I'm Afraid of Heights and Almost Turned Back On This Hike...

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  • @JamesJones-cx5pk
    @JamesJones-cx5pk Год назад +66

    I'm from Mississippi and me and my buddies went out west a few decades ago for 3 weeks camping. We did a guided tour of Masa Verde. I was blown away. Being able to find and see things like this on your own is incredible! Keep it up.👍

    • @robaldridge6505
      @robaldridge6505 Год назад +1

      mEsa verde

    • @russward2612
      @russward2612 Год назад +2

      Welcome to the scenic wonders of the American West. You've only begun to explore the magnificent views that await you.
      You'll never get to see them all, there are WAY too many, hidden and scattered over thousands of square miles, in some of the most in difficult, desolate terrain on Earth.
      These were some tough people.

  • @sandramorey2529
    @sandramorey2529 Год назад +8

    This was really fun. Thanks a lot.

  • @fisch69
    @fisch69 Год назад +5

    What a beautiful place!👍

  • @RobynSouder-rt9jf
    @RobynSouder-rt9jf Год назад +32

    I appreciate how respectful you are to these incredible places. Thank you so much for taking me along on these wonderful treks, the type I use to do.

    • @TheSmokie55
      @TheSmokie55 Год назад

      One of the best on YT and that's why I like being a subscriber. Very respectful content.

  • @123456wasp
    @123456wasp Год назад +36

    Just walk in their foot steps and they will guide you through their dwellings. Very nice video. I really like the respect you give to these places you visit. 😎👍

  • @robingrüling5560
    @robingrüling5560 Год назад +32

    My late-husband and I took a trip to Santa Fe, NM back in 1990 when I was 30 years old. We went to visit Bandelier National Monument and were the only two people there. We got to go inside every nook and cranny of those ruins and I felt such an incredible connection to that place. I’ve never been able to adequately explain it, but it felt like I was drawn to it on a deep, spiritual level. I appreciate and respect your sense of adventure and excitement at seeing all these ruins for the first time, and can’t thank you enough for bringing me along. Stay safe!

    • @mf5985
      @mf5985 Год назад

      I know exactly what you mean about being drawn to the place. I feel that way about New Mexico in general. I live in Colorado.. but we bought a condo in Angel Fire, NM. I swear, when we drive down and cross the border, the atmosphere changes. It's quite amazing! 💕

    • @elouiserichards7606
      @elouiserichards7606 8 месяцев назад

      Question? Where's the restroom? 😢

  • @TrzCharlie
    @TrzCharlie Год назад +8

    Once again thank you for taking us along. I enjoy your adventures a lot.

  • @prieten49
    @prieten49 Год назад +11

    It was very interesting to see the masonry. Some walls were covered with mud inside and out. Some of the mud mortar between the sandstones had twigs in them. Imagine having to carry clay and water and stones and wood up to that arched alcove!

  • @sandradanforth8524
    @sandradanforth8524 Год назад +9

    I think I will start praying for you. Just watching you scares me. I love your adventures and sharing with us, I would never have gotten to see those wonderful ancient places. Thank you. 😊

  • @johnmeszaros3827
    @johnmeszaros3827 Год назад +14

    After taking 11 straight years out to trek the world I returned home and still haven’t trekked my own nation, too old now so keep on trekking where few have gone before. I’m following with appreciation.

  • @faerieSAALE
    @faerieSAALE Год назад +8

    If those rocks could talk, OH, the stories they could tell! Can't imagine that lifestyle. Just a few steps from the actual stone age.
    Thanks for the tour TREK PLANNER.

    • @Norsktype
      @Norsktype Год назад

      Rocks are actually well known for being aggressive and bloodthirsty beasts among many indigenous peoples. You should pray to your gods that you will never hear their bloodcurling cries of war, it would be the last thing you ever heard. A dead rock is a good rock.

  • @user-yv2sc5qv7x
    @user-yv2sc5qv7x Год назад +4

    The directional-windblown green grasses at 8:35 was something we haven't seen before. Moisture & shade.

  • @christopherbusch1933
    @christopherbusch1933 Год назад +7

    I imagine these sites were built in troubled times. Imagine the places by the rivers now washed away by time!

  • @helenburke9507
    @helenburke9507 Год назад +1

    Thank you for being so respectful of our ancient culture ! Certainly hope and wish all exploration people would be and are respectful!! Stay safe.

  • @TheSmokie55
    @TheSmokie55 Год назад +2

    I am so grateful that you trek to these sites and document them. Being that those are so easily accessible. They made be destroyed by visitors soon and all but forgotten. Those are very well intact for the potential age of them. Thank you again.

  • @beverlyhayshouston2770
    @beverlyhayshouston2770 Год назад +4

    That was amazing. Thank you for sharing. They probably stayed safe and warm. I could picture buffalo hides and blankets.

  • @Lb-df4xi
    @Lb-df4xi 9 месяцев назад +1

    Would like to see what you found at the end of those steps and also the alcoves across the valley. Maybe a part 2?

  • @sdavis7916
    @sdavis7916 Год назад +20

    I'm not afraid of heights however I think this would've been past my self preservation buffer.
    You, sir, are amazing.

    • @TheTrekPlanner
      @TheTrekPlanner  Год назад +1

      Really appreciate that! Thank you!

    • @corneliusdinkmeyer2190
      @corneliusdinkmeyer2190 Год назад +1

      Especially doing it alone!!! One wrong step & your laying waiting for someone to notice you didn’t come back, then figure out where to search for you! Phew! Amazing!

    • @joyfullone3968
      @joyfullone3968 8 месяцев назад

      Yes I would never have done this it only takes one misstep to break bones. I really think drones are a wiser choice for these dangerous sites!

  • @random22026
    @random22026 Год назад +5

    This was GREAT! And your advice (hiking, exploring the ruins), SOUND! 😊😊🥾🥾🥾🥾🥾🥾🥾🥾🥾🥾🥾

  • @janettetippetts7942
    @janettetippetts7942 Год назад +1

    Wow, that was enough to make my stomach churn, even though I know you are very experienced and are wearing the right shoes . . . I think it's all the loose rock maybe. All I can say is good for you and thank you for respecting these sites. I love watching.

  • @SeMoArtifactAdventures
    @SeMoArtifactAdventures Год назад +29

    I hope that someday I get to see the area you are in. Most of the places in my area like that have been destroyed by farming or looting. In the early 1900s there were over 4000 documented mounds in my county. Now there are probably less than 50. I really enjoy your channel man. Its cool seeing what you find on google earth.

    • @TheTrekPlanner
      @TheTrekPlanner  Год назад +7

      Thank you! It's sad to see many of these sights here disappearing to looting too :-( Where are all these mounds at??

    • @SeMoArtifactAdventures
      @SeMoArtifactAdventures Год назад +9

      @@TheTrekPlanner I’m in southeast Missouri. In scott county. All of southeast Missouri was once a huge swamp and the natives built huge mound complexes in the swamp to live on. The swamp was drained in the early 1900s and the huge cypress trees were logged revealing these mounds. Most of them were looted for the pottery vessels most of them contained. My area is famous for a lot of the Mississippian era head pots that were buried along side the people in the mounds.

    • @georgesheffield1580
      @georgesheffield1580 Год назад

      Those in the west are being destroyed by land owners and looters for profit and are not being prosecuted by the right wing constitutional sherriffs and local DA's .

    • @bethbartlett5692
      @bethbartlett5692 Год назад +1

      ​​@@TheTrekPlanner
      @ 7:20 (Notice the ash in the floor, and apparently it's been swept). I would take a QTip and an old Spice Container, glass so it could be sterilized in the inside, and swap a bit of the smoke, and have it "Carbon Dated" at you local University). It may be recent or from the time of habitation.
      I would gather it from an area closer to the wall. Could do a separate in another space.
      Label Date of Collection, use latex gloves, just to keep it as forensic as possible.
      Just keep it closed until you can find a University lab that will do it "for the value 9f their studies", and they shouldn't charge you.
      I would make friend with a Student or Faculty Member. (I would take a course that allow me to get to do some of this. How fun that would be to get credits for doing your Passion!)
      Geology, Anthropology, or Archaeology (although the latter guys really frustrate me with their "Belief" rather than Open Minded Discoveries and Facts)
      "Mainstream Academics" use a 19th Century Theory as their foundation for their Paradigm and Linear Timeline ".
      The "Standards of Science and Research " prohibits using a Theory as Fact. "Authentic Academics" follow the "Standards of Science and Research" (my values are here).
      Enjoy your Explorations and Discoveries!!!
      Beth Bartlett
      Sociologist Behavioralist
      and Historian

  • @fisch69
    @fisch69 Год назад +3

    You have been finding some incredible sites and I appreciate your respect for these ancient artifacts and people!👍

  • @exploringincalifornia2470
    @exploringincalifornia2470 Год назад +7

    One of the most interesting channels I have found. I love this stuff!

  • @peanut71968
    @peanut71968 Год назад +4

    Most enjoyable and informative, lest not forget inspiring! Thanks for doing!

  • @dianefairbanks9373
    @dianefairbanks9373 Год назад +1

    I don’t know if you are crazy brave or just crazy but I love your hikes and the respect you show these sites!

  • @juliebridge7590
    @juliebridge7590 2 года назад +9

    Awesome video, wish how we could see how these industrious people lived, fascinating people that lived there! Thanks again!

    • @TheTrekPlanner
      @TheTrekPlanner  2 года назад +2

      I agree! Thank you for watching, Julie!

  • @thomasteske9127
    @thomasteske9127 Год назад +2

    Visited various Butler Wash sites including this one with my hiking buddy Daren in 11/2021 and still get anxious remembering that exposed section. Great area to explore. Thanks for a great video!

  • @franzwaltenspuhl8892
    @franzwaltenspuhl8892 Год назад +3

    “I don’t know if it’s real or not” ?! I’d say it definitely is☺️

  • @JulianaBlewett
    @JulianaBlewett Год назад +1

    I love to see the old ovens in places like these.

  • @mikesmith135
    @mikesmith135 Год назад +1

    Thanks!

    • @TheTrekPlanner
      @TheTrekPlanner  Год назад

      Thank you so much, Mike!! Appreciate you supporting my channel very much!
      -Jeff

  • @terryt.1643
    @terryt.1643 Год назад

    Hard for me to imagine toddlers on those heights, but I’m sure it was families, so yes. Thanks for taking us on your journey. Stay safe! 🙏

  • @davekreitzer4358
    @davekreitzer4358 Год назад +2

    Would be a great place to camp ! With care , of course 😁👍

  • @corneliusdinkmeyer2190
    @corneliusdinkmeyer2190 Год назад

    That would be so cool to see, people across the valley calling out to each other!

  • @ScottGridleyPHD
    @ScottGridleyPHD Год назад

    I'm just finding some of your older content and loving it! Thanks.

  • @corneliusdinkmeyer2190
    @corneliusdinkmeyer2190 Год назад +1

    That one square ruin must have been built by an OCD perfectionist!😆 Cuz that’s amazingly perfect!

  • @grandmakellymcdonald
    @grandmakellymcdonald Год назад +1

    Let’s go let’s go adventure

  • @Rocksider2525
    @Rocksider2525 Год назад

    Thanks for sharing these incredible hikes. Seeing water seepage makes me think a gallon collected a day is plenty to survive on. Hunting had to get tougher by the day. Great place I coulda survived in. Imagine the shape these people were in. The kids musta grown up tough and able to run those hills hunting and gathering. Great video. Thanks for sharing.

  • @janiceconnett3192
    @janiceconnett3192 Год назад +3

    Great trek...always too short! Loved the way you showed the twigs in the mud pieces. Amazing trek...good that you have the right shoes to grip those tiny steps! Surprised that you didn't encounter any snakes or lizards.

    • @metaldetectingwithlugnut
      @metaldetectingwithlugnut Год назад +2

      A lizard scoots by @ 2:43 going center to right. I agree though eyes peeled for larger fanged wigglies.

    • @janiceconnett3192
      @janiceconnett3192 Год назад

      @@metaldetectingwithlugnut Thanks for your keen eye! I will look for it!

    • @ramonvasquez4890
      @ramonvasquez4890 Год назад

      Yes I saw some lizards in the video.

  • @robertodebeers2551
    @robertodebeers2551 Год назад +3

    I enjoy these treks so much. Always expect a bobcat to come boiling out of one the enclosures or caves.

  • @virginiageorges4799
    @virginiageorges4799 Год назад

    Another great video down memory lane. I love the videos, and appreciate you keeping most locations secret and showing respect. Growing up, I’ve seen ruins destroyed be people looking for pottery. I know people who have gone and destroyed them to look for pottery and also chiseled the petroglyphs off the cliffs.

  • @gregruland1934
    @gregruland1934 Год назад +1

    Grats on 100,000 you earned 'em all well done

  • @Gregtheguide
    @Gregtheguide Год назад +4

    Moki steps , found all over CR , I have explored Comb Ridge for 30 years and still go back , we only get to see a small section there , but its littered with ruins and art , all the way into AZ, Im a private guide in that area and at Mesa Verde .

    • @MegaLivingIt
      @MegaLivingIt Год назад

      They might have run out of their water supply there so had to abandon the location eventually?

    • @Gregtheguide
      @Gregtheguide Год назад

      @@MegaLivingIt The whole 4 corners region was in drought , plus dwindling resources . They are direct descendants of the Hopi and Zuni tribes . Migrated south and are still there today along the RIO Grande river in New Mexico . If anything these people might have had it a little easier being closer to the San Jaun river . But 1300 AD the party was over and all Ancestral Puebloans had to go .

  • @craigslyst
    @craigslyst Месяц назад +1

    It looked like you could have walked on other side of the big rock or over it instead of along the cliff, really nice eagles nest ruins, great conditiion, its amazing how the small granaries look like swallows nests stuck to the side o cliff, nice video, nice ruins!

  • @Katnip452
    @Katnip452 День назад

    For those who enjoy this content, there’s also a similar channel, Desert Drifter, and that guy explores a lot of cliff dwelling ruins as well. There seem to be so many of them, it’s just amazing to realize how heavily populated these “remote” spots actually were, over the years. The great mystery is the story explaining what events and upheavals forced people to live in such precarious spots. The inter-tribal raiding doesn’t quite cut it.

  • @anyascelticcreations
    @anyascelticcreations Год назад

    Faint of heart raising hand. 🙋‍♀️ At least when it comes to heights. I was feeling it just watching you hike there via my phone. 😅 Gosh, it's beautiful there, though. And those ruins are incredible! Thank you for taking us there while our bums are firmly planted on solid ground. 😅

  • @h.a.boswell9617
    @h.a.boswell9617 Год назад +7

    Great video. I appreciate the respect you have for the artifacts you found. I wonder if the archeological department at one of Utahs universities would be interested in this area.

    • @TheTrekPlanner
      @TheTrekPlanner  Год назад +2

      Thank you! I think this one has been surveyed before

  • @zipshed
    @zipshed Год назад +2

    Very cool to see these homes from so long ago. Its easy to imagine people living there and doing their daily activities, raising a family. Amazing!

  • @williamskris6335
    @williamskris6335 8 месяцев назад

    Incredible find!! TY for sharing!!! God Bless!!!

  • @jaycee6996
    @jaycee6996 Год назад +1

    From the distribution of soot on the ceiling the cave was clearly used by people lighting fires long before the walls of the dwellings were built.

  • @dr.froghopper6711
    @dr.froghopper6711 Год назад +1

    I once, long long ago, worked with special forces and regularly worked in hills like that. Even training is dangerous when you’re simulating combat. I took a few spills that, 42+ years later, I still feel. Be careful out there if you’re hiking solo!

  • @charlielaudico3523
    @charlielaudico3523 Год назад

    Both of my sons did live in Moab Utah in the late 90s,there are so much ruins all around town and a short ride out of town,i was amazed that there was so much in such a small area.

  • @karinschild9020
    @karinschild9020 Год назад

    Love this! I would love to hike in beautiful Utah

  • @edyoung6756
    @edyoung6756 Год назад +1

    You always have the best videos.

    • @TheTrekPlanner
      @TheTrekPlanner  Год назад +1

      Thank you, Ed!!

    • @edyoung6756
      @edyoung6756 Год назад

      @@TheTrekPlanner You earned it big guy. I'm just glad to watch them.

  • @infinit12
    @infinit12 Год назад +1

    they did pick awesome spots with chokehold at entrance. would be hard to attack.

  • @megalou6567
    @megalou6567 Год назад

    Absolutely incredible

  • @juliojames5986
    @juliojames5986 Год назад +3

    Very interesting. Unknown specifics , why, when, who, how long, enemies, stone, mud, grasses, clothing, food, defending from ? Thanks for these intriguing vids. 👍🏻🤠

  • @bethsands7665
    @bethsands7665 11 месяцев назад

    You are an awesome and true mountain goat !

  • @nancykennon310
    @nancykennon310 Год назад +1

    I like that it's hard to find. No one has vandalized it.

  • @sheilam4964
    @sheilam4964 Год назад

    8:15 remember families lived here for however many years , meaning lots of babies and children climbing around up here were our adult friend is filming this for us. 👍👍👍👍👍

  • @TheNacho1717
    @TheNacho1717 8 месяцев назад

    I love it! Thanks for sharing.

  • @mincemeatpie2543
    @mincemeatpie2543 Год назад

    I am almost positive that I did this hike for an Eco Psychology course about ten years ago. It was breath-taking in both the view and the hike up! Be sure to wear very grippy shoes.

  • @margaret-pb6mt
    @margaret-pb6mt 2 месяца назад

    It looks like the walls aren’t smack up against the back wall of the cave, and had back doors as well so they could walk from one end of the cave floor to the other by squishing by between homes and the back wall of the cave. That way they didn’t need to go by the outside edge and chancing a fall or taking a hit from enemies. Amazing!

  • @davidkerns5413
    @davidkerns5413 Год назад

    Great videos, thanks for sharing

  • @washingtonroad6738
    @washingtonroad6738 Год назад

    Magnificent. Thank you.

  • @asimms65
    @asimms65 Год назад

    This video made me look away a couple of times. But the ruins were beautiful.

  • @haroldgardiner1966
    @haroldgardiner1966 Год назад +1

    Do you think that that seepage area was source of water, and mud to make mortar for the stone houses?

  • @hilarybromley3064
    @hilarybromley3064 Год назад +1

    Physical history to be treasured

  • @deepj3908
    @deepj3908 6 месяцев назад

    How exciting!! Takes ya back to those days and makes one think of how they lived and survived tucked into a mountain. Thanks for sharing but can i make a suggestion please, try to not move the camera so much and go slower because us old folks would like to revel in the beauty of these dwellings for more than a second. Plus it gives me a headache with swift movements. 😉🥰 Thanks again and keep em coming!!

  • @craigslyst
    @craigslyst Месяц назад +1

    Jeff, have you ever thought about making your own brick ruins in your back yard, plsy house for the kids or a old time patio barbecue out of natural rock you collected and natural mud clay mortar, might be fun, you could make a granary door and keep propane or charcoal behind it underneath the barbecue?

  • @richardcallihan9746
    @richardcallihan9746 Год назад +2

    At 8:20, I think I would have had to peek around that [apparent]corner. Where does that go, only the Trek Planner knows.

  • @craigslyst
    @craigslyst Месяц назад

    The bigger parallell step impressions look like they are probably Metate bowls in the floor like so many other ruins straight and parallell to each other!

  • @groundzero6662
    @groundzero6662 Год назад +1

    Soot rather than smoke.... but yeah. COOL!!!

  • @richardpetty4105
    @richardpetty4105 Год назад

    You were VERY near the Kachina petroglyph panel which is absolutely huge, and beautiful. You were also near the River House Cliff dwellings both on the San Juan River near the south end of Comb Ridge.

  • @Sonofgod384
    @Sonofgod384 Год назад +1

    This place is beautiful

  • @DanielFCutter
    @DanielFCutter Год назад

    Comb ridge is loaded with these artifacts-a real treasure trove of undisturbed ruins. I volunteered at Natural Bridges for 3 months in the 1980s and was introduced to lots of Anasazi real estate by the full time rangers. Finding these artifacts on your own makes an indelible impression. I think those tiny steps are indicative of the diminutive stature of the inhabitants-between 4 and 5 feet tall, as are the entrances to the dwellings. If my memory serves me you were close to Fish Mouth alcove? That trail looked familiar.

  • @k1j2f30
    @k1j2f30 Год назад +4

    Can you imagine having toddlers and young children up there? Sleepwalkers might have it a little rough up there, too! If someone in the family or group came up missing, you wouldn't have to look very far, to find them.

    • @petergomez6991
      @petergomez6991 Год назад

      I've heard they find skeletons with healed broken bones . Kids who didn't listen to their parents

    • @mikentx57
      @mikentx57 Год назад

      I am sure if those native peoples saw us briefly they would say same about our toddlers around all the zooming cars.

  • @donb7113
    @donb7113 Год назад

    You’re a regal mountain goat the way you make in through the steep rocks.

  • @Jake-vt4ow
    @Jake-vt4ow 20 дней назад

    Incredible find!

  • @appalachiancrestrailroadja6801

    Found some cliff dwellings down in Grand Gulch which is nw of mexican hat and sw of blanding in 1989 it’s a primitive area so you have to check in at the ranger station,it’s about a 5 mile hike and drops about 900 feet,but I’m sure you will like it and so will your viewers. It’s an easy hike and well worth it .

  • @lilashelton535
    @lilashelton535 Месяц назад

    I’m always so amazed at how isolated these “homes” are way up in the rocks surely children couldn’t live there.

  • @timothyoo7
    @timothyoo7 Год назад

    Hello, Tim
    I wanted to thank you for all the cool videos you make.
    Im sure that its a lot of work and time put in behind the scenes.
    Ive got multiple severe, and chronic medical issues that limit my movement and especially my ability to work constantly. So, video's like this and others from all over really help me to see things that i wouldn't be able to otherwise.
    That being said, I am not an invalid and can still hike, just not like i once could. So, once I get my car in better running order, im going to make it a plan to get out and hike, fish, camp... like i used to.
    Thank you for your inspiration!

  • @LeonJackson-dj4re
    @LeonJackson-dj4re 4 месяца назад

    Thank you for outstanding video!!

  • @dirkvanerp7332
    @dirkvanerp7332 Год назад

    I have done a lot of hiking in these areas in search of ruins, I am fascinated by these peoples and their culture.
    One thing I quickly deduced, they lived in tight family groups and I feel were very warlike, look where and how they built, generally all very defensable positions where you could see people approaching from miles away.
    I belive they lived in constant fear of attack from other clans, perhaps to raid their food and possessions?
    Also many times with these ruins, the granaries were hidden some distance away, from where they lived.
    Anyone aproaching was always forced to hike up the canyon floor, would have been at a huge disadvantage, they had and used arrows of course.
    Sad thing is, these ruins that are accessable, near lakes or campsites are destroyed.
    More than once I've caught young kids alone taking great joy in in dismantling these ruins and throwing the rocks down the cliffs, meanwhile back at camp, mom and dad pull back a few brewskies, it's sick, something that stood for 700 to over a thousand years, destroyed by disrespectful, unsupervised kids!

  • @Crodmog83
    @Crodmog83 Год назад

    Love you're video's dude.

  • @margaret-pb6mt
    @margaret-pb6mt 2 месяца назад

    Perhaps the back being somewhat open to allow smoke from fires to exit the house?

  • @johnhart125
    @johnhart125 10 месяцев назад

    This was a cool place, many people once lived here

  • @B-rads
    @B-rads Год назад

    Are you on that ledge holy crap I don't like heights this one got me be careful up there thanks for the adventure

  • @chippywarren9706
    @chippywarren9706 Месяц назад

    I'm with you Brother! Heights are horrible lol!
    Braver than me!
    Well done.

  • @katesutton1476
    @katesutton1476 Год назад

    Great explore.

  • @candymcclure2476
    @candymcclure2476 Год назад

    I have such a fear of heights That this was hard to watch but still great. Gramma Candy

    • @TheTrekPlanner
      @TheTrekPlanner  Год назад

      Hey Gramma Candy! It was hard for me to go there and I probably won't ever do it again!

  • @I_am_Junebug
    @I_am_Junebug 11 месяцев назад

    Why didn't these people use some kind of chimney or other means of ventilation? It must have been so smoky inside.
    Also - these living places are located in defensive spots. Were there tribes or groups warring with each other? Protection from wild animals? It's all so fascinating - makes me want to take some anthropology classes. Thanks for taking us to these amazing places!

  • @margaret-pb6mt
    @margaret-pb6mt 2 месяца назад

    I would love to watch or know what day-to-day life would have been like for these people.

  • @andreajohnson1796
    @andreajohnson1796 Год назад

    Amazing ! !

  • @gersonhay984
    @gersonhay984 Год назад +1

    Very cool.

  • @selfsameday7448
    @selfsameday7448 Год назад +1

    Recall seeing these dwelling buildings in oldWestern cow boy movies !

  • @aukebij3193
    @aukebij3193 Год назад

    at 4.29 against the rock wall, that wall is a bed, they filled it with grass, heather, straw and soft material, a skin over it and they slept on it

  • @davidstrickler6570
    @davidstrickler6570 Год назад +1

    When ever i see habitats like that i always wonder how where the people able to provide for themselves under those extreme conditions. Water would of been a expensive resource. Food would of been grown or harvested a long distance away. And yet they felt it to be necessary to live there.

  • @Zinmar
    @Zinmar Год назад

    These are interesting but what did they do for water and food.

  • @buddymitchell6216
    @buddymitchell6216 Год назад

    I’ve been to comb wash many times. I’d love your help in finding a dwelling my dad found in the 60s

  • @patroberts5449
    @patroberts5449 Год назад

    Sure hope you give a close family or friend your plans for these treks!