I passed through it in 1976 heading West bound, I was a new 21 year old 3rd Officer on a 40,000 deadweight bulk carrier, there was little wind, I was on the Bridge wing and looked back and saw a huge wave that I have never seen since. It was enormous, and heading fast towards us, there was nothing I could do, the wave lifted the after end of the ship high and the bow tipped right down and then the bow was lifted high and the stern right into the water. Amazingly the ship settled down and nobody was on deck so nobody was hurt. Thank god there was no wind but as the narrator says you will never forget it and I’m 69 now and still see that wave clearly in my head👍
@Ricossmft28Ай бұрын
Thank god it hit the aft first otherwise you might not be here to tell the crazy story
@SirbadoneАй бұрын
"Bending forces" must have been incredible
@andrewhumphreys586Ай бұрын
@@Sirbadone Yes, maybe close to the limits but ‘bulkies’ do bend a lot even in moderate seas. Anyway, it ended well👍
@akashajoti645620 күн бұрын
Wow!!! Thank you for sharing your experience!!!
@ashishkundalia15 күн бұрын
I just loved Handy sized bulk carriers. Best ports and berths. If it were a Cape Sizer maybe no one would be here to tell your story. 😮
@mtngrammy6953Ай бұрын
My father and I crossed the Drake Passage to Antarctica from Ushuaya, Argentina. The same cruise ship we were on had, on its previous trip, been badly hit by waves which broke windows and damaged the electrical systems. Luckily, when we crossed we had the smoothest crossing ever experienced by our crew! My dad was 93 at the time and the trip to Antarctica had been a dream of his since he was about 10 years old. It didn't disappoint! Thanks for this informative video!
@marionnadeau8457Ай бұрын
@@mtngrammy6953 I would go back to Antarctica in a heartbeat! It was SO much more than I expected.
@wesstubbs3472Ай бұрын
@@marionnadeau8457 Soon it will be so much less.
@DK.448Ай бұрын
That’s cool that your dad got to live out his dream. I must say Antarctica is a very special place. I was on the Explorer II when I crossed the passage. An amazing experience.
@nathanmarchant2175Ай бұрын
Great explanation of one of earths most dangerous places
@RadicalCavemanАй бұрын
@@marionnadeau8457 Time to move there!
@3LLT33Ай бұрын
“Why ships never go there.” Proceeds to talk about all the ships that go there.
@tonyhalliday3188Ай бұрын
'Proceeds to shout' for nearly 14 minutes.
@AlaskaSlayАй бұрын
😂
@indiaandrews6996Ай бұрын
There are some brave souls.
@jrodriguez7531Ай бұрын
I know that feeling all too well, I slept in an elevator once.
@MervynPartinАй бұрын
Yes, I'm afraid that it is just another video churned out with the intention of making money with negligible consistency or facts.
@danielthomson8341Ай бұрын
Went through the Drake Passage twice back in January as part of the Ultimate World Cruise, on Royal Caribbean's Serenade of the Seas, which is now one of the smaller cruise ships but still has a capacity of over 2000 passengers. The first time through was the only time in my life that I've gotten seasick. My cabin was on deck 10, and higher cabins are worse when it comes to motion sickness. So I went down to my buddy's cabin on deck 3 to see if it was any better. His window looked like the door on a washing machine. It wasn't noticeably better down there, unfortunately. On our second time through, it was completely placid, the "Drake Lake". The captain even made an announcement that he'd never seen it so calm.
@smallstudiodesignАй бұрын
Thank you for sharing this wonderful story 🙏🤩
@brianmck7363Ай бұрын
And that’s with ballistae’s and stabilizers helping to keep the ship stable!!
@amoeba_xАй бұрын
Fake
@suckinspongebobsАй бұрын
@@amoeba_x you're not very bright, are you?
@iamthebrokerАй бұрын
@@amoeba_xfeel like you’ve contributed now…. Loser.
@hikerdude5265Ай бұрын
We've learned about Cape Horn and the explorers to the Pacific in grade school. Seeing modern vessels struggle under these incredible conditions continues to amaze me about how a 16th century crew could ever do this in a 150' wooden galleon! Great seamanship, great craftmanship or great luck. maybe all three. Great doc vid, thanks!
@jerlewis4291Ай бұрын
In 1981 I was on a Landing Ship that was doing a six month cruise around South America. There was a lot of talk about taking the Drake Passage, but the consensus was it was in the middle of winter and the weather could change too fast for us to go through safely. We passed through the Straits of Magellan and through the narrowest navigable channel in the world, The English Narrows. There were parts when standing on the bridge if we looked out each side all we saw were tree tops. As we started the narrowest turn the pilot told the Captain that we would have to back the starboard engine to make the turn and told him that he had to use his judgment to give the order because he knew the ships turning abilities. I remember the Captain out on the Port bridge wing watching the ship enter the turn and then he yelled "Starboard engine back full!" As soon as we got the indication the engine was reversing he yelled "All ahead 2/3rds!" The pilot told him that he had been on 3 ships that struck rocks because they turned too late. There was a DDG following us and we heard over the bridge to bridge radio, "Nicely done Skipper" from the task force commander.
@FunRunEndsInTragedyАй бұрын
I have to say, that’s a very cool anecdote. Nice.
@stickinthemud2324 күн бұрын
Was it INCHON?
@jerlewis429119 күн бұрын
@@stickinthemud23 No, U.S.S. Plymouth Rock, they wanted to said the Drake Passage but weather was too iffy. Plus we had picked up a port call in Punta Arenas Chile. We anchored out and a bunch of us went skiing in late August. It was wild to see the ships in the bay from the top of the mountain.
@catmeow11111Ай бұрын
"This Is Why Ships Never Pass Under South America" *Laughs in Chilean Navy*
@ac1646Ай бұрын
😂😂
@DS-lk3txАй бұрын
@@ac1646 Laughs in what navy?
@chommie5350Ай бұрын
He's right... When you look at a map or the globe.... It's "under" south America.... So he's English is right
@09RiceGirlАй бұрын
@@chommie5350 ..unlike yours 🫣
@DonnieGoodman-tz7kzАй бұрын
Ive been a Fisherman in the Bering Sea for 21yrs. What I've learned is that any of the worlds oceans. At any time of the year anywhere in that ocean. Can become violent enough. With big enough waves. Can overcome any vessel man can build. The ocean is the ocean . That water doesn't matter where it is or what we call it. It is the most powerful force on earth. That is why there are ships that were considered seaworthy on the bottoms of every part of every ocean on the planet. My advice to any sailor is something that I have survived by doing. Always , always prepare your vessel for the worst weather imaginable. Before you're in the open waters. And if something is off. Or doesn't sound or feel or smell right. Get up and see for yourself that it is just your imagination. Because given enough time. You will find that one time it isn't.
@unclejohnbulleit2671Ай бұрын
And that, By God, is absolutely sound advice!!!
@ac1646Ай бұрын
Thank you. Very enlightening (and scary).
@FrostyMcGАй бұрын
Yup, crossed the drake six times, and spent two seasons in the gulf of Alaska, along with countless sea days in the north and South Pacific and Atlantic. The ocean can kick your ass anywhere, and often does. Everything needs to be ship shape, secured for motion, etc. That’s the only way to leave the dock,
@norab2125Ай бұрын
@@DonnieGoodman-tz7kz my 41 years of experience on almost all the oceans will agree to your comment.
@wesstubbs3472Ай бұрын
The Bering is a shallow sea, thus large waves can build suddenly. You can be in fifty-foot swells in the mid Pacific and no really be able to tell that you're going up and down because the swells are so far apart. Wait until they start to hit shallow water! That said, I read a first-hand account by some people who were in a large Trimaran in the Pacific off Chile who said that they surfed a large wave in mid-ocean and got to 70mph. Lake Pontchartrain covers over 600 square miles but it's only about 12 feet deep. It can get rough in just a few minutes, catching many a sailor unprepared. Prepare for the worst, hope for the best.
@charlesward8196Ай бұрын
And yet, Earnest Shackleton and the crew from ice-crushed Endurance ROWED across the Drake Passage to South Georgia Island, in open lifeboats. Wooden ships and Iron Men!
@damaddog8065Ай бұрын
Mostly very very very lucky boys.
@shauny2285Ай бұрын
The sea takes who it will and leaves who it will. @@damaddog8065
@csjrogerson2377Ай бұрын
They didn't row. They sailed. The James Caird had covered decks to keep the weather and the sea out and a little hatch to look out from and navigate by sextant.
@wasserdaggerАй бұрын
I'm guessing they took a goodly ration of rum off the 'Endurance' with them before they cast off, lol
@csjrogerson2377Ай бұрын
@@wasserdagger Having been stuck on the ice for nearly 2 years at that point, they might have run out. Bugger.
@14goldmedalsАй бұрын
I’ve been from the Pacific through the Panama Canal and onto the Atlantic. And now I’m even happier I did! Amazing place the Canal is and knowing how long ago it was conceived and built is mind boggling. Men of great vision back then.
@MervynPartinАй бұрын
And it's just as amazing going in the other direction- loved it.
@didntknoicouldchangethisАй бұрын
And endurance! Malaria still existed when they did this project...in the jungle! We are very fortunate the men that worked on this canal gave their blood and sweat.
@margiewinslow872Ай бұрын
Crossed the Drake Passage twice in 1978. Also curcumnavigated Cape Horn twice in 1974. Research ship with no stabilizers. 20 on board. Going to Antarctica it was Drake lake. Had a barbecue on deck. Coming back, tied to our bunks. Nobody out and about. Only time I ve been seriously seasick.
@kevinmcdowell9074Ай бұрын
@@margiewinslow872 you sound like youve had an interesting time, I'm jealous.
@vibratingaught3656Ай бұрын
You’re badass, lady
@kaijafry4528Ай бұрын
What a woman! 👍
@IAMTHESWORDtheLAMBHASDIEDАй бұрын
that would be a dream I'd have in a dream of me having dreams... my god that'd be amazing... like not the, not the bad.. err ya know? lololol just everything else you said... lol. I would love to be able to any of that..... oh my god.. lolololol
@RemoWilliams1227Ай бұрын
Thank you very much for sharing this with us!
@cellgrrlАй бұрын
In 2010 I took a cruise to Antarctica. Left Buenos Aires and traveled to the Falkland Islands as we were headed south. The waters on that stretch were the worst of the whole ship, the waves were high and we got tossed around. People pretty much stayed in their rooms for that part. I really don't remember the water during the Drake Passage thus is must have been okay. I think we did that by night. So we attempted a cruise through the Antarctic Peninsula but only got through half of it when a huge wind kicked up and nearly, I kid you not, push our large cruise ship on its side. The ship was tilting steeply. The Captain turned that 900 ft ship around on a dime easily as he decided to go back the way we came in, he was afraid that the winds would blow him off into uncharted water. It all turned out fine so I loved the adventure, however, it seriously could have turned out much differently. As we approached the tip of South America, it was a beautiful sight, the last bit of land of a continent. It was a little rough, but mostly well behaved that day. It was the highlight of my life time. Antarctica is other worldly.
@BeverlyM52Ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing your great adventure! It's the only way I'll ever experience it!
@angelikaopland7880Ай бұрын
Contrary to one comment in the video, ANY ocean voyage contains an element of life-or-death risk. Out there, you are completely dependent on your ship &, aside from the weather & waves, there are several ways to find yourself in the water with no land or help in sight: falling overboard, collision at sea, fire on board or simply springing an uncontrollable leak are all events that can lead to a really bad day. Power loss on a motor vessel in heavy seas is a serious emergency all by itself, as it then becomes difficult or impossible to prevent getting turned sideways to & rolled over by high wave crests, called "broaching" in sailor lingo. BTW, the Gulf of Alaska can be a pretty interesting patch of water; storm seas off the North Pacific bounce off the cliff faces that form the other 3 sides of it & create a "chop" that must be seen to be believed...& storm seas of up to 100 feet have been reported there.
@seltaeb9691Ай бұрын
These huge awful cruise ships I wouldn't fancy their chances in a storm down there, but hey if it sinks then that's a plus. Everyone safe in their lifeboats of course.
@cellgrrlАй бұрын
@@BeverlyM52 Aww, I am glad I gave you an idea of the place. Just watch any video here on KZbin, so many people have posted their cruises. I enjoy watching them even if I had been there, I got to see things I somehow missed. The colors are white, black, grey and deep blue. Nothing else.
@cellgrrlАй бұрын
@@angelikaopland7880 You are so right. I learned very quickly there are no guarantees when you head off to Antarctica. Weather changes by the minute. Deep down I understand that experience could have easily been another "Titanic". We figured it would only take 10 seconds to pass out in that water temperature.
@tfp0052Ай бұрын
Thank God I joined the Air Force! It's only mildly interesting from twenty thousand feet. However, all of my respect to the folks who must do this!
@luna775Ай бұрын
Haha one guy says was on The enterprise when they crossed through this pass, sounds dreadful to do on a boat full of nauseous marines
@charlieabbot3649Ай бұрын
And the guys in the Navy hate you, your dog, and your Pet Rock!
@Vagabond_EtrangerАй бұрын
Off we go, into the wild blue yonder Climbing high, into the sky.... 3706 BMTS April 1990. TSgt Crum.
@ChrisLichowiczАй бұрын
@@luna775 We don't get nauseous on ships the only time a Marine is getting nauseous and throwing up on a ship is after coming back in from Liberty.
@MPier23 күн бұрын
I'm sure you have your own turbulences and no-go atmospheric spots
@petecedor28523 күн бұрын
My grandmother sailed from England to San Francisco around 1900 and yes - no Panama Canal - so she had to go around that tip of South America. I have newfound admiration for her courage.
@jcjrsmithАй бұрын
Sailed the Drake Passage on USS Independence (CV-62) when we changed homeports from Norfolk to San Diego in 1988. She was too broad in the beam to go thru the Panama Canal. On the carrier, we hardly noticed the movement caused by the heavy seas, but the cruiser that was with us, USS Lake Champlain got tossed about.
@edwaggoner7403Ай бұрын
Served several years in the US Navy on a DDG. I loved the rough seas, occasionally. I found I could sleep very well during storms. They rocked me to sleep.
@lasttrimestr49califos89Ай бұрын
Oh man, nothing like it...go Navy!
@harleyhawk7959Ай бұрын
was on the charles s sperry in the Atlantic in 70s a boiler tech. it was designed to 47 degree rolls. Once out we took took 42 degree rolls. only time I got sea sick. you could walk on the bulkhead going down the passage way @lasttrimestr49califos89
@ChrisLichowiczАй бұрын
@@edwaggoner7403 I always get the top bunk! 😆
@KosmicKarenАй бұрын
Ugh I would hate it
@IAMTHESWORDtheLAMBHASDIEDАй бұрын
HOLY TOES I was just talking about how much I felt like, right, just right, everything felt right, lol, when I was down in the gulf off of the keys on a boat that shouldn't have been where it was and everyone else I was with had to hold on with dear life and I was just vibing with it giggling not holding a thing just moving my weight with the boat. hah. everyone hates when i'm being me LOL "GUYDUDE! YOU'RE GOING TO GET KILLED STOP BEING A... DAMN MAN!" (my being manic isn't at all far fetched here heh)
@peterway7867Ай бұрын
You forgot to mention the 1916 journey that Ernest Shackleton did through the Drake Passage from Elephant Island to South Georgia in a tiny life boat. Still today one of the most incredible sailing feats ever endured.
@Notme195Ай бұрын
If anyone is interested read "Endurance: Shackleton's Incredible Voyage" you will not be disappointed.
@blurredlights5235Ай бұрын
that's a great way of putting it. A mighty feat that was not achieved, but endured.
@peterway7867Ай бұрын
The book "Endurance" is defiantly a great read. And if you are ever in England I suggest taking a trip to Dulwick College. The life raft they sailed 1300 kilometers in "The James Caird" is on display there.
@Notme195Ай бұрын
@@peterway7867 That's definitely going on the bucket list.
@toughenupfluffy7294Ай бұрын
Shakleton was in Antarctica for the better part of three years. He started out with 109 men, and ended up with 109 men. The only casualty was one man lost some toes to frostbite. That was in 1914-1916.
@ChrisLichowiczАй бұрын
Funny, I've been there and done that in The Marines. Went completely around the southern tip of South America. That makes me a Blue Nosed (crossed the Arctic Circle) Red Cheeked (crossed the Antarctic Circle) and a Shellback (crossed the Equator).
@jatnarivas8741Ай бұрын
Opposite to a brown -nosed, rosy-cheeked, spineless dude
@cynot71Ай бұрын
How many different ships were you stationed on?
@ChrisLichowiczАй бұрын
@@cynot71 I could have sworn I replied to this. I can only remember three off the top of my head. USS Cayuga USS Fairfax County USS Ponce' Maybe about 3 or 4 more I can't remember without digging out a bunch of old photos.
@sickofcrap89926 күн бұрын
Yeah, but...Are you a turtle? (This is from the Navy WWII era. I don't know if the marines were in on it.)
@ChrisLichowicz6 күн бұрын
@@sickofcrap8992 I might be if I knew what it was I never heard the term turtle in the Marine Corps. Snail, yep, turtle, don't know. The snail term, was being a grunt, you had full packs, water, beans, bandages and bullets. Basically, carrying your home on your backs like a snail.
@unclejohnbulleit2671Ай бұрын
Everything you are describing happens regularly in the Bering Sea, and often in the North Atlantic and North Pacific. I've sailed all three, for two decades. In a small ship this type of life is regular, just another day. We used extra rolled up clothes or boots to raise the outboard side of the mattress on our racks. No going topside unless with safety lines, tied off, etc etc. And eating, yeah, with your five compartment metal tray, you left one open for your drink, and just combined the food into one compartment. You held your tray with one hand to keep it level and your food on it, and used your fork to eat with.
@ajciccar3Ай бұрын
1983 I was on board the USS Bristol County off the Kamchatka peninsula for 2 months. (our story was we were testing the freedom of the seas, we were actually spying on Russian subs) The Bering Sea was so rough we had a crack in the ship from the keel to halfway up the stack. And I have never seen seas like that in my life, I loved it.
@anthonyburnam3415Ай бұрын
Just the 2 stories on this page make me respect Sailors like I respect soldiers that get tired and worn out. What sailors did in the World Wars was crazy af. Just waiting to get sunk by a German sub with nothing to protect them. Not a single armed ship among them for a couple of years. Not even a Garand probably. Not that a Garand would help anyway. Rock solid heroes is what they are and to any men who went down to the sea in ships I say the same and big thanks to all of you.
@myobmyob2215Ай бұрын
Being sent to survive in the Aleutians is not only a famous military punishment its deadly
@AncientWildTVАй бұрын
are there any big challenges you had to face?
@FireStick-nu4pnАй бұрын
All this makes me want to hear A Salty Dog by Procol Harum
@AKStovallАй бұрын
The strait of Magellan is plenty wide for ships to pass with plenty of room. the channel is close to a mile wide at it's narrowest. the only reason a ship would take the drake is because they don't want to have a pilot on board to take the Magellan. You do have to have a pilot on board from a buoy about a mile out of either end, to a mile out of the other end. it's about a 16 hour transit. basically to save a few thousand bucks, they'd rather take a chance to lose their lives.
@jamilateef6392Ай бұрын
thanks @akstovall
@lxportugal9343Ай бұрын
Even in the Magellian strait, the Pacific side is very bad. Magellian was incredibly lucky... because that side is never pacific. He named the Ocean Pacific based on a rare day 🙂
@CrowPalАй бұрын
Tying yourself down to the bunk is the origin of the phrase "sleep tight".
@christophergrinton4035Ай бұрын
Not so, but makes a good story. The origin of the phrase is beds hundreds of years ago used animal skin, cut into strips, to suspend the mattress, much like today’s sprung mattress. It was THIS goodnite wish that led to the sayin. Source; Brewers Book of Phrase & Fable.
@Smedley1947Ай бұрын
I love etymology. One of my favorite groups of classes when in college 50 years ago.
@@christophergrinton4035 Actually the origin isn't known. It was first recorded long after rope beds were still in common use.
@johngordy8071Ай бұрын
"And as ye wallop around Cape Horn, heave away, haul away, ye'll wish t' God ye'd never been born, we're bound for South Australia..."
@theobserver2309Ай бұрын
Another dark period in England's history. Those poor buggars being shipped off to Australia for stealing a loaf of bread. Very cruel times.
@kevinmcdowell9074Ай бұрын
Ships never pass under South America because you need to have somebody there to hold it up, and it weighs a ton, so good luck finding someone to help you with that.
@thomasmaughan4798Ай бұрын
I was thinking more like a huge tunnel under South America.
@kevinmcdowell9074Ай бұрын
@@thomasmaughan4798 oh, thats a good idea; we could set up a toll booth and make some good money.
@emiliebovaАй бұрын
😂
@ronfullerton3162Ай бұрын
Oh boy!!!!!
@amoeba_xАй бұрын
Exactly, these weirdos probably still think Walmart is actually a grocery/super market. Crazy
@Nigel2ZoomАй бұрын
Transited the Drake passage in 1987 onboard The USS Nimitz. Awesome voyage.
@Oatmeal-SavageАй бұрын
I found out why port holes on ships are round. Because if they weren't, if you were looking out and a wave hit, the wave would hit you square in the face.
@KumaBeanАй бұрын
Oh ffs, lol 🍻
@strayspark1967Ай бұрын
maybe a similar reason as to why Airliners have rounded windows....corners are weak spots, i think
@wholeNwonАй бұрын
Have you no shame?
@kimkimba1131Ай бұрын
🙄😉
@georgenaps5255Ай бұрын
😂🤣😂🤣😂🤣
@jimbo92107Ай бұрын
I sailed on a Coast Guard 378-foot cutter in the Bering Sea off the coast of Alaska in the early 1980's. Had to tie off one wrist to a steel stanchion to avoid falling out of bed when I was off duty. 35-foot seas in the winter. This is why crab fishing in Alaska is considered one of the world's most dangerous jobs. Believe it or not, you get used to it. However, it's hilarious when you get off the ship in harbor. For the first few minutes it's really hard not to fall down!
@ronaldslater4703Ай бұрын
I was on the Nimitz when we went through the Drake Passage. I was never seasick until we did and we had waves crashing over the deck. The ship rocked from side to side slowly and that made my seasickness worse. I was glad we left that joker. 🤒🤢
@tfp0052Ай бұрын
Respect!
@jebes909090Ай бұрын
@@tfp0052 i mean he literally did nothing but be sea sick and be a passenger
@colmquinn7860Ай бұрын
@@jebes909090Two stages of sea sick, one where you think you're going to die, second where you HOPE you're going to die
@dudermcdudeface3674Ай бұрын
@@jebes909090 Aircraft carriers don't take passengers.
@KedvespatikusАй бұрын
@@dudermcdudeface3674 Except when going down...
@CoilyladyАй бұрын
I made it through the Drake passage in 2022 on a Viking Ocean Ship the week after the unfortunate passenger was killed by the rogue wave incident. The seas were rough enough to cause us to skip a port but the stabilizers on the ship were excellent. It was a worthwhile experience. Thanks for this video. Fortunately I didn’t see it BEFORE I went 😂
@rileydj8764Ай бұрын
Ships do it all the time.
@christophergraves6725Ай бұрын
By the way, Francis Drake was English, not British since he lived before Britain was a nation. Britain was formed in 1707 from England, Wales and Scotland.
@DaveSherry-z1wАй бұрын
No the b'stards are stealing our heroes too!
@richavic4520Ай бұрын
It's pretty solid under South America. It's not tipping over any time soon.
@Go2hell-fulgybitchАй бұрын
OK sure how come we don't believe that
@johnreep5798Ай бұрын
I thought maybe the tunnel under S. America got clogged up.
@ChernorizecHrabyrАй бұрын
Dude, this coffee at the beginning looks sooooo watery. Like it's the leftovers from some one else.
@poeticdork6661Ай бұрын
"Well, as usual, you owe me a like!" Brilliant. And "Like" given.
@terrypeckham4744Ай бұрын
I worked on US merchant ships for many years all over the world. Including South America and Central America. Always used the Panama Canal. Never traveled south around South America. Never really thought about until now
@RobertSorel-w8r5 күн бұрын
Enjoyed sailing from 1974 to 1983 in the Merchant Marines, SIU. Best memories going through the Panama and Suez Canal(s). Went through a Hurricane and some rough weather. Alaska was at -40 one time in Valdez. Thanks for your comment, brought back the good times from the past.
@celsovazquez7175Ай бұрын
In the 80"s I crossed the Drake Passage twice onboard the US Navy Aircraft Carrier Enterprise from Philadelphia to San Diego and back to Pensacola FL. And many other Aircraft Carriers do so, instead of going through the Panama Canal.
@MSpotatoesАй бұрын
Aircraft carriers are huge, though. I imagine it was pretty safe
@ArnoldJudasRimmer..Ай бұрын
The coolest name of ALL the aircraft carriers lol
@sindento1942Ай бұрын
Probably because they won't fit, WW2 carriers could but they're far bigger now.
@jamesaustralian9829Ай бұрын
Yeah those big ones America uses are insanely massive
@1lowtradeАй бұрын
Not like us
@robertturner1505Ай бұрын
I was a crewman on a ship that went through the Drake Passage in 1989. We went through in December, which is summer in the southern hemisphere. The passage was similar to going through a strong tropical storm in the central Pacific. Granted the ship I was on was a US Aircraft Carrier.
@anthonymeade7345Ай бұрын
I think ships would have trouble going UNDER South America with all the dirt and rock.
@lupepedraza8497Ай бұрын
Stupid comment you're not contributing with anything by it. Ignorante maybe.
@jefffeix8576Ай бұрын
I like the way he sounds like these things NEVER HAPPENED anywhere else in the oceans.
@Go2hell-fulgybitchАй бұрын
Because they don't fool
@jjooordyАй бұрын
still learning
@SLC41071Ай бұрын
It does but it is a badge of honor to have gone around the horn
@alainvosselman9960Ай бұрын
It's the amount of water being forced thru the straight that is probably very rare. So he does have a point. I live in Belgium and our coastline is part of the British channel... we never see water being forced thru that channel in amounts that would make it dangerous for ships to pass thru. However, the North Sea ( which is at the North end of the channel) is often the subject of winds and currents coming from all directions and causes monster waves so it's being considered as a pretty rough sea.
@tiaanfourie3181Ай бұрын
It is the most windy place on earth and the depth of the ocean results on extremely large waves... Like no other place of earth...
@ianscott2363Ай бұрын
Anyone prone to reading, a book called the war with cape horn gives an excellent perspective on this subject.
@desertegle40calАй бұрын
When I was in the Navy I was on an aircraft carrier. Once you get your sea legs, it was universal knowledge that you would get the best sleep of your life being gently rocked back and forth on the ship. I got the best sleep of my life on my deployments. But one of the worst days I ever spent on that ship was on a clear cloudless day that had 30 and 40 foot swells, enough to rock and aircraft carrier like a toy in a bathtub. And even for those of us who loved the pitching and yawing of the ship, were made sick and the heads were full of people chucking up their meals! LOL
@ac1646Ай бұрын
🤢🤢
@thalesofmiletus2966Ай бұрын
As someone who was deepsea for 34 years and travelled everywhere in all types of weather I always find it amusing when landlubbers are surprised that ships, yachts, boats in general move when on the oceans of the world.
@sfheatherrАй бұрын
Wow, what a great presentation. I learned a lot, esp from the comments.
@GrumpyPopАй бұрын
I rounded the Horn in 1988 on the USS Independence. It was one of the most memorable at sea periods I ever had. Ships DO pass under the tip of South America.
@phiksitАй бұрын
I could be wrong, but if I recall correctly we lost a crewman and some aircraft that were chained down on the flight deck. It was the only time I felt the ship move up and down as we crested and descended waves, which were breaking across the flight deck. Never got seasick except for the first time we got underway cruising down the Delaware river 😅 I remember the Shangri-la was nearby waiting to be scrapped and you could see small trees and weeds growing out of her wooden flight deck.
@allanstewart5682Ай бұрын
No, they pass SOUTH of the tip of South America GrumpyPop!!
@macka9999Ай бұрын
I've got more nights at sea in roughers than most people have had baked dinners. like everything you get used to it. Great video 👌🔥
@donniekellerman5833Ай бұрын
Here's a couple of fun facts on this topic.... 1. Drake never actually sailed thru 'Drakes Passages. 2.The Panama Canal connects the Atlantic & Pacific oceans....east with west. But it runs north & south. 3. If you enter the canal from the Atlantic side, when you exit into the Pacific ocean, you are 26 miles further east than when you entered the canal from the Atlantic Ocean. 😊
@robertmcdonnold3038Ай бұрын
That's a pretty strong statement to say that ships NEVER pass under the southern tip of South America.
@Go2hell-fulgybitchАй бұрын
So I take it you've never being there then just curious 🤔 want to also just cross check your statement 😉
@dr.hoover345Ай бұрын
Especially when you follow it up by saying that it is the preferred passage compared to the other two options.
@ane-louisestampe7939Ай бұрын
There was an International Association of Cape Horners: To become a member you had to have rounded the cape for sail, carrying freight. They naturally died out, they closed it down when there was 4 or 5 left, around 1990. I knew the last chairman. He'd only done one trip, but it took 41 days to get around the Cape. Forty one days in the same clothes. They had naps (no real sleep) at while tied to their positions on the deck. Those days the ships were made of wood, and the seamen of iron. Nowadays it's the other way around 🤣
@morganarutsatz6736Ай бұрын
probably meant, never by choice.
@michaelmcneil4168Ай бұрын
> That's a pretty strong statement to say that ships NEVER pass under the southern tip of South America It is wrose to say we owe you any likes. You are globalwarmer and your shit is shouted to fools.
@elrobo3568Ай бұрын
I went through the Drake passage and that day the captain told us it was the first time he ever saw the water was calm. It did get rough after we turned north so I guess we were very lucky.
@tomwaller6893Ай бұрын
Been there done that. On board the Royal Research Ship RRS Ernest Shackleton season 2003/4 where we were within half a degree of capsizing due to a rouge wave in the Drakes Passage on our way to re supply the British Antarctic Survey from the Flalkland Island. We lost most of our deck cargo and had to return to the Falkland islands for repairs.
@TubesmaneyАй бұрын
Wow! Scary stuff for sure.
@TeddyRumbleАй бұрын
The BAS was on South Georgia Island. It's closed now. I was there the last year they were opened. We had a poor lady who had a DVT on the flight down to Buenos Aries. The Navy doctor at the BAS came over to look at her. She never got out of her bed the entire 22 day trip. One of my favorite trip. Antarctica is very special. And penguins are super cute. My favorite was the rockhopper.
@jollyroger5646Ай бұрын
I was on the U.S S. Constellation CV-64 in 1989 when we sailed around the Horn. It was rough on a carrier, I can't imagine our smaller escorts!😂
@rob-timeАй бұрын
Every time I see one of these videos, I am reminded of just how many factors that, were they not in place, would not allow for life to thrive on this planet. A missing land bridge between Antarctica and South America could tip the balance for life on earth. Mind blowing.
@trentstaggerly7455Ай бұрын
Yeah, and still...people don't believe in Creation. The fact that we seem to be alone in the universe makes us mind blowingly, breathtakingly, amazingly one of a kind: SPECIAL. Thanks God.
@thenaturalmidsouth9536Ай бұрын
@@trentstaggerly7455yet, no actual evidence of deities or other supernatural beings.
@cellgrrlАй бұрын
When I was in Antarctica I could not shake the deep sense that this place on Earth was the engine that drives the entire planet. There was a sense of power I felt I could not explain. I still believe this although it is not born out scientifically, It was most likely a spiritual experience...there is really something very powerful going on there.
@margaretcaine4219Ай бұрын
@@trentstaggerly7455And who or what created God? You are just taking the unknowable one step further back, but if the God explanation satisfies you, then good luck to you.
@xXxcastenadaАй бұрын
Thankfully a small land bridge wont melt 11 million square miles of ice, despite what the narrator says
@J.E.W.S1967Ай бұрын
Another awesome video thank you so very much. I knew some about Drake’s pass, but I didn’t know as much as you taught me. Thank you very much. Can’t wait until the next video John from South Jersey the good part of the state from the US.
@billdoodson4232Ай бұрын
I've been through the Drake Passage twice, once each way. The weather on the west bound passage was unbelievable, totally mill pond flat, the atmosphere was so clear you could see the land as if it was yards away not 30 miles. Fantastic experience, still vivid 45 years on. Going the other way was a bit like a blustery day in the North Sea, nothing to write home about.
@TubesmaneyАй бұрын
Amazing! What time of year was it?
@billdoodson4232Ай бұрын
@@Tubesmaney Sorry cannot remember now, too many beers over the yardarm.
@juttaweiseАй бұрын
you all are able to watch live the Vendée Globe starting on Nov 10th through to march 7th 2025. It is THE sailing event of the international elite in sailing once around the world taking place every 4 years. One man or woman in their sailing yacht. I've watched it last time and it was sooo dramatic in many ways! Worth watching.
@WILD360_Ай бұрын
Nature is amazing 🎉
@GroundbreakGamesАй бұрын
I took DDG 92 USS Momsen through the canal on its commissioning voyage. Manned the rails all night and had a blast tossing gifts from the ships store over to the guys helping hook the cables up to the mules (steel Ballards that pull the ship through the locks) . Happy, friendly people!
@wasserdaggerАй бұрын
Fascinating and at times chill-inducing video. Thanks for uploading. *The title needs work, though: "This Is Why Ships Never Pass Under South America"... then you go into great length discussing how they certainly do, to this day.
@gogetit1431Ай бұрын
Next line was, " you can buy it at my shop, i sell tons of em"...🤣
@wallyman292Ай бұрын
Hardest thing I had to learn sailing on Lake Michigan was the art of pouring drinks down below in 4 to 6 foot swells. For those curious, it's all in the timing of the pour! ;)
@ac1646Ай бұрын
😂 cheers
@Mondo762Ай бұрын
I sailed 30 years as an Engineer. Also, I have sailed under South America in a US flag Passenger/Cargo ship. Our experience was not that bad. Sure, it was gray, overcast and a little rough. We did go through Drakes Passage and the English Narrows. However, I have experienced much worse in the Gulf of Alaska and the China Coast.
@brendac8501Ай бұрын
Interesting, Thank You
@TrollMeister_Ай бұрын
I have crossed the passage. On the way down it was the Lake. And for about four hours on the way back it was the Shake. And some shake it was. Like the narrator said the storms over the Drake can develop at a moment’s notice. The weather in general is unstable in these parts (60 degrees S )
@TeddyRumbleАй бұрын
The Roaring 40s and the Screaming 50s.
@GG-mx9fjАй бұрын
I worked on Polar research vessel for a few years. Got rolled round in the Drake passage many times, even took a rogue wave further to the east. We had a large GM/righting lever…on another vessel it may have been a different story. God bless all my friends at sea 🌊
@TeddyRumbleАй бұрын
I envy you
@timogeerties3487Ай бұрын
The strait of Magellan is (and certainly was during colonial times) the preferred option to the Drake Passage since you're a lot safer from dangerous weather there
@GIGSUPREMEАй бұрын
This Report ist soooo informative and fun at the same time!!!!👍😁 Thanks!!!
@williamd9393Ай бұрын
I made the drake passage in 1969 on the USS Yorktown.
@gregparrottАй бұрын
Yikes! That must have been quite the experience. Was it reasonably navigable?
@cronistamundano8189Ай бұрын
I crossed the Drake in 2007. I will neves forget it the south atlantic is no easy water either, but if felt like a blessing after the Drake
@ane-louisestampe7939Ай бұрын
48 hours?? I knew a REAL Cape Horner (Someone, who've sails - by ONLY sails - around the cape, carrying freight) It took 41 DAYS!!! They weren't out of their clothes for 41 days! FORTY ONE DAYS.
@jrfoleyjrАй бұрын
Welcome to life aboard a US Navy destroyer. We routinely walked on the bulkheads during a bit of rough weather. Word gets passed to secure gear for rough weather. Any sailor worth his salt gets used to this and thinks some about it but doesn't freak out. It just makes for interesting scuttlebutt when we hit port and hoist a brew or six.😁😎
@derekhutton9855Ай бұрын
Two minutes of this was enough for me.
@SleepySteve79Ай бұрын
In the university of TU Delft they have worked out the science behind the rogue waves. They were able to create the Draupner effect.
@davetooes6179Ай бұрын
I never went through the passage . I was a seaman on a WW2 Landing Ship. Somewhat like a cork . our berthing had 6 bunks in a space 2m wide and 2.4 metres high. During a tropical cyclone off South Vietnam I was on the top bunk a wave off our port side. I finished on the bottom on the other side. I had tie myself in to stay put and get a good night's sleep
@ac1646Ай бұрын
Thank you for your service Sir.
@danielschechter813028 күн бұрын
I get "seasick" on rocking chairs and porch swings. Antarctica looks like an amazing place to visit but neither love nor money will ever get me there. Very cool video!
@southernknight9983Ай бұрын
Back in the age of sail, they dealt with this issue by sleeping in hammocks. Sleep issue solved!
@phiksitАй бұрын
I think that would be like trying to sleep on a roller coaster... not to mention being wet, cold and unable to eat.
@SpiderF27Ай бұрын
Like bats do...
@PaulVisions-e8vАй бұрын
My very first time on an aircraft carrier was in 1990. CVN-72 Abraham Lincoln was built too big to go through the Panama Canal, she sits too deep in the water. So, after it was built on the East Coast, but it was stationed in the Pacific, so around the horn she went. It was my first time at sea, in the Navy. I am also a “plank owner”, lol. If you know what that is, than you too may be a Shellback! Aloha swabbies!
@durgaprasadkothuri256Ай бұрын
I alongwith my crew of five survived Sea State 7 in a whaler for 24 hours.Nothing scares me now.
@marionnadeau8457Ай бұрын
I was lucky enough to have the Drake Lake both ways on an expedition cruise in 2019. On the way to Antarctica, we had 1 rogue wave that knocked everything off the tables and across the cabin!
@SilkyJJАй бұрын
Make sure to hide your kids going through this passage
@mikej4537Ай бұрын
Took a sec, but I got it. 😊
@hellomoto2084Ай бұрын
I understood the moment I read it . Drake passage lol@@mikej4537
@ronaldjones7655Ай бұрын
Bars😂
@theactioneliteweaponsmasterАй бұрын
LOL!😅😂,Aww man!,leave Drake alone!
@luna775Ай бұрын
Underrated comment
@MsSambaNow29 күн бұрын
Love the delivery and the script, very engaging.
@thesnare100Ай бұрын
I was thinking What?? Under, you mean SOUTH of!
@davidforbes7772Ай бұрын
How does he have so many subscribers?
@thesnare100Ай бұрын
@@davidforbes7772 what does that have to do with what I said?
@gregparrottАй бұрын
12:13 Holy smokes! Barbara Huerta swam a mile in the Drakes passage in 15 minutes! That is 4 MPH, equivalent to an unnaturally fast walk.
@noelhutchins7366Ай бұрын
That was a lot of data, good researching, very informative & not distressing to a state-of-worry; well done!
@veramae4098Ай бұрын
Sir Frances Drake was the first to take a ship through. He then proceeded up the west coast of S. America, making very little progress for a year. Finally got out of the area and continued raiding Spanish settlements.
@ArnoldJudasRimmer..Ай бұрын
Imagine being in one of those old ships also when weather whipped up?
@valenzupcАй бұрын
In 1525, Spanish navigator Francisco de Hoces discovered the Drake Passage while sailing south from the entrance of the Strait of Magellan
@jiphjuegos1402Ай бұрын
Nop
@colmquinn7860Ай бұрын
How could he be first when he found Spaniards there already?
@Ahkran1980Ай бұрын
In fact this place was discovered and navigated in 1526 by Francisco de Hoces while he was in expedition to las Molucas.
@nickbrockelmanАй бұрын
I wasn't aware that we had an ocean called the Southern Ocean 4:53
@vincentbrunelle6263Ай бұрын
Yeah ans its the 3rd Biggest! 😮
@TeddyRumbleАй бұрын
Yup. The Screaming 50s.
@elatedTravelchannel3 күн бұрын
I love this channels content. ❤ alway fun, informative, and super creative.
@katsyboАй бұрын
It’s sad that people don’t know basic geography.
@mazzithАй бұрын
Google Thornewood Castle in WA. That castle was originally in England and a rich American bought it as a wedding gift to his bride after they had their honeymoon there. They shipped all the bricks through this straight in the early 1900s.
@CanisLupus1987Ай бұрын
That coffee looks like water to Portuguese taste
@jamilateef6392Ай бұрын
portugal give fish with potato crispp to the world
@norab2125Ай бұрын
We have passed through the underbelly of South America, through the Strait of Magellan for many times. And it’s very memorable and peaceful. I myself have also passed through the drake passage and all I can say is that I have been through much worse than this in other parts of the world. You are just making a big issue of it when all we need to pass through is to do safety preparations. I should know this because I was a seafarer for 41 years.
@ac1646Ай бұрын
Interesting Which areas of the ocean are more extreme?
@1lowtradeАй бұрын
"Hmm let me strap myself to the bed meanwhile the ship violently slams on the water" yikes.. i couldnt sleep like that.
@AmeliaClairaBlackАй бұрын
You did fine job explaining all about the drake passage, thank you. I have liked and subscribed
@frankwhittenham5125Ай бұрын
That's "SIR" Francis Drake mate !
@MrLibwebdevАй бұрын
Why are you yelling? Why do I always have to lower the volume on videos by Americans? Why are Americans so loud? I think these questions deserve answers just as much as why ships don't (rightly) like to pass under South America.
@FranklinGrayАй бұрын
Sailboats pass through it yearly. I'm talking 30 to 60 feet sailboats, not corporate ships. The trick is to pass in the summer time. In the summertime you have 2-3 days between storms. In the winter they come about every day. Personally, I'd rather go through the straights of Magellan as there is more to see and a bit safer and when you come out the other side, you just need to sail north for a day to be out of storm's reach.
@jesusandu3491Ай бұрын
the first one to cross magallanes was Fernando de Magallanes in 27th fo Nombenber 1520
@gregparrottАй бұрын
Thanks for the information. That should have been mentioned in the video.
@seanabrennan965029 күн бұрын
Back in 1972 and 1973 i sailed through this storm belt 4 times. I was on the US Coast Guard ice breaker Glacier. We. Sailed from New Zealand to McMurdo Sound then up to Chili, then down through Drake’s Passage to the Wedell Sea then back to Chile then North to home. It was rough but it wasn’t any rougher than some of the storms that we sailed off of Alaska to Japan. We did some 60 degree rolls in both places. I became a “Square Knot” on that trip.
@manuelrosario2107Ай бұрын
Been watching your content for years. I can literally feel my brain getting more wrinkles each time I watch a video. You Rock!
@SpicyTexan64Ай бұрын
Nah, that's your IQ dropping. This is a channel for simpleton Kamala voters.
@KjdjrhАй бұрын
Unless your destination is Patagonia or the Falklands, avoid Cape Horn- especially in July ( Winter Season for South Pole ) 🇬🇧
@thomasmaughan4798Ай бұрын
"Ships Never Pass Under South America" No tunnel. If there was a huge tunnel UNDER South America they could then pass under.
@tonyfloyd7666Ай бұрын
This was fascinating. I've known about the dangers; but I had no idea. Thank you
@ArnoldJudasRimmer..Ай бұрын
'One does not simply cross the Drake Passage...'
@janicedaily6043Ай бұрын
Been through the Drake Lake 3 times. Lovely trips. 😊