The Empty Southwest: Why "No One" Lives In This Region Of The United States

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  • Опубликовано: 2 янв 2025

Комментарии • 710

  • @sapinva
    @sapinva Год назад +618

    One factor you didn't mention is that probably half of that land is either controlled by the federal government or is autonomous native american land (includes the entire four corners and a quarter of Arizona).

    • @pai9255
      @pai9255 Год назад +13

      Yes, this was my thought too.

    • @hillbilly4895
      @hillbilly4895 Год назад +28

      "Facts are overrated" ~ Geoff

    • @lazygongfarmer2044
      @lazygongfarmer2044 Год назад +28

      Not so in Texas. It holds true for the other states though.

    • @driver4818
      @driver4818 Год назад +11

      Navajo area. US 160. Pretty Drive! Beautiful scenery

    • @maxpowr90
      @maxpowr90 Год назад +18

      It honestly feels Geoff is just a script reader and not doing any of the actual research for the videos. It became apparent to me when he was butchering MA locales which is something any geography "nerd" would take pride in correctly pronouncing. It's the same problem with this video.

  • @landofrye
    @landofrye Год назад +113

    The empty southwest is a truly magical place.
    Remember driving on I-10 from Texas back to LA and had to pull over on the side of the highway in southern NM just because the scenery was so...haunting and enchanting.

    • @AmericanDaders
      @AmericanDaders Год назад +3

      It’s definitely haunted out there. Beautiful though. The land of enchantment

    • @mostdopecaptain3350
      @mostdopecaptain3350 Год назад +1

      It’s absolutely gorgeous. Got a spook feel to it. But I can understand after the US govt did what they did to the people of that land.

    • @TheAnnoyingBoss
      @TheAnnoyingBoss Год назад +2

      You havent seen the best views new mexico has to offer. Southern nm is as ugly as an asshole compared to the mountainous northern part I live in. Its really incredible the views and the vast publicly accessable lands where you can go put and no one will come to save you if you run out lf water but out therr is the real good views if you have the vehicle to support you to hey out that far away from any civilization at all. Northern nm is a great place for 4 wheeling dirtbiking etc because of the hills and mountains.

    • @AmericanDaders
      @AmericanDaders Год назад +1

      @@TheAnnoyingBoss man I wish I could’ve done that while I was there

    • @ScottCrawford-d6j
      @ScottCrawford-d6j 10 месяцев назад +1

      I think one of the best drives on a interstate in the nation is I-10 heading east to the city of Las Cruces New Mexico mountains are dreamy and I've lived in Colorado. We know mountains. Awesome desert drive with the mountains in the background makes las cruses a must drive in my opinion if you like the western desert look.

  • @mysticaltyger2009
    @mysticaltyger2009 Год назад +182

    Correction: The Saguaro (pronounced sa-Wah-ro) cactus grows primarily in the Sonoron Desert, which is to the west of the Chihuahuan Desert.

    • @wallacem41atgmail
      @wallacem41atgmail Год назад +4

      I cought that also. Thanks!

    • @BootyEahter
      @BootyEahter Год назад

      Made me so mad... there aren't any saguaro in chichuaha

    • @RedRaiderLobo20
      @RedRaiderLobo20 Год назад +12

      As a New Mexican, I get more upset than I should when people make that mistake 😂

    • @TheDarkhorse386
      @TheDarkhorse386 Год назад +9

      There are no Saguaro cactus in the chihuahuan desert

    • @salvadorlopez1814
      @salvadorlopez1814 Год назад +1

      The Saguaro cactus it’s a plant of the sonora desert, the cactus of the chihuahua desert it’s the yucca.

  • @levistokes3960
    @levistokes3960 Год назад +116

    I actually live in Flagstaff, Arizona. The geology around here is actually pretty cool. We are on top of a volcanic field. The San Fransisco volcanic field. And we have huge mountain peaks here that are about 11-12,000ft. Although flagstaff itself is at 7k ft. The mountains around here are dormant volcanoes. It doesn't get hot here like southern arizona.

    • @patrick0uch
      @patrick0uch Год назад +2

      it's probably snowing in Flagstaff now

    • @levistokes3960
      @levistokes3960 Год назад +3

      @patrick0uch it's not currently but it got about 4in over Thanksgiving. The mountains are snow capped now. Last year though we broke q record fir flagstaff. 140 inches of snow over the season. The ski resort stayed open till almost may.

    • @patrick0uch
      @patrick0uch Год назад +2

      @@levistokes3960 that's awesome for the ski resort, probably not awesome for the residents. i plan on going to the ski resort when i visit my friend in phoenix in a couple weeks

    • @alvidrez7956
      @alvidrez7956 Год назад +6

      Flagstaff is beautiful , but what trips me out is 1 hour south and your in the desert

  • @HighDesertPsychedeliaCinema
    @HighDesertPsychedeliaCinema Год назад +32

    I chose to live out in Belen NM because an acre of land was cheaper than a month of rent in the city. Lucky enough to have a friendly neighbor with a well & smart enough to setup rainwater harvesting systems. People across the world thrive in even harsher environments. Research the "Tuscon swales". Natural buildings (adobe) are exceedingly easy to build given the rich clay/sandy soil. Giving up modern luxuries to live a humble, impoverished but empowered & natural life is a breath of fresh air in our era of industrial instability.

    • @TomFarrell-p9z
      @TomFarrell-p9z Год назад +1

      I retired to the Sandia Mountains for similar reasons. Sitting by a fire right now from beatle killed wood I harvested from my own land. Heating paid by "sweat equity" and helping prevent wildfires in the process.

  • @adithyaramachandran7427
    @adithyaramachandran7427 Год назад +105

    The water stress in cities like phoenix and las vegas is a real concern given the exponential growth. Longer term, these areas should stop building massive swimming pools, tropical themed neighborhoods, and fountains so that residents have enough water to survive. Increase the penalties when valuable fresh water is misused for vanity projects.

    • @BobPantsSpongeSquare97
      @BobPantsSpongeSquare97 Год назад +15

      Even though those are problematic, they're actually not the primary cause of water stress. The vast majority of our water goes to growing crops specifically for cows to graze on

    • @henlohenlo689
      @henlohenlo689 Год назад +1

      las vegas is an outlier. it's in a horrible location as far climate and resources, but it makes up for it being right next to the colorado river which gives it some water. and still somewhat close to so cal which is another region has alot of resources from the ports. people of so cal go to vegas for more fun activities if you know what i mean, but also go to mexico for that aswell california the laws are too strict on certain things.

    • @reesejabs1895
      @reesejabs1895 Год назад +1

      Agreed! I visited Las Vegas earlier this year and was saddened by how much water they waste. It's also sad to see Lake Mead drained so far.

    • @FirstnameLamename
      @FirstnameLamename Год назад +3

      Water is not "stressed" but politicized and economized at the same time. It is sold at a current rate, to consumers, large and small, who make decisions to consume water, large and small, based on scarce resources in their control.

    • @MotoringAdventures_KE7SAI
      @MotoringAdventures_KE7SAI Год назад +8

      @@reesejabs1895They wouldn’t be able to “waste it” if they didn’t have it. I’ve lived in both Vegas and Phoenix for considerable amounts of time and they’ve planned for long term growth with the scarcity of water and are well aware of what they have. Despite what it looks like, they are some of the most water efficient cities in the world. Everyone else should take note.

  • @briansieve
    @briansieve Год назад +58

    A lifelong Midwest boy. I've lived near El Paso for 4.5 years. I'm amazed at the beauty of the land and people of New Mexico. It's my new favorite state. I may retire there

    • @YachtsOnTheReg7
      @YachtsOnTheReg7 Год назад +5

      Hope you don't need good health care bc the healthcare and insurance companies in NM suck. It's the main reason I'm leaving this state.

    • @davidkachel
      @davidkachel Год назад +4

      Hope you aren't fond of the Bill of Rights. It is null and void in New Mexico.

    • @briansieve
      @briansieve Год назад +9

      Y'all are such drama queen snowflakes

    • @eugenecrawford14
      @eugenecrawford14 Год назад

      I retired to New Mexico,, I carry everywhere everyday,, no one even notices
      I am 384 miles north of El paso, in tres Piedras, taos County
      Don't let the democratic socialist communist nazi Marxist party members scare you away

    • @drewskij2175
      @drewskij2175 Год назад +3

      @@briansieve healthcare will get much better, a lot of docs and nurses left during the lockdowns to neighboring states. My wife came from the medical profession here in NM but worked in NJ where we moved from years past, it was the same problems there as it is here. However I will say this, Ive been waiting over a year to see an ENT doc, she's had no issues seeing any professional she's needed to.
      Politically though, NM is an absolute mess, very similar to California but hope it's hit rock bottom with no where to go but up.

  • @jackcoats4146
    @jackcoats4146 Год назад +110

    I loved my time living in El Paso, and being next door to Juarez makes the contiguous city a large metro area with about 3M+ people. Jobs took me away, but it has wonderful memories and culture on both sides of the border.

    • @hugoponders
      @hugoponders Год назад +19

      Yeah, not treating El Paso Juarez as a metroplex really undersells the truth.

    • @Bleakmarrow
      @Bleakmarrow Год назад +7

      @@hugoponders It’s actually called a borderplex

    • @Bleakmarrow
      @Bleakmarrow Год назад

      @@hugoponderswith El Paso and Juarez

    • @Bleakmarrow
      @Bleakmarrow Год назад

      @@hugopondersAnd just southern New Mexico to the north

    • @Bleakmarrow
      @Bleakmarrow Год назад +6

      @@hugoponderswhich includes las cruces

  • @sifridbassoon
    @sifridbassoon Год назад +27

    I grew up on the southern plains. It is flat. It is VERY flat. And very dry. There's a saying "Lubbock Texas isn't' hell, but you can see it from there," (with different versions depending on which town you live in).
    I'm surprised that when you were talking about water sources, you didn't mention the Ogalala Aquifer.

  • @binx2smooth
    @binx2smooth Год назад +125

    Tiny quibble: The desert scene with the saguaro cacti is of the Sonoran Desert, not the Chihuahuan.
    A point for consideration: Whether Taos Pueblo and Acoma Pueblo in New Mexico qualify as "cities" by geographers' definitions. If yes, THEY are possibly the oldest cities in the contiguous USA, each having been established about 1,000 years ago.

    • @pelicanus4154
      @pelicanus4154 Год назад +20

      yep, you'll never see organ pipe cactus in the Chihuahuan desert.

    • @magellanicspaceclouds
      @magellanicspaceclouds Год назад +8

      Yea, those Pueblos would be the oldest non-European cities/settlements to my knowledge.

    • @ericr154
      @ericr154 Год назад

      Are the pueblos part of the US or are they independent? Maybe that's why they don't count them.

  • @basicstrange1617
    @basicstrange1617 Год назад +15

    Thank you. As a father of five I struggle to find educational and entertaining content for my younger children. The twins just hit their teen years and it's so hard to get them going in a positive direction concerning online content. They want to be RUclipsers more than anything and you have given me hope. You channel is a a great resource for both entertainment and you are a good role model for kids wanting to create content. Thank you. It's so very nice to be able to watch your videos with them and teach them a variety of lessons.

  • @OrlValdez
    @OrlValdez Год назад +16

    There is also Mexicali, a city around 1M people contrasting Calexico which has less than 50K people

  • @schris3
    @schris3 Год назад +45

    I live by the region you're saying, in El Paso, Texas, at the extreme western panhandle of Texas. And yes we have the the typical desert weather, but not like Phoenix, because as a high altitude desert overlooking the southern tip of the Rocky mountains, we do have cold although bearable winters, that's why weather wise we aren't as attractive for guys that like spring like winters in Phoenix. And as you can see in the map, we are quite remote and as the city name implies, we been for centuries a mountain pass that the Rio Grande cut through and a crossroads to either California, the Rocky mountains and the Great Plains.

    • @HeronPoint2021
      @HeronPoint2021 Год назад +5

      Phoenix. Won three speech events in a tournament there. Eight months of broiling piss pot hot. No thanks. I'd take El Paso any day.

    • @kaymillerfromTX
      @kaymillerfromTX Год назад +5

      As a Houstonian, that’s always made me jealous of your weather. Phoenix weather sucks as does Houston’s. Our winters used to be more consistent when I was growing up. Just chilly at night with a few cold days here and there. Now we go from 82 to 20 and snow to 65 in the same week. Makes energy bills higher too when you’re running ac and heat all the time. Today is a nice 58 though :)

    • @schris3
      @schris3 Год назад +3

      @@kaymillerfromTX Although with climate change, El Paso weather is starting to resemble Phoenix's, and Phoenix weather is waltzing into becoming more like the Middle East.

    • @kaymillerfromTX
      @kaymillerfromTX Год назад +2

      @@schris3 LOL! You aren’t wrong there.

    • @Sins83
      @Sins83 Год назад +1

      ​@user-zp7jp1vk2i its only brutal June-Sept. May and October are mild 90s. Nov-April is perfect. Your 8 months is backwards. Besides, Phoenix is only 1.5hrs from mountain country and a 30 degree temp relief. Rim country is heaven in July.

  • @tritosac
    @tritosac Год назад +71

    I grew up in Dallas. After spending the majority of my life in Dallas I moved out to El Paso. The 10 hour drive is brutal as my back & lets hurt from sitting for so long. Once I got out of Ft. Worth into Weatherford & saw the sign for El Paso at 545 miles I knew I was in for a long damn ride. But to me it was interesting to see the gradual change of vegetation down to dry shrubs, yucca, nopal cactus & creosote. I love the desert. I don't care what anyone says. I'd love to get lost in the desert & die in the desert on a spirit quest. The song by America was stuck in my head-Been to the desert on a horse with no name it felt good to be out of the rain. In the desert you can't remember your name Cause there ain't no one for to give you no pain. I am glad I am here. Sure beats all that severe weather, tornados, humidity and other crap you have back in DFW.

    • @jeremiahallyn4603
      @jeremiahallyn4603 Год назад +9

      10 hours? That is wild. It takes 13 hours to get from my home in Central Kentucky to my family's home in Tyler, TX. And that's going through 3 separate states!

    • @greglane3978
      @greglane3978 Год назад +9

      Simple rule of thumb for anyone that has never been to West Texas.
      Let me start by saying DFW and those big eastern Texas cities ARE NOT west Texas as many of them call themsleves "west Texas" since they think it sounds cool. West Texas starts around Del Rio. Draw a line straight north from Del Rio. Your on the west side of the line you are in west Texas. If your on the east side of the line you are not west Texas.
      Everytime you see a gas station in West Texas stop and fill up. If you own an EV you are screwed as you will not find very many charging stations if any. Rent a U-haul gas or diesel pickup and trailer and load your EV on the trailer if you want to travel in west Texas.
      Also carry water in your vehicle. If you break down on the trip between towns you are a long way away from help and summers easily get to 105F plus.
      If your from CA it all looks like this in west Texas and you really need to go to Austin or back to CA as you are not welcome here.

    • @tritosac
      @tritosac Год назад +3

      @@greglane3978 Oh trust me. I stopped to fill up 6 or 7 times. I never took a chance. When you're getting out of Midland it is scarce. It's a little scary to think what would happen if my car broke down. But I got to say it's beautiful scenery at the same time. You're right about places like Ft. Worth whose slogan is "where the West begins" No it doesn't. Not by a long shot. They call themselves cowtown. Funny.

    • @tracejones5952
      @tracejones5952 Год назад +13

      ​@@greglane3978I'm from Dallas and literally not one person in my entire life has ever called DFW "West Texas". Also I severely dislike people like you who try to tell people where they can live and stay as if you wanting them there matters at all. You or one of your relatives had to move to West Texas at some point in the near past and you have the gall to try and prevent people from getting the same opportunity. It's just crazy to me that everyone seems to forget that in the 1930's and 1940's a large amount of people in West Texas, Oklahoma, and Kansas moved out to California. People will follow the opportunities and employment and ignorant people like you aren't going to stop that.

    • @tracejones5952
      @tracejones5952 Год назад +3

      @@tritosac because it's true. If you looked at a topographical map of the U.S. you can see a clear ecological dividing line across the U.S. that goes just west of Ft. Worth, (the 98th meridian). Just because it isn't as western as West Texas doesn't make it not western. It's the transition zone. So a nickname like the Beginning of the West is very appropriate and even more appropriate in the early 1900's when it first got the name.

  • @cbuk8691
    @cbuk8691 Год назад +12

    Grew up in the "empty" region. Odessa Texas. It was a good place to grow up but I left after college (Lubbock Tx) to more habitable regions. I do like going back for drives there. No traffic and wide open views.

  • @TrexJerk8
    @TrexJerk8 Год назад +26

    Saguaro cactus only grow in the Sonoran Desert, not the Chihuahuan desert

  • @RedRaiderLobo20
    @RedRaiderLobo20 Год назад +14

    I’m from that region. It’s a harsh landscape, with little water, and meager economic opportunities. I now live in the NYC area, and the contrast is steeper than we even make it out to be.
    Also, there are no saguaros in the Chihuahuan desert. That’s the Sonoran desert.

    • @TheAnnoyingBoss
      @TheAnnoyingBoss Год назад

      I mean it also depends what you mean by meager economic opportunity. Nurses doctors lawyers they make bank anywhere bro. I live in nm i make every penny from the stock market I averaged 1-2.3k per day just this week in my stock value appriciation not even including my stocks representation worth of the companies assets which is now significantly high. Thats plenty of opportunity. Yeah there isnt a pf changs unless youre in albuquerque and there isnt tesla audi and bmw dealers unless youre in albuquerque but theres more economic benefit even in NM than you might think. If all you look for is jobs at taco bell of course youll think theres no opportunity. Its the land of enchantment man... To me i live here because its flawed but i will be fighting to make nm more like texas, and there is plenty of opportunity for me. I made 5k sitting on my ass last week man im 25 years old. Where there isnt oppprtunity you have to make it. Opportunity is only where youre willing to let your eyes see it. If you want to act like theres no opportinity there wont be for you. Stop saying there is no good jobs. I havent worked a W2 job in years in nm as there is so much opportunity i dont even have to. I go do my own thing to get my own money theres plenty of opportunity here you simply have to create it if what you want isnt there or think outside the box. I have plenty of ideas for opportunity here to build up my community over my life so it will outlast me for the peoples benefit. You dont have to work at mcdonalds bro im going to buy a 25k plot of land near my family here in nm and ill develop it. Theres plenty of ways to make money here if you dont thinl there is its because youre too used to being spoonfed opportunity so you think there is none when its simply a different kind of opportunity than youre used to. You have to think a little harder use a little intution a little intelligence and wisdom and diligence and the opportunity will become obvious to you where you thought it wasnt before. I have plenty of ideas im going to start an investment firm with my money im saving and im going to cut deals with my family for investment for a cut of the company as my family is not struggling with opportunity here either. This state is where we went from dirt poor to very comfortable upper middle class. Driving audis houses on hilltops. Come on man! Doesnt look like low economic opportinity to me. I have other ideas that are less for work and more for fun so when you say theres not a lot of opportunity to me what it means is there isnt the opportunity you expect like when you go to huston or new york city. Its a different kind of opportunities out here man. I wont tell you what all my secrets are but theres plenty of opportunity you just cant see it because you expect something else. If i hussle and snag all the good doordash shifts i can average 50k+ in one of the most rural areas if i work 7 days a week starting before breakfast and stopping towards midnight. So the money is here eben if all you do is deliver mcnuggets dont be fooled. you just cant expect it to be handed to you on a silver platter. Plus I live in a small town ive lived here most of my life so I know literally tons of the locals. Ive known them for most of my life. Thats great opportunity to me. One day theyll be my greatest employees I will work them half pay them double. Why is it i see opportinity when you do not? If someone wrongs me the town knows us so they fight for us because ive lived here for my life. Like when my family memeber was wrongfully terminated we post on facebook we have a yardsale to fund attourneys and people show up to buy stuff they say to me "i know your dad i know your mom i met your sister!" 😂 we had people want to helo pay for our attourneys because we stick up for each other better. I go to the bank and a guy will stop and yell my name i go to the grocery store someone will yell my name. I am a nobody to the world but here i am nearly famous. i know the people here. The sheriff ive seen around town countless times he even showed up just to break into my car for me when i got locked out. It gives a great feeling to me when i get to be apart of my small small community so when i develop an area it makes a big difference compared to if i was in a big city and no one really knew who i was. Here i painted for the city and they wrote my name on the walls to remember i painted their stuff 😂😂😂. The town likes me. They serve me i serve them we know each other for years and years and years since i was a child. i plant trees for the town and I know plenty of people i grew up with for years will see the same tree. I helped built a brick wall around a sign for a park i spread sod i spread rock i planted trees for my community and it actually makes a difference because people i know will read the wall and see me on it they know who i am already and can see im actually out building up an area 99.9% of usa turns a blind eye too. I ran into one guy in a restroom at one end of town i went to the other and ran into the same guy again 😂😂😂 to me its the greatest place because of things like this. Flawed but better to stay and fight for change like texas does. Im close enough to albuquerque i can sleep in until 9am and still be there by lunch time and enjoy the day there and drive a few hours back home its a day trip. Then I dont have to live anywhere near the big city. I will say, it is a corrupt place like anywhere. We have to sue our own local government once in a while. People running the grocery store get caught embezzling and stuff like that. But i mean it happens anywhere and low popualtions statistically itll be less anyway so there is that. Why is it i see opportunity all over in this land of enchantment yet you do not? Im going to build one of the coolest highly profitable businesses here in this so called "low economic activity zone" where I live is my favorite place. You call it bad ecomomy meanwhile ivd never had a job outside of the area. To me there is plenty of oppprtunity and there is less competition also. Have fun getting a job in LA when they have a gargantuan amount of applicants and they only want to pick 1-10 of them. When I apply for jobs here theres like sub 10 people applying for the same job so my odds of getting the job is way higher. But i havent worked a w2 jov in years that being said. I started a leather wallet company and i decided it wasnt for me so i took all my money and got into investing in the company everyone told me u was crazy to invest into. Well my asset accpunt went from 0 to 125k+ in 2 years so to me when tou say there isnt opportinity here, okay well maybe for you but not for me. I am developing these top secret plans only I know theres all kinds of cool stuff happening here you just dont know it! We were the manhattan project bro. We seem like a place of nothing very cool happening but cool stuff is happening you just dont hear about it. NYC sucks if youre dumb enough to live there you deserve every hyper inflated bill, charge and fees that comes your way. You asked for it. You willingly accept it. Where I live its so cheap i spend so little money my stock protfolio can balloon as my expenses almost dont exist compared to a new yorker. Thats nothing but opportunity man. Land of enchantment not the land of no opportunity.

  • @thehoneybadger8089
    @thehoneybadger8089 Год назад +9

    There are 4 deserts in the US, each identified by certain plant species. Saguaros are the identifying plant and native to the Sonoran Desert only, not the Chihuahuan Desert. The Chihuahuan Desert identifiers are several species of Yucca. The Mojave Desert is identified by the Joshua Tree. And the High Desert is identified by several species of Sage Brush.

    • @TheAnnoyingBoss
      @TheAnnoyingBoss Год назад

      Sage brush is what weve got and its just a tumbleweed before its dead. They drop their seed shrivel up die and the wind snaps them off the ground and they go tumbling pff into the great deep as a timbleweed just like one blowing across the road in the movie

  • @lorenzell3104
    @lorenzell3104 Год назад +12

    It all comes down to a lack of water that keeps the region small. Because of the high elevation, and lack of humidity, high temperatures here are more tolerable. Winters are also quite mild. I should also add that rainfall is irregular. One year you could have abundant regular rain all year long. The next year could be dry, and most of the rain will fall in one month. Irrigation is a necessity in this whole region. Water is the biggest problem in the whole region.

    • @TheAnnoyingBoss
      @TheAnnoyingBoss Год назад

      Yes there is vast wmpty land that is dumb cheap bit its cheap because if you buy it its hard to sell it. You pay 5k for a nice peice of alnd and its size is competitive for the price but there isnt a drop of water or a grocery store for literally hours sometimes. People buy tjat land realise they dont wamt it and have a hard time selling it. So what happens is the land thats where the water is, thats the valuble land. The rio grand and the northwest rivers from the navajo dam and san juan are where the population areas stick around. So thats where the good land is. In the southwest its like semi-ghosttowns plus places a little run down like roswell and theres a big oil industry down there that keeps people around. In my area the northwest its a lot of natural gas industry. Its a peculiar place i just wish it was less like cali and more like texas as it should be

  • @dylansmith9342
    @dylansmith9342 Год назад +7

    I'm one of the 2% of Americans who grew up in the empty South west in Southwest Colorado and live just north of the border outlined in your video today in Central Colorado. It really is a great part of the country. Interesting video on the history and Georgraphy of the area.

  • @adventureswithtwooldladies
    @adventureswithtwooldladies Год назад +26

    You stated that Amarillo's population is around 270,000. I think you might have meant to say Lubbock's population. Amarillo's population is a little over 200,000 from what I've seen.

    • @yaboykris2118
      @yaboykris2118 Год назад

      I was just thinking the same thing.

    • @TheUnknownWorld248
      @TheUnknownWorld248 11 месяцев назад +1

      He did, im from Lubbock and our CSA(Combined Statistical Area) is larger by over 70,000

  • @marcostorres5257
    @marcostorres5257 Год назад +16

    The Juárez metro population 2.5M residents figure you gave also takes into consideration the El Paso and Las Cruces populations. The Juárez metro population excluding them is 1.5M across the city proper and the population in the Juárez Valley

  • @robertward553
    @robertward553 Год назад +19

    I live in Washington State about 50 miles south of Seattle in the foothills of the cascade range by Mt. Rainer. Green, green, green. Visited Farmington New Mexico and drove around the area. Beautiful sites to see, rocks, sand, rock formations were beautiful. After seeing those sites for about 3 weeks, I had to get the hell out.

    • @clwest3538
      @clwest3538 Год назад +4

      I grew up in the SW ... and feel the opposite! Went to eastern TN once - was on the CB and said, "... hey, I thought TN was supposed to be pretty! But how can you tell? .... all the trees are blocking your view!" A quiet reply stated, " ... Welcome to TN you desert flat lander" .... LOL - it was all in good fun. I enjoy looking out over the desert skies like I did in CA looking out over the ocean ... Told my brother in E. TN ... sheeze guy, you don't even see the sun until 10:00 am! I visited the CO Rockies but got a crick in my neck trying to see the sky - until I got up to Pike's Peak. Think I must have 'long' vision! 😆

    • @davidkachel
      @davidkachel Год назад +4

      And we encourage that decision!

    • @davidconn3222
      @davidconn3222 Год назад +2

      Hello from Bowen Island BC , Canada , we are retired now so get out for the winter to Arizona and many other states, love the desert hikes , driving to La Paz in a few weeks for the first time , hope Baja treats us good. many trips to the Skagit valley over the years , can't beat it , EH ?

    • @robertward553
      @robertward553 Год назад +1

      @@davidconn3222 Yes, Skaget valley is beautiful, so is BC. Lakes and rivers, mountain meadows with snow capped mountains beats the hell out of 110 degrees sand and rocks. Just my opinion.

    • @krisg3984
      @krisg3984 Год назад

      @@davidconn3222. Sounds like the best of both worlds ! The Southwest in winter, NV on the summers !

  • @PHXez7939
    @PHXez7939 Год назад +8

    Living in Phoenix I have traversed few of these areas. The first thing that does come to mind is how vast and empty it is.

  • @livingartdesigns06
    @livingartdesigns06 Год назад +27

    Thank you for the informative and excellent presentation. I live in San Diego, but am originally from Albuquerque. I have one small correction to share. The Saguaro cactus is the iconic cactus of the Sonoran Desert, not the Chihuahuan Desert.

    • @davidkachel
      @davidkachel Год назад +1

      But, he's an expert. He must be right. And he taught us all how to pronounce it correctly. It is pronounced: "Sagg-wear-oh". All those years growing up in Arizona, I never knew! Maybe it's because the arms of the cactus "sag"!!

  • @RioAbajoBelen
    @RioAbajoBelen Год назад +24

    Great video and so true. You either love it or hate it out here in New Mexico. After 30 years in California, I love having wide open spaces, mountains, open sky and other amenities.
    Doug
    Belen, New Mexico.

    • @tlaloc9624
      @tlaloc9624 Год назад +1

      Hi Doug. Any tips for moving to New Mex? I'm also from CA and I'm planning to move soon. Thanks

    • @RedRaiderLobo20
      @RedRaiderLobo20 Год назад

      My dad is from Belen, but we live in the NYC area now. When he talks about his childhood and early years, there’s a glow on his face that he doesn’t have otherwise. It’s really a magical place.

    • @allisonjones-lo6795
      @allisonjones-lo6795 Год назад +1

      Yes! I have lived in Santa Fe, NM for over 40 years. I will never leave Santa Fe, either. It is beautiful and comfortable to live here unlike anywhere else I have lived in the US.🥰

    • @michaeldeierhoi4096
      @michaeldeierhoi4096 Год назад

      ​@@tlaloc9624 There is a broad difference in the climate from north to south in New Mexico. It tends to be cooler with a milder climate in the northern half of the state due to the higher elevation. While moving south it becomes warmer year round with milder winters. It depends a lot where you move if you want to a larger city like Albuquerque a tourist town like Santa Fe with a higher cost of living or to a smaller community of which there are many spread around the state.

    • @TheAnnoyingBoss
      @TheAnnoyingBoss Год назад

      If we had no corporate income tax wed have better business. If we had no more conceal carry permits the texans wpuld visit more and they birthed us its sad this great state is crippled demonically by satans liberalism

  • @cleigh113
    @cleigh113 Год назад +8

    It's pretty hard to survive when you can't have access to clean drinkable water.

  • @thatmichiganguy
    @thatmichiganguy Год назад +16

    For these reasons, I'm planning on living there. Living my childhood in the middle east made me prefer open landscape over concrete jungle.
    I'm going ton a road trip exploring most of this landscape in December 2023... starting in Michigan.
    Can't wait to embark on my journey

    • @dennisconrad6124
      @dennisconrad6124 Год назад +4

      Being from Michigan originally, I always thought the same as you. I spent 7 years around Arizona but not in the area covered here. I made several trips to New Mexico trying to convince myself that was what I wanted. But I just couldn’t do it. The thought of having to drive 100 miles to get to a Walmart (just an example) I realized it’s just not for me. Much of what I seen on my several trips, it looked like the whole place was “ Out of Business”

    • @danielclayton7524
      @danielclayton7524 Год назад

      Funny 😂

    • @msovaz77
      @msovaz77 Год назад

      I’m in a Tucson. It’s gorgeous here.

  • @lindaelston4728
    @lindaelston4728 Год назад +1

    We live in central Oklahoma and are 71, so don’t travel very far, and our favorite place to go in our camper, is the Oklahoma Panhandle and into NM and COL a bit. It’s beautiful and very peaceful. No big cities, small towns here and there and it’s a whole different mindset, a timelessness that gets our minds off the mess in the world these days. It’s a whole different feel and the sky, stars, breezes, it’s a very free feeling.

  • @chuckinhouston9952
    @chuckinhouston9952 Год назад +15

    I love West Texas because there’s nobody there and it’s very scenic, but the scenery is highly variable.

    • @alicemurrah5029
      @alicemurrah5029 Год назад +5

      I'm a West Texas girl! I grew up in the Permian Basin and now live in the Panhandle. I love it here. Great people and stunning sunsets.

  • @Idahoguy10157
    @Idahoguy10157 Год назад +6

    I’ve lived in Phoenix, San Diego, and San Antonio. When I lived in Phoenix I could never see any reason for anything larger than a small city. This was fifty years ago. Even more so now.

  • @eleidal
    @eleidal Год назад +23

    It might be nice to mention the Native Americans in passing here. There are large reservations in the area you're discussing.

    • @michaeldeierhoi4096
      @michaeldeierhoi4096 Год назад +5

      There is a mention of the pueblos, Navajo and Apache nations mentioned beginning at 4:25.

  • @texasflood1295
    @texasflood1295 Год назад +13

    Loving County Texas is in the described area and has a population of 58 people.

    • @jeremiahallyn4603
      @jeremiahallyn4603 Год назад +5

      Yep, the least populous county in the United States.

  • @bcubed72
    @bcubed72 Год назад +9

    Guessing in advance: Indian Reservations, mountainous terrain, and no water?

    • @howardlowry6412
      @howardlowry6412 9 месяцев назад

      Not to mention federal government land control.

  • @TheUnknownWorld248
    @TheUnknownWorld248 11 месяцев назад +2

    Im from the panhandle of Texas and he has the population wrong. Lubbock is larger than Amarillo and home to Texas Tech University the largest university in West Texas. The CSA for Lubbock is 381,000 and the CSA of Amarillo is 308,000 and he left out the Oil Capitol of America, Midland/Odessa which has a csa of 335,000.

  • @donparkison4617
    @donparkison4617 Год назад +21

    I am a minute in, and the answer is easy. Very little water.

    • @michro4094
      @michro4094 Год назад +3

      What?! I would have never guessed!

    • @billyroye3987
      @billyroye3987 10 месяцев назад +1

      Lubbock, on the high plains, gets more rain per year than LA or even San Francisco. California is a big desert in the southern part and sucks water resources from Las Vegas, Phoenix...

    • @donparkison4617
      @donparkison4617 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@billyroye3987 Rain isnt the primary source of water in the west, Its snowmelt. Those California cities get water from snow melt from multiple rivers of snowmelt from the Rocky Mountains and the Sierra Madres. Texas only gets snowmelt from the Rio Grande river.
      P.S. The water in Phoenix and Las Vegas come directly from the Colorado River, I.E. the Rocky mountains.

    • @billyroye3987
      @billyroye3987 10 месяцев назад +1

      I have lived in Santa Ana CA, Phoenix, Lubbock and Las Vegas. California has a dark history of trying to take more than their share from the Colorado. They are slow to build reservoirs and most rainwater and other water goes to the ocean. Lubbock also has the Ogallala Aquifer.

  • @LuckyBaldwin777
    @LuckyBaldwin777 Год назад +6

    The saguaros you pictured are an indicator species of the Sonoran desert, not the Chihuahuan desert. The famous cactus from the Chiuahuan desert is the peyote.

  • @chrisreeves8037
    @chrisreeves8037 Год назад +4

    Germans visiting the empty SW, I ask why so many Europeans visit the area since there is nothing here. They replied: "that is why, there is nothing!"

  • @beefsupreme6488
    @beefsupreme6488 Год назад +11

    Main reason for NM being so empty is lack of jobs, extreme poverty, second most violent state in the country.

    • @TheAnnoyingBoss
      @TheAnnoyingBoss Год назад

      I live here youre totally propagandized its actually sad. You think one of the saftest states in the union is the most dangerous. Sad youre illiterate. Luckily you wont be coming here. Stay out youre not welcome. California has more homeless than we have people total. I hardly.ever even see a homeless person even in albuquerque. Yes there is poverty but have you not seen the average income in usa? Itnused to be 55k-ish and now its 37k-ish. Most people are in poverty in this purposefully forced into poverty nation. California has 10,000x the crime as here. Chicago has gang wars ive never dealt with 1. Youre crazy. Living in la la land lime as if its apocolyptic here when in reality its san fransisco which is the real poverty hugh crime low job opportunity area. The businesses flee california and move in here because you keep saying its a safe place while millionares exit their front door and slip on a methheads feces and get stabbed by a used std needle left on the ground financed at taxpayer expense unlike here where i love where you cant get drug needles at tax payer expense. Vecaue nm is way less of a high crime rate area compared to at least half the country at large. 2% of the population it literally has the least crime compared to anywhere outside of maybe wyoming or montana. Wisconsin has a higher crime rate man what the hell are you on about? Making money in this state isnt a problem for me. I made 5k last week i didnt even leave my house. "Extreme poverty" the poverty here in nm is nothing even remotely close to what im seeing all over the coumtry. Nm wyoming montana tennesee, these places have exceptionally low crime rates. Everyone saying its high crime here live in areas of way higher crime its hypocricy my man it isnt accurate. How csn thd crime rate be so high when 95% of the entire state is literallt unpopulated desolate unsurvivable sand wasteland. No theifs are out there robbing like you see in megalopolis NYC san antonio, LA. Chicago. Albuquerque is the highest crime area and its a very small area of the actual state and even then its way safer at night in albuquerque than it is in sam fransisco portland la san antonio chicago or new york city. Where are you getting you data from, out of thin air? Nm isnt empty because of poverty crime of lack of jobs. Theres more jobs here than people. Its eloty hecause theres only 1 damn mega river the rio grand and theres only a few smaller rivers that drain towards lake powell. If youre not in these areas its empty because its literally inhospitable. No one moves out to the middle of the desert 3 hours away from a mcnugget.

    • @archjones8187
      @archjones8187 8 месяцев назад

      To be fair, Albuquerque is so violent it drives the crime rate of the entire state wayyy up. There are some safe cities like Las Cruces, Los Alamos, etc.

  • @ChristopherSobieniak
    @ChristopherSobieniak Год назад +30

    This is basically America's Outback.

    • @stevenbaker7025
      @stevenbaker7025 Год назад +3

      No, the outback doesn't have mountains, canyons, raging rivers, arches, etc. Now you could make a case for death valley being 'mericas 'outback'

    • @HawklordLI
      @HawklordLI Год назад +2

      That honor would go to eastern Oregon.

    • @ChristopherSobieniak
      @ChristopherSobieniak Год назад +1

      @@stevenbaker7025 Just less population, I meant.

    • @TheAnnoyingBoss
      @TheAnnoyingBoss Год назад

      ​​@@stevenbaker7025nm is definelty comparable to the outback. Its just got endless semi arid desert-like enviorment and you have snakes tarantulas. You go out off the paved road onto the dirt oath that goes for miles and miles and miles into the luvlic wilderness and if you break down and run out of water youll orivbaly dehydrate and die without cell service and no one will fond you not evwn the vultures. Your body will shrivel up like a long expired peice of beef jerkey that got left out and became hard like a rock. Youll be mummified. Ive seen it with my eyes. The deer will wander so far away form water theyll die but nothing else is out there to eat them. So their corpse lays and the sun bakes them dry like a mcdonalds cheeseburger you let dry out it turns hard like stone before the mold can even grab hold. I actually compare new mexico more to that movie "the hills have eyes" compared to an outback like austrailia. The hills have eyes is a better comparison

    • @TheAnnoyingBoss
      @TheAnnoyingBoss Год назад +1

      Nm is basically the hills have eyes butnin real life

  • @ericmccurdy6149
    @ericmccurdy6149 Год назад +4

    Your population figures are wrong for the larger cities here, Lubbock, Tx is larger than Amarillo, Tx, in both city proper and metropolitan population, Lubbock has about 260,000 people while Amarillo has about 201,000, Lubbock Metropolitan has about 328,000, while Amarillo Metropolitan has about 308,000

  • @maximilianodehabsburgo3206
    @maximilianodehabsburgo3206 Год назад +6

    Im from the Chihuahua sierra... Lived in Las Cruces!
    Love the southwest!

  • @cdjhyoung
    @cdjhyoung Год назад +5

    Why do so few people live here? Federal Government ownership of the land; Indian Tribal lands; but the most important reason is that there is scarcely any regular rain fall or available water. This is a near dessert area of our country. And hot. Not a lot of people care to live in these conditions if they have another choice.

    • @Default78334
      @Default78334 Год назад +3

      The Federal government owns the land because no one was able to move there and make productive use of it; it was so barren and useless that the Feds literally couldn't give it away. The Homestead Acts were still active until the 1970s.

    • @michaeldeierhoi4096
      @michaeldeierhoi4096 Год назад

      ​@@Default78334 Barren and useless are never terms that I would use to describe New Mexico particularly for many reasons. For one the native Americans who have lived here for thousands of years. The extensive pecan crop grown in the southern third of the state where it hottest. Green and red chili are grown here. There is extensive tourism in the state as in other regions described in this video outside of New Mexico

    • @Default78334
      @Default78334 Год назад +1

      @@michaeldeierhoi4096 Yes, and those portions that could be productively cultivated were claimed by homesteaders. The lands that the federal government owns are ones that no one wanted or were otherwise unsuccessful in developing. For over 100 years, that land was literally free for the taking if people were able to settle and cultivate it.

  • @CasperLCat
    @CasperLCat Год назад +1

    Eastern AZ/Western NM has beautiful pine forests, mountains, and sunny but moderate climate because of the higher altitude. But NOT “very cold” winters, compared to the Northern US, contrary to this video.
    And VERY FEW people, because there are no large employers and no urban amenities, including airports. But if you wanted an idyllic, DIRT CHEAP place to telecommute, it’d be AWESOME.

  • @fackeyutub-emael6545
    @fackeyutub-emael6545 Год назад +3

    You made a mistake at 1:45.
    You said "the chiwawan desert, which extends TO Mexico" .
    This is incorrect since most of the chiwawan desert is in Mexico.
    So, "the chwawan desert, which extends FROM Mexico.

  • @gitgit22000
    @gitgit22000 Год назад +3

    just as ‘dry heat doesn’t feel as hot’ likewise dry cold doesn’t feel so cold … (i did a job in Albuquerque during one January-February and the weather was so pleasant and enjoyable)

  • @DavidCoxDallas
    @DavidCoxDallas Год назад +4

    it might have been worthwhile pointing out that old El Paso had been the northern suburb of Juarez.

  • @jonblaich
    @jonblaich Год назад +1

    Shhhh. We're trying to keep it a secret. I live in Albuquerque, NM and there are so many beautiful places within driving distance where you can avoid the crowds. The Grand Canyon, San Juan mountains, the Gila Wilderness, Big Bend, White Sands, Sangre de Cristo mountains, Carlsbad Caverns, and the list goes on.

  • @outlawcountryman
    @outlawcountryman Год назад +4

    I live in cochise county on the western end . Love how few people live out here

  • @taotaoliu2229
    @taotaoliu2229 Год назад +24

    Imagine if we added all of the empty areas of the US together: what would be left?

    • @orangeyewglad
      @orangeyewglad Год назад +4

      Humans have colonized a huge percentage of the planet if you count agriculture....which you should....because otherwise it would be pristine unadulterated habitat....so unfortunately a lot less land than you think.

    • @hillbilly4895
      @hillbilly4895 Год назад +5

      A space equal to cavern between Geoff's ears, perhaps?

    • @revinhatol
      @revinhatol Год назад

      What about Northern New England?

  • @kimjohnson8471
    @kimjohnson8471 Год назад +6

    Geoff if I had you as my geography teach during the latter end of the last century, I would've loved it!❤

  • @cosmic_pursuit
    @cosmic_pursuit Год назад +4

    The most beautiful part of USA. Thank you bro- great video

  • @wayneanderson8034
    @wayneanderson8034 Год назад +5

    Del Rio, Creede, Del Norte, & Alamosa were all once my home on that map. There is no more water to be had. Every drop is allocated & over allocated, there are more people holding valid water claims than there is water to divide. The area can never grow because there is simply no water for more people. That & -50 F in Creede & 111 F in Del Rio.

  • @jaredbardell7431
    @jaredbardell7431 Год назад +3

    Small quip: Lubbock is larger than Amarillo by about 100,000 people when factoring the metro area.

    • @TheAnnoyingBoss
      @TheAnnoyingBoss Год назад

      I went though lubbock to see a buddy of mine in texas. I drove through all of nm to lubbock and down towards san antonio and lubbock as you come in at nighttime youll notice outside there is a lot of windmills and the air wreaks of the methane from more cow farts that you could humanly imagine by my guess. I was impressed by their infrustructure because in the middle of the night traffic is down so you rrally get more of the road to yourself and all that infrustructure development pays off. They have roads over there tjat are like roller coasters compared to where i live. When icday trip to albuwuerquenits like that. The big giant overpasses and the roads that shoot up into the sky over and under other roads. Where i live its not like that. Its cool to drive through those giant civilizations at night whe. You can enjoy all the roads they build up without white knuckling the steering wheel in uber dense traffic

  • @ShaneDane12
    @ShaneDane12 Год назад +8

    Love your videos!
    You should make a video regarding the lack of new interstates being constructed in the plains / central US

  • @doubleindeminity
    @doubleindeminity Год назад +13

    The 5.2 earthquake had nothing to do with the Rio Grande Rift. It was induced seismicity from fracking the Texas oil fields.

    • @valfletcher9285
      @valfletcher9285 Год назад +2

      eh...no and neither is climate change real.

    • @xp7575
      @xp7575 Год назад +1

      😂☠️😂☠️😂☠️😂☠️😂​@@valfletcher9285

    • @beckybecky9643
      @beckybecky9643 Год назад

      what a joke@@valfletcher9285

    • @TheRustyLM
      @TheRustyLM Год назад +1

      Plenty of fracking in NM too.🤓

    • @rebeccalindley153
      @rebeccalindley153 Год назад +4

      @@valfletcher9285 The US outside of the West Coast, has a very long recorded history of earthquakes. They had them long before fracking.

  • @jeffplayswithcars
    @jeffplayswithcars Год назад +7

    Saguaro cactus are in the Sonoran desert. No Saguaros in the Chihuahuan desert.

  • @neildean7568
    @neildean7568 Год назад +2

    One factor that may not get a lot of attention is the migration of retired workers from LA and southern California to Phoenix and Las Vegas.
    It’s basically like retired New Yorkers going to Florida.
    Also, you talked a lot about the weather, but the weather in Albuquerque and Santa Fe is much more comfortable than Phoenix or Las Vegas.

    • @suzannefreund3100
      @suzannefreund3100 Год назад

      Amen to the weather in Albuquerque & Santa Fe being more comfortable than Phoenix or Las Vegas! Even Tucson is slightly better. I seem to remember that there were political and cultural reasons why Arizona and Phoenix in particular have outstripped New Mexico.

  • @luqmaanabrahams1971
    @luqmaanabrahams1971 Год назад +6

    should do a episode on why the western part of South Africa only has a third of the population that the Eastern part has

  • @Erick_Cuevas
    @Erick_Cuevas Год назад +1

    Recently drove thru the Northwestern and North/North Eastern corners of New Mexico and Arizona, respectively, on a trip thru South Western Colorado. One thing of note is that these chunks of land are sizable parts of the Navajo, Hopi, and Ute tribes's reservations. From my understanding, they don't really make a big emphasis on building sprawling cities and aim to conserve the wild nature of the southwest.
    When I say it feels eerily and isolatingly empty whilst still feeling inviting, curious, and enchanting all at the same time I mean it. Just driving thru the South Rim region of the Grand Canyon National Park (it cuts thru Navajo land) made me fall in love with the South West all the more. 10/10 would drive thru again!

    • @TheAnnoyingBoss
      @TheAnnoyingBoss Год назад +1

      Yes the navajo reservation is right on the edge of my main town. You can go out there but its mostly just navajo living out there and there isnt really cities or towns. Some but what theyll do is leave the res when they get paid and they buy groceries at my town and then leave back for the res. My 3 legged dog was rescused when he was abandoned om thr reservation and someone found him with his leg mangled they amputated and we kept him. Hes a reservation dog right off the res 😂

  • @Kaleisbord
    @Kaleisbord Год назад +7

    You are slowly convincing me no one lives in the US

  • @rebeccaorman1823
    @rebeccaorman1823 Год назад +4

    FYI: saguaro cacti are found in the Sonoran Desert.

  • @donhaffner7843
    @donhaffner7843 4 месяца назад +1

    some day i will move back to new mexico love it there.

  • @DesertRailProductions
    @DesertRailProductions Год назад +3

    I live in tucson, and its nearly the same as the other cities out there. Its also just really peaceful [until you go to the bad areas] and its nice to be away from the big cities where your gonna be stuck in traffic and brainwashed by all the politicians and crime.

  • @GianVersace
    @GianVersace Год назад +2

    Not treating El Paso-Juarez as a metroplex of close to 3 million people really undermines this video. It’s a huge metropolis larger than Nashville’s, San Antonio’s, and Orlando’s metropolitan population… but for some odd reason the US Census doesn’t consider Mexican cities.

    • @No-pos-ta-cabron
      @No-pos-ta-cabron 11 месяцев назад

      Uh… because it’s the US census and not an international census. Why in the world the United States ever consider Mexican cities?

    • @brianledezma1922
      @brianledezma1922 8 месяцев назад

      @@No-pos-ta-cabron I agreed with him to a very small degree, simply because San Diego and Tijuana Mexico are actually counted in I international metro area even when it comes to statistics in US census how you are 100% correct on cities even across the border are not in US census obviously because we’re not in Mexico

  • @Geckogold
    @Geckogold Год назад +3

    I really enjoyed my drive through this area when heading to the Grand Canyon a few years back. And driving through the Navajo Nation was really interesting for me too,. I really love the scenery out West, and can see why so many people move out to these places.

  • @coasterjaz89
    @coasterjaz89 8 месяцев назад

    Enjoyed your video!! I grew up in the empty southwest region, so it’s an area I like to call home. Spent formative years in Albuquerque, before relocating to the Gila River Valley of southeastern Arizona, where i would attend HS. Definitely an enchanting beauty to the region. I moved away for 4yrs during college to live back east, and had to come back! I missed the beauty and diversity of the arid desert and alpine sky island mountains. Thank you for sharing!

  • @GianVersace
    @GianVersace Год назад +2

    I loved my time in El Paso! I truly enjoy the mountains, desert, weather, food, people, and low crime rates. Unfortunately, my job took me away.

  • @Illumisepoolist
    @Illumisepoolist Год назад +7

    Why there no national parks in the Mid Atlantic region?

    • @goldfieldgary
      @goldfieldgary 11 месяцев назад +1

      Short answer, because it's already full of people.

  • @bonesandbells
    @bonesandbells Год назад +1

    Over 40,000 students at Texas Tech University putting it in the top 50 largest universities in the country. The weather can quickly change in the region, but the lower humidity makes it more pleasant than east Texas in August, which also heats up with high pressure on the opposite side of the desert monsoons.

    • @TheAnnoyingBoss
      @TheAnnoyingBoss Год назад

      They have literally 38000 more students than my whole town has people total. Wild

  • @alexmiles40
    @alexmiles40 Год назад +2

    Love the new do Geoff. Good video. THX

  • @rutabagasteu
    @rutabagasteu Год назад +11

    Lack of water,trees, lack of paved roads other than Interstates.

    • @revinhatol
      @revinhatol Год назад

      *than

    • @rutabagasteu
      @rutabagasteu Год назад +1

      @@revinhatol auto correct is my enemy.

    • @allisonjones-lo6795
      @allisonjones-lo6795 Год назад +1

      That is not my experience here in the southwest. I have lived here over 40 years. Are you referring to trees and water levels comparable to back east? True, you will not find that here, except in the cities, because those plants deplete the water supplies. We plant native trees and shrubs which are drought tolerant As for paved roads, many of us do not want them because dirt roads allow the rain to drain into the soil instead of it going into a sewer. We conserve water in many ways. We learned this from the native American tribes of the area. They have lived here, in huge populations, for centuries.

    • @rutabagasteu
      @rutabagasteu Год назад

      @@allisonjones-lo6795 i grew up in central Texas during the early 1950s drought. In town we had oak and other water using trees. Just 20 miles west was nothing but prickly pear cacti and mesquite trees.
      About 1957 the drought broke and we had flash floods. Dirt roads, you get stuck.

  • @geraldzimmerman8777
    @geraldzimmerman8777 Год назад +2

    You forgot to mention in the Utah Parks Capitol Reef and Arches. Everyone seems to forget Capitol Reef, it's the least famous NP in the state, but you have to go through it if you travel between Bryce and Arches. It's also near where my mother grew up on a ranch

    • @jackprier7727
      @jackprier7727 Год назад

      Capitol Reef and Cedar Breaks are two wild natural places that are splendid and often uncrowded-

  • @terenfro1975
    @terenfro1975 Год назад +2

    I can tell you in west Texas the pay is almost half that of the golden triangle with the exception of oil field which drives inflation, making everyone else’s salaries not matter. Owning land is next to impossible. Sellers wanting 10 times the actual agricultural value. Maybe 1 cow per 10 acres because of drought. That would put land values at $1000 per acre or less.

  • @michro4094
    @michro4094 Год назад +12

    Can we get a video on why there aren't many people living in Siberia? I'm curious as to why that is.

  • @slydale
    @slydale Год назад +1

    I noticed while staying in this area, you might really need to plan out your gas stops on long trips. You might have to go very far between fuel stations.

  • @robthetraveler1099
    @robthetraveler1099 Год назад +1

    0:07 LOL. Dallas is not in East Texas. It might technically be in the eastern half of the state, but it is not in "East Texas."

  • @Anthony-cz6lr
    @Anthony-cz6lr Год назад +1

    The saguaro doesn’t grow in the area you’re referring to in this video. It grows in the Sonoran desert

  • @russellkeeling4387
    @russellkeeling4387 8 месяцев назад +1

    Those of us living in the empty southwest would like to keep it empty. I want you all to know it's a terrible place to live so don't even visit here and you'll be safe.

  • @midnightrider1100
    @midnightrider1100 Год назад +1

    A lot of us from this region value our space. Aside from that, the drier regions take more acreage to support livestock thus the farms and ranches have to be larger than in the east. There are many roads that don't have utilities running down them and wells have to be dug deeper, so even if you want to move onto a piece of land, it could be cost prohibitive to a lot of people until the population gradually expands.

    • @TheAnnoyingBoss
      @TheAnnoyingBoss Год назад

      And it probably wont. Only 30k people moved in last year. My small town started with like 100 people in 1890 and its up to nearly 7000 now but it took 135 years 🤡🤣

  • @davidgrech4574
    @davidgrech4574 Год назад +3

    Thank you for another great video and I hope you know how much I appreciate you. Bless you and have a great week ahead 👍🌏

  • @ralphnoyes4366
    @ralphnoyes4366 Год назад +5

    Hot Hell tundra. But the Four Corners area is magnificent. So are the people.

  • @brandongannon5677
    @brandongannon5677 Год назад +2

    I love the north part of New Mexico, great place to Ski for relatively good prices

    • @TheAnnoyingBoss
      @TheAnnoyingBoss Год назад

      I live in the area. There is much better skiing just a little north up past durango, perhaps places more wealthy like telluride etc. in colorado the skiing is better. Nm only has mountainous in the northern areas towards colorado so the sking isnt as good. The 4x4 offroading is where its at here. We do less skiing in nm and more 4 wheelers, dirt bikes, my area legalized side by sides for our own public roads 😂

  • @ericvulgate7091
    @ericvulgate7091 Год назад +3

    I specifically came here bc there are fewer people and it's beautiful.
    Home sweet home.

  • @wesleywmassey7134
    @wesleywmassey7134 4 месяца назад

    I'd like to see northern New Mexico featured, showcasing the mountainous regions in the summer especially. My parents had a vacation home up northwest of Las Vegas back in the 70's and 80's. Mom called it, "Cloud Ten."

  • @mellissadalby1402
    @mellissadalby1402 Год назад +5

    I see no wisdom in livving in such a water scarce area.I also see Las Vegas, a sprawling citiy in the desert as an over-indulgent example of hubris and arrogance.

    • @itsme-rt7nz
      @itsme-rt7nz Год назад

      Yes. Las Vegas gets half the precipitation that Albuquerque gets, and has more than twice the population. Both cities get their water from states north.

  • @capricornone2362
    @capricornone2362 11 месяцев назад +1

    I recently moved to Ruidoso NM. Very happy with my choice 👍

  • @stephenheath8465
    @stephenheath8465 Год назад +1

    Amarillo, Albuquerque and El Paso were Railroad Hub Cities in the early days

  • @StrawberryRaine
    @StrawberryRaine Год назад

    I'm from El Paso! Honestly, I would love to move somewhere else. Having four seasons would sure be nice lol

  • @UnboxedEthics
    @UnboxedEthics Год назад +1

    It may be more niche and not necessarily an empty “region” but the quiet corner in Connecticut warrants one of these “empty region” videos as it’s the least populated and darkest night sky fully contained in the northeast megalopolis

  • @michellesinclair8620
    @michellesinclair8620 5 месяцев назад +1

    From what I saw when I drove thought it, most of the land was either owned by the government or a native tribe. I was impressed with how huge and empty it is. Monument Valley though is amazing and beautiful. Canyonlands, Arches and Mesa Verde are all beautiful places to see.

  • @ronaldwinfield307
    @ronaldwinfield307 Год назад +1

    I have made many trips from Provo Utah to San Antonio Texas. There is not really much in between.
    The land is beautiful & the climate harsh & I love it.

    • @TheAnnoyingBoss
      @TheAnnoyingBoss Год назад +1

      I think the original settlers of abuquerque said "damn this desert after luisiana just wont stop we are atopping right here and settling right in the middle of freaking nowhere nothing but sand in every direction for hours and hours and hours 😂😂😂😂😂 thats why nm is so empty. The popualtions are all in the water areas or areas with geopolitical economic benefits like natural gas and oil. So theres even really really ran down areas ghost towns semi ghost towns, but theres also areas that have been consistently ever so slightly gaining population since they started tracking it back in like 1890 oe whenever. My small town started with like 100 people 150 years ago and now its above 6000 and never once has the population shrank really. It barely barely barely grows over decades and decades but at least itll still exist in the future

  • @kgarba9253
    @kgarba9253 Год назад +7

    Remind me of an old Sam kinnison bit. We have deserts in America too, we just don’t live in them A******!!!!!” Rang truer in the 80s I suppose

    • @mystreteacher
      @mystreteacher 8 месяцев назад

      Don't send them water. Send them U-Hauls.

  • @Mark-qv4bn
    @Mark-qv4bn Год назад

    I moved to an isolated small town in Northern Arizona in the 90's. I haven't seen a big town in over 20 years, the closest one is 100 miles away. Quiet, peaceful, low crime.

  • @CosmicStargoat
    @CosmicStargoat Год назад

    I live in No. Colorado and can attest that the very SE corner of Colorado is virtually uninhabited. South of I-70 and east of Pueblo, there is nothing. I drove thru there years ago on the way to Memphis and almost ran out of gas. There was one lone pump (no station or convenience store) on a slab in Kit Carson. The area is like the surface of the Moon. Also, east of El Paso, there is not even a light bulb until you get to Van Horn Texas, which is just a bump in the road.

    • @TheAnnoyingBoss
      @TheAnnoyingBoss Год назад +1

      Be careful with those gas statioms in these areas of the country becauee often theyre not visited a lot and they can have bad gas. We shotnup from 4 corners nm upto silverton co and we pumped gas there its a very small town and their gas was so trash it ruined our fuel system and they wouldnt pay for it we had to get towed and i will never get gasoline up there again. Get gas from a station that looks to be used often enough. Their fuel will be fresher. Ill pump has at any gas station where i live but you gdy those weird stations that almost look abandoned or theyre in a small small small town witu. A popualtion of like 800 and none ofnthem trust their own areas gas you dont see them at that gas station thatsnaboutnto ruin your expensive fuel system.

  • @kc_1018
    @kc_1018 Год назад

    There's no way I would move to the southwest. I need lots of greenery, rivers, lakes, and lush rolling hills all around me.

  • @ChawpProphet
    @ChawpProphet Год назад +2

    Yet one major city in this area still has more people than all of Wyoming.

  • @cratecruncher4974
    @cratecruncher4974 Год назад +1

    "Water scarcity is another critical factor..." BINGO! Availability of water is THE number one driver of population development in any arid region. End of story. You can build a plant to make electricity. You can't build a plant to make water. You can't even divert it from another place because someone else already has the rights to it. The Rio Grande is like a tiny lifeline through the region with almost the entire population within spitting distance. I will note that the Permian Basin is the richest oil reserve in the world pumping millions of barrels a day for 100 years. But you can't drink or take a bath in oil!

  • @anthonymalovrh2912
    @anthonymalovrh2912 7 месяцев назад

    Living in Prescott Valley, AZ for 8 years now. Quad cities area(Prescott, Prescott Valley, Chino Valley, Dewey)

  • @austinoldfield5246
    @austinoldfield5246 Год назад +2

    Santa Fe is the oldest capital city on the western hemisphere actually.