"I found a mysterious large body of water on Google Earth west of California. After hiking through deserts and mountains, I finally came to a long abandoned beach..."
@@harridan. Well the fort is called Fuerte de San Carlos and there is a paved road leading to it, as is also clearly visible in the first second of the video and it is right next to a large holiday apartment :P But sure, he first accidentally went down to Faro del Caballo, 2km away :D
Fuerte de San Carlos is a tourist attraction less than a mile by a straightforward coastal road from Mirador de la Bahía de Santoña, Spain. Multiple and nearby hotels allow the opportunity to prepare (bottle of water, sunscreen, camera, etc) for and recover (beverage of choice) from the "ardjuous" journey.
This is the same guy that discovered the abandoned monument that some people call the "Statue Of Liberty". . He hiked there through treacharous undergrowth and massive mountains, while figting crocodiles and man-eating mosquitos. . Just as honest as THIS clip is. .
@@GreedyPuppy7 He's walking through a forest like it's the only way to get there - when there is a road right up to it. So he's giving the impression it is remote, when it is not. Do you get it now??
I would absolutely love to do this for a living. You're more blessed than you know. I would Also love to buy that property and turn it into a home. It would be such a great foundation to work with.
Said parking being about 500m back on the other side of the Vistamar Apartments. But at least there's a big wide treeless and bush-less road connection between the parking and the fort, just in case he gets, you know... lost! 😅
That hidden lighthouse looks like a spot I remember from GOT. Obviously, they green screened out the lighthouse, but the platform and staircase were used
I’m partial to videos that help you find neat places. I can understand creating adventures as well. But, be up front about places that are to be explored and those that should be shared but not decimated.
Drama! Adventure! Oh no I'm lost! Phew, i found the path! Whoa what a wonderful place! This vid sounds like a 3 year old talking about his first trip to Walmart.
Fuerte de san Carlos - da geht direkt eine Straße hin, ist wenige hunderte Meter von einem Küstenort entfernt. Warum man da durch den Wald klettert.. Hauptsache ein Video gemacht...
So he didn't also notice the big fat asphalt road leading up to it from the left? That road leads 200 meters away to a large active tourist hotel with a swimming pool, easily accessible. What's with all the jungle bushwhacking?
This place is a few hundred meters away from hotels. Behind it there is a national park. Doing caming wouldnt be that fun. If you look the video you see graffti all over the place. Probably many groups of young people partying there at night. The videos of this guy are all crap and pathetic. Next time he is hiking down Broadway until he „discovers“ a secret square full of video screens.
This guy has no fear, these structures this guy finds, most of them I never heard of!! Great job my friend and we look forward to the future findings! Are you just in the Europe or you go every where!?
You should come discover the Fort in St Augustine Florida; my 8-year-old granddaughter just came back from visiting it. She said not even you could miss it. there is a lighthouse near that one as well so she could be wrong.
Sleeping Beauty and, you know, the guy that was supposed to rescue her. Looks like dragons beat you there, but what a fun find ... Beauty and the Beast? Namaste
You said one adventure was in Mexico but most do not say where you are. Shoud I assume you do intentionally do not want people to know. I can think of a few reason. Maybr should leave it alone, but I am curious.
Let's not go too hard on the guy. He's just trying to show some interesting places, and he sucks at finding the parking lot. To be fair and honest, I never heard of this place, so seeing it here might actually get me to look into it a little more. My world history knowledge is about as rusty as the Titanic, but I don't mind looking at places that are interesting like this.
He should have just taken the road. He should try to find the old nazi camp in Los Angeles. It really is off-the-beaten-path, at least when I was there in the 90s
Out of many places he explores, many of them are from maybe WW1 OR WW2 mostly I think! Those abandoned places built for defence or offence in times of war!
Standard practice among explorers who try to be more respectful is to a) not share the location at all. Saves it from being trashed by shitheads who are just there for tagging/Instagram posts. Also b) not sharing POE (point of entry) both to preserve the site, and also to somewhat avoid implicating yourself for trespass.
@@axes444 Not that much of a case for international sites anyway. There is more local places for wherever you live. Whole Europe has WW2 and WW1 or earlier remains in all sorts of abandonment. Much more impressive than this one for example
Oh no, not again... Not by the author. I'm sure it takes steam train, then horse drawn cart so you can sail and land only 50 km from the destination. Last bit is easy if you book your mule two weeks in advance and bring your own hay.
It's a gunnery fort, many of them can be found along certain coastlines along the US, mostly from WWII, built with concerns about a domestic land invasion. The one near my town is now part of a big park for families, but the fort is still there, and could potentially be outfitted again, if need.
Well, wasn't it quite obvious from the satellite image that these are (abandoned) coastal defenses? It was, wasn't it? Well, at least he was outdoors and had a nice hike.