School Bus Graveyard Upd Today

The group consists of six students with distinct personalities and skills: School Bus Graveyard | WEBTOON

Take only pictures, leave only footprints. Removing parts or "bus signs" is vandalism. However, many graveyard owners are elderly farmers who are happy to let you photograph the site if you ask politely and sign a waiver. School Bus Graveyard

Unlike standard sedans that are often crushed for scrap metal immediately, school buses often sit for years in "retirement." Their sheer size makes them difficult to stack or crush without heavy industrial equipment. Consequently, they are often lined up in long, yellow rows, waiting for a second life or a slow dissolution into the earth. The group consists of six students with distinct

While many are on private property (and exploring them is legally dubious and dangerous), a few locations have achieved legendary status online: Unlike standard sedans that are often crushed for

Have you ever looked at a line of rusted, abandoned school buses and felt a chill? For fans of the hit

Unlike a car graveyard (which feels clinical) or a plane graveyard (which feels industrial), the bus graveyard resonates with social energy. You can feel the ghosts of the morning route. You can almost hear the whisper of a forgotten argument in the back seat, or the crinkle of a lunch bag under the floorboards. Each bus held a community of 60+ children twice a day for a decade. That leaves a psychic residue.

Located about an hour northeast of Atlanta on Highway 365, the site is a popular stop for photographers and travelers.