Thanks for your videos, I enjoy watching them. I enjoy the downtown trips as well as the neighborhood areas. I get to see areas I would probably never see in person if it wasn't for your videos. Thanks for your efforts in letting us watch something different.
Georgia is like that too, except a little more urban. But even the urban areas have a bunch of trees. One of Atlanta's nicknames is "The City in a Forest" because of how much trees.
That’s just southwest and central west Alabama swamps really. Southeast and lower central east are rolling hills, upper central and northeast are the Appalachian mountains and more wooded, and north middle and northwest is basically just corn and cotton farm land. Of course all parts have woods and farms, but some more than others. Alabama is 450ish miles north to south and is very diverse in terms of weather and topography. Georgia is the same but on a greater scale. Mississippi is all flat and kind of the same as far as topography (not weather, it’s the same situation as us just on a lesser scale) though but the swamps kind of stop halfway up.
Nice drive! That is a beautiful suspension bridge! You should do one of your infrastructure drives over the Cochrane-Africatown USA bridge. It’s an interesting layout
That bridge was not completed until after 1980 before that you had to go to downtown mobile go across the causeway to Spanish Fort and go up Highway 225 which was the last exit before you got on that bridge
Thanks for your videos, I enjoy watching them. I enjoy the downtown trips as well as the neighborhood areas. I get to see areas I would probably never see in person if it wasn't for your videos. Thanks for your efforts in letting us watch something different.
Love how green it is. This is literally how I pictured Alabama on the highway in my head
Georgia is like that too, except a little more urban. But even the urban areas have a bunch of trees. One of Atlanta's nicknames is "The City in a Forest" because of how much trees.
@@w-josh interesting! Thanks for the info! I’ll have to go
@@AllanEvansOfficial yw and also Atlanta's skyline is stunning
That’s just southwest and central west Alabama swamps really. Southeast and lower central east are rolling hills, upper central and northeast are the Appalachian mountains and more wooded, and north middle and northwest is basically just corn and cotton farm land. Of course all parts have woods and farms, but some more than others. Alabama is 450ish miles north to south and is very diverse in terms of weather and topography. Georgia is the same but on a greater scale. Mississippi is all flat and kind of the same as far as topography (not weather, it’s the same situation as us just on a lesser scale) though but the swamps kind of stop halfway up.
Nice drive! That is a beautiful suspension bridge! You should do one of your infrastructure drives over the Cochrane-Africatown USA bridge. It’s an interesting layout
Missed that one. I'll have to check it out next time. Maybe whenever I get out to New Orleans I'll stop by.
That’s a good idea! Cant wait to see more!
Great video Mike that was a nice bridge you crossed over on the way to Mobile
Thanks 👍
Nice video Alabama Mike keep up the great work man that bridge was cool your interstate drives are worth watching
Thanks 👍
Yep that the dolly Parton bridge
What a nice suspension bridge
That's a nice lookin bridge
That bridge was not completed until after 1980 before that you had to go to downtown mobile go across the causeway to Spanish Fort and go up Highway 225 which was the last exit before you got on that bridge
I 65 South end at I 10 but nice drive tho
very nice video, what brand of camera are you using?
GoPro for this one
Interstate 65 bypasses the Downtown Mobile Central Business District
Hellavue Long As Bridge U Driving On
That in Mobile area
Mobile ALABAMA