Why the Appalachian Mountains Are Deceptively Dangerous

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  • Опубликовано: 5 янв 2025

Комментарии • 5 тыс.

  • @AidinRobbins
    @AidinRobbins  Год назад +3790

    Appalachian or Appalachian?

    • @harshjain2047
      @harshjain2047 Год назад +469

      Appalachian.

    • @garretthess4953
      @garretthess4953 Год назад +137

      Yes

    • @coolbuffdad
      @coolbuffdad Год назад +125

      ​@@harshjain2047 NO...Appalachian!

    • @DragonnRider
      @DragonnRider Год назад +74

      i prefer Appalachian

    • @randomchannel-px6ho
      @randomchannel-px6ho Год назад +159

      As far as I know it's a north / south thing, north of the Mason-Dixon people say Appa-lA-chian, and south people say Appa-Lach-ian. From experience in the southern Appalachians there's a strong sense of identity the locals associate with their pronunciation of it, and with a rough history in the region of outside influences trying to change the culture there, they can get quite offended by saying it the Yankee way, so even though I think both are technically correct be careful.

  • @heronimousbrapson863
    @heronimousbrapson863 Год назад +17382

    The mountains of Scotland and Norway are part of the same system as the Appalachians. Separation occured as North America and Europe separated forming the Atlantic Ocean.

    • @no.7893
      @no.7893 Год назад +1193

      It's amazing how similar some of the landscape is between parts of scotland and northern america. I'm sure I'd feel right at home in southeastern canada

    • @morbidmanuscript9324
      @morbidmanuscript9324 Год назад +157

      Grandma Mountain

    • @maqima
      @maqima Год назад +478

      what the hell that's so cool!!! I'm from norway myself, and I've become pretty facinated with american nature recently. such a cool fact

    • @LeveretteJamesClifford1955
      @LeveretteJamesClifford1955 Год назад +192

      There are some geologists who claim that due to the plate they are on, they are part of North America. But Im not taking a stance, Im just reporting.

    • @nickphillips4398
      @nickphillips4398 Год назад +37

      Wrong

  • @tomp6685
    @tomp6685 Год назад +6921

    I was born and raised in Eastern Tennessee and I enjoy hiking in the Smokies often. At first glance the Appalachians may appear underwhelming, but the more you explore those ancient mountains you begin to realize how truly unique they are. There is something about the Appalachians and I can't put it in words that wants you to come back like an old friend you havent seen in a while.

    • @JBBost
      @JBBost Год назад +90

      It's a landmass that you projected yourself onto because you lack any interesting personality trait beyond "hurr, mountains"

    • @AidinRobbins
      @AidinRobbins  Год назад +1111

      @@JBBost why are you no fun

    • @Ruby-eh2cr
      @Ruby-eh2cr Год назад +22

      I agree.

    • @TheRoosterMart
      @TheRoosterMart Год назад

      ⁠@@JBBost based on your pfp you look like you’ve got your own issues that need sorted out

    • @Bryan-Hensley
      @Bryan-Hensley Год назад +56

      I hike and ride dirt bikes all over the east Tennessee and west North Carolina Appalachian mountains

  • @nothanks3236
    @nothanks3236 Год назад +2058

    It's really very simple: people go missing because they overestimate their physical abilities, and they don't think about the dangers of going into remote wilderness alone. As well, they often go into wilderness areas they are unfamiliar with, and when they aren't paying attention, they end up lost. I've been hiking and camping the backcountry for two decades, most of it in the Appalachians. If you don't know what you're doing, it's VERY easy to get yourself lost. And in the mountains, there are lots of places where a wrong step will send you plummeting into a ravine where nobody else ever goes, and you're lost forever.

    • @christaylor9095
      @christaylor9095 Год назад +120

      Humans are spectacularly poor at guaging risk...

    • @MADGUNSMONSTER
      @MADGUNSMONSTER Год назад +44

      ​@@christaylor9095 Also termed 'Hubris'.

    • @TzeentchLordofChange
      @TzeentchLordofChange Год назад +92

      @@christaylor9095 yep, an online poll showed that almost 60% of american mean believed they could beat a black bear in combat without a weapon ....pretty poor self assesment there

    • @christaylor9095
      @christaylor9095 Год назад +52

      @@TzeentchLordofChange maybe they thought it said "black bean". Humans have poor eyesight, too 🤣

    • @standyke542
      @standyke542 Год назад +51

      While this is often the case you are missing a portion of individuals that really do become victims to evil humans in these remote areas. Don’t assume you’re prepared if you haven’t factored that in. Extreme poverty and isolation can have unexpected consequences.

  • @kendrickherring4957
    @kendrickherring4957 11 месяцев назад +2082

    I grew up there. People always looked down on us. Insults, stereotypes and assuming I was dumb was pretty common. As a kid I got rid of the accent, learned to speak without so people would leave me alone. Thank you for bringing attention to our region in such a respectful way. It feels nice to feel proud of where I'm from.

    • @FloridaFishFreaks
      @FloridaFishFreaks 11 месяцев назад +91

      This hit really close to home, I’ve only recently started allowing myself to speak without cutting away my accent and it’s felt freeing to me but it hasn’t made any of the preconceived notions people have any better, fuck em 🫶🏼

    • @kendrickherring4957
      @kendrickherring4957 11 месяцев назад +37

      @@FloridaFishFreaks I'm glad you've had a similar experience. Since letting my accent more I've found a newfound love and appreciation of my roots and all my family did to show we were more than the stereotypes. I'm glad you got to feel something similar.

    • @kendrickherring4957
      @kendrickherring4957 11 месяцев назад +16

      @AwestruckAudioHertz One, its manners. Two, so you've traveled all around then yeah? Out of Pikeville to bowling Green and other places? You've seen it all? Pikeville ain't great yeah I can agree, education there is awful and the population is dropping and dying. But what the hell did that add to my statement of finding pride in my region and who I am? If its so hellish, leave. Most don't get the option to. Sounds like you do. Go back to Carolina.

    • @danielhall-wl4ql
      @danielhall-wl4ql 11 месяцев назад +20

      boils down to supply and demand ! lol I hear ya man when I moved to ohio I was 17 bagging groceries after school , always had to ask paper or plastic ? and usually got "where you from?" 95% of the time but was in bad mood one day and said I just came from ya mommas house and got fired ! lol

    • @danielhall-wl4ql
      @danielhall-wl4ql 11 месяцев назад +6

      I kind of got punched to, he smothered out when realized I was underage but I wasn't going to press no charges, if I run my mouth Ill take what coming

  • @thomascampbell5321
    @thomascampbell5321 Год назад +2413

    Most of the large trees in those old pictures were “castanea dentata” otherwise known as American chestnut trees. They were called the sequoia of the east and it was said that a squirrel could run from Maine down to southern Georgia on the canopy of American chestnut trees. Their seed pods used to litter the ground in such numbers that people could collect them for food, hence that old Christmas song “Chestnuts roasting by an open fire.” But in the early 1900s the Chestnut blight arrived from Europe and the American chestnut trees had no natural immunity to this foreign fungus and rapidly died out. Logging didn’t help things by any extension, but they really were not the primary cause of the American Chestnut trees decline.

    • @morsumbra9692
      @morsumbra9692 Год назад +147

      There's good efforts going to bring chestnut trees back to southeast.

    • @DeenanTheKemon1
      @DeenanTheKemon1 Год назад +18

      Awesome info. Thanks 👌

    • @jeffreymcmillan7703
      @jeffreymcmillan7703 Год назад +48

      Yep. Thanks. White Oaks growing around Dolly Sods area were reported to have been over 10 feet in diameter at their base. An absolutely incredible forest to behold. Those trees were possibly over 1000 years old.

    • @Olemier
      @Olemier Год назад +61

      Yeah that blight was rough. And from what I understand, in a last ditch effort they decided to cut a ton of them down once the blight hit so they could sell em off and save the money they would otherwise lose from the trees dying. They didn’t know what else to do. But, in doing so, it’s supposedly possible they cut down some that had genetic immunities/resilience towards the blight. Of course, people didn’t think about that back then. They may have chopped down some examples that could’ve persevered through the blight after all… Just sad to think about what could have been. I would’ve loved to see those chestnuts.

    • @allenwilhelm7799
      @allenwilhelm7799 Год назад +5

      Devon fan?

  • @TheAbigailDee
    @TheAbigailDee Год назад +4785

    People overestimate their survival skills and underestimate the dangers of nature. No conspiracy. Human error. We all can love folklore as much as we want but not to the point of disrespect. A beautiful area! Thank you for sharing!

    • @ronhall9394
      @ronhall9394 Год назад +99

      And if you add to this mix the 'relative' lack of altitude. People going out to 'proper' high mountains usually take the correct equipment and treat them with respect, folk tootling about so called foothills (hey man, I did the High Sierras in these sandals - don't worry...) don't bring the respect that these places deserve - and pay for it.
      There's an anonymous poem from my neck of the woods about two rivers which sort of reinforces the lack of respect given to certain aspects of nature.
      Tweed said to Till:
      ‘What gars ye rin sae still?’
      Till said to Tweed:
      ‘Though ye rin wi speed,
      an I rin slaw,
      where ye droon yin man,
      I droon two.’”
      Modern Translation
      “Tweed said to Till:
      ‘What makes you run so still?’
      Till said to Tweed:
      ‘Though you run with speed,
      And I run slow,
      Where you drown one man,
      I drown two.’”

    • @Glowtrey
      @Glowtrey Год назад +68

      People hear things like : the Appalachians aint as hard to cross as the Rockies or the Canadian Great Shield, and to be fair that is true in general. But that push a lot of people in getting sloppy and, like you said, overestimate themselves !

    • @cptchuff2741
      @cptchuff2741 Год назад +82

      A skinwalker probably wrote this

    • @Glowtrey
      @Glowtrey Год назад +25

      @@cptchuff2741 trouble with the internet these days is we cant know if your joking or need help with your mental health 😅

    • @andyjay729
      @andyjay729 Год назад +9

      @@ronhall9394 For what it's worth, a lot of people also go missing in the Western mountains every year.

  • @larryfromgasstation
    @larryfromgasstation Год назад +3836

    Thank you for debunking the lies that a lot of creators on TikTok and yt keep saying like “there are monsters in the appalachians, trust me” even though they live on the opposite side of the country. It just gives the appalachians a bad name and really understated how absolutely beautiful and amazing these mountains are.
    EDIT: damn yall thanks for the likes!

    • @aff77141
      @aff77141 Год назад +158

      As a wnc resident, there's nothing like the forests and people here, and I wish more people would see that. I tie a lot of this stuff to the old ideas people have of hicks and rednecks living in backwards towns and woods doing terrible things and being uneducated inbreds. It's always funny when people say they 'hear screaming' in 'appalachia' and you can immediately tell not only that it's an animal but what kind of animal it is, and either they have no idea because they're city people, or because it's an animal that doesn't even live here and they're as you said in another part of the country. Sometimes you can even tell by the foliage. That said, I do enjoy a good spook, and while most of the forests here are truly magical, some do have that particular, odd feeling.

    • @LeveretteJamesClifford1955
      @LeveretteJamesClifford1955 Год назад +110

      The only monsters ever to roam the Appalachians are people who hunt people.

    • @gregscrabshack2307
      @gregscrabshack2307 Год назад

      I like it, keep the liberal weirdos away

    • @willieclark2256
      @willieclark2256 Год назад +126

      As an Appalachian I LOVE anything that keeps Yankees and lowlanders away

    • @supersiem1431
      @supersiem1431 Год назад +43

      ​@@willieclark2256 indeed! just make thr city people scarsd so they don't go in the forests:)

  • @cyanidesmile7263
    @cyanidesmile7263 11 месяцев назад +721

    I'm bred, born, and raised Appalachian, and while I love being in the woods and seeing the beauty of my home, it's also important to remember that we are guests in the woods, not the owners, and that no matter how safe we feel out there, we still gotta be mindful and cautious.

    • @janetairlines1351
      @janetairlines1351 8 месяцев назад +15

      Me too. Im on the ny/MA border. People disappear often in the woods here

    • @two5seven14
      @two5seven14 7 месяцев назад +8

      The banjos. Gotta watch out for the banjos. They’ll sneak up on you.

    • @sofol699
      @sofol699 6 месяцев назад +1

      Good warning

    • @McShibby10
      @McShibby10 6 месяцев назад +1

      Animals or people?

    • @alexandra8164
      @alexandra8164 6 месяцев назад +4

      @@McShibby10both. also things that can’t really be categorized as either

  • @ethansams883
    @ethansams883 Год назад +1625

    As an Appalachian now living elsewhere, I just wanted to say thank you. It brought tears to my eyes see someone to appreciate the beauty of our home. Thank you for not speaking I’ll of us as many have before.

    • @bethbnolan
      @bethbnolan Год назад +13

      This was so beautifully presented; I discovered the beauty of your region.

    • @Magna_Carta5
      @Magna_Carta5 Год назад +25

      How lucky to grow up there! My dad died in the Appalachians. He felt connected to them, and went all the time, even after an accident that left him paralyzed from the chest down. His propensity to go deep, far from other people, means there was no one to hear him calling for help when he fell one day.
      I’d like to live amongst those mountains one day, they truly are something to behold.

    • @dtrain739
      @dtrain739 Год назад +3

      I definitely miss them as well.

    • @jtron87
      @jtron87 Год назад +12

      I mean…he literally said “off-putting culture”…

    • @bernsky
      @bernsky Год назад +2

      as a born southerner, the appalachian culture and especially the cultures deep in the hills, were the ones i felt most comfortable in. now i live in maine, NC got too dense.

  • @josies9862
    @josies9862 Год назад +1715

    There’s something so human about the phrase “hell yeah, who doesn’t like bears?” because bears could shred us to pieces and we should be terrified of them, yet we still have such a fascination/excitement/love for them despite that fact. The careful love and adoration of everything in nature, whether it can kill us or not, is so wholesome

    • @J-tt1lu
      @J-tt1lu Год назад +4

      I think other organisms feel this way too!

    • @TheMpo1986
      @TheMpo1986 Год назад +16

      I want to hug a bear

    • @s_t_r_a_y_e_d
      @s_t_r_a_y_e_d Год назад +65

      if dangerous why friend shaped :(

    • @hedgehog3180
      @hedgehog3180 Год назад +4

      I mean I guess even a bear probably looks tame compared to the number of animals killed to feed your average human in the first world.

    • @suvi1502
      @suvi1502 Год назад +12

      If dangerous why cute and cuddly looking 😔

  • @TheAlanFish
    @TheAlanFish Год назад +1009

    I remember when the Blair Witch Project came out. My friends all scoffed at the idea of getting lost in the woods in Maryland. As a southern PA kid who grew up in the woods, I knew that those woods are extremely hard to navigate through. Obviously the movie isn't the most realistic one ever, but the parts where they got lost and ended up back at the same place truly hit home for me. Without a compass or a clearly defined trail, it's incredibly difficult to proceed in a straight line in proper Appalachian woods, no witchcraft required. :)

    • @thepunisher3662
      @thepunisher3662 11 месяцев назад +79

      I have a similar story. A guy I know that hunts in the woods of Florida (which I also hunt and hike in) got lost while searching for a deer he had shot. When he found it he had realized that he didn't know where he was and everything looked the same He ended up walking towards the sounds of cars (the Management area butts up against a big state road) while dragging a deer through the woods and by the time he got out of the woods and hit the highway he was over 3 miles away from his truck, parked where he had entered. The woods are no joke and you can get lost easily.

    • @jasonscottjenkins
      @jasonscottjenkins 11 месяцев назад +36

      The thing that really pissed me off about the Blair Witch and getting lost in the woods in general is that once you do find a creek just follow it until you get to a road. Creeks may meander a lot but they do go only one direction to the sea.

    • @TheAlanFish
      @TheAlanFish 11 месяцев назад +24

      @@jasonscottjenkins Yeah, but that was intentional on the part of the film makers. They wanted people who know how to deal with that sort of thing to be pissed off at the way the people behave. Same thing as the idiot who goes down into the basement to check on the noise in a horror movie, just a different application. There certainly are people who simply don't know better too though.

    • @halfstep44
      @halfstep44 11 месяцев назад +5

      ​Follow a creek and you'll come to a road? Never heard that but interesting. JW but have you ever done that yourself when lost? ​@@jasonscottjenkins

    • @halfstep44
      @halfstep44 11 месяцев назад +6

      Same thing's happened to me in the Adirondacks. One problem is that the NYS OPRHP (state parks) publishes maps that are out of scale!!!! They also show trails that don't exist or that haven't been marked yet. They do a good job in most other ways, but wtf get it together. People assume that they can rely on government materials. I just try tohike where I get cell service and/or the trail is heavily trafficked. That limits me but there's still a lot that you can do

  • @polluxb
    @polluxb 7 месяцев назад +128

    The foggy mornings after a large rainstorm is breathtakingly beautiful. You can almost see the trees breathe.

    • @WesB1972
      @WesB1972 5 месяцев назад +8

      The smell in the mountains after a rain is wonderful. I live about 30 minutes from the Townsend entrance to the GSMNP.

    • @Melissa-ph5bs
      @Melissa-ph5bs 5 месяцев назад +5

      That's ❤️ beautiful

  • @elricsyao1884
    @elricsyao1884 Год назад +970

    I recently graduated from a college in the southern appalachians and it was a really cool experience. The southern appalachians are some of the most ecologically diverse places in the world and we learned in a class once that the southern appalachians are a feew inches of rainfall short from being considered a rain forest. The appalachians are such a special place

    • @skyrothman8651
      @skyrothman8651 Год назад +28

      The definition of a rainforest is such a wild fact. I'm from northern california and a lot of coast redwood forests here qualify as rainforests

    • @radezy-
      @radezy- Год назад +4

      The Smoky Mountains are a form of rainforest sounds like you are still brain dead even after completing college. Go hiking after it’s finished raining or as it’s raining and you’ll see the vibe is totally different…

    • @xBINARYGODx
      @xBINARYGODx Год назад

      @@radezy- you are what you label others - temperate rainforests exists - what matters is the moisture content of the soil, to put it too simply - does it support thick enough forest AND trch enough plant life under the canopy (two forests for one, basically)? Good - then you have a rainforest. You are brain dead on this topic, go educate yourself.

    • @jokaii
      @jokaii Год назад +6

      @@radezy-?

    • @marthakaczmarczyk4240
      @marthakaczmarczyk4240 Год назад +28

      I live in Watauga county in NC....this area is now considered a rain forest. It also attracts a lot of people from Florida and elsewhere. They come here for what is here and then get involved in local politics to change it. They buy the land, build enormous houses and destroy a lot of what makes it unique.
      As a native, this is sad. Used to be people were friendly and always helped one another. Now it is just a clusterfuck of outsiders who are rude and selfish.

  • @KevinRAAMAAAGE
    @KevinRAAMAAAGE Год назад +1552

    The bison roaming those mountains came from my hometown. It was a decades long breeding project the city and townspeople paid with with their taxes and we voted to have this done. Please treat them with the respect and awe they deserve. It was hard for some of us to see them go and we want to know they're safe and people aren't gonna poach them just cause they can. Please treat them with the respect they deserve. We tried our best to make up for the mistake of almost wiping them out, now we need everyone else to do their part if they want them to become part of the landscape again.
    Yes we're the town with the white Bison calf.
    If you don't believe me my channel proves I live there

    • @patrickglaser1560
      @patrickglaser1560 Год назад +54

      Absolutely do not take close up photos with them, that's how they get put down

    • @KevinRAAMAAAGE
      @KevinRAAMAAAGE Год назад +9

      @@patrickglaser1560 I know that

    • @ellenrittgers990
      @ellenrittgers990 Год назад +5

      Woodland bison?

    • @Butts0hboi
      @Butts0hboi Год назад +18

      One Nudged my car when I went to the Safari Farm that’s near where I live in Memphis. Pretty damn powerful creatures

    • @JohnWickkkk
      @JohnWickkkk Год назад +1

      I want to pet them and take pictures with them and ofc feed them

  • @noxington4260
    @noxington4260 Год назад +802

    FINALLY someone gives Mount Washington some respect. I’m from that part of New England and everyone around here thinks it’s just this little tourist destination because a ton of cars around here have the “this car climbed Mt Washington” bumper stickers on them.

    • @YourNeighborhoodCaat
      @YourNeighborhoodCaat Год назад +33

      Same! Also my family put that sticker on our lawn tractor lol, looks a lot more daunting. But yeah, you either struggle crawling up, or you ride the cog like a normal person

    • @raevanl5477
      @raevanl5477 Год назад +19

      i know! i was just on the cog last week during a storm and it was incredible. the landscape up there in the mountains is amazing but there's so much tourist-y stuff that that's all people know about it (not that the tourist stuff isnt fun!)

    • @codesuc0171
      @codesuc0171 11 месяцев назад +15

      Agreed, that rock pile isn't a joke when the weather rolls in.

    • @IHamilton9320
      @IHamilton9320 11 месяцев назад +16

      Never been there but have heard horror stories from family. My dad and grandpa climbed it in terrible weather and agreed that it was probably the most dangerous hike they ever did, moreso than Kilimanjaro

    • @rinzlr3554
      @rinzlr3554 11 месяцев назад +7

      @@IHamilton9320 I’ve done Kilimanjaro. Unless they did it without a guide (which is impossible now) then it’s relatively safe.

  • @ROOTBEERMAN091
    @ROOTBEERMAN091 8 месяцев назад +67

    As someone who lives in/near northern Appalachia, these woods, no matter where you are are eerie af. You go in them past say 9pm, you instantly want to leave. Theres a constant feeling of dread, and half the time, you feel like somebody or something is watching you. Its weird, because in the daytime, its completely fine.

    • @crusader.survivor
      @crusader.survivor 5 месяцев назад

      It's the history of millions upon millions of violent bloody deaths accumulating evil energies! First batch: annihilation of the Natives
      Second: War for Independence
      Third: Civil War
      Fourth: ?

    • @redragon_istaken
      @redragon_istaken 5 месяцев назад +13

      Drove at night through the woods of northeast pennsylvania once. It was a commomly used road but with no street lights. And no houses on the sides of the street. It was 4 am and the fact that I could barely see anything even with my high beams on freaked the fuck out of me. Seeing nothing but trees all around me as I drove also made it feel very eerie. It also did feel way too quiet and I was trying to get through there as fast as possible. As soon as I hit the interstate highway and saw other cars and drivers there was a feeling of relief that washed over me.

    • @lucycarola
      @lucycarola 3 месяца назад +5

      It’s the Oz factor which is theoretical and not sufficiently studied that does this in such extent, but I do believe that certain levels of non environmental sounds we may be used to, or places that have no light pollution can irritate the senses into a state of “pareidolia.”

    • @LaurenceDay-d2p
      @LaurenceDay-d2p 3 месяца назад +8

      Most forests are like that, but I find them fascinating and love to hike at night. You see more wildlife, and the forests are cool and quiet. Yes, the wild animals are watching you at night - most of them are nocturnal. Needless to say, I always carry my pistol, no matter how "safe" an area is supposed to be.

    • @Chilliestjoker
      @Chilliestjoker Месяц назад +2

      Yup they are spooky lol

  • @ethanb4489
    @ethanb4489 Год назад +420

    even though the rocky mountains are more visually striking, the appalachians are almost haunting in it’s beauty. this mountain range has literally seen the world go from barren ash to a lively ecosystem. it’s literally seen the continents grow closer to form pangea and then be pulled apart. it’s seen bugs rule the world, then reptiles, then mammals. it’s seen it’s forests grow, get ripped to shreds, then grow again. these mountains are older than life itself. that’s why i find the mountains so beautiful. even if most people from the west coast think they’re boring, i think they’re genuinely some of the most amazing areas in the world

    • @whims6278
      @whims6278 Год назад +5

      Beautifully said

    • @Amanitaland
      @Amanitaland Год назад +7

      Another similar mountain range is the Adirondacks as well. Not far from the Appalachians

    • @Chiefleif91
      @Chiefleif91 Год назад

      Agreed

    • @Ieezeca
      @Ieezeca Год назад +3

      I love the way they make me feel tiny and insignificant...

    • @carlcushmanhybels8159
      @carlcushmanhybels8159 Год назад +5

      Bugs still rule the world! (in a way/ and in the Appalachian woods in season.)

  • @matthewtE
    @matthewtE Год назад +319

    I grew up in the Appalachian mountains and am more frightened of being in cities. I had some crazy, unexplained experiences, but it's mostly peaceful out here.

  • @rickw9008
    @rickw9008 Год назад +556

    Born and raised in E. TN and love the beauty and history of this area. It’s home to a resilient and proud people who are a mix of descendants of Scots/ Irish and native Americans. I feel safer in these woods alone than in the middle of a city surrounded by people.

    • @bigheartedgal833
      @bigheartedgal833 Год назад +5

      Amen

    • @moniqueengleman873
      @moniqueengleman873 Год назад +5

      Absolutely 👌

    • @_J0N_TAFFER
      @_J0N_TAFFER Год назад +6

      Lots of mixed natives in every state especially Pa and Ny

    • @skyearthwater
      @skyearthwater Год назад +12

      Amen.
      I was once "ran away" to the Snowbird range, my safe place, prepared to stay gone for months.
      Returned after 10 days to give the system another chance..... Still ambivalent about it.
      If I had to fight, let it be in those mountains.
      I dream that one day, long after I'm gone, the chestnut trees will again tower there, the elk and the wolf and the cougar will thrive freely there again.
      It was a privilege and joy to see the spotted skunk, to have overnighted under 30 ft tall fir in a blizzard, and caught the brookie .

    • @ellenrittgers990
      @ellenrittgers990 Год назад +3

      Because you are.

  • @punchkitten874
    @punchkitten874 11 месяцев назад +34

    5:42 Some of the first Carolina colonists were my husband's ancestors. His family history tells of coming over as indentured servants who immediately fled for the hills as soon as their ship landed. According to them, their original family farm was built in 1698 and they didn't come down "to town" until 1941, when my husband's grandfather had to run the local gas station because everyone else went off to war.

  • @abssssee
    @abssssee Год назад +709

    This was absolutely amazing. I grew up in the blue ridge mountains of Appalachia and this video was an amazing experience. The way you talked about the lack of old growth forests and the culture of animal exploitation/extinction as a result of early deforestation was amazing. The lack of attention to the destruction of this range is devastating to the ecology and surrounding communities. You touched on details even most from Appalachia go their entire lives not knowing or batting an eye at. Thank you. Lovely video

    • @davegordon6943
      @davegordon6943 Год назад +2

      Hey I'm nearby. Rockingham county Virginia

    • @metalmamasue3680
      @metalmamasue3680 11 месяцев назад +2

      I'm on the eastern side of the Appalachians in PA. Love Iiving in my ruraI area. It's beautiful and most peopIe are awesome. They're the first to come heIp when you need it most, without asking for anything in return. You couldn't pay me to Iive in a city. 😊

    • @historymajor26
      @historymajor26 11 месяцев назад +1

      I'm close by too! Near Winston-Salem, NC but have lived half my life going to Hillsville/Galax, VA

    • @davegordon6943
      @davegordon6943 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@historymajor26 Galax in the house!

    • @WolfyTheIn-between
      @WolfyTheIn-between 11 месяцев назад

      It was genocide of not only our Peoples, but of ecology itself 😢

  • @jibbygonewrong2458
    @jibbygonewrong2458 Год назад +590

    I grew up near the south Appalachian mountains and moved to the rockies as an adult. When I moved back to the south, i told people, there was just something very old, magical and mysterious about the Appalachian mountains compared to the rockies. They definitely "speak" to you if you listen.

    • @FastwayIndustries
      @FastwayIndustries 11 месяцев назад +20

      I feel the same way, i was born and raised in idaho and then after highschool i moved to pa, something about these mountains and forests that really speak to me, they feel comforting and full of history

    • @simontenkate9601
      @simontenkate9601 11 месяцев назад +13

      Same experience I had years ago comparing forests on Vancouver Island with those in the province of New Brunswick. Although the western forests and mountains are majestic, those in New Brunswick are much more "mysterious".

    • @justsomenobody889
      @justsomenobody889 11 месяцев назад +9

      I grew up in northern Virginia (now McMansion Central) and obviously have visited the Appalachian via Skyline and such ... I know just what you mean. All my life I have felt like the mountains have been calling to me. It's like another world there, seems like a fairyland at times when you're beside a creek with those mossy rocks and the sunlight filtering through the canopy in the summer, but I still haven't had the opportunity to do it. Someday...

    • @christrotter3052
      @christrotter3052 11 месяцев назад +3

      They do.....
      Western VA and West VA....just amazing

    • @prettyprincess8187
      @prettyprincess8187 10 месяцев назад +5

      Yup. Born and raised in southeastern PA and I've travelled but there's no nature I've seen that speaks to me and holds my heart like PA wilderness. You can definitely feel the age and have no choice but to respect it.

  • @Lasarius2010
    @Lasarius2010 Год назад +815

    As a lifelong Appalachian (Apple-ATCH-in) and an AT thru-hiker, I thoroughly enjoyed this. Many people don't understand the history behind these mountains. They seemingly think they're lesser because they are not as tall as the mountains out west. They are vast and indescribably beautiful. Those of us who grew up here often have a hard time leaving, because the mountains have such a hold on our hearts. Big industry (mining, fracking) has really done a number on small town economies and many people are fleeing the best mountain areas due to the fallout of the industry elites taking business elsewhere after extracing all our natural resources. It's a sad tale. But we are proud people and cling dearly to our mountains - no matter how creepy or scary some people might find them.

    • @lindamaemullins-wr1jg
      @lindamaemullins-wr1jg Год назад +3

      Yep 👍❤

    • @bearbenton5945
      @bearbenton5945 Год назад +18

      As a proud Appalachian, I agree. I almost feel like we're in a country of our own. These mountains have a hold on me I can't escape even if I wanted. I did, 2 1/2 years ago.. but I came back. There's just something so hauntingly beautiful here. Yeah there's bears, but they are afraid of us(speaking from experience), and if you are out far enough to come across them, you should be armed anyway. Thera are other things, though. If you're lifelong, you should know. I was 15 years old when I first saw a creature I couldn't explain. 12 feet tall covered in dark orange fur, malignant eyes. Bigfoot or Dogman is what I've come to recognize the creature as. I hope I never see another. The most terrifying day of my life. But the woods still call to me everytime I go out at night.. Maybe I'll die out here one day but I wouldn't want to die anywhere else.

    • @herbie_the_hillbillie_goat
      @herbie_the_hillbillie_goat Год назад +11

      Really puts "as old as the hills" into perspective.

    • @K-E-V-I-N
      @K-E-V-I-N Год назад +2

      This is the most American thing I have ever heard God bless 🇺🇸

    • @gabedavv
      @gabedavv Год назад +4

      west virginia here 🤚🏽 i can say you are soooo right!! we have so so much more to offer than these big coal/oil companies. unfortunately for west virginia the education system still uses computer systems from the 80s but they still and will always push through with what we got and make the best out of it!!

  • @MayoMonster75
    @MayoMonster75 8 месяцев назад +44

    I'm 50 and live in the Appalachian Mountains. Been here all my life. Seen other places and those places where I have traveled will never replace the beautiful landscapes and unique animals along with some of the greatest and loving people. This is my home and thank you for making it seem even more beautiful with this awesome video.

  • @alyonkabenya
    @alyonkabenya 11 месяцев назад +963

    I was born and raised in Ural mountains, and it was interesting to learn about many similarities: from being one of the oldest mountains and how they feel mysterious and rich in folklore, and being heavily used for mining and timber industry and dangers it all brings, how indigenous people were forced away and even how people nowadays from these regions are viewed.

    • @mariahmier9313
      @mariahmier9313 11 месяцев назад +11

      Do you have any folklore or stories about them you’d like to share? Sounds beautiful!

    • @alyonkabenya
      @alyonkabenya 11 месяцев назад +72

      @@mariahmier9313 Sure! A lot of them are based on stories by mine workers pre XX century, collected by Bazhov, and they consist of many genius loci: for example The Mistress of the Copper Mountain (beautiful green-eyed young woman in a malachite gown or as a lizard with a crown) or The Fire-Fairy. And the stories are about how these creatures help find rare gems, for example, or punish people, if they are nasty. Among the more recent ones there is a Dyatlov Pass incident, which has a lot of conspiracy theories ranging from death from a secret KGB poison to murder by indigenous Mansi tribes. :)

    • @thisisaname5589
      @thisisaname5589 11 месяцев назад +2

      Thank god, too. Sure, the Appalachians are still somewhat dangerous, but people can survive far easier there after the barbarians and dangerous animals were forced out.

    • @alanmoulet1362
      @alanmoulet1362 11 месяцев назад +37

      ​@@thisisaname5589Lil bro think hes the good Guy for forcing people out their Land and killing wildlife. Acting like animal in name of good and calling other barbarian ...

    • @redhourglass8
      @redhourglass8 11 месяцев назад +4

      My great grandparents, grandparents, parents aunts and uncles worked for the Steel Mills and Coal Mines and the scariest most dangerous thing is in those woods. Not kidding. Here they couldn’t clear all the trees because people and equipment go missing. Plus most of everything is haunted and you WILL see them. Not all ghosts.

  • @trueinthekitchen
    @trueinthekitchen Год назад +149

    I live in the Appalachian mountains and a friend of mine who moved here from the Rocky Mountains said “in the Rockies, the mountains are dramatic and showy intense. In the appalacians, you can’t see the end of the mountain range. You can’t tell what elevation you’re at, or see how far away from home you are. You can’t tell where one mountain ends and the other begins.” And I think the culture of these two ranges reflects those descriptions perfectly.

    • @timetoxx
      @timetoxx 5 месяцев назад

      Is the shit true?

    • @heraprince
      @heraprince 5 месяцев назад +3

      So they were from the range, not the Rockies. But yes the mountains here are very defined. But if your in the Rockies they go on forever but have vast valleys too

  • @Sam89365
    @Sam89365 Год назад +186

    I’ve backpacked in the Rockies, Cascades, and Appalachians a ton over the years. I have zero issue walking around in the dark in both the Rockies and cascades but the Appalachians creep me out.

    • @vivianloney
      @vivianloney Год назад +13

      I live in the Appalachian foothills and I love stargazing. I've driven into parks and wild areas in the middle of the night and climbed up ridge trails to summits for the view many times. I've never had an issue with the dark, but the key is to know the area you're hiking in the dark very well. I do my 1am hikes in areas where just the feeling of the ground underneath me tells me where I am on the trail. So I get why that can be a problem for outsiders.

    • @zacharias.horsemanship
      @zacharias.horsemanship Год назад +10

      ​​@@vivianloneyI went hiking with my sister in the middle of the night once to catch the sunrise at the top of Mt. Leconte... I would've had a total heart attack if I ran into someone else on the trail. 😅
      Also, she forgot our headlamps, which would've made an encounter even more scary. Lol
      Thankfully I was blissfully unaware at the time that there were other weirdos that hiked at night.

    • @shepberryhill4912
      @shepberryhill4912 Год назад +3

      @@zacharias.horsemanship Oh, the reason YOU didn't have a light is someone else's fault? Stay home until you're ready to take responsibility for your own self.

    • @ssfc117
      @ssfc117 Год назад +2

      I wouldn’t walk around the cascades or Rockies at night if you knew any ndn stories there

    • @ssfc117
      @ssfc117 Год назад +10

      @@shepberryhill4912 why don’t you stay at home buddy

  • @julianparks8485
    @julianparks8485 11 месяцев назад +31

    I love these mountains. Not just the flora and fauna, but the geology as well. I find a peace in them.

  • @jacobjarvis1335
    @jacobjarvis1335 Год назад +363

    The sheer amount of biodiversity in the Appalachian mountains is incredible. Thank you for talking about these beautiful mountains

    • @pakde8002
      @pakde8002 Год назад

      Unfortunately the biodiversity doesn't extend to the people living there. The inbreeding isn't just a stereotype.

    • @robertbates6057
      @robertbates6057 Год назад +1

      An interesting fact_ there are more species of plants in just the state of GA than all the states west of the Mississippi COMBINED!

    • @thomassnapp1341
      @thomassnapp1341 Год назад +7

      @@pakde8002 Yes it is a Hollywood stereotype. Do your homework before making an asinine post.

  • @SobaOfPulaski
    @SobaOfPulaski Год назад +202

    I am on a County SAR team that covers part of the parkway, half of these cases are because people go into the woods without the proper equipment or clothing and end up falling off a huge cliff or into a mica mine. We have had plenty of searches that have gone cold because there are just so many variables within these woods that make it either too difficult or flat-out impossible to find people. Not to mention the fact most of our teams are way less equipped than teams in other parts of the country simply because we lack the funding and/or support from the state government or local jurisdictions. Regardless of all this, I think it's important for people to realize that a lot of the people who go missing, go missing because they are overconfident in their abilities or just simply unprepared. We have had to do many carry-outs from the plane crash up off of water rock knob because people are either out of shape and unfit to go on that hike or were wearing the wrong boots or clothes for the hike. I remember seeing the news recently about it getting removed from the trail and I personally am glad about that. It hopefully means we will have fewer people getting lost and hurt, not fully eliminate the risk and chance of these incidents, but hopefully, it will do a number at mitigating this.

    • @SobaOfPulaski
      @SobaOfPulaski Год назад

      @@jennifermarlow. I agree 100%

    • @pakde8002
      @pakde8002 Год назад +1

      If you had to sign an NDA you couldn't tell us you had to sign an NDA, right?
      We all know it's really aliens!

    • @SobaOfPulaski
      @SobaOfPulaski Год назад

      @@pakde8002 Alien’s ain’t real, the Bible makes it very clear God only created life on Earth. The creature which folks consider an alien are in fact satan spawn.

    • @monotropaodorata2632
      @monotropaodorata2632 Год назад +5

      Water rock knob isn’t that bad it’s actually one of my favorites just bring plenty of water and don’t drink a fifth of whiskey first because you will be dried out.

    • @SobaOfPulaski
      @SobaOfPulaski Год назад +7

      @@monotropaodorata2632 Oh I love it too, but there are folks who hike it that shouldn’t be until they get a bit more in shape.

  • @warshipsdd-2142
    @warshipsdd-2142 Год назад +170

    I have lived over half of a long life in and around these mountains that my kin and ancestors have inhabited over 300 years. I can name some of the ridgelines you showed from hiking them solo in all kinds of weather, deep into the peaks and coves-from Georgia to Newfoundland. I say that to give credence to my praise of a video take does an excellent job of conveying the feel of this magical place I call home. Well done sir.

  • @OneOldLady984
    @OneOldLady984 11 месяцев назад +18

    Thank you for a wonderful video on this area.
    I grew up in the mountains of Western NC and my family has lived on the same property since the early 1800s. I also have Cherokee ancestry. Growing up, I was taught and still have a deep respect and reverence for these beautiful mountains and its people.
    Now in my 60’s, I am saddened by the loss of pride and value placed on our cultural heritage by the younger generations caused in part by social stigma attached to this area. The influx of drugs and outside influences has devastated many areas.
    I deeply appreciate your video highlighting the beauty and uniqueness of this often misunderstood region.

  • @joshua557
    @joshua557 Год назад +212

    I'm a Colorado native and familiar with the rocky mountains. I have visited the Appalachians once a year (TN/NC/GA) for the past three years and I find them extremely beautiful and wonderfully different than what I am used to at home. I haven't spent much time in very remote parts of the Appalachians but I have never had a scary or creepy experience even at night. The interactions I've had with the people that live there were pretty normal too. It is a welcome change and I appreciate the diverse mountain ranges we have in our country.

    • @SSL0707Star
      @SSL0707Star Год назад

      Appalachian is an older version of Rockies :)

    • @קעז-מענטש
      @קעז-מענטש Год назад +2

      You should visit the blue ridge mountains as well

    • @connorrothgeb
      @connorrothgeb Год назад +10

      Nice to hear this from a Colorado native. I hear too many people being like “the east coast doesn’t have real mountains” which just annoys the hell out of me

    • @SubvertTheState
      @SubvertTheState Год назад +3

      There's a beautiful place called The Black Forest (not Germany) in Pennsylvania. It's actually the toughest parts of the Appalachian mountains in PA and the Black Forest Trail is a leg destroyer. But the incredible views are irreplaceable. You can walk through thick, dark woods, climbing and climbing up very steep trail, and then it opens up a bit and you get to see just how much elevation change you made. I just wish the massive trees which gave the Black Forest it's name weren't clear cut long ago.

    • @ejonesmiata
      @ejonesmiata Год назад +2

      As someone who has lived in VT and CO .. the Appalachian Mountains are just so much more diverse and so beautiful. I now own a house in Vt 😂. But I will say I did love that Rocky Mountain powder lol . But I’m happy at smuggs

  • @elknut2150
    @elknut2150 Год назад +261

    Born and raised in Montana. We moved to East Tennessee for Medical School. As a lifelong outdoorsman, I severely underestimated these mountains and how unique and beautiful they are. Sure miss the Rockies but exploring the Appalachians has been truly amazing.

    • @Fishhunter2014
      @Fishhunter2014 Год назад

      No kidding where abouts?

    • @elknut2150
      @elknut2150 Год назад +4

      @@Fishhunter2014 We are in Harrogate until next year. Couldn’t have asked for a better place to be relocated to for a bit.

    • @Fishhunter2014
      @Fishhunter2014 Год назад +1

      @@elknut2150 Gotcha. I'm from montana too so I was curious.

    • @elknut2150
      @elknut2150 Год назад

      @@Fishhunter2014 oh I thought you meant Tennessee. I’m originally from Butte. We will be back there in a couple of years. How about you?

    • @Fishhunter2014
      @Fishhunter2014 Год назад +3

      @@elknut2150 I'm from Lewistown

  • @georgekamenov_
    @georgekamenov_ Год назад +248

    Aidin, I subscribed to your channel around 4 years ago and I have to say, having the opportunity to see how you have grown as a filmmaker and how your content has changed into what it is today has been incredible. Any time I see one of your videos in my subscription feed I click it before anything else and never regret that choice. It's hard to describe in a way that doesn't turn this comment into a 10 page essay but there's just something that makes me feel completely different when watching your videos compared to any other creators in this beautiful filmmaking meets engaging storytelling genre on RUclips. You're genuinely a huge inspiration and absolutely one of my all time favorite creators on this platform. Keep up the amazing work. Can't wait to see how it evolves moving forward!

    • @coffeygrinds
      @coffeygrinds Год назад +6

      Thanks for typing this my feelings exactly

    • @Waynebrady22
      @Waynebrady22 Год назад +3

      I have a feeling he’s about to blow up like he deserves soon to a million subs plus

    • @Tridevcandraw
      @Tridevcandraw Год назад +3

      Me too❤

    • @PoeLemic
      @PoeLemic Год назад +4

      I would have said the same thing, but @GeorgeK said it better -- than many of us could. So, I'll second, third, fourth, or wherever I am on the list -- agree & have same sentiment as @GK.

    • @kkilljoy3588
      @kkilljoy3588 Год назад +4

      This is the first vid of his I’ve ever seen so that’s neat to read - thanks for that!

  • @julianafowler2758
    @julianafowler2758 8 месяцев назад +20

    Your editing alone is absolutely amazing. I hope you’re proud of your work!

  • @Aran_chini
    @Aran_chini Год назад +79

    Your videos are the new gold standard. The amount of information conveyed, the seamless story and presentation, the artistic skill to represent such an achingly beautiful corner of the world - amazing.

    • @barbarakelly1916
      @barbarakelly1916 Год назад

      I'm a retired educational media consultant and buyer for a public school system. I agree with your comments. Excellent content, cinematography, and delivery!

  • @tesshagensieker1700
    @tesshagensieker1700 Год назад +129

    I live in Alaksa and we have similar stories about skinwalkers or other monsters stealing people, but being out in the wilderness here without respect for its natural force is deadly, and I think that's what most people fail to recognize with places like the Appalachia or Alaska etc.

    • @TzeentchLordofChange
      @TzeentchLordofChange Год назад +2

      sup there fellow 907er

    • @celebrityrog
      @celebrityrog Год назад +4

      In Alaska, the biggest threat in the wilderness I think is the weather and the ability to change rapidly, as well as limited shelter to be found or created in some of the conditions Alaska has to throw at us. Next would be Bears and Moose attacks.

    • @zellyu8559
      @zellyu8559 Год назад

      ayee 907 gang gang 😊

  • @MyFireInside4
    @MyFireInside4 Год назад +393

    My family has been in the Appalachians since well before the 1790’s and I’ve never watched a video that accurately describes the vast diversity and beauty and yet the economic depression of the Appalachians. And I have never understood the “don’t go out at night, if you see something no you didn’t” trend that is happening. I go out at night all the time. It’s gorgeous.
    Thank you so much for this video! Finally someone that truly sees the Appalachian Mountains 😊

    • @Badluckfistfck
      @Badluckfistfck Год назад +79

      I’m convinced that the “if you see something, no you didn’t” “don’t have your blinds open at night” “don’t go out at night” trends are all created by attention seekers who don’t actually know shit about true Appalachia. I never heard ANY of that stuff growing up, and I came from an extremely superstitious family

    • @MyFireInside4
      @MyFireInside4 Год назад +44

      @@Badluckfistfck All. Of. This.
      I literally would walk in the woods by myself as a child and never once “saw anything”. It’s weird to me.

    • @Badluckfistfck
      @Badluckfistfck Год назад +44

      @@MyFireInside4 I’ve had a couple of weird encounters, but ironically the weirdest wasn’t even in Appalachia, they were all in broad daylight, and it’s not going to put me off going into the woods. I feel 10x safer in the woods of Appalachia in the dead of night then I did spending one night on the streets of NYC, I really don’t know where people are getting these stories and “rules” from

    • @krisqo
      @krisqo Год назад +17

      ive spent many of nights in these mountains laying in a hammock staring at the stars it is the most peaceful experiences of life. However doesnt discount from some of the strange things ive heard either.

    • @lindamaemullins-wr1jg
      @lindamaemullins-wr1jg Год назад +1

      IKR ❤

  • @tetleyT
    @tetleyT 7 месяцев назад +61

    According to research by Yosemite National Park Search and Rescue, "accidentally losing the trail" is the most common reason for people going missing in wilderness areas. In addition, when people are successully found, they are found an average of 1.8 kilometres from their starting point and only 58 meters from the nearest trail or road. It doesn’t take much for someone to lose their bearings in the wild.

    • @beardeddragon9255
      @beardeddragon9255 6 месяцев назад +7

      It really is easy to get lost. I tell anyone that doesn't believe me to go into the woods, go off the trail just far enough until you can't see it anymore, and absorb the feeling that you get when not being able to see that trail anymore. It's a spooky feeling, even if you know exactly where the trail is. Go a little farther and they now see why they don't want to veer off official walkways.

    • @suchnothing
      @suchnothing 6 месяцев назад +11

      And THAT is why, when you get lost in the woods, the best thing to do is STOP and wait for help. If you stop as soon as you think you're lost, chances are you're actually right next to the trail and can be found by a search party, or could even hear other hikers passing by and make your way back. If you keep wandering looking for the trail, you could be actively running away from the search party that's out looking for you.

    • @kar460
      @kar460 3 месяца назад

      ​@@beardeddragon9255 how does someone lose a trail?

    • @phlpblr
      @phlpblr 2 месяца назад

      @@kar460very easily. Could be due to trying to go around an obstacle, the perfect picture spot was found, etc. I know in my part of Appalachia there are woods so thick there are some patches that are almost double/triple canopy within a mile of houses, and quickly you can lose a trail.

  • @MaritimeFox
    @MaritimeFox Год назад +404

    In 1995 I did a road trip from NY to LA in a big smiley face route across the Southern US. Whilst driving through West Virginia and Tennessee I was struck at how similar the hills and mountains looked to North Wales and Scotland. Ireland too. It's only in recent years that I learned that they are the same mountains. The central Pangean mountains. I often thought how Scotland looked a lot like Canada and in many ways that's because it was a part of Canada. I believe the highlands of Scotland are now listed as part of the Appalachian trail.

    • @John_on_the_mountain
      @John_on_the_mountain 11 месяцев назад

      Probably why so many Scots settled in the Appalachians

    • @baddestjoanna-michellesmit5578
      @baddestjoanna-michellesmit5578 11 месяцев назад +6

      Wales gave me the same vibe.

    • @antonycharnock2993
      @antonycharnock2993 11 месяцев назад +12

      You have the Scottish naturalist John Muir to thank for your national parks and protected areas " The mountains are calling and I must go"

    • @John_on_the_mountain
      @John_on_the_mountain 11 месяцев назад +10

      @@antonycharnock2993 yes! He lived in my hometown in Martinez, CA. We went to his house for a 4th grade field trip. It was across the street from my friends house lol

    • @gwhite7136
      @gwhite7136 11 месяцев назад +3

      There are many people here whose ancestors came from Scotland. One of mine was deposed by the King of Scotland and banished. He ended up in NC and eventually his decedents ended up in east TN and western NC. I think most decedents of Scotland tend to stick to where there are mountains.

  • @sydneyjackson6530
    @sydneyjackson6530 Год назад +169

    I’ve lived in North Carolina my whole life and never experienced anything really spooky here. The mountains are beautiful and should be protected. That being said if you feel unnerved it’s probably a rouge bear or cougar and you don’t really know that’s what you are sensing. Very informational video I now love them even more.

    • @aliablackwell8311
      @aliablackwell8311 Год назад +19

      I agree, I've never felt safer anywhere than in the mountains in NC. I'm from the Piedmont but the mountains feel like home.

    • @killaloli2779
      @killaloli2779 11 месяцев назад

      @@aliablackwell8311same here! 336

    • @justsomenobody889
      @justsomenobody889 11 месяцев назад +2

      maybe it seems spooky if you're not used to foggy mornings. Do you get much fog down in NC?

    • @sydneyjackson6530
      @sydneyjackson6530 11 месяцев назад +3

      @justsomenobody889 It really depends on the area and the time of year but it can get rather misty here. The mountains kinda trap humidity from the coast so it is really rare to have a completely dry day. I don’t see fog every morning, but the days that I do it’s really thick. That being said I don’t live on the end of the state near the mountains so the weather may be different there

    • @MsSmokeNmirrors
      @MsSmokeNmirrors 11 месяцев назад +1

      I agree and I feel safer there than mountains on the west coast. But i have researched the murders and disappearances and there are many.

  • @sandyaw3057
    @sandyaw3057 Год назад +265

    As someone who has always lived in the Appalachians, I really loved this video. I’m hoping this will help people realize that we deserve respect instead of looking down on us.

    • @elonever.2.071
      @elonever.2.071 Год назад +3

      It is a wonderful place to live and the people are real family oriented.

    • @galadrielwoods2332
      @galadrielwoods2332 Год назад +10

      Let them look down. It keeps them and their evil “progress” away.

    • @Olemier
      @Olemier Год назад +3

      I grew up in PA, explored all along the Appalachians through PA, WV, etc. The shitty Hollywood stereotypes about Appalachia are annoying. Can’t believe they still do that shit.

    • @sandyaw3057
      @sandyaw3057 Год назад +1

      @@Olemier That’s where I grew up and still live! I know to what you are referring and I hate it too!

    • @Beadledom2024
      @Beadledom2024 Год назад +3

      We only look down on the baby bottles filled with Mountain Dew...

  • @ChristianSchaffer
    @ChristianSchaffer 11 месяцев назад +2

    This footage is so beautiful 🥲

  • @delphi2123
    @delphi2123 Год назад +96

    I was born and raised here in the southern Appalachians- I really appreciate you making such a nice video about our home. (Saw a bunch of other commenters saying they’re also from TN- hi family!!)
    I love a good ghost story but too many people take it too far or too seriously and paint the area and locals in a negative light. The woods can be spooky and potentially dangerous but you’re only in any real trouble if you’re heading deep into the forest with little to no experience, supplies, etc. I don’t fear monsters and haints- I’m more worried about mountain lions lol

    • @DrPhilGoode
      @DrPhilGoode Год назад +6

      You mean wampus cats?? Lol 🤣🤣

    • @12345fowler
      @12345fowler Год назад +4

      Don't worry about the horror stories etc. It's just part of the human psyche to invent stories for whatever reasons. I bet this is the same around the world where you have intricate environement like deep forest etc, that the human feel they can't master and dominate right off so they start telling stories about them. For instance in France there is an area called "Le Gévaudan" where you mostly have deep forrest yet horror stories has been circulating from thousends of years about a big wolf eating humans there. (La bête du Gévaudan) A full feature movie was even made out of it in as late as 2002 so nothing new here.

    • @charliedallachie3539
      @charliedallachie3539 Год назад +2

      Other people (crazy or criminal) are the most dangerous usually

  • @kitecorbin3914
    @kitecorbin3914 Год назад +88

    Live in Appalachians. I am a mountains gal and I could never leave to live anywhere else. There's something so safe about them and friendly. I feel like they hold me in a cradle and keep me safe. There's something soothing in the thought that I can step off a path and be invisible for a time.

    • @loganbaileysfunwithtrains606
      @loganbaileysfunwithtrains606 Год назад +8

      It’s a spiritual energy, like being amongst family, I know what you mean. As a West Virginia boy I could never leave. My older brother moved to Central PA to the city of Harrisburg and the only thing that keeps me sane during those trips in the busy city is looking upriver of the Susquehanna river and seeing the silhouette of the Alleghenies the sister mountains to the Appalachians.

    • @tylergooden2183
      @tylergooden2183 Год назад +7

      That’s the Appalachian vibe in a nutshell. Old, ancient, and somehow cradling you

    • @gipsymoth1574
      @gipsymoth1574 Год назад +2

      lived in West Virginia for a year and honestly felt so exposed when I drove back west. I missed feeling cradled by all the valleys 💕 beautiful place

    • @revsla
      @revsla Год назад +1

      Yes. I feel the safety and warmth of home in these mountains. I also give them the respect they deserve because they are, after all, mountains.

    • @vladvalo
      @vladvalo Год назад

      Fed comment *

  • @zachf2345
    @zachf2345 Год назад +38

    I'm a sucker for good cinematography and this video tickles my brian in all the right ways, also cool to see the smokies get the recognition they deserve.

  • @MJ-bz3fw
    @MJ-bz3fw 9 месяцев назад +1

    This was so beautiful! I have been wanting to hike the Appalachian mountains for years. Can’t wait to get there, now!

  • @glenmorrison8080
    @glenmorrison8080 Год назад +185

    I'm a westerner with a penchant for doing a lot of hiking by myself, and exploring funky places like derelict canyon and ridge trails through wilderness. I would never do that in the Appalachians, or any other mountains with so much, dense forest cover. I agree with Boone. Being in a forest like that really strikes me with fear. It is sooooo easy to become lost when you cannot see 100 feet in front of you.

    • @shepberryhill4912
      @shepberryhill4912 Год назад +9

      That's absurd. You should stay out of most of the forests on this planet, then.

    • @eekee6034
      @eekee6034 Год назад +13

      I get where you're coming from, but humans naturally learn to find their way around when they're very young. If you haven't learned a terrain type, it's frightening. I took to exploring the woods behind my home, much against my mother's wishes, when I was 3 years old, but I was always kept on a tight reign in urban areas. Forests don't scare me at all; I don't even see anything creepy in the footage in this video. Urban areas are a different story. In my 20s, I was terrified of trying to find my way around an unfamiliar town until I trained myself. Funnily enough, the basic technique is the same: look around; get mental snapshots of what you'll see if you find yourself coming back the way you came.

    • @glenmorrison8080
      @glenmorrison8080 Год назад +15

      @@shepberryhill4912 I don't say that because I'm scared of spooky stuff. I'm just not used to forests. I'm used to landscapes where it's easy to keep long distance line of sight. That thick eastern forest feels claustrophobic to me.

    • @jeffminnich3291
      @jeffminnich3291 Год назад +13

      @@eekee6034 every hill looks the same, every valley looks the same, you can only climb them steep hills so much before you become exhausted and that's if your in great shape....and you typically cannot see far due to the trees. getting lost in them mountains is not a good thing.

    • @eekee6034
      @eekee6034 Год назад +1

      @@jeffminnich3291 I see your point regarding exhaustion, I never tried to find my own way around for more than about half a day, and that's including coming back. (I have fatigue issues.) I don't know about every hill and valley looking the same. That might be a case of learning to recognize the differences, but definitely don't let yourself get exhausted. Trees should help, but they can all look the same depending on how the forest is (or isn't) managed. I have it easy in Britain, but I have been in one forest where the trees all grew the same.

  • @MJGEGB
    @MJGEGB Год назад +83

    The Appalachian mountains have always been the place I've felt the safest ever since I was a child. Just weird hearing they described as creepy. They feel like home to me and I've always only been a visitor.
    Definitely some cool information in this video. One spot I've visited has plants only known to exist in two locations on earth. This definitely explains why that is.

  • @catalinaplaza7909
    @catalinaplaza7909 Год назад +183

    I find the supernatural stories very fun, but as you said they can come out as disrespectful, and you don’t need anything supernatural to make the wilderness dangerous for people.
    I wish I could go to that beautiful place someday 💖

    • @fancydeer
      @fancydeer Год назад +15

      honestly if the spooky skinwalker stories keep people out then lets spread them. but fr the number of old family mines, mine shafts, abandoned mines, illegal mines etc in the area that people can fall into and get hurt by are much more of a danger than anything supernatural.

    • @jenshoefer7944
      @jenshoefer7944 Год назад +7

      Nothing supernatural there anyways, it's all natural, just that we don't fully understand nature...having said this, besides the danger of accidents incl getting lost, the biggest threat are humans (as usual) 🤷‍♂️...nevertheless, coming from european alps, the AT is firmly on my bucket list, it's so much of a different experience

    • @hedgehog3180
      @hedgehog3180 Год назад

      @@fancydeer If Chernobyl is anything to go by scary stories are probably more likely to attract people than the boring reality, which is something of a shame when talking about some genuinely amazing and beautiful nature.

  • @tauterpaladin
    @tauterpaladin 2 месяца назад +1

    Incredible story telling and cinematography on all of your videos, one of the hidden gems of RUclips , thank you for this content

  • @gibby1325
    @gibby1325 Год назад +34

    You are making some of the best content I have ever seen, and that's not an exaggeration. As someone who adores these mountains, it's so enjoyable to watch these videos. Just recently, I've also seen a lot of stories about people going missing in the Appalachian Mountains, so the timing here is perfect! I'm close enough to these mountains that I get to go at least a few times a year. It's a beautiful, tranquil place where you get to re-connect with yourself and get some time away in a location you could only dream of. I hope to learn more about them from you because we share the same appreciation. Keep doing what you are doing: learning about this place and sharing your knowledge and appreciation with the world. You are fantastic at it!

    • @darksu6947
      @darksu6947 Год назад

      I can see the second tallest mountain in Virginia from my front porch. I love it here. I can't imagine living anywhere else.

  • @PoeLemic
    @PoeLemic Год назад +12

    I don't know what to say. You have a superb talent in story-telling. This video feels like a documentary on Discovery. Seriously, you are a really gifted individual. Your work is impressive.

  • @KaminoCloningOperations
    @KaminoCloningOperations Год назад +284

    Hey guys, if you’re economically available or just generally have the time to do so, please hike the Appalachian Trail or drive the many routes through the mountains. Doing so brings much needed visitors (tourists) to these dying and often dead towns. It’s such a cool, gritty but overwhelmingly beautiful region that often gets looked over. Thanks!

    • @jonc275
      @jonc275 11 месяцев назад +66

      Nice try skinwalker

    • @RobertGaeta-y6m
      @RobertGaeta-y6m 11 месяцев назад +2

      Why should i

    • @tsteinebach287
      @tsteinebach287 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@jonc275LOL!

    • @kaitlynbennett4348
      @kaitlynbennett4348 11 месяцев назад

      not with 12 tribe dangit. dont need a cult up my arse

    • @ReptilianTeaDrinker
      @ReptilianTeaDrinker 11 месяцев назад

      I live all the way in the UK and tend to stay indoors, so that probably won't happen. Sorry.

  • @JeffreyEsguerraPhotography
    @JeffreyEsguerraPhotography 9 месяцев назад +1

    I think I've watched this video maybe 4 times and I still feel like I learn something new every time I watch it, and this goes for every film from Aidin. Keep up the great work and thank you for inspiring me to do more with my photography and to delve into a new experience in filming.

  • @nayaabshah1155
    @nayaabshah1155 Год назад +18

    The production and quality of this video is insane! I often forget how beautiful my country is and how its so diverse in lands and peoples . Thank you so much for the history lesson and incredible imagery.

  • @PuipinM
    @PuipinM Год назад +86

    Geologist here!
    I'm currently researching the mountain building events that created the Appalachian Mountains as we know them today. Though my focus is largely on a uniquely zoned Pluton in the Northern Appalachians, I'd suggest anyone interested in the beautiful geological history of this range look into the Acadian and Neoacadian Orogenies! Many of the largest mountain ranges on earth, such as the swiss alps, are modeled based off earlier Appalachian cross-sectional models.
    You can learn and infer a lot from these mountains and mountain building events!
    Some fantastic journal entries include (not cited in any good format):
    "The Nappe Theory in the Connecticut Valley region: Thirty-five years since Jim Thomspon's first proposal," (Robinson, Thompson, Elbert, 1991) (His first proposal is great too!)
    "Tectonic Synthesis of Southern New England" (Robinson, Hall, 1980)
    "A newly identified Gondwanan terrane in the northern Appalachian Mountains: Implications for the Taconic Orogeny and Closure of The Lapetus Ocean" (Macdonald, Ryan-Davis, Coish, Crowley, Karabinos),
    "Rise and fall of the Acadian altiplano: Evidence for a pPaleozoic orogenic plateau in New England" (Hillenbrand, Williams, Li, Gao),
    "Paleozoic evolution of crustal thickness and elevation in the northern Appalachian orogen, USA" (Hillenbrand, Williams)

    • @SubvertTheState
      @SubvertTheState Год назад

      Hey thanks for sharing these

    • @wmanadeau7860
      @wmanadeau7860 Год назад +3

      I see you reference the Taconic Orogeny. My understanding is it predates the other mountain building processes of the region and is the western edge of the extremely complex geology of central and western New England. I live a few miles from the Taconic ridge and have hiked it in all seasons. It's a little known, remarkably beautiful ancient place. I find fossils no one has been able to identify. Yet we're a stone's throw from the center of the northeast metropolis.

  • @thekatalexander
    @thekatalexander Год назад +93

    I grew up in the PNW and recently moved to rural VA and I gotta say, the energy here is very different. I grew up in the woods and the forests. I spent hours and hours on my grandparents property exploring the creeks and fields and trees. As well as camping and hiking lot on crazy Mountains. So I’m fairly comfortable in nature but still… it’s a completely different landscape and vibe out here.

    • @impulse_xs
      @impulse_xs Год назад +31

      I think it’s partly due to the long and complex history of human inhabitants and their relationship with these mountains. There’s a strange sense of unavoidable human connection. Any time I’m in the woods and rivers of south central PA I can’t help but think of the Susquahannock people(as well as the early colonists) who lived on the same land, fished the same streams, hunted the same game, and maybe even walked the same game trails I am centuries later.
      I think about all the death that happened in these woods. I can only imagine the sense of fear both the natives and early settlers felt when they were alone in these woods. Imagine trying to traverse these mountains where sheer cliffs, limestone sinkholes, and other dangers lurk, in woods so thick you can’t see anything past 10-15 feet. Being alone out there, wondering wether a native, a rival tribe, or settlers might be looking to kill you, knowing that you’re on your own and nobody will come to save you.
      There’s a sense of sadness, knowing this land was home to an entire group of people that no longer exist. It’s impossible to avoid too. You can’t avoid the arrowheads you find. There’s literally artwork drawn and carved into the small rock outcrops in the Susquehanna and other rivers in the area. Very heavy feeling in the woods. Not intimidating per se, but very uncomfortable feeling in the air sometimes. I’ve become used to it. I try to show some reverence to this land when I’m out fishing, hunting, camping, ect. You just KNOW people have been here before you… and there was a lot of human suffering.

    • @shepberryhill4912
      @shepberryhill4912 Год назад +1

      Of course it's different. Different is not bad.

    • @loganbaileysfunwithtrains606
      @loganbaileysfunwithtrains606 Год назад +5

      @@impulse_xsspiritually for a lot of people the Appalachians are their home, for the Scottish immigrants the Appalachian mountains are exactly like that of the Scottish highlands (they are part of the same mountain range originally) and for a long time there was an understanding amongst the Scottish and the natives, while it wasn’t all holding hands dancing around the fire as people might want to think, there was mutual respect and very similar Clan culture that the Cherokee and Shawnee had that the Scottish also followed. So most issues were handled diplomatically. This all of course ends with the English ruining it and this is when you have settlers and natives attacking each other and you get the stories like Follow The River.
      Being ancestrally Scottish and Irish (i don’t know how that happened) plus a very very small amount of Native American living West Virginia I will say I feel a spiritual connection to the land, it’s almost that of a familial connection like it’s a family member. I think there is a native belief that a powerful spirit lives within the mountains and I’d have to agree even if I believe in no other power besides God. I believe he channels spiritual power through these ancient hills which is why they always have a vibe or feeling to them.

    • @mary-ue4ir
      @mary-ue4ir Год назад +1

      @@loganbaileysfunwithtrains606 I couldn't agree more. It suits me better than anywhere else. It feels right, it feels safe, it makes my heart peaceful and it feels like home. I'm greatful and have always felt truly blessed to live here for so long.

    • @galadrielwoods2332
      @galadrielwoods2332 Год назад +1

      @@impulse_xs They still exist. 🙂 Native American does not imply a specific race. North America has always been multi racial. For example, the Cherokee speak of the Moon Eyed people who already lived on lands they wanted. They fought each other and the Cherokee won and took the land. The Moon Eyed people were from Wales. Another example is the Red Paint People of the Northeast who date back to at least 8,000 years ago. They were from North and Northwestern Europe. When I say “from” somewhere I mean their genes and race match people of those areas in Europe. Same race/species of hominid. People ignorantly think that North America or the Americas in general were hidden by a cloak until a few hundred years ago. Of course, they are made to think that by corrupt mainstream academia.

  • @PC_83-i7q
    @PC_83-i7q 8 месяцев назад +4

    I really appreciate videos like this. You took your time creating this and researched. The crap on TikTok I don’t know why people waste their time on that

  • @AngieFulfordWorld
    @AngieFulfordWorld Год назад +13

    Western Carolina girl here. These mountains were our playground. Yeah there were some creepy places but we were never afraid. Brilliant national park. I have nothing but fond memories camping and exploring the mountains.

  • @mime514
    @mime514 Год назад +37

    These mountains truly are a treasure of this world, they look so eerily beautiful and being able to step foot on something so incredibly ancient sounds like such a privilege. They remind me of the Carpathian mountains of my homeland, Romania: both of them have an atmosphere that imposes respect and you can’t help but wonder at their incomprehensible beauty, brutal and peaceful at the same time. I can’t really put this feeling into words, but I think that all of the folklore, legends and, sadly, sorrowful stories that surround these mountains make me respect them even more

  • @PrettyPrince
    @PrettyPrince Год назад +8

    these videos are so incredibly thoughtful, and well made. I used to live in Gatlinburg before the fire. Super nostalgic video

  • @bchearne
    @bchearne 9 месяцев назад +3

    About 100 times better than the video I expected based on the title. Well done

  • @akashghoto
    @akashghoto Год назад +9

    These recent videos deserve so much recognition.. Aidin you are truly a FILMMAKER

  • @lancepoteet2172
    @lancepoteet2172 Год назад +24

    Having grown up in southern Appalachia, it blew my mind when visiting Joyce Kilmer and to see what the timber used to look like.

    • @skyearthwater
      @skyearthwater Год назад +2

      That had to be a few seconds of footage from Kilmer here. ❤️. I 'm pretty sure I recognized the very spot.

    • @cchaffincc
      @cchaffincc Год назад +2

      I looked in the comments to see if someone else recognized Joyce Kilmer/Slickrock . One of the prettiest places in North America.

  • @luckyboyyt8582
    @luckyboyyt8582 Год назад +25

    I've always wanted to explore the Appalachians and learn more about the land, ecology, history, people, and build new skills. This was so well presented. It makes me more excited to get out there. What a fantastic land.

  • @kolascire
    @kolascire 6 месяцев назад +1

    The photo of LeConte Lodge at 3:15 brings back so many memories. Great video!

  • @lavendereyes1533
    @lavendereyes1533 Год назад +35

    Thanks for making this! I grew up in southern WV and it’s really refreshing to see a video about Appalachia that doesn’t make it seem horrible.

    • @MissyRichmond
      @MissyRichmond Год назад +6

      I agree. I’m from Southern WV, too. I now live in the Western part of WV. I went back for a visit in Southern WV a few weeks ago. We lived in a valley surrounded by huge mountains. It’s simply gorgeous. It hurts my heart when I have to leave. I even dream about those mountains. I’ve been all over them. It’s definitely a beautiful place to see. Especially in autumn.

    • @gabedavv
      @gabedavv Год назад +1

      LETS GOOO MOUNTAINEERS

  • @pBIggZz
    @pBIggZz Год назад +74

    I live in ontario, and frequent Algonquin Park. Traveling there it's easy to imagine the place as completely unchanged, pristine wilderness, but there are photographs of it *treeless*. Literally, barren rock and dirt. It is difficult to imagine how different these places were even a short few centuries ago, and how completely european settlers destroyed them essentially within the span of a single century. To the indigenous people, it must have seemed like the apocalypse.

  • @yona6142
    @yona6142 Год назад +6

    Thank you so much for making this! I'm an Appalachian local and your video made me so happy! You did my beloved home such justice by showing it in a fair and truthful light that it doesn't often receive. I loved seeing the Canton mill and Joyce Kilmer and other local spots. You gave great honor to the most beautiful place on earth and I'm so happy you did!

  • @thejoedog
    @thejoedog 7 месяцев назад +3

    Its pretty cool how in depth you go in explaining. True passion

  • @sh4rdzy
    @sh4rdzy Год назад +228

    I have lived all my life in the appalachians (specifically in and around the blue ridge mountains). I've hunted here, hiked, and gone camping deep in the forests where there may have never been a human foot before mine. The weirdest stuff I have seen has been times where I swear I saw something move in the distance out of the corner of my eye, but when I look nothing is there. Then there are the times where I have gotten this chill run down my back and feel like something or someone is right beside me when I am by myself. But by far the worst is when you are in the forest and listening to the sounds of nature and taking it all in and all of a sudden everything is silent; not a single sound from the bugs, birds, small animals, or even leaves. Everything becomes still and you get this feeling in your stomach that something isn't right. I know that I personally have left as soon as that has happened. Just because I don't have the desire to find out if it's just my mind messing with me or not. I do think there are things in the mountains and woods that people don't know about or can't explain. I'm not a huge believer in spirits and supernatural stuff, but having heard all the stories and learning the true history behind the area I definitely believe that if there is anywhere in the world where such things exist it's in these mountains. The vegetation is so thick you can't see more than 10-15 feet ahead of you, and even then you can't see clearly. These mountains have been here for so long and seen so many things. So many wars, fires, droughts, catastrophes, and entire species wiped out. All the death brought on by conflicts between the natives and europeans, all the wars and battles fought between native tribes before europeans even got here. The curses the natives put on the lands when the settlers came. I truly believe that if supernatural things are anywhere in this world, they call these mountains home. However, I do not appreciate the people who don't live here, or may have never even been here at all, talking about the mountains and the goings on here like they know. They tell outright lies, and they push this idea that the mountains are this place to be avoided at all cost and would be a death sentence to enter. They are beautiful and wonderful and just walking into them you can immediately feel how old they are. Such a unique and amazing place. I doubt there is any other place on earth that you can experience the same beauty.

    • @Bhunnidb
      @Bhunnidb Год назад +1

      The blue ride mountains are awesome went through them To get to Tennessee plan on going back to backpack

    • @BuckingHorse-Bull
      @BuckingHorse-Bull Год назад +15

      i thought the general understanding that when everything becomes silent is that there is a predator in the area and going silent is a form of survival

    • @alisondickinson
      @alisondickinson Год назад +14

      @@BuckingHorse-BullMan is a predator. Your presence is just that.

    • @KR72534
      @KR72534 Год назад

      Thanks for your heart felt remarks. I understand your feelings about the mountains. Wish I had visited the mountains. But superstition is nonsense.

    • @SunnyAndShare
      @SunnyAndShare Год назад +10

      Why do y'all have to blame Native American curses so much? Do I have mystical powers that you don't?

  • @giovannapedrini1777
    @giovannapedrini1777 Год назад +11

    May I point it out how incredible the production of this video is cause that is next level and so much hard work

  • @Errcyco
    @Errcyco Год назад +37

    I did the Blue Ridge section as a kid over three weeks and it was amazing. One thing we learned VERY fast talking to through hikers was they all planned their trips down to the day. And they’d start north or south depending on when they could start. If you don’t plan right you’re going to freeze to death. The northern section has brutal areas you have to hit in spring or summer only really.
    The Virginia/North Carolina section is the best hiking for newbs. You still need to remain aware as you can walk within 6’ of a cliff on some parts of the trail but it is pretty obvious. Some of the best scenic views of my lifetime on that trail.

  • @TessaDebra-jo6cs
    @TessaDebra-jo6cs 11 месяцев назад +2

    Great video! Shout out to all those who fought to protect these mountains from the Mountain Valley Pipeline!

  • @mtgreek
    @mtgreek Год назад +6

    The production value on display here is absolutely unique: incredible narration, excellent score, breathtaking video and an overall extremely solid look into one of the most interesting places on Earth. You, sir, got yourself a new fan

  • @samdavis4221
    @samdavis4221 11 месяцев назад +14

    What a beautiful ode to the mountains I've called home! I so appreciate the effort put into capturing the real magic and danger of this place.

  • @suzannepatterson5548
    @suzannepatterson5548 Год назад +11

    From the Appalachian foothills, I really appreciate this video. The respect you gave the region is very much appreciated.

  • @nopigeon
    @nopigeon 11 месяцев назад +1

    thank you for this video. We have a place we rent for a month at a time a few times a year near Franklin, NC. This video is a wonderful depiction of how I would like to describe to people why I'm always So anxious to leave our home in Florida with my Southern roots husband, going back since the beginning of Southern time, and retreat to the Appalachians. 'Our' place is up a road named Groaning Hill. The name indicates why we have to choose the times of year to migrate, and the type of vehicle you need to get up it. My husband's old four wheel drive vehicle with 300,000 miles on the odometer couldn't make it up Groaning Hill. We had to buy one that could. And exploring the types of remote places we like to go to, well....good idea to have something up there that will get you out of squirrely situations. We stay away from the tourist areas.
    Thanks again for this . I love the people in the backwoods of the Appalachian mountains. Talk about real! Don't mess with them or they'll be fit to be tied.

  • @AdamxSoldo
    @AdamxSoldo Год назад +26

    The white mountain range of the Appalachian trail really reveals just how rough the terrain can get. I’ve been out west and there’s very few hikes out there that are as difficult or rough as those!

  • @flawed1
    @flawed1 Год назад +6

    I would’ve happily watched a two hour long version of this video. It could have held my attention for that long. Great job

  • @6484373
    @6484373 Год назад +54

    I've visited the Appalachians a few times on road trips, and am always reminded of how criminally underrated they are. Yeah they might not have the shock and awe of the Rockies, but they are a very demanding terrain in their own way. I was lucky enough to grow up in what I like to call the miniature Appalachians, referred to as the Driftless Area. This is a region at the corner of Minnesota, Wisconsin and Iowa that was never touched by glaciers in the ice age. Because of this it has very similar terrain as Appalachia, just on a smaller scale. When you can drive in pretty much any direction for hundreds of miles from this region and see nothing but flat prairie, its a nice little escape. Probably the Midwest's best kept secret.

    • @RichardsShortHorrorFilms
      @RichardsShortHorrorFilms Год назад +1

      I shot a short film in Solider's Grove Wisconsin and could't believe how steep the hills were. My ears actually popped while driving.

    • @timdowney6721
      @timdowney6721 Год назад

      Although I live on the Colorado Front Range, I think the Appalachians are just as beautiful, just in a different way. They have suffered much more from “development” that’s left behind environmental degradation on a tragic scale.

  • @daniellechandler4918
    @daniellechandler4918 6 месяцев назад +1

    I am from East Tennessee and I have lived in a lot of different places, including Germany. Nothing compares to the beauty of our mountains. The beauty of the "Blue Ridge Mountains" is unforgettable. Thanks for sharing our home with the world! ♥

  • @billmalone5050
    @billmalone5050 Год назад +35

    I live in NC and I have always viewed the Appalachian Mountains in north Georgia, east Tennesse, western North Carolina and southwestern Virginia as gloriously beautiful places to visit and to escape from the crowded cities, hot summer temperatures and the boring flatlands.

    • @ThinWhiteAxe
      @ThinWhiteAxe 4 месяца назад

      Are we the same person? lol

  • @joejtunes
    @joejtunes Год назад +4

    The cinematography, storytelling, and overall composition of this video is insane! Just subscribed, lovely job ❤

  • @Joe-bx8py
    @Joe-bx8py 5 месяцев назад +1

    Absolutely beautiful work - thank you for making it.

  • @baeleilloyd28
    @baeleilloyd28 Год назад +6

    I live in Western Kentucky, I’ll be completely honest, I have always been fascinated about the Appalachian Mountains. This video only solidifies that fascination. Thank you!

  • @UrbanGardeningWithD.A.Hanks14
    @UrbanGardeningWithD.A.Hanks14 Год назад +22

    Thank you for pronouncing them correctly. It's my favorite range, and I've been to 49 states. There is just something about the Appalachian chain; Smokies; Blue Ridge, and dozens of spinoff ranges. I'm fortunate to have a few dozen acres in one of those adjacent ranges myself.

  • @naturally_rob
    @naturally_rob 11 месяцев назад +9

    I loved growing up near the Appalachian Mountains. Me and my friends spent nearly every free moment in our childhood in them. We'd routinely set up camp somewhere that tooks us hours to bike too. During hikes and bikes, I remember being captivated by the massive forest and all of what makes it up. We'd sit for hours in this one spot which was decently off the main trail which had this water that would dribble down. A very tiny waterfall, but man was it beautiful there. The one time we decided to see where the water came from and after making it and saying what a beautiful thing nature is, we hiked back down. We got below the huge boulder we were sitting on and for some reason I decided I needed to stop. Then I heard one of the loudest noises I've ever heard and turned to see a bunch of large boulders, along with the massive one we were sitting on, tumbling towards the bottom towards where my friend was. I screamed so loud with the realization that I was about to lose my best friend. Luckily, we were young and in shape. He was able to grab the branch of a tree and just get the backs of ankle scraped. It was absolutely terrifying, but that place is still so special to me. Perhaps it's time I take a flight to my parent's house and take hike out there again.

  • @snogboxes
    @snogboxes 9 месяцев назад

    what a beautiful video. I grew up near the "Grand Canyon of the South" in the Appalachian Mountains, and they reintroduced elk in the past ten years to our ecosystem. I'm not sure how to describe the feeling but the feeling of growing up in the Appalachias never leaves you, the mountains will always call you home.

  • @tminusnyc2915
    @tminusnyc2915 Год назад +8

    I love your work. Great ambient music is often overlooked, but you use it seamlessly to highlight your narrative.
    Much support and respect from NYC.

  • @racoonofcancun9105
    @racoonofcancun9105 Год назад +36

    I’ve never been to the American bits of the Appalachians, and only bits of the Canadian bit of the range when I was very young, but this is an incredibly beautiful tribute. You lend so much character and love to the mountains, it is incomparable to almost anything else I have seen on the internet.

  • @toshmeister92
    @toshmeister92 Год назад +12

    You sir are an enlightener of the wild and a filmmaker for the often unseen. I could watch your content for days

  • @TheOldHippiebilly
    @TheOldHippiebilly 3 месяца назад +1

    Hi from Chattanooga! Having hiked in the Smokies for 50+ years, I can attest that you're more likely to get hypothermia in the spring or fall when you're not prepared. When the temp drops to 40F and you get drenched in rain, you're in serious trouble. But I absolutely ADORE the Appalachian Mts and I feel very fortunate to know them. Please respect natural places and the plants & animals that live there.

  • @FreerunTMac
    @FreerunTMac Год назад +11

    Finished the AT this summer, really made me appreciate the devasting ruggedness of this range. Humbled me, as someone who previously didn't see them as a legitimate range compared to my backyard Cascades.
    Great video man. Learned a lot! Love the contemplative vibe :)

  • @ogBruce
    @ogBruce Год назад +18

    As someone from the Appalachia's, them tiktoks be lying their asses off

  • @troyturner5312
    @troyturner5312 Год назад +15

    I have lived in various areas of the Appalachians from GA up to VA. Thank you for treating the topic and people with respect. Unfortunately, something that is often lacking when the general public (outside of the area) discusses the Appalachian region.

  • @FaisonCochrane-pu4eu
    @FaisonCochrane-pu4eu 9 месяцев назад +2

    I have hiked over 4,000 miles in the Appalachian mountains, including a 2020 NOBo thruhike. These mountains are my second home