Utqiagvik i believe is the coldest town in america by average, but Prospect Creek is the coldest in record tempurature reaching down to -80°F as its lowest tempurature.
When he was driving in at the beginning of the video, I was wondering who built the roads in that heat. I'm thinking that they did so either in winter or in spring.
They definitely build and repair those roads at night and in the coolest time of the year. Highway work here in Florida is done at night if it is in the summer when they do it.
@@TrickyVickey I'm in Texas, and they do that here, too. I see road workers out at 10-11 pm often. I just assumed that they do it to avoid causing so many traffic issues during rush hours because they do it year-round, but the heat may be a factor, too.
I’m from France and me and my friends went to Death Valley thinking it’d be a one week long nature stop before heading for Vegas. It was all going amazingly well until our car broke down on the 5th day in a ghost town in the middle of nowhere lol, our phones were all overheating and we were stranded until a very nice elderly couple from Colorado stopped. They were so nice! We managed to cool our phones with their car’s AC and to call the rental company who just told us to leave the car there. And the couple took all three of us to Vegas! Definitely wanna go back!
Park Ranger here. I went to thank you for not only showcasing our parks, but doing so in an informative manner. Ranger, you did a great job on the interview! Clear skies everyone!
I love Death Valley. Went there as a teenager and have longed to go back. I’m 62 and a widow now. Never wanted to force my family into a vacation there. Your video reignited my passion! 2025 I will be in Death Valley,
If I've learned anything at all about getting older. I would say 62 is young. There was a survey taken some years ago that I got wind of, and in that survey they asked 100 people off the street what they thought was the beginning of old age ??? AND it appears the average is 79 😳🫢🫣 SO at 62 you've got a ways to go before you're considered officially old, so you might as well enjoy yourself and live It up. 🎉❤🎉❤🎉❤🎉 If Death valley is where you feel you can live it up then go for it... LOL😅
@FromHeretoThere AH! You've only been here a year. Forgive my other comment where I corrected you on something you said about Vegas temps in this video, LOL. You are forgiven and welcome to Vegas. Hope you love it here despite the heat! 😅
Yes. My favorite is the massive amount of tents of the homeless on the sidewalks of businesses. It the war zone type streets of the big cities. The scenery is busted car windows from thieves that gave no punishments are right up there with van gogh. So breathtakingly beautiful.
@@lesterine77California has major issues, like all big cities forever now? I think the commener was talking geography? Cali is magical geographically. I love being able to leave the coast and be in the desert or mountains in under 2hrs. Snowboarding, dirt biking, camping, surfing, best Mexican food you can find. While i dont like the egotistical way of people, you prove that's everywhere on earth now. We have every climate within reaching distance. This Cali bashing is now a virtue signal 100000% as nowhere is perfect, and crappy people are common these days spreading poison like you while acting superior 😂 facts! ✌️
Stayd at the Furnace Creek Inn ~25 years ago. Memory that sticks out was swimming in the pool after sunset and looking up at the stars. The stars were very bright. Then all of sudden they blinked out. At first we thought maybe clouds, but then we started hearing faint squeaks and realized there were thousands of bats flying overhead.
Omg that sounds so scary . I have a similar memory of swimming at night at a motel in Dalhart Texas as a kid . Except for the things flying around were flying roaches . It wasn't a sworm of them to where it covered the stars but the few I saw were enough to freak me out lol
Oh snap they are cute though I've only seen two up close a white bat in the black mountain at bat cave lake lure buncombe Henderson Rutherford county area of wnc usa and a brown one that flew into my daughter's house it had just gotten dark we were loading up for a rd trip me & my granddaughter hear my daughter started screaming a horrific scream we ran to her but she was in laundry room wide eyed looking up saying bat bat bat and it flew we let it get tired and she took it out and let it go and we started our trip a hour behind schedule. She drove straight thru and made it in 12 hours.i wish we had thought to take pics on phones I believe we did but they were in the car already. I bet all those bats would be a amazing sight
I was raised in the coldest city on Earth, Yakutsk, Russia. I visited Death Valley a few years ago and it is wild to go from one extreme to another. It was hard for me to be outside for too long at all without the risk of getting heat stroke.
I couldn’t do it. I went from a hot humid summer in Australia to Switzerland in the middle of winter and that was very tough. I felt the cold like a wall when I was walking out of the airport. I went from 38 degrees Celsius to -10 (it did get colder I believe). When I got back home 6weeks later the heat was unbearable.
I grew up in Death Valley as a kid. My dad was a park ranger there and for a few years in the early 1980s we lived there. What you thought was the elementary school, is indeed the school there. I went to first, second and third grades there. There are two types of people who work in Death Valley for the Park Service. Full time, and seasonal. Upper was for full-time, lower was for seasonal. However when I lived there we lived in the lower area because there was not enough room for full-time employees in the upper area. There were more full-time employees than there was permanent housing for them. There has been more permanent housing constructed since then. The lower area is affectionately called The Boneyard. I learned to ride a bike there. When I lived there, the lower area was just a bunch of mobile homes. The Park Service got rid of them after we moved away, and built an apartment complex for seasonals.There is a swimming pool for employees and their families there as well. The community is bare bones, but, it's nice nonetheless. Good people. Always willing to help.
@@silvertip185 My dad was a Park Ranger. He worked in Resource Management. He'd occasionally work in the Visitor Center, Resource Management office is over in the Cow Creek area. He was often on mountain peaks checking weather stations and checking that mines weren't violating their leases, which they often did. He'd also help rescue people dying of dehydration in the middle of nowhere. You might have noticed that there's no trees to chop down for firewood. So, people camping there would go into 150 year old mine shafts, rip the old wooden support beams out and use those as firewood. Have to arrest those people for destroying government property. People are shockingly stupid when they're on vacation. Because the valley is under sea level, fighter jets from the local air bases, Edwards, Nellis, etc, etc, would skim the valley floor so they can see their altimeter drop below zero. Having an F-14 break sound barrier 150 feet over your home may sound neat, but after having it happen several dozen times. Shockwave knocking you out of bed at 3AM, gets real old real fast.
LOL. That dude from DC was running from something. There's no way he's chasing his dreams out in Furnace Creek, population less than 150, hottest place on Earth.
I need to travel with people like you. My family and friends rush me when I like to take my time with museums, shops, exploring, etc. Furnace Creek is now on my must visit list!
Even when it gets hot enough to be an oven. Maybe it should have a habitable dome with solar panels just to keep the town cool and to make the place look cool. And to provide energy.
Unlike places like Salton Sea, Plaster City and other places as long as you don't become a magnet for the "off-the-grid" types the place will not fall into ruin.
I was born and raised in Texas, now live not far from Death Valley in the Mojave Desert. I much prefer this dry heat over that miserable Texas humidity! Great video, well done.
I live out here in Bakersfield it gets to be 110-115 in the summer. It's not fully dry like it normally is, these past few years it's been humid for us.
We used to live about 90 miles from there. Our temps only got to 115 or so. Still, we used to run in the summer at lunchtime. It is so dry (5% humidity) that any sweat instantly evaporates and cools you down. And you had views for 50-100 miles every day. Great weather for flying fast jets! Beautiful area and land of contrast. 80 miles from Badwater, the lowest spot in the Continental US (-200 feet) and Mount Whitney the highest spot (14,000+).
I was travelling and went from the desert where it was about 115 into Iowa where it was about 80 and super humid. I missed the desert. Going from one extreme to the other really put it into perspective for me.
United failed states of america = USA is a social experiment gone wrong with both the leftwing (fake liberals/democrats) and rightwing (fake conservatives/rightwing/republicans).
You do a very good job . Your enthusiasm is catching and if I was not 94 years old, I would like to visit Furnace Creek and surrounding areas. Good luck to you and keep up the good work. 8 30 2024
Mt Whitney is 100 miles directly NW from Dante's View in Death Valley, you can also see it on very clear days. So from Dante's View you get to see the lowest point Badwater directly below, and the highest Mt Whitney to the NW - absolutely mind blowing National Park, and probably my fav.
Iceland Park Ranger (Landvörður) here. Thanks to Mathew the National Park Warden for such succint answers, coupled with his obvious passion and enthusiasm for his vocation.
Very comprehensive and nice video of the place. Worked as an exchange student on a summer job visa from the Netherlands there back in the summer of 1994. It was so tranquil. Worked in the kitchen of the Furnace Creek Ranch and Hotel mostly making sandwiches for the occasional day visitors from LA. Stayed in one of those bungalows you showed. No internet or mobile phones back then so the only news was the LA Times newspaper which arrived always a day late. Have been back once (in 2018) since and it is still an amazing place.
I really enjoyed the tour of Death Valley. I have enjoyed your narration. I’m planning to watch more of your videos. I’m 75 years old and will live vicariously through your videos. Thank you
I lived here for two years. Summers are indeed rough, but it's also kind of neat to experience some of the hottest temperatures in the world. Winters, as well as parts of fall and spring are quite pleasant, and there is SO much to go out and explore. The culture of resort and NPS employees (often, but not always separate from one another) is actually quite diverse and there's always something to do if you're so inclined.
Me, my 5 year old son and my 3 week old daughter drove thru Death Valley in 2010 as a short cut to get back to Arizona, we were in a red Chevy Astro van, no air conditioning so we stopped at a Fry's Marketplace before entering Death Valley and I bought 3 spray bottles, 5 gallons of water for them, and bought my 5 year old son snacks of his choice as "pay"- his job was to sit in the first row seating next to his baby sister and behind me and keep spritzing us and himself with water to keep us cool while the wind from driving would whirl around in the van. It worked. To this day in the hot desert of Arizona when I'm out treasure hunting, I always pack and use my spritzer bottle 💦
That is a great memory, thanks for sharing. Thank God that you didn't break down!!!! Your angels were watching over your little family. I love that your son's " job" was to keep spraying the family . I bet that was fun for him, and a life saver! 😇
The shallow pit with the small boulders on chains that you thought was a well is an arrastra, a pit for grinding and pulverizing ore. Mules, burros, or horses would power the wheel by pulling it while walking in a circle around it.
Yes, infectious with laughter and enthusiasm. He is very unique and has a heart of gold and a thirsty soul in nature. He is always happy and never be afraid. Be his own sunshine. Chase joy, not just dreams. Every day is a happy adventure. Find fun in everything.
I was at Ft. Irwin, about 80 miles south of Furnace Creek; we saw temps there we're usually from 120 to 124 degrees, some days hit 134. It's a dry heat though, you don't realize how much you're sweating, because it evaporates so quickly. You exert yourself and get soaking wet with sweat, then stop long enough to get a drink of water, and by the time you put the cap back on your water bottle you're completely dry. During the day when it's hot the wind blows constantly. It's different; overnight the temp drops to 90 degrees F but it feels like 45 F, because there so little humidity.
Stayed in a mobile home for 4th of July weekend this year at Desert Hot Springs. Temps reached 125 degrees, our AC unit broke at 9pm at night, my husband said we'll leave in the morning. I said we are leaving now, I was so thankful for that ac in his truck as we drove home late that night!
My ex drove truck and I traved with him a lot and our a/c went out in the summer when we were in the SW, also our heat went out when we were traveling in the east coast, fun memories haha
What an interesting visit! Especially the last part of The Amargosa Opera House! I was lucky enough to be there in 1986 and to see Martha Becket preform! We also explored the Areas she had restored and adorned with beautiful Frescos. In the Art Gallery, several in our Group of Visitors purchased one of Ms. Beketts beautiful Paintings! It was an unforgettable Experience; ALL!!! Thank you, for this great visit!!!
Great, he's enjoying life there, but he probably has a habit of flickering his cigarette buds, that's littering especially in a National Park. He should try to stop smoking too. Garbage right behind him. Enjoy life bro.
I loved Rahim's laugh and a great person to interview for your video, very articulate explaining everything well! And talking about chasing dreams, so good🌵
@@FromHeretoThere Yeah, talk about hot! Hottest I've been in was Parker, AZ 1998, it was 114° Hopped out of the car and couldn't catch my breath at first😂 Furnace Creek had to have been a unique lifetime experience! You stayed out in the heat a long time walking around. A truly awesome place and real great video 💯
I really love your videos, you are a great narrator, the facts you give, and most interesting, talking to the locals! It is pouring rain here in washington in August, and I love hot summer weather. Thank you for the adventures, and your enthusiam is great!
Unique environment to be sure. I lived in El Paso, Texas for a year in 1976. I got there end of June and told myself I will not be able to handle the heat. It did reach 115-118F during the summer and the next spring time I adjusted to the increasing temperature. I used to play outdoor handball at UTEP for hour at a time in the heat and consumed few gallons of water. You would sweat but it would evaporate rapidly. During the winter we had scant snow and the overpasses on the interstate would ice over making driving more careful. I was less than 30 years of age then and would find it hard to do now being near 75 years of age. Thanks for sharing the video, it did bring back some memories to an older guy!
The host has so much great energy and it's truly excited and the guy you interviewed certainly hope it gets back to him what a great vibe and I sure he contributes see the communities vibe in such a great way
Currently watching this in Los Angeles on September 7, 2024 during the hottest heat wave of the year. Yesterday was the peak and it got up to 111F. It is currently 101F as I am typing this comment out. I could not fathom walking around, under the sun, at below sea level, in 120F weather. You are insane for making this video.
Nearly the entire state is a desert. If we didn't steal water from the Colorado River, over-pump the Central Valley aquifer, and divert water from the Delta, it would be as habitable as the moon notwithstanding the occasional monsoons.
Living in Phoenix AZ where it gets hot AF by 9 AM in the summer on most days, the fact they have that enormous, green golf course at 126 degrees is a miracle. Whoever does the maintenance should work on the Super Bowl committee because that must take some serious cost and dedication. Seeing a lush, natural lawn here is one of the ultimate signs of luxury.
That crossed my mind, too. I live in the suburbs of Dallas, TX and I have a hard time keeping my lawn green during summer here, and we're 95-100 degrees most days during July-August.
@@AgentOffice It’s not necessary more expensive than most other places. You just need to put in some major commitment. During the summer here you’d need to water your grass at least twice a day to ensure it doesn’t die in this heat. Most people who have lawns have very patchy grass because it’s too hard to maintain.
What a great, informative and interesting video. I was born in Tucson Arizona 1950 and love the desert. The heat well, I can only take SO much. Thanks so much for posting this vid!! Stay safe!!
The hottest I experienced was 122* in Palm Springs, California back in 2006. The heat was a force that you could feel bearing down on you. Deadly, for sure.
I really enjoyed this clip was so well done well cut very engaging… However, I grew up in Garden Grove California so we camped in deserts only when I was a kid growing up my father loved the desert. This town is so much larger now than it was in 73 when I drove through, thanks again and keep doing what you’re doing. You’re very good at it. Our arms are forever wrapped around you here and Kennewick Washington Washington state on the mighty Columbia river.🤗👍❤️
Thank You Very Much... I was surprised to see you walking around without a HAT. Your narration is full of information and you certainly hit all the punch points. Fun to watch (so now I don't need to go and get a sunburn)..... TM
In the early 1970s, the morning announcers at KCBS news radio in San Francisco loved to ask their weather specialist what the temperature was in Furnace Creek. I thought they did so because of the name of the municipality. I didn’t realize that a world record had been established there. Thanks for this video!
This is a strange comment, but I really want to proclaim it. A few years ago, the most naturally beautiful woman I have ever seen was working in a gift shop at Furnace Creek. On this particular trip, it actually rained in Death Valley.
Like this new style of video!! Really enjoyed the interview with chef. Gave great insights into the local lifestyle. Hope to see more videos like this!!
My ancestors mined anthracite coal and most of the stories were about tragedy and hard life, so I have a special interest in miners. I have a new respect for the borax miners. I can’t imagine the working and living conditions for Death Valley 1880’s miners and their families. I heard you say that the miners were Chinese, which I’d love to know more about. Thank you for sharing your adventures with us.
Chinese also built the hardest part of the railroad. Idk much about coal but that's cool about your ancestors! I'm adopted so I don't really know much about ancestors, and my birth country, S.Korea was shut off from most of the world till the last few decades, so it's hard to lean much about it.
I remember reading somewhere that the U.S. was desperate for workers and made a deal with China where they would send their prisoners here as temporary workers. The U.S. government did not allow Chinese women to come here as they did not want the men to stay and have families. The Chinese suffered much racism. However, many found ways to import Chinese women and founded Chinatowns where they lived, worked, opened businesses, and raised families.
I climbed and trimmed the tallest crookedest palm trees at Death Valley Resort.No one else would climb them.They were like walking up a rubber band.😂I love the golf course there ,they let our crew play for free.
Thanks for sharing a little history about the hottest place on earth, but also, shout out to that chef !! He could as easily blown off the interview or even made a quick interview, instead, his outlook on life and his journey is amazing !!
I visited Furnace Creek in July years ago. The digital thermometer in town read 117 degrees at 5 PM in the afternoon. Felt like being in an oven. Can’t imagine 134 degrees.
117 isn’t that bad. You get acclimated after about 5-10 minutes outside. Past 120 is when things start to really sizzle and direct sunlight instantly stings
Raheem seems like a really cool dude, love his energy. I've always wanted to visit Death Valley and I think I might next summer, I live in California but have never taken advantage!
I have visited several times, in the winter after a major storm is the best. The extensive salt flats become covered with water and extend for miles… incredibly beautiful!
I was a Subaru STi 'hot fuel' test team member in 2003. We would do testing for 1-2 weeks out of Furnace creek in July-August. 54.44°C (130 degrees °F) at our test site... Go SRD!!
Loved the dude from DC. He seemed so friendly and excited about working at the oasis. Raheem (or Rahim?) best of luck on the move. Great video as always and as someone from Los Angeles, I appreciated all the facts and history about this place not all too far from me!
Furnace Creek.. Where the devil shows up to take a lava leak... When you have this young man sweating... Our older, more heavy gooses are cooked! BTW, there were trains back then... The issue likely was replacing all the dead people trying to lay down tracks...Great coverage! Thanks! Glad to visit along with you enjoying my 67 degree room temp. lol
I live not too far from Death Valley, and my husband and I visit frequently. He golfs at tournaments held at the golf course. We stay in Beatty and drive down each morning during the tournament. In the 80s, I read electric meters in Death Valley. There were a few residents in DVJ other than Marta, and the cafe was open. There is also a trailer park up the road a ways from Furnace Creek Inn that houses the workers at Briggs Mine. Cow Creek was my favorite area to read in the summer as it was cooler. Randsburg, Red Mountain and other Ghost Towns of the Indian Wells Valley would be interesting! I love your enthusiasm! Lone Pine, the Bristlecone Pines (oldest trees in the world), the Pinnacles, and Petroglyphs (reqiures approval from MWR at NAWC, China Lake) are other very interesting places!
I love your enthusiasm. 😊. I grew up in LA. I remember camping at Furnace Creek fifty years ago with my family. It was Easter week and already 100 degrees 😅. We also went up to Scotty's Castle. My dad loved the desert so we monthly went to Lancaster and Mojave and as far as Boron and Trona. As the ranger mentioned the night time sky is stunning. Great tour.
What an excellent TOUR you provided ~ you did your research and SO appreciated How incredible ~ I’ve always wanted to visit Death Valley & Furnace Creek ~ after seeing your video it’s sparked my interest again !!! I live in Arizona where it’s been very HOT 🥵 this summer so altho I’m used to heat ~ What you’re showing Is extreme heat 🔥🔥🔥🔥 But find it all fascinating . So much history and love all the old with the new modern beautiful hotel , etc Thank you for such a GREAT VIDEO and adventure ! You’re an excellent tour guide ! ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
Loved your video of Furnace Creek. You gave so much information. It's a place I would love to visit. But watching your video was the next best thing. Thank You..
The limestones and sandstones found in the Funeral and Panamint Mountains indicate that the Death Valley area was the site of a warm, shallow sea throughout most of the Paleozoic Era (542 - 251 million years ago.) Time passed and the sea began to slowly recede to the west as land was pushed up.
I stayed at Furnace Creek about 10 years ago in April. I visited Scotty's Castle and of course Badwater and Zabriskie Point. Oh, I'm from Connecticut, so the distance felt like driving through my state. Those houses you saw was the reservation.
I'm a native of Southern California and my cousin was a park ranger at Death Valley. Now both of us live in Southern Arizona. It's not as hot as Phoenix here but I miss living in California and Honolulu where I went to school. I will subscribe to your channel because it's awesome!
@@doctorrobert60That's a good point. I have noticed that also. Places that are isolated don't attract masses of people that are homeless. There just aren't any resources for them, out in the boonies. The majority of the camps are in a town, where people and agencies can be within walking distance. If you were homeless in Death Valley it wouldn't be long before it wouldn't matter anymore.
I still remember sleeping in a tent at Texas Spring Campground (1 mile from Furnace creek) in the middle of September. Couldn't sleep more than 2 hours because ground was hot as a pan whole night. But still a night to remember 🙂
Very nice video. You did a nice job. I have been going to DV for decades. We have camped in motorhomes primarily during the cooler months of the year. I have never been during the Summer. I ride my motorcycle through DV two to three times a year (it is only a couple of hours from my home) and usually stay in Beatty. DV is an awesome place. I really need to stay at the Inn some time.
That was a great video, that structure was built from adobe and that river/stream was a wash. And the round thing you said was a well was a rock mill, and they don't pump borax it comes from a rock mineral and is mined.
I live and vlog now from Merida, Mexico. It hits 100F but the humidity is so high it feels a lot hotter than Furnace Creek, Death Valley, Las Vegas or Phoenix. You sweat in the shower and most people live without a//c, including me.
@@AshesAshes44 ohhh ok. and about the sun hating the desert, i can kind of understand because i live in southern california (temecula specifically, in orange county.) but not as much as death valley. i was born in vegas though!
@trovman999 so you understand hot weather for about nine months of the year. I grew up in the imperial valley, low desert, charm-free. I'm in northern california now, and it's like living in Narnia!
What a great video! Your enthusiasm is infectious. Very informative and interesting I love that you find locals to interview . Thank you so much. You helped me survive Covid....
Going for a run in the middle of the day like that is insane. I live in Phoenix, it's a consistent 110 give or take, and I don't even like walking to my car during the day. Best thing to do is wait till the sun goes down or do things early in the morning before the heat kicks in.
Yes. Several years ago I had stopped in Phoenix to drop off a truck. A couple of days before I reached Phoenix I was looking at getting a rental car. As I got closer to the date I needed which happen to fall just before President's Day. I noticed the availability was dropping quickly and the prices were going up. I was wondering what the heck was going on. But I managed to find a rental car for a one way trip back to Sacramento, CA. I asked the clerk about why the availability was getting so tight and the prices had started moving up. She told me that many tourists show up in the Phoenix area before the summer heat hits. Okay that makes sense to me.
I used to live in phoenix. I moved back to California due to how bad it is over there. So many homeless people walking around like a GTA iPhone nock off game, weird purple lights , and within a week of being there I already had a gun pulled on us during a road rage incident and the heat was ridiculous I kept seeing cars that were overheating or their tire blowing up
Should I visit the Coldest Town in America next?
Yes
Yes
Barrow, Alaska
Utqiagvik i believe is the coldest town in america by average, but Prospect Creek is the coldest in record tempurature reaching down to -80°F as its lowest tempurature.
idk there nothing to do there i have been :/
The dudes who build and maintain the roads here need appreciation.
When he was driving in at the beginning of the video, I was wondering who built the roads in that heat. I'm thinking that they did so either in winter or in spring.
They definitely build and repair those roads at night and in the coolest time of the year. Highway work here in Florida is done at night if it is in the summer when they do it.
@@TrickyVickey I'm in Texas, and they do that here, too. I see road workers out at 10-11 pm often. I just assumed that they do it to avoid causing so many traffic issues during rush hours because they do it year-round, but the heat may be a factor, too.
Ya it’s hot in Texas too. In the 80s I worked on the road construction. East Texas stayed hot and muggy at night 😊
Their Idiots for working on roads up here😅
I’m from France and me and my friends went to Death Valley thinking it’d be a one week long nature stop before heading for Vegas. It was all going amazingly well until our car broke down on the 5th day in a ghost town in the middle of nowhere lol, our phones were all overheating and we were stranded until a very nice elderly couple from Colorado stopped. They were so nice! We managed to cool our phones with their car’s AC and to call the rental company who just told us to leave the car there. And the couple took all three of us to Vegas! Definitely wanna go back!
great story!
You met the two trusting Americans.
@@Eric-qc2ii need a hand up? You are TrippiN' over and over again
Trusting couple.
@@eej902 Does anyone know what this means?
Park Ranger here. I went to thank you for not only showcasing our parks, but doing so in an informative manner. Ranger, you did a great job on the interview! Clear skies everyone!
:D
I love Death Valley. Went there as a teenager and have longed to go back. I’m 62 and a widow now. Never wanted to force my family into a vacation there. Your video reignited my passion! 2025 I will be in Death Valley,
You should. This is the chapter of your life to explore.
The parabolic shape of the valley is one of the reasons it gets so hot. plus the elevation
I hope you go!
If I've learned anything at all about getting older. I would say 62 is young. There was a survey taken some years ago that I got wind of, and in that survey they asked 100 people off the street what they thought was the beginning of old age ??? AND it appears the average is 79 😳🫢🫣 SO at 62 you've got a ways to go before you're considered officially old, so you might as well enjoy yourself and live It up.
🎉❤🎉❤🎉❤🎉
If Death valley is where you feel you can live it up then go for it... LOL😅
Weird@@tamitatangoto5134
During my first deployment I was stationed with a dude who was from death valley. He wasn't phased by the heat in Kuwait, lol.
😂😂😂😂
I can picture it: "Whaddya mean, 'hot'? This is like a nice spring day, back home!"
that's how i feel when it's 100 after living in Vegas a year 😂
I have a buddy from Phoenix and also spent a lot of time in Mexico and he wasn’t bothered by the heat when we were deployed to Saudi Arabia
@FromHeretoThere AH! You've only been here a year. Forgive my other comment where I corrected you on something you said about Vegas temps in this video, LOL. You are forgiven and welcome to Vegas. Hope you love it here despite the heat! 😅
There is something hauntingly and mysteriously beautiful about California's landscape.
Yes. My favorite is the massive amount of tents of the homeless on the sidewalks of businesses. It the war zone type streets of the big cities. The scenery is busted car windows from thieves that gave no punishments are right up there with van gogh. So breathtakingly beautiful.
He was talking about the natural landscape tho natural@@lesterine77
@@lesterine77California has major issues, like all big cities forever now? I think the commener was talking geography? Cali is magical geographically. I love being able to leave the coast and be in the desert or mountains in under 2hrs. Snowboarding, dirt biking, camping, surfing, best Mexican food you can find. While i dont like the egotistical way of people, you prove that's everywhere on earth now. We have every climate within reaching distance. This Cali bashing is now a virtue signal 100000% as nowhere is perfect, and crappy people are common these days spreading poison like you while acting superior 😂 facts! ✌️
Stayd at the Furnace Creek Inn ~25 years ago. Memory that sticks out was swimming in the pool after sunset and looking up at the stars. The stars were very bright. Then all of sudden they blinked out. At first we thought maybe clouds, but then we started hearing faint squeaks and realized there were thousands of bats flying overhead.
Omg that sounds so scary . I have a similar memory of swimming at night at a motel in Dalhart Texas as a kid . Except for the things flying around were flying roaches . It wasn't a sworm of them to where it covered the stars but the few I saw were enough to freak me out lol
Funny! Very cool and interesting! I would have liked to see that! Hopefully none of them pooped on you! 😂
bat country
Oh snap they are cute though I've only seen two up close a white bat in the black mountain at bat cave lake lure buncombe Henderson Rutherford county area of wnc usa and a brown one that flew into my daughter's house it had just gotten dark we were loading up for a rd trip me & my granddaughter hear my daughter started screaming a horrific scream we ran to her but she was in laundry room wide eyed looking up saying bat bat bat and it flew we let it get tired and she took it out and let it go and we started our trip a hour behind schedule.
She drove straight thru and made it in 12 hours.i wish we had thought to take pics on phones I believe we did but they were in the car already. I bet all those bats would be a amazing sight
Maybe they could hold the OLYMPICS there .
I was raised in the coldest city on Earth, Yakutsk, Russia. I visited Death Valley a few years ago and it is wild to go from one extreme to another. It was hard for me to be outside for too long at all without the risk of getting heat stroke.
That's wild! I bet few people have done that!
I couldn’t do it. I went from a hot humid summer in Australia to Switzerland in the middle of winter and that was very tough. I felt the cold like a wall when I was walking out of the airport. I went from 38 degrees Celsius to -10 (it did get colder I believe). When I got back home 6weeks later the heat was unbearable.
-10 celsius... lol :D
WOW
That happened to me moving from Iceland to Corpus Christi TX. My family was all excited, we lasted about 30min outside in the summer.
Possibly one of the most interesting programmes I've seen on RUclips. Thank you for making it.
Thanks so much! Glad you enjoyed!
I grew up in Death Valley as a kid. My dad was a park ranger there and for a few years in the early 1980s we lived there. What you thought was the elementary school, is indeed the school there. I went to first, second and third grades there. There are two types of people who work in Death Valley for the Park Service. Full time, and seasonal. Upper was for full-time, lower was for seasonal. However when I lived there we lived in the lower area because there was not enough room for full-time employees in the upper area. There were more full-time employees than there was permanent housing for them. There has been more permanent housing constructed since then. The lower area is affectionately called The Boneyard. I learned to ride a bike there. When I lived there, the lower area was just a bunch of mobile homes. The Park Service got rid of them after we moved away, and built an apartment complex for seasonals.There is a swimming pool for employees and their families there as well. The community is bare bones, but, it's nice nonetheless. Good people. Always willing to help.
very cool
Nice
That’s the thing in small communities in challenging environments… very helpful and friendly… definitely a feeling of ‘we’re all in this together’
@@silvertip185 My dad was a Park Ranger. He worked in Resource Management. He'd occasionally work in the Visitor Center, Resource Management office is over in the Cow Creek area. He was often on mountain peaks checking weather stations and checking that mines weren't violating their leases, which they often did. He'd also help rescue people dying of dehydration in the middle of nowhere. You might have noticed that there's no trees to chop down for firewood. So, people camping there would go into 150 year old mine shafts, rip the old wooden support beams out and use those as firewood. Have to arrest those people for destroying government property. People are shockingly stupid when they're on vacation. Because the valley is under sea level, fighter jets from the local air bases, Edwards, Nellis, etc, etc, would skim the valley floor so they can see their altimeter drop below zero. Having an F-14 break sound barrier 150 feet over your home may sound neat, but after having it happen several dozen times. Shockwave knocking you out of bed at 3AM, gets real old real fast.
Do they also pretend that they know more than visiting "city folk" about heat? Probably. Small town minds tend to be that way.
It looked a bit depressing. Then you met that guy! So positive and living his best life. Really inspiring guy.
fr… really hope he gets up there to become a chef or higher at the resort, he seems to really love it there
The air is warm and the people even warmer
115 degrees in the morning as he throws a cig not lit out throws it on the dry dirt lmaooo
@@nightreapers3425while he talks about eating healthy 😂I loved his attitude though, so happy and positive!
LOL. That dude from DC was running from something. There's no way he's chasing his dreams out in Furnace Creek, population less than 150, hottest place on Earth.
I need to travel with people like you. My family and friends rush me when I like to take my time with museums, shops, exploring, etc. Furnace Creek is now on my must visit list!
Despite of low population the Furnace Creek is surprisingly well kept. It doesn’t look abandoned or anything.
Even when it gets hot enough to be an oven. Maybe it should have a habitable dome with solar panels just to keep the town cool and to make the place look cool. And to provide energy.
Enough people come to it, apparently, that that’s kept from happening. I’d like to visit someday.
Unlike places like Salton Sea, Plaster City and other places as long as you don't become a magnet for the "off-the-grid" types the place will not fall into ruin.
I was born and raised in Texas, now live not far from Death Valley in the Mojave Desert. I much prefer this dry heat over that miserable Texas humidity! Great video, well done.
Yeah, it's a 'dry' heat. Tell that to a turkey!
Cle Elum hit 116*
I much prefer the humidity of texas. Dry heat k.lls and is very painful, and the uv us always 11+.
I live out here in Bakersfield it gets to be 110-115 in the summer. It's not fully dry like it normally is, these past few years it's been humid for us.
ill take dry heat.
20:56 Rahim brightened my day, such a chill down to earth guy what a legend
That was an excellent interview. From both questions and answers.
We used to live about 90 miles from there. Our temps only got to 115 or so. Still, we used to run in the summer at lunchtime. It is so dry (5% humidity) that any sweat instantly evaporates and cools you down. And you had views for 50-100 miles every day. Great weather for flying fast jets!
Beautiful area and land of contrast. 80 miles from Badwater, the lowest spot in the Continental US (-200 feet) and Mount Whitney the highest spot (14,000+).
@@JBoy340a
Exercising at lunch time in summer is okay if your job is at a desk in a/c air for the rest of the day.
I don’t care how dry it is, running in triple digits is stupid.
wait so does that mean you can just walk like normal without being bothered as much as one would think?
@@clothestravelthe body will aclimate with exposure and time
I was travelling and went from the desert where it was about 115 into Iowa where it was about 80 and super humid. I missed the desert. Going from one extreme to the other really put it into perspective for me.
That park ranger was SO well-spoken. Seems like a really good guy!
Dream job. He is lucky.
I know that's always nice when they pronounce something.You can actually understand what it is
Thanks!
United failed states of america = USA is a social experiment gone wrong with both the leftwing (fake liberals/democrats) and rightwing (fake conservatives/rightwing/republicans).
He is a bit
Of a zoomer using a lot of hyperbole.
You do a very good job . Your enthusiasm is catching and if I was not 94 years old, I would like to visit Furnace Creek and surrounding areas. Good luck to you and keep up the good work. 8 30 2024
Sir it’s amazing that you are commenting on RUclips at 94!
25 miles away is Mt Whitney, the highest point in the lower 48. Unbelievable geography.
It is more like 125 miles by road.
Dream on
Mt Whitney is 100 miles directly NW from Dante's View in Death Valley, you can also see it on very clear days. So from Dante's View you get to see the lowest point Badwater directly below, and the highest Mt Whitney to the NW - absolutely mind blowing National Park, and probably my fav.
Stay out if you ain't fit of health. Gotta be used to that kind of heat or be real lucky your car doesn't quit passing through.
There is actually an ultra marathon from death valley to the Mt Whitney trailhead every year. It's called the bad water 135.
Iceland Park Ranger (Landvörður) here. Thanks to Mathew the National Park Warden for such succint answers, coupled with his obvious passion and enthusiasm for his vocation.
Furnace Creek residents must have a burning desire to live there. Cheers!
Raheem has a great attitude! I would like to join you on a drive from LA to Vegas, stopping at weird places like this in between.
Very comprehensive and nice video of the place. Worked as an exchange student on a summer job visa from the Netherlands there back in the summer of 1994. It was so tranquil. Worked in the kitchen of the Furnace Creek Ranch and Hotel mostly making sandwiches for the occasional day visitors from LA. Stayed in one of those bungalows you showed. No internet or mobile phones back then so the only news was the LA Times newspaper which arrived always a day late. Have been back once (in 2018) since and it is still an amazing place.
Wow, thanks for the comment and story!
I really enjoyed the tour of Death Valley. I have enjoyed your narration. I’m planning to watch more of your videos. I’m 75 years old and will live vicariously through your videos. Thank you
❤
I lived here for two years. Summers are indeed rough, but it's also kind of neat to experience some of the hottest temperatures in the world. Winters, as well as parts of fall and spring are quite pleasant, and there is SO much to go out and explore. The culture of resort and NPS employees (often, but not always separate from one another) is actually quite diverse and there's always something to do if you're so inclined.
Me, my 5 year old son and my 3 week old daughter drove thru Death Valley in 2010 as a short cut to get back to Arizona, we were in a red Chevy Astro van, no air conditioning so we stopped at a Fry's Marketplace before entering Death Valley and I bought 3 spray bottles, 5 gallons of water for them, and bought my 5 year old son snacks of his choice as "pay"- his job was to sit in the first row seating next to his baby sister and behind me and keep spritzing us and himself with water to keep us cool while the wind from driving would whirl around in the van. It worked. To this day in the hot desert of Arizona when I'm out treasure hunting, I always pack and use my spritzer bottle 💦
That is a great memory, thanks for sharing. Thank God that you didn't break down!!!!
Your angels were watching over your little family.
I love that your son's " job" was to keep spraying the family . I bet that was fun for him, and a life saver!
😇
I did the same when travelling round Europe in my open sports car, it "only" reached 45C / 113F though...
No you didn’t
Where was the father?
@@Raminakai fantastic comment Raminakai🤗 Yes, blessings come to those who are good to others💯 I appreciate you!!!❣️
I worked housekeeping at Furnace Creek 5:13 Ranch (resort) 1990-1992. Loved it!! Even got to work the Castle
The shallow pit with the small boulders on chains that you thought was a well is an arrastra, a pit for grinding and pulverizing ore.
Mules, burros, or horses would power the wheel by pulling it while walking in a circle around it.
This dude is so infectious with laughter and enthusiasm. I'm subscribing. Cool dude to hang out with I bet.
Yes, infectious with laughter and enthusiasm. He is very unique and has a heart of gold and a thirsty soul in nature. He is always happy and never be afraid. Be his own sunshine. Chase joy, not just dreams. Every day is a happy adventure. Find fun in everything.
Love your enthusiasm, even with the most mundane travel destinations, you make it seem really exciting and interesting!
I find there's beauty everywhere in the world. Just depends on if you wanna see it :)
As you pass the dispensery...
I see you are about to hit 420k Subs!! Congrats!! 🎰⚡🍻🍀😁
It really is I love working here
Is it me or does it seem ridiculous trying to keep a golf course in that environment
You are very in depth in your video, really appreciate the time and effort you put into it. Thank you. Safe travels.
Thanks I appreciate that
The Chef was my favorite part he was so positive and inspiring. Thanks I enjoyed watching.
Fabulous video. I have lived in CA all of my life and never heard of Furnace Creek. Great info all around, thank you!
Thanks come up here it’s a amazing place
I was at Ft. Irwin, about 80 miles south of Furnace Creek; we saw temps there we're usually from 120 to 124 degrees, some days hit 134. It's a dry heat though, you don't realize how much you're sweating, because it evaporates so quickly. You exert yourself and get soaking wet with sweat, then stop long enough to get a drink of water, and by the time you put the cap back on your water bottle you're completely dry.
During the day when it's hot the wind blows constantly. It's different; overnight the temp drops to 90 degrees F but it feels like 45 F, because there so little humidity.
I could have listened to Raheem talk all day, he seemed super cool.
Stayed in a mobile home for 4th of July weekend this year at Desert Hot Springs. Temps reached 125 degrees, our AC unit broke at 9pm at night, my husband said we'll leave in the morning. I said we are leaving now, I was so thankful for that ac in his truck as we drove home late that night!
My ex drove truck and I traved with him a lot and our a/c went out in the summer when we were in the SW, also our heat went out when we were traveling in the east coast, fun memories haha
You made the right decision in leaving. That was too hot to spend the night without AC.
"I'm a cook" - yesss! I've been a chef & pastry chef, and am proud to call myself a cook. Respect!
I don't understand? A chef makes the recipes and the cooks execute the recipes, correct? They are two different jobs.
@@Rac3r4LifeYou should only call yourself a chef if you're the head of a brigade (head chef).
It’s a really a great thing to do I love
What an interesting visit! Especially the last part of The Amargosa Opera House! I was lucky enough to be there in 1986 and to see Martha Becket preform! We also explored the Areas she had restored and adorned with beautiful Frescos. In the Art Gallery, several in our Group of Visitors purchased one of Ms. Beketts beautiful Paintings! It was an unforgettable Experience; ALL!!! Thank you, for this great visit!!!
The picnic table chef guy was the coolest interview!
Thanks I appreciate that I love the energy
@@raheemjohnson3291 Hi from the UK where we complain when the temperature gets to 27 C haha.You,re brave living there.Much love to you.
For real. I could watch a whole show based on him. DC to Death Valley is quite the move.
You have a very positive vibe bro. Keep being you and take care
Great, he's enjoying life there, but he probably has a habit of flickering his cigarette buds, that's littering especially in a National Park. He should try to stop smoking too. Garbage right behind him. Enjoy life bro.
I loved Rahim's laugh and a great person to interview for your video, very articulate explaining everything well! And talking about chasing dreams, so good🌵
Yeah super cool guy! We chatted a bit after but then i had to head back to the AC 😅
@@FromHeretoThere Yeah, talk about hot! Hottest I've been in was Parker, AZ 1998, it was 114° Hopped out of the car and couldn't catch my breath at first😂 Furnace Creek had to have been a unique lifetime experience! You stayed out in the heat a long time walking around. A truly awesome place and real great video 💯
I really love your videos, you are a great narrator, the facts you give, and most interesting, talking to the locals! It is pouring rain here in washington in August, and I love hot summer weather. Thank you for the adventures, and your enthusiam is great!
Those native plants and trees are so amazing I don't know why anyone would ever have exotics.
The Date Palms and Tamarisk are not native though.
I worked in the area a few times. Once in summer, it's so dry it's bearable. Twice in winter. Heavenly weather in January.
Informative video. I will stay here in Florence, Oregon on the coast.
Unique environment to be sure. I lived in El Paso, Texas for a year in 1976. I got there end of June and told myself I will not be able to handle the heat. It did reach 115-118F during the summer and the next spring time I adjusted to the increasing temperature. I used to play outdoor handball at UTEP for hour at a time in the heat and consumed few gallons of water. You would sweat but it would evaporate rapidly. During the winter we had scant snow and the overpasses on the interstate would ice over making driving more careful. I was less than 30 years of age then and would find it hard to do now being near 75 years of age. Thanks for sharing the video, it did bring back some memories to an older guy!
Very good host you are!!
Those cracks in the road tho
The sky is such an amazing hue
The host has so much great energy and it's truly excited and the guy you interviewed certainly hope it gets back to him what a great vibe and I sure he contributes see the communities vibe in such a great way
Currently watching this in Los Angeles on September 7, 2024 during the hottest heat wave of the year. Yesterday was the peak and it got up to 111F. It is currently 101F as I am typing this comment out. I could not fathom walking around, under the sun, at below sea level, in 120F weather. You are insane for making this video.
Nearly the entire state is a desert. If we didn't steal water from the Colorado River, over-pump the Central Valley aquifer, and divert water from the Delta, it would be as habitable as the moon notwithstanding the occasional monsoons.
@@invisibleink2644California isn’t a desert lol..
Loved this! You gave us a lot of history and a great look-around. Dad took us kids to Death Valley 2 or 3 years in a row mid-70's. Great memories.
Living in Phoenix AZ where it gets hot AF by 9 AM in the summer on most days, the fact they have that enormous, green golf course at 126 degrees is a miracle. Whoever does the maintenance should work on the Super Bowl committee because that must take some serious cost and dedication. Seeing a lush, natural lawn here is one of the ultimate signs of luxury.
That crossed my mind, too. I live in the suburbs of Dallas, TX and I have a hard time keeping my lawn green during summer here, and we're 95-100 degrees most days during July-August.
Must be some expensive water
@@AgentOffice It’s not necessary more expensive than most other places. You just need to put in some major commitment. During the summer here you’d need to water your grass at least twice a day to ensure it doesn’t die in this heat. Most people who have lawns have very patchy grass because it’s too hard to maintain.
A lot of wasted water
Must be some good paint.
What a great, informative and interesting video. I was born in Tucson Arizona 1950 and love the desert. The heat well, I can only take SO much. Thanks so much for posting this vid!! Stay safe!!
The hottest I experienced was 122* in Palm Springs, California back in 2006. The heat was a force that you could feel bearing down on you. Deadly, for sure.
Hottest outdoor temperature I’ve experienced was about 111 on a hot day in Austin, TX, that alone was deadly.
I like hiking and the desert but idk if I'd try there myself lol!
Hottest was Kuwait. Way hotter than this on a regular basis. You can't go outside after 10 am.
@@DonnellOkafor-r2d Yep Basra, Iraq and Al-Jahra, Kuwait are just a couple degrees behind Death Valley, so is Iran’s Lut Desert.
@@DonnellOkafor-r2dThe Libyan desert in 1942. 136 degrees.
I really enjoyed this clip was so well done well cut very engaging… However, I grew up in Garden Grove California so we camped in deserts only when I was a kid growing up my father loved the desert. This town is so much larger now than it was in 73 when I drove through, thanks again and keep doing what you’re doing. You’re very good at it. Our arms are forever wrapped around you here and Kennewick Washington Washington state on the mighty Columbia river.🤗👍❤️
Glad you enjoyed David! And I love the Columbia! Probably my favorite river!
I love the cook man you interviewed. He has the right way to think. "It's hot, but if you think it is an adventure, you can like it"
Nah. That's Dave Chappelle in hiding. Up to his old tricks again, Dave!
Thank You Very Much... I was surprised to see you walking around without a HAT. Your narration is full of information and you certainly hit all the punch points. Fun to watch (so now I don't need to go and get a sunburn)..... TM
The area is beautiful. So pristine looking. Yes, it's hot but the sky is clear and the landscape is so spread out that one can see far, far and far.
The land scape of war what was done to me people our people I fear this reset will result in the same
@@matildamarmaduke1096explain more
Thanks!
85% of the world’s supply of Borax is still mined in nearby Boron.
And you can still find the mule team stops in the middle of the Mojave Desert.
interesting
God bless those long gone mules
@@SusanKay- borax also kills ants pretty easily
Also I wish borax helped me with my hardness.
@@SusanKay- Thank you for the info.
Did some maneuver training in Death Valley, mechanized infantry with cohorts. Beautiful.
In the early 1970s, the morning announcers at KCBS news radio in San Francisco loved to ask their weather specialist what the temperature was in Furnace Creek. I thought they did so because of the name of the municipality. I didn’t realize that a world record had been established there. Thanks for this video!
This is a strange comment, but I really want to proclaim it. A few years ago, the most naturally beautiful woman I have ever seen was working in a gift shop at Furnace Creek. On this particular trip, it actually rained in Death Valley.
😂
This was quite interesting and I appreciate your wonder and the time you take to appreciate the environment, history, and people. Subscribed.
Raheem's interview was fantastic. What a great outlook on life.
Like this new style of video!! Really enjoyed the interview with chef. Gave great insights into the local lifestyle. Hope to see more videos like this!!
The excitement and passion narrating this video made it for me
My ancestors mined anthracite coal and most of the stories were about tragedy and hard life, so I have a special interest in miners. I have a new respect for the borax miners. I can’t imagine the working and living conditions for Death Valley 1880’s miners and their families. I heard you say that the miners were Chinese, which I’d love to know more about. Thank you for sharing your adventures with us.
Chinese also built the hardest part of the railroad. Idk much about coal but that's cool about your ancestors! I'm adopted so I don't really know much about ancestors, and my birth country, S.Korea was shut off from most of the world till the last few decades, so it's hard to lean much about it.
I remember reading somewhere that the U.S. was desperate for workers and made a deal with China where they would send their prisoners here as temporary workers. The U.S. government did not allow Chinese women to come here as they did not want the men to stay and have families. The Chinese suffered much racism. However, many found ways to import Chinese women and founded Chinatowns where they lived, worked, opened businesses, and raised families.
I climbed and trimmed the tallest crookedest palm trees at Death Valley Resort.No one else would climb them.They were like walking up a rubber band.😂I love the golf course there ,they let our crew play for free.
Thanks for sharing a little history about the hottest place on earth, but also, shout out to that chef !! He could as easily blown off the interview or even made a quick interview, instead, his outlook on life and his journey is amazing !!
I visited Furnace Creek in July years ago. The digital thermometer in town read 117 degrees at 5 PM in the afternoon. Felt like being in an oven. Can’t imagine 134 degrees.
117 isn’t that bad. You get acclimated after about 5-10 minutes outside. Past 120 is when things start to really sizzle and direct sunlight instantly stings
Hottest I've been through was 126 in Palm Springs. That was nuts. Glad I was only there for 2 nights.
Furnace Creek is an apt name for the place then!
Sounds like red bluff
Just went to Vegas three weeks ago and it was 118 by 2pm and 95 degrees at 2:30 am
Love your enthusiasm. We have been visiting Death Valley since 1985 and you filled in the gaps we were lacking. Excellent interviews.
I was born in 1985 wow that is crazy no problem and it’s a great place to come
Raheem seems like a really cool dude, love his energy. I've always wanted to visit Death Valley and I think I might next summer, I live in California but have never taken advantage!
I have visited several times, in the winter after a major storm is the best. The extensive salt flats become covered with water and extend for miles… incredibly beautiful!
Nice to see the brother pursuing his dreams ❤
Woooow, very impressive! Thank you for all the information. Very well explained, clear and understanding the topic.. thank you.
I was a Subaru STi 'hot fuel' test team member in 2003. We would do testing for 1-2 weeks out of Furnace creek in July-August. 54.44°C (130 degrees °F) at our test site... Go SRD!!
Send the headgasket team out there 😂
As an owner of a VA STi, that is the coolest thing I’ve read in a long time!
Cars work in this heat!
Funny I commented that this would be heaven for me due to the testing that is done out there. Test “mules” get me excited lol
Loved the dude from DC. He seemed so friendly and excited about working at the oasis. Raheem (or Rahim?) best of luck on the move. Great video as always and as someone from Los Angeles, I appreciated all the facts and history about this place not all too far from me!
Until he flicked his cigarette on the ground. I’ll have to wait until he’s out before I visit.
You are an amazing presenter and I love how clearly and confidently you speak. You really have a talent for this.
Thanks so much!
Furnace Creek.. Where the devil shows up to take a lava leak... When you have this young man sweating... Our older, more heavy gooses are cooked! BTW, there were trains back then... The issue likely was replacing all the dead people trying to lay down tracks...Great coverage! Thanks! Glad to visit along with you enjoying my 67 degree room temp. lol
Thank you for this video of Death Valley. Well done and I now know of what it might be like to go there.
I love the way you interact with the locals! Good vibe!
I live not too far from Death Valley, and my husband and I visit frequently. He golfs at tournaments held at the golf course. We stay in Beatty and drive down each morning during the tournament. In the 80s, I read electric meters in Death Valley. There were a few residents in DVJ other than Marta, and the cafe was open. There is also a trailer park up the road a ways from Furnace Creek Inn that houses the workers at Briggs Mine. Cow Creek was my favorite area to read in the summer as it was cooler. Randsburg, Red Mountain and other Ghost Towns of the Indian Wells Valley would be interesting! I love your enthusiasm! Lone Pine, the Bristlecone Pines (oldest trees in the world), the Pinnacles, and Petroglyphs (reqiures approval from MWR at NAWC, China Lake) are other very interesting places!
I love your enthusiasm. 😊. I grew up in LA. I remember camping at Furnace Creek fifty years ago with my family. It was Easter week and already 100 degrees 😅. We also went up to Scotty's Castle. My dad loved the desert so we monthly went to Lancaster and Mojave and as far as Boron and Trona. As the ranger mentioned the night time sky is stunning. Great tour.
I grew up in Chino Cal and also went to Death Valley 50 years with my family but on Thanksgiving week. It was my favorite family trip.
What an amazingly report. It must have taken a lot of work to make this video..And you went slowly as if we were with you. Thankyou so much 😊
What an excellent TOUR you provided ~ you did your research and SO appreciated
How incredible ~ I’ve always wanted to visit Death Valley & Furnace Creek ~ after seeing your video it’s sparked my interest again !!!
I live in Arizona where it’s been very HOT 🥵 this summer so altho I’m used to heat ~ What you’re showing
Is extreme heat 🔥🔥🔥🔥
But find it all fascinating .
So much history and love all the old with the new modern beautiful hotel , etc
Thank you for such a GREAT VIDEO and adventure !
You’re an excellent tour guide !
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
Loved your video of Furnace Creek. You gave so much information. It's a place I would love to visit. But watching your video was the next best thing. Thank You..
Watching these high temp vids in the chill of Autumn is great, just love it!
The limestones and sandstones found in the Funeral and Panamint Mountains indicate that the Death Valley area was the site of a warm, shallow sea throughout most of the Paleozoic Era (542 - 251 million years ago.) Time passed and the sea began to slowly recede to the west as land was pushed up.
Wow thank you for the quick history. I would like to hear one about the Phoenix, Arizona area
appreciate your comment as a baby cali historian / geographer !!
That makes sense why it’s over 200 ft below sea level.
Those poor darling mules…what a hell of a life they had.
Don't you kid yourself. Those mulies would murder us all if given the chance.
The animals suffered too..
You are such a great host ! Great job great entertaining! Loved it!
I stayed at Furnace Creek about 10 years ago in April. I visited Scotty's Castle and of course Badwater and Zabriskie Point. Oh, I'm from Connecticut, so the distance felt like driving through my state. Those houses you saw was the reservation.
Wow that's extreme for a town. Thanks for sharing. I went to Death Valley in the winter and that's a hell a lot better than being here in the summer.
Glad you enjoyed!
joined your channel after watching the impressive coverage and details of Furnace creek.
I'm a native of Southern California and my cousin was a park ranger at Death Valley. Now both of us live in Southern Arizona. It's not as hot as Phoenix here but I miss living in California and Honolulu where I went to school. I will subscribe to your channel because it's awesome!
Glad you enjoyed and wow what a journey! And Phoenix, while hot, is at least "bearable" compared to Death Valley!
I watched some videos recently and the homeless population in Hawaii is big problem. No homeless in Death Valley!
@@doctorrobert60That's a good point. I have noticed that also. Places that are isolated don't attract masses of people that are homeless. There just aren't any resources for them, out in the boonies.
The majority of the camps are in a town, where people and agencies can be within walking distance.
If you were homeless in Death Valley it wouldn't be long before it wouldn't matter anymore.
I still remember sleeping in a tent at Texas Spring Campground (1 mile from Furnace creek) in the middle of September. Couldn't sleep more than 2 hours because ground was hot as a pan whole night. But still a night to remember 🙂
Very nice video. You did a nice job. I have been going to DV for decades. We have camped in motorhomes primarily during the cooler months of the year. I have never been during the Summer. I ride my motorcycle through DV two to three times a year (it is only a couple of hours from my home) and usually stay in Beatty. DV is an awesome place. I really need to stay at the Inn some time.
That was a great video, that structure was built from adobe and that river/stream was a wash. And the round thing you said was a well was a rock mill, and they don't pump borax it comes from a rock mineral and is mined.
I live and vlog now from Merida, Mexico. It hits 100F but the humidity is so high it feels a lot hotter than Furnace Creek, Death Valley, Las Vegas or Phoenix. You sweat in the shower and most people live without a//c, including me.
I'd almost forgotten getting sweaty while trying to dry off after a shower. Even with a/c!
oh dang no ac? that’s rough😬
@trovman999 Oh, there was a/c, it just wasn't enough. I swear the sun hates the desert and everything in it.
@@AshesAshes44 ohhh ok. and about the sun hating the desert, i can kind of understand because i live in southern california (temecula specifically, in orange county.) but not as much as death valley. i was born in vegas though!
@trovman999 so you understand hot weather for about nine months of the year. I grew up in the imperial valley, low desert, charm-free. I'm in northern california now, and it's like living in Narnia!
What a great video! Your enthusiasm is infectious. Very informative and interesting I love that you find locals to interview . Thank you so much. You helped me survive Covid....
Awesome stuff! I'm planning to visit Furnace in late August this year with my daughter and thanks to your video and I know what to expect.
Going for a run in the middle of the day like that is insane. I live in Phoenix, it's a consistent 110 give or take, and I don't even like walking to my car during the day. Best thing to do is wait till the sun goes down or do things early in the morning before the heat kicks in.
exactly! 6 or 7am run, I understand. Running MILES once it's already 115+... INSANE
Wonder if they were training for Bad water Ultra.
Yes. Several years ago I had stopped in Phoenix to drop off a truck. A couple of days before I reached Phoenix I was looking at getting a rental car. As I got closer to the date I needed which happen to fall just before President's Day. I noticed the availability was dropping quickly and the prices were going up. I was wondering what the heck was going on. But I managed to find a rental car for a one way trip back to Sacramento, CA. I asked the clerk about why the availability was getting so tight and the prices had started moving up. She told me that many tourists show up in the Phoenix area before the summer heat hits. Okay that makes sense to me.
How does someone even work a job in that heat ??
I used to live in phoenix. I moved back to California due to how bad it is over there. So many homeless people walking around like a GTA iPhone nock off game, weird purple lights , and within a week of being there I already had a gun pulled on us during a road rage incident and the heat was ridiculous I kept seeing cars that were overheating or their tire blowing up