Ghost Towns of SW Saskatchewan

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  • čas přidán 30. 07. 2024
  • A trip down Ghost Town Trail in SW Saskatchewan along highway 13 and 18 checking all some of the abandoned places along the way. #ghosttowns
    0:00 Introduction
    0:22 Consul, SK
    0:54 Robsart, SK
    2:48 Vidora, SK
    2:57 Ravenscrag Valley
    4:12 Eastend, SK
    4:44 Dollard, SK
    6:27 Shaunavon, SK
    6:42 Abandoned Bridge
    7:05 Scotsguard, SK
    9:14 Admiral, SK
    10:44 Cadillac, SK
    13:18 Maxstone, SK
    14:23 Wood Mountain, SK
    17:16 Fir Mountain, SK
    19:36 Glentworth, SK
    20:04 McCord, SK
    21:17 Val Marie, SK
    22:00 Masefield, SK
    23:40 Climax, SK
    24:50 Claydon, SK
  • Jak na to + styl

Komentáře • 801

  • @joansolomon1194
    @joansolomon1194 Před 11 měsíci +36

    It's amazing to think how the houses, the schools, the cars, the tractors, the machinery, all cost people their lives in time and money, and are now abandoned...

    • @deepblueacc
      @deepblueacc Před 8 měsíci +2

      That's why they call it earthly things. Some people worked their whole live just to afford only one of those things.

    • @dougrobbins5367
      @dougrobbins5367 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Yes, the passage of time has a way of being unpleasant

  • @clearsailing7993
    @clearsailing7993 Před 11 měsíci +86

    I worked with a Canadian engineer here in Detroit about 30 years ago. He grew up in the wheat growing areas of western Canada. They used an enclosed wagon to go to town. It was so cold that the wagon had its own heater to burn wood (I think coal too). He was in the Canadian Air Force in ww2 in England. He was a really smart guy with an incredible memory. He told me many interesting stories about Canada and England.

  • @joelgrosschmidt5507
    @joelgrosschmidt5507 Před 10 měsíci +21

    Thank you for making this. I am fascinated by abandoned towns in the prairies. These old houses that had children running around barefoot, mothers cooking over wood fired stoves, men coming in for lunch from working. I cant describe the feeling it gives me.

    • @attrell
      @attrell  Před 10 měsíci

      Glad you enjoyed it

    • @minkorrh
      @minkorrh Před 8 měsíci

      You're going back way over 100 years with thoughts like that. Just because people were rural doesn't mean they're living in abject poverty ffs. Some of the wealthiest people you will meet are farmers...maybe not back then, but these days.....

    • @joelgrosschmidt5507
      @joelgrosschmidt5507 Před 8 měsíci

      @@minkorrh dumbest reply I’ve ever seen. The scenario I described was the daily life of my father as a child. I’m pretty sure that wasn’t over 100 years ago. Plenty of central albertans in the 50s lived that way. The way you blast stupidity with such confidence might be sign of a malignant tumour. Go get checked out.

    • @brianhdueck3372
      @brianhdueck3372 Před 2 měsíci +2

      That is exactly the imaging running through my mind. Where have all the children gone… the smells of fresh break… chicken dinners…. Vibrancy and hope. Oddly sad and lonely, yet intriguing and warm. I love these historic throw back videos.

  • @morganahoff2242
    @morganahoff2242 Před 11 měsíci +28

    It really makes you feel like you're livin' on a ball. I took a guitar building course 30 years ago in a small town in Saskatchewan, and it has since become a town full of artisans. Because you can buy a house for $60,000, and put a kiln in the back yard if you want to. People have time to explore their creativity, not distracted by lots of other people, and things.

    • @TheMrCC21
      @TheMrCC21 Před 10 měsíci

      "Small town Saskatchewan" is quite vague. Just say the place.

    • @dawnwennberg9884
      @dawnwennberg9884 Před 10 měsíci +1

      @@TheMrCC21 pick one buddy. You can be free to walk around naked. Winter sucks though.

    • @suefrench8721
      @suefrench8721 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Sounds like a wonderful place. Don't say the name; you'll be inundated with so many new neighbors that your magical place will change forever!

    • @benjaminnjeru879
      @benjaminnjeru879 Před 10 měsíci

      The homeless people should be relocated here

    • @minkorrh
      @minkorrh Před 8 měsíci

      Freaking paradise.

  • @JensSchraeder
    @JensSchraeder Před 4 měsíci +4

    I find these small Saskatchewan towns so peaceful. My dad grew up just north of there. In a small town called Gouldtown on a farm. Rest in Peace Dad.

  • @fuzzywuzzy5749
    @fuzzywuzzy5749 Před 10 měsíci +4

    As someone with roots in SK, my eyes are filled with tears . RIP Mildred SK

    • @nicolasuribestanko
      @nicolasuribestanko Před 9 dny

      My roots are in Dauphin, Manitoba. But my eyes have also filled with tears.

  • @Cliff2548
    @Cliff2548 Před 11 měsíci +4

    Really interesting trip through these Sask. Ghost Towns however, it leaves an ache in the pit of my stomach!

  • @c.morees9698
    @c.morees9698 Před rokem +5

    Nice video..i've been in Saskatchewan in 1981.
    I was picked up from the Regina airport by my Canadian uncle who married my Dutch aunt just after Workd War 2.
    I my memory we came trough Assinaboi(?) were we did some shoppings and went on to Rockglen(n?) were they lived.
    I enjoyed Saskatchewan in the summer and worked on several farms(most milking cows) while the farmers were harvesting the crops.
    Cornelis Morees,
    The Netherlands🇨🇦🇳🇱

    • @attrell
      @attrell  Před rokem +1

      Things have changed a lot since then. Most grain elevators are now gone. Thanks for watching, pretty exciting you are from The Netherlands and watching!

  • @mercsport
    @mercsport Před rokem +16

    That was fascinating: you have a good eye for framing a picture. The emptiness of the flatlands twixt Winnipeg and the Rockies was tangible throughout. Over 50+ yrs ago and as a penniless bum from Britain and fresh from a winter trawling for fish out of Reykjavik, and hitchhiking my way across Canada in '64 looking to find a fishing boat out of Vancouver, a work crew from a Manitoba grain company picked me up, and I ended up for a couple of months working, shingling the company's grain elevators in Alberta S of Calgary down to the U.S. border. It was interesting in the sense that you didn't want to fall off, and like deep sea fishing where you were fully engaged in not drowning, there was a wee bit of danger too: If you slipped there was only a rope to grab if you were quick enough. I don't think Health and Safety had quite the power back then it has today.

    • @attrell
      @attrell  Před rokem +1

      Safety was not a huge concern that is for sure, I believe that!

  • @Xean45
    @Xean45 Před 11 měsíci +8

    I'm lucky enough to live in Sask and visit many old ghost towns while trompsing around the back roads. Just bought a piece of history myself: The Nolan School House that earlier this year was at the intersection of Hwy 4 North and the hamlet of Hamlin Rd. Moved it three miles down the road to my property. Glad I got to save a bit of history :)

  • @rustyscrapper
    @rustyscrapper Před 11 měsíci +6

    The church at 5:50 is mint. That's what you want to buy dirt cheap. The structure is probably still good if you replace the roof and address any water leak issues, then pressure wash the old paint off tbe wood, and re paint the wood. New Windows probably, then the building will not continue to degrade into a pile of shit.
    Then you address the interior, it's probably high quality custom wood. Sand and stain it.
    Then build interior units that have upper levels within the church, so it's all non structural interior additions. And you got yourself a 4 plex.

    • @billfarley9167
      @billfarley9167 Před měsícem

      A four plex for what? Electrical source? heat? food? medical issues? transportation? gas and vehicle maintenance? Etc, etc,eEtc.

    • @nicolasuribestanko
      @nicolasuribestanko Před 9 dny

      @@billfarley9167 Hey, let a guy dream!

  • @davidrobins4025
    @davidrobins4025 Před 11 měsíci +6

    My dad, Rev. Kenneth Robins, was raised on a farm outside Ponteix. When we were children (early 50's) dad and mom brought us to his old home. And my father who was an ordained minister held meetings in the church in Aneroid every night for a whole week. My sister, brother and I were the "special music" at each of the church services. Many years later, I returned to Aneroid with my cousin to attend the funeral service of her father, Gerald Robins. My dad spoke at his funeral service in that church.

    • @attrell
      @attrell  Před 11 měsíci

      Very nice town, Aneroid is much smaller now

    • @brianhdueck3372
      @brianhdueck3372 Před 2 měsíci

      @@attrellI understand, as only a fellow PK could.

  • @garyposehn9129
    @garyposehn9129 Před 11 měsíci +5

    As a young geologist with SaskOil Corporation in the early 1970's I well sat many oil wells in this area. One would get use to people talking about you at the local cafes and wondering what the drilling rig will find on someone's land. Winters were brutal as there was usually no snow and strong blustery winds. As a geologist the area surrounding the Cypress Hills is mind boggling and with landform-expressions like the Ravenscrag Valley tells of the mighty affects of continental glaciation. I truly enjoyed this video and my days in this part of the province. One must not miss the restaurant in Eastend (Jack's; we use to drive for hours to eat at this establishment) and the T-Rex Museum!! What I do not miss is the grasshoppers!

    • @attrell
      @attrell  Před 11 měsíci

      Grasshoppers are bad this year!

  • @samgagner5200
    @samgagner5200 Před 11 měsíci +7

    Robsart is where my wife's dad was raised; born on his grandparent's farm. My 5 year old son and I were with the last family members farming in the area. Aunt Rose and Uncle Frank were driving slowly through the old town telling stories about the old days. A small house had yellow curtains blowing through a slightly open window. We stopped. Looking through the window the place looked like someone had stepped out for a moment. We entered carefully, looking with respect at this two room shack that had been the home of a man named Manfred Smith. Uncle Frank said Manfred had felt unwell, went to the hospital and never returned home. The wood stove was ready to be lit, a handmade table cloth adorned the small table. A shaving kit sat on a shelf. The man had no family. A box of old photos was in the bedroom beside the bed.
    My son was amazed that someone lived in the little house. We left everything as is.

  • @palco22
    @palco22 Před rokem +9

    It does make me sad to see some of these towns like this. I knew these places back in the 1960's. As a teenager, life was so good in southern Saskatchewan.

    • @attrell
      @attrell  Před rokem

      I agree.

    • @billfarley9167
      @billfarley9167 Před rokem +1

      Saskatchewan produced a lot of NHL players back in the day. Learned how to skate and play shinny hockey on sloughs before they hit the big time.

  • @alexdetrojan4534
    @alexdetrojan4534 Před rokem +8

    ...I might add that I travelled through that particular part of Saskatchewan back in the late 70's and fell in love with it. I always promised myself I would return there when I retired...I'm months away from retirement...so time to fulfill my promise. 🙂

    • @ItsNotMeItsYou007
      @ItsNotMeItsYou007 Před rokem +2

      Kind of thinking about that myself.

    • @attrell
      @attrell  Před rokem +2

      Happy retirement!!

    • @brianhdueck3372
      @brianhdueck3372 Před 2 měsíci

      @@ItsNotMeItsYou007do it guys! It’s so worth it! She’s a harsh but beautiful land.

  • @magcs6233
    @magcs6233 Před 10 měsíci +7

    I've lived in SK my whole life and can't understand how people don't find it beautiful, From Leader to Moosomin, Estevan to La Ronge its an amazing province. Growing up around Moose Jaw, Briercrest, Avonlea and Leader was the best childhood I could have ever asked for, thanks for the video, more places to shoot up next spring!

    • @attrell
      @attrell  Před 10 měsíci +1

      Thank you!!

    • @davidrussell8795
      @davidrussell8795 Před 4 měsíci

      You see beauty, but others see a baren landscape devoid of trees! Flowers etc,except for Northern Saskatchewan, trees lakes ,something to look at and appreciate!
      The praires are like seeing your Breafast pancake everyday!I
      So if you see a pancake as beutiful,we'll,you need to broaden your horizons,go see the mountains, get off the pancake 😅!!!
      Well there is some beauty out there,but you have yo get used to staring at open fields, and a few animals.

    • @davidrussell8795
      @davidrussell8795 Před 4 měsíci

      R.I.P SASKATCHEWAN!

    • @JensSchraeder
      @JensSchraeder Před 4 měsíci +1

      I absolutely love Saskatchewan. It’s my home and always will be.

    • @JensSchraeder
      @JensSchraeder Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@davidrussell8795that’s what I love about Saskatchewan. The northern lakes and forests all the way down to the open grasslands. It’s my home and always will be.

  • @myautobiography9711
    @myautobiography9711 Před 11 měsíci +13

    It's hard to believe these places must have been full of hope, newly settled barely over a century ago. These prairie towns are more significant than other places because those times must be so close from today that early settlers were still alive during my infant years. I thought rural Ontario was fun, boy was I wrong.

  • @MySpitfire19
    @MySpitfire19 Před 11 měsíci +2

    We use to have our 4-H meetings at the old community hall in Robsart and that riding arena behind those swings is where we would ride. That was only 20 years ago.

    • @attrell
      @attrell  Před 11 měsíci +1

      Wow I was there my first time in 2003

  • @user-ex3ql8ke8m
    @user-ex3ql8ke8m Před 11 měsíci +3

    I was born & raised in Saskatchewan. East of Regina. I joined the Royal Bank in 1961 and started in Aneroid , SK. Last I was through over 10 years ago it was a ghost town but the old bank building was on main st as was the old hotel, to bad you hadn’t filmed them. I recall so many of those towns, Kincaide, Vanguard , Gravelberg and so many more. So many fond memories of playing hockey along that line. Also had relatives at Robsart spent many good times there.

    • @pugnacious6290
      @pugnacious6290 Před 9 měsíci +2

      My best friend growing up was from Aneroid, my wife is from Vanguard, we went to school in Kincaid and my dad is from Gravelbourg 😁

  • @glentomkins8044
    @glentomkins8044 Před rokem +20

    Thanks Chris, looks like farming towns all over the western world. There are plenty of abandoned or semi-abandoned towns in Australia too, sadly. It has happened as farms got bigger and people moved into cities.

    • @spectrumofreality
      @spectrumofreality Před rokem +2

      More than enough vacant farm land in Canada to feed the world!

    • @attrell
      @attrell  Před rokem +1

      Some folks are moving back to small towns now here

    • @4thlinemaniac356
      @4thlinemaniac356 Před 11 měsíci

      False History real history @ Spacebusters Comets and Cataclysyms series @ John Levi & Michell Gibsonn channels. Ever heard of Tartaria?

    • @missourimongoose8858
      @missourimongoose8858 Před 11 měsíci +1

      ​@@spectrumofrealityexcept Justin won't let yall have enough fertilizer for something like that to much climate change lol

  • @grantfahlman1815
    @grantfahlman1815 Před rokem +42

    Chris, thanks for another ride along. Great to see, and sad at the same time, the general area where my Mom's side of the family is from. It's amazing to think how nature takes its toll and slowly returns things to their original state. If the walls in all these areas could speak of the brave souls/pioneers/families who made their lives in such places before "moving on". 😢

    • @attrell
      @attrell  Před rokem +4

      Way back in teh day I got so many stories, I wish I had written them down!

    • @grantfahlman1815
      @grantfahlman1815 Před rokem +2

      @@attrell No kidding. You might have been able to write a book that could have sold well; at least locally.

    • @dlwdaddyo1
      @dlwdaddyo1 Před 11 měsíci

      Did you forget Govenlock? There is only a sign and one building the last time I was there, maybe 1992? My dad and I had sold oats and hay to lodge creek ranch. My neighbor (see CZcams: Riverview Ranch) sold hay to another place down there and I delivered it

  • @herstory911
    @herstory911 Před rokem +19

    Thanks so much. My grandparents met in Star City in southern Saskatchewan...both new immigrants, Grandpa from the states and grandma from Norway. My dad was born in star city on Easter Sunday in 1939. They met at a dance hall. It is nice to see my roots in Canadian history.

    • @attrell
      @attrell  Před rokem +3

      Thanks for posting, glad you enjoyed the video!

    • @charlottecampbell4327
      @charlottecampbell4327 Před rokem

      I know only of a Star City in the north-central area of Saskatchewan near Melfort., off highway 3, along highway 681. Amazing that your grandparents from so far apart met in small-town Saskatchewan. Maybe at a school dance?

    • @herstory911
      @herstory911 Před rokem +1

      Well my grandmother only had grade one back in the early 1900s so I doubt it was a school dance but it was a dance lol

    • @abrahamdozer6273
      @abrahamdozer6273 Před rokem +2

      My aunt and uncle lived in Star City 1940s to 1970s and I visited there as a child. My aunt taught school there to a couple of generations.

    • @nigellee9824
      @nigellee9824 Před rokem

      Who cares…

  • @robertodebeers2551
    @robertodebeers2551 Před rokem +25

    Excellent road-trip video of some interesting towns and landscapes. I'm from Montana, so some of these scenes look pretty familiar. Hope to see more of your work here.

    • @attrell
      @attrell  Před rokem +1

      I used to live in Sidney. Montana is my fav state!

  • @dani40338
    @dani40338 Před 11 měsíci +2

    Great video-- I thoroughly enjoyed it. I downloaded it to show my 92 year old neighbor (he does not have internet access), hence the download. He will enjoy this video as he once lived and farmed in Sask. many years ago as youngster. I bet he will recognize a lot of the towns in this video.

    • @attrell
      @attrell  Před 11 měsíci

      I hope he enjoys it!

  • @danielomalley4394
    @danielomalley4394 Před 10 měsíci +4

    My Mom, Gisèle Beaudoin, was the one of the daughters of Arthur and Clara, who answered the call of Abbé Louis-Pierre Gravel,for whom Gravelbourg is named, to move from Québec to homestead in Saskathcewan circa 1911 shortly after their wedding. Mom told us about seeing dust storms blackening the sky sweeping away so much top-soil that fence-posts were left swaying in the wind. And locusts. Such was life in the 1930,S Dust Bowl. After his eldest son died of blood poisoning, a cut whilst haying, he gave up, moving his daughters and young sons to Québec. Thus uprooted, my Mom , age 14, was to miss her home for the rest of her life. Such is life.

    • @heatherchambers1609
      @heatherchambers1609 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Still 30% Francophone in Gravelbourg with associated cultural services according to Wikipedia. Definitely not a ghost town here

    • @attrell
      @attrell  Před 10 měsíci

      TOo bad she had to move, it was really bad in that area of Saskatchewan

  • @merccrewlcab2385
    @merccrewlcab2385 Před 10 měsíci +2

    Wow! Thanks for the tour! I am from the Cowichan Valley, born and raised. I really got to get out there and cruise around and look for 1932 Ford car body parts and pieces. And enjoy the scenery of course! Thanks eh!

    • @attrell
      @attrell  Před 10 měsíci

      Glad you enjoyed it!

  • @brianhdueck3372
    @brianhdueck3372 Před rokem +4

    Thanks for the ride! Loved the tour. Makes one appreciate the ones who came and paved the way before us.

  • @createone100
    @createone100 Před rokem +3

    Curling rinks ‘used to be popular’ in rural Saskatchewan! News flash, they still are!

    • @attrell
      @attrell  Před rokem +1

      Not as popular as they were in 1950.

  • @bigdansplan9262
    @bigdansplan9262 Před rokem +25

    Great footage. The one thing that immediately stuck out to me in these towns was that there is no grafiti. One of the USA’s traits is to deface anything when possible. A demographic rundown would probably explain this. Thank you.

    • @attrell
      @attrell  Před rokem +5

      There isn't many people who live in these areas, that might be why.

    • @barryrahn5957
      @barryrahn5957 Před rokem +1

      I hadn't noticed, but yes, no graffiti! How refreshing! Alas it's a worldwide phenomenon.

    • @abrahamdozer6273
      @abrahamdozer6273 Před rokem +3

      Canadian culture is generally a bit different and for the most part, the urban areas are much cleaner and safer in Canada, too.

    • @barryrahn5957
      @barryrahn5957 Před rokem +3

      @@abrahamdozer6273 I think in Canada the culture is generally more reserved and respectful and not quite so self promoting. A nosegay from south of the border.

    • @abrahamdozer6273
      @abrahamdozer6273 Před 11 měsíci +3

      @@devoniangardens2974 Are you really a grown man?

  • @SpencerStreichert
    @SpencerStreichert Před 10 měsíci +2

    This was wild to watch. I grew up on a ranch near Ravenscraig, went to school in Eastend, played football in Shaunavon, won the rodeos in McCord, Wood Mountain, and Val Marie, played hockey and volley ball in counsol, its weird seeing how much has changed in 12 years. Wood Mountain used to have an awesome bar that played live music and let me drink at 14 (lol its Saskatchewan). Ravenscraig was owned entirely by one family minus a couple plots of land. Dollard population has been the same. Great video 👍🏼

    • @attrell
      @attrell  Před 10 měsíci

      Thanks! Yes it has changed a lot since I moved to Shaunavon in 2006

  • @gopherholehotel
    @gopherholehotel Před rokem +6

    Thanks for adding your great video. I lived in a few of these towns through the 1950's and 60's . Admiral , Frontier and Shaunavon . It made for a great upbringing with good friends . It is sad to see a lot of towns returned to nature . Once were busy towns . It brings back lots of memories for me.

  • @luckyguy600
    @luckyguy600 Před rokem +19

    Just depressing and my whole family were basically from Waldron.
    After the war/ the railways disappeared/ the grain elevators were disused, and the whole place went back to what it once was. Wild grass is for buffalo and native Indian bands from hundreds of years ago.
    Your videos are great, for sure, but it saddens me when I used to visit the area.
    My grandparents were railway men from the turn of the century/ and homesteading.

    • @attrell
      @attrell  Před rokem +1

      It is kind of sad, especially when you read the local history book and see photos from the towns heydays!

    • @4thlinemaniac356
      @4thlinemaniac356 Před 11 měsíci

      False History Ever heard of Tartaria? A video essay on you tube title There are no Forests on flat Earth English dubbed version before @Spacebusters & John Levi & Michelle Gibson channels

    • @dlwdaddyo1
      @dlwdaddyo1 Před 11 měsíci +2

      We had a cowboy poetry gathering in Taber Alberta last spring. One of our board members suggested we do a benefit for a young bronc rider from Consul, who got his neck broken in a rodeo wreck at Brooks over the Christmas season. Cowboy poets, western story tellers and western musicians from all over the west, a wood carver and a children/youth author from New Hampshire and local businesses all sent merchandise to be auctioned off for the benefit for Sandy the cowboy from Consul

  • @keith2599
    @keith2599 Před rokem +11

    Good day to you Chris' Again another epic trail across SK and those old cars and churches look amazing' Most of the churches there seem to have the same quality built theme and shape along with white paint also, This video is thrilling to watch and really enjoyed the walk around" So photogenic and serene... Take care Chris to yourself and your family and look forward to all the videos you post and many thanks for your time doing these....Best 73s from the uk 😊❤

  • @seanfrank4158
    @seanfrank4158 Před rokem +8

    I toured that area a few years ago now. I'm from BC where mountains are the norm around here so being in southern Saskatchewan is like being on another planet for me. I really enjoyed it. I need to go back I think....

    • @attrell
      @attrell  Před rokem

      I am glad you enjoyed your trip!!

    • @annmorgana2848
      @annmorgana2848 Před 11 měsíci

      me too! born and raised on the bc coast, the ocean of rolling grass on the prairies was a revelation. cant wait to go back!

    • @pugnacious6290
      @pugnacious6290 Před 9 měsíci

      As someone who grew up in this exact area, trust me it goes both ways 😅. I get excited any time I see a decently-sized hill or a patch of trees. Driving through BC is absolutely mind-blowing.

    • @genesisknight9948
      @genesisknight9948 Před 6 měsíci

      Meanwhile, its the other way around for me. I'm so used to the flat prairies that after a few days in the B.C area I start longing for the prairie views again. Idk, I just find being surrounded by mountains on all sides a bit suffocating. But granted that I've seen nothing but flat lands for my whole life, it makes sense why its hard to adjust to a complete change in environment.

  • @tonynicholson2697
    @tonynicholson2697 Před 11 měsíci +6

    This is amazing! We moved to Medicine Hat last year and we have been exploring since we got here. I'll be driving us several of these locations in the next few weeks. Thank you for sharing this with us.

    • @attrell
      @attrell  Před 11 měsíci +1

      Have a fun trip!

  • @ronkuzyk3836
    @ronkuzyk3836 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Thanks for the tour! Looks like a lot of great movie sets.

  • @barrysims9906
    @barrysims9906 Před rokem +7

    this was an impressive view into a part of Canada I have never been but always wanted to go. Thank you.

    • @attrell
      @attrell  Před rokem

      I hope you get to visit!

  • @markmoore2625
    @markmoore2625 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Wow!!! So many photogenic places to visit, I would need another suitcase full of colour slide and black and white film to capture all these cool towns. Greetings from the U.K.

  • @robswystun2766
    @robswystun2766 Před 2 měsíci +2

    Cool video. I love old, abandoned places, especially churches.

  • @garymacdonald2549
    @garymacdonald2549 Před rokem +4

    Wow! Great video! These little towns slowly die and just fade away. My dad grew up in Weldon, Sask. It was created just after the turn of the century and in its heyday had numerous restaurants, two pool halls, multiple stores, several implement dealers, two schools, and five grain elevators. My uncle ran one of two service stations. All that's left now is some residences, a post office and two decaying elevators.

    • @attrell
      @attrell  Před rokem

      Kind of sad how some towns just faded away like that.

  • @RedcoatsReturn
    @RedcoatsReturn Před rokem +5

    Thanks myol mate….I enjoyed the tour very much 😊👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👍👍 So much place…so much land…wilderness…a huge blue sky….Canada is…like a giant planet on its own 😲😲😲 It makes the UK look like a miniature toy model 😄😉🇨🇦

    • @attrell
      @attrell  Před rokem +1

      THank you! Yeah you can see storms 300 kms away from here.

    • @billfarley9167
      @billfarley9167 Před rokem +1

      Dude, it is a miniature toy model that punched way over its weight and spent a few hundred years trashing inhabitants all over the world. Right here in Canada we have the experience of the Acadians. Look it up. Your countrymen.

  • @robertdesmeules6099
    @robertdesmeules6099 Před 11 měsíci

    Excellent video Chris,keep up the good work

    • @attrell
      @attrell  Před 11 měsíci

      Thanks, will do!

  • @brucesmith9144
    @brucesmith9144 Před rokem +5

    Great scenery. Really enjoyed the grain elevator during the thunderstorm. That is something worth spending time doing.

    • @attrell
      @attrell  Před rokem

      It's a really nice area!

  • @VirtualTravelFilms
    @VirtualTravelFilms Před 6 měsíci +1

    Thank you so much! You have very interesting videos! I really enjoyed exploring Saskatchewan. I've never been there, but I had a great tour with you!

  • @stanleykachuik2589
    @stanleykachuik2589 Před rokem +1

    Great vid Chris! My family farmed for more than a hundred years. 10 min away from Limerick. I still have fond memories of the original house my grandfather built out there.

  • @heavensmountains323
    @heavensmountains323 Před rokem

    That was great! Thanks for sharing. I would love to do that trip as a little tour.

  • @bobelliott2748
    @bobelliott2748 Před rokem +2

    I have done both of these roads twice. hope to do it again. there is no one else around. many thanks for this video

  • @papa606
    @papa606 Před rokem +2

    So quiet you can fall asleep standing in place. Very enjoyable trip, thanks for the ride. It is sad that the people left, wonder were they all went.

    • @attrell
      @attrell  Před rokem +1

      Glad you enjoyed it! They went to bigger towns and cities.

  • @kananaskiscountry8191
    @kananaskiscountry8191 Před 9 měsíci +1

    wow, it has been years since i have been to climax where my sister lived at one time
    thanks for a tour Chris, alot of this brings back memories 👍🏼🎶🎶⛩🦉

    • @attrell
      @attrell  Před 9 měsíci +1

      Glad you enjoyed it!

  • @corystarkiller
    @corystarkiller Před 11 měsíci

    Thanks for your channel. I'm glad that CZcams is finally giving some good recs.

    • @attrell
      @attrell  Před 11 měsíci

      WOW thank you!

    • @corystarkiller
      @corystarkiller Před 11 měsíci

      @@attrell Your videos are showing parts of western Canada and USA, that are so rarely talked about, or shown to the world. It's an under-appreciated service that you're doing, but I appreciate it, because these places are home.

  • @greathodgy22
    @greathodgy22 Před 11 měsíci +8

    I don't think you could find a handful of people who are tough enough to homestead that country today. Gives me shivers to think of that area on a January day.

    • @pugnacious6290
      @pugnacious6290 Před 9 měsíci

      I grew up on a farm in this area, about 20 minutes from Aneroid, shown in this video. Can confirm it gets cold as hell in the winter.

  • @dwayneharris3874
    @dwayneharris3874 Před 11 měsíci

    Thanks for the tour. My Father was born in Wood Mountain. I have relatives who live near Consul. I am from BC but I get back to see Saskatchewan semi-regularly.

  • @jaysmoke3132
    @jaysmoke3132 Před 10 měsíci +1

    10:54 Spent way to much time here when I was young. Hey Steve H and Don H. I miss this place. Great video Chris.

  • @bobcunningham5288
    @bobcunningham5288 Před rokem +2

    Hi Chris. Thanks for the video tour of a part of my home province. The colour at that time of year may look bleak to some, but to me it is the colour of the season to come.

  • @jessemurray2236
    @jessemurray2236 Před 10 měsíci

    So many great barn finds!

  • @toriwolf5978
    @toriwolf5978 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Just found your channel loving it ❤ please keep these videos coming so interesting to watch ….

  • @thehamachekco9132
    @thehamachekco9132 Před rokem +2

    Derek Ace sent me here. Good stuff!!! Will watch more!

    • @attrell
      @attrell  Před rokem +1

      Oh wow, he does amazing work. Thank you!

  • @juanitahardy8583
    @juanitahardy8583 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Great video ......not a placeI would have thought of visiting but reconsidering

  • @cashoyboy
    @cashoyboy Před 8 měsíci +1

    Awesome video thank you for sharing!!

    • @attrell
      @attrell  Před 7 měsíci

      Thanks for watching!

  • @garyhusband3395
    @garyhusband3395 Před 11 měsíci

    Thank you for this video Chris.
    I was raised on a farm just outside of Robsart from 1950 to 1970.
    All of the area from Consul to Shaunavon was my stomping grounds.
    This video sure brought back a lot of good memories.
    It is sad to see these places now but there is a lot history around that whole region.

    • @attrell
      @attrell  Před 11 měsíci

      Wow must have been different back on those days. Robsart especially!

    • @garyhusband3395
      @garyhusband3395 Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@attrell Yes it sure was Chris. It was very vibrant then.
      There was a nice community hall. We had our wedding reception and dance in the hall in 1979.
      There was a modern school from grade 1-8 and then we bussed to Consul for high school.
      There was a very active curling rink. There were three grain elevators.
      The General Store was a store that had Everything as well as the Post Office.
      The garage was an International Harvester dealer, a blacksmith shop, a repair shop and a seniors hangout bench where I used to love to listen to many stories.
      The Beaver Lumber had already closed by then.
      Oh, the great memories.
      Thank you again.

  • @billhosko7723
    @billhosko7723 Před rokem +2

    WELL done. Truly.
    Thank you!

  • @frankgutjahr8188
    @frankgutjahr8188 Před rokem +1

    Love this area. Travel it often. Even got to help out with the tourist train in Eastend. The locomotives there which are f7 and F9 are my favorite locomotives. Great video, thanks.

    • @attrell
      @attrell  Před rokem

      I can't wait until that train is running!

    • @frankgutjahr8188
      @frankgutjahr8188 Před rokem

      @@attrell You should see the inside of that gas station where that old truck is parked. It is like a 50s diner! So cool!

  • @MrGaryRoberton
    @MrGaryRoberton Před 10 měsíci +2

    As the radio personality, Bob Arnold said of Wood Mountain, "Our town was so small, on Saturday night we would go down to main street, and watch the GIRL" RIP Bob.

  • @citibear57
    @citibear57 Před rokem +1

    Great day for a drive to the small villages, towns, and ghost towns. My dad grew up on a farm near Truax. It has probably been 50+ years since I was out there (I was just a little kid). The 'house' was already gone by then, so I would have no idea where to look for the farm. We have a grainy, old b&w photo of the two-room farmhouse. I know how bad our winters are, but being born and raised in the provincial capital, I have no idea how miserable life was. I only heard a few stories. It seemed that no one wanted to talk about that. This is the first of your videos I have watched, but I have already subscribed and look forward to seeing more drives through my home province!

  • @snorrejnnevaldhalvorsen6548

    Good music, nice pictures, sad stories !

  • @bobelliott2748
    @bobelliott2748 Před rokem +3

    I'm glad you included Orkney. I stop for lunch there

    • @attrell
      @attrell  Před rokem

      Must have been a long long time ago!

    • @bobelliott2748
      @bobelliott2748 Před rokem

      Lol. good response to my comment! Both times lunch was on the tail gate of my truck. When you travel in that country you bring your own provender and spare gas. I wanted to avoid Shaunavan and Eastend and stick to the south roads. I have done the Dempster highway and there is always gas at three places. South west Sask is pretty thin for gas on a weekend and in that regard is more remote. The nearest is Milk River AB

  • @ledwallet1944
    @ledwallet1944 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Love your videos...Subscribed!

  • @adamwelsh9372
    @adamwelsh9372 Před rokem +6

    Dollard was founded by the father of novelist Gabrielle Roy. It was originally called Valroy, valley of the Roys but renamed,

    • @attrell
      @attrell  Před rokem

      I did not know that. thank you!

  • @kengeddert5375
    @kengeddert5375 Před 11 měsíci +2

    I lived in Wood Mountain from 1991-1994. I was a teacher in the school the last three years before it closed. At that time the hotel was still in business, and the church in town was still used occasionally. The old curling rink was used for storage, but a restaurant was in business at one end of the curling rink.

    • @attrell
      @attrell  Před 11 měsíci

      Wow that Church is in very very bad shape now

  • @higgy04
    @higgy04 Před 11 měsíci +5

    Dollard was Wanda's last name on Corner Gas. Most of the characters last names were towns and villages throughout the province.
    Val Marie is the birthplace of six-time Stanley Cup winner Bryan Trottier.

    • @attrell
      @attrell  Před 11 měsíci

      Oh yeah I forgot about that!

  • @christopherhenderson4820

    So cool and beautiful, and sad. This is happening in rural Illinois USA.

    • @attrell
      @attrell  Před rokem

      Yes it is kind of sad.

    • @harrytpk
      @harrytpk Před 11 měsíci

      Ya I live in Illinois too and I’ve been to Saskatchewan and your right the small farm towns on the plaines and prairies in North America are emptying out.

    • @Gfysimpletons
      @Gfysimpletons Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@harrytpkall per plan…..

    • @WildWillysProductions428
      @WildWillysProductions428 Před 11 měsíci

      That’s Canada not USA

    • @newfic2290
      @newfic2290 Před 10 měsíci

      ​@@Gfysimpletonsда😢. Это и в России происходит😢

  • @bigdoglogging8584
    @bigdoglogging8584 Před 11 měsíci

    Very nice video. One side of my family left southern Saskatchewan in the mid 30s and the other left mortlack in the late 50s both for BC. One day looking forward to a tour like this myself

    • @attrell
      @attrell  Před 11 měsíci

      I hope you get to, it is rather nice part of Saskatchewan!

  • @dyannejohnson6184
    @dyannejohnson6184 Před rokem +1

    Wonderful trip thanks

  • @caelumwebcitizen
    @caelumwebcitizen Před 7 měsíci +1

    Masefield is the prettiest ghost town i have visited. The nature and the old buildings to together so nice.

  • @billgraham8354
    @billgraham8354 Před 11 měsíci

    Thanks for the trip Chris.

    • @attrell
      @attrell  Před 11 měsíci

      Glad you enjoyed it

  • @aero9009
    @aero9009 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Excellent. I really enjoyed this.

  • @Pond6
    @Pond6 Před 10 měsíci +1

    This is a great video and I hope you continue to document other abandoned places in Canada. I subbed!.

    • @attrell
      @attrell  Před 10 měsíci

      Thank you! Will do!

  • @4z94
    @4z94 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Very nice Chris.

  • @Leo_Davis_
    @Leo_Davis_ Před rokem +2

    Thanks for this! Im definitely going to take a drive down this way soon.

    • @attrell
      @attrell  Před rokem

      It's a fun trip, hope you get to make it!

    • @billfarley9167
      @billfarley9167 Před měsícem

      To-day is June 9, 2024. I'll be touring all these towns this summer. Thanks for the video. I'm from Moose Jaw, SK.

  • @bruced1429
    @bruced1429 Před 5 měsíci +1

    I have been to most of the towns you have showed on this very great video. Some how I missed Robsart and Scotdale and Limeric. I enjoyed just travelling along exploring. Since our daughter moved to Moosjaw last year we made a few more trips south to the Big Muddy and Castle Butte. Our two favourite places on the video which we have been to are Caddilac and Eastend. Eastend has a great dinosaur museum , you did not mention that, and Caddilac has all the streets named after old cars, and a wonderful still in use school.
    Hope you have some new videos coming out.

    • @attrell
      @attrell  Před 5 měsíci

      THank you! I hope the train service in Eastend is able to get up and running this year!

  • @_Lazare
    @_Lazare Před 10 měsíci

    Awesome time well spent and remembered
    Well done

  • @rickrathy5404
    @rickrathy5404 Před 11 měsíci

    Thanks for the video....great 'tour'. For those who go to Val Marie, check out Grasslands National Park. There are some great hikes in the area and as well, an Ecotour drive in the Park itself.

    • @attrell
      @attrell  Před 11 měsíci

      70 Mile Butte is amazing!

  • @garionporter5961
    @garionporter5961 Před 11 měsíci +1

    wow magical I could watch this for hours :) *BUT* gotta get some work done lol thanx and keep up the great work! love my prairies.

    • @attrell
      @attrell  Před 11 měsíci +1

      Thanks for the visit

    • @garionporter5961
      @garionporter5961 Před 11 měsíci

      Have you been out to that weird museum/old "town" that old guy made near whitewood SK? -old George's place? I've fantasized about doing a slightly spooky quiet slow (non narrated) video of that place in the evening - fall maybe. creepy but beautiful place.

  • @frankdaeran352
    @frankdaeran352 Před 11 měsíci +2

    I lived in Sask (PA & Regina) for 18 years (60's & 70's) and had never even heard of Ravenascrag valley! Looks beautiful, reminds me of the Quapelle valley area

    • @attrell
      @attrell  Před 11 měsíci

      I hope the passenger rail service will be up and ready for that trip next spring!

  • @craigm6878
    @craigm6878 Před rokem

    Fascinating journey, beautiful and sad.

  • @robertlyon8876
    @robertlyon8876 Před 11 měsíci +2

    I grew up in a very small town on the prairies. I was a great place to be as a child . So much is gone now sadly.

  • @trainrover
    @trainrover Před 11 měsíci

    that was cool, recognising some mightily enchanting North Dakotan Painted Canyonesqueness towards the beginning here 🍸

  • @JohnNyren65
    @JohnNyren65 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Fantastic video!

    • @attrell
      @attrell  Před 11 měsíci +1

      Thank you very much!

  • @chihuahuaman7025
    @chihuahuaman7025 Před 11 měsíci

    Great job!

  • @richardbaxter2057
    @richardbaxter2057 Před rokem

    Truly the land of the big sky....beautiful in it’s sad emptiness.....❤️

  • @michaelbesler7469
    @michaelbesler7469 Před 11 měsíci

    Thanks for the video, I know want to check it out for myself.

  • @I_LOVE_THE_SUNCOAST
    @I_LOVE_THE_SUNCOAST Před 7 měsíci +2

    Greetings from USA, I am liking these videos.

    • @attrell
      @attrell  Před 7 měsíci +1

      Awesome, thank you!

  • @steevebouchard8927
    @steevebouchard8927 Před 11 měsíci

    beautiful - my kind of place

  • @suefrench8721
    @suefrench8721 Před 11 měsíci +3

    I was born here in Cadillac. Ponteix was just down the road and also Willow Bunch nearby. There was a large French settlement along the road in various little villages. This was what we Canadians called the "baldass prairie".

    • @merccrewlcab2385
      @merccrewlcab2385 Před 10 měsíci

      A friend here in the Cowichan Valley (Chemainus) owns a house and a church in Cadillac.

    • @suefrench8721
      @suefrench8721 Před 10 měsíci +1

      @@merccrewlcab2385 Chemainus is such a beautiful place. If I had to choose between Chemainus or Cadillac I'm afraid that I would have to say goodbye to the birthplace and head for Chemainus. What does he do with the two places? With homelessness and the real estate market it's hard to know which way to jump. Enjoy the coast, both of you.

    • @merccrewlcab2385
      @merccrewlcab2385 Před 10 měsíci

      @@suefrench8721 Thanks again for the reply. Doug stores old car, tractor parts and other cool old keepsakes in one of the places and lives part time in the other.
      I enjoy the beauty of our island but not how busy and greedy it is these days. Really debating on moving out to Alberta Sask.
      Do you know of any 1932 Ford cars, bodies or pieces out your way? Haha

  • @davep6278
    @davep6278 Před 7 dny +1

    My grandparents had a farm north of Crichton until they retired to Swift Current and and an aunt & uncle who farmed north of Admiral. I miss them so much.

    • @attrell
      @attrell  Před 5 dny

      I think you are the first person I ever come across who knew about Crichton

    • @davep6278
      @davep6278 Před 4 dny

      @@attrell Thanks. My mom would tell me stories about how Crichton used to be and going to school there when she was little.

  • @marianne52
    @marianne52 Před rokem +3

    My first home was Wood Mountain (mid-50's). It was a thriving little community back then. We visited 4 yrs ago. My father was the RCMP officer at that time and his detachment office as well as our home were still there across from the school.

    • @attrell
      @attrell  Před rokem

      That is one of my fav towns!

    • @rockwellrhodes7703
      @rockwellrhodes7703 Před 11 měsíci

      @@attrell The little red house (14:52) housed my cousins, for a short time. My uncle grew up on a ranch south of town in the hills. He told me the old-timers told him Sitting Bull wasn't at the Big Horn debacle, but sitting with his "old friends" the NWMP at Old Post, south of town, during the battle. Old Post was the NWMP detachment at that time.

  • @djdj500dr
    @djdj500dr Před 11 měsíci

    The topography is amazing

  • @timunderwood4314
    @timunderwood4314 Před rokem

    Great video!

  • @darrelgoulet29
    @darrelgoulet29 Před 11 měsíci +1

    My house is in this video! Great video, Chris!