Great Finds at Moolack Beach // Learning From the Locals

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  • Опубликовано: 18 окт 2024

Комментарии • 59

  • @CurrentlyRockhounding
    @CurrentlyRockhounding  Год назад +9

    Did you enjoy this video and find it to be informative? You can help ensure that more videos just like this get made by supporting the project on Patreon. www.patreon.com/currentlyrockhounding

  • @giabella9344
    @giabella9344 Год назад +2

    Thank you for sharing . This is on my list of places to travel to with my son .

  • @Grandmasrockin
    @Grandmasrockin 3 месяца назад +1

    Fun group!!! I love those guys!!!!

  • @RockyMountainBear
    @RockyMountainBear Год назад +1

    Epic mash-up of my favorite rock-tubers. So cool.

  • @kellyharper367
    @kellyharper367 Год назад +4

    Old disabled house bound dusty rusty rockhound here: Great collaboration! Fossil hunting is always so fun! Thanks for the microscopic views of the bone specimens. Can't wait to see how it saws. 😊

  • @outdooradventureswithfayde6832
    @outdooradventureswithfayde6832 Год назад +1

    Very fun video! I love beach rockhounding videos. Even better you met up with Karen and Kyle! Moolack souns like a goblin king. Really enjoyed the video, Jared. 👍

  • @775Rockhounding
    @775Rockhounding Год назад +1

    Great to see you guys all meet up in the wild like that! Great video with great people. Thanks for sharing with us.

  • @Mike-br8vb
    @Mike-br8vb 8 месяцев назад +1

    Nice finds and a great collaboration!

  • @TheStoneSeekers
    @TheStoneSeekers Год назад +1

    That bit in the first 2 minutes was hilarious. Thanks for another great and informative video.

  • @CurrentlyRockhounding
    @CurrentlyRockhounding  Год назад +2

    Did you enjoy this video and find it to be informative? You can help ensure that more videos just like this get made by supporting the project on Patreon. www.patreon.com/currentlyrockhounding

  • @josephpotterf9459
    @josephpotterf9459 Год назад +1

    Thanks

  • @chazwickie81
    @chazwickie81 Год назад +2

    Philomath is my hometown! Woot woot!

  • @rockhoundingwithjasperblue
    @rockhoundingwithjasperblue Год назад +1

    Great Show! So Awesome to see you Heavy Hitters together! Hope to meet up with you all, some day!💎

  • @sinisterscorpion1331
    @sinisterscorpion1331 Год назад +1

    S/O to Mamlambo with his fun, informative & educational videos!! I guess I'm a little bit bias since I'm a NZer😉Absolutely love watching him showcasing some amazing local finds & prepping them into amazeball pieces of fossil artwork🙌🏽🇳🇿 🦀 🐧 🐚 🦖 🦕 🦈

  • @wyomingadventures
    @wyomingadventures Год назад +1

    Cool Beach finds.

  • @edheadgrfx
    @edheadgrfx Год назад +1

    Great video! Boy I could have really used a guide or two when I was out there! It was my first time also. I found a lot, but can't imagine what I missed!😂😂😂

    • @CurrentlyRockhounding
      @CurrentlyRockhounding  Год назад

      That's the way it often goes, you gotta visit some places a few times to get the feel for it.

  • @gator83261
    @gator83261 Год назад +1

    Very good video.

  • @kengensjewelry
    @kengensjewelry Год назад +2

    Two of my dreams in one video! To be at the Pacific Ocean and finding cool stuff with other RUclipsrs. So cool! Thanks for taking us along.

  • @Nrscathy60
    @Nrscathy60 Год назад +3

    Sea glass is NOT trash.😂 Your blueish glass was once clear. It is prob hundreds of years old. People pay a fortune for this. Keep your sea glass finds and sell it as a lot. I would love to put it into a resin project. That piece is considered a gold nugget.😁 It could have been a wine glass from a ship 3 hundred years old, or a clear alcohol bottle from a pirate's ship. Have some romantic explanation and realize how cool your old sea glass is worth.❤

  • @keithcunningham7925
    @keithcunningham7925 Год назад +1

    Very good video

  • @kaleyfantastic
    @kaleyfantastic Год назад +1

    nice finds!

  • @lorisoidea
    @lorisoidea Год назад +2

    These Oregon videos could not have dropped at a better time! I'll be heading to the coast a few days from now and am looking forward to hours of beachcombing. Thanks to Karen especially for the simple and informative explanations, will definitely be checking her channel out.

  • @LillianArch
    @LillianArch Год назад +1

    Ok. Leave some for me!! Love Moolack Shores!!

  • @vickygoodwin9771
    @vickygoodwin9771 Год назад +2

    Breaking open the shell. Ta da, was as enjoyable as watching the islanders open coconuts! You guys were All great!

  • @patriciamckean4186
    @patriciamckean4186 Год назад +1

    Maybe someday I will make it to the Pacific Northwest. Great finds with the locals.

  • @DonariaRegia
    @DonariaRegia Год назад +1

    That was a pleasure to watch. Karen and Kyle are perfect guides for rockhounding in a new locale. I would imagine just about everyone watching learned along the way. Not needing a hammer at the beach for instance, his technique spoke for itself.

  • @sfbfriend
    @sfbfriend Год назад +1

    Septarian nodules are concretions, even though they are called a nodule! Nodule is a bubble that is later filled and a concretion is formed backwards of a nodule but they are all roundish! This was a fun vlog, I follow both Karen and Kyle's channels and I'm a member of Kyle's. Glad you had fun on the "Way way big beach" I had a good laugh at your description. Laughing with you, not at you. I love the beach, live in SoCal so it's a place I frequent and I prefer early morning or late afternoon's. I take my mother in law to find shells at least once a month, unfortunately no rocks. Hey channel members, 2 bucks on Patreon and you don't have commercials!

  • @dustinfindsrocks
    @dustinfindsrocks Год назад +1

    This is an epic collaboration 😆 I was listening when you said you had advice. It’s harder to film with multiple people than you’d think!

  • @offyarocka
    @offyarocka Год назад +1

    🤩🤩🤩

  • @paigesmith7753
    @paigesmith7753 Год назад +1

    You guys are fun xD I’m on my way to moolack rn ^~^
    Edit: I also found one of those agate shells last weekend in Lincoln city!! So kewlll

  • @laurafolsom2048
    @laurafolsom2048 11 месяцев назад +1

    Just got back from Oregon, got a couple great fossils. It was almost more exciting than agates.

  • @cliffmiller1021
    @cliffmiller1021 Год назад +1

    Exciting trip rubbing elbows with the locals. It was amazing seeing how easy it was for Kyle to pop open that stone. It had me thinking of a video showing how the ancients used rocks to shape rocks, pretty simple and obvious once pointed out how. I learning there is more than one hardness scale and was mildly surprised. That beach scene was pretty, waves coming in like that, reminds me of the Sunday morning tv back in the day. Hoping to see more collaborations, it's fun to see hounds in the wild.

    • @CurrentlyRockhounding
      @CurrentlyRockhounding  Год назад +1

      Yeah the Vickers hardness scale just doesn't get used that much but its good to know about.
      I would like to do more things like this with other people but of course its hard to coordinate.

  • @sandmaker
    @sandmaker Год назад +1

    I for got. Woof to the pup.

  • @rachaelb9164
    @rachaelb9164 Год назад +1

    I tried to go to Moolack beach last year but couldn’t figure out how to get down to the beach. We ended up on the wrong side of that stream.
    You guys need to check out Tunnel Beach near Tillamook. Lots of pretty agates and green jaspers. That’s where I found my first agate… it was a pretty almost black color. Go through the tunnel and there are tons of rocks.

  • @TruthWillSetYouFree832
    @TruthWillSetYouFree832 Год назад +1

    That "Sevenupite" is pretty! 😁 There is so much to learn about what you're looking at when it comes to the fossilized treasures. I'm trying to ID some things I found here, where we don't have much in terms of agates or other, more exotic specimens. It's pretty much just a lot of grays. :)

  • @jscottchrist5178
    @jscottchrist5178 Год назад +1

    I'm confused. Video posted yesterday, filmed in May?

    • @CurrentlyRockhounding
      @CurrentlyRockhounding  Год назад +1

      That is correct. I normally have a lead time on videos so that there is a buffer in case I can't make a video for a week or two there is still content to be posted and I never miss a week without having a video go up. This also allows me to work on bigger and more complex projects at times.

  • @Nrscathy60
    @Nrscathy60 Год назад +1

    Your concretion is a Bivalve such as a scallop. Where was "here?" Was that beach near, or at, Tillamook? Great finds. Fossils are a fun class of objects to find. Just the research of what they are and when they were possibly alive is the exciting part. Branch out. You don't live too far away!😂 Expand your knowledge. ❤

  • @eddeckert278
    @eddeckert278 Год назад +1

    Great to get to experience what is out there by you. I doubt that I will ever get out to the Pacific Northwest, but watching your video made it feel like I was there.

  • @Rich_N
    @Rich_N Год назад +2

    Looks like YT either hid my earlier comment or it was deleted.
    Commenting for engagement!

  • @largent45
    @largent45 Год назад +3

    That was a great collab! You can definitely learn a lot from karen about the different rocks, minerals, and bones that you will find on the beach. She is very knowledgeable and then Kent is a wealth of information! His fossil collection is enormous! And he just goes down and oicks them up and lets the kids fromthe college come out and id them and catalog them. But he has literally found thousands of fossil bones some great finds and some not so great, but he collects them all. And now armed with the knowledge and experience of finding these things, you really need to go back out to the beach, and try your lick doing it on your own! Its a lot of fun. Im in no way an expert when it comes to fossil bones, but they all belonged to some creature that was there millions of years before us, and i think that is the coolest part.
    Thanks Jared and Sarah, and Karen, and Kyle, for a wonderfully entertaining and informative video. I love fossils, and i love the beach, and this is a great combonation of the two! Thanks Jared!

  • @graemero5532
    @graemero5532 Год назад +3

    I wonder, Is your dog named after Laika the Soviet space dog ?

  • @MrPhillip2
    @MrPhillip2 Год назад +1

    Towards the end (14:47) there’s a mystery rock. I may be wrong, but it reminded me of pisolites.
    en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pisolite

  • @oodz
    @oodz Год назад +1

    5m10s it looks as if you two are standing on a giant rib cage.