Redwoods Shouldn't Be So Tall. Here's Why They Are

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  • Опубликовано: 30 сен 2024

Комментарии • 694

  • @CampingforCool41
    @CampingforCool41 Год назад +379

    It’s so devastating to see how small the area they grow in is compared to how big it once was. Videos never capture the feeling of being among those trees. I’m not religious or even spiritual but those forests truly feel holy, and I want to cry when I see those old pictures of the most enormous ancient trees chopped down. It’s one of the greatest tragedies.

    • @amvin234
      @amvin234 Год назад +24

      note that, while still devastating, that graphic portrays where "*old growth*" redwoods used to be, and where they still exist now. It's not a map of where redwoods in genral grow now vs where they used to grow. so-called "second growth", younger redwoods still populate much of the previous old-growth extent. but the old growth forests which contain the biggest, oldest trees encompasses a much, much smaller area. and rehabilitating will take a lot of time in the second growth forests (as the name "old" growth implies).

    • @alfonsomunoz4424
      @alfonsomunoz4424 Год назад +12

      I was so surprised how small of an area the national forest was. Its depressing.

    • @marcusmartin1426
      @marcusmartin1426 Год назад +8

      @@amvin234 Yeah, only about a 1000 years

    • @vivalavivarium
      @vivalavivarium Год назад +11

      Ive literally always said that the trees make me feel like im in the presence of god. I agree those trees are holy special

    • @marcusmartin1426
      @marcusmartin1426 Год назад +9

      @@vivalavivarium Yeah it's such a shame that a few loggers get to take it all away from the rest of us! Happy earth Day!!

  • @damonroberts7372
    @damonroberts7372 Год назад +336

    I live in Australia, and we have our share of natural wonders here - but the redwoods by themselves are reason enough for the fourteen-hour flight across the Pacific!

  • @wakaralightcloud3628
    @wakaralightcloud3628 Год назад +510

    Glad you included the Yurok tribe in this. You cannot speak of California Redwoods and not include them. I wish more people knew about the 2500 acres being returned to the Yurok and what they are doing with that land / redwoods. Even their condor program makes me thankful for my Yurok brothers. 👊🏽

    • @soltantio
      @soltantio Год назад +9

      Yes definitely.

    • @kirkgoshert7876
      @kirkgoshert7876 Год назад +16

      The people around these trees are meaningless to the trees. One could speak of Cali redwoods for days and never mention a human.

    • @dawnpalmby5100
      @dawnpalmby5100 Год назад +2

      Thanks for the info, I'm going to find out more!

    • @SolaceEasy
      @SolaceEasy Год назад +16

      Shouldn't allow the guy to say that they've been there as long as the redwoods...

    • @GarnetReign
      @GarnetReign Год назад

      ❤❤❤

  • @cathleenwitt2790
    @cathleenwitt2790 Год назад +379

    I used to live in Brookings, Oregon, home to the northernmost redwoods in the world. There is nothing that compares with walking in the redwoods, except, perhaps, the old-growth cedars on the Olympic Peninsula of Washington! They did not mention that redwoods reproduce both by seed AND by cloning! It's possible that trees we can see today have been part of the same organism for MANY thousands of years! They are, indeed, our guardians!

    • @alexnovak2669
      @alexnovak2669 Год назад +4

      I thought those were redwoods. I guess they were cedar. Big Big trees.

    • @maryrosekent8223
      @maryrosekent8223 Год назад +8

      Redwood trees are magical!

    • @marcusmartin1426
      @marcusmartin1426 Год назад +1

      Look now, gone tomorrow!

    • @Ozhull
      @Ozhull Год назад

      ​@@marcusmartin1426 nope, but nice try spreading your cynical doomer mindset.

    • @marcusmartin1426
      @marcusmartin1426 Год назад +1

      @@Ozhull What kind of chainsaw do you have?

  • @oneoftheninetynine3953
    @oneoftheninetynine3953 Год назад +332

    I'm so glad that the general opinion in the last 40 years about redwoods has changed from lawn chairs and jobs for loggers to preserving what incredibly tiny amount of forest is left. I moved into the area back in the early 80's, the loggers were the most obnoxious group of human beings I'd ever had to live with and they were in the process of being laid off en mass because the various logging companies they used to work for had been bought out by Maxxam who began shipping all the lumber overseas to Japan. The industry could no longer justify to anyone it's own benefits and, it had run out of logs, so amazingly, they stopped cutting trees after decades of demonstrations by Greenpeace and others. I remember when logs so big you could only put one on the back of a truck used to roll through Eureka, CA multiple times daily, and locals would fist-pump the driver as if to say "Yeah! destroy it all!" Glad we finally stopped...? at the last 2% (some say it's actually less).

    • @tpbforlife3323
      @tpbforlife3323 Год назад +21

      As a logger here my self, I would advise you to re look at the industry today, it’s changed so much. Though I could never consider moving some where and then going after the locals for there livelihoods. It’s a super bizarre thing people from city’s do. Going after people that live off resources. Like my number one goal is for the forest to be there for my kids so they have a job a too and a great forest to live in.

    • @oneoftheninetynine3953
      @oneoftheninetynine3953 Год назад +62

      The problem is people like you in that area don't understand what a forest is. They think a planting of douglas firs in a 'demonstration forest' or the narrow line of trees they leave up on either side of hwy 101, while just beyond that is clearcut to the horizon, is the same as an old growth redwood forest. I spent 28 years living among loggers I think I grew to understand them pretty well. Most of them thought the woods were 'all rotten' and animals were for shooting. No I don't have a lot of respect for ignorance.

    • @frankmacleod2565
      @frankmacleod2565 Год назад +19

      2 or 3 percent of old growth is left, but the redwood belt is still here and the way they're managing much of the second growth, it'll revert to old growth in a few centuries. Largest landowning timber company vowed to not cut stands of old growth and to not clear-cut, in order to promote older forest growth. Huge differences over the last 40 years

    • @Dyejob01
      @Dyejob01 Год назад +44

      ​@@tpbforlife3323Sadly, as just an employee you have no ability to stand up to your employer, who's the one responsible for clear cutting the old growth Redwoods down to LESS than 2%. I'm also not sure how you believe that logging is the way to leave forests behind for your children. Did you not see the original map with millions of trees, that have been logged (clear cut) down to 3 itsy bitsy teeny tiny specks on the current map? Seems like loggers were in it for the money in the moment, not for the long term, for their children as you say.
      Had the industry done more to be better stewards of the forests, the jobs might not have disappeared with the trees. It's one of a handful of industries who didn't seem to notice that they were clear cutting their own jobs out of existence, like they did to the Giant Redwoods. Fishing is another.
      And the only reason there are any Redwoods left, is BECAUSE of outsiders who weren't afraid of the community leaders that locals were. That outrage and protesting SAVED the few Redwoods they could. Not the loggers, or the companies they work for.

    • @shikawgoh
      @shikawgoh Год назад +27

      @@tpbforlife3323 The problem with your train of thought is to somehow trick your mind into tunnel vision thinking, where logging for some folks in the area is the only form of employment. It’s not an either or situation. There are other forms of employment. If you really care enough about the forest, you would gravitate towards another type of employment. Are options fewer in some parts of rural America that depend on certain resource driven jobs? Yes. But again, there are other options. To think that there aren’t and that you have to be employed in that manner is self-defeating. Plain and simple.

  • @liz.1328
    @liz.1328 Год назад +132

    I'm very thankful that I live just a few hours away from the Redwoods. They truly are magical!

    • @imberrysandy
      @imberrysandy Год назад +9

      you are very lucky
      i was recently informed that redwood city near my area.... do not have any more redwoods :(

    • @danielcarroll3358
      @danielcarroll3358 Год назад +4

      I'm lucky. I live in a city and right now as I sit at my computer I look out at redwoods. Oh, they are only 100 feet tall or so, but give them a century. I figure I have fifty years before my solar array gets shaded.

    • @juliew393
      @juliew393 Год назад +1

      You are blessed

    • @heavymetalbassist5
      @heavymetalbassist5 Год назад

      I dream of seeing them one day but its hard to visit from the poor coast

    • @nursemom101casteel7
      @nursemom101casteel7 Год назад +3

      We are hoping to move to the Willamette Valley as soon as my daughter is finished with school. Three years can't get here fast enough for us.

  • @PorcheGardener
    @PorcheGardener Год назад +34

    Here in BC, Canada there are old photos from 150 years ago showing old growth trunks the same size as the redwoods. It breaks my heart knowing the damage that's been done

  • @B30pt87
    @B30pt87 Год назад +10

    I live in (and love) the redwoods. "My" trees are protected in my deed so that after I die, they'll have to be looked after by whoever gets my land.

  • @saintracheljarodm.holy-kay2560
    @saintracheljarodm.holy-kay2560 Год назад +49

    I've only seen the coastal sequoia redwoods, but I have been too the big trees national park. They are beautiful creatures that really do deserve our respect. As humans we should be very concerned about there footprints disappearing they also grab the clouds and help bring persipitation to California. Making sure that there continues to be healthy forests should be our concern.

  • @evelynlamoy8483
    @evelynlamoy8483 Год назад +179

    I'd known about albino redwoods. They don't have functioning chlorophyll. I had heard that they only exist by being parasites, "leeching" off other trees. but hearing how in the forest the root systems are genuinely connected, in a way where they actually support each other really changes the understanding of that dynamic. They're not being parasites, they can't produce the same way the other trees can but they are being supported regardless.
    IDK its actually kinda heartwarming in that context.

    • @kaitlyn__L
      @kaitlyn__L Год назад +54

      Can’t help but be reminded of the way disabled people are often talked about, and yet we find that pre-agriculture human societies overwhelmingly took care of everyone in their tribe regardless of “productivity”. Seems these trees are the same.
      It’s quite eye opening how we only found out about trees supporting each other somewhat recently, and until then just assumed they were in cut-throat individualistic competition. It says a lot about how our economic situation influences the entire way we think of the world

    • @purpleicewitch6349
      @purpleicewitch6349 Год назад +13

      @@kaitlyn__L that’s exactly what I thought of too

    • @jessehunter362
      @jessehunter362 Год назад +18

      They’re also helping the other trees, in ways that are exceptionally important in the modern day; stockpiling heavy metals that the other trees in their network, those that keep them alive, would be unable to handle.

    • @kaitlyn__L
      @kaitlyn__L Год назад +12

      @Remain Nameless not bookmarked, but what I’ve seen and what I’d be looking for again is archaeological evidence of skeletons with various disabilities living to an old age, having lots of recovered injuries, etc across a wide range of cultures. Search terms would probably be best to be stuff like “prehistoric disability treatment across cultures” or “archaeological dig disabled skeleton”.
      There’s also a bunch of idioms leftover from cultures which were nomadic more recently, such as “a man who cannot walk can still ride a horse” which IIRC is Mongolian? Which suggest the idea was to find any value in tribe-members, rather than be overly concerned with that they can’t do.

    • @rockets4kids
      @rockets4kids Год назад +6

      I get by with a little help from my friends. I get high with a little help from my friends.

  • @0HARE
    @0HARE Год назад +42

    This is a fascinating story.
    For a more in-depth and nuanced examination of the California Redwoods please read the book “The Wild Trees” by Richard Preston.
    As an avid reader, it is one of the very best books I have ever read.

    • @veramae4098
      @veramae4098 Год назад +13

      Bought a new version of the Paul Bunyan story when I was working. Paul makes his way west, cutting down everything. Reaches the redwoods and rejoices "At last, trees worthy of my axe!" As he raises his axe for the first chop his eyes happen to glance eastwards ... and he sees the devastation.
      Paul changes. Hitches Babe the Big Blue Ox, makes his axe a plow, and he and his team head east PLANTING trees!
      Retired school librarian

    • @freedomthroughspirit
      @freedomthroughspirit Год назад +2

      Thank you! I just requested it from my library. I really enjoyed "If Trees Could Talk" by Holly Worton and I learnt a lot from "The Overstory" by Richard Powers (but it kind of broke my heart too).

  • @thorium222
    @thorium222 Год назад +30

    Seeing how big the historical range of redwood forests was and how tiny it is now, it makes you want to restore the whole area. Maybe future humans will be smart enough to grow agroforests and reduce the urban sprawl by increasing the population density in cities (yes, that necessarily means public transport) so vast areas could be regrown.

    • @amvin234
      @amvin234 Год назад +1

      the graphic shows the extent of "old growth" forests then and now, not redwoods in general. it's tragic that we've lost so much old growth, but worth noting that redwood forests still exist in the previous old growth extent; they're just "second growth" younger redwoods that grew after logging, and not "old growth".

  • @pliktl
    @pliktl Год назад +116

    There really is no way to describe the feeling of being around these giants. It is a feeling that easily explains that guardian protection ❤

    • @ravensdotter6843
      @ravensdotter6843 Год назад +2

      ❤️

    • @cwg73160
      @cwg73160 Год назад

      A person says there really is no way to describe it, yet they describe it in the very next sentence.

    • @acmefixer1
      @acmefixer1 Год назад

      I think it's awe inspiring insignificance. So tall you can't see the tops. So big around. Old and gnarly. Just breathtaking!

  • @ryujin199_
    @ryujin199_ Год назад +21

    Whenever I hear about such gigantic trees being felled, it makes my heart sink. Even it if was "over 100 years ago..." what comfort is that when a tree with a lifespan that dwarfed the Roman Empire was callously cut down to build houses?

  • @blainehankins
    @blainehankins Год назад +18

    I was married at the foot of the Stout Tree in Jedidiah Smith Redwoods in 1980. It is indeed a magical place! Sadly, at the same time, logging trucks were roaring by every five minutes taking the last of the once great forests. Now the trees are mostly gone except for a mile or so buffer along the highway. Sad.

  • @aick
    @aick Год назад +28

    One can make that connection with nature anywhere in the world if one pays attention. I've lived in the southwest for decades now, and I have connections with the insects and the cholla and the reptiles, mammals, and birds here. I lived in the Olympic rainforest for a few years, and I grew up all over the Western Americas. There is true connection in life and other living creatures, and I've never felt a connection outside of that.
    The Redwood forest, to me, was another holy place on earth, simple as that, and holy places are everywhere life is. Look for them in your own neighborhood, you can find them.

  • @mattiasbunn8771
    @mattiasbunn8771 Год назад +22

    I work in a second growth forest in Sonoma County and I never get over how incredible these trees are. I would love to be able to better take care of them.

  • @tiacho2893
    @tiacho2893 Год назад +53

    It's editing but the forest rangers all smiling at the thought of healthy growing trees, it is heart warming.
    And I love the fact that the new redwoods are being "raised" like children so future generations will one day look at them with respect as the elders of the forest. And fyi, a mature fallen redwood takes decades if not a century to decay. During that time, it acts as a mini biome for numerous species.

  • @mgoh1984
    @mgoh1984 Год назад +5

    Without a doubt they are magnificent, but I want to smoke what you guys do when you talk about how they watch over us and care for us.

  • @josephbrandt3768
    @josephbrandt3768 Год назад +13

    Haven't been to the Oregon groves yet but I went to Yosemite and I've seen the Mariposa Grove as well as Miur preservation and never been so awe struck in my life. Truly grateful to have witnessed these trees and plan to continue to visit them as frequently as I possibly can! Anyone on the fence should do everything they can to experience this as well.

  • @thesilentone4024
    @thesilentone4024 Год назад +12

    The fact we can go thats a big tree lets log it is just insane but we still do it today just with different trees.

    • @toteispoe4
      @toteispoe4 Год назад

      Rockefeller Christmas trees

  • @paulmartin6419
    @paulmartin6419 Год назад +33

    As a native Californian I am humbled by and proud of these amazing living treasures.

    • @nobodysbaby5048
      @nobodysbaby5048 Год назад

      Did a bucket list trip in 2020. Saw the Redwoods & Sequoias. They are indeed irreplaceable.

  • @venox3811
    @venox3811 Год назад +12

    I went to see these trees and it crushed me to think we once cut them to the point of near extinction.

    • @bobbycrosby9765
      @bobbycrosby9765 Год назад

      Imagine a whole coastline full of them. It must have been an amazing sight.

  • @uhhmanda
    @uhhmanda Год назад +5

    We just moved from Texas to Oregon and drove through the redwoods for the first time. The whole time we were driving Ijust wanted to cry. Its one of THE most beautiful things I've ever, ever seen. 😭😭😭🙌🌲🦅

  • @wheresbren
    @wheresbren Год назад +3

    I will go there before I die

  • @osteoclast6884
    @osteoclast6884 Год назад +10

    Why shouldn't they be so tall?

    • @confusotron
      @confusotron Год назад +1

      Because now they don't fit in a museum

    • @imberrysandy
      @imberrysandy Год назад +1

      The older trees are taking light away from other trees and animals on the forest floor
      The team mentioned that trees grow in generations and are removing trees around the same age

    • @CMZneu
      @CMZneu Год назад +7

      Supposedly because they absorb water through aerial roots high up in the canopy... but idk they barely explained it

    • @decgal81
      @decgal81 Год назад +1

      The water uptake i think but they didn't really cover that too much

    • @bobgug8626
      @bobgug8626 Год назад +4

      It's a hyperbolic clickbait title. What they mean is Redwoods have special adaptations that enable them to take up fog water and overcome the normal limits on tree hight.

  • @AnimealPlanet
    @AnimealPlanet Год назад +7

    It's amazing how gigantic trees could make you humble and reminded you how little you are. Maybe this is why people on the past worship trees in the past. We establish connections with these trees.

  • @loribaldwin1112
    @loribaldwin1112 Год назад +8

    I was blessed to live in Boulder Creek, California in an old house on the creek surrounded by those towering beauties for four years! It was my heart's desire. We sadly had to leave, but I will always be so grateful for the memories I have of those days. There is nothing like those trees. I love them. They are guardians! I miss them so very much. I took one with in a pot, which I've transplanted twice because it's growing so fast. I hope it'll grow up here in Oregon--I've seen a few here already, so I do have hope! When we finally save up enough to buy another house, I'll plant it in our forever ground and hope and pray he does well and then I'll have my own tiny redwood forest again.
    I am SO grateful there are people looking after them! I'm so glad for this video!

    • @Thor_Odinson
      @Thor_Odinson Год назад

      The nearby Henry Coe State Park is awesome....a small grove of old growth redwoods that you can actually touch and a few you can even climb into...having been hollowed out by centuries of brush fires. It's a religious experience

  • @wmanadeau7860
    @wmanadeau7860 Год назад +13

    I was last in the area over twenty years ago and was bothered by seeing less Spanish Moss than had been around a few decades earlier, and actually saw dead stump sprouts regularly, something I'd never seen before. I saw these things as symptoms of changes in the climate, more heat and less moisture...

    • @camojoe83
      @camojoe83 Год назад

      Fool.
      Signs of an extended drought, sure.
      Climate changes.
      If it didn't, there would still be mega fauna in North America. The wooly kind. And glaciers.
      Wasn't even that long ago, even.

  • @The1MkII
    @The1MkII Год назад +5

    Wonderful video and I really appreciate the Indigenous perspective on the trees. I am excited to make a journey to see the redwoods in the future! Glad there's individuals fighting to preserve these beautiful trees.

  • @MabDarogan2
    @MabDarogan2 Год назад +2

    No humans have been there as long as the redwoods. Not even close.

  • @jm5390
    @jm5390 Год назад +8

    My mom, sister, and I went to the Redwoods National and State parks in September 2018 and just were amazed at the size and grandeur of these trees. Seeing them in person is unlike anything you can experience in a d forest! A real gem of the natural world that needs to be properly preserved and maintained!

  • @Miikhiel
    @Miikhiel Год назад +5

    Please do my other three favorites: Sequoias, Douglas Firs, and Ancient Bristlecone Pines.

  • @IgorEngelen1974
    @IgorEngelen1974 Год назад +8

    If I’d had to pick one thing on earth as my favourite this would be it. Planted one of them in my garden just because I could to see it grow. It will never be majestic in my lifetime so I guess it’s time to start looking into options to somehow protect it, prevent it from being cut down.

    • @eljanrimsa5843
      @eljanrimsa5843 5 месяцев назад

      Or grow something more fitting into a garden.

  • @frankkeltch5260
    @frankkeltch5260 Год назад +2

    Because the United Kingdom is so foggy couldn't the Red Wood grow well over there if transplanted.

  • @christianeaster2776
    @christianeaster2776 Год назад +8

    I haven't had a chance yet to see the redwoods, but I have sequoias. I can understand the magnificence of these trees. No amount of photos can convey the titanic size of them. Absolutely breathtaking.

  • @Chris-dx4mf
    @Chris-dx4mf Год назад +12

    There are definitely not just 3 things that kill trees. Besides that great video!

    • @DeltaNovum
      @DeltaNovum Год назад

      The most dangerous thing to all trees (and every other living thing on this tiny rock called earth) is a certain type of cancer.
      It's called homo sapiens.

    • @Svensk7119
      @Svensk7119 Год назад +4

      I think that 5hey weren't counting us.

    • @Ethan7s
      @Ethan7s Год назад

      THEY are killing the weaker trees with chainsaws! What a hypocritical video.

  • @NemeanLion-
    @NemeanLion- Год назад +4

    I can totally picture a T-Rex walking around under those giant Redwoods. They look prehistoric.

  • @ESL-O.G.
    @ESL-O.G. Год назад +2

    First 1:45 on the video: The Redwoods are millions of years old and have outlived the dinosaurs. Native guy talking: WE'VE BEEN HERE AS LONG AS THE REDWOODS 😅. See kids, this is why staying in school is important

  • @big-t-shirts
    @big-t-shirts Год назад +6

    Grew up and still live around redwood trees. Redwood forests are the only kind of forest I've ever really known, so deciduous forests look really weird to me. Seeing people be so in awe of redwoods is still a little strange cause it seems so normal to me, but when compared to other forests? I get it

  • @aaronely759
    @aaronely759 Год назад +4

    I have one growing from seed down on the Florida panhandle. Itll be interesting to see it establish over the coming years. It survived a very uncommon 4 day 20 degree cold snap as a sapling, and came out growing stronger than ever. Its very similar and closely related to the bald cypress native to here.

  • @ld_raine4247
    @ld_raine4247 Год назад +2

    I'm not sure you really answered the question though...? Physics is the usual culprit, but you're saying fog is the secret weapon to beating that? Or the epiphytic mat, both?
    How do redwoods differ from other trees specifically? Or is it more a culmination of several smaller effects?

  • @NikiHerl
    @NikiHerl Год назад +2

    I need to come in with the fact that the nature of nutrient sharing is disputed among scientists, and that while there are certainly interactions happening in the soil, it's likely not as "communist" as one might like to believe
    See the article "The Idea That Trees Talk to Cooperate Is Misleading" in the Scientific American

  • @christinaduffy6618
    @christinaduffy6618 Год назад +6

    This forest is pure magic. I got to spend 2 weeks hiking and walking and riding through them. Thank this crew for caring for the trees ❤

  • @kuyshina
    @kuyshina Год назад +7

    Redwoods are guardians of the past and stewards of our future. There is no place as quiet and loud as being in an older growth redwood forest

    • @Mp57navy
      @Mp57navy Год назад +1

      I disagree. We have a saying here in Iceland, that translates as "the silence is screaming". The most silent I've ever witnessed was in the highlands. No wind, no light pollution, no sounds. None, not even a breeze. I startled myself when I sniffled it was so quiet.
      A forest is always full of noises.

    • @rickkwitkoski1976
      @rickkwitkoski1976 Год назад +1

      You've never been in an old growth mature forest then.
      Very quiet!
      Open spaces have much more wind. At the base of these trees it is still... and quiet

  • @frankmacleod2565
    @frankmacleod2565 Год назад +3

    About 3% percent of old growth is left, but the redwood belt is still here and the way they're managing much of the second growth, it'll revert to old growth in a few centuries. Largest landowning timber company vowed to not cut stands of old growth and to not clear-cut, in order to promote older forest growth. Huge differences over the last 40 years

  • @CandycaneBeyond
    @CandycaneBeyond 9 месяцев назад +2

    This is what I don't understand. The trees have figured out how to live for thousands of years, yet humans come in and cut them down to "help" them? They already got cut down by the loggers. Stop, let it be!

  • @Mrbfgray
    @Mrbfgray Год назад +2

    Climate has always been changing, I get anxiety over the tools sold on the myth that it's all anthropogenic, panicking and causing serious problems. They are the science deniers without even knowing what the actual science indicates.

  • @abruemmer77
    @abruemmer77 Год назад +2

    As much as i respect the view of people, who admire these beings as much i question sayings like "redwood had watched humans evolve" no they didn't. they just live.
    There is no need to make them more than they are.

  • @notright7
    @notright7 Год назад +2

    There are giant reds woods planted in European countries and they are hjuge. If you ever get a chance to see them, go see them.

  • @omggiiirl2077
    @omggiiirl2077 Год назад +2

    The title is hilarious. Shouldn't be so tall? Says who? It's funny how humans make these statements as if our opinion is the authority that holds a candle to nature!😂😂😂😂😂

  • @hypersynesthesia
    @hypersynesthesia Год назад +4

    I got to experience them once. I didn’t expect them to feel the way they did! You expect a tree trunk to feel hard, even brittle…. The surface of the redwoods was squashy! You press them with your hand and they gently ‘give’. Really strange and unearthly. And the scale of them is truly daunting. It was an emotional experience to camp beneath them, and a feeling of deep respect for them as living organisms and as a whole organic system.

  • @hewhohasnoidentity4377
    @hewhohasnoidentity4377 Год назад +2

    A little less politics would be nice. Otherwise #defundpbs government grants and supporting sponsoring entities need to end.

  • @As5tro0
    @As5tro0 Год назад +7

    Redwoods r so magical, the coastal Redwoods in the dunes of Humboldt, the old growths of Lady bird Johnson & tall trees out side Ukiah. the redwood curtain😊😊😊😊 ❤ best dic golf course in the WORLD! The albino Redwoods, only 7 forest exist. a timeless being with timeless wisdom. ❤ I love them so much. ❤

    • @danielcarroll3358
      @danielcarroll3358 Год назад

      The only place I have seen giant sequoia and coast redwood growing next to each other is in a park in New Zealand.

    • @thomasgroh3276
      @thomasgroh3276 Год назад

      The Reggae on the river at French's Camp is the first week in August every year....I have been to so many it's amazing weekend with the Redwoods and the Eel river .....🎶✨🌲

  • @CHMichael
    @CHMichael Год назад +3

    Surprise there isn't more effort to spread them . Plant them everywhere and see if they grow

    • @inkydoug
      @inkydoug Год назад +2

      Sequoias have been planted in UK and continental Europe.

  • @lonelycubicle
    @lonelycubicle Год назад +1

    How can one tell which future episodes of PBS Terra are part of “Untold Earth”? Are any “Untold Earth” episodes to be published outside of PBS Terra?

  • @BanjoBitty
    @BanjoBitty Год назад +2

    My favorite plant in the world. Can't wait to visit them!

  • @1HarryH
    @1HarryH 7 месяцев назад +1

    Wonderful video, nice tour, beautiful presentation 👍 thank you
    I wish you a happy day

  • @The_sinner_Jim_Whitney
    @The_sinner_Jim_Whitney Год назад +3

    I've never been anywhere that felt so special than among the coast redwoods. It's just crazy, feels like you need to be kinda quiet and just experience it they way you need to, which is different for everyone.

  • @TC-py3oo
    @TC-py3oo Год назад +2

    Why are we paying to keep public television stations on ?
    When all we we get is one narrative
    I do not give money to any PBS station it needs to focus on both sides of all issues

    • @ripvanwinkle1819
      @ripvanwinkle1819 Год назад

      Agree with your first question. The rest nah. The world is not a duality

  • @GriffWild
    @GriffWild Год назад +3

    Wow! Well put together. I love the production team's style. You go, PBS Terra! The Redwoods Rising project deserves this kind of great storytelling. So big thanks to all involved.
    Folks should know that Redwoods Rising is solutionary work that will benefit all of us in more ways than one can immediately recognize. This episode does a great job of providing us a look into this unfolding and motivating work.

  • @jimfloyd4563
    @jimfloyd4563 Год назад +2

    The General Sherman tree is indeed the biggest (not tallest) tree in the world, but it is not as coast redwood. It is a giant sequoia which are found in easter California in the Sierra Nevada.

  • @davidleker9482
    @davidleker9482 Год назад +2

    we could make more jobs for restoration ecology

  • @nickbono8
    @nickbono8 Год назад +1

    I live in NorCal and I’ve been all over the world, Mt. Everest base camp, Milford Sound, Grand Canyon, Ancient Rome, to name a few and I would say the Redwoods are my top 3 favorite places I’ve ever been to. There’s just something about that place that makes you feel… human.

  • @86GT11
    @86GT11 Год назад +1

    He said, "There's 3 things that can kill redwoods, bugs, fire, and disease." WRONG!!! There's 4! Humans!

  • @mbgrocott7115
    @mbgrocott7115 Год назад +2

    So...why are redwoods so tall? Not answered or even brought up in the video.

    • @RGreen-rt1fk
      @RGreen-rt1fk Год назад

      Well, it truly was a horribly produced piece - or at least badly titled with 'click-bait' - but the answer seems to be the mention in the video of those 'air-roots' and how the tree interacts with fog. One may also, even if it wasn't well connected to the evidence of why they are so tall, assume the communal root system might also be considered relevant.
      In all honesty though, after watching, I too found myself asking the same question you did. In an 8 min. educational video made in today's world, perhaps we should be happy with 2 minutes given to confirm a thesis... even if it was given as a hypothesis.
      Oh, and lest we forget the unqualified nor explained statement that these trees have overcome 'bugs, fire, and disease.' Nevermind that that statement would have formed a much better foundation for an exploration of the subject matter.
      Oh well, maybe the purpose of those trees was as guardians for the Yurok. The tribe member mentions that 'they've been there as long as the trees had been there'. I'm doubtful that the statement is true, but it makes for feel-good emotional voice-over to play on top of the native-infused background music intended to propagandize instead of persuade.

  • @KevinBae
    @KevinBae Год назад +1

    "Redwoods Shouldn't Be So Tall. Here's Why They Are."
    It would have been nice to answer this click-bait title. Nothing in this video says why they shouldn't be so tall nor answers the question as to why they are. Instead we get 7+ minutes of anthropomorphization about giant trees.
    The trees are truly magnificent and I have nothing against the video for what it is. I just wish the video matched the title!

  • @AndrewCentanniBotanist
    @AndrewCentanniBotanist Год назад +1

    I'm sorry, are we all gonna just ignore that salamander at 3:12 that looks like it just escaped a POW camp? Like I know it'll grow back, but they just gloss over it like "oh, but the trees..."

  • @stormelemental13
    @stormelemental13 Год назад +1

    It took you over two minutes. Almost a full third of a the video, before you even started talking about subject of the video. Most of the video had nothing to do with the title, and you gave very little information on the unique characteristics of the trees. I don't need to hear how majestic the trees are, or how they relate to indigenous peoples, to understand why redwoods are able to grow taller than expected. If you are giving me a short video about redwood biology. Give me redwood biology. If you want to do a video on how important redwood trees are to the Yurok people, just do a video on that.
    Imagine if someone titled a short video, "Cathedral walls shouldn't be so thin, here's why they are" and then spent half the video with a priest talking about the mystery of the Eucharist instead of the actual architecture. This sort of rubbish very aggravating. Typical of PBS and the NPS though. Talk to a park ranger and they can give a superficial talk about native religion and how majestic nature is, but are not very useful about the status of trails or practical information about the park.

  • @RottnRobbie
    @RottnRobbie Год назад +1

    I gave this episode a "thumbs down" for a few reasons -
    - the title was clickbait. Only one sentence - literally _one_ - had anything to do with why the redwoods can grow so tall.
    - I wanted and expected information rich science content, and instead was served emotional heartstring tugs about the plight of the trees. This isn't (shouldn't be) the Lorax channel.

  • @matthewhepler801
    @matthewhepler801 Год назад +1

    I don't understand why science shows present religious beliefs in an a-critical way. Humans have not been anywhere as long as the redwoods. This isn't a show about religion, it's a show about nature, the statements made in the show should be scientifically valid.

  • @jc4354
    @jc4354 Год назад +1

    I'm glad I live in Eureka CA and get the privilege to walk among giants everyday.

  • @As5tro0
    @As5tro0 Год назад +5

    I lived in the redwoods 4 over a decade, they r teachers & friends of humanity.

  • @billruss6704
    @billruss6704 Год назад +1

    I backpacked through the redwoods most of my life. One time my wife arrived early to get me so she hiked in a ways. When I reached her she was just sitting there looking up. She was like wow now I know why you come here.

  • @lovedove7000
    @lovedove7000 Год назад +1

    Also, if you’re someone who is concerned about climate change and you would like to take action, you can join your local climate reality project chapter.

  • @sammylacks4937
    @sammylacks4937 Год назад +2

    Redwoods are capable if planted of growing here in NC. What limits their growth is when they become taller than all the other native trees is lightning striking them then insects and diseases do them in. Apparently in Northern California they must not get thunderstorms. I remember a family from California, I don't know where but their young daughter was really scared the first summer here because she had never seen lightning or heard thunder. I'd like to know if this is true.

    • @danielcarroll3358
      @danielcarroll3358 Год назад

      In north coastal regions of California summer lightning is very rare. About the only time one might hear thunder in San Francisco is in a winter storm and not often then. The central valley is a different matter.

    • @bjarkiengelsson
      @bjarkiengelsson Год назад

      @@danielcarroll3358 The Valley gets plenty of storms, as do we up here in the Sierras.

    • @danielcarroll3358
      @danielcarroll3358 Год назад

      @@bjarkiengelsson I'm glad to get verification. Thanks.

    • @An-kw3ec
      @An-kw3ec 4 месяца назад

      That's because north carolina has the opposite climate of northern California, both temperate in different ways.
      Norther california is cool Mediterranean so it gets most of its rain in winter, while North Carolina is Humid Subtropical with summer rain, Northern California almost never sees snow and rarely frost ,the Atlantic is colder in winter.

    • @sammylacks4937
      @sammylacks4937 4 месяца назад

      @@An-kw3ec We accually get more rain in the fall and winter because the creeks and swamps are low and dry in summer. They are higher and swamps flooded during a typical winter. Winter in NC is mild average highs are 60sor 70s with cold snaps for a few days then warming again. We get snow about every 15 - 20 years. Lots of trees and plants will grow outside their home range but most won't produce seeds to propagate new ones.
      Looks like Forest Services and timber companies would try to plant more redwoods even if they only grow a fraction of the size they do in Calif. The wood is valued and it might give the big old trees a chance to grow older.

  • @Fuzzle1985
    @Fuzzle1985 Год назад +1

    Whats crazy is they used to be in Wyoming. There's a fossilized redwood tree that was buried by volcanic ash in Yellowstone.

  • @PeggyAmaya
    @PeggyAmaya Год назад +1

    I have a huge ring redwood grove I lived in for 8 years, off the grid. It was really beautiful. It will be donated to the state park to be protected. Not many old growth trees left.

  • @jimboslice6367
    @jimboslice6367 Год назад +1

    An 8 minute video and you only spent 30 seconds talking about the title of your video which is why I clicked. I don’t need to hear how some dude think the tree is a god

  • @7Spronge
    @7Spronge Год назад +1

    I do bonsai, bought a redwood a few years ago, and planted it in the ground to thicken faster. In just two years the trunk diameter grew ten times bigger. Never seen a tree grow so fast.

  • @dragoonzen
    @dragoonzen Год назад +3

    Yes, I still yet to see them and one day I will make my way out there to see their magnificent.

  • @marisahokefazi4735
    @marisahokefazi4735 Год назад +1

    Can't stand the RUclips warnings and heads up before you click a video as if their audience are morons.

  • @JayBigDadyCy
    @JayBigDadyCy Год назад +1

    This brought tears to my eyes. The way the Yurok people feel about the trees. How he said they teach us how we should be treating each other... it really hit home. And then they show how we literally destroyed the vast majority of the Forrest. There's no doubt that humans are pretty much the worst thing to ever happen to this planet. Forget asteroids and meteors and super volcanoes. The destruction we've wrought is almost beyond compare, just stretched over a long period of time. Makes me sad, but I'll find joy in knowing there's people out there working to conserve these remarkable natural wonders.

  • @smallfaucet
    @smallfaucet Год назад +1

    That little girl has the most annoying speak......"all statements sound like questions"?

  • @brianmombourquette2673
    @brianmombourquette2673 Год назад +1

    Some of our favorite places on our cross America road trip were the redwood forests, including Avenue of the Giants and camping in the woods outside of Crescent City. So beautiful ❤️

  • @philliplamoureux9489
    @philliplamoureux9489 Год назад +5

    Did you consider if the thinning might make the trees more vulnerable to wind throw?

    • @As5tro0
      @As5tro0 Год назад +5

      wind isn't their enemy, it is their friend. Redwoods r so majestic & humbling. They r alive with wisdom of generations. They have a voice that when u truly listen sings across the winds.

    • @wmanadeau7860
      @wmanadeau7860 Год назад +15

      Second growth trees are often stump-sprouts forming a loose ring around where a giant was cut down, and often not so loose a ring, they can be very crowded. While they grow tall they are thin for their height. Removing two or three of the five or more stump-sprouts from a group helps the others get more growth and creates openings in the canopy. The original forest was multi-layered, tall trees had shorter offspring around them in some places, and an intermediate canopy layer that was home to many species that need a place in these newer second and third growth areas.

  • @mrjonesyyy
    @mrjonesyyy Год назад +4

    I would have loved to see the american chestnut before they were all cut down and the killed by disease...

    • @wmanadeau7860
      @wmanadeau7860 Год назад +1

      Right? Most people don't know how widespread they were and how important.

  • @dwftube
    @dwftube Год назад +1

    I was lucky enough to visit a few years back and the atmosphere in these forests is something else.

  • @schousehead
    @schousehead Год назад +1

    4 things that kills tree, you FORGET number 1, humans!

  • @johna1160
    @johna1160 Год назад +1

    No, Frankie Myers, the Yuroks have not "been here as long as they've been here". Not even close.

  • @mikemorris1760
    @mikemorris1760 Год назад +1

    If you study how much territory the redwoods originally covered it would make you cry.

  • @robwagnon6578
    @robwagnon6578 Год назад +1

    You silly rabbit, 'the redwood tries did not teach us how to treat one another." It was Yeshua who said, "treat others the way you want to be treated"

  • @chilirasbora
    @chilirasbora Год назад +1

    I don't know folks messing with nature always seems to backfire.

  • @mrrj44
    @mrrj44 Год назад +9

    I do work with the Yurok tribe in many areas of humboldt and trinity counties. The redwoods are a truly insane humbling experience, akin to the feeling after you leave your first concert, or first professional sports game. It’s magical.

  • @Abhishek-qj2iz
    @Abhishek-qj2iz Год назад +1

    I love the redwoods, but that dude in the canoe seemed so pretentious. Like cmon bro 😂

  • @arthas640
    @arthas640 Год назад +1

    6:44 I wish more scientists would just tell people "we need to do it. For science reasons."

  • @camojoe83
    @camojoe83 Год назад +1

    tHeY sHuDiNt Be ThAt TaLl!
    *Explains why they should be that tall*

  • @Davidsample7761
    @Davidsample7761 Год назад +2

    Yes we did lose many of the redwoods. An ongoing reflection on the past as a time of shame is not fruitful. What I think is critical to remember is that conservation of the redwoods has been in progress since at least 1918. As a result of the foresight of a few and their efforts in building a consensus, the remnants of the ancient forrest have been saved. That is a victory that should be celebrated.

    • @systlin2596
      @systlin2596 Год назад

      See I think it's important to remember and reflect on our mistakes so that we don't forget to do better, personally.

  • @hypeairsoftandgaming
    @hypeairsoftandgaming Год назад +3

    Seeing those trees as a kid is something I will never forget I was amazed I looked up at the trees and could not see the top of the trees keep in mind this coming from a kid that lived his whole life in the Arizona desert I was fortunate enough to go see them truly a natural wonder of the world

  • @LindysEpiphany
    @LindysEpiphany Год назад +1

    I live close to the Redwoods and have seen them many times and every time is filled with the awe and wonder of the first time!
    They are definitely worth a trip to see!