The Most Dangerous River in THE WORLD is HOW DEEP?! The Strid at Bolton Abbey

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  • čas přidán 19. 06. 2024
  • Is The Strid at Bolton Abbey the most dangerous river in the world? Find out how deep it is here....
    I filmed beneath the Strid too: • I filmed beneath THE S...
    Other video: • Accident at Quarry
    0:00 Intro
    1:00 Back story of Strid
    3:30 First Depth Check
    4:23 Second Depth Check
    6:04 Third Depth Check
    7:03 Getting Deeper
    7:43 Deepest Part I Found
    10:22 Reaction
    11:04 Outro

Komentáře • 5K

  • @jackasnacks
    @jackasnacks  Před 2 lety +1121

    UPDATE: I have been back to film under water! czcams.com/video/KPO7cxHJgvw/video.html

    • @subetai17
      @subetai17 Před 2 lety +60

      While the subject is interesting, you're talking way too much and saying nothing of value. This would be better as a 2 minute video.

    • @jackasnacks
      @jackasnacks  Před 2 lety +135

      @@subetai17 yeah I probably did. Don’t know when to shut up do I. Time stamps available to jump to the interesting bits. Thanks for checking it out subetai appreciate it

    • @Poniax3
      @Poniax3 Před 2 lety +153

      I thought the video was great.

    • @rich3222
      @rich3222 Před 2 lety +164

      @@subetai17 jog on I would of enjoyed a video double the length, no one in the comments agrees with you.It was a great video,I know a fair bit about the stid and didn't find it repetitive,annoying or anything like that.Its was great.

    • @texturesofwater
      @texturesofwater Před 2 lety +100

      I really enjoyed the video and the commentary. It was friendly, relaxed, and personal.

  • @Ididathing
    @Ididathing Před 2 lety +7723

    This seems like a great place to hide a body

    • @nicholaswilliamson1180
      @nicholaswilliamson1180 Před 2 lety +420

      Wasn’t expecting to see you here

    • @psion01
      @psion01 Před 2 lety +384

      You'd have to weight it down a bit, and keep it on a chain as you lower it so you can 'steer it' into the deep waters before it gets washed away.

    • @StarLight-lt2tm
      @StarLight-lt2tm Před 2 lety +424

      @@psion01 you have put some serious thought into this lol

    • @Hazed64
      @Hazed64 Před 2 lety +280

      @@StarLight-lt2tm or has some serious experience...

    • @trongytrong5845
      @trongytrong5845 Před 2 lety +49

      Haha I see the algorithm is perfect

  • @ThePyrotechnic23
    @ThePyrotechnic23 Před 2 lety +2026

    The absolute best way to describe the River Strid, its a canyon. Look at Antelope Canyon for example. It's the exact same shape and will still fill up occasionally. Only difference is the Strid doesn't dry up

    • @ThePyrotechnic23
      @ThePyrotechnic23 Před 2 lety +76

      @Yeah, I said it not to mention, its probably a lot deeper than he can measure. That thing only reads depth in a strait line. I know for fact, that there has to be an overhang or two closer to the bottom where the water is most turbulent

    • @ThePyrotechnic23
      @ThePyrotechnic23 Před 2 lety +26

      @Yeah, I said it would still be absolutely as difficult as mapping something can be though. Looooots of background noise that will mess up any imaging sonar. I think itd be cool to build a submersible that maps using close proximity sonar, so that there'd be less interference

    • @ThePyrotechnic23
      @ThePyrotechnic23 Před 2 lety +5

      @Yeah, I said it i like where your brain is going! So sonar is really interesting. Lower hz sonar is used for low resolution and longer distance and isnt as claer. Higher hz sonar is better for high resolution and up close, as there are more soundwaves reflecting back to the detector. Problem is high hz sonar is really sensitive to bg noise unless you have some kick ass military grade software and hardware to help muddle through the noise.

    • @ThePyrotechnic23
      @ThePyrotechnic23 Před 2 lety +14

      Holy shit. My most liked comment is one explaining that the River Strid is a canyon.

    • @iaxacs3801
      @iaxacs3801 Před 2 lety +12

      I'm gonna go one step further and bring up Spooky Slot Canyon where my family calls it the nipple grinder for how narrow it is. The most terrifying part though is looking up after a recent rain to see where the last waterline was some 30 feet above your head and above that is a very battered looking log wedged some 40-50 feet above the floor. River Strad is a slot canyon, don't fuck with slot canyons full of water.

  • @slapdat.byteme
    @slapdat.byteme Před rokem +663

    The river essentially turns on its side, to a depth equivalent to an 18-storey building… incredible!

    • @calessel3139
      @calessel3139 Před rokem +33

      Or so the Germans would have us to believe!

    • @slapdat.byteme
      @slapdat.byteme Před rokem +100

      @@calessel3139 Your tinfoil hat may be a couple sizes too small.

    • @calessel3139
      @calessel3139 Před rokem

      @@slapdat.byteme It's a Norm quote my friend!
      czcams.com/video/9miLGPXBs4w/video.html

    • @tdoran616
      @tdoran616 Před rokem +17

      @@slapdat.byteme wtf... is that an anti Semitic joke about a small hat? Not funny bro

    • @slapdat.byteme
      @slapdat.byteme Před rokem +216

      @@tdoran616 When you’re dead, you don’t know you’re dead. The pain is felt by others. The same thing happens when you’re stupid.

  • @benmcreynolds8581
    @benmcreynolds8581 Před rokem +1108

    It would be so cool to do a LIDAR Scan under the water there so we could see how complex the underwater cave systems are. Cheers, from Corvallis, Oregon. 👍🏻

  • @SimonDeBelleme1
    @SimonDeBelleme1 Před 2 lety +3789

    It's terrifying, particularly when it looks like a quaint little shallow stream which you could skinny dip in to cool off on a hot sunny day. I bet the Strid has lured thousands to their deaths over the centuries.

    • @wolfenstien13
      @wolfenstien13 Před 2 lety +449

      I use to be a sailor, (I don't know why) but water has always terrorfied me. You never know what's in it, or what the water hides until you get sucked into it. I don't trust any body of water.

    • @shanepatrick4534
      @shanepatrick4534 Před 2 lety +357

      The great lakes are like that. Since they're not salt water people don't think they're dangerous and every year some poor idiot washes up on a beach after falling from a pier or not realizing how very deadly the under tow is.

    • @leviathanqueen3780
      @leviathanqueen3780 Před 2 lety +115

      @@shanepatrick4534 happened in my town not long ago, happens a few times each year on lake superior alone

    • @dawsonmills2840
      @dawsonmills2840 Před 2 lety +123

      @@shanepatrick4534 happened a month ago in conneaut lake erie, people dont realize there's more shipwrecks and stuff on lake erie and the other lakes than any other body of water on the planet

    • @smilesfordays
      @smilesfordays Před 2 lety +146

      @@shanepatrick4534 that’s how it used to be for locals like me around Mt. Hood between my experience of 1998-2010 when every year we would have a local news watch of at least 2-5 dead because they underrated the mountain and didn’t bring a GPS. It got to the point where as a child I would feel no pity at all. You respect the water. You respect the mountain... no matter the appearance.

  • @angryginger791
    @angryginger791 Před 2 lety +3468

    Imagine diverting the water draining the whole length of it. It would be an amazing place to explore.

    • @McKayLove
      @McKayLove Před 2 lety +133

      that would be fascinating

    • @Binkophile
      @Binkophile Před 2 lety +620

      I wonder how many bones you'd find

    • @ripvon3199
      @ripvon3199 Před 2 lety +186

      this actually sounds amazing, should tell some millionaires or maybe the country about it.

    • @ripvon3199
      @ripvon3199 Před 2 lety +71

      @Thomas Shannon how is it bad..... do you know how amazing it would look down there............ you obviously have never had someone to show you the right way, except the right way of others. Still think if I had a different a not of live would have turned out diff if had my
      Millionaire always have always will

    • @d2ds17
      @d2ds17 Před 2 lety +38

      Drop some cave divers in.

  • @katelunt8140
    @katelunt8140 Před 11 měsíci +50

    I remember walking past this not realising how deep it was until I read a warning sign and an information board with illustrations of the geology of the river nearby. When I googled it after my walk, it gave me shudders. It stuck in my head for days. In parts it looked so calm and almost inviting. Without that warning sign I would have been none the wiser. It’s terrifying yet it’s beautiful and inviting- almost like it’s trying to trick you 😅.

  • @patrickmcrae4403
    @patrickmcrae4403 Před rokem +60

    It’s basically an underwater water fall that pulls you into its basin of caves. Be safe and god bless you for making these videos, I’m sure your saving people with these videos

  • @graarchen9357
    @graarchen9357 Před 2 lety +958

    A few years ago people dropped a load of plastic balls in to track the route underground, non of the balls were ever seen again after they went into an underground cave system... this place is amazing and deadly

    • @Felix-Sited
      @Felix-Sited Před 2 lety +107

      That doesn't sound very environmentally friendly. But if I ever kill anyone, I'm chopping them up and throwing them in the Strid at night.

    • @leifvejby8023
      @leifvejby8023 Před 2 lety +74

      I don't believe you have dismantle the corpse before dropping it off here

    • @Felix-Sited
      @Felix-Sited Před 2 lety +13

      @@leifvejby8023 Yesnt.

    • @thewingedporpoise
      @thewingedporpoise Před 2 lety +61

      @@Felix-Sited ping pong balls, they float and are often used to study water, as well as being highly visible if you use the orange kind

    • @Felix-Sited
      @Felix-Sited Před 2 lety +23

      @@thewingedporpoise But human legs and arms, are much different. In very many fundamental ways.

  • @ga5712
    @ga5712 Před 2 lety +384

    Wow! I'd love to see this place fully mapped & modeled in 3d.

    • @zGJungle
      @zGJungle Před 2 lety +17

      That would be amazing to see.

    • @MrM-_
      @MrM-_ Před 2 lety +2

      Can't wait to see it too!

  • @MoustacheMedic
    @MoustacheMedic Před rokem +78

    I actually work at a college that is up a 200ft Hill. To think that this river is as deep as the hill i work on is tall is truly a terrifying thought. You're brave for staying at that spot so close to the edge after seeing that reading come up. I would have gone back immediately lol

    • @Tugela60
      @Tugela60 Před 8 měsíci

      It is not that deep, lol.

  • @BigD63
    @BigD63 Před rokem +101

    An interesting note to compare is The deepest section in the Niagara River is just below the Horse-Shoe Falls. It is deep as it equals the height of the falls above: 52 metres (170 ft.) , but as you determined the deepest part in the Strid is 65 meters (217ft). Jack - Thanks for the info on the Strid.

    • @aff77141
      @aff77141 Před rokem +6

      Makes sense that an underwater waterfall with that much pressure would get plenty deep too, they're often deeper than the result of a normal waterfall and that's not counting geological formations that existed before the river itself

    • @cynnajackson4556
      @cynnajackson4556 Před 11 měsíci

      Great comparison. I found this video that shows Horseshoe Falls and it's mind-boggling that The Strid Is DEEPER than the height of the falls 😮 czcams.com/video/FeOEjiCMl1k/video.html

    • @animeandwieardness6132
      @animeandwieardness6132 Před 9 měsíci +1

      Thank you for the conversation to Emperial Units! Merica!!!

    • @southtexasobserver3306
      @southtexasobserver3306 Před 9 měsíci +3

      The Congo is 720 feet deep in some parts ;)

    • @TheScorpion615
      @TheScorpion615 Před 5 měsíci +2

      That's terrifying hearing how deep this river suddenly drops on top of that you have to worry about rocks,caverns,and cold frigid water guess that's why most would have a zero percent chance of survival

  • @missleemarie3
    @missleemarie3 Před 2 lety +887

    This is incredible. It is mind boggling to me that it goes that deep. If I were on top of a roof at 65 meters up. I'd have the shakes looking down. Yet people are just walking along the edge of the rocks like theres not a giant chasm below them. Funny how visuals work (meaning since we cant see it, it doesn't seem scary).

    • @THISISLolesh
      @THISISLolesh Před 2 lety +37

      It’s unlikely to be that deep, inaccurate readings.

    • @MrNoFWay
      @MrNoFWay Před 2 lety +28

      Nice to see Harry Potter got a job after all them movies.

    • @wilsonov87
      @wilsonov87 Před 2 lety +74

      @@THISISLolesh if it's not that deep then where is the volume of the water? It's clearly not in the width of the river. It's geologically straightforward for it to be a flooded slot canyon with such depth.

    • @ReasonableAccommodations
      @ReasonableAccommodations Před 2 lety +31

      @@wilsonov87 Except that the river has overhangs, so it's not as narrow as it looks. It gets wider underground.

    • @DynamicUnreality
      @DynamicUnreality Před 2 lety +10

      Yeah but you also dont float in air generally either.

  • @rich3222
    @rich3222 Před 2 lety +619

    You an absolute legend,I wanted to know this for years,I search for new strid videos every week ,so when I saw this today I couldn't beleive it .Thanks.Hope you get enough likes to put some ads on you deserve it.

    • @jackasnacks
      @jackasnacks  Před 2 lety +24

      Hey Rich no problem. Was great fun to go visit was my first time there so wasn’t a trouble at all. I have also followed strid videos for about a year now and read through comments of lots of suggestions for experiments. I figured I’d give this a shot! Good to see you here

    • @rich3222
      @rich3222 Před 2 lety +14

      @@jackasnacks thanks Jack,14.5 double decker busses,I will do my own video too one day.I had the idea to get a big weight on a rod ,one that can sink quick enough to avoid the current and measure the depth.Also wanted to put a life jacket on a manikin, people had issue with the littering aspect.However a one off is well worth it.We need to know.Can alway retrieve it downstream if possible.

    • @bistokid7555
      @bistokid7555 Před 2 lety +2

      Dito Dito Dito 😏, great words 👍

    • @dudemanismadcool
      @dudemanismadcool Před 2 lety +1

      It is terrifying seeing those ferocious eddies coming up and dispersing against the direction of flow in the turbulent area, almost like there is an upward draft of water. It is basically a washing machine for a depth of over 60 meters. I was always skeptical seeing other vids on this but this shows just why it is so dangerous. Awesome.

    • @johndaugherty3544
      @johndaugherty3544 Před 2 lety

      Had to like and subscribe because you did and contributed money/time to this! Great job!!

  • @Fishingminooka
    @Fishingminooka Před rokem +347

    Sonars work with sounds waves reflected from the bottom. Sound moves ~3x faster in water than air so with how much air there is in the water, it would slow the reflection of the sound waves down a bit and would trick the sonar into reading the water as deeper than it is. It’s still incredibly deep and dangerous but the numbers will be skewed a little bit towards the deeper with more bubbles present. I love the video and how you put it together, just felt like sharing this lil bit of info

    • @benhortonben9105
      @benhortonben9105 Před rokem +8

      I thought about this too. I know that subs used to hide from Sonar because of varying temperatures being unable to detect there presence. I wonder if that would apply here?

    • @amarillo856
      @amarillo856 Před rokem +48

      I like how this comment was informative without sounding rude.

    • @KWW0321
      @KWW0321 Před rokem +20

      The algorithm used by the software does a good job at compensating for what you are describing as well as particulate interference.

    • @Dude0000
      @Dude0000 Před 11 měsíci +13

      The bubbles are only in the top meter. It shouldn’t affect it too much, but I’m wary of his results.

    • @Mister_Scar
      @Mister_Scar Před 10 měsíci +9

      If it is an underwater sonar, which I assume it is, then it’s safe to say that the calculation for depth accounts for sound travelling through water. It might actually be inaccurate used in air as it calculates a slower sound travel in air as it does for water.

  • @solarus2120
    @solarus2120 Před rokem +38

    I've been visiting Bolton Abbey with my family for decades. I have a lot of good memories playing in the much calmer and shallower stretch near the Abbey. My first memory of the Strid section is from a school trip in the early 90s. It was drilled into us, at length, that it was deep and treacherous and that everyone should stay back from the edge. We were told stories of people trying to jump the narrow bits, falling in and not being recovered. I remember thinking "it doesn't look that wide, I could probably jump it..." but being cowed by the stories.

  • @dianeluke1746
    @dianeluke1746 Před 2 lety +924

    I have never heard of The Strid before, and I found it absolutely fascinating! This is an exceptionally well made video and I loved the drone footage! I hail from Tampa, Florida, USA.

    • @jackasnacks
      @jackasnacks  Před 2 lety +47

      Thanks Diane glad you enjoyed it and your comments really do help keep me motivated to keep finding out more! Hope all is good in Florida!

    • @edwinner100
      @edwinner100 Před 2 lety +2

      Same loved this

    • @mikeo8790
      @mikeo8790 Před 2 lety +9

      I'm in Tampa as well. average water depth in our rivers around 5foot I've canoed every river around I couldn't imagine 200 foot moving that fast.

    • @dianeluke1746
      @dianeluke1746 Před 2 lety +5

      @@mikeo8790 I canoe the Hillsborough River, and up where I go the water doesn’t seem to move at all! The gators like it better that way! :-)

    • @travism9339
      @travism9339 Před 2 lety +3

      @@dianeluke1746 St Augustine here. 👍🏻👍🏻

  • @lucygeezer4328
    @lucygeezer4328 Před 2 lety +636

    Just for reference... the Statue of Liberty is 93 metres tall, the statue of Christ in Rio de Janeiro is 38 metres tall with the Brooklyn bridge coming in at 84 metres.... shit be deep

    • @KroniklyStoned
      @KroniklyStoned Před 2 lety +37

      Bottom of the Golden Gate bridge to the water at high tide is 67m

    • @logankowalyk2580
      @logankowalyk2580 Před 2 lety +24

      It's not 65m deep. This is a horrible way to test the dept. The sonar is more than likely being pushed by the current and is facing downstream therefore the readings are extended and also unreliable. This creek is closer to around 6m. Or 20-30ft

    • @KroniklyStoned
      @KroniklyStoned Před 2 lety +2

      @@logankowalyk2580 Makes sense that the true depth would be the sonar pointing vertically downwards.

    • @VenomGamingCenter
      @VenomGamingCenter Před 2 lety +74

      @@logankowalyk2580 Sonar doesn't get pushed. He's also using a gyroscopic sonar so it's always pointing downwards.
      The strid really is that deep. And goggle confirms this.

    • @logankowalyk2580
      @logankowalyk2580 Před 2 lety +2

      @@VenomGamingCenter it's really not though

  • @tylersmith8380
    @tylersmith8380 Před rokem +2

    I subscribed and liked simply because you went and did that. Guys like you deserve more presence on here and definitely more availability and opportunity. Just keep doin you bro!

  • @BBDA-CLEAR
    @BBDA-CLEAR Před 11 měsíci +12

    That's around 210 ft or equal to a 21 story building. How can something so narrow be so deep absolutely unbelievable. Wonderful Post ! Not to mention an absolutely beautiful landscape which unfortunately sometimes can be deadly..

  • @Lord_Ronin_The_Compassionate

    Folks, please note that “The Strid” is just a small section of the River Wharfe, in Wharfedale, Yorkshire. It is not the River Strid which seems to be a source of confusion judging by many of the comments here. This interesting video was done when the water level was relatively low, but even I would think twice (and more) before trying to jump across its most dangerous parts.
    We live in Burley-in-Wharfedale, just a little downstream of the Strid and have visited it numerous times to photograph the area throughout the year as the season and water conditions change. There’s no doubting that in flood it looks particularly dangerous so it’s easy to appreciate the risks, but when it’s summertime it looks like a little stream with nothing to indicate the danger except for the numerous warning/danger notices in the area.

    • @Vespyr_
      @Vespyr_ Před 2 lety +7

      What is the actual danger though? Will it suck you under? Is it just fast currents? Steep drops? What is it that kills you?

    • @Lord_Ronin_The_Compassionate
      @Lord_Ronin_The_Compassionate Před 2 lety +34

      @@Vespyr_ Its probably all of the above alongside some other reasons, so I can’t claim to know the precise answer, but I do agree with your suggestions. If you walk upstream of the Strid the river Wharfe is quite a lot wider than than the Strid, and the same holds true for the downstream as well. It suggests that there’s more going on in the Strid for it to be narrowed on the surface.
      If The upstream water has to go somewhere to allow for the conditions we observe - the Strid’s surface water is considerably faster than the up/downstream area which would support your thoughts about speed/depth/turbulence, the latter being possibly the hardest bit to deal with.
      If you are in the area during spring to autumn after a local rainstorm has fallen upstream, the power of the water passing through the Strid, is quite an awesome sight. Unfortunately those that die trying to jump across the narrow parts tend to be tourists that ignore the warning signs and they only see a small stream that looks appealing to cool off in (yes, we do see sunshine in Yorkshire, lol), but they don’t appreciate just how strong the current/undertow/turbulence/depth is, nor do they appreciate the danger until too late.
      I suspect that as it’s in an area of limestone strata that, as with other limestone areas (the North Riding of Yorkshire has lots), that there’s plenty of underwater overhang’s, which, coupled with fast flow and turbulence, it’s going to make death by drowning far more likely (the turbulence/& associated bubbles won’t make it easy to swim to safety).
      Add in these possible complications and the likelihood of survival that much harder eg fast flow/overhang’s water power making impacting the head on the rocks highly likely.
      When a body is recovered, usually a bit further downstream, it’s difficult to assess the precise cause due to all the marks, bruises and extensive damage, resulting in it being listed as “death by drowning”.
      Sorry for the length of my comment but hopefully it helps with understanding the situation? I didn’t want to just answer your question with some trite response such as “a combo of all of the above plus drowning” as it doesn’t help. It’s a pity that there’s no way to add photos/videos to accompany a comment as I’m sure it would show both the beauty of the area alongside the hidden danger of the area!

    • @Lord_Ronin_The_Compassionate
      @Lord_Ronin_The_Compassionate Před 2 lety +5

      @@Vespyr_ Just spotted that Jack a Snacks has released a couple of newer Strid videos, and there’s one CZcamsr (MrBallen) that’s watching! Already hooked on these new videos which, TBH, show some of the reasons why jumping/swimming in the Strid is a shoe in for those that would like a posthumous Darwin Award!

    • @iaxacs3801
      @iaxacs3801 Před 2 lety +8

      @@Vespyr_ If underneath looks anything like slot canyons the danger is a hidden blender ready to bash you against the walls with highly turbulent waters until you're a nice puree.

    • @MissionaryInMexico
      @MissionaryInMexico Před 2 lety +15

      I find it strange people don't watch the video then comment about it based on the title. He even comments during the video that it's the river Wharfe.

  • @near--zero
    @near--zero Před 2 lety +933

    The strid is one of the deadliest waterways evar.
    Pans over to some granny doing the breast stroke

    • @bradleysmith9431
      @bradleysmith9431 Před 2 lety +29

      Yeah, I doubt this is the most dangerous river in the world, it's just the most dangerous river that people still recreationally swim in.

    • @austinhogan9202
      @austinhogan9202 Před 2 lety +71

      100% fatality rate, RIP random swimmer dude in this video.

    • @austinhogan9202
      @austinhogan9202 Před 2 lety +5

      @@bradleysmith9431 doubt that too as people
      Casually swim the Mississippi River

    • @havinglotsafun
      @havinglotsafun Před 2 lety +49

      The strid isn't that long, as the river goes back to normal. Hence the person swimming downstream

    • @Toochilledtocare-_-
      @Toochilledtocare-_- Před 2 lety +35

      @@bradleysmith9431 deadliest in england, probably not the world. when people talk about the strid, they're not referring to the wider area where t where the granny is swimming. its more further upstream.

  • @FeedMeSalt
    @FeedMeSalt Před rokem +138

    Stuff like this exists all over Canada just not as dramatically.
    Our old farm had a river that ran through it and fed a dozen more properties. It was 4-5 foot wide in some places yet moved millions of tons of water.
    Some sections were 35+ foot deep.
    We lost entire cattle into that damn river more then once. Just Fing gone.
    And we have pulled Sturgeon out well over 150lbs
    There is also a truck down there somewhere.

    • @father0f4ll
      @father0f4ll Před rokem +18

      how did a truck just fell there😂

    • @crakkbone8473
      @crakkbone8473 Před 11 měsíci +4

      Where!? I’m in Alberta and I’ve never heard of something like that.

    • @FeedMeSalt
      @FeedMeSalt Před 11 měsíci +8

      @@crakkbone8473 Northern Ontario a small area called "Timisking shores"
      That's where I grew up.

    • @FeedMeSalt
      @FeedMeSalt Před 11 měsíci +5

      @@father0f4ll It MAY have been intentional 🤣

    • @Horsewrangler780
      @Horsewrangler780 Před 11 měsíci +2

      ​@@crakkbone8473get outside and explore more. Im in southern ontario and i can walk to rockwood and we have a glacier park with deep potholes everywhere.

  • @sheryl6038
    @sheryl6038 Před rokem +11

    Oh my God! I was so nervous for you going so near that water. It looks like there should be all kinds of warning signs and alarms. So, scary. My heart is actually beating faster watching your approach.

  • @TheOriginalFaxon
    @TheOriginalFaxon Před 2 lety +482

    Tom Scott did a video about The Strid and the algorithm pointed me here afterward, so you're definitely doing something right there since he has over 4m subscribers and your video is easily the same quality!

    • @jackasnacks
      @jackasnacks  Před 2 lety +30

      Thannks a lot Dale i appreciate it! Good to hear that it is recommended after Tom Scotts! Hopefully people manage to find the answers ayou tend to have after watching his video

    • @TheOriginalFaxon
      @TheOriginalFaxon Před 2 lety +1

      @@jackasnacks I didn't watch past half way because a hardware unboxed charity stream came on and I was literally passing out, so I left it on for the view for them. I still learned a bunch more and answered most of my questions. I really need to start actually making content regularly for my own channel but my health has been extremely demotivating recently. Always doing research though! Keep it up dude

    • @melin1969
      @melin1969 Před 2 lety

      so has Haze Outdoors several months back

    • @adriennefloreen
      @adriennefloreen Před 2 lety +2

      His video is way better than Tom Scott's, because Tom Scott didn't make a new scientific discovery and correct wikipedia and google.

    • @murraynatkie7490
      @murraynatkie7490 Před 2 lety

      I watch a lot of Tom Scott but haven't even been recommended his video on the topic yet, just this.
      Going to see what else you've got!

  • @ex-navyspook
    @ex-navyspook Před 2 lety +185

    Holy crap! For anyone in the US, the deepest part is over 210ft, about the height of a twenty-story building! Simply extraordinary.

    • @captainsquiggles5958
      @captainsquiggles5958 Před 2 lety +14

      Thanks! Im from the US and had no idea how to visualize 65 meters XD

    • @ex-navyspook
      @ex-navyspook Před 2 lety +2

      @@captainsquiggles5958 Me, too, but I've spent so much time overseas, I can go back-and-forth between Imperial and Metric measures pretty easily.

    • @julierobinson3633
      @julierobinson3633 Před rokem +6

      @@captainsquiggles5958 Basically a metre is equivalent to 3ft 3 inches. So times by 3 - and if it's a big number add on a bit for every set of 3" making up another foot. So 4 metres = 13 feet. (I'm British and we think in both metres and feet and inches).

    • @palloproductions3198
      @palloproductions3198 Před rokem +20

      How much is that in cheeseburgers?

    • @naathnaath6377
      @naathnaath6377 Před rokem +4

      @@palloproductions3198
      2.4

  • @236260
    @236260 Před 10 měsíci +5

    Brother, you are the kind of adventurer I can relate to. This is the first video I have seen of yours, but I already know I’ll be watching plenty more.
    Seeing such a narrow stretch of running water, I would have never, ever guessed it to be that deep. We have some dangerous spots around here at a point called Great Falls, I feel quite confident that it never gets that deep.

  • @drgunsmith4099
    @drgunsmith4099 Před 8 měsíci +6

    I watched my brother drown in a slow looking river..under currents got him, he’s a great swimmer and strong but the river just took him away…he popped out eventually not far away, we actually brought him back, he was so lucky. Please be careful folks around any river.

  • @cecilia6703
    @cecilia6703 Před 2 lety +409

    Hello from Sweden! That is massively terrifying & there's not a shot in hell I'd get anywhere near those mossy ass rocks.

    • @jackasnacks
      @jackasnacks  Před 2 lety +19

      Sweden! Hello :) Love that country i love your language and accent lol

    • @mattiasdahlstrom2024
      @mattiasdahlstrom2024 Před 2 lety +11

      I presume y’all know know that in Swedish strid means fast or rapid when used about water or rivers but also combat !

    • @landonboyd3001
      @landonboyd3001 Před 2 lety +11

      Right?! my anxiety was skyrocketing when he was climbing down them

    • @electricboogeyman5855
      @electricboogeyman5855 Před 2 lety +8

      @@landonboyd3001 seriously, at least wear a helmet and lifejacket. Idk if it would help but I'd feel better watching him. Lol.

    • @andrewilkinson
      @andrewilkinson Před 2 lety +3

      I live near the Strid and love videos like this. Why because it promotes an air of mystique. Unfortunately that’s all it is. Yes it’s dangerous and indeed fatalities have occurred, but they also have in other stretches of the river. It is not a dangerous area if treated with caution, but swimming is certainly not advisable.
      That said it’s a beautiful stretch of river and I do enjoy videos such as this which encourage that air of mystique rather than the pure beauty of the place.
      Treat with respect and it will fill you with pleasure.
      There’s far more scary places in wharfedale, the dog with saucer sized eyes in Trollers Ghyll, the mysterious carvings and UFOs on Rombalds Moor (Ilkley Moor) to name a couple.
      Sometimes mysteries are best left that way.
      By the way the depth of water is irrelevant when it comes to drowning, if you can’t breathe in it it doesn’t matter if it’s 2 inch or 20 fathoms.

  • @rdance3
    @rdance3 Před 2 lety +801

    Even the best transducers, mounted on fishing boats, give inaccurate readings when bubbles are allowed to form. The trouble you had, in the beginning, getting consistent readings, could have been mitigated by allowing the transducer to "free float" down the stream. This would allow constant vertical orientation, which is very key.

    • @JLo83
      @JLo83 Před 2 lety +52

      Someone else made the point that the sonar he's using has a gyroscopic nature to it so that it always maintains vertical orientation inside the ball housing.

    • @nahometesfay1112
      @nahometesfay1112 Před 2 lety +39

      @@JLo83 but the bubbles can affect how sonar travels through the stream

    • @Kaboomf
      @Kaboomf Před 2 lety +21

      Also, the cone it's measuring in isn't laser beam narrow. Trying to use a sonar close to a near vertical feature like that is fairly pointless, it will get confusing readings off the sides.

    • @llYossarian
      @llYossarian Před 2 lety +6

      @@Kaboomf Wouldn't that more likely result in a shallower reading though if it doesn't just return an error?

    • @Kaboomf
      @Kaboomf Před 2 lety +5

      @@llYossarian depends. Sometimes, the echo can reflect at a shallow angle off more than one surface and take a longer route back to the sonar, giving a false deep reading.

  • @hansjohannsen6722
    @hansjohannsen6722 Před rokem

    Good to see ya pop up on my feed again! I've seen people talking about this project since you posted!!

  • @victorpena200
    @victorpena200 Před 11 měsíci +73

    The Strid is truly an underwater crevasse or a thin underwater canyon. It’s thin but I truly believe that it gets much wider at the bottom and then forms into a rapid underwater lake with massive cave systems.

    • @melody3741
      @melody3741 Před 9 měsíci +10

      Good idea, but the wider it is, the slower the flow would be.

    • @magnumxlpi
      @magnumxlpi Před 9 měsíci +10

      I too like to imagine things that don't exist

    • @victorpena200
      @victorpena200 Před 9 měsíci

      @@magnumxlpi What you can image does exist somewhere that is uncharted.

    • @npcperson2158
      @npcperson2158 Před 9 měsíci

      .. and tentacle monsters.

    • @casualrider6045
      @casualrider6045 Před 9 měsíci

      ​@@npcperson2158fish market 😂

  • @lawrencesmeaton6930
    @lawrencesmeaton6930 Před 2 lety +124

    Man, those depths add an additional terror. Without equalising your ears on the way down as trained divers do, you'd almost certainly burst your ear drums at depths below ~20m. Just an extra level of pain to go through in before you die!

    • @mydogeatspuke
      @mydogeatspuke Před rokem

      You'd not get a chance to do any diver things, you'd already have been swept under and had your head repeatedly smacked against rocks below the surface before you could process what had happened. Burst ear drums would be the very least of your problems lol

  • @a_diamond
    @a_diamond Před 2 lety +91

    The way that water roils by the falls.. I've seen waterfalls before, but that almost convective movement of the water is insanely powerful.. just wow ..
    It makes sense that it's the deep there.. it's been hit with a pressure washer for ages.. it's been blasting the bottom of the falls away..

  • @marcosartor6474
    @marcosartor6474 Před rokem

    Great video, man!!! I've always been fascinated with The Strid and that is REALLY mind blowing.... Thank you very much!!!

  • @ecmmechaicsuk9535
    @ecmmechaicsuk9535 Před 11 měsíci

    Thanks for taking the time to do such a thing

  • @luckyotter623
    @luckyotter623 Před 2 lety +138

    There's something incredibly eerie about a body of water this narrow, that looks like your average stream, that is over 200 feet deep. The fact the water is so murky and dark with tannic acid, hiding all its secrets, only adds to the creepiness. Shudder. Thank you for making these videos that reveal the terrifying truth!

    • @jackasnacks
      @jackasnacks  Před 2 lety +11

      No worries Otter! It is creepy. I always wonder if i am going to see something that i really don't want to lol

    • @luckyotter623
      @luckyotter623 Před 2 lety +2

      @@jackasnacks I can't wait to see more of your videos. I bet there's all sorts of interesting and creepy things down there!

    • @johninnz
      @johninnz Před 2 lety +5

      You are right its definately a bit unusual....if you haven't already check out David Paulides "Missing 411" he draws a link between missing people and bodies of water. This creek certainly is strange.

    • @brennanherring9059
      @brennanherring9059 Před 2 lety +1

      It's dangerous because of the turbulence under the surface, not the depth.

    • @RichO1701e
      @RichO1701e Před 2 lety +3

      @@brennanherring9059 when the turbulence drags you down 200ft, then yes, it IS the depth that's as dangerous as much as the turbulence, idiot

  • @johnathansaegal3156
    @johnathansaegal3156 Před 2 lety +330

    I've always been fascinated by this little strip of water - I am an American who has whitewater rafted on some massive rivers, yet this narrow section of the Strid is just impossible to believe how dangerous this section is.
    I just found this channel - seeing you have several videos on this, you not only got a "like", you earned a sub. Keep it up!

    • @lukeholmes7057
      @lukeholmes7057 Před rokem +3

      It's actually an offence to enter the strid now due to its dangers

    • @davidelliott5843
      @davidelliott5843 Před rokem +4

      Making swimming an offence will cause some people to break the rules - just for fun. Where are the Deep Water undercurrent signs?

    • @erichughes284
      @erichughes284 Před rokem +2

      It looks benign

    • @jasonjaeger7216
      @jasonjaeger7216 Před rokem

      @@lukeholmes7057 heh, me thinks this world needs less warning labels and rules from the nanny-minded. More direct cause and effect please.

    • @mkgaming5823
      @mkgaming5823 Před rokem

      @@matthewnienkirchen8083 Ehh, The rocks around it are very slippery so you can easily fall in
      Its dangerous even to experienced people
      The Strid does not care about your experience or your understanding
      If you get caught you are totally at its mercy

  • @Warhawk76
    @Warhawk76 Před rokem

    Thanks for making this and sharing it.

  • @Moishe555
    @Moishe555 Před 11 měsíci

    This is unreal!!! amazing work!

  • @OpinionatedMonk
    @OpinionatedMonk Před rokem +263

    As I live nearby, I've walked past this quite a few times and it was terrifying watching you that close to it. Some sections are literally a couple of feet wide (about 60 cm) depending on the time of year, but the depth is ridiculous and the undercurrents are, as you said, absolutely incomprehensible, as in most people can't appreciate how it looks beneath the rocks. Someone got pulled under and the body was found a few miles down river, but on the surface it looks almost calm and inviting, on a peaceful day. Must have been some weather the days before you filmed. Great video by the way.

    • @undertyped1
      @undertyped1 Před 10 měsíci

      No more dangerous than standing nearish to a cliff, and that's not that risky.

    • @chriswoodley3307
      @chriswoodley3307 Před 10 měsíci +13

      @undertyped the thing is, jumping off a cliff isn't as inviting as jumping into a stream

    • @uws5604
      @uws5604 Před 10 měsíci

      @@chriswoodley3307 haha, look at you spending bytes trying to explain yourself to an idiot like @undertyped1. I remember being a child with my parents and paddling in light streams that didn't look too different than this deceptive monstrosity.

    • @Ninchennase
      @Ninchennase Před 10 měsíci

      That's what I was thinking, standing this close and all it takes is one little slip and bye bye ... slipping at a cliff you still have a chance to grip some rocks and try to break the fall, slipping here and you don't ...

    • @corail53
      @corail53 Před 10 měsíci +1

      @@undertyped1 No surviving if you fall in, not to mention you don't get flash floods on a cliff.

  • @riverliva792
    @riverliva792 Před 2 lety +202

    Hey mate, definitely get yourself some ppe if you go measuring stuff in a river again, like a pfd so you float if you fall in, a helmet& a mate with a throw bag to pull you out. Trust me man ! Advice from a long time rafting guide. Crazy how deep that is too, likely the main flow is concentrated on the surface looking at the ejection pace of the surface water, but clearly going over a huge pothole! Great work lad.

    • @fancyhat6505
      @fancyhat6505 Před 2 lety +40

      Believe me, if he fell in the strid, none of that would have made the slightest difference

    • @ThorRuneHansen
      @ThorRuneHansen Před 2 lety

      The pfd indeed!

    • @WaterNai
      @WaterNai Před 2 lety

      I was thinking the same thing.

    • @davehart1027
      @davehart1027 Před 2 lety +21

      Only ppe that would work is a tethered rope set that theres no way he could fall in

    • @EddThe19th
      @EddThe19th Před 2 lety +34

      The nature of the strid means essentially the water has very little resistance. You fall right through it as if falling through air. (Realistically a little more resistance, but not enough that even floatation devices will give you any buoyancy). Then at the bottom the weight of the water means you can't climb out, or move realy or anything much. The only reason you'd survive is that you'd be close to it's outlet, and were lucky enough that the current shunts you out without you falling into one of the caves or other crazy geometry down there. Basically there is no chance.

  • @dressagerider31
    @dressagerider31 Před rokem

    all i could think about while watching is just how beautiful that area is, the greenery of the trees with the turbulent water in the background gorgeous!

  • @eu528
    @eu528 Před rokem +4

    Sou brasileira,apaixonada por esse Rio.
    Obrigada pelo vídeo, excelente!

  • @Kaxlon
    @Kaxlon Před 2 lety +96

    Holy balls! That's one deep stream. We have a few of those here in Sweden too.
    Say the stream is 1 meter wide and 66 meters deep. That is more volume per second than my 60 ton truck of gasoline/diesel. Truck was 18-21 cubic meters plus 33 cubic meters for the trailer.
    That thin/deep river flows more than a fully loaded tanker truck measuring 25 meters long 60 tons! Just wow!
    Great job!

    • @jackasnacks
      @jackasnacks  Před 2 lety +13

      Thats a crazy comparison Kaxlon thanks for sharing :)

    • @seraphina985
      @seraphina985 Před 2 lety +4

      I think you will find some of those deeper sections have regions of slow flowing water within them. This usually happens when water flows over a depression that is deeper than its deepest outlet goes. You essentially end up fairly stagnant water at the bottom being trapped by the rise up to the outlet acting like a dam so most of the flow occurs at the top above the outlet height.

    • @SonnyKnutson
      @SonnyKnutson Před 2 lety +3

      What is those here in Sweden called? Know any of them by name :D?

    • @eldattackkrossa9886
      @eldattackkrossa9886 Před 2 lety

      @@SonnyKnutson did you find any of them? id love to know too

  • @guns21111boatbuilding
    @guns21111boatbuilding Před 2 lety +682

    Sonar doesn't work well in very turbulent water. When you're on a boat and going at speed, you cant use it due to the turbulence and air bubbles in the water. I'm not sure your max depth readings are accurate because of that

    • @HoleyMoleyAlex
      @HoleyMoleyAlex Před 2 lety +64

      That is true, we also know it's not that deep. I believe that it was properly surveyed back in 1981 by University of Leeds divers. The depth is only between 20 ft (6m at low flow) up to a max of 9m 30ft at high flow.

    • @ApocalypticChronicles
      @ApocalypticChronicles Před 2 lety +111

      @@HoleyMoleyAlex A lot of erosion can happen within 40 years with the flow that water has. Not only that, but it's an entire cave system underneath that makes it too dangerous to get into - even for divers.

    • @peterw7512
      @peterw7512 Před 2 lety +127

      @@HoleyMoleyAlex I doubt the Uni of Leeds would have allowed it's divers to swim in the deeper areas, way too dangerous.

    • @HoleyMoleyAlex
      @HoleyMoleyAlex Před 2 lety +31

      @@ApocalypticChronicles Eroison of solid limestone is not that quick, and they were cave divers are mad, and this was done by cave divers.

    • @HoleyMoleyAlex
      @HoleyMoleyAlex Před 2 lety +14

      @@peterw7512 I am referring to the caving club, i.e. the cave divers. The dive definitely took place and it was the 80s!

  • @Bob-ts2tu
    @Bob-ts2tu Před 10 měsíci +2

    i've walked down this path more times than i care to remember for over half a century, and just looking at it having heard many stories of no chance of survival is enough to keep me (and kids/grandkids) well away from the edge, but 65m deep !!! i never knew that, it's pretty insane and i AM shocked lol, it's a fact i can use to impress my walking buddies, so thanks for the vid :)

  • @TheEs2012
    @TheEs2012 Před rokem

    Simply incredible. I like your low key delivery, too. What a beautiful place. And so scary.

  • @50StichesSteel
    @50StichesSteel Před 2 lety +83

    I could imagine being tumbled around like a washing machine underwater and having no idea what way is up. With 60 meters of water with dark water, cave systems, bubbles everywhere, etc..No wonder people can easily drown there. You can kick and swim as hard as you want and it's useless without a sense of direction.

    • @killerbug05
      @killerbug05 Před 2 lety +5

      The way to find which way is up is by blowing out air and seeing where it goes...but in the dark and with so many other bubbles I doubt that'd be possible.

    • @VenomGamingCenter
      @VenomGamingCenter Před 2 lety +10

      It's not just that, the water is so turbulent that it essentially doesn't act like water.
      The turbulent nature of it adds a ridiculous amount of air bubbles to the water and you can't float in air. You essentially sink or fall to the bottom due to the nature of this effect.

    • @50StichesSteel
      @50StichesSteel Před 2 lety +1

      @@VenomGamingCenter I'm not a professional rescue diver to give answers on how they do what they do exactly, but if people lose their lives in a certain river or stream, most likely someone has attempted to dive it to recover the body...We have a river near my house that regularly claims lives of people falling in or kayaking, swimmers, etc..and the volunteer fire department dive it to do body recovering. In certain spots you see vortexs' and undertoe currents usually after the small waterfall that does the most damage and holds people underwater...I don't know how they overcome these features but I do know that they dive it and recover body's regularly.

    • @thedeviouspanda
      @thedeviouspanda Před 2 lety +1

      It's a scary feeling to be sure. I was knocked off a tube and dragged underwater in a river where I live and was caught in a small turbulent area under a low tree branch like that. And when I was able to find the surface again, there was so much debris from everyone's stuff always falling into the river and getting caught in the branch that I couldn't push it all aside and get my head above water. Very lucky I was able to finally get out. 0 out of 10 experience. Be careful in and around water.

    • @TheMajkla
      @TheMajkla Před 2 lety

      Deeper in there's zero visibility in cavernous areas. The water is dark and foaming like what I see in Scotland - runoff from peat bogs. Undertows and vortexes, a pure nightmare.

  • @lizjoy6828
    @lizjoy6828 Před 2 lety +309

    After hearing Mr. Ballen's description of this part of the river, my anxiety was through the roof watching you work your way to the edge. People have slipped on the rocks and fallen in. This has got to be one of the most terrifying places in nature...

    • @yeshuasage3724
      @yeshuasage3724 Před 2 lety +3

      Which video?

    • @lizjoy6828
      @lizjoy6828 Před 2 lety

      @@yeshuasage3724 czcams.com/video/IDJ8_VFtexw/video.html
      Starts at 6:38, but the whole video is great.

    • @milkweed5089
      @milkweed5089 Před 2 lety +7

      @@yeshuasage3724 It's in one of his "top 3 places you can't go" videos.

    • @captainsquiggles5958
      @captainsquiggles5958 Před 2 lety +10

      YESS SSAMEE!! Iactually only clicked on this video because of Mr Ballen's description XD

    • @dr.robert5322
      @dr.robert5322 Před rokem +3

      That Mr Ballen video hits hard

  • @lovethatagave
    @lovethatagave Před 10 měsíci

    Great job with this video - thank you.

  • @coyoten8897
    @coyoten8897 Před rokem +1

    oh thats nuts, i can barely make sense of that in my mind's eye, glad yall were safe when finding this! regards from the pacific northwest of canada

  • @jenny2245
    @jenny2245 Před 2 lety +23

    I've been to the Strid a few times as a child, pretty shocked at how deep it is. Not that surprised though, given the volume of water that goes through it. I remember being told that the water is more dangerous than you'd expect, not just because it's swirling & all the undercurrents & mini whirlpools, but because it's so full of bubbles, making it much harder to float even if you're a really good swimmer.

    • @Blox117
      @Blox117 Před 2 lety

      if its dangerous why are there people swimming in it during the video

    • @sethshannon2322
      @sethshannon2322 Před 2 lety +3

      @@Blox117 they were swimming upstream, which is totally different. The density of the water alone would make you sink to the bottom.

    • @iang-lb7nx
      @iang-lb7nx Před 2 lety

      Lol. No way on earth it's that deep. What shocking is people on here believe absolutely anything.

    • @jdjshzhhhsushhszjp8969
      @jdjshzhhhsushhszjp8969 Před 2 lety +5

      @@iang-lb7nx what about it. even if it was 15 meters it’d kill almost every person that went in it. it’s an underground cave system, that sucks you in and there’s no way out, it’s really that simple

  • @sneakygloworm
    @sneakygloworm Před 2 lety +22

    I've just found out about this quaint and rather pretty man eating stream. 3 feet across and 130 feet deep is incredibly creepy. I'd love this stretch to mapped somehow so we can see a CG image of what the cave system would actually look like and how far the overhang goes back. You're a braver man than I. I cannot stand fast flowing water and very deep fast flowing water is nightmare fuel to me.

  • @garywinkel1831
    @garywinkel1831 Před rokem

    Very cool. Great video my man!

  • @stoki1
    @stoki1 Před 7 měsíci

    Thank you for the video , great job 👍

  • @ks9759
    @ks9759 Před 2 lety +81

    For us visual types: The deepest part could fit 4 school buses stacked end to end, or you could submerge the entire Leaning Tower of Pisa into that part of The Strid, and still have room to spare. 😳

  • @paulinap9739
    @paulinap9739 Před 2 lety +30

    Wow, I came across this river a couple of months back on internet and now knowing how deep it is it’s even more mind blowing 😍 Thank you Jack a snacks for your video 🙏

    • @jackasnacks
      @jackasnacks  Před 2 lety +3

      Ayyyy no worries Paulina glad you found the video! Also thanks for being here and checking it out appreciate it a lot :)

  • @olabashanda
    @olabashanda Před 10 měsíci

    Thanks for this!

  • @chriscunningham1348
    @chriscunningham1348 Před 11 měsíci

    Just rewatched this video when I first watched it was in the low thousands brilliant piece of work jack

  • @QueerCatClub
    @QueerCatClub Před 2 lety +42

    Hello from Norway! I saw the Strid mentioned over on today just now, with a link to Tom Scott, and when googling it your video came up. And man, I'm not sure whether to call you a legend or mental for getting that bloody close. Blew my mind when you revealed the depths, though. Definitely deserve more views and likes, this was really well made (aside from the very big volume jumps between recorded and live audio)

    • @jackasnacks
      @jackasnacks  Před 2 lety +4

      Thanks! I think i corrected the audio issues in my newer Strid video where i have filmed underwater, go check it out if you haven't! But i did realise the audio issues myself after posting it. Lesson learned :) Thanks for stopping by though and the positive comments really appreciate it!

  • @xxgag3xx
    @xxgag3xx Před 2 lety +27

    This is actually insane. You would never guess it was that deep just looking at it. Mind blown 🤯

  • @staceywatson1921
    @staceywatson1921 Před 9 měsíci

    Great video. I enjoyed it!

  • @dreamnxtgen8477
    @dreamnxtgen8477 Před 2 lety +444

    Please be safe! those rocks can become incredibly slippery and I felt anxiety brewing when i saw you going so close to the deadly waters.

    • @jn5433
      @jn5433 Před 2 lety +32

      The video would be titled differently if he fell to his death.

    • @that.neurodivergent
      @that.neurodivergent Před 2 lety +16

      Same, it reminded me of my current trip to the Oregon coast. There’s this structure in the rocks there that’s essentially a giant horizontal hole/tube that the waves shoot up and down (called Thors Well, look it up.) And it’s absolutely amazing to witness because as the tide is coming in, the waves shoot super high and fast into the air from this hole. That being said, these waves have the very real capacity to come up, knock you off the rocks and into the hole, where nothing but sharp mussels and a water grave await you. Creepiest part is that this is the exact type of thing you can’t really retrieve bodies from… so everyone who’s ever died in there is doomed to haunt it. A truly horrible fate.
      Anyway I couldn’t help but have incredible dread and anxiety knowing all this as I watched a man edge closer and closer to the hole, his wife taking photos and egging him on. Sure enough, a large wave comes up and he’s soaked, but luckily it was not enough to even knock him back, much less into the hole.
      This finally made him back off and I shit you not, the SECOND he stepped back, a MASSIVE wave came crashing through that would have knocked him out for sure. I just looked at him with a stern face and said “good thing you moved, huh?”
      It’s one thing for people to put their own lives in danger, that’s their issue but I was NOT prepared to see someone die that day right in front of my eyes…

    • @voetbal12
      @voetbal12 Před rokem +9

      I knew he survived because he edited the video.

    • @julierobinson3633
      @julierobinson3633 Před rokem

      @@that.neurodivergent Wow, I'd never heard of that, cool place. Similar to this...
      czcams.com/video/rrsuxn6e8UY/video.html

    • @metatron803
      @metatron803 Před rokem

      nigga calm down yo tits the boy literally survived and posted this video lmao

  • @xFENRISx
    @xFENRISx Před 2 lety +158

    That’s crazy brave to get that close. I’ve wanted to know this for years. Astonishing findings. Definitely deserves a sub.

    • @jackasnacks
      @jackasnacks  Před 2 lety +3

      Thank you err0r great to see you here man!

    • @russellayton6408
      @russellayton6408 Před 2 lety +9

      It is even crazier because you can't see what he is perched on at the 65 meter finding. I felt a little bit tense lol.

    • @PibrochPonder
      @PibrochPonder Před 2 lety +1

      Not really it’s perfectly safe if you go when it’s not wet

    • @peterlarkin762
      @peterlarkin762 Před 2 lety

      It deserves a sub, but I don't think it'd fit in there.

  • @thunbergmartin
    @thunbergmartin Před rokem +1

    What a nice video, a dude investing time and money in measuring an interesting river, as well as getting some amazing result, this is wholesome. Take care friend!

  • @juliogeordio7358
    @juliogeordio7358 Před 10 měsíci

    Great content mate

  • @LBPreviews
    @LBPreviews Před 2 lety +144

    Wow. This makes it deeper than the world's deepest pool in Dubai, which is 60 metres deep. Absolutely crazy. Makes The Strid even more frightening.

  • @chope6786
    @chope6786 Před 2 lety +3

    I was today years old (44) when I first heard of the river Strid and how intriguing and fascinating and deep it is! I will hop off CZcams now and read up on it. Thank you for sharing this! Greetings from Washington state.

  • @OlizerVanAntoninus
    @OlizerVanAntoninus Před 6 měsíci

    Great video. Had never heard of this lovely place.

  • @crunchycrispybacon
    @crunchycrispybacon Před rokem

    I didn’t have any anxiety or terror watching this but I do appreciate you answering that question we all had after reading about this fascinating place.

  • @jhonnyrocha2556
    @jhonnyrocha2556 Před 2 lety +90

    My anxiety shot all the way up when you got closer to measure the 65.3m depth - lol you're nuts. Great video!

  • @jimjoelliejack
    @jimjoelliejack Před 2 lety +26

    it’s a mind boggling piece of river, I was a paramedic and a member of the fell rescue who searched for them unfortunate newly weds, it was so sad, I would think that one of them slipped on the limestone and the other tried to rescue them. They found them down stream near addingham.

    • @jackasnacks
      @jackasnacks  Před 2 lety +5

      Jim thats really cool, do you remember much about that event? I haven't met anyone that was part of that. Would you by chance be willing to maybe explain to me what you remember happening and what you were doing whilst part of the search party? I'm sure there are lots of people would love to hear that story. Can be done over email rather than comments if want to :) No worries if you don't fancy it though!

    • @jimjoelliejack
      @jimjoelliejack Před 2 lety +12

      @@jackasnacks it happened in aug 1998, it had been raining very heavy. We parked at Barden bridge up stream from the strid woods, I was amazed at the volume of water in the river. The wharfe like most of the Dale’s rivers are spate rivers, they rise and fall very fast especially in the summer. We searched down stream to the bridge at the A59, alas no sign of the two was found. Lynne’s body was found on the weir at Addingham 6 days latter, Barry was found on October 16 10 miles downstream. I’m glad for the family and friends that they recovered them.
      They either slipped in or got caught in a flash flood. There’s not much to do when a person gets caught in there. One thing that I do remember of the day is, when I got back to my vehicle someone had smashed my car window and stole my child seat and various other items of property. Stay safe. It was a good video that you did and the one with the GoPro 👍

    • @jackasnacks
      @jackasnacks  Před 2 lety +3

      @@jimjoelliejack That is so cool to here Jim thanks for sharing :)

    • @wjheald
      @wjheald Před 2 lety

      @@jimjoelliejack o

  • @natsski9003
    @natsski9003 Před rokem

    Well done on this video.. it was very interesting. Thank you 🤔

  • @INTLBADBOY
    @INTLBADBOY Před rokem

    Really great video !

  • @adamfowler5475
    @adamfowler5475 Před 2 lety +80

    This is hands down the most intriguing river on the planet...Its remarkably bizarre how deceptive the river looks.

    • @adamfowler5475
      @adamfowler5475 Před 2 lety +1

      @ᅠᅠ really? Can You tell me the name if you find out? That's insane

    • @andrewilkinson
      @andrewilkinson Před 2 lety

      The videos deceptive not the river

    • @martynrobinson9910
      @martynrobinson9910 Před 2 lety +2

      @ᅠᅠ yeah there is a section of river that's a feeder to the lake Michigan that is electrified by the US Army Engineering Core to keep an invasive fish out, but to be fair that section is concrete and well signposted that it's electrified.
      Cost in the high hundreds of millions to build and maintain

    • @michaelscott7166
      @michaelscott7166 Před 2 lety +1

      Try looking up Bolton Abbey stepping stones. You'll see the exact same river, about a mile down stream from The Strid. 60 stepping stones to cross the river.

    • @operator0
      @operator0 Před 2 lety

      Fun fact: The Congo River discharges the second highest amount of water in the world, yet it's only the 9th longest. The river reaches a depth of 720 feet (219 meters). For comparison, the Amazon reaches a max depth of 328 feet (100 meters) and the Mississippi is about as deep as the deepest part of the Strid (200 feet, or 60 meters).
      The Congo is so deep, it has gouged out a deep underwater canyon into continental shelf under the Atlantic Ocean at its mouth.
      The Strid is like a mini Congo, except much deadlier.

  • @TheMadblondebint
    @TheMadblondebint Před 2 lety +5

    Great video, I've always been scared of the strid thanks to my parents telling me how many people died there and always finding it hypnotic, it almost beckons you to jump in. I knew about the caves and ledges but unbelievable that it is so deep, the power of the water is immense.

  • @markjessurun7765
    @markjessurun7765 Před 7 měsíci +1

    I really like ur video so don't worry about the expenses you,ll get it back !! I enjoyed this because the Bolton Strid really fascinates me so Thanks for the video and B Safe !! 😅😅😊😊

  • @nickcitron2369
    @nickcitron2369 Před rokem

    Thanks, bruv!!! So interesting.

  • @blueann3359
    @blueann3359 Před rokem +5

    Watching this from California! That is so incredibly scary deep. Awesome video. So glad you did not fall it, terrifying to be that close! Great video!

  • @elwynn9931
    @elwynn9931 Před 2 lety +13

    Ever since I first heard about this river a few years ago, I’ve been really curious about how deep it is. Thanks for doing this

  • @Sandman.68.
    @Sandman.68. Před rokem

    Excellent video mate 👍😄👍

  • @marcusoutdoors4999
    @marcusoutdoors4999 Před rokem +1

    Fascinating, living in Ilkley in the 80’s I used to go down to the Strid regularly and clamber across. Wonderful to see the mystery solved.

  • @barryfox2711
    @barryfox2711 Před 2 lety +85

    My father jumped it when he was a lad and said it was probably the most stupid thing he ever did, given that he knew the consequences of falling in. Though I live in the US now I grew up alongside the Wharfe which, at another part a little downstream, claimed the life of a grammar school friend. The Wharfe is a treacherous river, full stop.

    • @deepanshyadav02
      @deepanshyadav02 Před 2 lety

      Your father survived to tell the tale? But how?

    • @e.l.2734
      @e.l.2734 Před 2 lety +13

      @@deepanshyadav02 he jumped over it, not in it. People getting out of there alive are unknown of.

    • @deepanshyadav02
      @deepanshyadav02 Před 2 lety +3

      @@e.l.2734 Ahh shit guess I misread it the first time.

    • @scrubbybard380
      @scrubbybard380 Před rokem

      Period

  • @markbansemer1385
    @markbansemer1385 Před 2 lety +54

    Imagine too in the turbulent areas where a person would lose buoyancy because of the air saturated water and then massive undertows..

  • @zstrode.8953
    @zstrode.8953 Před rokem

    That's insane somewhat looks like that is so deep! Wow thanks for the video this is super cool! 👌

  • @GlazeonthewickeR
    @GlazeonthewickeR Před 10 měsíci

    You’ve got some really inspiring energy, man.

  • @gwynn2528
    @gwynn2528 Před 2 lety +69

    I've only heard the terrifying and heart breaking stories of The Strid, it's nice to see it as the wonder of nature that it truly appears to be. It's really beautiful.

    • @AverageAlien
      @AverageAlien Před 2 lety +1

      it's probably very exaggerated. In reality it's a very short section of river and all rapids are dangerous globally, this isn't anything new

    • @Ivy_Panda
      @Ivy_Panda Před 2 lety +4

      @@AverageAlien The problem is that some times of the year some of the most dangerous parts of the strid just look like a very calm stream perfect for swimming in. The strid has a 100% mortality rate that I know of.

  • @anthonyraistrick4728
    @anthonyraistrick4728 Před 2 lety +3

    I’ve walked this a thousand times- as I only live 30 mins away. I never thought it was that deep. Thankyou for the knowledge. Great vid. 👍

  • @alexandercarlson919
    @alexandercarlson919 Před 10 měsíci

    very cool and interesting! Hope you do more of these at famous rivers and measure them more accurately.

  • @MildaGoesWild
    @MildaGoesWild Před 10 měsíci

    Excellent job, a very interesting video.

  • @xXBurningxBridgesXx
    @xXBurningxBridgesXx Před 2 lety +88

    Thats insane. If this is true, the Strid has the same depth as Lake Erie. Wow.

    • @mikeholland1031
      @mikeholland1031 Před 2 lety

      Lake Erie is a pretty shallow lake

    • @garrettmarshall7664
      @garrettmarshall7664 Před 2 lety +9

      @@mikeholland1031 yeah and this is a stream you can jump across

    • @mikeholland1031
      @mikeholland1031 Před 2 lety +1

      @@garrettmarshall7664 I realize all that, just saying lake Erie is particularly shallow for it's size so not really a good comparison.

    • @pigeonlegs7738
      @pigeonlegs7738 Před 2 lety

      finally an analogy I can understand as a michigander...

  • @WithmeVerissimusWhostoned
    @WithmeVerissimusWhostoned Před 2 lety +57

    wow, I'm absolutely intrigued! Now I want to see full 3D scan of this ravine! \o/

  • @anthonygallagher1397
    @anthonygallagher1397 Před 8 měsíci

    A good interesting, and informative wee video.

  • @johnmanno2052
    @johnmanno2052 Před rokem

    Bravo! Excellent video

  • @physkys9708
    @physkys9708 Před 2 lety +37

    That's awesome work, not to mention a little nerve racking watching you get so close.
    Although I'm not sure how much difference it would make it is worth noting that the readings in fast flowing, aerated water will show it as deeper than it is. This is due to the fact that sound travels much faster in water than air.

  • @GeologicalNerd
    @GeologicalNerd Před 2 lety +5

    This is great! It's pretty amazing that no other research has been done on the area. Blessings to you

  • @jennygrim2057
    @jennygrim2057 Před 7 měsíci

    Fascinating Thank you!😢

  • @tomhanna2714
    @tomhanna2714 Před 11 měsíci +21

    I had asked about it in the other video but the drone footage was really helpful in explaining just why the Strid is so unusual - flipped upside down is an apt description indeed! It’s essentially a slot canyon carved into the relatively soft rock as it drops from the heights above. Gravity never sleeps, and water never stops working either, you know.
    There’s several local watercourses here in the Ozarks that have their own quirks, attractions and potential hazards too. One I haven’t really found a lot of good information on is just exactly where is the deepest known location on Table Rock Lake. Most people say it’s the river channel just above the dam, but I’m inclined to suspect it’s a potential blue hole (called a calyx) on the outer left edge of a right hand hairpin bend just below the Kimberling Bridge. The channel is generally 200-220’ here but some charts have indicated 270-280.’ Whatever the case, it’s reasonable to assume it’s substantially deeper than usual due to the sharp bend creating a local whirlpool effect and scouring the bottom out at the base of a sheer underwater cliff. There are several such locations along the lake but this one is the deepest.

    • @xerox13ster
      @xerox13ster Před 9 měsíci

      Now that you've said this, I regret ever swimming in Taneycomo, because the surface looks like this strid does when the strid is calm, and I already had to climb down a cliff to swim in it in the first place and it was COLD so it know it came from deep. I shudder at the thought.