In this episode, Globe Trekker adventurer Holly Morris explores the waters that shaped America - the Great Lakes. Covering 94,000 square miles, the Great Lakes are the largest reservoir of fresh water on the planet and one of the world's busiest waterways. For centuries these waters have been a critical trade artery, determining the history and economy of North America and the world.
@tmontgomery75926 ай бұрын
I knew i recognized her from somewhere.
@STEEPPOW6 ай бұрын
At the 18 minute mark you see the myth of lake Michigan, and Huron, being two lakes. Lake Michigan is one gigantic like. There’s a misnomer to consider at two lakes, split by a bridge and magically separate.
@MartsEntertainment5 ай бұрын
I’d love to learn more about the incidents that occurred in the area surrounding Chicago including the history of building Lake Shore Drive and how it changed the shape of the Lake b
@FirelandsAccounting5 ай бұрын
What about Lake Erie?
@HarryEbanks-dk9lz5 ай бұрын
We@@MartsEntertainment
@NorthCountryHistory6 ай бұрын
I am proud to have been a small part of this. I'm the one sharing Michigan's lumber industry with Holly.
@___beyondhorizon46646 ай бұрын
I'm a Sparta, but I didn't know much about the shipping industry on the Great Lakes after taking many trips to the UP😊 springs in Travis City was beautiful
@colonialstraits10696 ай бұрын
Lumberman’s Monument and the Au Sable dune are always a stop when I’m up there.
@steady34596 ай бұрын
So you are Responsible for the DEVISTATED Forests in Mich ! GOOD JOB . Just RV parking lots Now ! REAL CAMPING IS A THING OF THE PAST ! 🎉🛶😒
@mikescott33706 ай бұрын
@@steady3459first of all no that was 80 years ago and now we have 30,000 miles of lush forest! I’m from the area so please don’t disrespect it if you don’t know!
@alfee94116 ай бұрын
Thank You
@they-call-me-mister-trash8475 ай бұрын
This is the most authentic, most cringe, most hilarious, most entertaining documentary I've seen in a while. It's... something.
@lordcommander32245 ай бұрын
She’s really fun 😅
@themicrowave9054 ай бұрын
@@lordcommander3224i can bet she’s fun
@beaconterraoneonline4 ай бұрын
Too many people have no idea what it takes to make our lives comfortable. They should be showing documentaries like this in high school and teaching kids what is required to make the world work as it does, and the extraordinary effort and resources required.
@RogerDiotteАй бұрын
You are SO CORRECT...I'm glad your watching and anyone else also here!
@johncj55516 ай бұрын
The bridge is called the "Mighty Mac". Grew up in Gaylord, but my mom and pop grew up in Rogers City. Pop sailed the great lakes when they were still steam ships. He sailed the Fitzgerald before it went down. He talked about how dangerous the ship was- loose rivets and all. He told us he could stand at one end of the ship and when it hit a wave, the light would disappear.......couldn't see the other end. What you don't realize is that the great lakes can swell unlike anything you could imagine. After Mom got pregnant, she demanded Pop get off the ships. He did. We had a collection of slides and a projector. Every year we'd make Pop narrate the slides as we projected them onto a white sheet. The pictures of the storms, ice and snow was crazy. Sadly, then we moved south, those slides melted in the attic. More sadly, I lost my Pop 4 years ago. Man, I miss the stories.......
@nadinedaoud25384 ай бұрын
You have beautiful memories of an amazing area (Great Lakes) God bless your father 🙏🙏❤️ I’ve lost mine too but the memories are eternal ❤️🕊️🕊️
@donaldlayher31804 ай бұрын
Great story of your family. You should be, and I'm sure you're proud of this history. Been there.
@RogerDiotteАй бұрын
Hello also John, GREAT write up you shared! Just crossed the MAC coming home myself I picture exactly your stories! I'm up in Ontario a few miles from there!
@stevenjohnson7086Ай бұрын
@johncj5551 If you still have the slides, it’s possible they might be salvaged. Even with discoloration, fade and warping, slides can often be salvaged into digital images. The cardboard mounts will be removed, and the film sandwiched between glass plates like a microscope specimen. After scanning, the damaged image is corrected in programs like Adobe Lightroom. Color correction and distortion issues can be corrected to a large extent. It’s not a perfect solution, but a possibility. Digital slide protectors are now cheaper than an Ektagraphic III
@josephelden45736 ай бұрын
Growing up on the Detroit River many of us are avid Freighter watchers. Watched about every documentary possible on the subject. This one was very well done.
@FreeDocumentary6 ай бұрын
excellent - glad you liked it!
@spinkey48426 ай бұрын
hahaha..... homeboy was blushing in that little bridge elevator
@keebz756 ай бұрын
That woulda been great to be In that thing with her like that!
@timothyhill91466 ай бұрын
She is pretty!
@RealJeep6 ай бұрын
Not a bad person to be stuck in a small elevator with, minus the cameraperson.
@blauer25516 ай бұрын
Better than Bubba the painter
@wishinifishin51726 ай бұрын
Yeah...he did this on purpose.
@madrx26 ай бұрын
Holly is an amazing presenter and super brave especially getting up on that bridge. I had to laugh when the captain was manoeuvring the ship and holly was like, "this must be the hardest trickiest part of your job, let me ask you a bunch of questions whilst you're executing that!" lol
@RogerDiotteАй бұрын
LOL
@stevenjohnson7086Ай бұрын
Ha! Yes, I was laughing at the same thing.
@madcitywendy5 ай бұрын
Great to see Holly in this film. Globe Trekker is amazing. My mother grew up in London, Ontario and I have wanted to explore this area of the Great Lakes. Thank you for this great film.
@billyjoejimbob566 ай бұрын
Holly... You are a genuine adventurer, a gifted storyteller, and a great narrator. Among the best Great Lakes documentary flicks I have ever seen. Thank you for sharing it!!!
@JuicyPeaches5046 ай бұрын
Holly is awesome! You might like Stacy Dooley's documentaries. I love her series "Stacy Dooley sleeps over". 🧡
@qv816 ай бұрын
The elevator scene is the best. I never expected to laugh so hard on a boat documentary.
@toms79476 ай бұрын
Agreed. He could have warned her how small it was!
@smf20725 ай бұрын
What is "lough?'
@qv815 ай бұрын
@@smf2072 It's writing English using Norwegian autocorrect and fighting it every word. ;)
@enzoangiolillo92445 ай бұрын
Samme her. Noe av det beste på lenge hahahah
@KamionKing4 ай бұрын
@@qv81don’t mention Norway, he probably doesn’t know where it is. Thanks to the US ed system
@seanwalters19775 ай бұрын
I love all the locals you interact with. Pure midwestern wholesomeness
@arneservatius1982Ай бұрын
Just for fact; Lake Superior is crystal clear seeing down 60 ft. It’s not murky. She “ the Host” is one of my favorites on a great program “Lonely Planet” this broadcast was not only fun it was energizing.🤗 so great full to see her again.
@lanceg1335 ай бұрын
Holly, as a 67 y.o. lifelong Michigander who loves the great lakes, I'd pay any amount to have been able to do this adventure. What a privilege. (P.S.: They're called "upper" and "lower".)
@stevenjohnson7086Ай бұрын
Yewpers! Haha😅
@GypsyLyn6 ай бұрын
I watched a ton of documentaries about Michigan because I love living here and learning about all things Michigan. I am only 8 minutes into this documentary and I love it already.
@ninadsheth84226 ай бұрын
An absolute top class bit of journalism and story telling
@countrycountry6729Ай бұрын
Worked at coal power plant over 24 years. Assigned to SUS "Ship Unloading System." Worked closely with the vessels and offloading equipment. Never got old. So massive and impressive.
@chancekruse95706 ай бұрын
Oscoda local born and raised! We are very proud of our Lumberjack history and have lots of respect for them! Very cool video
@riptide81036 ай бұрын
I love these world's toughest boat trips. Please post more.
@Pelican50776 ай бұрын
This was awesome. Thank you so much for featuring the lakes. We have lived on our sailboat for 12 years and sailed extensively in the Great Lakes and the Atlantic. Prior to moving aboard and heading south, we sailed and cruised on the Great Lakes for 30 years. The most beautiful anchorages are in the North Channel and Georgian Bay of Lake Huron. And the worst storms we have ever encountered have been on the Great Lakes. 40 knots with 12-14 ft waves with square tops and a short wave train is way worse than 40 knots and 25 feet on the North Atlantic.
@julybliss44405 ай бұрын
Always been my dream accomplishment and plans. Cruising or sailing Great lakes and to the Atlantic. Hopefully plans coming true soon.
@Pelican50775 ай бұрын
@@julybliss4440 Sweet! I hope that you are able to make it all work out. Living on a sailboat is nothing like the YT videos. It’s a lot of work, but the rewards are priceless. I could give you a literal ‘book’ of advice. On the other hand, sometimes figuring it almost out on your own is more rewarding. One idea you won’t likely find anywhere else is this: as long as you are in the Northern Hemisphere try to be the northernmost boat in the anchorage. You’ll sleep better when the weather gets nasty. Best wishes from te crew on S/V Blessings.
@julybliss44405 ай бұрын
@@Pelican5077 thanks for the advice. And yes I know sailing is nothing compared to actually doing it, especially compared to you tube videos. Even reading though won't do it justice I assume. Just sailing communities and first hand experience. I like the sailing groups on facebook better than I like youtubers. Been a carpenter and mechanic for 15+ yrs so that's what knowledge I plan on helping me survive and to get my experience started. Not sure how long I will last, I don't expect I will last as long as you because I know to expect it to be rougher than any one can explain. Just I want the reward, knowledge, experience, and enjoyable parts from sailing and live aboard for any amount of time. Been working on selling/renting my home and other assets to get started. Late 30s so I hope within few or handful years I will officially be ready and equipped to sail great lakes and head to gulf of Mexico or more preferred Atlantic Ocean. Ever since a child I have wanted to do transatlantic but I think that's a stretch for me to expect without trying ever. We'll see.
@MichaelLasleyIII6 ай бұрын
Watching this video is making home sick. I am from Mackinac my great grand father X 4 was a soldier stationed at fort Mackinac from 1798-1804 and after his service was completed he opened the first hotel on the island called the Lasley House or the Lasley tavern. My family still lives there and buried there also. My ancestors comprise of Scottish, English and Chippewa Indians I am am a member of the Sault Ste. Marie tribe of the Chippewa Indians. I loved growing up there I remember the night the Fitzgerald went down the bridge was closed down because the waves were 20-30 tall going over the causeway of the bridge, I was in high school at the time and was into photography for the yearboook and our teacher and year book advisor lived south of the bridge and he stayed at our house because the bridge was closed so he and I jumped into his van and took some awesome photos of the storm and the bridge it was like a hurricane in November. My next door neighbor was a professional diver and he had worked on the first expedition finding the Edmond Fitzgerald. I live in Florida now but my heart is still in Mackinac.
@RogerDiotteАй бұрын
Hey Mike, you have good memories and best of all you live em! I'm saying hello from near Desbarats Ontario...look it up i'm just a hop skip jump as crows flies to the Straits. I like you story of the Edmonds that evening..I to was out on Queen Street in the Sault that night as a young kid and man that wind....I still remember it...
@MartsEntertainment5 ай бұрын
Growing up on Lake Michigan was the highlight of my childhood and a favorite adventure whenever I’m back North.
@nicho-uyx12875 ай бұрын
Don't watch too many docs these days, but why does this feel like an older style documentary? I love it.
@stevenjohnson7086Ай бұрын
Maybe because it doesn’t have some sort of hidden yet obvious agenda, or calculated social and political remarks sprinkled in like cheap seasoning.
@Kaipi19886 ай бұрын
The elevator scene made me laugh XD but loved the documentary. It's such a beautiful region
@johnstudd42456 ай бұрын
I would love to go to the top of the tower, but ain't no way in hades you would get me in that little elevator!!!
@Sudique15 ай бұрын
OK. So, I got dizzy just watching the view from the top of the bridge. I'm originally from the east coast and have been living in the Chicagoland area for the past 45 years. I LOVE the mid-west. I have to admit, the Lake Superior coast of Minnesota has got to be one of the most beautiful I've ever seen. Thanks for the wonderful tour of these lakes.
@phillymathguy8142Ай бұрын
Missed an important point when marveling at the engineering at the Soo locks. "Raise the water a few feet". Locks do not use pumps. Valves are opened at the higher level water side & water pressure by itself causes that water to flow into the lower water in the locks. Going the other way, valves are opened to let higher water in the locks flow to the downstream side. No pumps in either direction. That is what is marvelous about locks.
@42Ccastro6 ай бұрын
This was a great documentary! Please post more videos like this, it was well documented. Thank you.
@mlwtennessee3226 ай бұрын
I was so glad to find this! I've been a big fan of Globe Trekker/ Lonely Planet for many years. Thought I had seen them all. Not only did I find another but the subject is something that I'm quite interested in. I wasn't disappointed and really enjoyed this. Bring more! You can find more episodes here on KZbin or you can stream from some PBS channels. Every episode is top notch.
@hightower66456 ай бұрын
Usually videos or pictures don't do a justice, but the view from the height of one of those bridge towers looks exhilarating!! The Mackinac bridge actually crosses over an entire Great Lake - Lake Michigan-Huron, even though they're considered as two separate ones. There's a deep trench between the two suspension towers that equalize the levels of both lakes so essentially they're two parts of the same lake.
@georgekn3mp6 ай бұрын
Hydrologically true but don't take away one of the two Great Lakes 😂
@Truthasvictim5 ай бұрын
What an absolutely great documentary Holly, et al. I am so accustomed to documentaries tabling mankind's dominant dark sides, that watching one that is covering more normal and benevolent sides is almost a relief. Thanks for such an informative and uplifiting show!!!
@tomyost63305 ай бұрын
Holly Morris, YOU ROCK! Thank you so much for this incredible documentary and insight of what the upper Great Lakes are like. Woman of steel nerves you must be in many way, like like going up the bridge tower to almost 600 feet on top. All I can think is OMG! The history and industry and the many people of these great waters that you brought to all us who wonder, now have a clearer view of life on and around these big lakes. Thank you thank you thank you for the effort you gave to make this great video. Loved all of it.
@lawrencejeffrey9245Ай бұрын
I lived in Northern Ontario close to Thunder Bay for over 40 years. Now I live on the St. Lawrence Seaway just inside Ontario, east of Montreal, on the river. I not only see lake boats going by every day, but lots of ocean ships too. As a Canadian, I am so very proud of the American-Canadian co operation on the whole Seaway project that goes from Montreal to Duluth Minn. Pres. Eisenhower and P.M. King had the foresight to make this project happen in the 50s. The amount of commerce that moves through this waterway is like nothing on earth.
@tomhulbert27845 ай бұрын
Having grown up on the Great Lakes, I must say this was well done.
@wendellellison34825 ай бұрын
Absolutely wonderful video of my beloved home state! I am a boat and history nerd, so obviously I have been to all of these venues (many several times) - even been to Duluth, MN. But not like this! This was and "up close" experience. I wish I could ride on the PRT (Tregurtha) or go to the top of the Mighty Mack! I can't wait to see what other videos are on this channel! Thank You!
@rustymacneil32275 ай бұрын
Well done!! The " Mac" bridge part was amusing. The " manways " and elevator were designed when the average worker was far less the size we are today!!! The Soo locks are by the international bridge where I spent two season's 1995/96 hanging scaffold from that bridge for the painters. Saw lot's of boat traffic!!
@USAIRFORCE6215 ай бұрын
Duluth is a beautiful city; I've had family there for nearly a century and both my mom and her parents and all but one of her siblings were born there and more than a dozen of my family still call it home to this day! Having seen the mighty Paul R. Tregurtha coming into Duluth's Twin Harbors as she sails under the aerial lift bridge is an awe inspiring and terrifying sight all at the same time because she's a beautiful ship but incredibly massive as one of the 1,000+ ft Lake Freighters!!
@steveravely67085 ай бұрын
How do you handle the hilly streets in the winter?
@avionicbug6 күн бұрын
Excellent my cousin sailed the Edward L. Ryerson, and I am a Navy Vet always loved ships., I enjoyed this alot.
@Mopar-Pioneer8 күн бұрын
Absolutely THE best documentary hostess/host around. The best documentary I have watched since the doc on Packard !
@SkyzBlazed3 ай бұрын
So glad I have the privilege to live in such a beautiful state surrounded in peace.
@awesomeness1414Ай бұрын
I'm from oscoda . It was a cool video.i now live out west I love the history of the great lakes
@dyoung35366 ай бұрын
Nobody in the great lakes call's it the Southern or Northern Peninsula. It's the Upper and Lower Peninsula.
@johncordes78856 ай бұрын
Lower trolls and upper yoopers
@JonKorpi-fk7yo6 ай бұрын
As a yooper I think of michigan as two separate states governed by one😢😢😢😢
@uprebel51505 ай бұрын
I have a house on each peninsula and NOBODY calls them “Northern” and “Southern” Peninsulas. Actually sounds ridiculous.
@curtis43905 ай бұрын
Facts
@shanefluhr64545 ай бұрын
@@uprebel5150 I'm sure she didn't mean to offend you get yourself a tissue and dry your eyes
@edstoffregen36236 ай бұрын
The thought of being on a freighter on a great lake is a surreal feeling
@wil488235 ай бұрын
There's a big difference between driving over the bridge and walking on it I live in Michigan and finally did the annual Labor Day Mackinac bridge walk for the first time in 2023. As a person with no history of acrophobia, I can tell you that bridge fear is real. You can feel the bridge swaying underfoot as you walk which is a bit disorienting but tolerable. It was when I made the mistake of looking directly down thru an expansion joint in the center section that it hit me like a bolt of lightning. Like every nerve in my extremities was lit up. I finished the walk of course, but I don't think I'd do it again. I admire the host's (and the bridge worker's) bravery here in going to the top of the bridge. I couldn't do it.
@christinagowan81165 ай бұрын
I've always wanted to do the Bridge Walk but I can never get my husband to do it
@wil488235 ай бұрын
@christinagowan8116 If you ever do, plan to take the next day off to recuperate. My friends and I walked over 10 miles that day. I could hardly walk the next day lol.
@christinagowan81165 ай бұрын
@@wil48823 😂 lol ok, thanks for the tip
@davecarpenter49175 ай бұрын
I've driven across it a few times. That would be some walk, I dont think I could do it.
@IamDoctorJekyll3 ай бұрын
I don't doubt you one bit. Between the weather and next-level size and height, it would be no walk in the park even for a strong person.
@Tickle..Tipson6 ай бұрын
The amount of coal transported in the Paul R. Tregurtha in this trip was 71,000 tons, worth $7.668 million and generates roughly 156,200 mWh of energy. It's absolutely shocking how important just this one ship is to powering the northern US and southern Canada.
@hectorn.61375 ай бұрын
A ton of coal is $108?? This can't be real.
@Tickle..Tipson5 ай бұрын
@@hectorn.6137 well, the cost per ton today is $105, so you're not wrong. There's a reason it's still used for electricity, and it ain't because it's efficient.
@4.0gpa444 ай бұрын
@@hectorn.6137Did you think it was going to be more or less?
@hectorn.61374 ай бұрын
@@4.0gpa44 I thought a lot more. I was so off.
@stevenjohnson7086Ай бұрын
More perspective… these are average numbers: A ‘unit coal train’ (train of coal only, no other merchandise) can be moved from Powder River to the lake with an average of .75 to 1.25 horsepower per gross ton. Locomotives are averaged at 4,400 horsepower each. Tractive effort is the magic there. Average weight of a loaded coal car is 125 tons. Empty car average is 40ish tons. Some cars are aluminum sided, some are steel… the weights vary slightly. Average gross weight of a coal train: 14,000 - 16,000 gross tons.
@critterscute364225 күн бұрын
Terrific documentary! So glad this came up in my feed. Love watching anything Great Lakes and this doc was “superior.” Thanks to the entire production team. Great work!
@samsrailventures1961Ай бұрын
Really enjoyed this! Holly is really an intrepid person, not afraid to push herself. I was born and raised in Muskegon, which was a real logging center in the 1870's, so I enjoyed the focus on the history of logging. It really was the industry that started Michigan into the industrial age.
@haadbajwa756520 күн бұрын
Free Documentaries are the best democracy on utube. ❤
@Curtis7391-t8q6 ай бұрын
Best way to keep the crew happy is by having great food…thank you Paul!
@colemant68455 ай бұрын
The Great Lakes of America are Truly AMAZING. The states around them are Freshwater Goldmines for the rest of the world... Fresh Water is Gold! Never saw a more beautiful coastline state (or country) than Michigan. ... AND still very Untouched and as it was 100 years ago. Northern Michigan is maybe the Most Unique state in the USA. (BTW... Did you guys go out for dinner after that Elevator Ride?...) Wow... What an experience going to the the top of Mac Bridge!... Lucky Woman!
@northlander43702 ай бұрын
The Great Lakes of Canada !
@ziro91226 ай бұрын
Awesome show and I like the way Holly is doing it. She asks the right questions and she is nice to look at as well :)
@countrycountry67293 ай бұрын
Off track. 44 years working in power plants. My last 22 years worked at a coal plant. Received 30,000 t0 35,000 tons per vessel. (Once or twice a week) Vessels were Tregurtha, Bethesda, and McCarthy. Worked closely with the vessel. It was amazing.
@pudermcgavin44626 ай бұрын
Duluth is my fav city and watching the ships roll in is amazing!
@jameslenzmeier480Ай бұрын
Got the wonderful opportunity to build scaffold in the Paul during layup this past winter. Absolutely incredible piece of engineering!
@CherylzaLoufan6 ай бұрын
I thoroughly enjoyed this video, especially the time spent on the ship. Cudos to the men and women who work on these giant boats doing a job that most of us don't even realize needs doing. Just amazing.
@dougscott95245 ай бұрын
Lived in Michigan for most of my 68 years , after seeing this I'm going up to see the soo locks on a vacation soon.
@colonialstraits10696 ай бұрын
Lifelong Detroiter but I love the area along M-23. It’s a truly underrated area. Michigan is a special place.
@RogerDiotteАй бұрын
GREAT Video! I live on the Great Lakes so this is BONUS! The Soo Locks...my hometown...awesome content well done!
@TheRacerG5 ай бұрын
Traversing the Great Lakes on the Paul R. Tregurtha was quite the experience.
@troy9er5 ай бұрын
I grew up boating on Lake Michigan. Loved it!!!
@Jim-nt7xy2 ай бұрын
I remember Holly Morris from Lonely Planet! Love your presentations.
@nadinedaoud25384 ай бұрын
Oh HELL NO ‼️‼️(top of bridge) over massive body of water. That is soooooo fr’g scary. My legs are shaking. These guys are unbelievable ‼️‼️🙌🙌🙌
@memal254 ай бұрын
You went through some amazing pieces of Michigan's infrastructure, great video!
@isaacdrost156 ай бұрын
I work for Interlake Stramship Company and the PRT is one of the easiest ships to work on. I was part of the first crew when the Mark W Barker launched and been sailing 7 years. The hardest working ships to work on is the Dorothy Ann Pathfinder, Herbert C Jackson and maybe the Kaye barker. However the Mark Barker is running all those short trips like those boats so it’s a different kind of work. I know all those crew members on the PRT in this video. I’m a relief Bosun/ deck boss as well as relief wheelsman on the Mesabi miner my permanent ship. @FreeDocumentary
@superior4515 ай бұрын
The Miner was always my favorite. Grew up in Grosse Pointe in a house 3 north of the gpyc. The seasons and the boats kept time. I friends dad, a boater/sailor struck up a friendship with the captain back in the late 1970s. Captain had he and his wife and kids aboard a few time at anchor in the Detroit River. In perhaps 1980 I got to ride with a group a few miles on the Miner from one fuel dock to another in the St Clair River. Quite an experience I will always remember, riding on a freighter for once vs, sailing, racing, boating around them. Grateful for that. I would say the Roger Blough is a favorite to sight. She cuts a distinctive silhouette and a bit of an accomplishment when You ID her across the lakes.
@alisamariespistol63315 ай бұрын
Interesting 👍
@RogerDiotteАй бұрын
@@superior451 Yea Interesting....I like you describe "cuts a silhouette"..... I set nets in Lake Huron with my grandfather that was AMAZING time of life!
@RogerDiotteАй бұрын
Thank YOU for your service!
@ericb9426Ай бұрын
Very nicely done and without one mention of the Fitzgerald. Great look inside ship operations.
@Jaymindrew1990Ай бұрын
Back in April 2004, my wife and I stayed at the Coast Guard lodge next to the Great Lakes Shipwreck Museum (back when you could stay there) which is at Whitefish Point. We ironically saw the Tregurtha sail past out on Lake Superior. That is a HUGE ship!
@larry6486 ай бұрын
I had family working the ships in the lakes, three were chief engineers and one a ship’s captain. They also ran speedboats across Lake St. Clair and the St. Clair River running booze.
@anderskandersson46133 ай бұрын
Wow ... This is very unique and mesmerizing story indeed , absolutely far beyond an adventure documentary ... Keeps going Holly !!! Always love you and a big HUG from Sweden ❤❤❤
@carolwilliamson4660Ай бұрын
I REALLY LOVE THIS DOCUMENTARY!!! GREAT TO THOSE CREW MEMBERS !!! GREAT JOURNALING 👍 👌 👍 👌
@marksalgy75896 ай бұрын
I retired 2012 off M/V PAUL R. TREGURTHA😅
@lordcommander32245 ай бұрын
Guessing Dayton was captain then?
@marksalgy75895 ай бұрын
@lordcommander3224 I worked for Daton on the pRT. I guess he pass away.
@goofyleo38693 ай бұрын
And I helped keep 'er going at BayShip in Sturgeon.💪🏻
@kevinducharme12635 ай бұрын
I used to drive a transport truck over the Mackinaw bridge once in a while. the view from the bridge is awesome. in the early winter/late fall you could see large chunks of ice floating under the bridge deck (the truck lanes are made of a heavy steel grating that's open and you can see through it). I kinda miss those days.
@dougmacqueen16794 ай бұрын
Been watching these behemoths cross Lake Erie for years coming into Cleveland and negotiating their way down the Crooked Cuyahoga river. Great video.
@ellenpeterson-t9w6 ай бұрын
Awesome story, Holly Morris, ❤, I love all the stories on the lakes, especially the Paul R. Tregurthra!!!! The boat is amazing and so are the crew and all that work on the moving mighty ship!!!!!
@katydidiy26 күн бұрын
The Great Lakes are incredible!
@WilliamDobson-h2t4 ай бұрын
I've been over the Mighty Mac at least 50 times. Anyone else notice when she was first talking about going over the bridge, she was already in the UP? Thank you Holly for the great documentary. I enjoyed it very much.
@2wheelneil3625 ай бұрын
This was my first ship as a deckhand with interlake steamship and worked my way up to Oiler in the engine department in my 8 years with the company. Spent a lot of time on this ship
@Nationof3006 ай бұрын
Todd was on his Mack daddy mode 😂😂😂😂
@shoepenguin3 ай бұрын
Loved absolutely everything about this - surprised they didn't show and tell more about coming into Duluth though - the lift bridge is pretty awesome and watching it from the ship would have been super cool (I watch the web cams all the time, so I've seen it from that side). Still, awesome job.
@FreeDocumentary3 ай бұрын
awesome - so glad you liked it!
@debbiejohnston59Ай бұрын
This was a terrific doc!!
@steppanoreed6 ай бұрын
I go across that bridge all the time and never knew it had a elevator lol. I guess I thought they climbed a ladder. I worked on the Tregurtha for a while and it is a nice ship. One reason it's nice is that it has a single belt unloading system. Makes cleaning much easier. The only drawback on that boat is you share the head (bathroom) with the room next door. not sure why they did that. Older footers you get your own. The only problem with great lakes shipping is it does not take any real time to get anywhere. Lots of work goes on during the trip. Such as say cleaning the tunnel, you get 5 hours of sleep then through the locks. 3 more hours of sleep. Then a workday then 5 hours of sleep then Superior/Duluth. Not like the ocean where you pick up a load and then it takes 5 days to get somewhere. Anyway not a bad job but very physical. I liked this documentary
@jefflevoir61276 ай бұрын
The captain is in the middle of performing several maneuvers and conversing with multiple crew members on the radio. A very, very important task. And she keeps asking him questions the whole time. LOL. That captain had A TON OF PATIENCE !!
@georgekn3mp6 ай бұрын
We almost lost a Great Lakes Freighter yesterday. The Michipicoten was saliling out of Duluth and after she passed Grand Marais Minneota she "struck something underwater" and took a 15 degree list and half the crew was evacuated from the freighter while the Michipicoten was escorted to Thunder Bay for investigations
@HeavyHaulKen6 ай бұрын
Glad they got here to port! We'll all wait for her to get inspected to hear what happened. Training and safety of crew pays off!
@rjcoady216 ай бұрын
It was even in this video, the ship that is. I identified quite a few seeing ive lived on the St. Mary's for a bit.
@georgekn3mp6 ай бұрын
@@rjcoady21 i noticed the Michipicoten was going upbound in the Locks, I wonder if after going to Duluth did she start on her infamous trip? Not sure when this was actually filmed...
@cannachefchris93466 ай бұрын
The horn salute is epic on the Tregurtha!
@Tipp_Of_The_Mitt6 ай бұрын
If you want to hear the most epic horn on the great lakes google James R Barker horn.
@air433420 күн бұрын
The elevator ride ...🤣😂 This was such an fascinating documentary !!!!! A++++
@vicpapagiorgio5 ай бұрын
Fantastic documentary! Great editing and camera work. The host a beautiful woman!
@bak4320Ай бұрын
Todd is a man of few words. Love it!
@CaroleLeamer7356 ай бұрын
I truly enjoyed the arrangement and story telling in this one. I learned a lot. Thank you ❤
@kathurimamwongera69046 ай бұрын
Lady, you are amazing. Your love for adventure and courage is on another level.
@smf20725 ай бұрын
omg whatever.....you tryin to get laid ?
@madcitywendy5 ай бұрын
What a great film!! So glad I found this.
@larrywheeler97976 ай бұрын
Beautifully done!!! Bravo!!! Holly is the best!!!
@normrustic99873 ай бұрын
Or Brava!
@MrCtsSteve6 ай бұрын
Those frieghters have pretty nice state rooms . Ex Navy here , i always thought working on one of these for a season would be interesting
@goofyleo38693 ай бұрын
I'm an ex-Squid myself and did a winter repair season at BayShip in Sturgeon Bay. I enjoyed a slightly 'elevated status' among employees since I had time at sea and own boats.😎
@MrCtsSteve3 ай бұрын
@@goofyleo3869 way cool man 👍 . I bet it was an interesting time . Elevated status ...lol . I hear ya
@luukkuijer5790Ай бұрын
a great! great! great! documentary!
@WindwardToEden6 ай бұрын
I used to work on the Beaver Island Ferry in the fall, and still sail northern Lake Michigan. More dangerous than the oceans when she gets angry...
@DemetriaLewy4 ай бұрын
I'm blown away by the value you provide in your videos. 🚀 Thank you for your hard work and dedication!
@ryry5620006 ай бұрын
The shallowest Great Lake has the most ship wrecks, Lake Erie. Erie can go from glass to treacherous in the matter of minutes
@PeteD18845 ай бұрын
What an amazing experience to ride a laker across Lake Superior. Thanks for this cool film.
@NJF603 ай бұрын
Bravo 🙌 Holly, excellent presentation!
@normrustic99873 ай бұрын
Or Brava!
@MattTee19755 ай бұрын
Can confirm, that bridge scared the absolute bejeesus outta me. It actuary triggered a lifelong fear of heights in me.
@Offthbadan5 ай бұрын
I took a random photo of this ship going down the Detroit River yesterday and instantly it was in my KZbin suggestions.🤔
@atomatom73555 ай бұрын
I seen it docked up at the DTE coal plant in MOnroe.. I fished right next to it.. I've seen many of ships there in that location, but nothing quit that large.. Watching this Video.. I was like "Hey"! I know that ship...
@aspiceronni44623 ай бұрын
The Tregurtha is cool but my favorite is the Stewart J Cort followed by the Presque Isle.
@Emerald_Acre_OH5 ай бұрын
Thank you for producing this documentary. I enjoyed watching it!