    • @JeffPDX1
      @JeffPDX1 2 года назад

      It is a completely normal place that some idiot starved himself to death in.

  • @shannamoxley1040
    @shannamoxley1040 3 года назад +7

    I never even knew his story but í cried and felt how surreal it would be to visit the bus, I've read up on his journey just this past 2 days. Thankfully no one stole anything and I'm surprised his stuff is still in there. Brought tears to my eyes

    • @anti-ethniccleansing465
      @anti-ethniccleansing465 3 года назад

      Yeah man - I am super surprised that no one stole the suitcase... that speaks volumes about the type of person that used to make that journey.

  • @patsywhiddon1832
    @patsywhiddon1832 3 года назад +5

    I believe Chris is there anytime people come to visit, he loves it! Most beautiful and moving story of my life and love that no one would dare to take anything, as if he was still alive, and so he is!

  • @chamberlain676
    @chamberlain676 4 года назад +27

    I knew nothing of this story until watching you previous video that had mentioned it. Now I've read the book and watched the movie. Thank you.

    • @MILE30Adventures
      @MILE30Adventures  4 года назад +1

      Wow! Thank you for sharing this Chris! I'm so glad you found his story here. What an incredible story he has. An inspiration and a reminder.

  • @kevinpride6543
    @kevinpride6543 4 года назад +74

    I met Chris McCandless in Hot Springs Arkansas during his drive west. He detoured north to visit HS National Park although his route map did not indicate it. He told me of his intentions regarding Alaska. He told me he had a book on plant identification. Having lived and worked in Yellowstone/Grand Teton National Parks and knowing that wild edible plants do not have the calories to sustain life, I urged him to considering hunting and fishing. He thought that a .22 rifle, yet to be purchased, would suffice. I was thinking something larger in caliber. Grizz/Brown Bears, and moose, are not to be trifled with. I wished him well on his journey. He had a very charismatic and joyful positivity about him.

    • @kevinwelsh7490
      @kevinwelsh7490 4 года назад +4

      yeah, I met him just before that. he told me he imagined he would die in Alaska!

    • @gh0sty1mz
      @gh0sty1mz 4 года назад +2

      srsly ? can you have alittle bit of respect ?

    • @kevinwelsh7490
      @kevinwelsh7490 4 года назад +6

      @@gh0sty1mz I am mocking Kevin Pride who is now proud to say he met a guy who died famously. He's not even an friend of the deceased. He's clearly lying about the whole thing. This video is ghoulish and interesting for people with morbid fascination. I'm entertained by people's
      morbid fascinations. KP is a total a-hole.

    • @ATY676
      @ATY676 4 года назад +4

      I'll take 'Things that didn't happen' for $1,000 Alex.

    • @acidicali7776
      @acidicali7776 4 года назад +3

      Bull.shit. Nice job making up stories for..25 likes?

  • @YorkshireHillbilly
    @YorkshireHillbilly 3 года назад +26

    Chris's story makes me incredibly sad each time I read/watch it. I'm a big hearty coming up to 40 year old Yorkshireman (England) and I'm sat here watching the outro absolutely sobbing, I mean unrollable breathless sobbing. It leaves me feeling so low/helpless and takes me so long to recover, I can only read/watch it every few years. RIP & Godspeed Supertramp.

    • @wolfydan121
      @wolfydan121 2 года назад +1

      Real men don't cry

    • @daneillia35
      @daneillia35 2 года назад +1

      the way his life ended is so sad

  • @cesalt2408
    @cesalt2408 4 года назад +17

    I just came upstairs from working on my van build and saw this. So beautiful. So very, very beautiful. And what a wonderful way to end January 1, 2020. Thank you so much!

    • @MILE30Adventures
      @MILE30Adventures  4 года назад

      I'm so glad to hear you say that! What van did you get?!

    • @OgGuak420
      @OgGuak420 4 года назад

      Just saw a video about how van life on RUclips is extremely click bait can’t wait to see your progress..

  • @johnwilliams2920
    @johnwilliams2920 4 года назад +8

    A few days after I'd learned that the 'Magic Bus' has been moved from here, I just wanted to congratulate the maker of this short documentary for such a wonderful retrospective look at the time Christopher spent in it . ❤🙏

  • @zurieljansky28
    @zurieljansky28 3 года назад +14

    Into The Wild is a beautiful film. I just watched it recently and was absolutely blown away by both Chris and his whole expedition. The ending of both his life and seeing it in the film was both quite sad and stunning. I would love to do an expedition or journey like this one day, but of course being well equipped. Thank you for making this vid, and of course to Chris McCandless without him and his journey we wouldn't want to journey Into The Wild. ♥️🙏🏻

  • @andernj08
    @andernj08 4 года назад +332

    "The rivers to high you can't get there at this time of year"
    *I've got money*

    • @nickwalton9724
      @nickwalton9724 4 года назад +3

      When? What time of year? Now? I just hiked in and out in 2 days and spent 1 night on the bus

    • @hisham031170
      @hisham031170 4 года назад +1

      Probably he should say "on foot".

    • @johnantes8068
      @johnantes8068 4 года назад +3

      I think he used hoverboard and segway for some of the trip

    • @davidjones-bh5xg
      @davidjones-bh5xg 3 года назад

      @@johnantes8068 😆

    • @lucasftsantos
      @lucasftsantos 3 года назад +2

      I wonder how much it was to get there by helicopter

  • @allisonsherman7231
    @allisonsherman7231 4 года назад +70

    You can feel the energy through your video. How awesome that Sean Penn made a movie about Chris’ story. Thank you for your video.

    • @MILE30Adventures
      @MILE30Adventures  4 года назад +3

      I'm glad you felt something from it. We definitely did that is for sure!

    • @CabinDweller
      @CabinDweller 4 года назад +1

      Same, powerful video.

    • @marinvidovic763
      @marinvidovic763 4 года назад +1

      @@CabinDweller ruclips.net/video/27n6ML0sGPY/видео.html

    • @CabinDweller
      @CabinDweller 4 года назад

      Marin Vidovic cool! Thx for sharing.

    • @kevinwelsh7490
      @kevinwelsh7490 4 года назад

      @@MILE30AdventuresYOU ARE A GHOUL

  • @angelserenade
    @angelserenade 2 года назад +44

    I could imagine Chris' happy spirit enjoying these visitors in his little lair. Happiness is indeed real, with a lot of people honoring his life and his story being shared around the world.

    • @galileo707
      @galileo707 2 года назад +2

      Happiness is only real when shared

    • @ballpython6753
      @ballpython6753 Год назад +1

      @@galileo707 the real quote had no "is" but close enough

    • @galileo707
      @galileo707 Год назад

      @@ballpython6753 for you i had to fact check.
      In the movie when he wrote, yes he didn't use no "is" probably because he was in a hungry and scared state.
      But if you search for his quotes. They will give you "is"
      “Happiness is only real when shared. ” -Christopher McCandless.

  • @ChrisTrude
    @ChrisTrude 4 года назад +503

    maybe I'm just superstitious, but I wouldn't lay there, partially out of reverence, partially out of grossness.

    • @myra961
      @myra961 4 года назад +63

      Exactly. I mean i'm a nature lover and shit but how many people have lie down on that sheet? Unless the sheriff or the park ranger changed that everyday then im not sleeping there no ma'am.

    • @LynnRedwine800
      @LynnRedwine800 4 года назад +52

      I know. He never gave it any thought. He just went straight to the mattress and plopped down. I don't think he will ever realize what he did.

    • @MylotheZooLovingScientist
      @MylotheZooLovingScientist 4 года назад +51

      @@never100x I'm not exactly sure where his decomposing body was found, but I think that just the fact that it was found *somewhere* in the bus - regardless of how much time has passed since - would be enough to turn me off to the idea of lying around in there.

    • @stephanietomlinson1545
      @stephanietomlinson1545 4 года назад +40

      He died on the bed wrapped in the sleeping bag that his mother made him when he was a child. It’s hard to say what his body was like. He was only 67 pounds when the found him and the temps are on the cooler side.

    • @richnaper6666
      @richnaper6666 4 года назад +23

      I thought the same thing, no way I’m laying on that, lice/chiggers/mites/scabies?? Depending on the last hippies to venture through

  • @salan3507
    @salan3507 4 года назад +8

    Into the Wild was a great movie, and that's great that you guys got to see the bus. It is a sad story but also very inspiring, and for many people Chris will never be forgotten.

  • @lara.genevieve_9416
    @lara.genevieve_9416 3 года назад +10

    This was so cool to watch, for once RUclips recommended a gem of a video! I remember buying Into the Wild when I moved to London from Australia back in 2010 and read the whole thing while waiting in a bank - absolutely incredible story.

  • @Wonderhussy
    @Wonderhussy 3 года назад +189

    This is THE ultimate RUclips explorer video of all time

    • @bikinggal1
      @bikinggal1 3 года назад +18

      explorers with drones and fists full of cash to charter choppers!! LOL

    • @benchipi2317
      @benchipi2317 3 года назад +1

      Folks are basically descent

    • @jeffwaltrip5979
      @jeffwaltrip5979 3 года назад +2

      Haha what? No it’s not

    • @jeffwaltrip5979
      @jeffwaltrip5979 3 года назад +1

      @@bikinggal1 lol right?! What an explorer!

    • @MiguelMendoza-oh6vu
      @MiguelMendoza-oh6vu 3 года назад +1

      Can't believe they moved the bus....

  • @knchakradhar
    @knchakradhar 4 года назад +14

    Though, It's a sad story...
    But I feel...Chris had a dream & he lived it before he died. And that inspires us....and will be inspiring the generations.
    I have read about...& have watched the film also. It was really a good feeling to watch you visiting this 'magic bus'
    Thanks for this video.
    Love & respect to Alex! (Alexander Supertramp) ❤️❤️

  • @redsquirrelftw
    @redsquirrelftw Год назад +5

    Wow that must have been an incredible thing to actually get to see it in person and even sleep in it. I recently watched the movie not realizing it was a true story and been so inspired by it. I want to live off grid myself, though I'm going in more prepared and bought land so I can build a cabin with infrastructure etc. Still inspiring the way Chris did it though, he just left everything and went. He died doing what he wanted, got to give him that.

  • @deeubs09
    @deeubs09 4 года назад +4

    Wow so beautifully picturised. The 142 Bus and Chris have become immortal, they have become the symbol of tranquility for the one's who search a place for peace. It's quiet emotional to visualize how Chris would have lived in the same bus and tragically died there. I think one can't define by words you need to be in that place to experience it. I saw the movie and learnt the story of Chris.. RIP Chris n bus 142.

  • @jennacummings3936
    @jennacummings3936 4 года назад +7

    I’m all bummed out because they removed the bus from that resting spot. I’m so glad y’all were able to come up here to Alaska and experience something so amazing that other places can’t offer.

    • @josephspruill1212
      @josephspruill1212 Год назад +1

      They had to remove the bus cause it has caused 5 ppl to die just finding the bus cause of chris's story... Don't think he wanted that to happen much less his family.

    • @lastmanonearth3202
      @lastmanonearth3202 Год назад +1

      It's rather sad they removed the bus ..

    • @jennacummings3936
      @jennacummings3936 Год назад +2

      @@lastmanonearth3202 but it’s an exhibit at the Museum of Alaska that is able to be seen and still gone in I believe

  • @gabi1342ful
    @gabi1342ful 10 месяцев назад +3

    Fairbanks Bus 142 was taken away from there on 19 June 2020. It is now at the University of Alaska Museum of the North in Fairbanks and can be seen there.

  • @dwitcraft
    @dwitcraft 4 года назад +4

    I respect the young people that find inspiration in this story and trying to see the bus. Nature is wonderfully beautiful and powerful. Following your dreams is inspirational, and you have to do that when you're young(because when you're old you're tied down). I watched the movie only, and as a parent I was struck by the difficulty that Chris and his parents had relating to each other. Seeing the book that his parents dedicated to him hits parents pretty hard. I can only imagine their pain trekking across the country just to see where their kid died.
    All of you kids have family and friends who would miss you and suffer if you met the same fate as Chris. Chase your dreams, find meaning in the world, but remember the people who love you and take enough care of yourselves to come back to them afterwards!
    The Alaska authorities will find a way to display this so people can still trek there to see that special place, but now they will make it home to those that love them afterwards.

  • @Papuaz
    @Papuaz 4 года назад +38

    In the box in 4:20 is polish edition of "into the wild" book :D my countrymens were there.

  • @J27GAMES
    @J27GAMES 3 года назад +6

    You guys are incredible cinematographers! You did a great job honoring his memory

    • @anti-ethniccleansing465
      @anti-ethniccleansing465 3 года назад

      I wish they showed the items in the bus more. Show us all the contents of the suitcase, the stove, the items next to the second bed, what flag that was, more shots showing all the graffitim etc etc. This could have been so much more thorough.

  • @fugley100
    @fugley100 4 года назад +253

    "people said you cannot hike this" "the rivers way to high" [ominous background sounds] "it's virtually impossible" "but we were determined we were going to make it as video shows two hikers approaching the bus...so we... chartered a helicopter?!? Wait what?

    • @nimmishj
      @nimmishj 4 года назад +31

      I thout they were about to do something impossible, and then there comes the copter

    • @36degreesMars
      @36degreesMars 4 года назад +31

      right? I mean what a nice waste of fuel chris would be proud of what an environmentally conscious act that was. Also it sounds like the magic is not just the actual bus but the whole getting there, including all the obstacles, if you're determined enough to do it. Also i'd like to see more shots of every little detail in that bus instead of the person talking and shots of the movie (we've all seen it already), no offense.

    • @johndoe144
      @johndoe144 4 года назад +11

      LMBO! I wouldnt have slept there. Didn't earn it

    • @Hanzyscure
      @Hanzyscure 4 года назад +1

      The flight there was the most dangerous part of the trip. Safe Emergency landing is 35mph straight down.

    • @AndiDuck
      @AndiDuck 4 года назад +12

      IKR I totally lost respect when they took a helicopter (>ლ)

  • @Cronkerdonk
    @Cronkerdonk 4 года назад +25

    I used to live in Fairbanks, Ak. and I heard a lot of stories about how the forest service have to fly out and look for people who got lost or stuck at this bus. Don’t underestimate Alaska like McCandless or it will kill you, for people thinking about going to this bus think about that before putting yourself in a dangerous situation.

    • @1pcfred
      @1pcfred 4 года назад

      If that is the case then it is a good thing we pay to have a forest service. Kudos on them for doing their jobs too.

    • @Cronkerdonk
      @Cronkerdonk 4 года назад +1

      Paul Frederick if you haven’t guessed by the name it’s called the forest service not the find the lost people service, finding lost people is not their primary purpose. Lost hikers cost the us government millions of dollars a year. Taking forest service personnel away from their normal job to find some dumb person just seems like a waste of my tax dollars.

    • @1pcfred
      @1pcfred 4 года назад +1

      @@Cronkerdonk the name means they provide services in the forest. Rocks and trees do not pay taxes. People do. So every government workers primary job is to serve the public interest. The public is made up of people. Someday it may be your dumb ass that they're saving too.

    • @Cronkerdonk
      @Cronkerdonk 4 года назад

      Paul Frederick I agree with you completely, but that’s not really my point. There is known risk when attempting this trail. The main character of the book that made this trail popular died, hell 5 people got lost on this trail last month. If people had common sense or knew their limits then we would have to waste very limited and valuable resources. I work for the government and you always have to more with less resources. All I’m is trying to say is that people should think about how Mccandless died before they go into a dangerous area, waste time and money or even die in an attempt to get a selfie.

    • @1pcfred
      @1pcfred 4 года назад +2

      @@Cronkerdonk if you don't test your limits you never realize your true potential. Tis better to have tried and failed than to have never tried at all. People who have experienced true failure are more genuine than those who haven't. I can generally tolerate them better too. There really is nothing as life affirming as a good near death experience. They might set out for just a selfie but I imagine many of them end up with far more. Life is what happens to us while we're making other plans.

  • @Adventurist
    @Adventurist 3 года назад +4

    Just finished the book and watched this video straight after putting it down. You captured the spirit extremely well and I just wanted to thank you for sharing this experience. One of the most beautiful videos I‘ve ever seen. Knowing the whole story makes this video really great. Take care!

  • @fast03vette4me
    @fast03vette4me 4 года назад +169

    As the bus has now been removed, this may end up being one of the last bus in place videos. R.I.P. Alexander Supertramp the magic bus flew away like you did, free and out of the wild forever.

    • @philstoke
      @philstoke 4 года назад +1

      They is another one of a woman she did it by foot these didnt they used transportation ie helicopter or mv

    • @anti-ethniccleansing465
      @anti-ethniccleansing465 3 года назад +1

      @@philstoke
      I wish you left a link. Boo.

    • @philstoke
      @philstoke 3 года назад

      @@anti-ethniccleansing465 will try find it its deff on Facebook and in the into the wild group on Facebook and she put it on RUclips to ill try find it

    • @anti-ethniccleansing465
      @anti-ethniccleansing465 3 года назад +1

      @@philstoke
      Cool I hope you can find it! I’d definitely be interested in watching it. :)

    • @samuelalvarez_art
      @samuelalvarez_art 3 года назад

      How did the bus get there? Like originally?

  • @jamesirwingofobogmailjames2673
    @jamesirwingofobogmailjames2673 4 года назад +71

    Now that the bus is gone this should get more views.

    • @holoholopainen1627
      @holoholopainen1627 3 года назад

      That was a WRONG MOVE ! ALASKA should return The Bus ! They have NO USE for The Bus ! FAIRBANKS should return a Bus like #142

    • @laurelmcphee793
      @laurelmcphee793 3 года назад

      @@holoholopainen1627 many people died trying to visit the bus so I think it was fair of them to move it

    • @holoholopainen1627
      @holoholopainen1627 3 года назад +1

      @@laurelmcphee793 Like The Swiss Girl ? She was just Out of Her Comfort Zone - and maybe 1st Time in Alaska ! When You travel that long - many People loose Their LIVES ! Do You know How many People die - Do parachuting - mountain climbing - surfing - riding motoecycles etc etc ! These are LIFESTYLE SPORTS - and You need to know Your Sport ! Youngters Today need something to Do - to LIVE - 100% LIFE ! EARLIER Generations were too busy with something Different !

  • @hollyvincent7726
    @hollyvincent7726 3 года назад +6

    This video was AMAZING! You guys definitely captured the mAgic bus in a great light❤️ I think that Chris would be happy that so many people have been positively affected by his story. Amazing job guys❤️❤️❤️❤️✌️✌️✌️✌️

  • @amazingman5493
    @amazingman5493 4 года назад +192

    It's to bad they didn't shoot the tiny details of the bus. The entire video was about them. Wasted last chance.

  • @FifthRobin
    @FifthRobin 4 года назад +6

    His story is so moving.
    Rest in piece Chris

  • @ea41
    @ea41 3 года назад +1

    Amazing story, brought to light. Crazy how he wanted to be Alone & in the wilderness, but his story brought people to him & his magic bus, to a museum. In the end he wanted to return & then realized that "Happiness only real when shared"..
    Wish it didn't become too late for him. Although, his journey was definitely beautiful. He was just trying to find his inner peace & happiness. So young! I hope he truly did fulfill his dreams. 💕

  • @sodobson
    @sodobson 4 года назад +11

    I wonder how his belongings and stuff are still in pretty good shape, it Hass to rain and snow inside that bus. Pretty cool video. Thank you for sharing.

  • @JackMellor498
    @JackMellor498 4 года назад +157

    Watching this after seeing the news story of the bus being airlifted and removed from its position.
    I understand it from a health and safety point of view, apparently several hikers have gotten themselves killed trying to navigate up the Stampede Trail to get to it, but I sincerely hope they don't scrap it and throw away all the items in it or whatever. So many who've visited the bus have left behind enough in memory of Chris to practically designated it a shrine! Isn't there a museum or something about Chris in a nearby town? Be nice if they moved it there, anything other than selling it for scrap.

    • @MrNightrider981
      @MrNightrider981 4 года назад +3

      One of God's commandments says: "Don't make yourself an false God and idol and don't worship it" - hence that old bus shouldn't be any kind of "temple" because it was a place of human suffering ...

    • @jongallardo8006
      @jongallardo8006 3 года назад +5

      Last I heard the museum of the north /university of AK Fairbanks would be the bus’s permanent home now

    • @dlewis8405
      @dlewis8405 3 года назад

      Sounds like the best outcome to have the bus be a museum in Fairbanks. No more deaths will be associated with the bus.

    • @ImMora1
      @ImMora1 3 года назад +5

      @@MrNightrider981 you really have absolutely no touch to reality do you?

    • @MrNightrider981
      @MrNightrider981 3 года назад

      @@ImMora1 More than you and other snobs ...

  • @eligefashion
    @eligefashion 3 года назад +5

    This is haunting, thank you for taking us along on this experience..

  • @devinsupertramp
    @devinsupertramp 4 года назад +261

    Amazing work guys! Loved all the insights you gave and I felt inspired by this, well done :)

    • @ethancbaker2002
      @ethancbaker2002 3 года назад +2

      You have 6 mill subs? 😳

    • @passingintooblivion4914
      @passingintooblivion4914 3 года назад

      Goat

    • @Tcstewie
      @Tcstewie 3 года назад

      Remember that time you came to Logan and made a waterslide off the only cliff jumping spot in the valley and literally manually eroded a huge chunk of the cliff away? Yeah, screw you, man. Of course you would be inspired by a RUclips snowflake flying a helicopter into the wilderness to see the most famous hunk of littered scrap metal.

    • @gudelis2171
      @gudelis2171 2 года назад

      Supertramp

  • @jeremyspecce
    @jeremyspecce 4 года назад +4

    Obviously renewed interest today due to the airlift of the bus. This was a beautiful video and it was amazing to see the respect that has been shown to the bus and artifacts inside. I hope it winds up in a museum now that it is no longer there.

  • @chadmiller1120
    @chadmiller1120 3 года назад +4

    Never hold onto the past, let it go like the wind. It’s all a memory, it’s what the future will be. Keep moving, making more.

    • @skippysmom
      @skippysmom 3 года назад

      history is important

  • @SaugotChowdhury
    @SaugotChowdhury 4 года назад +30

    I am in love with the film and the book and john. Someday in future, in this life, I would love to visit.

    • @MILE30Adventures
      @MILE30Adventures  4 года назад +3

      It's an incredible journey Saugot and will change your life especially as you are a lover of the stories that has told his story. Make it happen!

    • @SaugotChowdhury
      @SaugotChowdhury 4 года назад

      @@MILE30Adventures thank you for your reply and thank you for reminding about John and his tragic death.

    • @daisydu2048
      @daisydu2048 4 года назад

      @Charle MIJ Please explain your definition of 'discontented'. Why is it discontented for him to pursue his dreams and freedom?

  • @ericmoney9734
    @ericmoney9734 4 года назад +12

    Had to go on RUclips to see what was so special about this bus being moved ( News claims it's a dangerous hike and they don't want anyone going up there )... After watching this, I'm off to see the movie. 😁😁

    • @narikaba439
      @narikaba439 4 года назад +1

      Get the book. It's a good read.

    • @ericmoney9734
      @ericmoney9734 4 года назад

      @@narikaba439 finished the movie yesterday. Loved it. Will definitely be grabbing the book. Going to check now if they have it on Audible. 😁😁

    • @narikaba439
      @narikaba439 4 года назад +1

      Interestingly enough Jon Krakauer, the author of Into the Wild was there during the 1996 Everest disaster when 8 climbers died. Look it up. The movie Everest was based on that event. Into Thin Air was the book he wrote about it.

  • @michaelbreaux2485
    @michaelbreaux2485 3 года назад +5

    One of those movies you watch randomly and decide “I have to read the book “.

  • @franceswatts4001
    @franceswatts4001 4 года назад +4

    I have just finished watching Ryan's video, and I was so pleased to see yours pop up on my recommended list straight afterwards. You both have made such beautiful tribute videos to Chris McCandless and what he was about. Thank you so much for sharing your thoughts, feelings, and outstanding photography and narrative.

  • @ryanhammond6688
    @ryanhammond6688 4 месяца назад +10

    Its wierd people romanticize what chris wanted to do by getting away from society. But ignore the fact that he regretted it and wanted to be back home when he was dying.

    • @Al_G
      @Al_G 2 месяца назад

      He died for our sins so we didn't have to. As long as there is hate and cruelty in this world, Christopher's dream will never end.

  • @hdhdhdhbdhdbd9799
    @hdhdhdhbdhdbd9799 3 года назад +8

    I wish I could have experience this and seen the magic bus myself but knowing his story is enough to feel the immensely powerful message and life he lived to know that I must live a life that is true to myself and remember the lives that others have lived to find that peace.

  • @MyStolenAimbot
    @MyStolenAimbot 4 года назад +54

    My dream to go here. The movie and book that changed my life.

    • @christinb5766
      @christinb5766 4 года назад

      How so?

    • @cheahmadhazmansabri
      @cheahmadhazmansabri 4 года назад

      Me to

    • @oldcountryboy
      @oldcountryboy 4 года назад +5

      So you decided not to go live in the woods is that how it changed your life

    • @alaskakaren715
      @alaskakaren715 4 года назад +4

      Yesterday April 16, 2020, Brazil tourist had to be rescued from the bus. A week before he had crossed a frozen river to reach the bus. Its spring. The river opened up, he couldn't return. He was out of food. Fortunately it didn't end up badly. February 2020, 5 tourists got to the bus. Couldn't get back on their own. Had to be rescued. Frostbite on their feet. Summer 2019. Couple from Belarus ventures to the bus. On trying to return wife is swept away while her husband tried in despair to save her. I could go on but....... as an Alaskan in the area of this artifact the heartbreak simply doesn't end. Denali Borough has voted to remove the bus. Please stop going to the bus.

    • @bratwurstred
      @bratwurstred 4 года назад +3

      Alaska Karen I hope people listen to you. Many of the people who say they dream of visiting the bus don’t strike me as having extensive outdoor/survivalist experience. I understand the appeal of wanting to drop by and pay their respects but the area just seems too unpredictable even for experienced survivalists.

  • @noahyoung105
    @noahyoung105 3 года назад +2

    Ok when I graduate college in 3 years I wanna do exactly what this guy did. Take like a year to just travel the country and experience nature at its true form. I would love to visit this. The movie really inspired me

    • @cplcabs
      @cplcabs 3 года назад

      You wanna do exactly what this guy did you say? So, you want to die in a bus in pain? Strange, but each to his own.

    • @dwaipayanroy3232
      @dwaipayanroy3232 Год назад

      Me too!

  • @pierreeversole265
    @pierreeversole265 4 года назад +7

    Very well done !! You've honored Chris's life, as well as his final word .... "shared". Thanks for sharing.

  • @HTRAENOECAEP
    @HTRAENOECAEP 4 года назад +17

    There is so little magic in the world, this story and this bus feel really magic

    • @cplcabs
      @cplcabs 3 года назад +2

      How so? Its a story of a dude basically killing himself, not seeing how that is magical.

    • @berito_leona
      @berito_leona 3 года назад

      Magic someone died in a bus? Wow lol

  • @Devthapafilms
    @Devthapafilms Месяц назад

    I'm 21yr old gurkha from India and I’m really very inspired by Chris. I hope before I die for just once I want to get there and explore this place.

    • @moookymookerson3229
      @moookymookerson3229 10 дней назад +1

      The bus was air lifted out of there. Too many idiots died trying to get there

  • @spectralaves
    @spectralaves 4 года назад +5

    It's such a shame that this bus was removed... It means so much to so many people.

    • @josephspruill1212
      @josephspruill1212 Год назад

      Its not a SHAME THEY REMOVED THE BUS! Its a SHAME that 5 others had to DIE trying to find the bus cause of Chris's story! Matter fact they drowned in the same river Chris couldn't cross either

    • @matthewpamatian4853
      @matthewpamatian4853 Год назад

      @@josephspruill1212 lol Imagine going to a place where a guy died.. and thinking that you might not also die.

  • @efeklau6502
    @efeklau6502 4 года назад +10

    Thank you. This is the most respectful, heartwarming shared experience on the bus and beautifully recorded too.

  • @dustbowlhammer7119
    @dustbowlhammer7119 2 года назад +1

    Cool story, I can totally relate, there is nothing like being in a pristine wilderness. The air is crisp, the water is clean. Everything in nature seems busy, even though it is calm.

  • @AndrewLykins44
    @AndrewLykins44 4 года назад +41

    People can say what they want about Chris. Obviously he wasn’t prepared enough and didn’t know exactly what he was doing. That is not the point. Chris’ story is one of the most inspirational stories I’ve ever heard. “If you want something in life, reach out and grab it” RIP Christopher McCandless.

    • @Vrais23
      @Vrais23 2 года назад +1

      His story isn't inspirational. He was extremely unprepared and naive. He was running away from his problems and he used his arrogance to justify that he knew what he was doing.

    • @larochejaquelein3680
      @larochejaquelein3680 2 года назад +1

      It‘s not inspirational seeing how he failed to survive. He literally shot a moose, that‘s about 1000 pounds of pure meat. That‘s enough to live like a king, but poor ignorant history major Chris did not know how to conserve meat. Pathetic.

    • @WhoTFVotedBiden
      @WhoTFVotedBiden 2 года назад

      .you’re ignorant asf. You act like we all don’t die… LIFE ITSEF IS POINTLESS AND MEANINGLESS

  • @irishgreen4634
    @irishgreen4634 4 года назад +60

    They airlifted the bus today!

  • @danlewis1871
    @danlewis1871 3 года назад +1

    I can feel the energy from that place. You're not alone.

  • @RealDJStew724
    @RealDJStew724 4 года назад +6

    Idk how I'd feel sleeping ON the same mattress that he died on haha. Great video!

    • @xBurnitallx
      @xBurnitallx 4 года назад

      Probably nothing but the shell of the bus is the same. Things break down when exposed to the elements, and it's been a long time.

  • @HedenCop
    @HedenCop 4 года назад +10

    Apparently my grandmother (and maybe mother) lived next to his parents for years, even during when all this went down. Had no idea but I had a great conversation with my grandma about it and some of the stories/ first hand accounts from Chris's parents

  • @routeboundexperience6518
    @routeboundexperience6518 3 года назад +2

    6:27 Reading "Into the Wild", while basking in the sun on top of his very bus. A moment of connection at its best.

  • @vidyvlog5249
    @vidyvlog5249 3 года назад +3

    That 142 is like " I LOVE ME" ❤️😍⭐

  • @Lemurs
    @Lemurs 2 года назад +4

    Chris is such an inspiration to us all

    • @doovie101
      @doovie101 Год назад +1

      Why? He was a fool.

  • @peek-a-moose2491
    @peek-a-moose2491 2 месяца назад +2

    I have been happy by myself in the Alaskan wilderness without anyone too share it with. And I have been happy with people. That quote is just sad..... You have to be happy with yourself first.....

  • @Takatukata
    @Takatukata 4 года назад +6

    It's really easy to judge Chris after his death... I think he wanted to feel like the first person on this planet, learning all on his own. It's not easy to live your life on your own. And if that message stucks with his story there's a lot to learn from this one.

  • @bergydermeister5616
    @bergydermeister5616 4 года назад +10

    Everybody saying Christopher McCandless is a Big Hero but nobody seems to be concerned about all the misery and pain he put his family through in the most selfish of ways.

    • @henrique18181818
      @henrique18181818 4 года назад

      The one thing i like about his history is that he was a real person who hated hipocrisy and wasnt perfect, just himself, actually no one should take him as an exemple of what exaccly to do, just as an inspiration for us to live a life worth living and to be ourselves

    • @indraneelmurkumbi1599
      @indraneelmurkumbi1599 4 года назад +1

      He had a troubled childhood. Poor soul wanted an escape. R.I.P.

  • @wishtheyunderstoodme
    @wishtheyunderstoodme 2 года назад +1

    Just watched the movie, watched the whole thing, cried my eyes out while smiling. Then at the end to find out that it was true, and finding your video showing how real it really was, I'm heart broken yet heart glowing. This is truly as real as the fairy tail can get. I really hope that some were some how Christopher knows how much his life, decisions and efforts were well worth it And that he is important to me and many other out there for the future that comes.

  • @navyvet7138
    @navyvet7138 Год назад +4

    there are some parts of me that understand why he did what he did but there are parts of me that thought it was selfish of him for leaving his sister without telling her goodbye or anything. It is truly a tragic sad story and hopefully he has found peace in the afterlife and watches over his sister.

  • @olgachavez75
    @olgachavez75 3 года назад +8

    Christoper Johnson McCandless you were very brave and had no attachments (what a lesson you thought me), you were running away from the life that didn’t give you happiness, you found happiness in Nature and you strongly believed that you could be happy by yourself and let go of so many chances of being Truly Happy and you realized that too late! I wish you had made it back 😢 .R.I.P

  • @EvynBowser
    @EvynBowser 5 месяцев назад

    This man, Christopher McCandless has inspired me so much I love him he will forever be in my heart ❤❤

  • @rajanadar8057
    @rajanadar8057 3 года назад +32

    Those 112 days were more precious than a 112 years.

  • @KidsToysPlayChannel
    @KidsToysPlayChannel 4 года назад +42

    Great video! Awesome shots and editing, pleasure to watch!
    I just found out about this bus the other day. It's funny that you were at the Mile "0" marker, in Dawson Creek, I used to live in Beaverlodge and drilled many wells in that area.
    It's actually crazy how many abandon vehicles I've found on old lease roads, from Hinton up to Fort Liard NWT. I used to wonder what the story was with them, how they got there, if they were left there to serve a greater purpose.
    Guess I'll have to read the book.

    • @potatoman7760
      @potatoman7760 4 года назад

      Iu

    • @ethancbaker2002
      @ethancbaker2002 3 года назад

      Step Bro? 😳

    • @JenFromWebsite
      @JenFromWebsite 3 года назад +3

      Omg I can relate to this so hard! Whenever I visit a mountain, I always encounter abandoned vehicles like tractors, cars and even tools that are all rusty and I always wonder when they were left there, by whom, why etc. And this bus was no exception! It had been on my bucket list for the longest time but unfortunately it’s been airlifted so I’ll never be able to step into it and experience what these guys (and so many other hikers) have experienced. Just stepping into the bus and thinking that so many people from around the world have visited this one spot in the middle of nowhere throughout the years is fascinating. If I ever go to Alaska though (I’m 18, so you never know), I’ll definitely hike there with a group of experienced hikers! Even if the bus is not there anymore, the terrain is. We’ll set up tents and just stay there and breathe in the fresh Alaskan air. Hey, a man can dream! Love your channel by the way!