I am just returning to watch your channel after a few months. I love your history! A lot of people have misconceptions of viewership,. I could not afford the data, required, to enjoy you and EE's adventures but I can now. Keep posting honest, thoughtful stories! I catch up with you, when I can. Thank You guys for bringing light into history!
It's a great little spot on a peninsula with nice bunkers and an amazing cave system. Thank you, history hunter and Eagle Eye's, for all the hard work you both do.
This was just an amazing explore. It seems like every corner you turned there was another surprise in store for you, and us. That complex, dug into solid rock, the hours that must have taken. That you so much for taking us along. Stay safe and well my friends
Another beautiful area. Great finds HH. Love the roof at 14:30 interesting that one sheet is galvanized, and the other is rusted. Again, great stonework. The tunnel at 23:30+ has a reason for the shape. From a narrow vein mining perspective, they found a horizontal fault and cut up to it. Life is a little easier that way. Some great work was done. The both of you are doing great video and research work. Thank you. Stay safe and well. Looking forward for the next part.
What an amazingly beautiful location! With some truly fascinating tunnels, and bunkers. Compared to some of the other tunnel systems we've seen, the tunnels, and bunkers, here seem only half finished, especially that last long tunnel with it's slanted roof! They must have had only a limited workforce, so just dug what they had to, to make the place work. It's always really interesting to see all the different building techniques and styles, of these locations, as against the "classic" Atlantic Wall, concrete and steel, monsters. I can imagine those crude bunkers, and tunnels, would have been freezing, during the winters. Especially if a storm was raging. Thank you for sharing such an interesting location, and for dealing with the mosquitos! Looking forward to seeing what else you foung there! Cheers to you both! Stay Safe!
Amazing area, seemed to be loads of individual posts dotted around this location. Fantastic scenery over the water. Thanks for taking us along with you. Look forward to seeing the next episode!
Wide and low tunnels might be because of carts being used in the tunnels. The tunnels are wide too which lends itself to two way traffic within the tunnel. Interesting find.
Another great video thanks for sharing it I hope that your history hunting family is doing well have a great time I look forward to seeing what you share next
Another amazing explore! That was some tunnel system. I could hear the surprise in your voice when you went around the corner and there were the tunnels. It really is quite beautiful there. Thank you HH and EE for taking me along and thank you for all your hard work finding these places. Take care and stay safe. 💖💯
Great explore, the tunnels were very interesting. The one that jogged to the back might have been a generator room, the pipe near the ceiling might be the exhaust pipe. Thank you and EE for taking us along, can't wait to see more from this area. Take care and stay safe out there.
yes there are really so many interesting details there. EE loved it and what a great explore it turned out to be Allen. More to come soon and thanks so much for your great support :)
You both should get a pair of rubber boots so you don't have to worry about flooded rooms. Hard hats might be recommended, too. I have always been fascinated by WWII, and I love that you both go around checking out the places off the beaten path.
I cringed when you smacked your head in the bunker. OUCH! Those were some fascinating tunnels. Was quite interesting when you went in and found they were tunnels. It was something that there was still the original wood over the cable trenches and that there were still some parts of the rifle racks lying about. Thanks for taking us along.
That last cave is where the Oompa-Loompas were forced to fight. If it wasn't for Mr Wonka flying them all down to work in his chocolate factor, then this poor Oompa-Loompas would have been wiped out. Nobody would have ever known or heard of them before. Thank you Mr Wonka!
Once again another great video I’m still amazed by all the tunnels the Germans built. Do you think some of those were built for WW1? Those views are beautiful. Thanks again.
Amazing tunnel system. Please return and explore more features. The ceilings were so low, sorry about your head! EE is certainly getting taller. He will need to watch where he is going too.
What an amazing location, so many cool features and questions. Hope you didn't bang your head too hard, I was saying "whatch your head" when you turned around to come back out haha. great one this, thanks guys.
Glad to see EE and this was a cool place and what a great view they had in some places. I wounder what they did hide in these caves? Thanks for all your hard work!!
Hi EE 👋. That was great that you were able to obtain a spy map from one of the locals. It was a shame there was crap in the storage bunker. The 200 litre drum barrel should be in a war museum. The ammo storage bunker and MG station was pretty hefty. Ouch 😮 I bet that hurt HH. Quite the tunnel system. The view was incredible. Winter would have been brutal. There were so many features there. Thanks for taking us inside some of those bunkers. Good find on the rifle rack piece, EE. Very interesting place. Thanks EE & HH. ❤❤
That gentleman is so kind and he even let us see some photos of some of the installments taken just a few days after the war. Loved it and take care Laura :)
THAT was pretty amazing, all those tunnels. That one somewhat bunker, with the small slanted windows was prob an observation post and that piece of wood that EE found almost looked like an ammo wood holder; since it had that "rounded" area in the wood. Great job on finding it EE. The last tunnel seemed like it was used for quick transit for the troops. The room looked like it had been closed off though, but that could be just me. Great area and such a beautiful area. Thanks guys for taking us along. Take care
I'm not sure how to support your channel. I have just discovered your channel. Amazing discovery, I think all of this helped the allies win the war. Could you imagine the manpower, resources, money it took to build the Atlantic wall.
What a beautiful location. I don’t mind people using these bunkers for storage but many look like they are full of rubbish that should be taken to a land fill. Looking at the construction of these bunkers look like they were built in the early days of the war or before.I wonder if the one bunker with the metal strips over the opening were for the troops to stay in or a command post. During the day the metal strips had wood on them and they would open them up and at night they would close them to keep light out. Am still amazed with the tunnel system and how long they would have taken to build. Very interesting location.
I'm really looking forward to this and every episode. Have not been very well these last couple of weeks so have been watching your channel to catch up on everything - thanks for the therapy ❤
I was never good with algorithms, too much algebra. When the algebra teacher in high school first said "find X," he wasn't happy when I asked if he "remembered where you last saw it?" My imagination wanders to heavy water production facilities and transportation lanes. Or, the offices of Werner von Braun before he transferred to NASA.
@@WW2HistoryHunter I just wastch a documentary I think ud love about recruiting Germans recruiting soldiers where us Americans are so tall they wanted to make thier tunnels shorter to make it harder for us to go thru the tunnels if we took them over. But Americans knew that so they did the same. But my grandfather was one of the ones that went thru the tunnels and tight spots cu he was only 5'7. He was shot in 42 and went back in 44.