As a Norwegian. It's always fun to me when I hear Americans or people from other countries talk about "Snow day". :D I don't live too far from Trollstigen either, driven there several times due to work. 8:38 Trust me those guys are not freezing, that's very warm clothing and when you work with snow like that. You'll want to take off a layer of two.
@Frosty4RealКүн бұрын
yup. 40 mins from me :P yeah imagine having snow day :P
@elinmoftedalКүн бұрын
To be honest, in Stavanger we have snow days….(snølov) in addition to a similar day in the spring when it was a perfect sunny day. …I thought everyone had that 😅
@afrog2666Күн бұрын
True story (:
@Xirque66623 сағат бұрын
@@elinmoftedalnope, haven't heated about it anywhere in the country 😅
@declaredjeans755519 сағат бұрын
@CodBabyWalk Fellow Ålesunder?
@JonOlavBjoerke2 күн бұрын
I actually work in a Norwegian factory that produces snow plows, and a few of them, we export to USA. The american importer sells them under the name snow wolf.
@StefanRixö5 сағат бұрын
'Snow blower' look when the 'clean' the railway in Norway... 🇸🇪
@Merete862 күн бұрын
Yes Tyler. It's 30 years since 1974 🤭🙄
@mammastenhjerte2 күн бұрын
Yea, this made me laugh so hard.
@svenwesterlund34052 күн бұрын
Fits with the video before this, norwegians talking about education in the US :-)
@R3TR02212 күн бұрын
Tyler is American. Education seems to be illegal over there. Don't blame him for the system not educating him
@glacieractivity2 күн бұрын
Hush!!! I feel young again 😀
@christopherjensen30342 күн бұрын
😂 yeah! I'm only 30 apparently for Americans.
@Fandomfreak0772 күн бұрын
i remember one time as a child, it had been snowing heavily that day and my family where driving to my grandparent, we had to follow one of these snow plowers, it took two hours longer. but i'm so thankfull for all the people that makes it easier to live in Norway in the winter
@VikingRageGaming2 күн бұрын
Really agree with you there. Actually I trwally thank him for bringing this video out in the open, cause we Norwegians can really complain alot when it comes to the snow plowing and why we aren't prioritized and it can go days before they actually reach us. But we really should be thankful
@Methinna2 күн бұрын
11:46 ...Most of the snow has usually melted in June, when Trollstigen opens.
@stuinNorway2 күн бұрын
"Most" of Norway's "Summer roads" that like trollstigen are closed in the winter, they will aim to reopen for mid-May, but that will vary year to year. If there's a year with little snow, or an earlier melt, it could open earlier, BUT, if it snows again might have to re.close.(Generally the further North, and more inland, the later the opening date will be) Not far from us, near Sirdal, they measured 8m, 25ft, snow walls after they cleared the road to open, whereas where we are an hour or so drive from there, the mose we've seen in the last 20 yrs is about 2ft of fallen snow.
@terezahlucha46132 күн бұрын
8:42 Believe me, you warm up when shovelling snow for few hours 😂 Plus as Norwegians of that generation, they would be wearing 100% woolen sweaters, not coats. Coats were fancy attire to be worn to church on Sunday, not for manual work. Plus wool is actually great for what we now call functional clothing. Perfect balance between thermal insulation and airing sweat off.
@liselotte32812 күн бұрын
Also, its June and temeratures above 0°C. 😅
@AudunWangen2 күн бұрын
@@liselotte3281 Some people think 0°C is very cold 🤣
@volkhardhenschel1863Күн бұрын
The Trollstigen road is 55 kilometers long! 😊
@VikingRageGaming2 күн бұрын
Another thing about the old pictures btw is thatif you study the guy up in the left in the first picture, he is holding a huge hand saw that he cuts into the snow before the guys with shovels cones and can the dog out quadrants of snow at the time. This saves a lot of time when if the guy with the saw had not been there ens snow would just cave in and it would take a lot more time
@AlexTheFruitcake2 күн бұрын
TBF: We do not get 10ft of snow EVERYWHERE at winter time. This is area spesific. Because the road follows a rather steep slope of montain, a lot of the snow that falls at the top of the mountain will roll down the slope causing it too become several feet of snow wall along the road. In most highly populated areas we get maybe 2 feet or less because cars produce gasses that melt most of the snow before it gets to stay. Also: it's not magic how accurate they are. Most of the people who do that work has driven this road for literal years and they also have very accurate gps's in the vehicle that will warn them if they go too much off course.
@the_oslovian2 күн бұрын
Now you have to see the "brøyteballetten".." The snow ploughing ballet" at Oslo Airport! That's like ten of this working together...
@Zirion123Күн бұрын
@@the_oslovian my dad works at Gardemoen ✌️ its amazing to watch
@Norwegian_Bastard20 сағат бұрын
iirc one of the biggest snow plows in the world is at gardermoen. think ithe plow was 27m long. looks insane going down the strip thats for sure
@arnehusby14202 күн бұрын
We have lived in this country for thousands of years. So we don't close schools and roads because it's Winter.
@TomKirkemo-l5c2 күн бұрын
I have a picture of my grandfather somewhere vith a horse and a sledge. The snow is twice the higth of the horse. But this is on the mountain passes. And it isn't like that so much anymore. But on the two main crossings between the east and west it's still like this.
@DonGorgen6 сағат бұрын
In those old photos of the guys shoveling the snow by hand they're not wearing heavy winter coats because it's already spring by the time they open those roads, so the weather is not that cold. It's usually done in april/may, those roads are kept closed mid winter.
@espekelu34602 күн бұрын
Regrettably, the Trollstigen was closed this year due to the high risk of landslides. It is now being discussed who will pay to secure the road for the future, as many believe the state should undertake this. Since Norway benefits from all the tourists who often come only to visit the Trollstigen. But tragically, the politicians believe that the Municipality and the county should be responsible for the maintenance. And as long as this is discussed, Trollstigen will be kept closed. Something many Norwegians also find very sad. Because we are of course proud of those who once built this road, and we think it is very nice that so many foreigners also appreciate the Trollstigen.
@ahkkariq74062 күн бұрын
The road should certainly have been the responsibility of the Norwegian state.
@Gazer752 күн бұрын
Pretty sure the government already pledged some money to help fund the work to secure it. Climbers have been working on it for months this summer and autumn.
@oldis642 күн бұрын
You must understand that the level of snow is massive because you're up in the mountains. A few hundred meter higher up makes all the difference. It can rain in the valley and snow a little bit higher. Nice video! 🎅
@Krozmar2 күн бұрын
Back in the old days, when the sun arived they usually had prepeared stations along the road with ash that was usually aviable even if the snow was high, these positions where carefully choosen to be very windy so there would not be snow there. then they just walked over the marked road with the sticks and throw the black ash over the top of the icy snow and let the sun do the work melting it, before they did the hard working finnshing it off
@eivetjafrasenja2 күн бұрын
There is a reason why we call this workers, the heros of the winter roads
@AudunWangen2 күн бұрын
I don't think this job will be replaced by robots and AI any time soon, because this takes some skills for sure.
@kbejustervesenet72612 күн бұрын
I come from this place (Åndalsnes) .. . . This year thay had to close the road for the whole summer, due to rock-fall. They have worked on clearing the mountain-side for loose rocks for a whole season now, and will probably be able to open the road from next summer-season.
@trinewestbyejrgensen48382 күн бұрын
In Norway we also stay at home if it snows too much. So it depends on what much is. Every year during the first snow fall everybody freaks out. ( people who forgets to change to snowtyres) 😊
@AudunWangen2 күн бұрын
Never stayed home because of snow a single day in my entire life, and I live in eastern Norway, where we also have a lot of snow. I've never lived very far from school or work, though. Sometimes public transportation is not an option when it snows, but the roads around here are usually cleared quite quickly.
@MuppemaniaКүн бұрын
I live a few hours south of Oslo, the winter is a little shorter here and we have the regular snow plows clearing the main roads often with the smaller roads less often. But where I live we actually get a lot of snow, I got trapped inside twice last winter with having to call family to dig me out since I was unable to open my front door with snow having pilled up keeping it shut.
@Cochmazh2 күн бұрын
That guy makes very good videos. His channel is full of good stuff.
@TylerWalkerYouTube2 күн бұрын
Thank you!
@SteifWoodКүн бұрын
You have to *plan and prepare* to live in Norway. Just this week the whole of North Norway had a blistering storm so severe that much of the infrastructure (schools, airports, roads, etc) had to shut down - which is rare in Norway. I myself have an ambivalent "crush" on snow where I live here in the lowlands in SE Norway. Yes, we seldom experience as much snow as in my childhood - when my dad had to clean the roof of our house and we couldn't see out the window and jump from the 2nd floor (1st floor is called that in Norway) - but sometimes we still get a meter or thereabout and we have more icy conditions now than before (climate change). At the end of the day, it's always a struggle to keep my driveway passable and all heavy loads (like building materials, firewood, etc) must be done before snow and especially ice arrives. In any case, every winter I have to prepare and settle in for massive snow/ice cleaning up and down my abnormally steep 100 meter driveway. At this point I have 3 blowers: one tiny but indestructible Honda I inherited from my dad and keep as a spare, one old wheeled Snapper I keep with tire chains for those extra icy moments, and one big belt driven Ariens with all the whistles and gadgets - which I bought to get a flat surface and to munch through those pesky plow edges at the entrance. I have given up calling the local municipality or company that cleans the roads with their big tractors: they're unreliable when they actually come and when they come they charge me a staggering price.
@FrankHarwald4 сағат бұрын
0:40 In Germany, we are told to put snow-chains on out cars' tires so we can actually drive on snowy roads even if they didn't happen to be removed of their snow .
@tordlindgren2123Күн бұрын
i've went over those places plenty of times. a few times during the winter when i was younger, and several times during summertime after the snow have thawed out. sometimes there's still snow storms coming out in the mountains middle of summer, but generally they're really interesting roads to drive on. If you were to visit norway i highly recommend going on a roadtrip, either with a rental car or better. someone from norway that can drive there.
@johnnygood483118 сағат бұрын
As someone from Ontario, it sort of reminds me of long ago when we used to have snow. I would go out during the big snow storms just to go drift jumping in my car after they are telling people to stay off the roads, so I don't have to worry about traffic.
@oysteinsoreide4323Күн бұрын
some roads are closed in the winter. These roads are examples of that. If they are open all the time, the snow build-up will never get as tall. I have seen like more then 10 meter high walls of snows along a road some decades back. It was Hardangervidda which is not held open all winter in case of much snow.
@bearofthunder7 сағат бұрын
You should take a look at Matthews whole channel. He makes a lot of great videos about biking in Norway, including some cautionary tales.
@linbelejacobsen5037Күн бұрын
Most smaller mountain roads are closed during winter. They have ferries or more efficient alternative routes through tunnels driving under the mountains and not over them. It sure is pretty when they open.
@Styrestian2 күн бұрын
we are not in year 2004 Tyler 🤣
@davidrobinson9702 күн бұрын
You should see the level of snow they get in Japan.. It will bow your mind! Also where my wife comes from is very much over the top. We sent a picture to her brother when we had a huge downfall here in the UK; he sent us a picture of a typical snowy day in Anhui Province - it snowed up to the third floor of his block of flats!
@andreix1232 күн бұрын
Back In my day, we had to find the school and dig it out before class could begin
@gahustad2495Күн бұрын
Hello Tyler 🙂 I live about 1,5 hour driving from this scenic road. It is always a great experience to visit this place. -By the way: The name "Trollstigen" is translated "The troll ladder" on english. Cheers from Geir 🙂
@audunaa14942 күн бұрын
The road is cleared first, so if the melting snow and smaller avalances releases rockslides it`s possible to do something about it in eary stage before opening date.. When it`s "safe" for public it officially opens for the season . this summer it had to close caused heavy rain and unstable rockslides to be secured. A old mountain pass that you drive around on modern roads for faster travel and wintertime. But always safety first, cause the main traffic is by tourists
@SaraKvammen-tx7qc2 күн бұрын
It's scary to drive on the road when you can't see over the snow...I've done it....hard to know where you are...😂
@TullaRaskКүн бұрын
06:19 In the us that truck would triple the size lol
@Rene-kg7pfКүн бұрын
I've been there the end of the road (remote end) goes down to the world heritage place where the city Geiranger is... That's down by the fjord... Those who live there can in worst case take ferry in winter (if the road is closed in both ends coz of snow)
@ZoieNhoaКүн бұрын
Our heroes, the snowplowers!! :-D :-D :-D
@laustpeternielsen-norman9569Күн бұрын
I have pics from 1964 when i was 2 on a family trip to Norway in volkswagen autocamper. The snow is double height the of the autocamper😊
@grotler18 сағат бұрын
10:52 it's a old school waffel iron
@kilipaki87oritahiti2 күн бұрын
Whether it snows a lot in Norway varies from year to year as well as where in Norway you live. Global warming is real. I live in Oslo and no snow yet. It’s mostly rain and ice here for the past X years. There was a few years there was a ton of snow, but again, this varies. When I grew up during the 90’s and 2000’s 15-30 minutes by car/bus outside of Oslo it was more snow and much colder. But Oslo is mild as it’s near the ocean which keeps it tempered. And Trollstigen is simply just the scenic route. The main road goes through a tunnel for easier access, logistics and traffic flow as well as security. Of course you won’t see much. that’s the downside🤣🤣🤣 And those workers were wearing knitted wool sweaters. Wool and dress in layers is literally how we have survived.
@mariaberg37802 күн бұрын
Joniboi (a norwegian youtuber)has reacted to your video.The one with you trying norwegian chocolate.
@philip45882 күн бұрын
Thats a weird guy
@mariaberg3780Күн бұрын
Again:JONIBOI (A NORWEGIAN KZbinR)REACTED TO YOUR VIDEO.THE ONE WITH YOU TRYiNG NORWEGIAN CHOCOLATE..
@Klay_422 сағат бұрын
No no, Trollstigen was closed a long while during repears on this road, june is the middle of the summerdays in Norway, in november it start snowing, so from that month they start cleaning the snow, continous the whole winter.
@koppadasao2 күн бұрын
At 17, before I got my license, I drove through such a road, in May. Still got 3 meter high snow walls next to the car...
@DarelBah2 күн бұрын
we always go there in august and there are still patches og snow that have been in shadow the whole time. So you could say snow never melts in some parts. And this is still in south of Norway. Imagine when you drive 1000miles north, what's going on there :)
@HaraldKlette2 күн бұрын
Those are caled SnowBlowers, not SnowPlows!
@LeperMessiah22 күн бұрын
The road is about 50 km. This is awesome but the high-speed.. plowing on the main mountain roads is insane. Yeah we can drive around on sealevel in the off season but it takes about 3 hours longer.
@torebereczky8954Күн бұрын
It is summertime!
@scottcampbell90082 күн бұрын
Any country with a lot of snow clears this way. Canada, Japan, and I would guess even the US (Alaska).
@livb69459 сағат бұрын
Surely there are places like this in the US? Alaska for example?
@oblivirator2 күн бұрын
8:42 there whering wool shirts and the work they do keep then warm.. so no need for thick jackes
@zx9005Күн бұрын
They use GPS nowdays. Like EasyDig or simular. System has a failure of maximum 30cm or about 9,3 US inch or less
@oldis6419 сағат бұрын
That road has been closed for at least a year due to "rock-slides". Its gonna open in june/july they say.
@mjelves2 күн бұрын
*50 years
@avlinrbdig57152 күн бұрын
1970 was thirty years ago and noone will tell me otherwise
@monicanyhus50642 күн бұрын
@@avlinrbdig5715😂😂😂
@AlexGarcia-co1ec2 күн бұрын
Imagine if you're on a bike between those mountains of snow, and then the upper "shelf" starts to shift because of warmer weather, then the upper shelf slides into the lower shelf, smashing everything in between. You have nowhere to run.
@mammastenhjerte2 күн бұрын
It is pretty cool (pun intended) to drive on these. A huge portion of Norwegians have snow blowers/plows with these wheel blades, in much, much smaller versions for their driveways. They weigh so much that the store selling them brings it our to your car with a fork lift.
@koppadasao2 күн бұрын
There's places in southern Norway where there's still snow patches in July...
@AudunWangen2 күн бұрын
Some places the snow never melts. That's how you get glaciers, and we have a few of those still.
@koppadasao2 күн бұрын
@@AudunWangen I wasn't talking about glaciers...
@afrog2666Күн бұрын
Hehe, if you work hard, you don`t need warm clothing (: Bcak when I had double paper route, I RAN the whole way and TRUST me, I was never cold ;)
@thorarisan2 күн бұрын
"We don't have this in America." How does he think they get around in Alaska and northern rockey mountains? America is large....
@TrondLangeland7 сағат бұрын
Thats amazing. Im born then i i thought i was 50😂❤
@oysteinsoreide4323Күн бұрын
I'm from Norway, but I have acually not been on Trollstigen road.
@finncarlbomholtsrensen11889 сағат бұрын
I'm sure they sometimes have a hard time finding thee road below the snow!
@RoteLarsКүн бұрын
I have a video from Trollstigen summer session in other channel I have on KZbin (need to reupload it with English text)
@jonasbjerga17392 күн бұрын
You should watch, Norwegian clearing snow airport
@smolPjusk2 күн бұрын
How do americans get to work if they just stay inside their houses when it snow outside?
@chrisjones-vu7he2 күн бұрын
i have driven through this road with snow walls i have to say it is an experence to do so .
@bodilfrausing79662 күн бұрын
Tyler, why did you skip the first part? 🤷♀️
@olehaugan95552 күн бұрын
This is spring, btw
@penaarja2 күн бұрын
Been there at summer of 1978
@MichalBergseth-AmitopiaTV2 күн бұрын
Alaska must have this? Or..?
@KristineSjli7 сағат бұрын
I live in norway 🇧🇻🇧🇻🇧🇻🇧🇻🇧🇻🇧🇻🇧🇻🇧🇻🇧🇻🇧🇻🇧🇻🇧🇻🇧🇻🇧🇻🇧🇻🇧🇻🇧🇻🇧🇻🇧🇻🇧🇻🇧🇻🇧🇻🇧🇻🇧🇻🇧🇻🇧🇻
@Azekable2 күн бұрын
Come visit ill bring you, see it every year
@jarls58902 күн бұрын
Seen Star Wars; Empire strikes back? The icy Hoth planet - filmed not far from there.
@Sisi_norwegian1232 күн бұрын
30 years ago? Really? 1974 was 50 years ago! It was 1994 30 years ago! Sorry not hating or anything😊
@Kajsun2 күн бұрын
Theres no snow in oslo yet 🥲
@volkhardhenschel1863Күн бұрын
Yellowknife in northern territories CANADA is 60° North but Trollstigen NORWAY is 62° North!! Thats further North. Now you understand why there is snow in June😂😂😂😂
@KurtGAndersenКүн бұрын
Yellowknife is 62 degrees, 27 minutes north: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yellowknife
@geirhenriksen1376Күн бұрын
Everybody that is Norwegian 😅 👇👇
@FPV-Jon22 сағат бұрын
Tyler, out of curiosity, how many % of your audience is norwegian? 😏
@elinmoftedalКүн бұрын
This is real and not uncommon either. I mean it’s all over the country
@penaarja2 күн бұрын
How the snow can stop traffic.? From Finland🇫🇮🤣
@oysteinsoreide4323Күн бұрын
you cannot exactly close down the society because there is winter and come out of the house three months later ....
@Azekable2 күн бұрын
David Grøvdal is in my family 😂
@steinarhaugen76172 күн бұрын
🤓
@84com832 күн бұрын
1 kilometer eaquals half a mile plus a furlong
@BizzyX782 күн бұрын
----- @84com83 ----- - A rough estimate at best, 'cause they are not equal comparatively speaking... In reality, you overshot the distance by '5,840 meters' or roughly just under '6 meters'. The distance of '1 kilometer' equals exactly '4 Furlongs, 213 Yards, 1 Foot, 10 and (2000/25400) Inches' or simply '(15625/25146) (International Standard-)Mile'. -----
@MrKveite1Күн бұрын
Hmm you are not very informed about your own country, the mountains of california had 30 feet of snow last winter.And yes people live there so the roads had to be plowed. Just mentioning it. So yes, usa have a lot of snow too. Not where you are but you still have it some places
@JohnnyRoscoe012 күн бұрын
The coolest thing is that all that white stuff turns to money….💶😃🇳🇴
@aggiefields9496Күн бұрын
95-year old pro waffle maker shows the hairy bikers how it's done, is the video you're looking for. Heavy black object is a kind of waffle fryer.
@ChristianWikborg2 күн бұрын
we use helicopter to now my dad is working in a nirbay plaeise sory for the miss speling
@GEBSOS2 күн бұрын
Trust me, a lot of people here too can't drive during winter. Some are too late to switch to winter tyres, some thinks they're invincible with AWD, and there are even those who says studdless tires are just as good as stutted tires.
@Allrights2 күн бұрын
sUPERnICE!!
@Zirion1232 күн бұрын
Lots and lots torque and big engine is how they are doing it haha.
@MrDinuzza2 күн бұрын
are you a skiaboo? like a weeaboo for norway?
@GnosticAtheist2 күн бұрын
Ok, that Skiaboo makes sense. I guess thats the most famous thing we have going, sure beats pillaboo from the viking age.