Thank you sir for exploring places I can no longer go to. I'm 81 and in a wheelchair and greatly appreciate your travels that kind of get me out of the house.😅
@chrisarmstrong4119 ай бұрын
I'm just 72 ,but to damn lazy to go anywhere!!😂
@zcam19699 ай бұрын
@@chrisarmstrong411 i am going to that worthless piece desert if it has gold on it .i am 60
@cranucci21889 ай бұрын
SAD@@zcam1969
@icosthop99989 ай бұрын
@@chrisarmstrong411 L😂L
@DavidHBurkart9 ай бұрын
That is awesome. Respect Sir
@mikebrown19679 ай бұрын
I worked for the Bridge Gang on the SD&AE RR, 1969 - 1972. Spent many lunch breaks at Dos Cabezas. My boss, Jack Beal and his wife lived at Dos Cabezas when they first got married.
@FishKepr4 ай бұрын
What is your fondest memory of Dos Cabezas?
@ronm32453 ай бұрын
Dos Cabezas is Spanish for Two Cabezas.
@hildahilpert50182 ай бұрын
Dis Cabezas means two heads in Spanish.
@mtbkmaniac19 ай бұрын
My Neighbor George who served in WW2, told me that he took this railroad from Texas to San Diego way back in the 40's RIP George and thank you for your friendship and service to our country.
@rdred86939 ай бұрын
We love you George
@christopherlatham42549 ай бұрын
The thing you didn't recognize was an upside down truck flatbed. They loaded dolomite at the loading dock. There were mines close to the station and all the way over on the other side of S-2 also.
@3henry2149 ай бұрын
Every time I watch one of your videos, it stirs a massive sense of wanderlust in me, and this one is no different. I'm 70 now, and with mobility becoming increasingly difficult due to arthritic knees, these video are probably the only way I'll get to see the places you go to. Thanks for your continued efforts in bringing places like this to those of us that are physically unable to go there. Your historical research and narration is top-notch... safe travels!
@peirpoint569 ай бұрын
Medicare will replace your knees, just saying.
@MaryJohnston-s4l9 ай бұрын
Yes,you're showing us wonderful things that some of us are no longer able to go to.Thank you.I was born and raised in So Cal and I do love it still.Especially the deserts.
@nesleinf9 ай бұрын
Sad to see how little respect people show to historic places. I'm glad to see you showing us around and spending time to find exiting and forgotten places. I have seen lots of videos on the impossible railway, so if any are interested, just search youtube and they will come up. Thakns for showing us Steve! Love from Denmark
@SidetrackAdventures9 ай бұрын
The history of the railroad is fascinating. I'm hoping to do something else on a section of it people don't get to see often soon.
@elizabethbogle35339 ай бұрын
Nicely done!
@jerrystern10marissanikki629 ай бұрын
I agree. It’s unbelievable people cannot respect historical sites. At least we’re not as bad as they are in the Middle East. Were they destroy entire buildings and statues still not right anyway no matter how small or big the item is.
@TomG-f4r9 ай бұрын
Don't think normal volks-..think Charles Manson...drugged , psychotic and...bored , tired of dust and sands ,,, anti social is simply gravy . This is wastelands - here civilization hath failed . Repeatedly
@guitarstringman74039 ай бұрын
"This is the desert, there's nothing out here....Nothing." The desert IS what's out here and it's amazing. Thanks for posting another great one, Steve.
@russell-di8js5 ай бұрын
I fully get what your saying cos that was my 1st thought & then i realised maybe some1 was warning hippies etc that there would be no water or rescuers beyond the signs!!
@thesarge44579 ай бұрын
This is a Great way to get out of the house due to health issues, Thank You Sir. THE SARGE
@RaymondMullen-t9j9 ай бұрын
Why do People '''FEEL THEY''' have the right to Tag and Paint Buildings ??? Great Tour and History ... Thank You ..
@skydiverclassc20319 ай бұрын
You mean like the Native American petroglyphs, or the ancient Roman graffiti? I agree, it looks ugly now, but in a 1000 years, more or less, they might blend right in.
@Buckshot97969 ай бұрын
Even the natives were into tagging the walls.
@RaymondMullen-t9j9 ай бұрын
I Honestly don't think Native Americans would Disrespect areas as that ...
@Buckshot97969 ай бұрын
The natives would have covered the rocks with their symbols and graffiti if they had had the means to do so. People are people.
@acavell61849 ай бұрын
Why were four faces hacked into a cliff in turtle island (america)?
@FuHackers-wx9lq9 ай бұрын
Nothing like watching/seeing American history! Books are one way, this is the best way! 🇺🇲
@RetroRobbin599 ай бұрын
People suck. Ugh. Thank you Steve for taking me places I couldn’t go to otherwise. ❤
@Rfk19669 ай бұрын
It’s sad. People even tag rocks and trees these days.
@mattroberson86799 ай бұрын
I was born and raised in Hemet. My dad and I explored so much of the surrounding area anhills in the 70 and 80s. There is so very much history and things to stumble upon. I get so homesick when I watch these videos. Keep making them and sharing the great history of the southwest.
@1wholovestrees9 ай бұрын
The Kumeyyay would travel from Anza Borrego to what is now Cuyamaca and back again, depending on the season. The desert in the winter and the mountain in the summer. I used to be a park service volunteer for Cuyamaca and the history there is amazing.
@TomG-f4r9 ай бұрын
Hi , nice area , do you know where knappers point is ? ...great gig...your lucky ...I'll get back there someday..
@1wholovestrees9 ай бұрын
@@TomG-f4r I’m thinking that’s on the Harvey Moore Trail.
@ellafields94248 ай бұрын
Cuyamaca State Park was my first camping trip! We took the 🐎 🐎 & kids for a week end. (Late 1960s?). Always ❤ treasure that trip!!
@varminter69 ай бұрын
My first camping trips were to the Dos Cabezas area in 1971, camped there many times. The SD&AE was running then. Beautiful nighttime view looking toward Imperial Valley and beyond. Its so sad that people fell they can go out and spray paint what ever they want. Spray paint the inside of your home so we don't have to see your ugliness. Indian Hill also has some nice pictographs
@rcarlier19 ай бұрын
I think I'll see your videos every week since i think about 1 year now. For someone from the Netherlands, these videos are really interesting. In the time that I have been following your channel, I have learned more about the Southwestern United States than I learned from television or in school. Your channel is very informative and entertaining, among all the nonsense out there on the Internet. Keep up the good work Steve.
@ronm32453 ай бұрын
Just out of curiosity, could you tell me what they teach about the American Southwest in the Netherlands?
@bettym73469 ай бұрын
I don't remember when we explored this area, but sometime in the 70s. My husband started walking the tracks and found the tunnels between Dos Cabezas and Goat Canyon had been blocked. (No doubt for the safety of the dummies who like to walk around in the desert.) Well, that dummy just climbed over the hills the tunnels were cut through. When we found out the tunnels had been cleared, his dream was to build a railcart, but never got around to it. I particularly love your sidetracks to places we explored fifty years ago. The survival of that water tank and phone booth is amazing. It all still looks the same - no buildings to be seen when we were there.
@JoJo-oc2zp2 ай бұрын
Your detailed historical facts are an amazing compliment to all of your first class videos. Thank you for all of your hard wok.
@Jay-vo4ec9 ай бұрын
Railfans keep dreaming of bringing that railroad back to life. I doubt that will happen. Excellent video as usual!
@Antyvas9 ай бұрын
PETE B WILL GIT ER DONE
@SidetrackAdventures9 ай бұрын
Oh yeah, it would cost so much at this point. All of those bridges and tunnels not to mentions the sections of tracks that are under rock slides.
@bigpebble9 ай бұрын
The big thing you say you didn't recognize sure looks like an upside-down flatbed trailer since it appears to have a strap cincher, and boards for the deck.
@jimmychanbers24249 ай бұрын
Vandalism sucks. Great video as always!!
@janethartwig7748 ай бұрын
Another fantastic tour of a place I’ll never be able to visit but completely enjoyed. Your videos are amazing. Greetings from Northern California.
@SpanishEclectic9 ай бұрын
Back in the 90s, a friend bought his first 4-wheel drive SUV, and the 'gang' made many jaunts to this area. We visited the stage coach station, and found the 1930s quonset huts, among other things. Such a quiet and interesting area. I wonder if the flowers come earlier to low-lying areas where the water pools; I've seen them on low hillsides and the desert floor. Glad you were able to capture the pictographs; thank you for sharing a bit of the early history of the area, and reminding people to be respectful. Yeah, those windmills. So weird that you can practically see the pulsing red lights from Arizona as you drive the 8 West back toward San Diego.
@SidetrackAdventures9 ай бұрын
The lights suck because you see them and think you are getting close to the mountains and home, and then it takes forever to get to them.
9 ай бұрын
Flowers depend on the rainfall, which varies from year to year.
@JohnCouch-m4f9 ай бұрын
Something new to add to my So. Cal. desert adventure bucket list! I've been exploring the desert for most of my 66 years and yet there is so many more places left to discover, so I thank you Steve for showing me yet another place to head out to for a great day trip. As always when you bring us along with you, you help educate us with history along the way on your adventures. Great production as always, and thanks for adding the pictograph app, as it does help make them pop out of the rocks. Looking forward to next Wednesdays adventure!
@chrisarmstrong4119 ай бұрын
Hey Steve!!😊 my grandfather worked on building that railway when he was 17 year's old,, plenty of stories he had!!❤
@LanceX-hv3gr9 ай бұрын
I hope you wrote them down or recorded him speaking.... When an old person dies... It's like a library burning down... Those experiences and history are lost forever!
@PinInTheAtlas9 ай бұрын
Hooligans! Such a shame that people feel they can destroy things! No respect. Pictographs are so fascinating. Interesting video Steve. Thanks for sharing
@TheStuport9 ай бұрын
Salute and Give Tonto a Rub from COW-lumbus, Ohio MOO👋
@SidetrackAdventures9 ай бұрын
Yeah, there is a cave near there that has some really amazing pictographs too.
@PinInTheAtlas9 ай бұрын
@@TheStuport will do. Thanks
@PinInTheAtlas9 ай бұрын
@@SidetrackAdventures tucked away so they can remain safe!
@spaceflight10199 ай бұрын
I'm amazed that the government hasn't removed all signs of the existence of the railroad.
@craftergin9 ай бұрын
I great video! I love Anza Borrego State Park. When I was a kid in San Diego, we would go out there every Spring. I know you said there weren't wildflowers, but the ocotillo were fully leafed out. Flowers to follow.
@SidetrackAdventures9 ай бұрын
I had heard that the flowers were in bloom, but it must be another section of the park. I'm actually glad it wasn't in this area, because the flowers bring a lot of people usually.
@robdunham73982 ай бұрын
I’ve been there. What you I.D.’d as a concrete phone booth, is actually a military guard shack. A guard was posted there 24/7 during WW2 due to the railroad’s strategic importance.
@TWX11389 ай бұрын
@7:36 that weird corrugated brick style was apparently common a hundred years ago. In Mesa, AZ the US government had constructed a Post Office and federal building that uses that style of tall square brick. The space has been turned into an events center after a renovation. The exterior of that section of the building was done in that austere federal concrete style so common in the roaring twenties and the great depression, but the interior the brick is visible. It looks like roofing tiles for what it's worth, and I expect that this style of brick fell out of fashion fairly quickly as I've never seen it anywhere else including in other public buildings and schools constructed from the late 1940s onwards.
@larryaldrich43519 ай бұрын
I've got too old to visit the desert so I can still see the hills in the Big Open, courtesy Side Track Steve.
@brucebarnes96384 ай бұрын
I camped here with some friends back in 1998. We hiked to the Goat Canyon trestle. Great memories, thanks Steve!
@mikecarr14849 ай бұрын
My grandpa said when they did that interstate construction if you didn’t pay the politicians in your area your town was cut completely out of the interstate highway. This is why so many little towns failed afterwards. So basically this gas station owner must have refused the extortion and he got left in the dust. Also why the interstate is so ridiculous in some places. They had to deliver what they promised the people that payed. So it got rerouted thru towns that paid.
@mythologicalmayhem9 ай бұрын
Interesting to know
@SidetrackAdventures9 ай бұрын
Lots of bribes and kickbacks helped shaped our highways and interstates for sure.
@AbandonedMines119 ай бұрын
Very cool video! Really appreciated all the historical information you provided. I drove my Corolla out to that water tower back in August 2009. I don’t recall having any problems with the road. Looks like the road may have gotten a bit worse since those days. Hard to believe those railroad tracks haven’t been used since 2008! I think one of the first tunnels you come to if you continued walking the tracks is partially blocked by a huge collapse that happened several years ago. I don’t think whoever still owns the railroad has bothered to make any repairs or safety upgrades. Therefore, I don’t think it will ever be opened to traffic again. Truly abandoned! I enjoyed the pictograph section near the end of the video. I’d always heard about that place. Regarding the water tower there at the station, when I was out there in 2009, someone had drawn a huge, female face on that water tower. I didn’t notice it in your footage, but maybe you didn’t film the side of the tower where the face is. Is it still there? It was really iconic looking and quite remarkable! Maybe 16 years’ worth of unrelenting sunshine and heat has caused it to fade away.
@tttyuhbbb98239 ай бұрын
Maybe another fool with another spray can! 😂
@LanceX-hv3gr9 ай бұрын
As for abandoned mines... The old original highway 8, the concrete one that still exists in bits and pieces had lots of mines, mostly gold I think that you could see from the road when I was a kid and heading over to Arizona from InSane Diego. {before Interstate 8 and multi-lane separating up and down the mountains and passes}
@AbandonedMines119 ай бұрын
@@LanceX-hv3gr I’ve been in some of those mines that you’re speaking of. Definitely a lot of history out there that is slowly being forgotten.
@SidetrackAdventures8 ай бұрын
I think it's been cleaned at some point then new graffiti replaced it. There were a few sedans that made it most of the way but the last bit was too rough with some bug ruts.
@joefin59009 ай бұрын
I'm old and living in New York City. I love your videos. Rode the ATSF through the southwest in the '50s from Colorado Springs, through Needles, into LA. Also, the music on this one is great! Nice job, Steve.
@joewenzel51429 ай бұрын
Excellent job filming that bird of prey.
@PalmBeachDog9 ай бұрын
Let’s load up the car with a case of spray paint, and had 100 miles out into the desert. What is it with people?
@timhazeltine3256Ай бұрын
Graffiti must be a deep seated human imperative. In the Valley of the Kings in Egypt, some of the royal tombs were graffiti-ed by Greek-speaking tourists almost a thousand years after the tombs were created.
@craig07699 ай бұрын
I hiked the rails from Ocotillo to Jacumba around mid 2000’s. At the time there were train cars loaded with drywall on the tracks just sitting there with no engines. It also looked like someone was attempting to repair certain parts of the railway mostly in the canyon toward Jacumba.This area has such stunning beauty from the rock features, plant life and ancient human history. No matter what random place one picked to explore around you were guaranteed to find something interesting.
@terrenceodgers58669 ай бұрын
I see all those fancy, 'renewable energy' windmills, as usual, were not doing their job. Another great episode - thank you.
@samurguybriyongtan1469 ай бұрын
A rarity, the Anza Borrego desert is really windy and lot of the time.
@samurguybriyongtan1469 ай бұрын
Did you get any idea where the eponymous boulders and spring are?
@CarsandCats9 ай бұрын
You mean the bird choppers? It's a lot quieter when they're not. They ruin the scenery, catch fire and kill birds. Nothing environmentally friendly about that!
@bettym73469 ай бұрын
Construction of those wind turbines caused devastating flooding. Not green.
@xibbumbero19457 ай бұрын
Thank you for this video. My uncle Jose Gonzalez worked for the A&E RR. He lived in the crew quarters in the pic that showed them. He lived with his wife Julieta in the end unit on the left. In one shot near the units there is a big dead tree that has fallen over. That was their shade tree. I spent a few summers with them with my Cousin Dennis Olson. This was in the early 50's. .
@rh55639 ай бұрын
Thank you my name is Steve! Love your work, brother. 👍👍👍
@Last_one_before_I_go9 ай бұрын
Another great vid. You do a wonderful service, showing us Californians the overlooked history of this special place.
@sonja4379 ай бұрын
Thank you Steve. I love watching your videos and plan to visit some of the places that you highlight in the future. And thank you to your wife for supporting you in this venture. Plus, I really appreciate how respectful you are of the land, sites and people.
@TheStuport9 ай бұрын
Excellent excursion Steve! You as always managed yet again to make it Possible to see The Impossible Dos Cabezas Railroad Station! LOVED the "Historical Marker" at Anza-Borrego State Park entrance. Precisely @ 1:35 we can actually hear you trying not to laugh as you say "No, this is the message"! 🤣 As always your humor is much appreciated! You preparation and research is not lost on your Fans either Steve. Always bonus when you show past photos of the topic you are commenting on. What a story about Mr. Berg going above and beyond to stop that passenger train. You always Deliver The Goods and The Sidetrack Adventures Posse LIVE For Hump Days! Cheers and MOO From COW-lumbus, Ohio 👋
@SidetrackAdventures9 ай бұрын
That monument got a good laugh out of me. I never noticed it before, but apparently its been there for years. Usually the Border Patrol is set up there so can't really stop, but the checkpoint was closed that day.
@dougsmuaythai9 ай бұрын
Another great episode. I hiked from Jacumba the first time whike in the Boy Scouts around 1979. Carrizo Gorge has always had a magical feeling for me.
@dewaynemoffett27489 ай бұрын
I have made that hike as a scout also!!!
@scottpearce87729 ай бұрын
... As have I, probably closer to 74 or so...
@joewenzel51429 ай бұрын
Odd in my area also - a few yellow flowers and purple ones but scattered. I'm thinking once it warms up, it finally hit the 70s yesterday, the flowers will follow. Spring is today.
@r0n5tea1th9 ай бұрын
In the early 70s (72-73) I was in the navy & was on a detachment out to NAF EL CENTRO to belt ammo for the F8s I worked on. On an off day I drove my 1966 Belvedere out to Dos Cabesa & then hiked to & back the goat canyon trestle from the East. It ended up being an all day excursion since we didn't get out to the station (Dos Cabesa)to start hiking until about 11:00 As I remember it was in January so it was good hiking weather.
9 ай бұрын
Great video. Enjoyed it. I've lived in Arizona for over 20 years and haven't visited any of these places, mainly because my wife and kids would have zero interest in this kind of subject. It wasn't necessarily vandalism that affected that rock art. We get a lot of adverse weather in this part of the country, rainstorms (even hail sometimes) and dust storms plus violent changes in temperature from winter to summer. All of those will cause rock paintings to degrade over the centuries.
@johnnyfreedom34379 ай бұрын
Dirt roads always excite me I love to go down them and see any old sites! And the petroglyphs are amazing, that new function on your camera helps a lot! And I sure wouldn't want to bring an old two-wheel drive car out there! Thanks for the trip!
@SidetrackAdventures9 ай бұрын
We saw a few 2WD sedans including a Tesla. They all stopped about 3/4 of the way there though and didn't try the last section where it gets a bit rougher.
@jastnatur9 ай бұрын
I love history. You have awesome channel me and my 5yr love watching these videos so educational and calming at the same time
@SidetrackAdventures9 ай бұрын
Thank you, I appreciate it.
@garykennedy99149 ай бұрын
Thanks Steve! Contrary to the monument at the start- there is a lot out in the desert! It never gets old exploring the deserts of the Southwest. It truly restores the soul. Love your travels👍
@mssixty34269 ай бұрын
Yay! It's Wednesday - time for another video from Steve with Sidetrack Adventures. I always look forward to these. Thank you Sir! I'm amazed a train was on those tracks as recently as 2008 . . . I wonder what for?
@donalddodson73659 ай бұрын
There was gypsum mining in the area, and the successors to the San Diego Arizona Eastern Railroad kept freight operations on the isolated Eastern branch.
@mssixty34269 ай бұрын
@@donalddodson7365 Thanks for the info.! Gypsum mining - I didn't think of that😄 and it makes sense. Cheers!
@SidetrackAdventures9 ай бұрын
Our pleasure!
@LanceX-hv3gr9 ай бұрын
Plaster City.... You can see it off to the north of Interstate 8 once you are down in the desert....
@heyoldman20039 ай бұрын
thank you Steve for taking the time and effort to bring us along . what fun 😊
@mauriceclark487012 күн бұрын
I. Must. Say. Background. Music. Is. Perfect adds. Body. Too. Good. Viewing. You. Get. About. Nice. Videos. Thank you. !
@jimholmes25559 ай бұрын
As always great video. If I were a younger man, I'd love to experience these adventures with you. But I'm wheelchair bound and can enjoy you wonderful explorations on my tablet. Thank you!
@tdhawk72849 ай бұрын
Thank you for the vid. I love your meanderings around the SW and the research you do to bring these places to life.
@gingerriviera36549 ай бұрын
Thank you for having awesome and normal educational content. Very appreciated. You're awesome.
@brucebarnes96389 ай бұрын
Great video Steve as always. I camped here with friends about 20 years ago, amazing history. The highlight was hiking to the Goat Canyon bridge. Thanks for the memories!
@billkeller55559 ай бұрын
Another enlightening and enlightened journey into our past. So close to our modern world, yet so very different. Thank you.
@robertfritz99169 ай бұрын
That monument used to have a bronze plaque telling the story on Juan Baptista d'Anza and his expedition but it was stolen by metal recycling thieves in the 90s, as were most of the plaques of this type. Our winter home is fifteen miles or so north of here, and we can assure you theat this plenty to experience if you know what to look for.
@kathysmith42749 ай бұрын
I have to say that you are excellent to listen to. And your music selection was perfect. I’m happy to have found you so I can travel along side.
@SharonMiller-po6rp9 ай бұрын
Love running around in the desert with you. This was a good one!
@ronk22059 ай бұрын
I have driven back and forth on I-8 many many times over the last sixty years and really enjoy your videos on so many of the places that I have passed and wondered about. Thank you.
@russell-di8jsАй бұрын
Thanks again Steve for your post which as always you do with a respect & sensitivity to the history + heritage of the areas you visit. Thanks also for showing any informative plaques you come across as i often pause at these moments to read & digest the notices. UK
@CARRVENTURE9 ай бұрын
Thank you!! My wife and I absolutely love listening and learning about what’s in our backyard. We look forward to your videos every week. Your content is bringing us closer together. Thanks again!
@larescats92289 ай бұрын
Hello steve. Another great video ive been to dos cabezas a few times always enjoy it Awesome. Im ready for you next trip
@SidetrackAdventures9 ай бұрын
Thank you.
@EricT37699 ай бұрын
Thanks for the adventure. I’m amazed I could see the eagle, but you got it.
@SidetrackAdventures9 ай бұрын
Thank you. I really appreciate it. We saw an eagle sitting on a rock, pretty close to us, and I guess it saw us getting the cameras out and it flew off before we could get a shot.
@EricT37699 ай бұрын
@@SidetrackAdventures That’s typical. I used to try to photograph wildlife. They’ll let you stare at them for 15 minutes, but try to aim a camera at them, and they act like you’re going to attack them. 😂
@rockdaddio699 ай бұрын
0:02 Dear Steve, thank you for the great video. The loading area might have been related to the Dos Cabezas quarry, which is just half a mile away. We visited that place about four weeks ago. There is evidence of a rock, crusher and a lot of quartz crystal. Maybe they were looking for gold ore and shipping it out from that loading dock. Two days ago, we went up to Borrego Springs, and we only found flowers at Henderson Meadows. I guess it’s late in the season. Thanks again.
@petem62918 ай бұрын
Steve, the scenery is so beautiful in that part of the country the sky is so blue those clouds look like cotton…
@AnthonyLee-u1z9 ай бұрын
I hate vandalism if i had the time and extra money with a few friends. I'd repaint the water tower and build some shelters for hikers.
@MAI-zl3li9 ай бұрын
Very very cool. I've been to Dos Cabezas plenty of times and never knew that's a phone booth. I come in the opposite direction through Jojoba Canyon, it's a very cool road once you turn right from Mortero Canyon Rd. Also, the wildflowers are definitely blooming more towards borrego springs off Henderson canyon Rd or Coyote canyon if you have an off road vehicle. So you were about an hour away from the bloom
@jeffsiegel48799 ай бұрын
Wow, I've been visiting Dos Cabezas once a year for four-wheeling, and the hike up the railway. Kudos to you as I know you're not a "4 wheeler" and I'm aware that the area has a LOT of soft sand that will bog down even an off-roader unless you know how to drive on it. The real gem in that corner of the desert is the Thousand Palm Oasis at the top of the mountain!
@LanceX-hv3gr9 ай бұрын
Do the walk and spend a couple of days up there in the mountains... You also may get to see the the Bighorn Sheep like I did many years ago when I walked the rails from well before Jacumba. Find someone to drop you off at one the areas that are close to the tracks and start you walk there... Take LOTS of water... at least 3 gallons. Also, Pack it in, Pack it Out... leave only footprints... {:~)
@rrelectric51599 ай бұрын
Thanks Steve. I have never seen anybody cover the Dos Cabezas station before. Great effort tog et there and show it.
@jessstone74863 ай бұрын
Wow! Talk about "out in the dingles"! Enjoyed this > especially your mention of the heroic railroader, and where he lived. That was kind. I love the southwest, but never really included Nevada in my view. Now I can see where the Silver State may be 'destination worthy'! Your approach is a thoughtful one, and is appreciated.
@johnnyirwin98389 ай бұрын
Thank you for filming this like your adventures. I had plans to do what you do old towns places of history western but when l retired l become sick then disabled now l can’t but l love your adventures thank you so much l enjoy and dream may be l will get better. 😊✝️🙏🛐🇺🇸
@charlesyell63189 ай бұрын
It always brings a since of sadness when looking at places like this. To think about the dreams and visions that lay in rubble now.
@tttyuhbbb98239 ай бұрын
Only humans with big hearts know the taste of NOSTALGIA!... 😢
@ScratchGlass99 ай бұрын
Fantastic trek again ! Going where most will never have the chance. Thanks for taking us along. Cheers from Detroit 🇺🇲
@davelj19413 ай бұрын
Really enjoy your videos Steve, thanks for the hard work and time you must put into them.....they are appreciated.
@maxortega46906 ай бұрын
Thank you for your videos. We live in Salton City and you've helped us get to know our surrounding area.
@glennferris27649 ай бұрын
Two things, first I’m curious on what you are driving out on these trails? This was one of my favorite places to offload in my Jeep and I’ve made many guesses on what that concrete structure was, l even asked my two sons who are railroad engineers and one guessed maybe something to store tools in but none of us guessed a phone booth :}
@mobiltec9 ай бұрын
My friends and I used to ride those rails through the Carrizo Gorge and we have crossed the Goat Canyon trestle many times in our home built cart. Now you see them all over You Tube but I believe that we were the first to do it on these rails back in the 1970s. When we rode them they were in disrepair. Then they were rebuilt again and again ruined by mother nature so now you can ride them once more. I'm thinking of building another cart.
@pappysproductions9 ай бұрын
Are part of the Facebook railcarts group?
@mobiltec9 ай бұрын
No I'm not on FB. We did this way back in the 70s. I believe we were the first to do this for fun. I've only been on the S&D/AZ tracks and the Eagle Mountain tracks. Back then the Eagle Mountain tracks were live and we knew the track maintainers who gave us the train schedule so there would be no conflicts. They actually allowed us on their tracks.@@pappysproductions
@TheAsif51827 ай бұрын
always love to see your videos .these are the places where ordinary people dont go . its rare choice .and not 100% but somehow i like it .
@dld40457 ай бұрын
Steve, Thank you for respectfully showing these places in the pioneer west that unfortunately I will never be able to visit myself.
@ScottDLR9 ай бұрын
Great job as always Steve. You were sure out in the middle of nowhere for this one!
@kenterdman79699 ай бұрын
Thanx for all your labors! They are always interesting! Best wishes to you.
@ellafields94248 ай бұрын
❤ Would love to see all rhose Ocotillo cactus when in bloom. Thanks for the view of yet another place I can only see Thanks tyour videos! 😊❤ Happy Trails from NM
@TheShornak9 ай бұрын
At about 9:50 you walked up to something on the ground and was kind of square in shape. I am pretty sure that is a truck flat bed flipped upside down. I see a winch on it where you would tighten straps that would go over the load on a truck.
@jetpi788 ай бұрын
Love the channel! Thanks for all the tours. Living on the east coast we have our interesting places but the west is a mystery to many.
@MrLee-ue7iu9 ай бұрын
Thank you for what you do. The research you put into these video's makes them very interesting. Your voice overs are perfect.
@eastbaykidd85749 ай бұрын
Definitely two thumbs up for Steve's work here. 😃👍👍 Interesting story, well researched, and the videography is great. You seem to have mastered those fades/transitions on the road quite nicely. From a technical perspective, this is one of your best if not the best videos. Looking forward to crossing paths some day and meeting you in person out in the middle of nowhere. 😎
@joeblow78689 ай бұрын
09:25 Upside down flat bed of a one ton truck, note rachet tie downs.
@espritmike9 ай бұрын
Hey Steve, you mention that the ruins were destroyed by vandals in 10 years yet there seems to be no material left. Can I assume that people go to these abandoned places to loot all the building materials to build something for themselves rather than going and buying bricks and materials themselves to build?
@s.marcus3669Ай бұрын
Great tour, thanks. When I lived in Ventura California I would listen to a popular AM Talk Radio station out of Los Angeles called "KFI", AM 640. The morning drive guy was (and still is) Bill Handel and his show producer's real name was irrelevant because his on-air name was "Dick Cabeza"....
@juliogonzales54419 ай бұрын
Great 👍 STEVE....Be Safe 😊
@SidetrackAdventures9 ай бұрын
Thanks 👍
@davidduffy3089 ай бұрын
An amazing amount of research and information! Thanks for sharing and brightning our day. Wishing you and your family safe travels in all of your adventures.
@SidetrackAdventures9 ай бұрын
Thank you.
@garyleibitzke41669 ай бұрын
The origin of the word/term vandal. The word vandal comes from the Vandals, the Germanic tribe that attacked Rome in 455. The tribe's name meant "wanderer," but the word vandal was used in the 1600s to mean "destroyer of what is beautiful." As I used to live in San Diego for decades I've visited this site many times.
@LanceX-hv3gr9 ай бұрын
Yea, me too, I once lived InSane Diego... Were you ever there when there was still water to the tower and the buildings were still standing?
@garyleibitzke41669 ай бұрын
@@LanceX-hv3gr Nope, it was pretty much like the video when I got there.
@lawrencebernas9229Ай бұрын
Thoroughly enjoy your videos and historical narrative. P.S. Enjoy the background music, it’s not not some videos where the music dominates
@donalddodson73659 ай бұрын
Thank you, Steve.
@SidetrackAdventures9 ай бұрын
Thank you, I really appreciate it!
@caryanderson72129 ай бұрын
At least they didn’t use nuclear bombs to clear a path for the railroad, like in another one of your videos when they wanted to build a new highway through a mountain range…and I think you said that they wanted to detonate something like 26 nuclear bombs to open up the area…but sounder minds prevailed, thank God!!! I enjoy your videos and I appreciate your narration and facts that you include in your videos. ❤
@SidetrackAdventures9 ай бұрын
They might have tried had the bomb been invented. They were determined to get that rail line open.
@GregPrince-io1cb9 ай бұрын
Great trip Steve.... my travels has taken me many places few humans have been to.. You are getting to enjoy what so few have done.. Keep on truckin!!
@lesthiele49219 ай бұрын
Hi Steve, that was a great tour around this abandoned sration, I assume there must be hundreds of this type of place arojnd the USA, Best regards from Australia
@kenbearsley83229 ай бұрын
Excellent video thank you Steve. Dam vandals have to ruin everything. Would be interesting to talk to some older native American Indians in the places you visit. They would have great knowledge and stories to tell.