The Bailey Bridge on Old Finch Avenue

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  • Опубликовано: 25 окт 2024

Комментарии • 120

  • @notsmoothsteve
    @notsmoothsteve  Месяц назад

    I did a followup to this video. Check it out here - ruclips.net/video/Mljc_34Djyo/видео.html

  • @TheoriesofEverything
    @TheoriesofEverything Месяц назад +51

    From one Torontonian to another, I love your content, Steve. - Curt

  • @JohnHill-qo3hb
    @JohnHill-qo3hb Месяц назад +12

    In my teen years, 73 now, I used to delight in driving Old Finch in my Austin Mini, great fun and this area always struck me as beautiful, wilderness in the city. Thanks Steve for the memories.

    • @dhj-i8g
      @dhj-i8g Месяц назад +1

      Even today, some of us gearheads will enjoy Old Finch as a twisty respite from the boring grid-pattern roads that make up most of the city. It's especially nice in a convertible during autumn.

    • @flyingdutchman773
      @flyingdutchman773 Месяц назад

      @@JohnHill-qo3hb same. but for me it was a '94 VW Golf, 5 speed!

  • @FandersonUfo
    @FandersonUfo Месяц назад +21

    love that bridge and the suspension bridge just to the North

  • @MrCyclist
    @MrCyclist Месяц назад +25

    i cross this bridge on one of my twice annual bike rides from Rouge Hill past the Toronto Zoo. Never gave it a thought until now. Thanks.

    • @Justsayingthat
      @Justsayingthat Месяц назад

      Me as well. Used to cross it on my bike or taking a hike.

    • @johnandrews3568
      @johnandrews3568 Месяц назад +3

      The one on Plug Hat has a 'cyclists dismount' sign because two of my friends hit that bridge about 30 years ago at speed in the wet and that bridge deck is like ice in the wet. Both required a hospital visit and dozens of stitches. Be careful when that bridge deck is wet or even with dew.

    • @Justsayingthat
      @Justsayingthat Месяц назад +2

      @johnandrews3568 That is horrible. Many people including myself, just ride across even though we are supposed to dismount

    • @johnandrews3568
      @johnandrews3568 Месяц назад +2

      @@Justsayingthat I used to bomb across it myself but after my friend's crash, I slow, click one foot out. Watch your tires.. if they get wet, be careful. If dry, you're good.

    • @cyberpleb2472
      @cyberpleb2472 Месяц назад +2

      @@johnandrews3568 I also used to ride my bike across that bridge at speed 30 years ago when I was young and fearless. What made it really scary was the fact that inconsiderate motorists would often drive just a couple feet behind me. I knew I'd be dead if I fell. I certainly wouldn't do it now.

  • @oldpossum57
    @oldpossum57 Месяц назад +5

    Thanks Steve! My father was in RCE camp building Bailey Bridges in 1944 when VE Day arrived. I often used this bridge on my homeward commute, if leisure served. I regret that I never got him out to see it while his health allowed it.

  • @DejanOfRadic
    @DejanOfRadic Месяц назад +3

    Keep them coming, my friend......your work is much appreciated

  • @Aerosnapper
    @Aerosnapper Месяц назад +1

    Steve - I came here because one of your fans tipped me off to this video. They had been following the saga of the failed lift bridge in Kingston, Ontario, which has led to the preparation of a Bailey style bridge to replace it temporarily. I enjoyed your account of the bridge on Old Finch and will be sure now to drop by again. Thank you for all you do to keep our understanding of our environment alive

  • @sankarnath
    @sankarnath Месяц назад +1

    Fascinating video! The Bailey Bridge on Old Finch reminds me of one recently built in my home state of Kerala, India, after a landslide. The army was able to save a lot of lives by establishing a crucial connection. Thank you for your video!

  • @nevarmaor
    @nevarmaor Месяц назад +4

    I discovered this bridge years ago by accident. I was travelling Finch eastbound when it suddenly ended at Morningside. Trying to continue east I ended up on Old Finch and wound my way through there. After that when travelling through Scarborough I stuck to Steeles.
    Love your videos.

  • @mtlicq
    @mtlicq Месяц назад +8

    Long live the Bailey Bridge! It's a cute artifact.

  • @mdis2bod
    @mdis2bod Месяц назад +4

    Praise the YT algorithm for recommending this!

  • @timbit72
    @timbit72 Месяц назад +7

    Youre an oddly compelling fellow & I enjoy your content

  • @jarvy251
    @jarvy251 Месяц назад +7

    "A Bailey Bridge...? Like the WW2 portable bridges? In toronto...!?" Got me clicking on the video and I was not disappointed. Amazing it's stood for so long.

    • @LeRoi715
      @LeRoi715 Месяц назад

      It is time to find out and check it out. Difficult for me as I do not drive. With out the car I am stuck and prevented in discovering Ontario also. Not many trains for ex. to Elora or not bus there...Cheers!

    • @BigLisaFan
      @BigLisaFan Месяц назад

      It was built by the Royal Canadian Engineers after the original bridge was washed out in 1954. Sections of the bridge were dated 1944.

    • @MetaView7
      @MetaView7 Месяц назад +1

      There are a few in the GTA. One in the Forks of the Credit.

  • @AChapstickOrange
    @AChapstickOrange Месяц назад +9

    Great stuff. :) Yeah, a long time ago, Finch did go right through across what's now Morningside. Sewell's Road used to cross it and head due south from it, though that course was obliterated by the subdivisions there in the 50s. For at least a century, though, Finch made a little triangular hop to go under a pair of railroad bridges to eliminate the level crossings. It's a much wider curve now and meets with Morningside, as it has for a decade or so.
    If you REALLY want to see what Hurricane Hazel did to the bridges in the GTA, though, drive up Brock Road in Durham to 8th Concession, turn east and drive to the end... which once went clear across. Get out and walk a minute or two down to the creek and there on the right you will see the most amazing sight; a real testament to the power of that storm!

  • @tbonetak
    @tbonetak 26 дней назад +1

    Your video inspired me to explore the area! It was fun driving over the bridge as well as the Sewell's Road bridge. And picking up a pie at the Rouge Park Pie stand and butter tarts at Julie's. What an amazing area!

  • @chizaa8
    @chizaa8 Месяц назад +6

    I did a project in grad school that was partially about Bailey bridges - I had totally forgotten 😂 The modularity is so cool

  • @conradmcdougall3629
    @conradmcdougall3629 Месяц назад +13

    Looks like I'm off to Scarborough tomorrow. I have to see this bridge.

    • @theastuteangler
      @theastuteangler Месяц назад +1

      bring a fishing rod

    • @FandersonUfo
      @FandersonUfo Месяц назад +7

      check out the suspension bridge just to the North up Morningside

    • @conradmcdougall3629
      @conradmcdougall3629 Месяц назад

      ​​@@FandersonUfoWill do. I haven't been to that part of Scarborough in years. Thanks

    • @digginggopher
      @digginggopher Месяц назад

      If I still lived in Toronto I'd do some metal detecting in the area

    • @squeekycat
      @squeekycat Месяц назад

      @@theastuteangler Don't encourage people to fish illegally. There are enough problems with that already.

  • @pyrazine
    @pyrazine Месяц назад +2

    discovered your channel recently and love it, keep up the great work!

  • @dhj-i8g
    @dhj-i8g Месяц назад +2

    Fantastic work as always!

  • @deafviolinist
    @deafviolinist Месяц назад +2

    two & a half minutes in - am somehow properly enthralled

  • @lawrencelewis2592
    @lawrencelewis2592 Месяц назад +3

    There's bailey bridges all over- there's two in the west end near Springhurst avenue. There's one in the Portlands on Unwin avenue. You see them a lot in the country when they are replacing a culvert and the road has to divert. Some are stacked 3 levels high to allow for large trucks.

  • @philpaine3068
    @philpaine3068 Месяц назад +3

    I love this kind of stuff. My head is full of such trivia to the point of bursting, but I can't help cramming in just a little bit more. I really love the city I live in --- facing up to it's good and bad features is the duty of love. In this case, I'm impressed by the "can do" attitude with which a sudden problem was faced. So many of the people who did such things were just fresh from the War, and it influenced the way they dealt with problems. Just after that war there was a tremendous housing shortage --- worse than what we face today. The Liberal government of Louis St. Laurent tackled it with prefab houses that could be built in a day, using a selection of pre-approved architectural plans, and quickly laid out the regulatory and financial system for building them, and negotiated with the Provinces to implement them. They were small and simple, but they did the job. Many of them are still standing today.

  • @ampwerx.canada
    @ampwerx.canada Месяц назад +4

    Great video. There is also the Hillside Bridge over Little Rouge Creek on Meadowvale Rd. just N of the Zoo, and also Twyn Rivers Bridge on Twyn Rivers Dr. in the new park. When I lived in Pickering I used to ride my mtn. bikes all over the Rouge Valley and the dump, summer and winter.

  • @CusterFlux
    @CusterFlux Месяц назад +1

    FWIW: The Indian Line Road bridge, out by Claireville Dam, had a Bailey Bridge over it for nearly 20 years ~1963 to ~1983 … before the 427 swooped in … it was goofy, it was noisy, it slowed things down … but I kinda miss it 🤔

  • @christ3737
    @christ3737 Месяц назад +4

    I use to build the Bailey when I was in the military. It’s like Lego. Really heavy Lego. Neat note, many Bailey bridges were replaced with the Acrow bridge. What’s an Acrow? A galvanized Bailey bridge.

    • @rearspeaker6364
      @rearspeaker6364 Месяц назад

      a few bailey bridges are used in balt. county Maryland on lesser used roads, after hurricane Agnes(1972) wiped them out.

  • @warrengee-f9l
    @warrengee-f9l Месяц назад +1

    at 60 I grew up in Richmond Hill , that bridge has always made me smile as I remember a few now long gone 1 lane bridges around York Region

  • @flyingdutchman773
    @flyingdutchman773 Месяц назад +1

    As kids we took this road to school, we called it the "zoo way"; so much more fun than the main avenues, and sometimes we caught a glimpse of the giraffes

  • @tomrogers9467
    @tomrogers9467 Месяц назад +2

    There is a Bailey here in Bracebridge, Ont. as well. It crosses the Muskoka River at the top of High Falls. It’s for hikers and picnickers in the summer and snowmobiles in the winter. I’ve driven across it many times in our five ton trail groomer - was interesting feeling the flexing of the bridge as I passed over the water at the crest of the falls. They are in the process of replacing it this fall, I haven’t heard why or what design they will be using.

  • @soiodd
    @soiodd Месяц назад +5

    Great video Steve! You're genuinely one of my favourite RUclipsrs.
    Wondering if you're interested in covering the bridge on Midland at Midland and St Clair. It's interesting because it's level with the intersection to its south, but I've always wondered why :)

    • @notsmoothsteve
      @notsmoothsteve  Месяц назад +1

      Thanks! I'm not aware of that bridge - not my neighbourhood and it's not an area I tend to pass through. But who knows, maybe that will end up on my list of videos to make at some point.

    • @joshmdmd
      @joshmdmd Месяц назад

      looking at street view thats a rail bridge. if its CN or CP, the land is likely owned by CN and they'd rather a train go straight. it's a matter of fuel and safety as the trains weigh a lot. if its passenger rail then it would be up to the original engineering proposals and what the city chose.

  • @mr8966
    @mr8966 Месяц назад +3

    Please do a history of Rosedale street evolution from the horse paths created by the Jarvis’ horses from their estate which was all of Castle Frank south of Bloor. Also Glen Rd Bridge history is interesting as well with the 2 year reconstruction of it just completed.

  • @MikeDS49
    @MikeDS49 Месяц назад +1

    I was all over Toronto when I lived and I didn't discover this bridge. Thanks for doing a video on it Steve!

  • @dancline2143
    @dancline2143 Месяц назад +2

    This was so cool!

  • @VE3UET
    @VE3UET Месяц назад +1

    How about the Glen Road Bailey Bridge north of Howard Street and the Bailey Bridge down in front of the Hearn Plan on Unwin Ave

  • @fakeologist1
    @fakeologist1 Месяц назад +1

    Awesome video thanks sad how Toronto doesn't build roads anymore

  • @billsinkins361
    @billsinkins361 Месяц назад +4

    Very interesting! In my neighborhood in Don Mills in the 1960s there were remnants of "Old Lawrence" avenue. Lawrence between what is now Don Mills road and Victoria Park used to take a windy path down into the valley where it crossed the Don on a stone bridge. The old abutments are still there. Lawrence was later straightened, a much bigger bridge was built to span then entire valley, and the leftover bits were named Old Lawrence. The City of Toronto has an Aerial Photograph archive that is fascinating to explore. Very interesting seeing how my old neighborhood took shape. The earliest images are from 1947.

    • @notsmoothsteve
      @notsmoothsteve  Месяц назад +2

      Then you may enjoy my video on that!
      ruclips.net/video/6kvtV2Q_wdg/видео.htmlsi=6N-z-87btF2ox22q

    • @johnandrews3568
      @johnandrews3568 Месяц назад +1

      Former Don Mills guy here... there are lots of old photos of Don Mills pre-war. Did you know that there used to be a small golf course where Edwards Gardens now stands?

    • @billsinkins361
      @billsinkins361 Месяц назад +1

      @@notsmoothsteve Just watched that video, very cool. Thanks!

  • @hMint
    @hMint Месяц назад +2

    I really love this street, whenever I have the chance I take a detour route to drive on it. Just the other day my friend and I drove on it late at night and it was surprisingly busy even when it's 10:30 at night

  • @ronzinn3336
    @ronzinn3336 Месяц назад +1

    2nd Field Engineer Regiment put up these bridges from a stockpile that Ontario Hydro had. They were awarded the freedom of the city and all of the boroughs for their work in getting the traffic moving again.

  • @georgehaeh4856
    @georgehaeh4856 Месяц назад

    There's a lovely set of rapids on the Rouge from the Sewell's Rd bridge to the parking lot south of the bailey bridge. The S-bend of the river gives you a nice set of rapids and a short hike back to your car. Whitewater skills are mandatory.

  • @bradlevantis913
    @bradlevantis913 Месяц назад +1

    My parents moved to Scarborough just before hurricane hazel and remember this being put in. There was also one on Morningside Ave north of West Hill collegiate (at the time I’m the road went down in to the valley unlike today)
    Growing up we spent a lot of time wandering around there.

    • @BasementEngineer
      @BasementEngineer Месяц назад +2

      I remember the Bailey bridge on Morningside Av. very well indeed.
      For Toronto Boy Scouts this was the access route to the Camp of the Crooked Creek by means of public transit ie. street cars in the city and then the bus along Kingston Road to West Hill.
      Getting off at Kingston Road and Morningside Av. we'd hike north on Morningside, down into the valley and crossing that Bailey bridge, then into the public park and on to the Camp of the Crooked Creek.
      Many a Toronto Scout spent his first days under canvas there and cooked his first meal on a camp fire.
      Scouting friends and I spent many a week on the "mountain" in that camp during one summer.
      It was a great spot for genuine outdoor experience in the city.

    • @bradlevantis913
      @bradlevantis913 Месяц назад +1

      @@BasementEngineer it was still the location of “Snow Job” the scouts winter camp.
      The park itself is still a real jem. I’d argue Morningside park and the entire highland creek system is superior to the more famous High Park.
      The east end is such a great part of the city

  • @terryleimonis
    @terryleimonis Месяц назад +2

    I cant believe im about to trump Notsmoothsteve, but Unwin Ave. over the cooling chanel for for the gas plant has one of these bridges. Its a hell of a nail biter as its the only access to the southern portlands for trucks in which you see it strain every time a heavy load goes over it!

    • @notsmoothsteve
      @notsmoothsteve  Месяц назад +2

      Yup - none of my research for this video mentioned that one, and it's tucked away in a part of the city where almost nobody (including me) goes. Fortunately, I did word my video to leave myself some wiggle room on that :)

  • @shidiwen9329
    @shidiwen9329 Месяц назад +1

    That’s amazing it was built in 3 days

  • @LeRoi715
    @LeRoi715 Месяц назад

    I live in the High Park area and there is an Old Weston Rd around Annette and Dundas Street West. It puzzles me. Do you ,Sir have the segment on that. Thank you for all material you gather and share with us. Greetings from High Park.

    • @notsmoothsteve
      @notsmoothsteve  Месяц назад +1

      I don't - sorry. I have a video planned not too far from there but Old Weston Road wouldn't fit the video. The Wikipedia page on Weston Road has some info and hopefully that will satisfy your curiosity. Thanks for watching!

    • @LeRoi715
      @LeRoi715 Месяц назад +1

      @@notsmoothsteve Thank you, Sir . I live in Toronto from 1983 and I come from Eastern Europe and consider Toronto full of undiscovered treasures. As an academic it is in my blood. Thank you again . Looking forward to more materials from you. Cheers!

  • @semipenguin
    @semipenguin Месяц назад

    I went to combat engineer school at Fort Leonard Wood, in 1995. They thought us how to build a Bailey Bridge. It’s not too fun when you have to move one of those panels, with six soldiers. A crane definitely makes things a lot easier.

  • @RobertTerbrugge
    @RobertTerbrugge Месяц назад +1

    Unwin Drive has a similar bridge, which is the only route to Cherry Beach with the Cherry Street Ship Channel Bridge under repair.

  • @wildernesscanoeassociation
    @wildernesscanoeassociation Месяц назад

    It is a cool bridge! We paddled canoes under it this year.

  • @edwardlenovo3240
    @edwardlenovo3240 Месяц назад

    There is something else weird near there. At 255 Old Finch (south side, just east of morningview trail) there is the remains of what looks like a gate, that is blocked off and a dissued communal mailbox. There is an abandoned road that leads south in to the forest behind the newer development. Last time I explored this area was in the early 2000s. Back then there was several homes at the end of this road (deep in the forest), and people actually did live in them. But then suddenly around 2010ish (might have been earlier) I went exploring with friends and all the home were gone, completly razed. I have tried for years to learn what in the world this little enclave was and why it was razed.

  • @rmcguirephoto
    @rmcguirephoto Месяц назад

    I'm curious about the old pedestrian bridge on Glen Road that crosses Rosedale Valley Road. I walked across it many hundreds of times when I grew up in Toronto in the 1950s-'70s. The deck looked flat like the Bailey bridges, but the structure underneath was more complex. I understand it is currently in the process of being replaced. When was it built and did it ever carry vehicular traffic? What is the name for this type of bridge. It was a unique bridge in its time, as most other bridges in the area carried vehicles.

    • @notsmoothsteve
      @notsmoothsteve  Месяц назад +1

      I don't know a lot about that bridge, but I believe it was over a century old, and yes, at one time it did carry vehicular traffic.

  • @mchitsab
    @mchitsab Месяц назад

    I remember riding my bike across this bridge as a kid. It was quite scary.

  • @lawriesv
    @lawriesv Месяц назад +2

    I believe the Bailey bridge on Unwin Avenue (downtown Toronto) is still in service (crosses the cooling water channel for the R.L. Hearn Generating Station, now decommissioned).

    • @lawrencelewis2592
      @lawrencelewis2592 Месяц назад +3

      it's still there.

    • @notsmoothsteve
      @notsmoothsteve  Месяц назад +1

      Thanks! Google street view backs you up on that. I looked at a number of sources when researching this video (and found that there's a lot of wrong or incomplete information, like listings of "Bailey bridges" in Toronto that aren't actually Bailey bridges) but this one never came up.

  • @robertsmith1703
    @robertsmith1703 Месяц назад

    there used to be one that went across the river or stream coming from Clairville dam, it was just below in the valley... if my memory is correct.

  • @LSOP-
    @LSOP- Месяц назад

    Drove it today.

  • @vimy1455
    @vimy1455 Месяц назад

    Isn’t the nearby bridge on Twyn Rivers Drive also a Bailey bridge also put in place due to hurricane Hazel?

    • @notsmoothsteve
      @notsmoothsteve  Месяц назад

      I see a couple of bridges on that road in Google Earth, and one has a metal mesh deck, but it's not a Bailey bridge - it's a truss bridge of some sort.

  • @KikiTalksTO
    @KikiTalksTO Месяц назад

    Did you see the old tree farm (? At least that’s what it looks like from satellite images) been driving me insane for 13 years trying to figure out what that was

  • @iam57yearsold
    @iam57yearsold Месяц назад

    This was our party place in the 1970’s.

  • @1Nanerz
    @1Nanerz Месяц назад +1

    I e been across that bridge a thousand times and I think I’ve managed to get a green light as I approached maybe twice.😂

  • @jeffmacd1972
    @jeffmacd1972 Месяц назад

    That "temporary" bridge on Dufferin Street has been there for about 10 years now.

    • @notsmoothsteve
      @notsmoothsteve  Месяц назад +2

      So, it's having a race with the Eglinton Crosstown LRT to see which project will drag on the longest?

  • @MikeBrockington
    @MikeBrockington Месяц назад

    Any idea what the source of this bridge was? The triangular pieces above each transom aren't standard for any of the military versions of the Bailey Bridge.

    • @notsmoothsteve
      @notsmoothsteve  Месяц назад +1

      Apparently after the war Ontario Hydro bought a whole bunch of Bailey bridges and used them as frames for buildings, and I've read that their stock of bridge parts was used for this bridge.

    • @MikeBrockington
      @MikeBrockington Месяц назад

      @@notsmoothsteve Thanks, I thought it looked like WW2 era, but wanted to check.

  • @adamsyclone7409
    @adamsyclone7409 Месяц назад

    Iv been crossing her for years and I can’t believe they still haven’t updated it the did some repairs a few years ago and put a dozen or so steel plates to repair the mesh decking the funny thing is there is not many signs that say how small and tight it is the rd to the east used to be fun in a sporty car or bike now it’s to broken

  • @MSI2k
    @MSI2k Месяц назад

    Mate you wouldn't catch me standing there. Place is reportedly haunted

  • @ricedreem
    @ricedreem Месяц назад +1

    Is this the legendary haunted bridge?

    • @notsmoothsteve
      @notsmoothsteve  Месяц назад +1

      Yeah, there's a rumour that this bridge is haunted. I didn't see anything, but maybe ghosts prefer to come out at night :)

    • @johnwoa
      @johnwoa Месяц назад

      @@notsmoothsteve Regarding the "haunting" of the bridge, the story behind the haunting is made up and not true. But the "unexplained" occurrences at the Bailey Bridge are unique as to any alleged haunting anywhere in North America. Many people have been scared out of their wits when they ventured out on the bridge in the wee hours of the morning after midnight and sang "Happy Birthday to You" and then experienced (on rare occasions) the phenomenon that occurred. The alleged "haunting" has a very real explanation but I don't want to give it away because that would ruin the fun for so many younger people who have gone out there at night over the many years. Not knowing what the "haunting" is only makes that place even more intriguing!

  • @johnandrews3568
    @johnandrews3568 Месяц назад

    What about the bridge on Plug Hat? Is that not a Bailey bridge as well?

    • @notsmoothsteve
      @notsmoothsteve  Месяц назад

      I'm not familiar with the area, but the only bridge I see on Plug Hat is a regular concrete road bridge.

    • @johnandrews3568
      @johnandrews3568 Месяц назад +1

      @@notsmoothsteve unless it's changed in the last year, it was a Bailey with a steel, open mesh bridge deck.

    • @squeekycat
      @squeekycat Месяц назад

      @@notsmoothsteve You must be thinking of the bridge close to where you were, on Sewells. The one at Plug Hat where it meets Meadowvale is the other Bailey Bridge. Pretty sure it is one.

    • @squeekycat
      @squeekycat Месяц назад

      @@johnandrews3568 Yes it's still the same. In much better shape than the one on Old Finch which keeps getting holes in the deck and plates welded on them!

    • @squeekycat
      @squeekycat Месяц назад

      @@notsmoothsteve Also if you want to see another interesting old bridge, check out the Lakeshore Rail Overpass Timber Bridge in Clarington. 3792 Lakeshore Road. It is amazing. There's another timber deck bridge around there but can't locate it on google maps at the moment. I'll leave it for you to discover. 🙂

  • @scarboroughlifestyleGaming416
    @scarboroughlifestyleGaming416 Месяц назад

    Try going here at night lol the red light is terrifying 😂

  • @thejeffinvade
    @thejeffinvade Месяц назад

    Dufferin Bailey bridge is definitely permanent 😂 it has been temporary for decades

  • @michaelfilippi3276
    @michaelfilippi3276 Месяц назад

    What's the one before the zoo?

  • @lawrencelewis2592
    @lawrencelewis2592 Месяц назад

    Here's a Bailey Bridge for ya!
    ruclips.net/video/TQzY_dKUz7E/видео.html
    This is similar to what I have seen and driven across up North but there they have three horizontal layers.

  • @smashedcapper
    @smashedcapper Месяц назад

    I was hoping you were going to be there in the dark and sing happy birthday. Totally off brand for your channel but for those from there, you know what I mean.

  • @christophorusvids
    @christophorusvids Месяц назад

    That bridge still sounds the same after all these years, good way to the zoo

  • @kidmohair8151
    @kidmohair8151 Месяц назад +1

    nothing pertinent to add.
    just feeding the algo-deities of the tube'y'all.

  • @TheOnlyOvermind
    @TheOnlyOvermind Месяц назад

    Isn't this haunted? hahah

    • @Justsayingthat
      @Justsayingthat Месяц назад +2

      Heard it was! I never saw😅 anything though through the years

    • @notsmoothsteve
      @notsmoothsteve  Месяц назад +1

      Yeah, there's a rumour about that! I didn't see anything ghostly, but then again, the middle of the day in summer doesn't seem like the spookiest time for spirits to come out :)

    • @squeekycat
      @squeekycat Месяц назад +1

      It's not haunted. People hear strange noises there. It's next to the Toronto Zoo. You'll sometimes hear peacocks screeching or lions roaring, for example. It does feel a little creepy there at night so if you're inclined to get spooked easily your imagine can run wild.

    • @johnwoa
      @johnwoa Месяц назад

      @@squeekycat Yes! The unexpected hearing from the Bailey Bridge of a screeching/screaming peacock during the night in the distance from the Toronto Zoo would be very unnerving!

  • @HWFlussy
    @HWFlussy Месяц назад

    Jesus that's sketchy.