EMPTY NORTH DAKOTA - And The Surprising Small Towns I Found There
I visited these small North Dakota towns: Hillsboro, Mayville, Portland & Casselton. Later on in the video, Nicole & I visit a local restaurant in Fargo.
Joe's Instagram: / joeysroadtrip
Nic's Instagram: / nicole_from_philly
Travel Vlog 323
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209 sw 1st ave $200k and under contract 4 bd 1 1/2 bath, beautiful inside as well
@JoeandNicsRoadTrip
25 күн бұрын
Sounds pretty good!
@69eddieD
25 күн бұрын
Nice! $200K wouldn't buy the lot my house sits on. What a bargain!
@kevinlupson6063
24 күн бұрын
I live in New Zealand this house is quite impressive i'd live there. love these videos
@AllenGraetz
21 күн бұрын
Sounds great until you try paying that mortgage with an $16 / hr job at the beet plant.
@AllenGraetz
21 күн бұрын
Note that the median family income for people living in the city limits of Hillsboro is $42K.
👍Hey, Joe, the geezer on the lawnmower waved how-do at you. Nice folk 👍
@JoeandNicsRoadTrip
25 күн бұрын
You're right!
@dopeMike_
18 күн бұрын
I waived with my pointer finger in the air and nodded because I don't know him.
I loved how the man on the tractor cutting the grass waved to you, a perfect stranger. In the northeast he would have given you the finger.
@dianamarie5663
26 күн бұрын
Yes, it would have been "What choo lookin at?"
@craigwiz
25 күн бұрын
My favorite wave in those parts would be "hand on top of steering wheel, index finger extended" wave. It is a classic wave -- good for strangers, friends, and family.
@JoeandNicsRoadTrip
25 күн бұрын
Yep, and I waved back!
@fumanpoo4725
22 күн бұрын
Kindness and civility rule!
@qre268Zrtb
21 күн бұрын
@@fumanpoo4725 Especially when everybody has guns. 🙂
It’s amazing how all the grass is mowed. Very neat and clean little towns
@MadelineRose-ep7fj
25 күн бұрын
Not one piece of litter or graffiti!😊
@edgregory1
23 күн бұрын
Not amazing. It's expected.
@daydays12
22 күн бұрын
that is not ecological - eliminates flowers, insects, butterflies etc...like the rest of the place it is car dominated asphalt and concrete waste land - the hatred of organic life is palpable
@68hitnmiss76
22 күн бұрын
@@edgregory1 I guess it’s expected where I am also but I guess it depends a lot on society and income maybe, a lot of towns around me (I’m in the country now Thank God) the town I grew up in 1/2 or more of the houses are now falling apart or down and look like the slums. needless to say those neighborhoods look like jungles. People have no pride anymore. That’s why I say it’s amazing. Those places remind me of how my hometown used to be. 🥰
@fumanpoo4725
22 күн бұрын
@@daydays12Turn that frown upside down!😂
My daughter graduated high school in 2016. Went to ND a month later with a boyfriend. Wages are low but cost of living is really low. She came back to Oregon and currently in Washington. She is planning on going back, without the boat anchor boyfriend. It's my birth state so i totally approve. Mayville is where my family lives.
Some beautiful towns for sure and worth looking into for living full time. I can handle the cold alot better than the heat any day. Have a great day
@bettyb1581
19 күн бұрын
Same here I love cold weather
209 1st Ave - $200k, ≈1800 sq ft, built in 1943
My dads family came into the US through Ellis Island from Sweden. They were sent out to North Dakota to build a life there. Nekoma is the town they were sent to. That was tough in that era. Sod houses, brutal winters. In the 1930's the dust bowl came. Most (but not all) of my family left Nekoma for the auto industry in Michigan. I have been to Nekoma to see where my family was from. There was a military base in Nekoma in the 1960's. That is gone now and Nekoma is slowly fading to nothing.
@erikthorne
25 күн бұрын
It was the 1970's. Your ancestors chose to go to North Dakota and the dust bowl never really affected that area like other areas. What drove people out was crop prices and the Depression. I am a University of North Dakota grad with a history degree, geography degree and a master's in human geography from there. What you are talking about is what I studied. You say your dad's family went to Michigan? Usually people went west not east. Considering during the 30's it was not like Detroit was booming.
@ffarmchicken
25 күн бұрын
They are going to use the pyramid to store computer data. The problem will be keeping workers. There is nothing to do out there like Austin or the Bay Area. And the weather is brutal most of the time.
@jppagetoo
25 күн бұрын
@@erikthorne I spent many hours with my grand mother asking questions about her childhood out there in ND. I asked her "How did you end up in Flint?" She told me. She said the dust bowl in Nekoma was horrible. She described what happened. Crops failed, animals starved, and dirt everywhere blowing into peoples homes. There was no way to make money so you can say it was economics that drove them away but they were also pushed along hard by the dust bowl conditions. Her brother had a job in the auto factories in Flint Michigan and he got them in there over a period of a couple years. I never thought to ask her how he did that (I realize it was the depression) and my Great Uncle who did that was long gone. I have a really neat book my uncle Melvin (my grammas brother) got at a class reunion called "Nekoma - the first 100 years" It tells the story of how Nekoma was founded and the people. My family is in the book. I still had family there into the 1990's.
@erikthorne
24 күн бұрын
@@jppagetoo I will put it very simply your grandma was feeding you BS. I have written research papers on the subject and all four sets of my great-grandparents were farming with 30 miles of Nekoma going back to the 1890's. I still own farmland there.
@jppagetoo
23 күн бұрын
@@erikthorne OK. I have no reason to doubt her story other than your assertion. Maybe she felt it was worse than it was? Possible, she was a very young woman and peoples memories are far from perfect. I can't ask anymore, all of the Nekoma part of my family are gone (my gramma was born in 1917 and died in 2012 and she was the last of the Swanson children). According to the Nekoma book, all but 2 of the family left Nekoma by the end of 1936 (ish). If she was gone by '36 that meant she was at most 19 when she came to Michigan. Surprisingly the Nekoma book discusses the early sod busting and the miltary base eras quite a bit but large swaths of decades the are left undiscussed. I quote from the Nekoma book "Crowded on three sides by settlement the pre-Nekoma area was part of a VEE shaped formation shunned by settlers due to it's reputation for frequent and early frosts." So the area was a more difficult place to grow anything. So add in some drought and the area was likely a tough farming proposition in the 1930's. How big was that VEE? I don't know. Was it dust bowl bad? I don't know, but it there is evidence that this little town had a handicap that other nearly communities did not. BTW: This book was written by the residents of Nekoma and published in 1980. The authors are given but I do not know much about them. The family histories in the book were related by the families. They are first hand accounts.
"The moral of the story is be nice to people." -- How true, especially when traveling. Being pleasant and courteous to the folks you meet along the way makes for a good experience all around. As far as these towns "checking all the boxes", I'd agree with you...except for the the box that says "freezing cold about 4 months out of the year" 🙂 But seriously, despite being "empty", my visits to North Dakota have always been most enjoyable. On to the land of 10,000 lakes...happy trails!
@JoeandNicsRoadTrip
25 күн бұрын
Right!
@atatterson6992
20 күн бұрын
You sound as if "empty" is a bad thing..??..
@dopeMike_
18 күн бұрын
@@atatterson6992 Thats Texan for "I agree with you"
An awesome video ! Great little towns, and some lovely old theatres and churches ! Beautiful old buildings downtown ! Thanks so much, Joe and Nic, enjoyable as always.🥰
@claregale9011
23 күн бұрын
It facinates me that Americans consider early 1800s old , I'm from England and our local church is 1080 . 😊
We watch your videos and enjoy seeing all the places that you visit. Was totally shocked to see that you visited Hillsboro and drove by our home. You do a great job telling about the towns. Safe travels.
@atatterson6992
20 күн бұрын
Oh how I envy you Janet... Enjoy your peace :)
@deanhoward8155
16 күн бұрын
I noticed Doolittles Grill had walleye on the menu. I was hoping one of you 2 would order it. I live in Knoxville and in the south the only sure way to eat walleye it seems, is to first catch one in the lake. I HAVE heard of walleye being sold in the grocery stores occasionally but have yet to see it for myself. Northern restaurants seem to have more varieties of delicious fish on their menus, including bluegill for instance.Take advantage of it lol.
Hillsboro was a fun stop, Joe. Really enjoy your journey and bringing us along. Your show is MUST SEE TV for me. Appreciate it!
@JoeandNicsRoadTrip
25 күн бұрын
Thank you!!
My niece and I live in Grand Forks and we often do small road trips to the small local towns. This has put a fire under us. We are ready to go!!
@daydays12
22 күн бұрын
🙂
Classic beautifully preserved Americana. Hollywood could come here to do 40's, 50's, 60's movies and hardly spend a dollar on sets. Really liked this one.👏👍
@jgringo5516
23 күн бұрын
Keep them away. They’ll ruin it.
@edwinbergstresser7779
21 күн бұрын
I loved NOrth Dakota for its history. My son was called to Grand Forks Air Force Base. We visited few towns around. We love them there. I will love to live there when retired from Lutheran deaf ministry. My stress relieved when visited there. I asked my son if he would settle down. He would not. Too cold! I understand. North Dakotans, enjoy your life as I am impressed.
Yep, I was a Texas-born Air Force Brat, but my forever home for the last four decades has been North Dakota!
When visiting downtown St. Paul the James J. Hill house is impressive. I live in Fargo, yes the weather sucks in the winter, come spring everyone comes out of their hibernation and the mingling starts up in our neighborhood again.
@713tilidierippimpc5
25 күн бұрын
I'm huge on weather, I assume it's dry year round out there? I'm from/live in Houston TX and we're humid 80% of the year it sux lol
@poowg2657
25 күн бұрын
@@713tilidierippimpc5 They get their fair share of blizzards and severe thunderstorms. We get some of that here in Northern Wisconsin too.
@belle6219
24 күн бұрын
@@713tilidierippimpc5 I live in Fargo. It does get up into the 80's and 90's in the summer, but you're right, it's dry and breezy. I rarely turn on my air conditioner.
@713tilidierippimpc5
24 күн бұрын
@belle6219 makes me wanna move up there. Houston is wayyy too humid and I've lived here all my life. Can never get used to it. Plus it makes our food go bad way quicker than in drier regions smh
@tomfields3682
14 күн бұрын
@@713tilidierippimpc5 🥵
Love to see the Carnegie libraries!! The legacy that man left will span generations
@TinkerTailor4303
25 күн бұрын
I guess I should be ashamed to say I've never heard of a Carnegie Library. The man, yes, but not his libraries.
@GregPrince-io1cb
25 күн бұрын
@@TinkerTailor4303 History my friend.... Andrew was a hard man but a helluva philanthropist!!
@rhondatanner1157
25 күн бұрын
We have a carnage library in Morrilton Arkansas
@shannonmurphy9790
24 күн бұрын
We have a Carnegie building in Minot, ND
@julegate
24 күн бұрын
Actually, those libraries were used to control what you read and change the Country.
Maybe I missed it in an earlier video, but it would be interesting if you took a few minutes - or an entire episode - to talk about your background, education, interest in architecture. Also how you and Nicole met and where the idea for the channel originated. 🙂
@nathalienadeau8185
26 күн бұрын
Yes a Q&A would be really interesting!
@jenna-a-gogo
26 күн бұрын
I remember him saying in an earlier video that he and Nicole met in a bar that they both worked at before.
@NativeNYer
26 күн бұрын
Oh great idea!! Y didn't I think of that?🤔😁
@MyHumanWreckage
26 күн бұрын
All that info is available in an earlier Q&A video.
@JoeandNicsRoadTrip
25 күн бұрын
We're working on that. :)
Isolation and bad weather keeps it cheap. Interior Alaska is probably the only place you’ll find in the US with colder weather than the Red River Valley.
@yeoldmetalhead6592
24 күн бұрын
great insight, thanks
@darmony9153
20 күн бұрын
Amen to that. I grew up there and now live in LA. After 50 years in California I freeze if it gets below 60.
@dopeMike_
18 күн бұрын
Steve Wallis would agree.
Texting from Ireland, beautiful little town, absolutely spotless and the buildings immaculate. That’s the way I think of American small towns.
@dopeMike_
18 күн бұрын
Slainte!
I 've been through North Dakota numerous times. Great people, great state. Thanks for another excellent tour!
nice to see that cinema in Mayville still in operation
There's something I don't understand about America. We, husband and wife, have approximately 22,000.00 euros per year. The dollar is almost equal to the Euro. The difference today is 8 cents. But we can make a good living from it in the Netherlands. We can eat out at least 4 times a month. We can go on a flying holiday within Europe for 2 weeks twice a year. I can go to the cafe whenever I want. Together we pay 268 euros per month in healthcare costs. Our deductible is a maximum of 385 euros per year. Per person. Even though an operation costs 10,000.00 euros, it only costs us 385 euros. We receive housing allowance if your income is too low, which is the case with us, so you do not have to pay water tax or cleaning levy to the municipality. Oh, and I forgot to say that I also drive a Honda Goldwing 1991. Our income may be low, but we do not live in poverty. We can even save with this income. Fridge broken? There will be a new one tomorrow. So there's something I don't understand about America. Why are you poor with our income, in America, the richest country in the world?
@MrScorebord
25 күн бұрын
Oh, Joe and Nick, i love your channel. Thx for the tours.
@tomfields3682
25 күн бұрын
So prices must be low?
@zendave43
25 күн бұрын
your tax subsidizes your life.
@MrScorebord
25 күн бұрын
@@tomfields3682 Nothing is cheap. Gasoline prices are very high. A gallon is approximately 3.8 liters. In the Netherlands, the cheapest price around Amsterdam is €2.19 per liter. So multiply that by 3.8 and you get about $8.30 per gallon. Fortunately, we are not dependent on a car. In the Netherlands and the rest of Europe, all shops can be reached safely on foot or by bicycle. The prices in the stores are not low. Everything is getting more and more expensive. Vegetables, meat, hygiene items, clothing. But we have a subsidy culture in the Netherlands. If, according to the Dutch government, you have insufficient income, you will receive extra money. FREE!!! That is why so many so-called "refugees" come to the Netherlands. The Netherlands is an expensive country. But with €22,000.00 per year you can live well here and even save money thanks to all the government help.
@raymondmiller5098
24 күн бұрын
Short Answer: Even though the taxes are lower in the US as opposed to the Netherlands, we don't get much return for our money unlike the Dutch. (I was in the Netherlands for 2 weeks last October, btw). Since the end of WW2, Dutch voters have voted to create a lucrative social safety net (and willingly taxed themselves to finance this). By comparison, the social safety net in the US has always been comparibly weak. Historically, the Netherlands also has strong labor unions with many members; US labors unions have never been too big, and are now only 6% of the workforce. The Dutch also have greatly benefited by the US "security umbrella" since WW2, but this situation will likely change in the future (even if Pres. Biden wins) since US public support for continuing to underwrite 71% of NATO"s budget is dropping precipitously. From my conversations with Dutch people in October, it seems the Dutch public is oblivious to this inevitability. While the Dutch have excelent English language skills, it might be prudent for them to either dramatically increase their defense spending, or quickly start learning Russian. No joke.
It's so nice to see the guy in the mower waving hi. Higher in crime but they are friendly for sure. Thanks for the wonderful trip Joe and Nic
@atatterson6992
20 күн бұрын
Higher in crime? In ND?
Really respect these people in small towns who keep things looking so nice. Thanks for showcasing these small towns
Most people don't want to deal with 50 below and long winters.
@lisadobbie7109
23 күн бұрын
And that is why it is a good place to live.
@marcusleja7133
21 күн бұрын
If your region or community can keep out "most people", it's moving in the right direction.
@atatterson6992
20 күн бұрын
I'm totally fine w8th it. Please do stay wherever you are, thank you.
@dopeMike_
18 күн бұрын
Thats why Canadians go to Florida
@saskhiker3935
16 күн бұрын
I went to school in Fargo,ND. Ran track for NDSU. We had -70 degree weather with the windchill and our coach would drive us to the town north of the city and force us to run back to town.
I have made two fairly extensive trips to the USA but I have learnt so much more about this vast country from Joe and Nic's road trips. It has been a privilege and a pleasure to visit hitherto unknown small towns as well as the major cities ,with knowledgeable commentary on the history and the architecture of these places as well as a great visual feast of the surrounding land. Many thanks from England.
@JoeandNicsRoadTrip
24 күн бұрын
Thank you, Mike!
My mother was born and raised in Mayville. My grandparents immigrated from Norway and settled in Mayville. I graduated from high school and college in Fargo. I left North Dakota after college and don't get back very often. I knew you were in the Red River valley, as soon as the video started.
“If you can deal with a little cold weather.” That’s an understatement. My former physician lived in North Dakota and told me during the winter you don’t venture off without an emergency kit in your car in case you get stranded. It’s a matter of life or death. Everyone has electric engine block heaters to keep the oil from thickening. Remember all those Weather Channel wind chill reports. 🥶
@chrissyrose8184
26 күн бұрын
I laughed when he said that, too. The winters here are brutal.
@andrewward5891
25 күн бұрын
I spent 10 years in Maine. I prefer Phoenix winters.
@poowg2657
25 күн бұрын
I'll take 2 feet of snow instead of an 8 foot storm surge.
@ffarmchicken
25 күн бұрын
Well, the winter is the longest season in that part of the country. And you have sub 0 temps for weeks at a time in January and February. You don’t go outside unless you need to. Summers are beautiful though, just short.
@jons.14
25 күн бұрын
It's not that dramatic. We go outside. We have jobs. Sure, we don't go traipsing around in shorts and flip flops(although some do) during winter. When it's -20 or -30 with 30mph winds, it is most certainly cold AF. And most people keep a winter kit in the car because, yes, you can get stranded if the weather gets ugly. But if you don't like massive cities and prefer a chill (no pun intended) place to live without having a million people stacked on top of each other, it's glorious.
All of Joe & Nic's videos have been enjoyable, informative, and very much worth watching. This one in North Dakota seems especially good. Perhaps it because it is a look into what may be the least known and least understood state in the U.S., but it may also be because Joe & Nic's filming, editing and content keep getting better and better. "Joe & Nic's Road Trip Videos" are becoming an American treasure in much the same way as author William Least Heat Moon's awesome book on little known yet marvelous American places "Blue Highways" has. Am looking forward to all that is to come from Joe and Nic. Cannot thank you folks enough. R. Henry, M.D.
@JoeandNicsRoadTrip
24 күн бұрын
Wow, thank you, R Henry!!!
So fun visiting small towns. North Dakotas are quant and charming. I thought you might see more folks out and about on such a beautiful day.
@Motovationnation
20 күн бұрын
Quant and charming? Yeah right. I've lived in North Dakota my whole life. Neighbors don't even talk to each other.
@jburnett8152
8 күн бұрын
@Motovationnation So sad. Surprised to hear that.
I was admiring that old theatre with you and suddenly realized it may be the clubhouse for a notorious "motorcycle club" as they prefer to be called.
Low crime? The video only started with the Traill Old Theater now home to Sons of Silence. Only the 6th largest outlaw motorcycle club in the world! 😉
Great research, great presentation, as usual.
@JoeandNicsRoadTrip
24 күн бұрын
Thank you!
Yellow house in Hillsboro is $200,000. 1792 sq. feet, built in 1943. 4 bedroom, 2 bath.
I live in southern Manitoba Canada just 13 miles from the North Dakota boarder. Have been to many of their towns and cities but not the ones you have visited except Fargo. Same thing here ...... brutal winters.
@atatterson6992
20 күн бұрын
Brutal winters vs. Crime ridden hell hole Give me the brutal winters
Thanks again for your dedication and super videos!
Amazing towns with culture that is still carried on, they care about their communities. I know most of America used to have much of this. I loved the video , it was awesome.
Wow. I played a round of golf in Hillsboro with my father in laws friend back in the mid eighties. My wife grew up on the other side of the Red River in a small town of maybe two hundred called Hendrum. The wife still has relatives in the area.
Wow, absolutely blissful. Thanks Joe for the lovely video.
I visited the Theodore Roosevelt National Park on the west side of ND several years ago. Such beautiful landscapes and wildlife! The people of ND were so very nice and pleasant to talk with. Would love to go back again.
@atatterson6992
20 күн бұрын
Did you notice the correlation between those people you saw and talked with in ND, compared to the big city people you see but can't talk with? I do.
North Dakota really embodies what America is I feel like. That's just my opinion but man what a nice, slower paced, rurel farm town small community vibe with more freedoms than most states.
@Montanafelines
26 күн бұрын
Settlers that stayed there were tough, determined homesteaders and that blood is still in these folks veins! IMO 😁
@lakenneth374
26 күн бұрын
Topic of Personal Freedom, North Dakota is Rank# 31 out of the 50 States.
Hi Joe Thanks for this wonderful piece of video of small towns in ND. Enjoyed.
Getting lots of blue skies and in some places big wide skies. 🙂 🇮🇪
Back in 90-91 My bride and I stayed in a little town of 160 called Wasta SD. On the way we stopped at a little town that had a building made with corn cob siding and artwork.
How about LONG BITTERLY COLD WINTERS with howling wind all winter long!!
@meathecopark
13 күн бұрын
If you can take a bit of cold weather…..
wonderful video thanks for sharing joe and Nic 👍
@JoeandNicsRoadTrip
25 күн бұрын
Thanks 👍
In the Red River Valley of the North you also have to deal with the flatness. Not everyone can take it.
@713tilidierippimpc5
25 күн бұрын
I'm from Houston be glad there's not 100% humidity everyday lol and we're flat as hell smh. Why I love taking road trips to see diff landscapes and feel dif climates
Fun Fact: It has snowed in North Dakota during every month except August.
@marge3157
25 күн бұрын
Same in Oregon.
@usmcmos0317
22 күн бұрын
That I absolutely do not doubt. LoL 😂
@mrdpdjr
21 күн бұрын
That would suck
@davidrussell8795
21 күн бұрын
Not over here just north of Baudette Minnesota! April,just a bit in early April!
@dew02300
20 күн бұрын
Global warming.
The small church-looking building is an old school house. 😊
Hillsboro looked a really nice town and it was quaint with a Midwestern character and I loved the old movie theater in Mayville. That's American heritage that should be protected.
One of the only videos without junked cars precariously parked or piled high upon each other. North Dakota is doing it right!
Lived in ND from 2004-2009 When I was in the military. I remember those Hardware Hank stores in eastern ND. Not a lot of people there because the winters are terrible. Chicago winters ain't got nothing on ND. Just about every restaurant has Walleye on the menu, but no trip to ND is complete without a plate of lutefisk.😏
@janderson2556
26 күн бұрын
You don't understand the winter till you experience them. Best 7 months of the year... And yes, lutefisk, torso, and lefse are a must!!
@johngalanti1010
25 күн бұрын
What the heck is lutefisk,torso and lefse???
@jons.14
25 күн бұрын
Lutefisk is fish that has been fermented using lye. It's smell is off putting and it's texture is questionable. And taste is acquired. Lefsa is a thin doughy pastry with cinnamon sugar and butter. The other I cannot help with, but knoephla soup is amazing!
@dopeMike_
18 күн бұрын
@@jons.14 Almost sounds Macedonian.
Beautiful small towns. I would love to take pictures there. I'm from Sweden so I would not have problem with winters there 😅👍🏼
@donborvio
11 күн бұрын
Lots of Swedish and Norwegians settled in the area (ND, SD, MN, etc) because of the similarities to home.
The Scallops & Veggies get's the nod ! Enjoy all your adventures and learn a lot !
@johngalanti1010
25 күн бұрын
I agree. Looked super delicious 😋!
Interesting, well filmed with good sound. Highly watchable.
@JoeandNicsRoadTrip
24 күн бұрын
Thank you!
another excellent video, I also enjoy the restaurant meals and reviews....
OK but…visit in February and report back on what a bargain it is haha. People who live there must be tough as nails.
North Dakota looks like its living in a 1950's time warp, and how sweet it is. Low crime, well tended property, civic pride, no graffiti, low poverty rates. You can bet there are no protest marches or riots at Mayville State University, either. Kids are actually getting an education. How refreshing.
I’m liking North Dakota!! Looks very peaceful. That university building was so nice. Great explore! 😊😊😊
@yeoldmetalhead6592
24 күн бұрын
We should all move there!
Thanks Joe! A “little cold weather” ?? 🤣. Don’t go there in the winter ☃️🥶. That’s why the population of the state is less than most large cities watch the movie “Fargo”. You’ll see what it’s really like
@jenna-a-gogo
26 күн бұрын
He has. He showed us the woodchipper at the end.
Majority is farm land and oil fields i used to live in Watford City during the oil boom of 2013-2014 before obummer shut it down
@dopeMike_
18 күн бұрын
I guess his investments weren't being met by shipping it overseas and the gas prices locally were too low.
@tylerbuckley4661
18 күн бұрын
@@dopeMike_ actually during that oil boom things were OK when we were using our own oil it was not until we were using mideast oil when prices went up
Small towns out in the middle of nowhere. These are your best videos Joey. I just watched your video on fort Sumner NM for the 6th time. You show these towns that no one else is recording these videos will be watched for generations!! Right now for adventure purposes then later on for historical purposes.
Looks nice. The reason it has such a low crime rate is correlated to the absolutely brutally cold weather it has so much of the year.
@johngalanti1010
25 күн бұрын
I guess the criminals are so cold they can't go out and Rob anybody😂😂
@jons.14
25 күн бұрын
"Cold weather keeps the riff raff out." Shout be the state motto...
@belle6219
23 күн бұрын
Certainly keeps homelessness in check! 🥶
@daydays12
22 күн бұрын
good point about the crime rate
@trevorn9381
21 күн бұрын
Chicago has brutally cold weather much of the year as well. The low crime rate in these small rural towns is due to the fact that the population is predominately white.
I enjoyed the video. I understand that N. Dakota is the least visited of the 50 states.
@d23bw
20 күн бұрын
Perhaps that is one cause of the low crime rate. Criminals are often on the move.
My goodness, North Dakota has come a long way! Those plates looked delicious!❤ Not what I would expect from a small town there!😱🙂
@atatterson6992
20 күн бұрын
You are sadly misguided. Small towns like that are exactly where you find plates like that. You really need to get out more.
@denisefreeman2123
20 күн бұрын
@@atatterson6992 Sorry didn’t mean to offend. I am from CA and we no longer have that type of meal much anymore, more into ethnic variations. Maybe you need to get out more.
@atatterson6992
20 күн бұрын
@@denisefreeman2123 Thanks, but I'll pass on the ethnic variations. I'm a comfort food kinda guy as well as an Americana kinda guy. I miss the culture I grew up with, as did my parents, and their parents, and their parents, and theirs.. ad infinitum. Its a shame we're the only ones not allowed to revere, appreciate and respect our culture. We're instead expected to embrace "ethnic variations" and many of us are over it. Thanks anyways.
North Dakota looks so much nicer than what you showed in Oregon and Washington.
@marge3157
25 күн бұрын
It is. I was born in No Dak lived in WA as a kid and Oregon as an adult. I would go back in a heart beat.
BRILLIANT PROGRAM VERY INFORMATIVE GOOD TO SEE MORE OF USA - LIKE 👍👍👍
Just finished watching this video. Hillsboro was hometown for me. Thank you.
@donnagalbreath1202
25 күн бұрын
And I don't think the cold is the worst weather. It is the many blizzards every winter.
Great video. As soon as you mention the house for sale the price pops up in the comments. The comments section is a decent place. You have real nice followers.
Excellent presentation as usual. North Dakota has it going on for sure. Charming and healthy small towns. That molten cake looks incredible.
Here in London learning so much about rural us thanks for all your videos
I've visited all of these except Hillsboro. If you saw the school mascot, you know one reason I like Casselton. Mayville and Casselton are really nice towns with attractive downtowns. Casselton struggles a little because it's so close to Fargo. Businesses are not so well supported because it's so easy to drive to bigger and better down the interstate. Portland is, of course, overshadowed by its much larger neighbor. I love to visit new small towns in North Dakota. Most are clean, even if there are abandoned buildings, and there is always something to see!
Bismarck ND has one of the highest crime rates in America! 37 per 1,000 residents! I'd love to see a video about Bismarck and maybe some of your observations about why Bismarck has such a high crime rate.
@FixIt1975
25 күн бұрын
I thought the cold was supposed to keep the riff raff out. I guess not
@marge3157
25 күн бұрын
All the out of staters who came for the oil boom.
@aaronkidd9450
24 күн бұрын
@marge3157 Your right on with that.
Thank you,nice video and some lovely places!
Joe, thank you from Barbados 🇧🇧 for the videos and trips tru small and big town America.
Would SO LOVE to see the inside of those old theaters...
I grew up in a small city in neighboring Minnesota in the 70s-early 80s (Winona) so a similar environment to ND today I’m guessing. Although it’s more rural there and it’s farther north. Has a lot of good points but yeah I now live in the South, where a brutal winter day is in the 50s, for a reason.
You guys bring me comfort & some joy in your videos. Thank you 😊👍
@JoeandNicsRoadTrip
18 күн бұрын
Our pleasure!
Man, I am from Brazil and lived in Orlando FL between 21-22 and I have to say something - Good memories coming while watch your videos. Someday, if God help me, I will go back to America. Good job and THANK YOU FOR MAKE MY DAYS HAPPIER.
@JoeandNicsRoadTrip
21 сағат бұрын
That is awesome!
FIRST USAF base in 2002: Why Not Minot? Fishin is my thing! 👍👍👍 Miss her BIG time!
You two should print a book about the restaurants you go to! I want to go to this restaurant in Fargo - both main dishes (grilled scallops are the best and that fish looked incredible as well) and the desserts sounds AMAZING! Thanks for this episode - did not know of this area in North Dakota.
@dopeMike_
18 күн бұрын
Joe and Nics Culinary Guide of The United States
Such lovely clean little towns. That dinner looked amazing!
More power to the both of you and take care of yourself, thanks for bringing me in every place you visited.. God bless you both..
I think people are seeing just how great a place to live North Dakota is. Not much crime, good housing/job market, and beautiful scenery and people.
@andrewward5891
25 күн бұрын
If nice homes are going for $200k there’s not a lot of people moving there
@johngalanti1010
25 күн бұрын
Too damn cold for me though and probably for most people. 🥶
@ffarmchicken
25 күн бұрын
The problem is, more people move to ND, they will attract the bad people that will spoil the ambiance that attracted people there in the first place. Crime, graffiti, drug addicts, bums. Then people won’t wave, doors will be locked, people will be fearful.
@jons.14
25 күн бұрын
Most people freak out because winter is 7-8 moths of the year. That's why less than a million people live in the state.
Proof that all the stats of a town can be perfect, and it still pales in comparison to places with flawed stats. For instance, the downtown looks completely dead and I am sure the only thing to do there is drink.
Beautifully kept homes and properties. Very impressive. ND, keep it going great work.❤
Very interesting and well done. I love the small towns I've been to in ND. Looking forward to more of your videos.
You should have stopped in west ND. It's very much cowboy and oil country. You were pretty close to Jamestown also. It's a little bigger and has a river along with a buffalo museum.
Thank you for the tour, from Kharkov, Ukraine, 2mln town.
Thank you for sharing Joe, beautiful state. Awesome the food 👀 looks , so delicious Awesome video.🤗
Thank you for this video of small town America. Wonderful.
The library in Mayville originally had a dome. It was removed in the 1950s (thereabouts) because it leaked.
Thanks Joe and nic ❤
@JoeandNicsRoadTrip
25 күн бұрын
Any time!
I love your videos. They are informative, entertaining and unique. Keep doing this.
Love your videos.. Thank u for what u do
You want rural check out Clifford or Hope, ND
I’ve been to South Dakota, but not ND. Yeah, nice towns. I was impressed with the lawns especially at that chapel and courthouse in Hillsboro. The only drawback is the extremely cold winters.
@atatterson6992
20 күн бұрын
I would happily go through the winters in exchange for the safety, security and extremely high quality of life.
@jennifurhead
12 күн бұрын
@@atatterson6992This is not how all of ND is though. Born and raised and still live in ND. Cost of living is not like this everywhere and either is the income. And we have brutal winters. Takes a unique person to deal with -30 to -70 wind chills 7-8 months of the year along with feet of snow. And where I live, highest crime in the state. So no, not all of ND is how this video was portrayed.
It is a Wonderful Place to live, The People there are Fun and hard working!
@atatterson6992
20 күн бұрын
Exactly. Such a foreign concept today in big cities.
A guy who grew up there told me it was a great place to grow up. Hunting, fishing, wild and open spaces.