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@karl1914
23/10/22 09:08 
 poparcie   847
Widz, komentarz do filmu
It takes patience and courage to get through the amount of filler in this video, I feel like I’ve got to the most difficult place to reach by watching this (the end of the vi...
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@karl1914 @karl1914  23/10/22 09:08  polubiono  847

It takes patience and courage to get through the amount of filler in this video, I feel like I’ve got to the most difficult place to reach by watching this (the end of the video)

@1XX1 @1XX1  23/10/02 22:36  polubiono  344

Ice cold, steep cliffs, frigid conditions? Sounds like my ex wife...

@MapPack @MapPack  23/10/04 17:35  polubiono  313

CORRECTION: 23:15 Roald Amundsen did not die on his return trip from the South Pole. It was Robert Scott, the leader of a separate expedition, and his crew, that died on their return trip in March 1912.

@V3ntilator @V3ntilator  23/10/26 05:07  polubiono  163

The Norwegian Bouvet Island should have been in this video. The island is so remote in any direction that ISS space station astronauts is the closest neighbors to it now and then.

@robblerouser5657 @robblerouser5657  23/10/02 22:57  polubiono  148

Every corpse on Mount Everest was once an extremely motivated person...

@avikroy9108 @avikroy9108  23/12/08 17:37  polubiono  120

For those who value time, informative content starts at 3:03

@thebearonhighwayone @thebearonhighwayone  23/10/02 22:57  polubiono  110

Wait a minute. If no one has been there then how does anyone know that no one has been there? Hmm... 🤔🤣

@Billy.Bunson @Billy.Bunson  24/01/15 04:38  polubiono  107

Bro tryna hit that word count in his essay Still a Great Video😂

@janbergh7132 @janbergh7132  23/10/23 22:19  polubiono  83

Roald Amundsen did not died on his way back from the south pol, but return safely back to Norway. greetings from Norway

@danomalley2473 @danomalley2473  23/11/03 16:57  polubiono  71

My brother worked with a guy from Greece who got special permission to let his vacation days accrue from year-to-year. His home village was so remote, it took him 5 days to get there from Chicago, so that he otherwise would have had to use his entire vacation each year just travelling to and from home. And yes, I realize that 10 days is a ridiculously short amount of vacation days per year.

@geraldsturgill12 @geraldsturgill12  23/12/11 19:15  polubiono  40

Why wasn't North Sentinel Island on this list? It's literally illegal for people to even get close to the island as the Indian coast guard monitors the area and the people who've made it there have died.

@ecoideazventures6417 @ecoideazventures6417  23/10/03 15:05  polubiono  38

When i was young, i wanted to conquer every mountain peak, explore every river valley and reach the deepest abyss in the ocean. Today when i hear someone died going to ocean depths, i feel why the hell did they go there!?

@LelouchLamperouge235 @LelouchLamperouge235  23/10/03 03:47  polubiono  38

Im guessing the wind is really the problem with those unreachable mountains. I thought helicopters cant fly that high but it seems that extra powerful ultralights can. The same thing would apply if you were to jump from a plane ( with oxygen of course) .. the wind would probably never allow you to land anywhere near close.

@Geckogold @Geckogold  23/11/02 10:10  polubiono  33

Another interesting point of interest could be Point Nemo, which is a spot in the Pacific Ocean that's the furthest away from any land for a few thousand miles. It's so remote that if you went there, the closest humans to you would be the astronauts aboard the International Space Station a few hundred miles above. Apparently there's not a lot of sea life either because its remoteness and relative lack of ocean currents means not a lot of nutrients reach that part of the ocean, thus making it a sort of "desert" for sea creatures as well.

@mboyer68 @mboyer68  24/01/16 02:56  polubiono  23

A parking spot in NYC is the most inaccessible place on Earth. By far.

@jelink22 @jelink22  23/12/30 04:02  polubiono  19

It's a bit expensive, but cruises to Antarctica are common now. I was there three weeks ago, landing at the South Shetlands and several spots on the Western Peninsula. Very strict conditions were imposed on us, not to touch anything, nor to sit/kneel on the ground, not to leave even a kleenex there, and never to disturb the animals. Upside: a young 30-ft humpback whale approached our 18 fit inflatable Zodiac raft and dove under it, only ten feet down. I saw it flash by, turning to expose part of its underbelly, just as I hoped it wouldn't decide to surface and upend our raft. Scary for instant, but an unforgettable experience. Our fellow cruise passengers were a varied lot, including a bunch of Chinese , as well as Europeans, Argentinians and Brazilians, and North Americans of all adult ages and economic strata. You don't have to be rich to get there any more! Nor should you be put off by the dreaded Drake Passage. New ships have planes deployable from their hulls to provide balance against the waves. Better bring along the Dramamine, just in case, but it's a No Biggie.

@peterg4224 @peterg4224  23/10/31 13:40  polubiono  19

The mountain peak to stand on in which you are the closest to the Sun and furthest from the center of the Earth is not Mt. Everest but Mt. Chimborazo in Ecuador.

@davidbeckenbaugh9598 @davidbeckenbaugh9598  23/10/09 07:30  polubiono  19

How about Olavtoppen, anglicized to Olav Peak, on Bouvet Island, the most isolated island on Earth. The peak is 780 meters above sea level and only one expedition is listed as setting out to summit. I can not find if it was summited, but I believe it was.

@okami220 @okami220  24/01/05 02:23  polubiono  19

i was kinda hoping North Sentinel Island would be on this list. technically inhabited by humans but it is completely closed off to outsiders

@alphamiscritplayer345 @alphamiscritplayer345  23/10/28 14:35  polubiono  18

home is the most difficult place to reach when drunk