Top 15 Emptiest Parts of the U.S.

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  • Опубликовано: 2 июн 2024
  • Examining the Top 15 emptiest parts of the U.S. I look at the parts of the country that have the fewest number of people over a large area. These are places with little to no development, few if any roads, and few if any farms and ranches- just true wilderness. If you're a city slicker or suburbanite, you may be surprised at just how much of the U.S. is empty and remote. This is true middle of nowhere.

Комментарии • 4,5 тыс.

  • @GeographyKing
    @GeographyKing  5 лет назад +811

    The countdown starts at 2:10 if you want to skip the educational fluff at the beginning.

    • @kenrickeason
      @kenrickeason 3 года назад +48

      No need, I like learning new stuff.. Thank You for the tag anyways..

    • @johnortmann3098
      @johnortmann3098 3 года назад +12

      Every square inch of the Nebraska Sandhills is ranched and grazed. No water? It's one of the largest wetland areas in the US. This past summer, due to two wet years and a wet early summer, the huge lakes in places that have been dryland for the last 100 years.
      Your last shot is of Toadstool Park in extreme NW Nebraska, nowhere near the Sandhills.

    • @kevinbushracing58
      @kevinbushracing58 3 года назад +32

      @@johnortmann3098 settle down

    • @jamesfarrell8339
      @jamesfarrell8339 3 года назад +3

      Cool video
      I really enjoyed it
      The southern part of Illinois is pretty remote

    • @robinsss
      @robinsss 3 года назад +8

      i am amazed that you think that a road is in an area means it's not in the middle of no where
      i can drive down roads down south for miles and see nothing but trees
      to me that's just as middle of no where as the Mojave desert
      much of which also has a road by the way

  • @TimeMeddler
    @TimeMeddler 3 года назад +2958

    I’m from Scotland in the UK and once travelled from California through Nevada, Utah and Arizona. The scenery was stunning and the sheer space into which you could probably fit our entire country several times was exhilarating. It was a magical experience. You do have some stunning scenery over there in America.

    • @bradhill1099
      @bradhill1099 3 года назад +114

      Great to read that you had such a magical tine in the USAs vast western landscapes. It is a great time cruising through Arizona for sure.

    • @julieloucalcote1368
      @julieloucalcote1368 3 года назад +88

      And I think the same about Scotland! Love your country! The sights, the people, the history, and the land. I could listen to someone from Scotland talk for hours. Being from south Louisiana I can’t say that I love y’all’s food bc we have the best food 😘 but y’all’s food is interesting. Just needs more spice!

    • @nisbit3883
      @nisbit3883 3 года назад +40

      I used to live in the Highlands of Scotland and the scenery. there is fantastic. For example, the Isle of Skye.

    • @rantsinarobe4099
      @rantsinarobe4099 3 года назад +14

      Denver, CO to the western Pennsylvania border along I80.....FLAT and BORING. Iowa is actually a bit scenic surprisingly

    • @newmexrob99
      @newmexrob99 3 года назад +144

      Once met a guy in Taos, NM who told me the biggest difference between Europeans and Americans is that Europeans think 100 miles is a long way and Americans think 100 years is a long time.. :)

  • @anitamartini4298
    @anitamartini4298 3 года назад +240

    25 yrs ago, on my bike with no plans, in a little town in southern S Dakota, I looked southward and mentioned to another biker that I might try that direction. A local guy heard me and asked, "How far can you get on a tank?" I said, "About 150 miles." He said, "Son, there ain't nothin' on that road for 200 miles." Saved my skinny keester.
    Many thanks, again.

    • @BcFuTw9jt
      @BcFuTw9jt 3 года назад +1

      @Alan Smithee Because you don't know gow to read hahahaha... If you can, read the name fast

    • @jacobpowerhouse
      @jacobpowerhouse 3 года назад +2

      Carry a can of gas.

    • @tiktokplaza517
      @tiktokplaza517 3 года назад +8

      He was exaggerating, If you were in southern South Dakota, you would have hit US 20 about 30 miles into Nebraska. It is the middle of nowhere, but there are towns with services. Would have been hard to go 20 or 30 miles w/o a town with services.

    • @SIGINT007
      @SIGINT007 Год назад

      He was blowing sunshine up your butt…you can’t go more than 30-50 miles at most in the eastern part of the state before finding a town with gas.

    • @stevef4010
      @stevef4010 Год назад +3

      Its freaking dark there at night too. Kinda scary driving hey at night.

  • @benstone3323
    @benstone3323 2 года назад +227

    Yeah, I heard growing up in Arkansas, that we were "country" or "rural." And we are culturally. But my entire conception of rural changed when I drove through central Wyoming

    • @sashamoore9691
      @sashamoore9691 2 года назад +9

      Lol Wyoming is the least populated state in the U.S😂

    • @sashamoore9691
      @sashamoore9691 2 года назад +17

      And most people out there own like 150 acres EACH! I don’t see how they manage THAT much land! Sheesh

    • @steveschaeffer6889
      @steveschaeffer6889 Год назад +18

      @@sashamoore9691 you can if there's nothing on it!

    • @tristantheoofer2
      @tristantheoofer2 Год назад +5

      literally the population of my borough is 1% of wyomings population which is definitely saying something bc 5400 ppl isnt much lol

    • @lorpsandorps3729
      @lorpsandorps3729 Год назад +5

      @@sashamoore9691 150 acres isn’t that much out west. My family owns 100 acres on Alabama and 160 in Tennessee. It’s manageable.

  • @debbiehf05
    @debbiehf05 Год назад +177

    As a Brit, this blows my mind. I simply can't even imagine how big these spaces are until I visit it myself. Sure there are some "empty" spaces here, maybe if you climb up a large hill or mountain but you will always see a village or at the least a few cottages at the bottom. Couldn't imagine being on a road with nothing for 200 miles, thats like driving from London to Leeds and not seeing anything or anyone.

    • @comedian376
      @comedian376 Год назад +9

      Yes, i recently road tripped from Louisiana to Washington. From Winnemucca, NV, up through NW Nevada and SE Oregon, you are on two lane highways for 100's of miles. You'll see a sign "Next services 88 miles" then 88 miles later, see your first tiny old gas station, followed by "Next Services 86 miles". It is pretty mind blowing

    • @ramencurry6672
      @ramencurry6672 Год назад +9

      It’s very different from Europe. Even many Americans don’t know and many Americans actually have never travelled to other parts of the country

    • @mellofello6792
      @mellofello6792 Год назад

      @@ramencurry6672 REALLY!! It’s different.Woooow we didn’t know this!🤦🏿🤷🏿‍♂️

    • @paspep
      @paspep Год назад +2

      It would be nice to have a grocery store every 200 miles....
      Type transtaiga road in quebec....
      This is remote

    • @Charlii223
      @Charlii223 Год назад +1

      @@comedian376oh man you seen some of the best scenery then I’ve done from WA-VA-NVlasvegas-WA back n forth and then again from WA-VA haha it’s a lil scary tbh specially driving at night and being all by yourself but no doubt it was a great experience it’s surprising how empty is the US…

  • @jeffmartin3406
    @jeffmartin3406 3 года назад +2109

    When traveling in Utah, you should never let your gas tank go below half.

    • @isaacsevan
      @isaacsevan 3 года назад +164

      so true. especially when traveling on i-70, there’s so few gas stations.

    • @brucesmith9144
      @brucesmith9144 3 года назад +163

      Anywhere in the mountain west for that matter.

    • @davidlittle5693
      @davidlittle5693 3 года назад +185

      I almost got in trouble driving from Grand Junction to Salt Lake City, left Grand Junction with a little over half a tank, barely made it to the gas station in Thompson Springs with less than 30 miles remaining. I was white knuckling it the whole way there lol.

    • @robwagner7545
      @robwagner7545 3 года назад +66

      @@davidlittle5693 same. I made the turn onto highway 6 headed towards Price. Forgot to check my gas level before exiting the highway. Halfway between the exit and Price, I noticed I was on E, 12:30 AM. Coasted in on fumes and with the whitest knuckles I've ever seen.

    • @edwardfights4900
      @edwardfights4900 3 года назад +16

      That's true. I remember driving from Phoenix to the GC and then up to Utah and I think I got gas twice. Then on the way back before Vegas.

  • @wilfig
    @wilfig 3 года назад +1668

    There's nothing like a drive across Nevada. It's what you'd imagine a drive across Mars would be like. I love it here.

    • @Jacob-yd7gd
      @Jacob-yd7gd 3 года назад +111

      To me it’s just depressing. I live out in SoCal, so I’m used to a desert. I’ve lived in the Mojave desert my entire life, and I don’t like it. However. Driving through parts of Nevada makes my home look like a rainforest

    • @paul16451
      @paul16451 3 года назад +55

      No kidding. I live in San Francisco and for the longest time I drove no further east than Reno/Tahoe. The one time I took a road trip and drove to Yellowstone, the road between Reno and Salt Lake City was REALLY empty and depressing...I was very surprised how quickly the landscape turned bleak once I left the limits of the Biggest Little City in the World. We chose not to drive that road on the way back.

    • @kaaronhudson8112
      @kaaronhudson8112 3 года назад +56

      Well they did film the mars land rover in Nevada so....

    • @drewbryan6739
      @drewbryan6739 3 года назад +27

      I've made three drives across Nevada on U.S. 6. It makes highway 50 (the so-called "loneliest road in America") look like a metropolis. One gas station between Ely and the California border (250 miles).

    • @TheTomkat13
      @TheTomkat13 3 года назад +27

      @@drewbryan6739 I would say i80 through Wyoming is far worse than Nevada. Also south east Oregon is really boring

  • @montanastranger
    @montanastranger Год назад +5

    Grandpa used to say that even the Jackrabbits pack a lunch in Eastern Montana.

  • @diane1390
    @diane1390 Год назад +8

    When I lived in Death Valley National Monument back in 1979, I would sit outside my old travel trailer and the view of the constellations was amazing. The sky so clear, you can see the shooting stars, and when I went back in the 1980's for 49er Days, I saw a Russian satilite shoot across the sky. It was a sight to behold!

  • @Jennifer-wg6hk
    @Jennifer-wg6hk 2 года назад +548

    I remember a road trip we took six years ago. It was the middle of the night and we were driving through the middle of nowhere in New Mexico. I was sleeping with my head propped up on the window. I opened my eyes and thought I was seeing smoke. Nope! It was the Milky Way and it was the first time I'd ever seen it. I told everyone in the car that I thought I was seeing the Milky Way, so we pulled over in the dusty, dry dirt and took pictures in the middle of the night, in the middle of the desert under billions of stars. A memory and sight I will never forget!

    • @renejean2523
      @renejean2523 2 года назад +9

      That's awesome. The best comment.

    • @AlxndrHQ
      @AlxndrHQ 2 года назад +3

      Amazing

    • @sashamoore9691
      @sashamoore9691 2 года назад +18

      Same thing happened to me when I passed northwest ARIZONA!! Omg i saw the freaking Milky Way!!! I could NOT BELIEVE IT!!!! Omgggggg

    • @HigherQualityUploads
      @HigherQualityUploads 2 года назад +28

      Light pollution is one of the worst tragedies to befall us modern people.

    • @c.rutherford
      @c.rutherford 2 года назад +3

      Yep in my brief stint with Astronomy the buffs all go on about what they call light pollution. It very much affects your ability to see things with a telescope.

  • @jamesharris3836
    @jamesharris3836 3 года назад +520

    I’m from Lund, NV. Beautiful place in the middle of nowhere with 8 students in my graduating class.

    • @victoriouspauper8495
      @victoriouspauper8495 3 года назад +19

      WELL....LOOKY THERE ..... I JUST GAVE YOU YOUR 7TH THUMBS UP ON THIS COMMENT.
      CLASS IS DEFINITELY REMOTE.

    • @DerrickLytlephoto
      @DerrickLytlephoto 3 года назад +24

      Played you guys in soccer during high school 👌

    • @TronisEdison
      @TronisEdison 3 года назад +8

      damn bro, i live in NJ the most densely populated state, in tryna move out somewhere where there is not that many people

    • @shika916
      @shika916 3 года назад +8

      @@TronisEdison move anywhere out west away from the big cities. Even some smaller towns away from the big cities will make you feel further from home you've ever felt. The mystery is beautiful.

    • @carlos-ej3sv
      @carlos-ej3sv 3 года назад +7

      I'm 15 and live in a pretty big city and I would love to live in a place like that

  • @theLongPigChef
    @theLongPigChef Год назад +230

    I'm from Alaska and people in the lower 48 states don't comprehend just how big it really is. The drive from Fairbanks to Anchorage is the most beautiful drive most people will ever make and you sort of take it for granted as a resident. It puts it in perspective that it's 360+ miles from one city to the next. I sure miss that drive.

    • @GrislyAtoms12
      @GrislyAtoms12 Год назад +3

      Dang, do you store full gas cans in the trunk???

    • @theLongPigChef
      @theLongPigChef Год назад +8

      @@GrislyAtoms12 lol. There is a gas station in cantwell at the halfway point. I reckon there's one in Denali too. But there's definitely a pretty good hump without any service stations. Over 140 miles

    • @RosenSkull
      @RosenSkull Год назад +8

      But Alaska fits twice in Texas. Source: Texans

    • @theLongPigChef
      @theLongPigChef Год назад +7

      @@RosenSkull lol. I actually had a Texas couple try to explain to me how modern maps lie to us and Texas is actually much bigger than Alaska.

    • @RosenSkull
      @RosenSkull Год назад +4

      @@theLongPigChef LMAO. If I'm being generous, I'm guessing they said something to the effect of "the Mercator projection stretches out higher latitude areas making them look bigger than they are", which is true.... But that's accounted for. Just look at a globe where this distortion doesn't apply and you can clearly see Alaska is bigger. But there's no convincing a Texan otherwise, I reckon

  • @sagatuppercut2960
    @sagatuppercut2960 Год назад +43

    I spent some time in Wyoming. There are some beautiful places there and some scruffy, barren places as well. I once joked to myself about how no one would ever find me if I decided to lose myself in the wilderness. If you ever get sick of people, I recommend taking a vacation in Wyoming. You can find your quiet place there and no one will bother you.

    • @danenson94
      @danenson94 Год назад +2

      ​@@reddawg6748 Hahaha, perfect for an undergound alien base

  • @linjicakonikon7666
    @linjicakonikon7666 3 года назад +443

    In a strange way, this video was a comfort. Nice to know there is so much untrammeled land.

    • @jeanettesmith765
      @jeanettesmith765 2 года назад +4

      I agree.

    • @maxwellerickson7066
      @maxwellerickson7066 2 года назад +14

      My lifeblood is untrammeled land, but... in much of this country it isn't really untrammeled. The farthest you can get from a road in the 48 states is 21 miles out, in a remote part of SW Yellowstone. It's right next to a ranger station. Someday I want to go somewhere so remote, I know no one has set foot there before and maybe won't ever again...

    • @libradawg9
      @libradawg9 2 года назад +3

      Sure. And then you try to drive through and get kids in the corn and take wrong turns.

    • @johnnyquist8362
      @johnnyquist8362 2 года назад +6

      By far, most of America is "untrammeled."

    • @johnswanson3741
      @johnswanson3741 2 года назад +3

      @@maxwellerickson7066 Floatplane into a remote area in Northern Ontario with a canoe. Nothing more adventurous than a canoe trip up there, and the walleye fishing is fabulous

  • @downbytheriver501
    @downbytheriver501 2 года назад +572

    That area in idaho is no joke. I drove through the northern part and there was a sign that indicated twisty roads for the next 99 miles. There were absolutely no gas stations for over 130 miles. Directly south, if you look on the map, is a massive quadrant of no roads, no people, nothing. It's amazing.

    • @GoaliGrlTilDeath
      @GoaliGrlTilDeath 2 года назад +39

      Those two signs on either end of Lolo Pass are quite literally my favorite signs I've ever encountered. One of the most fun drives if you can avoid the logging trucks and occasional RV.

    • @downbytheriver501
      @downbytheriver501 2 года назад +5

      @@GoaliGrlTilDeath yep that’s the exact area. Next to the locksaw right?

    • @GoaliGrlTilDeath
      @GoaliGrlTilDeath 2 года назад +5

      @@downbytheriver501 That would be the one!

    • @marksandstrom4248
      @marksandstrom4248 2 года назад +16

      @@downbytheriver501 Lochsa -- US12, Lewiston to Missoula. I was first on the route when I think it was brand new as a paved highway, 1965, as a 10 year old kid going to Yellowstone from Seattle

    • @marcpikas2859
      @marcpikas2859 2 года назад +5

      @@marksandstrom4248 you were a very young driver... laws have changed I guess.

  • @Starsk25
    @Starsk25 Год назад +26

    I went on a road trip in 1992 with relatives, starting in Minnesota, drove through S. Dakota, Wyoming then Idaho. On the way back to Minnesota, drove through Montana and North Dakota. There weren't even any radio stations in parts of Montana. Beautiful parts of the country. Yellowstone Park was awesome.

  • @youtubersingingmoments4402
    @youtubersingingmoments4402 Год назад +34

    Alaska is absolutely wild. The uninhabitable tundra area north of the Brooks Range is over two hundred thousand square kilometers of nothing. No trees, no human settlements, limited vegetation, and can get 24 hours of sunlight/darkness per day depending on the time of year. I drove up to Prudhoe Bay on the Dalton one winter and it was an otherworldly experience.

    • @skreefgeore6983
      @skreefgeore6983 8 месяцев назад +1

      I lived on an island in Alaska and have only been to Anchorage a couple times. Driving the Dalton is on my bucket list but I'm worried that I'll die trying. I don't think I've ever driven for more than two hours at a time.

  • @OzzyCat16
    @OzzyCat16 3 года назад +467

    Alaska: “My time to shine”

    • @drumset09
      @drumset09 3 года назад +24

      I was surprised we (Alaska) didn't rank all 15 of the top 15

    • @freidafogarty3724
      @freidafogarty3724 3 года назад +3

      Beautiful place!!!

    • @codygregg6683
      @codygregg6683 3 года назад +7

      @@Marzsala were you listening? Alaska is twice the size of Texas and less the populated then Wyoming. That's why.

    • @codygregg6683
      @codygregg6683 3 года назад

      @@Marzsala lol nope. Sensing I missed something.

    • @fritz1990
      @fritz1990 3 года назад +1

      Yep, and so glad I live here.

  • @DeadBelowZer0
    @DeadBelowZer0 3 года назад +415

    My grandparent have a ranch in SE Oregon. It’s beautiful when it’s so silent you can actually hear yourself think. It’s my favorite place on Earth.

    • @14preston49
      @14preston49 3 года назад +2

      I’m just curious, because I’m from Boise , but do your grandparents live around burns or Rome?

    • @DeadBelowZer0
      @DeadBelowZer0 3 года назад +12

      @@14preston49 Christmas Valley. My brother’s family and my mother live in Boise actually. I was there for a few months on leave last year.

    • @14preston49
      @14preston49 3 года назад +2

      @@DeadBelowZer0 O cool thx

    • @jeffersondonovan521
      @jeffersondonovan521 3 года назад +10

      I know I'm late, but I also love southeastern Oregon. Highway 140 east of Lakeview is beautiful. So open. Makes you feel alone

    • @pauldacus4590
      @pauldacus4590 2 года назад +7

      I lived in Bend for 2001-2016, and I liked me some Fort Rock!

  • @SmittyAZ
    @SmittyAZ 2 года назад +422

    On one of my middle-of-nowhere motorcycle (street) rides in Nevada, I met a German couple. They couldn't believe how much nothing there was when they left Vegas. The wife was actually really scared of such a wide open space. I told them that some people in the USA are more afraid of the big cities...

    • @billlewis1374
      @billlewis1374 2 года назад +1

      P

    • @sashamoore9691
      @sashamoore9691 2 года назад +38

      The west is the most open region of the U.S. and most of Nevada is owned by the federal government. Nevada gave the US government the land so they could operate because even they said it was just too much land to handle! But yes. Outside of the coastal regions of california, it’s gets very WESTY- Remote, and almost scary at how much land there is

    • @piglet1242
      @piglet1242 2 года назад +9

      Being born and raised in a big city, I lived in Vegas 2 years. We went to Red Rock Canyon late at night to look at the stars, I was scared 😨😳 to death driving there!
      Did see my 1st and only shooting star! 🌠

    • @SmittyAZ
      @SmittyAZ 2 года назад +6

      @@piglet1242 Do you enjoy the solitude now? At least, sometimes?
      On some of my motorcycle trips, I warned my passenger that we will be out in the middle of nowhere, she was OK with it to the point of telling me to stop warning her.

    • @piglet1242
      @piglet1242 2 года назад

      @@SmittyAZ Nope. Not even close. Retired in Florida now. My sister lives in New Mexico and wud go for motorcycle rides with her then husband and a lot of others. Do you call them pelotons?

  • @MateoSaavedraRodo
    @MateoSaavedraRodo Год назад +22

    I was born in the Andean Plateau. Over 12000 ft above the sea level and most places in the list are quite similar. If you are into this kind of landscapes I suggest you look for videos of Bolivian west specially The Uyuni salt flat.
    Edit. I’m expecting to climb the Sajama sometime soon. Best place on earth.

  • @freewill1114
    @freewill1114 3 года назад +229

    My home state is Montana. There are huge parts that I have not been to, and probably never will see. Wherever I have been is truly God's Country, beautiful beyond words. I wish I could have a do-over so I could see more of Montana.
    BTW, I just turned 80!

    • @sunshineyrainbows13
      @sunshineyrainbows13 3 года назад +13

      Happy belated birthday! God bless you!!

    • @kz6713
      @kz6713 3 года назад +2

      Not your land

    • @dandawson8128
      @dandawson8128 3 года назад +7

      ........there’s still time. 👍💪

    • @YoloTB
      @YoloTB 3 года назад +14

      @@kz6713 No one asked bitch

    • @ponderosatherapy
      @ponderosatherapy 2 года назад +1

      You got PLENTY of time! I still haven’t seen glacier. Pathetic, huh?

  • @ricksflicks-
    @ricksflicks- 3 года назад +176

    New Mexico born and raised. Can confirm there is only 8 of us here.

    • @stephengamber8749
      @stephengamber8749 3 года назад +3

      LOL - Best Comment!

    • @bearbryant3495
      @bearbryant3495 3 года назад +10

      I heard there's only 3 things to do in NM; drink, do meth and...only 2 things, sorry.

    • @pricklypear7516
      @pricklypear7516 3 года назад +1

      @@bearbryant3495 . . . and BALLOON!

    • @Wanna.Wander
      @Wanna.Wander 3 года назад +3

      @@bearbryant3495 there’s some great hiking and hot spring areas that I enjoy

    • @Episcopalianacolyte
      @Episcopalianacolyte 3 года назад +2

      @@Wanna.Wander eating, horse racing, casinos, history, and much more 🤩🤩🤩

  • @solarsoltice9075
    @solarsoltice9075 Год назад +13

    I worked at Crater Lake National Park, in Oregon.
    I was, well impressed. How deep the snow was. How dark and bright the stars were on a pitch black night.

  • @thetaterman7317
    @thetaterman7317 Год назад +31

    As a truck driver I have to say I have been through most of these locations the most remote one that I have been to was in Utah I delivered just outside the town of Bonanza Utah I looked it up before I drove there and in the 2020 census they had a whopping population of zero it was in the town of Vernal that I delivered to there is a power plant it was quite interesting delivering there

    • @noemitellez3098
      @noemitellez3098 Год назад

      What about it was interesting? Sounds spooky!

    • @stevemccarty6384
      @stevemccarty6384 Год назад +1

      @@noemitellez3098 I have been thru Vernal. It is a ghost town and yes...spooky.

  • @CraigandMandy1
    @CraigandMandy1 2 года назад +189

    We took a family trip through Central Idaho years ago. We were on what was essentially a logging road for 110 miles. We camped on the mountain that night and you could see no lights. You could see nothing man-made from where we were at. It was amazing!

    • @johnswanson3741
      @johnswanson3741 2 года назад +16

      That might have been what is called the Magrugure Trail, 100 plus miles of just winding mountain dirt road, just awesome

    • @danholm4952
      @danholm4952 2 года назад +6

      it is!

    • @user-kh1zo4sc9l
      @user-kh1zo4sc9l Год назад

      You realize just how small we all are at that point.

  • @wyatt367
    @wyatt367 3 года назад +82

    A correction if I might add. #13 Nebraska Sandhills: It has LOTS of water. The area sits atop the Ogallala Aquifer (the largest underground freshwater source in the world). It has a high water table and many small ponds/lakes/pools form between the vegetated dunes. I did my Master's research project in the area based on the hydrology of the area.

    • @CoIoneIPanic
      @CoIoneIPanic 2 года назад +4

      Nope. The Geography King says no water.

    • @silver2644
      @silver2644 2 года назад +11

      @@CoIoneIPanic Well the King is wrong about some things in the Sandhills. And you're probably being sarcastic. There is little cropping there and not many people but most of the Sandhills is well watered and ranch country. The Union Pacific follows HWY 2 through the Sandhills. The Sandhills is classic cowboy country and that is why Ted Turner is buying land there and Buffalo ranching. There are high $ golf courses in the Thedford area where very wealthy people fly in to play.

    • @CoIoneIPanic
      @CoIoneIPanic 2 года назад +2

      @@silver2644 thanks for the irrelevant info. Long live the Geography King.

    • @SZfiftyfour
      @SZfiftyfour 2 года назад +12

      @@silver2644 It's a basement troll, don't spend another second feeding it or bringing yourself down to its level, as it's a futile and pointless effort. Sometimes you just come across the most vile and repulsive internet dweller trying to create scraps of misery to feed its addiction while playing with itself in the dark because it thinks it got over on someone.

    • @CoIoneIPanic
      @CoIoneIPanic 2 года назад

      @@SZfiftyfour tell us again what Ted Turner has to do with Cowboys?

  • @FeR-kt1jt
    @FeR-kt1jt Год назад +19

    I drove from San Bernardino CA to San Antonio TX. What a trip! The remote desert wilderness I seen was unforgettable. Especially past El Paso on I-10 .

  • @tothesummit5864
    @tothesummit5864 Год назад +6

    Lived in Vegas all my life and have spent most of my spare time in the last 30 years exploring the most remote areas I could find across the western US. Central Nevada is impressive in both its scale and emptiness. Southeastern Utah is one of the most beautiful places in the world. The Mohave desert is my regular stomping ground and it's not hard to go wander around for a couple days and not see a single soul. Most places in Arizona are never too far from some sort of civilization but it is still easy to find yourself alone among some of the most beautiful landscapes. I find peace and relaxation in being alone in nature. There are places in the world that would make our little Western US seem small and busy, but it provides all the solitude I will ever need.

  • @b-man1232
    @b-man1232 2 года назад +24

    I have traveled all across the U.S. via my motorcycle. HONESTLY, the Sand Hills of NW Nebraska are absolutely beautiful and a hidden gem!! You can go 20, 30+ miles without seeing another car or human!! It's true cowboy country....like stepping back in-time!! Also, loved southern Utah....WOW!!

    • @Kingfisher1215
      @Kingfisher1215 Год назад +2

      Agree with you about the Sandhills. And just west and south of there is the north eastern Colorado, the Pawnee grasslands, which I think you would have enjoyed.

  • @ScottSmith-jz8zv
    @ScottSmith-jz8zv 2 года назад +140

    As somebody who is biking across the country and is currently in Oregon, the rural areas of Colorado/Wyoming/Montana/Idaho are unreal. Hours go by without seeing another house or development, sometimes 70 miles between places to fill up on water. It is truly lonely sometimes, but unbelievably enchanting and peaceful. It’s so rural it makes the most remote parts of New York seem bustling, it blew my mind.

    • @SilverSceptile
      @SilverSceptile Год назад +5

      That amazing how did that go?

    • @curedham2963
      @curedham2963 Год назад

      sounds amazing and peaceful

    • @analogman9697
      @analogman9697 Год назад

      The wind must make for some brutal cycling...and it's ALWAYS a headwind for some reason.

    • @greenandgold2185
      @greenandgold2185 Год назад +4

      ​@@SilverSceptile he must still be going...

    • @Marrifikc
      @Marrifikc Год назад

      Dude you have to update us on your trip. How was it ?? Where did you start and end ? Pls give details

  • @QueenofTNT
    @QueenofTNT Год назад +48

    Idaho and Montana could probably fill up most of this list, my mom and dad were born in a tiny town in eastern Idaho and they’ll tell stories sometimes. It’s incredibly beautiful up there, but it can get dangerous quickly, especially if you’re in the Wilderness Area or on the Salmon River (how fitting it’s called The River of no Return). Lost Trail Pass is another place that I remember my parents telling lots of stories about.

    • @danenson94
      @danenson94 Год назад +4

      Fascinating, what kind of stories? Paranormal too?

    • @air9music
      @air9music Год назад +4

      I really wish you could post these stories somewhere! It'd be absolutely fascinating 😊

    • @furrycircuitry2378
      @furrycircuitry2378 Год назад +3

      Would love to hear a retelling of your parents story they sound very interesting

  • @joeskis
    @joeskis 2 года назад +8

    Thanks for showing MN's boundary waters. If you love rugged camping and canoeing it's a must to experience.

    • @Pretermit_Sound
      @Pretermit_Sound 2 года назад

      I’m from Orr, MN, right smack in the middle of the BWCA, and Voyageur’s National Park.

  • @longbowshooter5291
    @longbowshooter5291 3 года назад +109

    Back in the late 80's I drove a motorcycle through Nevada on Highway 50, Highway 50 is called "The loneliest highway in America".
    I'm here to testify!
    Got a flat, guy pulls over to help, offers to take me into town because tire is ripped, can't fix that. I ask him how far it is - "89 miles".
    Ask him how far the last town was - "92 miles".
    How much closer to the middle of nowhere could I manage to get?
    I would drive along and see a mailbox next to a dirt road going off over the horizon - no house though. No lights visible at night. Nowhere even to pull over - two lane road with desert sand on each side.

    • @CarsandCats
      @CarsandCats 3 года назад +9

      I lived on 95. It was very desolate too. Grocery story was 33 miles away in Hawthorne. Same drive if you wanted a cheeseburger. People tend to help one another in Nevada.

    • @bernieweber4663
      @bernieweber4663 3 года назад +22

      I needed a tow in as southeast Wyoming. I had left Washingyon. A sheriff stopped and gave me a ride into town. About 15 miles back. He got me set up with a tow. The driver was headed south anyway. We picked up my car and we towed it 152 miles. Charged me the minimum tow fee too. I'm thinking these people are so nice what's that catch. There wasn't any. Got my car fixed up at the shop it was towed to and they got it running by the end of the day. Didn't cost much and I continued on to Oklahoma.

    • @CarsandCats
      @CarsandCats 3 года назад +9

      @@bernieweber4663 There are some really good people out there... If you can find them. But in your case, they found you! Great story.

    • @longbowshooter5291
      @longbowshooter5291 3 года назад +14

      @@bernieweber4663 Trying to get back to my bike it was, by then, night time, I only had a long sleeve cotton shirt on, carrying a tire, and there's not much traffic on that road, and the desert gets damn cold at night! There was a diner called Junction Diner that set on a T intersection, it was the only place between the town and my bike, I was FREEZING, and went in for coffee and warm up. Talked to the waitress and was telling her my woes, she said she was getting off shift and would drive me to my bike, it was still 35 miles away.
      Yep, good people out in the country.

    • @susantheberge4731
      @susantheberge4731 3 года назад +5

      @@bernieweber4663 Nice experience. Not really to one up you, but I managed a 200 mile towing in Maine. Up in the North Maine Woods heading to 5th St. John Pond for week long canoe trip on the St. John River. Took out the oil pan on dirt roads in a brand new 99 Jetta TDI. Managed to get the flat bed operators to take us 30 miles further out to begin our trip with us in the Jetta (canoes on top) on the flatbed before they headed home for the night and the car to a dealership the next day. The 4 hours waiting for help gave me time to hatch a plan. The trip I'd have to say was really more important than the car, at least at that moment.

  • @Johncornwell103
    @Johncornwell103 3 года назад +262

    Alaska is so remote even their major urban area looks like a suburb of a major city in the rest of the country.

    • @scottcooper4391
      @scottcooper4391 3 года назад +11

      I think I've heard that the City of Anchorage has more Forests than some parts of states back east

    • @nigelmarshallkenyonabbott8684
      @nigelmarshallkenyonabbott8684 3 года назад +14

      Anchorage has one of the largest urban areas in square miles in the country

    • @drumset09
      @drumset09 3 года назад +11

      Can confirm. I live in Anchorage, was born and raised in St. Paul MN.
      Anchorage is freaking huge. Going speed limit (55-65, except a few miles where it's 45) along the highway, it'll take you a couple hours to get thru the Anchorage muni.

    • @bob_frazier
      @bob_frazier 3 года назад +9

      Anchorage: "15 minutes from Alaska in any direction."

    • @susantheberge4731
      @susantheberge4731 3 года назад +1

      I would guess: Spoken by someone who's never been to Alaska, especially Anchorage.

  • @briscoedarling3237
    @briscoedarling3237 2 года назад +119

    As a born and bred Easterner, I love traveling in the Western US. I marvel at the sheer courage and effort that it took our forefathers and mothers to traverse this land on foot, on horseback and it wagons. People ask me what my favorite area of the West is and I always say that is impossible for me to answer as there is a ‘buena vista’ around every bend in the trail.

    • @AJFar-tm7dn
      @AJFar-tm7dn Год назад +6

      I think of the grit and determination of our settlers as well. Modern Americans couldn't hang in a wagon train from that era.

    • @billolsen4360
      @billolsen4360 Год назад +8

      @@AJFar-tm7dn Traveling inside a covered wagon over the Oregon or Santa Fe Trails wouldn't have been so bad, but you had a team of oxen pulling your possessions, food & water. In order to save your oxen the extra burden of hauling people, almost everyone walked along side the wagon. The pioneers were certainly in shape to build a home once they got to their destination.

    • @jamescoleakaericunderwood2503
      @jamescoleakaericunderwood2503 Год назад +4

      This courage of them hit me when I flew over the Great Basin... there's nothing out there now hardly... imagine hundred years ago

    • @danenson94
      @danenson94 Год назад

      Also the center and south of the western US, when Spanish explorers traveled and little by little colonizing that area must have been extremely difficult due to the harsh living conditions, what really attracted more people was the gold rush, there was a reason to travel all over the place.

    • @scholaroftheworldalternatehist
      @scholaroftheworldalternatehist 4 месяца назад

      I had that same thought when on a cruise, imagining those early explorers traveling in their tiny boats across an endless sea

  • @HallAroundTheWorld
    @HallAroundTheWorld Год назад +5

    We just did a month-long road trip around the West covering Colorado, Wyoming, Montana, Idaho, Utah, Arizona and New Mexico. It was the most amazing trip of my life. The landscape, food, people, scenery and sunsets were incredible. Cant wait to go back! 🇺🇲

  • @eastfrisianguy
    @eastfrisianguy 3 года назад +312

    As a German, you can hardly imagine that, because here you are happy if you get a place two miles without people. 😑

    • @mrp4242
      @mrp4242 3 года назад +35

      Come visit us in Idaho. If you like outdoor activity, its great.

    • @jmitterii2
      @jmitterii2 3 года назад +41

      Germany is very pretty. I'm an Idahoan from birth and have lived here my entire life... with moments of business, college, and military my perm address has always been Idaho. I visited Germany in 2001 age 18. Germany is very similar to western half of Oregon and Washington in climate and in flora; Cascades and Olympic mountain range remind me of the Black Forest.
      On the western side of the US, all states have stretches of essentially emptiness.
      Even populated WA and OR. Not just Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, Nevada, and Utah, etc. Even California has very remote areas as he described.
      The populations in the west are very concentrated.
      It freaks me out in both Germany and most of Europe as well as the East of the rocky mountains, how large and even super mega cities are 80 miles or less apart. Chattanooga Tennessee 180K is considered a small town in the east; stayed there on business for a couple months. But it's almost as large as Boise 228K people our capitol of Idaho.
      Richmond capitol of VA is only 80 miles from Washington DC. And DC only 47 miles from Baltimore and then 105 to Philadelphia and 94 miles to NYC. Huge major cities... distance between major cities in the west are 400 miles apart. It's odd to think when I was in Cleveland OH on business for 4 months that I was able to on a weekend drive just 300ish miles Chicago. Or within 250ish miles I could go to Pittsburgh or Cincinnati or Detroit or 292 miles is Toronto Canada.
      This is from an Idahoan's perspective living in Boise:
      Boise Idaho to Calgary Canada which is direct true north by interstate is 863 miles, Vancouver Canada 629 miles. Boise to Portland OR is 436 miles or to Seattle is 493 miles or to Salt Lake City 339 miles or to Las Vegas is 624 miles or to LA 879 miles, Boise to Denver is 812 miles.

    • @eastfrisianguy
      @eastfrisianguy 3 года назад +13

      @@mrp4242 I would like that if I could afford the trip :-) I got my hands on a picture book about the Midwest and the West Coast when I was a child and it has been a great wish of mine ever since.

    • @aplant946
      @aplant946 3 года назад +16

      @@eastfrisianguy America is beautiful, so is Germany. Try to visit! :)

    • @davidbalmer473
      @davidbalmer473 3 года назад +16

      Hallo Pegatan! I am an American living in Switzerland now for 31 years. My wife is German, and has been here for 24 years. I know Germany and drove to Rostock from Zurich last summer. 10 hours was no problem. This video was fun to watch, especially for me, growing up all over America with my hippie father in the 60s, 70s and 80s. I was born in New Jersey and then lived in Idaho, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Maine, Colorado, Oregon, Colorado again, then Washington state finishing High School, then California to my mom`s place. What I saw driving nonstop, what I have in my memories is crazy. For me Switzerland, being the size of West Virginia, is an amusement park with 4 national languages. Lots of nature and so many towns and cities close by too. I still have family in Idaho and my sister`s son is in Montana. All huge and beautiful, but I really love Switzerland and all of Europe.

  • @maryrenwickservais6903
    @maryrenwickservais6903 3 года назад +167

    I rode my bicycle from San Francisco to southern Maine. My favorite section was from Reno NV to Salt Lake City UT. The emptiness of the desert was majestic. It was clean; so few marks of people spoiling the land. One could imagine this was how has been for thousands of years.

    • @kap1526
      @kap1526 3 года назад +48

      You rode your bicycle across the country ???

    • @omarmesbah6620
      @omarmesbah6620 3 года назад +31

      Riding your bike across this vast country is truly insane.

    • @nunyabailey
      @nunyabailey 3 года назад +7

      That’s so cool

    • @gatewaysolo104
      @gatewaysolo104 3 года назад +16

      How did you carry enough water across the desert?

    • @bigmomma3265
      @bigmomma3265 3 года назад +5

      Oh hey I plan on biking in a four thousand mile triangle around kentucky to arizona and back to kentucky. Did you go alone? Because I am and I'm wondering what you did when you went to grocery stores. Did you take your stuff in with you or just leave it outside with the possibility of it getting stolen?

  • @grene1955
    @grene1955 Год назад +5

    I have traveled through pretty much all of these, including Alaska. There is something special about cruising for miles knowing that you have such a huge expanse to yourself. Every American should drive cross country at least once. You'll have a whole new appreciation for this magnificent place!

  • @40nights40daystv
    @40nights40daystv Год назад +12

    I’m from Seattle and some of my favorite parts of Washington to travel was the Northern Central Cascades. There is nothing. No people at all, u are alone. Untouched nature that impacted me like no other place I’ve been too. Truly there is something magical to this area.

  • @philpaine3068
    @philpaine3068 2 года назад +65

    After growing up in the Canadian sub-arctic, I eventually visited most of the places in this video ---- with the exception of Alaska, my reaction was almost always "this is really nice, but, hey man, I need some more elbow room!"

    • @billolsen4360
      @billolsen4360 Год назад +1

      Wasn't Leslie Nielsen from up there?

    • @philpaine3068
      @philpaine3068 Год назад +8

      @@billolsen4360 He was born in Saskatchewan, but he grew up in the remote settlement of Tulita (at the time it was called Fort Norman) in the Northwest Territories. It's a very typical little First Nations outpost in Canada's north, like many others I've seen. It's in a mountainous region along the Mackenzie River, a 1800 km (1120 mile) long river with only a handful of tiny settlements on it. The Mackenzie is named after the Scottish-Canadian explorer Alexander Mackenzie, and one of my cats is also named after him (the other cat being named after David Thompson, an even more daring Canadian explorer.) You can reach Tulita in three or four weeks by canoe from the nearest permanent road (going downstream, if you are really good paddler). For any practical purpose, it is reached by air. It's 617km by air from Yellowknife, the Territorial capital. The average night-time temperature in January is minus 28C, though of course it can get considerably colder. Most of its 397 people are of the Sahtu Dene First Nation. The population would have been much smaller when Leslie lived there. His dad was the local Mountie. Leslie's older brother Erik was the Member of Parliament for Yukon Territory for 30 years, and was widely known as "Yukon Erik." Leslie stated that his brother had the sharper sense of humour.

    • @billolsen4360
      @billolsen4360 Год назад +2

      @@philpaine3068 Wow! Thanks for the biographical info on Leslie. Dad was a Mountie! It's funny that Erik had the sharper sense of humor. My BIL went to high school with Steve Martin & said Steve was the quiet shy one but his best buddy was the real class clown & could even make the teachers laugh while disrupting classes.

  • @williamshultz4620
    @williamshultz4620 2 года назад +145

    I was an OTR truck and to me the most scenic areas I could drive through in a truck were in Utah and Nevada. I just loved how you can see just open uninhabited land for miles with snowcapped peaks that look like they can't be more than a few miles away but are really 40-50 miles away.

    • @JLKB-1947
      @JLKB-1947 2 года назад +5

      @ William Shultz . Agree . I’ve been there once .

    • @overundersidewaysdown
      @overundersidewaysdown 2 года назад +3

      Same! Love that area.

    • @townhall05446
      @townhall05446 2 года назад +3

      Originally I am from the flat Midwest and lived a dozen years in VT for a job transfer. When I had had enough and decided to move back to America (and I mean that) people in VT kept saying 'But isn't it flat there? It's so FLAT...' I like flat. I like seeing the big wide world for miles around.

    • @billolsen4360
      @billolsen4360 Год назад

      Ever driven from Denver to South Park? Beautiful empty basin surrounded by the Rockies.

    • @MrEOM41
      @MrEOM41 Год назад +1

      Arizona pretty nice too

  • @Phillydreaming
    @Phillydreaming Год назад +27

    When I moved to California, I flew over west Texas, new mexico, and Arizona to get here. Coming from Florida, which is very flat, I was amazed at how beautiful the scenery is in all of these places. Even in CA I am still in awe looking at the mountains just on a trip to Walmart etc, whereas the people from here tend to take it for granted. The only other place I have lived was Maryland's eastern shore and also Delaware. So I had never seen nature so big in my life.

    • @seanthe100
      @seanthe100 Год назад +2

      I'm from Florida, and the snow capped mountains are mesmerizing

    • @turdburglar1295
      @turdburglar1295 Год назад +3

      I cant believe west Texas wasn't on the list.

    • @bentownsend4017
      @bentownsend4017 4 месяца назад

      Yeah I wish more people had that appreciation of the world

  • @chrisbilling
    @chrisbilling Год назад +4

    This is really eye opening. In this world where everything has become so instant and connected by technology and populated with people, it really blows my mind that there are SO MANY huge swaths of land on which possibly nobody has even laid eyes in the US. Great video

  • @baroqueguitarist5673
    @baroqueguitarist5673 3 года назад +184

    I drove across the country and around the border of Oregon and Idaho ( very few signs giving me info on were I was, just followed a GPS) I hit a road that scared the crap out of me. Thank God I filled up my gas tank just before I hit this stretch. For at least two hours I drove without seeing nobody, no cars, no gas stations,no stores of any kind, no houses, having no phone signal at all in the middle of summer. By the time I realized that the nothingness wasn't going to stop anytime soon if I was a little low on gas I likely would not have had enough gas to even go back the way I came. I realized if I broke down there was nobody or stores or anything I would find to help. My phone was never going to work to call for help and the heat was crazy. It was all open land almost no suitable shelter, water, or even creatures to hunt. If you had to walk it .. it would take long likely a week to hit another person. I realized if I broke down I very well could die out there. Im from New York City and had no clue that nothingness like that exists and is that vast. Living on the east coast that was unimaginable. I flew to Oregon because of a sick friend who couldn't fly due to health issues so I flew there and drove him home. It was a emergency so I didn't prepare at all so that road was very scary. It was also my favorite part of the trip. I loved that endless stretch of road. I want to go back to drive it again but don't remember were it was. Just followed my GPS. I loved the road but seriously if I didn't get lucky by gassing up when I did or if I had a car not running that great I could have never come home. Scary stuff for a city boy not expecting that. At least I would think I would see another car or truck. Nothing was out there and nothing was coming. Hard to imagine in this overpopulated country with stores everywhere that parts of the country are like that and go on like that so long. I was gunning it likely doing around 80 for two hours or more (it seemed forever) non stop. It was nuts

    • @Jose58661
      @Jose58661 3 года назад +24

      I'm from Birmingham and people routinely tell me that I live in the middle of nowhere when I tell them where I"m from, but driving through that part of the country (Wyoming, Montana, Utah, and Nevada) you get a true sense of what actual nothingness really is. Driving through Utah and Nevada were probably the most anxiety-inducing driving I've ever done.

    • @JeffDeWitt
      @JeffDeWitt 3 года назад +40

      Most people have NO idea just how big this country really is, you have to drive across it to get a clue. Then stop along one of the old wagon routes and think about the people that headed out that way in the 19th century in horse drawn wagons and on foot.

    • @furtfurt
      @furtfurt 3 года назад +17

      @@JeffDeWitt yep, I was one of those people. Then I drove a uhaul from coast to coast. It's a ridiculously humongous country. And the massive size of states out west. Just because it's a rectangle shape doesn't mean it's somehow smaller or quicker to get across.

    • @bobsnipes3335
      @bobsnipes3335 3 года назад +3

      @Baroque Guitarist do you know what your destination and starting points were?

    • @baroqueguitarist5673
      @baroqueguitarist5673 3 года назад +4

      @@bobsnipes3335 I remember driving by that famous last blockbuster video in Oregon around late afternoon. It was either a few hours after that or maybe after driving all night and sleeping a bit I hit that road the following afternoon. Don't know if that helps

  • @Rofl890
    @Rofl890 3 года назад +141

    Funny how we use the term empty to mean "lacks humans" when really a lot of these beautiful places are far from empty! Good video; had no idea about central Idaho.
    May the RUclips algorithm stay in your favor

    • @GeographyKing
      @GeographyKing  3 года назад +7

      Thanks!

    • @SinginHigh
      @SinginHigh 3 года назад +6

      Think Rocky Mts, ski resorts, lakes etc in central Idaho!

    • @gregorycaspers1101
      @gregorycaspers1101 3 года назад +5

      Same for the term wasteland, really means that it can't be used but it's still full of life of one kind or another.

    • @Guess_The_Number
      @Guess_The_Number 3 года назад

      Yeh but we are humans.

    • @theccpisaparasite8813
      @theccpisaparasite8813 3 года назад +2

      Oh, they are all packed with wildlife and flora, but not many humans. I love the back side of the Sierra up the 395. Gorgeous and rather empty.

  • @erinbierly2766
    @erinbierly2766 8 месяцев назад +1

    Hello! 😀 I have been resisting traveling to and experiencing the wild blue yonder. I thought east of the Mississippi was the only place to “live”. But after watching and listening to your videos for over the past couple years…well, I’m officially converted as of this day. I need wide open spaces and fresh air. Thank you for your patience with me. 😊🎉

  • @hayden6700
    @hayden6700 Год назад +4

    Also I think everyone should visit at least one of these places. It gives you a completely different perspective on things and the view of the sky at night actually being able to see the stars is just the coolest thing I have ever seen. No light pollution at all

  • @ironmanmason4247
    @ironmanmason4247 3 года назад +473

    I was wondering when and what part of Montana is gonna pop up, then he chooses the whole state LOL

    • @emoryfaber8191
      @emoryfaber8191 3 года назад +29

      IKR, just the way we like it lol.

    • @ryandupuis5860
      @ryandupuis5860 3 года назад +8

      Lmao and I thought living here Montana had decent sized cities

    • @cpviking
      @cpviking 3 года назад +4

      Coming up on a road trip from Cali, y’all have a beautiful state. The southwest of the states mountains are so amazing and loved staying out there

    • @AccountInactive
      @AccountInactive 3 года назад +10

      I was thinking anything east of Billings 😂

    • @alansach8437
      @alansach8437 3 года назад +10

      Which, of course, is bull. Some parts of Montana are getting to look and feel like LA.

  • @m4l_vinny300
    @m4l_vinny300 3 года назад +76

    Being from South Dakota, I am really surprised not seeing us on the list!

    • @natashadwitt9258
      @natashadwitt9258 3 года назад +16

      Same! I live in Rapid which is obviously populated, but there’s a sign on I 90 that says “next McDonald’s: 260 miles” and if that’s not an accurate description of SD, idk what is

    • @ultrakool
      @ultrakool 2 года назад +17

      just look at a night time, satellite image of city lights. north and south dakota has a widespread coverage, whereas these places he mentioned are black.

    • @mikejacobs7464
      @mikejacobs7464 2 года назад +5

      North and South Dakota most of the population is along the I-29 corridor about 20 miles from the Minnesota boarder!

    • @michaelmack1035
      @michaelmack1035 2 года назад +3

      You can say that about North Dakota as well

    • @maxmayer1281
      @maxmayer1281 2 года назад +2

      Me as well from vermillion here

  • @ATLOffroad
    @ATLOffroad 2 года назад +4

    I grew up in Georgia. In my 20s I worked in construction. Usually working 6-8 months nonstop then off for 2-3months. On my months off I would just load up my truck and drive out west since I never traveled that way. Southern Utah and Southwestern Montana were my favorites. Like you, I would just look at a map, find a place with very few roads, and go explore. Fun times.

  • @johncalvo1743
    @johncalvo1743 Год назад +1

    I drive Nevada all the time and I love it. From Vegas, I take US-93 up to NV-318 then to NV-6 before I get back on US-93 to get to Twin Falls, ID. US-93 is also called the Great Basin Highway. One of these days I'm going to do it by car and really take my time to explore the small towns.
    As for SE Oregon, I was "trapped" for 3 days in a little town called Burns when my truck got stuck on ice about 65 miles away. I was very lucky to get a ride there from some folks who were behind me on OR-78 when my truck started sliding on a small hill. I had to stop the truck, which had slightly jack-knifed on the two-lane highway. In order to straighten out the rig, I had to put it in neutral and slide in reverse down the hill in order to get it on the LEFT shoulder, which was only about 3-feet wide. The people behind me watched me as I put out my cones, triangles and hazard lights. I came back 3 days later when the weather had cleared. The battery had died so I had to head back to Burns and come back with a wrecker to pull me free from the ice and re-solder the battery cables, which had completely corroded. Word to the wise if you're a trucker: DO NOT take these back roads in the winter!

  • @b-man1232
    @b-man1232 2 года назад +56

    I LOVE that there are still "empty" spaces left in the US!!! Man-Kind has destroyed so many beautiful places!!!

  • @ChallisVenstra
    @ChallisVenstra 3 года назад +426

    To be fair, western Utah and central Nevada are the same place, just an imaginary line in the middle of it. And yes, nothing there. That’s the way we hope it stays...

    • @gregoryjensen1890
      @gregoryjensen1890 3 года назад +22

      But the salt flats dont really start until getting right up to the Utah border. It's a slightly different landscape in that region.

    • @derrickthewhite1
      @derrickthewhite1 3 года назад +21

      A lot of these areas are adjacent to each other. Montana, Wyoming, and northwest Colorado are continuous, and I think the idaho area he mentioned is that way as well. The South East also feeds into the Nevada-Utah area, as does northeast California. Get a good solid satellite image of the US at night, and you can see where the nothing is.

    • @robertsmith6068
      @robertsmith6068 3 года назад +5

      no kidding. glad almost all posters hate it. central and northern Nevada is the best.

    • @maxwellerickson7066
      @maxwellerickson7066 3 года назад +10

      @@derrickthewhite1 The Idaho area he mentioned isn't quite contiguous. He's largely talking about the Frank Church wilderness, which is very much central Idaho. The valley that runs West-East through the bottom of the state is where the vast majority of people in the state live, and it's a bit more densely populated there than it is in Wyoming, Montana or NW Colorado. Mind, it's all a matter of perspective...

    • @dieterh.9342
      @dieterh.9342 3 года назад +2

      Too late, I'm moving.

  • @premchettri7170
    @premchettri7170 Год назад +2

    Driving i80 from California to Utah, once I was in deep trouble, there are like 100 miles of straight HW no gas station, and I was sweating as my car was showing Empty gas in the middle of the stretch. Stunning wilderness of emptiness in the middle of nothingness !!
    There is similar empty stretch in Wyoming too, only diff in Wyoming is its cold AF. In here I was lucky to find a small gas station outta nowhere called "buck mountian or something area"... Lady was super helpful and chatted for a while and she told me where she lives there are like 300 people altogether and the only source of entertainment is a Theatre !! I was shivering in that cold where as lady was having her day of the year saying what a beautiful bring sunny day was it !!

    • @shawna.4601
      @shawna.4601 Год назад

      @ Prem Chettri Battle Mountain is the name

    • @premchettri7170
      @premchettri7170 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@shawna.4601 No No, Battle Mountain is in Nevada.. ( The deserted place close to Prison area ).. This one I was talking about in Wyoming is actually called Elk mountain .. Just searched

    • @shawna.4601
      @shawna.4601 11 месяцев назад

      @@premchettri7170 you’re right, haven’t been that way for almost 4 years but now that I think about it Elk Mountain was where I used to stop in a Wyoming to get gas years ago, my mistake

  • @emilychun5306
    @emilychun5306 Год назад +3

    I lived in South Jordan Utah for 7 months before (from Kentucky) and loved road trips my friend from there would take me on. There was an area where we saw many wild horses running about ❤️

  • @flyoverkid55
    @flyoverkid55 3 года назад +37

    Been to and/ or through most of these places, and if you decide to go, you'd better be prepared. These aren't places you want to break down in.

  • @dannybau
    @dannybau 3 года назад +150

    Nevada is about 85% federally owned land.

    • @curtiskretzer8898
      @curtiskretzer8898 3 года назад +2

      4 Wheeler magazine said 90% of Texas was mostly Federal property

    • @sheepdavis
      @sheepdavis 3 года назад

      And?

    • @curtiskretzer8898
      @curtiskretzer8898 3 года назад +2

      @@sheepdavis so u have no access to freely swing...er,on said🇺🇸land

    • @danieljarrelljr5640
      @danieljarrelljr5640 3 года назад +1

      And the Merry Ole Bunch owns the other15%.

    • @MCAndyT
      @MCAndyT 3 года назад

      @Outdoor Life 4 Me ???

  • @Alex88302
    @Alex88302 Год назад +8

    Having been in Washington all my life and visited basically everywhere on numerous road trips, I think I'd say that south eastern Washington is way more desolate than the north central part. From Pullman south to walla walla east there's virtually nothing except deer, wheat fields and the occasional farm house.

  • @NorthOKCLee
    @NorthOKCLee Год назад +1

    As a truck driver who has been to all lower 48 states. This video is 100% correct ‼️

  • @CnekYT
    @CnekYT 3 года назад +419

    Top 15 Emptiest Parts of the U.S. exists
    Canada: Amateurs

    • @lardthing7417
      @lardthing7417 3 года назад +24

      *Manitoba moment*

    • @theccpisaparasite8813
      @theccpisaparasite8813 3 года назад +40

      Even worse, it's populated with Canucks. Seems like you didn't read the caption. Besides any group of people that would allow Trudeau to lead them has more empty space between their ears than the rest of Canada combined.

    • @DiviAugusti
      @DiviAugusti 3 года назад +43

      @@theccpisaparasite8813 Get out of here with your ridiculous politics.

    • @Albisriede
      @Albisriede 3 года назад +8

      As he said: Emptiest parts of the US.
      Now if you want to show us up, provide a list of the 15 emptiest places in Canada. I know there are a few, and it's not the Yukon, although it seemed like it when we drove up the Alcan 52 years ago.

    • @CnekYT
      @CnekYT 3 года назад +8

      @@Albisriede that moment when you forget about Northwest Terrorities, Nunavut and northern parts of Ontario and Quebec

  • @Rockhound6165
    @Rockhound6165 3 года назад +92

    When driving from NJ to Arizona, I remember the stretch of road from Amarillo, Tx to Tucumcari, NM was pretty barren. I don't think we saw 5 other cars.

    • @d.e.b.b5788
      @d.e.b.b5788 2 года назад +16

      I make that trip 3 times a year, to go back and visit my relatives and friends back east (I retired to Az). Love the ride. I get in with a group of trucks and tail them. I try to tell the family, what it's like to ride I 40; you can see the mountain ahead of you; a couple hours later, you can still see the same mountain, and you're still no closer to it! Roads so straight and long they just disappear like in the Road Runner cartoons.

    • @chairmanlmao4482
      @chairmanlmao4482 2 года назад +16

      Man if you Americans want true open wilderness, try remote Western Australia. In the Pilbara region up north, there are approximately 61,000 people living in an area of 196,000 square miles which is larger than California. Or take the Nullabor plain which is an area about the size of South Dakota but only has maybe a few hundred people living there.

    • @charlesbrown4483
      @charlesbrown4483 2 года назад +2

      @@chairmanlmao4482 Yeah but that’s because it would be hell on earth to actually live in those places. Probably 115 degrees in the summer, completely flat and full of animals that will fucking kill you lol
      While there’s definitely some flat, hot, boring desert land in the western US, there’s also a ton of uninhabited high mountain range and low valleys and woodlands. If you wanted to live somewhere with equal parts beauty and privacy, there would be no where better in the world than middle of nowhere Wyoming for example.

    • @sifridbassoon
      @sifridbassoon 2 года назад +1

      I just drove that stretch a week ago going from Santa Fe to Dallas. I had never driven that part of I 40 before. It was amazing. My favorite route is from Dumas, TX to Colorado, cutting across the NE corner of NM. You can drive forever, but the Rockies never seem to get any closer. AND there's an extinct volcano along the way to visit.

    • @Rockhound6165
      @Rockhound6165 2 года назад +1

      @@charlesbrown4483 115 degrees? What do you think it's like in Phoenix in summer?

  • @angrybadger4236
    @angrybadger4236 2 года назад +5

    So I live about an hour from a Utah national park. I visited it a couple years ago and some guy was talking to me and was blown away that I could live next to such beauty. He was like so do you come here all the time then? I laughed and said no.
    The reason Utah has so many national parks is because they were barren deserts. If it was remotely usable land the pioneers cultivated it in the 1800s. Plus There are literally hundreds of places I could go that wouldn't involve snuggling up next to a bunch of tourists and walking REI catalogues. Ebenezer Bryce was once asked how amazing it was to homestead a beautiful place like Bryce canyon. His answer was well it's a hell of a place to lose a cow.
    Here's a tip for tourists too. Walking through the 105° desert in an $80 moisture wicking shirt is actually no more pleasant than walking through it with an $8 Walmart shirt.

  • @katherineg9396
    @katherineg9396 Год назад +3

    I relived some of my favorite vacations with you! Central Nevada, highway 50. I went back to fill up my tank when I saw a sign: No services next 163 miles; my favorite vacation photo ever! I like living in a big urban area but I love to vacation in deserts and remote areas. When I see "no signal" on my cell phone, I'm very happy. At a planetarium in Wyoming I learned that 50% of Americans have never seen the Milky Way, what a shame! Thanks for some great ideas for my next trip!

  • @jamesmays9814
    @jamesmays9814 3 года назад +40

    In North Central Washington, on the very northern end of Lake Chelan, sits a tiny little community called Stehekin. Stehekin is completely cutoff from the road system, and the only way there aside from private float plane or a very, very long hike is to take a ferry in, a 3 hour journey from the town of Chelan at the southern end of the lake. It is the closest thing to an Alaska bush town you will find in the lower 48.

    • @MikeJBeebe
      @MikeJBeebe 3 года назад +6

      I've lived in WA for more than a decade now, and this is the first time I've heard of Stehekin!

    • @carlminor4556
      @carlminor4556 3 года назад +2

      Been to Stehekin many times as my wife and I are both from Manson, 7 miles up the lake from Chelan. Stehekin is absolutely beautiful!

    • @MrDagassman
      @MrDagassman 3 года назад

      They’ve got a real cool grass airstrip too

    • @freewill1114
      @freewill1114 2 года назад +1

      One of my favorite memories is when my wife and I took the boat up to Stehekin and spent the night at the Inn there. After the boat leaves, a heavenly quiet and stillness settles down, and you have millions of acres to explore any way you wish. In the morning, we got a couple rental bikes and rode up to the village a couple miles away. We had the road to ourselves all the way. We stopped at the bakery, got pastries and coffee, and sat out on the porch to enjoy the most beautiful July morning it is possible to experience. We wished it would last forever!

    • @dwlopez57
      @dwlopez57 2 года назад

      @@MikeJBeebe that's sad. You need to go there. If you dont like it the boat or plane trip to and from Chelan would be worth it. Where do you live?

  • @stuarthall3874
    @stuarthall3874 3 года назад +74

    I so miss living near central Idaho. It's been quite a shock to move to Indiana. It's hardly crowded here but it feels cramped compared to what I got used to.

    • @Styxswimmer
      @Styxswimmer 2 года назад +11

      Welcome to Indiana. Hope you build a good life here. Just don't vote blue. Keep the gun laws loose and the taxes low.

    • @Styxswimmer
      @Styxswimmer 2 года назад

      @Jose Ortiz Indiana is a right to work state.

    • @Styxswimmer
      @Styxswimmer 2 года назад

      @Jose Ortiz they can but if someone doesn't want to join they don't have to. Thats what right to work means. It doesn't ban unions, it just means if you want to work joining the union isn't a condition of employment.

    • @Styxswimmer
      @Styxswimmer 2 года назад

      @Jose Ortiz they do. If they get together and a majority vote to start a union they got one. I work for a high school and the teachers have a union. It's just that no one can be forced to join

    • @GermanShepherd1983
      @GermanShepherd1983 2 года назад

      @@Styxswimmer Blue is the only way to to vote-in any state. That idiot trump cost me a lot of money due to his Chinese tariffs that destroyed US grain markets.

  • @itinerantpatriot1196
    @itinerantpatriot1196 Год назад +3

    I drove through part of Utah that was pretty empty and I recall seeing a sign identical to that one that read last chance for gas for 163 miles. What exits there were were ranch exits. I remember thinking how screwed we would be if we broke down out there. Seeing those deserts on the list was no surprise. Those images brought me back to the Sam Kinison bit where he talks about starving people moving where the food is.
    But none of that can touch a low-level flight over the Polar Cap. I had that opportunity when I was in the service and it is just nothing but ice as far as the eye can see, with a bit of blue where the ice breaks up. I remember this very strange sense of calm coming over me because it dawned on me that if we did go down we wouldn't have to worry about staying alive because nobody was ever going to come looking for us anyway. Like I say, it's a strange feeling, one where you had to be there I suppose.

  • @air9music
    @air9music Год назад +3

    I'm absolutely loving the stories and experiences in the comments, lovely to find videos which foster such discussions!

  • @confused_beekeeper
    @confused_beekeeper 3 года назад +20

    Hey my sister lives in central Idaho on The River of No Return. No roads in. It’s 4 hours on a dirt road and a 6 mile hike down the mountain into her canyon, or a 2 hour dirt road and 1 hour of jet boat plus a 5 mile hike up to her secluded canyon homestead. The arduous trip doesn’t stop me from visiting her four times a year though! I love the remote country!

    • @sunshineyrainbows13
      @sunshineyrainbows13 3 года назад +1

      A homestead? That's so cool!

    • @libradawg9
      @libradawg9 2 года назад +1

      I hope she doesn't have a large horror movie selection, lol.

  • @morganfreeman8390
    @morganfreeman8390 3 года назад +60

    Being from NC, I took a trip from Vegas to the Grand Canyon and I realized that it is so empty out west! It was like going from town to town each like an hour apart.

    • @cindersofcreation
      @cindersofcreation 3 года назад +3

      As a guy born and raised in N.C and have driven up to N.Y and down to Florida I still can't even fathom it having never seen that level of emptiness!

    • @Xambonii
      @Xambonii 3 года назад +10

      As someone who lives in the west, there are certain road trips that I have had significant stress about running out of gas. There are areas with plenty of gas stations then there are stretches that if you run out of gas it will be an hour before you see someone else. I suspect you are lucky enough to not worry about that ever.

    • @wxstednxghts
      @wxstednxghts 3 года назад +2

      Yesss, I went to Vegas with my family a few years ago and we went to the grand canyon and it was soooooo empty but it was gorgeous out there😍

    • @patrick.3
      @patrick.3 3 года назад +1

      @@Xambonii in the west you gotta plan your gas stops ahead of time to make sure you don’t run out in the middle of nowhere

    • @stephenbray410
      @stephenbray410 3 года назад +2

      In 1995 I drove from West Yellowstone to Butte without filling up the gas tank. I did not expect that most of the small towns along the way had no gas station. Limped into Butte onto an empty tank. It's very easy to get caught out like that in the West.

  • @deserthethen
    @deserthethen Год назад +4

    Grew up in Centeral NV and took me a bit to understand how truly empty it is. Seemed normal as a kid. Now I live in NC and there's no breaks between towns, which is different to me.

  • @juliantaylor1819
    @juliantaylor1819 Год назад +1

    I've been working national parks and living in the open northwest US for over a decade, Idaho/Wyoming and Alaska have been my home for years now, I'll never forget my first drive out here, at first I was scared, and then was washed over with a feeling of refreshing isolation, I'll never leave

  • @bridgettewalker3739
    @bridgettewalker3739 3 года назад +17

    I'm from the high desert: a portion of the Mojave desert and the only place in the world, other than Joshua Tree National Park, that Joshua trees grow. Once you get past the major highways or interstates, there really is almost nothing for miles and miles. It's so close to some pretty big suburban cities like San Bernardino and Riverside so the sudden transition after you cross the San Bernardino and San Gabriel mountains is shocking the first couple times. I hated living there for so long because it was super isolating and there was nothing to do, but it's so beautiful and living in Sand Diego now for school I kind of miss it. The darkness at night and the gorgeous sunsets are unmatched in my opinion, let's keep it that way.

    • @seanthe100
      @seanthe100 Год назад +1

      Same, I was stationed at 29 palms we were literally the last town to Vegas or primm Nevada it was insane!! I remember being the only car on the road coming back from Vegas, living like that made me fall in love with even LA traffic, it was so awesome to see so many cars and know there was so many people there. The Mojave will change your perspective

    • @Spine929
      @Spine929 Год назад

      Lived in Hesperia for 11 years as a kid/teenager. I prefer wilderness myself, but there is a beauty about the desert.

    • @Ethan-um7cp
      @Ethan-um7cp Год назад

      LOL, I live far away from San Bernadino. and nowhere near JT Natl Park. And there are Joshua trees three miles from my backdoor.
      They grow over a huge range of the southwest and in two countries
      "This monocotyledonous tree is native to the arid Southwestern United States, specifically California, Arizona, Utah, and Nevada, and to northwestern Mexico"

  • @billymule961
    @billymule961 3 года назад +11

    I was driving in Nevada many years ago and I thought this is what the moon must look like, minus the craters. No sound at all, except the wind which you can hear before it reaches you.

  • @SweeneyJeffreyJ
    @SweeneyJeffreyJ Год назад +1

    I did an internship in the Frank Church Wilderness in Idaho. It’s the largest contiguous wildernesses in the lower 48, wolves, elk, bear, mountain lions and moose. Very remote

  • @Sdawggy
    @Sdawggy Год назад

    Your channel is awesome! Love nerding out here

  • @hapyjac6713
    @hapyjac6713 3 года назад +41

    I can tell ya, from experience, stopping on Hwy 50 between Fallon and Austin to stretch your legs, the wind will blow around your feet just for the company.

    • @spikespa5208
      @spikespa5208 3 года назад

      Sat in the middle of the road on Hwy 50 between Delta UT and Baker NV once. A half hour of blessed silence.

    • @thepeople5589
      @thepeople5589 3 года назад

      Well shiiiiit.

  • @tonyamikhalych6197
    @tonyamikhalych6197 2 года назад +67

    My favorite place (that I have been to so far) is Nevada. I traveled Route 50 years ago with my father. It was the most fun I ever had traveling. I loved being in the literal middle of nowhere. It is an experience I highly recommend for those who enjoy travel by car. Thanks again for a great video!

  • @kevlarfoxx3615
    @kevlarfoxx3615 Год назад +15

    That why I always travel with an Atlas in my vehicle. We rely to much on our GPS and phones for directions. My Atlas has saved me numerous times. Pretty scary when you realize you have no reception and forget to save a screen shot of your destination, especially while traveling in the white mountains. Seasoned traveler advice 😊

    • @basinho0211
      @basinho0211 Год назад +3

      Google Maps let's you download maps too, but phones die pretty fast!

  • @michaelchen8643
    @michaelchen8643 Год назад +3

    The sand hills in North Central Nebraska are a very important geological formation when rain falls in that area it goes into the ground and replenish is the Ogallala aquifer in certain parts of the underground reservoir for that reason it forms a very important rain catchment basin

  • @ConsolidatedPBY
    @ConsolidatedPBY 3 года назад +20

    I am so glad I found this channel. It's hard to find other geeks for this sort of stuff. In my home state of Colorado, in spite of population growth, there's still plenty of lonely and beautiful places here if you get away from the I-25 and I-70 corridors. I've been all over the Rocky Mountain West and Mother Nature is definitely more exaggerated here.

    • @GeographyKing
      @GeographyKing  3 года назад +3

      I'm glad you found it too! There are more geo geeks out there!

  • @parsnip2699
    @parsnip2699 3 года назад +136

    This is the travel guide for misanthropic people. No people, no problem!

    • @wannabetowasabe
      @wannabetowasabe 3 года назад +8

      Loving remote areas as I do does not make a person misanthropic. I love people, I just don't like cities, the definition in my book being about 16,000 plus people. In remote, rural locations you get to know people better and no one is pretentious, like you find in a city. I lived at a U.S. Forest Service ranger station on a dirt road outside of a town four years. Everyone there was living in Forest Service housing and we were quite close. The area was remote enough that sometimes I would work in the field, camping out or backpacking and I would not see anyone for the entire 4 night/5 day trip. When I did on some of these tours it was wonderful, people that enjoyed remoteness as much as I did.

    • @parsnip2699
      @parsnip2699 3 года назад +2

      @@wannabetowasabe Um, that was a joke dude.

    • @wannabetowasabe
      @wannabetowasabe 3 года назад +3

      @@parsnip2699 I guess you intend to have humor jump off the screen and hit people in the face. Humor doesn't work that way, at least not very often. Why, because you can't write down your voice inflection or tone or the look on your face.

    • @SombraPiloto
      @SombraPiloto 3 года назад +2

      Nowhere did Parsnip say that you have to be misanthropic to like remote places with few people, all they said was that misanthropic people will like remote places with few people. Reading is fundamental.

  • @legna6802
    @legna6802 2 года назад

    Thank you for providing us a wonderful knowledge!

  • @MythOfStudleySnape32
    @MythOfStudleySnape32 3 года назад +34

    Fun fact: Davy Jone's Locker in the 3rd Pirates of the Caribbean movie was filmed at the Salt Flats in NW Utah

    • @joez3706
      @joez3706 3 года назад +1

      That wasn't "fun"... 🤷🏻‍♂️

  • @judystine2783
    @judystine2783 3 года назад +11

    I live in Buffalo, Wyoming and I feel truly blessed.

  • @kennethmccullah4905
    @kennethmccullah4905 Год назад +1

    Just found your channel and subscribed immediately. I am not a big city guy at all, I love the vast empty wilderness and you nailed it with this video. The one place that I've never been but want to is Alaska. That is my dream vacation. I love your style and presentation, straight forward with no fluff. You come across as an awesome person. Thank you for doing this video.

  • @zenkahuna
    @zenkahuna Год назад +3

    Well done my friend. I have travelled through most the of areas you mention. I spend 6 weeks in North Central Idaho every summer. Truly a lovely place. I enjoyed traveling on the Loneliest Highway in Nevada and even took a long side road of of it which was even more amazing. Great videos. Many thanks. ZK

  • @drvp1997
    @drvp1997 3 года назад +25

    This summer I drove through Hyannis, Nebraska, yes that was the absolute middle of nowhere but at least I saw Carhenge

  • @ZiggZagg11
    @ZiggZagg11 3 года назад +110

    Have you ever experienced a view on the crest of a hill/mountain where you look out and as far as you can see there are no humans or signs of a human...? No power lines no roads nothing but nature...? Most people have never been to such a place...

    • @cellgrrl
      @cellgrrl 2 года назад +8

      And then there is the horizon line. There is something magical about it. We take it for granted but if you study it, it will pull you in. It is a glimpse of forever.

    • @tieoneon1614
      @tieoneon1614 2 года назад +3

      Yes sir. I moved to San Diego 8 years ago from northwoods WI. That itself was a beautiful area but I became a desert hermit shortly after visiting it. Sonoran, Mojave and Palm Springs area via enduro bike to get me 50 miles in from any dirt roads. I moved back to WI but will be visiting the desolate desert in the winters again. Cant see myself never not being there again

    • @thelandgravine
      @thelandgravine 2 года назад +1

      Too freaky. Done that in the coast range of Oregon. It's like being dropped into open water.

    • @pinlight97
      @pinlight97 2 года назад

      I have and I love it every time!

    • @duffal0
      @duffal0 2 года назад +1

      I live in Western PA and I’ve never seen anything like that

  • @ricstormwolf
    @ricstormwolf Год назад +1

    I think this is an excellent video. I keep coming back to it because I dream about bugging out to a wilderness location to escape society. Very comforting.

  • @dannypipewrench533
    @dannypipewrench533 2 года назад +6

    3:32 YES! That area is desolate, and absolutely magnificent. I was just up there a few weeks ago, it was my first time in that part of Utah, and it was among my favorite drives I have ever taken.
    I completely agree with that being the most beautiful scenery, I love the emptier deserts, the ones with little brush.

  • @Chaos8282
    @Chaos8282 2 года назад +14

    Absolutely loved Northern AZ and SE Utah. I live in a tropical jungle in the summer, mid to high 90's with almost 100% humidity, so the desert to me was heaven. Bryce Canyon is probably the most gorgeous place I ever visited. Spent 2 days on 4-wheelers all over the trails down there, and will never ever forget it.

  • @rhondatraywick3724
    @rhondatraywick3724 3 года назад +22

    No people can be a good thing! Silence is golden!

  • @allthingsbegin
    @allthingsbegin Год назад +1

    Thank you for this video.
    Drove from LA to Cook, MN in 2021. Went through a part of Wyoming that was amazing.
    If you ever visit Minnesota, I recommend driving to Duluth and then to Virginia MN, and then to Cook. It has some amazing scenery in the summer.

  • @themichaeldonovan
    @themichaeldonovan Год назад

    Thank you! This makes me want to explore more!

  • @peacecole1968
    @peacecole1968 3 года назад +27

    Nebraska is really an amazing state to drive through. As long as you stay off Interstate 80 you're going to see some spectacular sudden changes in geography.

    • @ubiquitousdiabolus
      @ubiquitousdiabolus 2 года назад

      The most interesting things I saw driving through Nebraska were being pulled by trucks, such as enormous construction vehicles, windmill blades, construction materials etc.

    • @philmickelsonscalves7585
      @philmickelsonscalves7585 2 года назад

      Once you get past Omaha and Lincoln, there ain’t shit in that state. One city in the middle of nowhere, north platte, and that’s about it. It’s creepy and lonely out there

    • @chelmrtz
      @chelmrtz 2 года назад +1

      How quickly it goes from brown and flat to green is really fascinating

  • @paceta80
    @paceta80 2 года назад +20

    Awesome video. I'm a truck driver from Stockton, California and been to 31 states so far. I've seen a nice amount of pretty remote areas. Montana sure is beautiful.

  • @davidwellen830
    @davidwellen830 2 года назад +4

    Great video! I share your fondness for remote areas. I live in Utah and some of my favorite places are in Idaho. Now I know why.

  • @jamesgoode9246
    @jamesgoode9246 Год назад

    Dude !!! -- You nailed this topic.
    I don't find anything to nitpick about or question.
    You even gave mention to the 3 least populated parts of the East.
    Excellent Job, Big Guy