Gold Rush: Parker's Trail (2017) s01e00 Episode Script
Before the Trail
To honor parker
schnabel's grandfather
Four friends are taking on
one of the planet's
wildest journeys
Anybody changing their mind,
now is the time.
To see if they can finish
the trail
Um, I don't know
if I got it in me.
You just gonna
leave us over there?
How the was I supposed to know?!
And find gold
like the legends
who came before them.
Unreal, the that
these old-timers went through.
Now we get a sneak peek
into an upcoming series
about this expedition.
My biggest concern
is somebody getting hurt.
But first, we're digging deep
into the seven years
that led up to this journey
That's a, um,
pretty sensitive topic for me.
One thing I've never wanted
to do is be an angry person.
Life's too short for that.
And uncovering
what inspired their adventure.
You know, for me personally,
it's a big testament
to my grandpa.
Give me a hug.
Coming up on
"gold rush: Before the trail."
in the seven years before
setting off on their epic trek,
friends
and now business partners
parker schnabel and rick ness
Come on, come down.
Have been on
a different sort
of roller coaster ride.
Whoo-hoo-hoo-hoo!
Ho-ho-ho-ho-ho!
They've been
hitting the highs
And lows
Yeah, we're at a standstill.
Of gold mining.
For parker, it all began
with noisy neighbors.
So, the first year that
todd hoffman came up to alaska
and went gold mining,
I was 15 when he showed up
and set up shop
literally about 300 yards
from my grandpa's cabin
Like, just across the creek,
bordering claims.
Take a look at this.
Get some neighbors,
They got a lot of machinery.
Yeah.
And so, naturally,
you get to know the neighbors.
And I ended up
on the show a few times
just because, you know, like,
I sold them some firewood.
Parker, what's with the wood?
You feeling sorry
for these guys?
No.
I charged them double
what I usually do.
And the next season,
they called me up and said,
"hey, we're looking to film
with some other mine sites,
and we really love the story
about you and your grandpa."
and the rest is history.
Here we are,
probably 150 episodes later.
Wow, you weren't
screwing around too much
when you were 20, were you?
No, I was working
like an idiot, like you.
All work and no play.
You've got to get big,
you got to think big.
Grandpa john
handed parker the mine
when he was 16 years old,
and parker quickly began
to scale up the operation
and hire his own crew.
Many of them have come and gone.
But one, rick ness, has been
with him through thick and thin.
Rick and I met
It was our first summer
on "gold rush."
his band came to haines
for a big state fair
And I met him
after one of the shows.
Yep. Fanboy.
I didn't even know
he was on the show at the time.
Honestly, I've traveled a lot.
I've been, you know,
all over the world,
and alaska just really
blew me away when I saw it.
I really
Honestly, all I was looking for
was a way to spend a summer
in alaska.
Yeah.
You spent most of that summer
in a rock truck, didn't you?
Sure did.
Best summer of my life.
Grandpa john
was a great teacher,
but parker had to learn a few
crucial lessons on his own.
I have not told you
how to do your job one time
this whole year!
You won't make money
if you chase the help off.
You know, I think about
that first season
that I started running
big nugget mine
and that my grandpa
stepped back,
but I was completely unprepared.
It was very tough.
Those first few years
were really tough
just because
I had no experience, right?
I had zero experience, really,
dealing with people
and dealing with
those kind of problems.
And that's a hard thing
to go into.
It's a really hard thing
to go into.
And when you don't have
experience to back up decisions,
you know, for me, it led
to just getting emotional
about things.
And I'd get mad, I'd yell.
I don't need that okay?
The first thing you do
I don't need you
yelling at me like that.
Don't talk, don't talk.
Just listen.
I'm spending the money here.
I spent the money
on that wash plant,
and I make the calls.
I'm not very happy
with you or carl.
So, yeah, you know,
a lot of tail
wagging the dog around here.
I'm not gonna take any
from the little punk.
I'm pretty pissed off.
He didn't understand that, you
know, while it's a business,
we are still kind of a team
and we're all kind of going
for the same goal.
You know what I mean?
It took him a few years
to realize that.
But now that he's kind of
coming around to it,
it's improving a lot.
One thing I've never wanted
to do is be an angry person.
I don't want to be that guy.
Life's too short for that.
Sorry for
Being so aggressive.
Thank you for that.
Always pushing to grow,
parker and rick
made the biggest jump so far,
leaving the big nugget mine
behind.
There's not
any good ground left, you know?
There's not another season left
for me here.
The next year was a
Was a new opportunity again.
Right? Yeah.
And it was go into the klondike
and try it up there.
And, you know, that's
the kind of stuff I live for,
so, you know, it was
a no-brainer for me to go back.
You know I couldn't stay away.
Never been so happy
to see you, man.
As soon as I went up there
and as soon as I saw, like,
tony beets' operation
and a few others',
that's when I was like,
"all right,
this is the promised land if
you want to be a gold miner."
I got to get up here
where the big boys play.
And in the yukon,
there's one big boy
who likes to play rough.
For me, the biggest
challenge I've faced
over the last four or five years
is dealing with tony beets.
The way he does business,
he doesn't care
about anybody else.
He knows how to get you in a
position where you're screwed.
You just show up in the
spring and shutting us down?
A contract.
You know, like, last year,
we had this big issue.
He told me not to show up
on his claims
until we signed a lease.
And we signed a lease,
and we sent it to him
and we showed up
and went to work.
And then,
instead of signing it himself,
he changed it
and came and told us,
"sorry, it's not valid,"
because we didn't sign it.
I signed it. I sent it to you.
And now you're changing it?
It's not valid
until tony signs it, right?
And so that is shady, right?
That's I don't think
that's a very good way
of doing business.
Even with a tough landlord,
parker has ramped up production
and begun to delegate.
One of the greatest things
rick's done
is came to me this last spring,
at the beginning of the season,
and I don't think there were
cameras around or anything,
but he just said, "parker",
you get way too worked up
at the crew over little things.
So when you have a problem
with what's going on out there,
come to me, take it out on me,
"and let me deal with it."
and that was a huge gift.
It started a huge change
between him and I, for sure.
Yeah.
Now I yell at you,
and you go deal with it.
It's great.
That may have been
a step backwards
in your whole plan, there,
but
That only happened
a couple times this summer.
Parker's temper is far from the
biggest hazard on the work site.
The smallest things
can prove deadly.
You know, our safety record
is pretty
Good out there, yeah.
I mean, it's great, honestly.
I've gotten hurt a few times,
but it's been
for really stupid things.
You're the one
that's come closest to dying
with a bee sting.
Off.
I got stung by a bee this summer
and went into
anaphylactic shock.
You know, I had to find
an epipen and stab myself.
Um
But that has nothing to do
with the work conditions.
You know what I mean? And
It got me, like, right here,
and it's all swollen
down to here.
And I've got, like,
a woman's breast.
It's like a "c" cup.
Like, it falls.
Like, it's no, it's absurd.
The nurse was laughing at me.
We're all laughing at him
as he's puffing up.
Yeah, my face is swelling up.
And he's, like, starting
to have a hard time breathing.
We're like, "we should
probably stop laughing"
and do something about this."
yeah, yeah. It was scary.
Over the last seven years,
success or failure
has come down to one thing
See what this brings us to.
Yeah, there's quite a bit
in there.
How much gold do they have
at the end of the season?
Nice chunks.
And we've come a long way.
Our first season I mean,
before rick was even there
We did 37 ounces.
It looks like a lot of gold,
but we spent a lot of money
to get it.
The next season,
we did 193 or 192.
You got 2-ounce profit.
Yeah.
Then, we went to the yukon,
and that year
First year in the yukon
We did 1,029?
I'm overwhelmed.
I never have seen that much
gold in my whole life,
at one time.
And then, the second year
up there, we did 2,538.
Look at that.
That's another 200.
And the year after that, 3,362.
Ooh! Boy, is that heavy.
What?!
And then, this season,
we've done 4,311,
so it's been
quite the progression.
I don't know.
That all adds up to probably
close to 11,000 ounces or so.
Coming up, parker has to answer
to his parents and his fans.
"Could you please get parker
to get a nice haircut?"
of course. I have no comment.
And then we get a sneak peek
into the upcoming miniseries
This is brutal.
This is so dangerous.
Where parker
and his three friends
push themselves to the limit.
If somebody gets hurt,
that's serious up there.
You know, from hurt to killed
is pretty quick.
Brace yourselves!
Whoa, whoa, whoa.
Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa!
- Hey!
- Parker!
For seven years,
roger and nancy schnabel
have watched their son parker
grow up
from a high-school sophomore
to a full-time miner.
Now we'll find out what it's
been like for them as parents
and learn how parker
first caught gold fever.
John mined every summer,
so the mine was always
a huge part of their lives.
And parker's question to
grandpa was, you know,
"when can I go to big nugget?
When can I
go to the mine with you?"
and john looked at him and said,
"when you're not wearing
those diapers."
in about two or three days,
his mother brought him up.
And he unzipped his pants,
and he said,
"grandpa, I got no diapers."
my father it was too much
for him to mine
and take care of two youngsters,
and so he would
take one at a time.
Nancy and I had to figure out,
"okay, who's gonna go
and who isn't gonna go?"
and payson didn't have
quite the passion
for going up there
than parker did.
And parker would drop
anything and everything
to go up to the mine.
So he would ask us,
"if payson doesn't want to go,"
grandpa said that he would take
one person every day,
and so I'll fill in for payson.
"Is that okay?" and sure.
The nice thing about big
nugget when I was growing up
was that it was everything
a kid needed.
When I wanted
to have it be a playground,
it was a playground.
When I wanted it to be a
school, it was a school.
I've practically grown up
up there.
How are you, buddy? Pretty good.
With parker growing up
in front of the cameras,
many fans want to know what it's
been like behind the scenes.
So now we let our viewers
ask the questions.
Gem p. Asks
I think that when I look back
over the seven years
and, you know, going from
a 15-year-old to a 22-year-old,
I think one of the things
that I'm most proud of
is that he never shied away
from the challenges
that kept coming up.
It has not all been easy.
It's still been, you know,
at times,
a really discouraging,
hard, tough road,
and he just kept at it.
It's been fun to be able
to see him develop.
The klondike is the biggest
sandbox in the world,
and I'm ready to play.
From melissa t.G
"it was stressful allowing
my boys to drive cars."
as far as the stress level goes,
when you're raising children,
you've got to try and figure
out how long or big of a leash
should you have on your child.
Did you just assume
you would take that equipment?
And this is the first that
you're gonna talk about it?
I'm not gonna support a kid
in thinking that life
is gonna be handed out to him.
You might have something
to add to that, honey?
"Very stressful" is the answer.
Extremely stressful.
And it doesn't get
any easier, you know?
But we have a big joke
in our family, you know,
I wanted to wrap them in bubble
wrap and keep them by me.
And I still do.
I still want both of my boys
home where I can see them.
And you have to trust that
it works out, they're safe.
You know, lots of praying,
lots of worrying.
But yeah,
really stressful, melissa.
Well There is
A clear record
of how concerned I am.
I am concerned about you,
and I am
And I'm telling you, I'm fine.
I had heard
from the production crew
that he was working too long,
he wasn't eating,
he was drinking coke
and eating candy bars
and not sleeping.
The coffee is wearing off.
You know, obviously,
somebody tells you that
about your child,
and you go find out
if he's okay.
And that necessitated a trip up
to big nugget to check on him
that I don't think pleased him
any more than it pleased me.
It's time to take you home.
Good luck.
Don't do that.
I was upset then,
and I felt like
I had some control over him.
You know, I could take him home.
He was 16.
You think
I can't shut this down?
You're wrong.
You're wrong.
I can shut this down.
It's very easy to see where
parker gets his work ethic.
It is exactly the same
as his dad,
and his is exactly the same
as his dad.
It's, like, in their dna.
It's in the gene pool.
And it's just part
of who they are.
We have parker
join his parents
hi.
Nice to see you,
nice to see you.
To help answer a question
that many viewers
have been asking.
Question from bill k
Of course.
I like the "nice haircut."
I have no comment.
Parker knows me too well.
I don't need to comment.
This is for you.
I am not commenting.
This is for you, dad.
Yeah, yeah. Roger is
It's his independence,
and if that's the way he wants
to show it, that's perfect.
It's true. Roger
It's a lot worse,
it's a lot worse.
That's what I'm saying.
That's what I'm saying.
Roger is a short-hair guy.
Our boys buzz cuts
Right? Their whole life.
Stop!
He needs to wash it more,
condition it more,
and cut it into a style.
A mullet is a style.
A mullet is a bad style.
I don't know
why you have chosen this.
I didn't choose it.
Mullet is great.
It's just it's cool.
You're just hoping that my
rebellion ends with long hair,
is what dad is aiming for, here.
Right, right, right, right.
Well, that's that's a, um
Pretty sensitive topic for me.
In fact, as I read it,
it, um, it's making me
well up a little bit.
First of all, I was blessed
with a wonderful
Wonderful father.
And I was secondly blessed
because of the relationship
between my father and parker.
And to think that parker
had an opportunity
to be with my dad
for the, gosh, 21 years
Going on 21 years-plus
Is unique
and a wonderful experience.
I kind of like the role
when grandfathers play
because it's rewarding,
and sometimes it's frustrating.
As your father said to me,
"dad, let me
make my own mistakes."
and I think you've got
a lot of the same blood in you
that he has.
And I make
a lot of my own mistakes.
Yeah, I mean,
I have a lot of friends
that never got to meet
their grandfather.
Right.
For me, whenever I start
feeling down about it,
I just, like, "god, you're
pretty damn lucky to have that."
love you.
Love you, too.
Bye-bye.
Bye, grandpa.
Bye-bye.
So, here's another
viewer question, from dave f.
I have thought about this
for a long time.
Two things.
He always had purpose,
he always had a plan,
he always had something he was
working toward always.
And the second one was,
he became the loving, open,
kinder, gentler,
more mellow person as he aged
because he realized
what was important.
The list is long.
Work ethic
You can talk about that.
You can talk about
treatment of other people.
You know,
you can talk about health
Your personal health
and well-being.
I can say,
more than anything else,
to put it all
into proper perspective,
he helped make me
a more complete individual.
The john that we got to see
in "gold rush"
was the very best john
The culmination
of over 90 years of learning.
And this is what he learned
The "I love you," "be safe,"
"I'll miss you,"
"family is everything."
give me a hug.
Nice to see you.
Well, I hope so.
Parker,
all I got left is family.
Up next, parker breaks the news
of his latest venture.
I'm really anxious to see it.
Like, I want to see it.
And he and three friends
set out into the wilderness
at the worst time of year.
We're not getting out of here
in this boat.
We got to figure out an
alternate route fast.
Winter is coming.
Before parker schnabel
talks about his adventures
on the klondike trail,
he and his parents
are taking viewer questions.
Here's a question from sheila s.
In looks, you bet.
It shows.
One thing that I can see
that's a real similarity
is they're both quick learns.
My dad had the ability to
He was a well-read person,
and he analyzed things quickly
and he put the puzzle together,
as far
as what makes things tick,
very quickly,
and very imaginative person.
And I see a lot of that
in parker.
Inspired by
his pioneering grandfather,
parker sets his sights
on a grueling challenge
Tackling the klondike trail at
the absolute worst time of year.
You crazy fools.
What you doing,
doing it this time of the year?
When did I tell you guys
about this trek
The gold rush trail?
You you
You were thinking about it.
You mentioned it.
Yeah, I'm pretty sure
it was just a casual,
off-the-cuff remark, probably.
And, you know,
that's how a lot of ideas die.
It's just like they, you know,
wither away, and nobody
Like, "yeah, that's real funny."
like, "good for you, parker.
Keep thinking."
and then it actually happened.
Right.
When I first told you guys, I certainly
never thought it would happen.
That it was really
gonna happen, yeah.
Right. Sure.
How many ideas
have I told you guys, you know?
And we brushed it off, yeah.
Right, and I thought,
"this is another really"
and of all the ones
I've had a lot of ones that
involve a lot of warm weather.
And I really think
I screwed up
Screwed up, right.
Which ones worked out
and which ones didn't.
The whole idea
of parker going on this trip,
as it started,
I didn't think it would happen,
so I didn't worry.
And then, when it became closer
and closer to the reality
and he started, you know,
filling up his backpack,
I said,
"well, isn't there, like,
a whole lot of water
you got to deal with?"
and he goes, "yeah."
I said, "so"
You been on the water a lot?"
"no."
"you worried about that?" "no."
and I thought, "wow."
I'm not sure that he
"Is fully anticipating
all that's gonna happen."
you know, the hiking?
Okay.
But all that time
on the water, cold
And so it's like I'm
I'm really anxious to see it.
Like, I want to see it.
To give us a preview
of their upcoming miniseries,
"Parker's trail,"
wilderness guide karla ann,
filmmaker james levelle,
and gold miners rick ness
and parker schnabel
are ready to talk about
their journey.
I'm stoked.
Even if
they can't agree on much
I hate
all three of these people.
I'm sick of their voices.
They're in the studio
for one reason
Together again.
The four idiots.
To give a behind-the-scenes look
into their latest adventure
A punishing 600-mile journey
into the wilds of the klondike.
Goodbye, haines.
Whether we like it or not,
here we go.
Each person brings
a different set of skills
And the group's success
hinges on thing teamwork.
We've got the best teamwork.
It's silent.
You know, the thing about
the four of us is, we're
All four of us are used to being
in control of the situation
that we're in, right?
Rick was running a gold mine.
I'm running a gold mine.
And you know, karla does hunts
and guides snowboarding
and does a lot of stuff
that she is in control of.
So, I did a lot of trips
with my family as a kid,
and we were always
cooking over a fire
and doing multiday canoe trips
and camp trips.
And, yeah, I've been working
in the bush in the yukon
for the last seven years.
I just originally wanted
to get away from the city
and get back into the woods.
I picked up a job as, like,
a wilderness guide
and some jobs
doing construction.
That's kind of
how I got tied up in parker.
I needed a couple months
of work,
and the rock truck
was calling my name.
I'm excited to get back.
It's quiet there.
And then same with james.
James makes films and needs
to be in control as he can be.
I'm a
filmmaker, and on this journey,
it's my responsibility,
essentially,
to capture the whole
crazy adventure on camera
at the same time
that I've got
I'm actually
a part of it, as well.
So it's a hell of a challenge,
doing two jobs at the same
time, but I live for that.
And so you put
all four of us together,
and that's a lot
of personalities
and that's a lot of people that
are used to being in control
that
Now that, you know, really,
we all have to
share that, right?
And we all have to
make decisions together,
which I love.
You know, there's a lot of reasons
why I wanted to do this trip.
Let's do it.
Something new and different
kind of challenge.
And for me personally,
it's a big testament
to my grandpa and what he did,
coming up to alaska.
The adventure begins, boys.
Yeah.
My great-grandfather
came from sweden
and was a part of the gold rush.
So I think, for me,
it was just
It's just in my blood.
And he biked there.
Yeah, he did
a couple different trips.
He biked, he tried sled dogs.
Like, on the frozen river.
Yeah, he did a couple
of different wild things, and
Don't downplay it so much.
That's so awesome.
Yeah, I know,
he was a pretty badass dude.
You just can't
let the weather get to you.
You can't.
It sounded like a mad,
crazy, fantastic idea,
and I was like,
"yeah, count me in."
and then I heard nothing
for months,
until suddenly,
there was a phone call.
And it's like, "we're doing it,
so get on the plane."
What I'm worried about
is the weather.
We are going
at the worst time of year
and need to be prepared
for anything and everything.
I've been saying for years now
that I need
to get out of my comfort zone
and do some new things.
So, that wasn't
what I was thinking about,
is this kind of trip,
but yeah, the opportunity
was there, so why not?
It fits the bill.
Further? How much
shut up.
I remember you saying
you were scared
that we weren't
taking it serious.
Totally. The whole yeah.
This is rick's prep.
We're all unpacking
and repacking,
and rick is sitting here
pounding beers.
Yep.
I'm just I'm used to being
professional about it, like,
you know, like, "let's get
this done, and let's"
I think you know by now
that this is not
anything professional.
Part of the experience
is not being prepared, right?
The accountants that
quit their job 120 years ago
to go be a part of the gold rush
didn't spend months planning it.
They're like, "that dude
has gold from way up there."
I'm getting on a boat
and I'm going up there."
yes.
- Yeah.
- Yeah.
I knew it was gonna be cold,
I knew it was gonna be tough.
But every time I've been
filming in the cold before,
I'd have a hotel
to go back to, usually,
or a car you could warm up.
This was gonna be
This was gonna be
something else.
You know, no escape.
Parker's idea is simple
To retrace the route
taken by the original
klondike gold miners.
In 1896,
a handful of prospectors
in the remotest parts
of the klondike struck it rich.
Word got to seattle
and san francisco,
and after that,
it sparked this
The biggest gold rush
in history.
And 100,000 people set off,
and it was just, like, mayhem.
Of the 100,000 that set off,
I think only 30,000
made it to dawson city.
The first to arrive
would be able to stake out
the richest claims,
but two out of every three
either died
or gave up along the way.
The fastest route
was also the roughest.
It was straight over
a mountain range,
through the chilkoot pass,
then another 550 miles
of hiking and canoeing.
My initial thought
once we started on this
was that, "no matter
how seriously we take this",
we're only gonna get a glimpse
at what it was really like
for them back then"
Because they just
You know, the packs they had
weren't like our packs.
You know, the clothes they wore
weren't like our clothes.
And the winter that
that was all happening
The winter of '97
I think it snowed like 35 feet.
I think, for me especially,
I was like, "holy
These were some tough dudes."
yeah. And women.
Yeah.
Hoo, hoo, hoo!
Coming up, the four stampeders
reach the breaking point.
Yeah, this is madness.
Didn't realize that you were
gonna try to break your leg
every step.
And they come clean
about each other.
Rick.
Deep, dark snores.
Four friends embark on the
adventure of their lives.
And now
we're getting a sneak peek
into a groundbreaking tv event,
inspired by parker's
grandpa john.
Wicked.
They retrace the footsteps
of the klondike
gold rush miners.
Unreal, the that these
old-timers went through.
In 1897,
prospectors faced long odds,
just like parker and his team.
A third or less
made it to dawson.
That's not very good odds.
But that means
a third did make it, too.
The four are heading into
one of the most hostile
environments on earth
A land of towering mountains
and freezing rivers.
It's the domain of moose,
bears, and wolves,
where temperatures plunge to 60
degrees below zero in winter.
Probably my biggest concern
is somebody getting hurt,
because that puts everything
in a dead stop.
If somebody gets hurt,
it's a whole
different ballgame, right?
Don't go that way.
This is so dangerous.
And that's serious,
especially up there,
where no matter how hard
you wanted to get somebody
that was hurt out,
you can't do it.
A lot of times,
you just can't do it,
and that's
a very serious concern,
especially for me,
because I feel like it's kind
of my responsibility, right?
I take that on as
As something I did wrong,
if somebody got hurt.
That's serious up there.
You know, from hurt to killed
is pretty quick.
The trek into
the klondike is treacherous,
especially with winter
setting in.
And the four can't avoid
the deadliest stage
of the entire trip
The chilkoot pass.
The last half-mile is an almost
impossible 45-degree slope.
In the gold rush,
this was where the dream
of getting rich
hit an unyielding wall.
Climber practically had to
crawl up the last stage,
which they called
the golden stairs.
Thousands gave up at this stage
or died
trying to make it over the top.
Sometimes the details
I mean, the golden stairs,
you know, it's the epic image
of the gold rush right?
That kind of line of ants making
its way up the 45-degree slope,
lugging all their gear.
I mean, it's iconic.
It's crazy.
I mean, I think about
the golden stairs,
and I'm just like,
"okay, that's where
I'm gonna tap out or die."
'cause, I mean, I'm 255 pounds.
What business do I have
climbing a mountain,
especially with a huge backpack
on my back?
That's all I could think.
You're a whole todd hoffman
with the backpack on.
Yeah, might be.
Not every challenge on the trail
is a matter of life and death.
Just getting along
can be a trial.
It's gonna be
a long month, boys.
So, we get these four friends
to explain what it's like
to share a tent
in the frozen north.
Smelled the worst?
Um
Parker.
Parker was the smelliest.
Parker is the smelliest
on any trip,
so that's an easy one.
Nobody really stank, but
karla ripped a lot of farts.
Rick,
without a shadow of a doubt.
Rick is a snoring machine.
- Hands down.
- No doubt?
Yeah, deep, dark snores.
Rick, no doubt.
No-brainer right there.
Karla farted about once
every 3 1/2 minutes.
Karla farted nonstop.
Karla had the worst gas,
by a long way, yeah.
And giggled about it.
Me.
That's parker, easily.
I think we all appreciated
the country-chic haircut
he was given by karla
at the beginning of the trip.
This is carlos' cuts
5 minutes, 5 bucks.
Holy cow.
It sounds like you're
cutting my whole head off.
It's called layering.
I'm layering.
Yeah, it didn't do much
for his morning look.
That's country chic. All right.
We all have great hair.
You look good, buddy.
Tell me the truth.
Is it terrible?
Coming up, we get
a sneak peek into the series
as the ice closes in
The current
is ripping under the shelf ice.
And the trek turns deadly.
Whoa!
Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa!
On the trail,
communication is key.
- Engage your butt, rick.
- Yeah.
But things get confusing when
james speaks english english
despite my bollocks ramblings.
Bloody hell.
Well, I have a habit
of speaking, I suppose,
a language that the guys, um,
find slightly ridiculous.
We have multiple meanings
for our wonderful words.
A banger is not only an old car,
it is also a sausage, obviously.
"Chuffed"?
That's what I like to try and be
as much of the time as possible.
It means
"happy, pleased, delighted."
I'm super chuffed to be here,
filming with you guys right now.
"Barmy"? "Mad," "completely
bonkers," like us lot.
It's charming
for about five minutes.
I mean,
I know what I'm talking about.
For parker and rick,
the mining season goes on right
up until the ground freezes.
So when they finally get time
to hit the trail
in their upcoming miniseries,
it's already November.
Crazy fools, what you doing,
doing it this time of the year?
The weather will go
from bad to worse.
We have a narrow window
with the weather.
At this time of the year,
you know,
the weather is unpredictable,
at best.
You know,
it could go either way.
It is not the time of year
for a canoe trip, essentially.
No.
Um
Never say "never."
yeah, but, I mean, you know,
the freeze is coming.
You just have to push
as fast as you can
because you just don't know
when the ice is gonna strike.
But when it does, you're dead.
It's all over.
I had a pretty good
feeling we'd run into ice,
but not this soon. This is bad.
But, you know,
we've come this far,
we got to keep going.
We hike over a mountain,
we paddle across
all them stupid lakes,
we finally get some miles
started on the river,
and we get this
it's weird walking the trail
and doing the boat trip
and floating down the river,
and knowing just how many
people have done that
and lost their lives.
Yeah.
It was a brutal thing
that they all went through.
And there's sections
of the lakes and the rivers
and all that that are
You know, it's serious.
Hundreds died along the route,
buried in avalanches,
drowned in the rivers,
and struck down by frostbite
and hypothermia.
We asked dr. David townes, an
expert in adventure medicine,
to explain what can happen
to the four friends
on the klondike trail.
I think as parker and his team
retrace the route
of the klondike gold miners,
there are quite a few dangers,
the big ones being hypothermia,
because of the extreme cold.
As the body starts to cool,
the first reaction is,
everything sort of revs up.
You can feel your heart
sort of thumping in your chest.
And then, as you cool even
further, you start to shiver.
And shivering is your body's way
of trying to generate heat.
When you get down
into 88 degrees or so,
shivering will stop.
The body is no longer able
to shiver and generate heat.
I really think that we should
get out of our cold gear
and sit in our tents.
The body gets down
to about 65 degrees,
you die, essentially,
from cardiac arrest.
Being wet and cold like this
for that long
and sleeping in a wet tent
in a wet sleeping bag
colder and colder,
as the temperature just gets
um, I don't know
if I got it in me.
There's always the risk
of avalanches in that area.
It's snowing up there right now,
and fresh-snow avalanches
are the most dangerous kind.
That's a little bit sobering.
I am not gonna die on this trip.
The water is very cold,
so if you fall
in one of these rivers,
your chance of drowning
is fairly significant.
Not only do you have to worry
about submersion in water,
but being hypothermic in that
cold changes your judgment.
Your judgment is not as good.
Brace yourselves!
Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa!
Once you start
kind of losing it a bit,
that's when things
get a bit dangerous
and you make
the wrong decisions.
And making exhausted decisions
kind of leads
to trouble sometimes, so
You just gonna
leave us over there
sitting on the beach
while you're supposed to
I just walked over here.
I just walked over here.
Tried to find you guys.
We're all over there!
Over where?
Right where your boat is.
How the was I supposed to know?!
You know, we know the stories
of the old-timers, you know?
That's what you're up against.
This is no-nonsense weather.
This is serious winter.
And you know it's coming.
The question is,
"when is it coming?"
and when it comes,
it's game over.
We are not going
anywhere near that bank.
The current
is ripping under the shelf ice.
Trying to get
pulled downstream look out!
Whoa! Whoa, whoa,
whoa, whoa, whoa!
As impossible
as the trek north will be,
modern gear will be lighter,
warmer, and more waterproof
than anything from the 1890s.
So, before
next week's deadly journey,
we're wrapping things up
on a lighter note
With a sampling of the original
stampeders' survival duds.
Yeah, look at that.
Rick, this could be for you
This puppy.
How do I look? Great.
I'm not feeling these pants.
All right, we need rick.
Yeah.
All right.
All right, who's up?
I broke the cork.
Inspired by parker's grandfather
and all the pioneers
who came before them,
four friends take on the
toughest journey of their lives.
Yeah, this is madness.
James, look out!
It's a brutal 600 miles
I can't see.
And winter is closing in.
Rick, draw left! Rick, draw
Whoa, whoa, whoa!
Whoa!
We cannot get stuck here.
There's no plan "b."
Like so many others
who died or quit,
will they come up short?
Watch out, watch out!
Or can they reach the end
Parker's trail"?
Captions by vitac
captions paid for by
discovery communications
schnabel's grandfather
Four friends are taking on
one of the planet's
wildest journeys
Anybody changing their mind,
now is the time.
To see if they can finish
the trail
Um, I don't know
if I got it in me.
You just gonna
leave us over there?
How the was I supposed to know?!
And find gold
like the legends
who came before them.
Unreal, the that
these old-timers went through.
Now we get a sneak peek
into an upcoming series
about this expedition.
My biggest concern
is somebody getting hurt.
But first, we're digging deep
into the seven years
that led up to this journey
That's a, um,
pretty sensitive topic for me.
One thing I've never wanted
to do is be an angry person.
Life's too short for that.
And uncovering
what inspired their adventure.
You know, for me personally,
it's a big testament
to my grandpa.
Give me a hug.
Coming up on
"gold rush: Before the trail."
in the seven years before
setting off on their epic trek,
friends
and now business partners
parker schnabel and rick ness
Come on, come down.
Have been on
a different sort
of roller coaster ride.
Whoo-hoo-hoo-hoo!
Ho-ho-ho-ho-ho!
They've been
hitting the highs
And lows
Yeah, we're at a standstill.
Of gold mining.
For parker, it all began
with noisy neighbors.
So, the first year that
todd hoffman came up to alaska
and went gold mining,
I was 15 when he showed up
and set up shop
literally about 300 yards
from my grandpa's cabin
Like, just across the creek,
bordering claims.
Take a look at this.
Get some neighbors,
They got a lot of machinery.
Yeah.
And so, naturally,
you get to know the neighbors.
And I ended up
on the show a few times
just because, you know, like,
I sold them some firewood.
Parker, what's with the wood?
You feeling sorry
for these guys?
No.
I charged them double
what I usually do.
And the next season,
they called me up and said,
"hey, we're looking to film
with some other mine sites,
and we really love the story
about you and your grandpa."
and the rest is history.
Here we are,
probably 150 episodes later.
Wow, you weren't
screwing around too much
when you were 20, were you?
No, I was working
like an idiot, like you.
All work and no play.
You've got to get big,
you got to think big.
Grandpa john
handed parker the mine
when he was 16 years old,
and parker quickly began
to scale up the operation
and hire his own crew.
Many of them have come and gone.
But one, rick ness, has been
with him through thick and thin.
Rick and I met
It was our first summer
on "gold rush."
his band came to haines
for a big state fair
And I met him
after one of the shows.
Yep. Fanboy.
I didn't even know
he was on the show at the time.
Honestly, I've traveled a lot.
I've been, you know,
all over the world,
and alaska just really
blew me away when I saw it.
I really
Honestly, all I was looking for
was a way to spend a summer
in alaska.
Yeah.
You spent most of that summer
in a rock truck, didn't you?
Sure did.
Best summer of my life.
Grandpa john
was a great teacher,
but parker had to learn a few
crucial lessons on his own.
I have not told you
how to do your job one time
this whole year!
You won't make money
if you chase the help off.
You know, I think about
that first season
that I started running
big nugget mine
and that my grandpa
stepped back,
but I was completely unprepared.
It was very tough.
Those first few years
were really tough
just because
I had no experience, right?
I had zero experience, really,
dealing with people
and dealing with
those kind of problems.
And that's a hard thing
to go into.
It's a really hard thing
to go into.
And when you don't have
experience to back up decisions,
you know, for me, it led
to just getting emotional
about things.
And I'd get mad, I'd yell.
I don't need that okay?
The first thing you do
I don't need you
yelling at me like that.
Don't talk, don't talk.
Just listen.
I'm spending the money here.
I spent the money
on that wash plant,
and I make the calls.
I'm not very happy
with you or carl.
So, yeah, you know,
a lot of tail
wagging the dog around here.
I'm not gonna take any
from the little punk.
I'm pretty pissed off.
He didn't understand that, you
know, while it's a business,
we are still kind of a team
and we're all kind of going
for the same goal.
You know what I mean?
It took him a few years
to realize that.
But now that he's kind of
coming around to it,
it's improving a lot.
One thing I've never wanted
to do is be an angry person.
I don't want to be that guy.
Life's too short for that.
Sorry for
Being so aggressive.
Thank you for that.
Always pushing to grow,
parker and rick
made the biggest jump so far,
leaving the big nugget mine
behind.
There's not
any good ground left, you know?
There's not another season left
for me here.
The next year was a
Was a new opportunity again.
Right? Yeah.
And it was go into the klondike
and try it up there.
And, you know, that's
the kind of stuff I live for,
so, you know, it was
a no-brainer for me to go back.
You know I couldn't stay away.
Never been so happy
to see you, man.
As soon as I went up there
and as soon as I saw, like,
tony beets' operation
and a few others',
that's when I was like,
"all right,
this is the promised land if
you want to be a gold miner."
I got to get up here
where the big boys play.
And in the yukon,
there's one big boy
who likes to play rough.
For me, the biggest
challenge I've faced
over the last four or five years
is dealing with tony beets.
The way he does business,
he doesn't care
about anybody else.
He knows how to get you in a
position where you're screwed.
You just show up in the
spring and shutting us down?
A contract.
You know, like, last year,
we had this big issue.
He told me not to show up
on his claims
until we signed a lease.
And we signed a lease,
and we sent it to him
and we showed up
and went to work.
And then,
instead of signing it himself,
he changed it
and came and told us,
"sorry, it's not valid,"
because we didn't sign it.
I signed it. I sent it to you.
And now you're changing it?
It's not valid
until tony signs it, right?
And so that is shady, right?
That's I don't think
that's a very good way
of doing business.
Even with a tough landlord,
parker has ramped up production
and begun to delegate.
One of the greatest things
rick's done
is came to me this last spring,
at the beginning of the season,
and I don't think there were
cameras around or anything,
but he just said, "parker",
you get way too worked up
at the crew over little things.
So when you have a problem
with what's going on out there,
come to me, take it out on me,
"and let me deal with it."
and that was a huge gift.
It started a huge change
between him and I, for sure.
Yeah.
Now I yell at you,
and you go deal with it.
It's great.
That may have been
a step backwards
in your whole plan, there,
but
That only happened
a couple times this summer.
Parker's temper is far from the
biggest hazard on the work site.
The smallest things
can prove deadly.
You know, our safety record
is pretty
Good out there, yeah.
I mean, it's great, honestly.
I've gotten hurt a few times,
but it's been
for really stupid things.
You're the one
that's come closest to dying
with a bee sting.
Off.
I got stung by a bee this summer
and went into
anaphylactic shock.
You know, I had to find
an epipen and stab myself.
Um
But that has nothing to do
with the work conditions.
You know what I mean? And
It got me, like, right here,
and it's all swollen
down to here.
And I've got, like,
a woman's breast.
It's like a "c" cup.
Like, it falls.
Like, it's no, it's absurd.
The nurse was laughing at me.
We're all laughing at him
as he's puffing up.
Yeah, my face is swelling up.
And he's, like, starting
to have a hard time breathing.
We're like, "we should
probably stop laughing"
and do something about this."
yeah, yeah. It was scary.
Over the last seven years,
success or failure
has come down to one thing
See what this brings us to.
Yeah, there's quite a bit
in there.
How much gold do they have
at the end of the season?
Nice chunks.
And we've come a long way.
Our first season I mean,
before rick was even there
We did 37 ounces.
It looks like a lot of gold,
but we spent a lot of money
to get it.
The next season,
we did 193 or 192.
You got 2-ounce profit.
Yeah.
Then, we went to the yukon,
and that year
First year in the yukon
We did 1,029?
I'm overwhelmed.
I never have seen that much
gold in my whole life,
at one time.
And then, the second year
up there, we did 2,538.
Look at that.
That's another 200.
And the year after that, 3,362.
Ooh! Boy, is that heavy.
What?!
And then, this season,
we've done 4,311,
so it's been
quite the progression.
I don't know.
That all adds up to probably
close to 11,000 ounces or so.
Coming up, parker has to answer
to his parents and his fans.
"Could you please get parker
to get a nice haircut?"
of course. I have no comment.
And then we get a sneak peek
into the upcoming miniseries
This is brutal.
This is so dangerous.
Where parker
and his three friends
push themselves to the limit.
If somebody gets hurt,
that's serious up there.
You know, from hurt to killed
is pretty quick.
Brace yourselves!
Whoa, whoa, whoa.
Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa!
- Hey!
- Parker!
For seven years,
roger and nancy schnabel
have watched their son parker
grow up
from a high-school sophomore
to a full-time miner.
Now we'll find out what it's
been like for them as parents
and learn how parker
first caught gold fever.
John mined every summer,
so the mine was always
a huge part of their lives.
And parker's question to
grandpa was, you know,
"when can I go to big nugget?
When can I
go to the mine with you?"
and john looked at him and said,
"when you're not wearing
those diapers."
in about two or three days,
his mother brought him up.
And he unzipped his pants,
and he said,
"grandpa, I got no diapers."
my father it was too much
for him to mine
and take care of two youngsters,
and so he would
take one at a time.
Nancy and I had to figure out,
"okay, who's gonna go
and who isn't gonna go?"
and payson didn't have
quite the passion
for going up there
than parker did.
And parker would drop
anything and everything
to go up to the mine.
So he would ask us,
"if payson doesn't want to go,"
grandpa said that he would take
one person every day,
and so I'll fill in for payson.
"Is that okay?" and sure.
The nice thing about big
nugget when I was growing up
was that it was everything
a kid needed.
When I wanted
to have it be a playground,
it was a playground.
When I wanted it to be a
school, it was a school.
I've practically grown up
up there.
How are you, buddy? Pretty good.
With parker growing up
in front of the cameras,
many fans want to know what it's
been like behind the scenes.
So now we let our viewers
ask the questions.
Gem p. Asks
I think that when I look back
over the seven years
and, you know, going from
a 15-year-old to a 22-year-old,
I think one of the things
that I'm most proud of
is that he never shied away
from the challenges
that kept coming up.
It has not all been easy.
It's still been, you know,
at times,
a really discouraging,
hard, tough road,
and he just kept at it.
It's been fun to be able
to see him develop.
The klondike is the biggest
sandbox in the world,
and I'm ready to play.
From melissa t.G
"it was stressful allowing
my boys to drive cars."
as far as the stress level goes,
when you're raising children,
you've got to try and figure
out how long or big of a leash
should you have on your child.
Did you just assume
you would take that equipment?
And this is the first that
you're gonna talk about it?
I'm not gonna support a kid
in thinking that life
is gonna be handed out to him.
You might have something
to add to that, honey?
"Very stressful" is the answer.
Extremely stressful.
And it doesn't get
any easier, you know?
But we have a big joke
in our family, you know,
I wanted to wrap them in bubble
wrap and keep them by me.
And I still do.
I still want both of my boys
home where I can see them.
And you have to trust that
it works out, they're safe.
You know, lots of praying,
lots of worrying.
But yeah,
really stressful, melissa.
Well There is
A clear record
of how concerned I am.
I am concerned about you,
and I am
And I'm telling you, I'm fine.
I had heard
from the production crew
that he was working too long,
he wasn't eating,
he was drinking coke
and eating candy bars
and not sleeping.
The coffee is wearing off.
You know, obviously,
somebody tells you that
about your child,
and you go find out
if he's okay.
And that necessitated a trip up
to big nugget to check on him
that I don't think pleased him
any more than it pleased me.
It's time to take you home.
Good luck.
Don't do that.
I was upset then,
and I felt like
I had some control over him.
You know, I could take him home.
He was 16.
You think
I can't shut this down?
You're wrong.
You're wrong.
I can shut this down.
It's very easy to see where
parker gets his work ethic.
It is exactly the same
as his dad,
and his is exactly the same
as his dad.
It's, like, in their dna.
It's in the gene pool.
And it's just part
of who they are.
We have parker
join his parents
hi.
Nice to see you,
nice to see you.
To help answer a question
that many viewers
have been asking.
Question from bill k
Of course.
I like the "nice haircut."
I have no comment.
Parker knows me too well.
I don't need to comment.
This is for you.
I am not commenting.
This is for you, dad.
Yeah, yeah. Roger is
It's his independence,
and if that's the way he wants
to show it, that's perfect.
It's true. Roger
It's a lot worse,
it's a lot worse.
That's what I'm saying.
That's what I'm saying.
Roger is a short-hair guy.
Our boys buzz cuts
Right? Their whole life.
Stop!
He needs to wash it more,
condition it more,
and cut it into a style.
A mullet is a style.
A mullet is a bad style.
I don't know
why you have chosen this.
I didn't choose it.
Mullet is great.
It's just it's cool.
You're just hoping that my
rebellion ends with long hair,
is what dad is aiming for, here.
Right, right, right, right.
Well, that's that's a, um
Pretty sensitive topic for me.
In fact, as I read it,
it, um, it's making me
well up a little bit.
First of all, I was blessed
with a wonderful
Wonderful father.
And I was secondly blessed
because of the relationship
between my father and parker.
And to think that parker
had an opportunity
to be with my dad
for the, gosh, 21 years
Going on 21 years-plus
Is unique
and a wonderful experience.
I kind of like the role
when grandfathers play
because it's rewarding,
and sometimes it's frustrating.
As your father said to me,
"dad, let me
make my own mistakes."
and I think you've got
a lot of the same blood in you
that he has.
And I make
a lot of my own mistakes.
Yeah, I mean,
I have a lot of friends
that never got to meet
their grandfather.
Right.
For me, whenever I start
feeling down about it,
I just, like, "god, you're
pretty damn lucky to have that."
love you.
Love you, too.
Bye-bye.
Bye, grandpa.
Bye-bye.
So, here's another
viewer question, from dave f.
I have thought about this
for a long time.
Two things.
He always had purpose,
he always had a plan,
he always had something he was
working toward always.
And the second one was,
he became the loving, open,
kinder, gentler,
more mellow person as he aged
because he realized
what was important.
The list is long.
Work ethic
You can talk about that.
You can talk about
treatment of other people.
You know,
you can talk about health
Your personal health
and well-being.
I can say,
more than anything else,
to put it all
into proper perspective,
he helped make me
a more complete individual.
The john that we got to see
in "gold rush"
was the very best john
The culmination
of over 90 years of learning.
And this is what he learned
The "I love you," "be safe,"
"I'll miss you,"
"family is everything."
give me a hug.
Nice to see you.
Well, I hope so.
Parker,
all I got left is family.
Up next, parker breaks the news
of his latest venture.
I'm really anxious to see it.
Like, I want to see it.
And he and three friends
set out into the wilderness
at the worst time of year.
We're not getting out of here
in this boat.
We got to figure out an
alternate route fast.
Winter is coming.
Before parker schnabel
talks about his adventures
on the klondike trail,
he and his parents
are taking viewer questions.
Here's a question from sheila s.
In looks, you bet.
It shows.
One thing that I can see
that's a real similarity
is they're both quick learns.
My dad had the ability to
He was a well-read person,
and he analyzed things quickly
and he put the puzzle together,
as far
as what makes things tick,
very quickly,
and very imaginative person.
And I see a lot of that
in parker.
Inspired by
his pioneering grandfather,
parker sets his sights
on a grueling challenge
Tackling the klondike trail at
the absolute worst time of year.
You crazy fools.
What you doing,
doing it this time of the year?
When did I tell you guys
about this trek
The gold rush trail?
You you
You were thinking about it.
You mentioned it.
Yeah, I'm pretty sure
it was just a casual,
off-the-cuff remark, probably.
And, you know,
that's how a lot of ideas die.
It's just like they, you know,
wither away, and nobody
Like, "yeah, that's real funny."
like, "good for you, parker.
Keep thinking."
and then it actually happened.
Right.
When I first told you guys, I certainly
never thought it would happen.
That it was really
gonna happen, yeah.
Right. Sure.
How many ideas
have I told you guys, you know?
And we brushed it off, yeah.
Right, and I thought,
"this is another really"
and of all the ones
I've had a lot of ones that
involve a lot of warm weather.
And I really think
I screwed up
Screwed up, right.
Which ones worked out
and which ones didn't.
The whole idea
of parker going on this trip,
as it started,
I didn't think it would happen,
so I didn't worry.
And then, when it became closer
and closer to the reality
and he started, you know,
filling up his backpack,
I said,
"well, isn't there, like,
a whole lot of water
you got to deal with?"
and he goes, "yeah."
I said, "so"
You been on the water a lot?"
"no."
"you worried about that?" "no."
and I thought, "wow."
I'm not sure that he
"Is fully anticipating
all that's gonna happen."
you know, the hiking?
Okay.
But all that time
on the water, cold
And so it's like I'm
I'm really anxious to see it.
Like, I want to see it.
To give us a preview
of their upcoming miniseries,
"Parker's trail,"
wilderness guide karla ann,
filmmaker james levelle,
and gold miners rick ness
and parker schnabel
are ready to talk about
their journey.
I'm stoked.
Even if
they can't agree on much
I hate
all three of these people.
I'm sick of their voices.
They're in the studio
for one reason
Together again.
The four idiots.
To give a behind-the-scenes look
into their latest adventure
A punishing 600-mile journey
into the wilds of the klondike.
Goodbye, haines.
Whether we like it or not,
here we go.
Each person brings
a different set of skills
And the group's success
hinges on thing teamwork.
We've got the best teamwork.
It's silent.
You know, the thing about
the four of us is, we're
All four of us are used to being
in control of the situation
that we're in, right?
Rick was running a gold mine.
I'm running a gold mine.
And you know, karla does hunts
and guides snowboarding
and does a lot of stuff
that she is in control of.
So, I did a lot of trips
with my family as a kid,
and we were always
cooking over a fire
and doing multiday canoe trips
and camp trips.
And, yeah, I've been working
in the bush in the yukon
for the last seven years.
I just originally wanted
to get away from the city
and get back into the woods.
I picked up a job as, like,
a wilderness guide
and some jobs
doing construction.
That's kind of
how I got tied up in parker.
I needed a couple months
of work,
and the rock truck
was calling my name.
I'm excited to get back.
It's quiet there.
And then same with james.
James makes films and needs
to be in control as he can be.
I'm a
filmmaker, and on this journey,
it's my responsibility,
essentially,
to capture the whole
crazy adventure on camera
at the same time
that I've got
I'm actually
a part of it, as well.
So it's a hell of a challenge,
doing two jobs at the same
time, but I live for that.
And so you put
all four of us together,
and that's a lot
of personalities
and that's a lot of people that
are used to being in control
that
Now that, you know, really,
we all have to
share that, right?
And we all have to
make decisions together,
which I love.
You know, there's a lot of reasons
why I wanted to do this trip.
Let's do it.
Something new and different
kind of challenge.
And for me personally,
it's a big testament
to my grandpa and what he did,
coming up to alaska.
The adventure begins, boys.
Yeah.
My great-grandfather
came from sweden
and was a part of the gold rush.
So I think, for me,
it was just
It's just in my blood.
And he biked there.
Yeah, he did
a couple different trips.
He biked, he tried sled dogs.
Like, on the frozen river.
Yeah, he did a couple
of different wild things, and
Don't downplay it so much.
That's so awesome.
Yeah, I know,
he was a pretty badass dude.
You just can't
let the weather get to you.
You can't.
It sounded like a mad,
crazy, fantastic idea,
and I was like,
"yeah, count me in."
and then I heard nothing
for months,
until suddenly,
there was a phone call.
And it's like, "we're doing it,
so get on the plane."
What I'm worried about
is the weather.
We are going
at the worst time of year
and need to be prepared
for anything and everything.
I've been saying for years now
that I need
to get out of my comfort zone
and do some new things.
So, that wasn't
what I was thinking about,
is this kind of trip,
but yeah, the opportunity
was there, so why not?
It fits the bill.
Further? How much
shut up.
I remember you saying
you were scared
that we weren't
taking it serious.
Totally. The whole yeah.
This is rick's prep.
We're all unpacking
and repacking,
and rick is sitting here
pounding beers.
Yep.
I'm just I'm used to being
professional about it, like,
you know, like, "let's get
this done, and let's"
I think you know by now
that this is not
anything professional.
Part of the experience
is not being prepared, right?
The accountants that
quit their job 120 years ago
to go be a part of the gold rush
didn't spend months planning it.
They're like, "that dude
has gold from way up there."
I'm getting on a boat
and I'm going up there."
yes.
- Yeah.
- Yeah.
I knew it was gonna be cold,
I knew it was gonna be tough.
But every time I've been
filming in the cold before,
I'd have a hotel
to go back to, usually,
or a car you could warm up.
This was gonna be
This was gonna be
something else.
You know, no escape.
Parker's idea is simple
To retrace the route
taken by the original
klondike gold miners.
In 1896,
a handful of prospectors
in the remotest parts
of the klondike struck it rich.
Word got to seattle
and san francisco,
and after that,
it sparked this
The biggest gold rush
in history.
And 100,000 people set off,
and it was just, like, mayhem.
Of the 100,000 that set off,
I think only 30,000
made it to dawson city.
The first to arrive
would be able to stake out
the richest claims,
but two out of every three
either died
or gave up along the way.
The fastest route
was also the roughest.
It was straight over
a mountain range,
through the chilkoot pass,
then another 550 miles
of hiking and canoeing.
My initial thought
once we started on this
was that, "no matter
how seriously we take this",
we're only gonna get a glimpse
at what it was really like
for them back then"
Because they just
You know, the packs they had
weren't like our packs.
You know, the clothes they wore
weren't like our clothes.
And the winter that
that was all happening
The winter of '97
I think it snowed like 35 feet.
I think, for me especially,
I was like, "holy
These were some tough dudes."
yeah. And women.
Yeah.
Hoo, hoo, hoo!
Coming up, the four stampeders
reach the breaking point.
Yeah, this is madness.
Didn't realize that you were
gonna try to break your leg
every step.
And they come clean
about each other.
Rick.
Deep, dark snores.
Four friends embark on the
adventure of their lives.
And now
we're getting a sneak peek
into a groundbreaking tv event,
inspired by parker's
grandpa john.
Wicked.
They retrace the footsteps
of the klondike
gold rush miners.
Unreal, the that these
old-timers went through.
In 1897,
prospectors faced long odds,
just like parker and his team.
A third or less
made it to dawson.
That's not very good odds.
But that means
a third did make it, too.
The four are heading into
one of the most hostile
environments on earth
A land of towering mountains
and freezing rivers.
It's the domain of moose,
bears, and wolves,
where temperatures plunge to 60
degrees below zero in winter.
Probably my biggest concern
is somebody getting hurt,
because that puts everything
in a dead stop.
If somebody gets hurt,
it's a whole
different ballgame, right?
Don't go that way.
This is so dangerous.
And that's serious,
especially up there,
where no matter how hard
you wanted to get somebody
that was hurt out,
you can't do it.
A lot of times,
you just can't do it,
and that's
a very serious concern,
especially for me,
because I feel like it's kind
of my responsibility, right?
I take that on as
As something I did wrong,
if somebody got hurt.
That's serious up there.
You know, from hurt to killed
is pretty quick.
The trek into
the klondike is treacherous,
especially with winter
setting in.
And the four can't avoid
the deadliest stage
of the entire trip
The chilkoot pass.
The last half-mile is an almost
impossible 45-degree slope.
In the gold rush,
this was where the dream
of getting rich
hit an unyielding wall.
Climber practically had to
crawl up the last stage,
which they called
the golden stairs.
Thousands gave up at this stage
or died
trying to make it over the top.
Sometimes the details
I mean, the golden stairs,
you know, it's the epic image
of the gold rush right?
That kind of line of ants making
its way up the 45-degree slope,
lugging all their gear.
I mean, it's iconic.
It's crazy.
I mean, I think about
the golden stairs,
and I'm just like,
"okay, that's where
I'm gonna tap out or die."
'cause, I mean, I'm 255 pounds.
What business do I have
climbing a mountain,
especially with a huge backpack
on my back?
That's all I could think.
You're a whole todd hoffman
with the backpack on.
Yeah, might be.
Not every challenge on the trail
is a matter of life and death.
Just getting along
can be a trial.
It's gonna be
a long month, boys.
So, we get these four friends
to explain what it's like
to share a tent
in the frozen north.
Smelled the worst?
Um
Parker.
Parker was the smelliest.
Parker is the smelliest
on any trip,
so that's an easy one.
Nobody really stank, but
karla ripped a lot of farts.
Rick,
without a shadow of a doubt.
Rick is a snoring machine.
- Hands down.
- No doubt?
Yeah, deep, dark snores.
Rick, no doubt.
No-brainer right there.
Karla farted about once
every 3 1/2 minutes.
Karla farted nonstop.
Karla had the worst gas,
by a long way, yeah.
And giggled about it.
Me.
That's parker, easily.
I think we all appreciated
the country-chic haircut
he was given by karla
at the beginning of the trip.
This is carlos' cuts
5 minutes, 5 bucks.
Holy cow.
It sounds like you're
cutting my whole head off.
It's called layering.
I'm layering.
Yeah, it didn't do much
for his morning look.
That's country chic. All right.
We all have great hair.
You look good, buddy.
Tell me the truth.
Is it terrible?
Coming up, we get
a sneak peek into the series
as the ice closes in
The current
is ripping under the shelf ice.
And the trek turns deadly.
Whoa!
Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa!
On the trail,
communication is key.
- Engage your butt, rick.
- Yeah.
But things get confusing when
james speaks english english
despite my bollocks ramblings.
Bloody hell.
Well, I have a habit
of speaking, I suppose,
a language that the guys, um,
find slightly ridiculous.
We have multiple meanings
for our wonderful words.
A banger is not only an old car,
it is also a sausage, obviously.
"Chuffed"?
That's what I like to try and be
as much of the time as possible.
It means
"happy, pleased, delighted."
I'm super chuffed to be here,
filming with you guys right now.
"Barmy"? "Mad," "completely
bonkers," like us lot.
It's charming
for about five minutes.
I mean,
I know what I'm talking about.
For parker and rick,
the mining season goes on right
up until the ground freezes.
So when they finally get time
to hit the trail
in their upcoming miniseries,
it's already November.
Crazy fools, what you doing,
doing it this time of the year?
The weather will go
from bad to worse.
We have a narrow window
with the weather.
At this time of the year,
you know,
the weather is unpredictable,
at best.
You know,
it could go either way.
It is not the time of year
for a canoe trip, essentially.
No.
Um
Never say "never."
yeah, but, I mean, you know,
the freeze is coming.
You just have to push
as fast as you can
because you just don't know
when the ice is gonna strike.
But when it does, you're dead.
It's all over.
I had a pretty good
feeling we'd run into ice,
but not this soon. This is bad.
But, you know,
we've come this far,
we got to keep going.
We hike over a mountain,
we paddle across
all them stupid lakes,
we finally get some miles
started on the river,
and we get this
it's weird walking the trail
and doing the boat trip
and floating down the river,
and knowing just how many
people have done that
and lost their lives.
Yeah.
It was a brutal thing
that they all went through.
And there's sections
of the lakes and the rivers
and all that that are
You know, it's serious.
Hundreds died along the route,
buried in avalanches,
drowned in the rivers,
and struck down by frostbite
and hypothermia.
We asked dr. David townes, an
expert in adventure medicine,
to explain what can happen
to the four friends
on the klondike trail.
I think as parker and his team
retrace the route
of the klondike gold miners,
there are quite a few dangers,
the big ones being hypothermia,
because of the extreme cold.
As the body starts to cool,
the first reaction is,
everything sort of revs up.
You can feel your heart
sort of thumping in your chest.
And then, as you cool even
further, you start to shiver.
And shivering is your body's way
of trying to generate heat.
When you get down
into 88 degrees or so,
shivering will stop.
The body is no longer able
to shiver and generate heat.
I really think that we should
get out of our cold gear
and sit in our tents.
The body gets down
to about 65 degrees,
you die, essentially,
from cardiac arrest.
Being wet and cold like this
for that long
and sleeping in a wet tent
in a wet sleeping bag
colder and colder,
as the temperature just gets
um, I don't know
if I got it in me.
There's always the risk
of avalanches in that area.
It's snowing up there right now,
and fresh-snow avalanches
are the most dangerous kind.
That's a little bit sobering.
I am not gonna die on this trip.
The water is very cold,
so if you fall
in one of these rivers,
your chance of drowning
is fairly significant.
Not only do you have to worry
about submersion in water,
but being hypothermic in that
cold changes your judgment.
Your judgment is not as good.
Brace yourselves!
Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa!
Once you start
kind of losing it a bit,
that's when things
get a bit dangerous
and you make
the wrong decisions.
And making exhausted decisions
kind of leads
to trouble sometimes, so
You just gonna
leave us over there
sitting on the beach
while you're supposed to
I just walked over here.
I just walked over here.
Tried to find you guys.
We're all over there!
Over where?
Right where your boat is.
How the was I supposed to know?!
You know, we know the stories
of the old-timers, you know?
That's what you're up against.
This is no-nonsense weather.
This is serious winter.
And you know it's coming.
The question is,
"when is it coming?"
and when it comes,
it's game over.
We are not going
anywhere near that bank.
The current
is ripping under the shelf ice.
Trying to get
pulled downstream look out!
Whoa! Whoa, whoa,
whoa, whoa, whoa!
As impossible
as the trek north will be,
modern gear will be lighter,
warmer, and more waterproof
than anything from the 1890s.
So, before
next week's deadly journey,
we're wrapping things up
on a lighter note
With a sampling of the original
stampeders' survival duds.
Yeah, look at that.
Rick, this could be for you
This puppy.
How do I look? Great.
I'm not feeling these pants.
All right, we need rick.
Yeah.
All right.
All right, who's up?
I broke the cork.
Inspired by parker's grandfather
and all the pioneers
who came before them,
four friends take on the
toughest journey of their lives.
Yeah, this is madness.
James, look out!
It's a brutal 600 miles
I can't see.
And winter is closing in.
Rick, draw left! Rick, draw
Whoa, whoa, whoa!
Whoa!
We cannot get stuck here.
There's no plan "b."
Like so many others
who died or quit,
will they come up short?
Watch out, watch out!
Or can they reach the end
Parker's trail"?
Captions by vitac
captions paid for by
discovery communications