Return to the Impossible: I Found New, Compelling Evidence

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 6 июн 2024
  • Months ago, I found an impossible ancient ruin. In the aftermath of this, I knew I needed to return, and see if there were more mind-boggling discoveries to make. This is what I found. #wildernessexploration #history #hiking #ancientdiscoveries
    // Camera Gear I Use:
    Sony a6700: amzn.to/49gsBb8
    Camera Lens: amzn.to/3xf5wIl
    Insta 360 X3: amzn.to/3U6PXvP
    DJI Mini 4 Pro Drone: amzn.to/3uaDo80
    Camera Clip: app.rockporch.com/prdlink/R6s...
    DJI Microphone: amzn.to/429gHOa
    // Backpacks I Use:
    Osprey Atmos: app.rockporch.com/prdlink/JVs...
    Osprey Exos 58: app.rockporch.com/prdlink/Lyr...
    Osprey Kestral 38: app.rockporch.com/prdlink/vV7...
    Osprey DayLite: app.rockporch.com/prdlink/5mF...
    // Clothing and Footwear:
    Protective Sun Hoody: app.rockporch.com/prdlink/YEA...
    Sun Hoody Option 2: rei.rockporch.com/prdlink/Epd...
    La Sportiva TX4: app.rockporch.com/prdlink/Wx4...
    Altra Lone Peak: app.rockporch.com/prdlink/o8I...
    Puffy Jacket: app.rockporch.com/prdlink/foF...
    // Backcountry Kitchen:
    Stove: app.rockporch.com/prdlink/gD3...
    Pots and Pans: app.rockporch.com/prdlink/nuo...
    Water Filter: rei.rockporch.com/prdlink/RZ1...
    Knife: app.rockporch.com/prdlink/JZy...
    Best Utensil I’ve Found: app.rockporch.com/prdlink/U7n...
    // Miscellaneous:
    Satellite Safety Device: app.rockporch.com/prdlink/4pG...
    Sleeping Pad: app.rockporch.com/prdlink/OXf...
    Camp Chair: app.rockporch.com/prdlink/MaN...
    Headlamp: rei.rockporch.com/prdlink/MKf...
    Sunglasses: amzn.to/4cFzoxK
    Portable Charger: app.rockporch.com/prdlink/Zl7...
    DISCLAIMER: Links included in this description might be affiliate links. If you purchase a product with the provided links I may receive a small commission. There is no additional charge to you! Thank you for supporting my channel so I can continue to provide you with free content!

Комментарии • 2,5 тыс.

  • @bobe3250
    @bobe3250 12 дней назад +567

    I am a descendant of Geronimo. My grandmother has been featured in several articles. You have more respect for ancient history in your pinky finger than I have in my entire body. You are also braver than I would hope to ever be. I am and have been protected by my ancestors. I will think of you when I pray for protection. You have earned it!

    • @greesemonkeyarmy
      @greesemonkeyarmy 12 дней назад +21

      The Apache came from central Texas until the Comanche drove them west. True survivors.

    • @gordonhide4539
      @gordonhide4539 12 дней назад +7

      That's so lovely ❤ kath the wife 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🇬🇧

    • @YouKnowTheyExist
      @YouKnowTheyExist 12 дней назад +14

      Your's is one of the most interesting comments I have ever run across. I was planning to post a comment about the geologic story hidden in the cliff - I see four lines where perhaps there was some serious volcanic infusion changing the character of the rock. Everyone can spot the heavy one, then there is a lesser, and a couple weak lines. Are they millions of years apart? You are talking a mystery about yourself, like the rock. We struggle to unravel some of the mystery. I think you should tell us more.

    • @tantoquejodeoiga1197
      @tantoquejodeoiga1197 12 дней назад +11

      I, as Geronimo himself, ask you to believe this man

    • @owenleynes7086
      @owenleynes7086 12 дней назад +7

      im surprised to find this comment 4 hours old (which makes sense its 7 hours old but im very high), i lack your ancestral connection yet know the bond myself. at risk of being the druggy in modern society, psilocybin has showed me incredibly well and i can feel a similar presence despite my lack of ancestral precedence. i hope to find more native friends like i did when i ventured out to kayenta for a few weeks in 2017. they felt more home than home did and i didnt even take psychedelics yet

  • @jimmoses6617
    @jimmoses6617 12 дней назад +1078

    I am a professional archaeologist working in the American SW since 1991. Linguists estimate that Athabascan groups entered the SW around 1200 AD. These groups had a subsistence strategy based on raiding, robbing, etc. This is also when the Ansestral Pueblo began building defensive-oriented homes, granaries, etc. Same thing happened further south with the Hohokam (now called " Huhugem"), who went from open pithouse villages to walled villages. It mut of been horrible to live among these raiding groups, as many first-hand accounts describe written by early settlers and explorers beginning around 1535 AD.

    • @oceanmariner
      @oceanmariner 12 дней назад +91

      Thanks. The history makes this much more interesting.

    • @randygerdes
      @randygerdes 12 дней назад +41

      There are writings from the 1500's?

    • @jamescharles3210
      @jamescharles3210 12 дней назад +24

      I never heard of any of these people who you are talking about doing the raiding

    • @scaredholy
      @scaredholy 12 дней назад +49

      @@randygerdesyeah I would like to know same thing. However, there are writings from Spaniards who were stranded in Ireland after Protestant wind shipwrecked them in Ireland. So maybe Spanish conquistadors wrote about it. Maybe buried in the Vatican archive.

    • @myboibill
      @myboibill 12 дней назад +17

      Thanks for commenting. I always have so many questions about these videos and I’ve done some research but I enjoy your remarks thanks

  • @scottfranson4215
    @scottfranson4215 12 дней назад +242

    People, don't forget, back in the 1890s many of these sites were dug up and those specimens are now in museums, which was accepted with enthusiasm. Stay safe out there.Thank you for NOT disclosing locations and preserving these sights for future generations

    • @MsMesem
      @MsMesem 11 дней назад +7

      Thank goodness. Those shards of pottery he worries about will be nothing but dust very soon. Corn cobs? Would be interesting to find some dried kernals. I'd rather that any relics were safe and appreciated in someones home or in a museum . Nothing captivates a childs' imagination more than a tangible piece of the past to treasure and hold.

    • @joane.landers9151
      @joane.landers9151 11 дней назад +6

      Do you hike alone when you do these videos? What would happen if you fell & got hurt? Some of the video doesn't appear as if uou can be alone. Stay safe. I enjoy your videos and learn the history as you tell jt. Thank you.

    • @BigBadJohn
      @BigBadJohn 10 дней назад +2

      You're absolutely right, there's a site on family land that was done that way by a local now defunct college. I have no idea what happened to the stuff they carried off but they a mess like this.

    • @Desert.Drifter
      @Desert.Drifter  10 дней назад +30

      The “shards of pottery” I regularly find have lasted there for over 800 years. Can you tell me how soon they will become “dust”?

    • @Desert.Drifter
      @Desert.Drifter  10 дней назад +47

      How about taking a child into the outdoors to experience a piece of history in its original context? That’ll captivate a child’s imagination far more than pulling it out of some drawer with zero context to it

  • @susandavey3312
    @susandavey3312 10 дней назад +33

    I am part Cherokee, my Grandfather taught food storage caves were always burned (large or small fires, some with some without smoke) before every harvest season, before anything was stored. Why? Doing so rid storage area of bugs, larvae, moths and vermin. They did not cook in the caves, doing so would draw bugs and animals to the food.

    • @cameltrophy3
      @cameltrophy3 День назад

      That is smart, don't cook in the cave because of bugs. Like in forests don't store your food near where you sleep because of bears. Very cool things we might not think about today.

  • @MichaelMeyer-uk5zd
    @MichaelMeyer-uk5zd 12 дней назад +401

    I watch your RUclips channel all the time and I just wanted to say thank you for taking me places and showing me things I would never be able to see for myself

    • @MissPrissy6688
      @MissPrissy6688 12 дней назад +6

      What people had to go through and do to survive. Amazing. Thanks for posting.

    • @ceceliavoss9174
      @ceceliavoss9174 12 дней назад +5

      I agree. His videos are fascinating.

  • @kathyp2197
    @kathyp2197 12 дней назад +345

    Thank you for NOT disclosing locations and preserving these sights for future generations. I appreciate how you share with respect and honor the ancient ancestors.

    • @robertcornelius3514
      @robertcornelius3514 12 дней назад +10

      Really? It's no secret were he is.

    • @Ambassador_Gkar
      @Ambassador_Gkar 12 дней назад +8

      What crass individuals made the comments below, to your appreciative statement.
      Just shows why Andrew doesn't reveal their whereabouts. Alas, the World is full of such.

    • @-oiiio-3993
      @-oiiio-3993 12 дней назад +5

      @@Londo_Mollari Happens on the daily.

    • @wanttogo1958
      @wanttogo1958 11 дней назад

      @@robertcornelius3514really? So where is he? Give me a Lat/Long for the closest drainage outlet you would hike up to get to this location.

    • @sauzachn
      @sauzachn 11 дней назад +1

      @@wanttogo1958 but Robert is right. I have been in this canyon many times, there is even (a lot) more than he has found yet.

  • @Pychonuant594
    @Pychonuant594 11 дней назад +139

    Thank you for not disturbing, disclosing, and having much respect. They are my ancestors.

    • @centralhighlander8511
      @centralhighlander8511 11 дней назад +6

      You are probably wrong about them being your ancestors. Your ancestors, more likely, came along after these people had long ago abandoned these dwellings. Marauders from the south or north are probably your ancestors in reality.❤

    • @ManannanmacLir69
      @ManannanmacLir69 10 дней назад +3

      When I lived amongst your people, they knew me as he who talks loud say nothing.

    • @Pychonuant594
      @Pychonuant594 10 дней назад

      @@centralhighlander8511 I'm TAOS Pueblo....THE ONLY MARAUDERS ARE YOU AND YOUR ASSUMPTIONS.

    • @MoietyVR
      @MoietyVR 9 дней назад

      @@Pychonuant594 Just ignore people like that. Either autistic or an a-hole.

    • @Keith-rk4td
      @Keith-rk4td 9 дней назад

      ​@centralhighlander8511 Belittling native people is the most offensive thing! Keep your crap knowledge in your crap brain.

  • @kpal2946
    @kpal2946 11 дней назад +47

    I've never questioned why you don't say your exact locations. This video made my stomach drop when you showed the willful damage to these amazing treasures. Thank you for taking us with you to see these places.

  • @pete7665
    @pete7665 12 дней назад +530

    As a Native American I appreciate your respect for the sacred places. It makes me sad seeing the destruction done by others. Stay safe out there.

    • @David0lyle
      @David0lyle 12 дней назад +10

      It bothers me quit a bit as well. It’s quit clear that some of these things we are seeing were recognized by ancient people as even more ancient. Something preserved so long only to be lost now 😕.

    • @robertmccully2792
      @robertmccully2792 12 дней назад +6

      All that rock below is the collapse of the route. Kids did the rock paintings when their parents said go find something to do.

    • @Mar--Mar
      @Mar--Mar 12 дней назад +8

      What do you mean when you say 'sacred'? Genuine enquiry.

    • @johnny_truth
      @johnny_truth 12 дней назад +4

      Most of these places are query’s anyway. This is all petrified wood from biblical trees, giant trees. Stumps and limbs, I’ve seen some over a mile in diameter. They were silica and not carbon.

    • @pete7665
      @pete7665 12 дней назад +19

      @@Mar--Marsights like this we consider them sacred because they are the lands of ancestors.

  • @docholliday5439
    @docholliday5439 12 дней назад +76

    I am at least 40 years your elder and have been to some of the the places that you have shown in your videos. In the 1970's I did a lot of hiking and exploring in that region. It is nice to see that the ancient ruins have held up so well. You are one hell of a hiker!!! Good luck on all of your new adventures... 🤠🌵🌵🌵

    • @aunch3
      @aunch3 5 дней назад +1

      Well, they’ve held up for hundreds if not thousands of years what’s another 50 more ?

    • @robertgarcia8440
      @robertgarcia8440 4 дня назад

      @@aunch3the only thing that’s capable of it, us….

  • @beckyrude9706
    @beckyrude9706 11 дней назад +48

    30 years ago, I lived and worked with the USFS in the Escalante, UT area. I really wish I had done more exploring in the public lands around there, but, at the time, I was there to make a living and I spent more time working than playing. I remember one year when I heard about a local man who was caught looting an ancient site. It was surprising because the man was respected by a lot of locals in the area. It is important to keep reminding folks that these ancient places can be discovered and documented, but always with tender, loving care.

  • @raymason3583
    @raymason3583 11 дней назад +38

    I’m originally from northern Ontario Canada but now I live in southern Baja California Mexico . When I first saw that country , it was a little depressing. No big trees like I was used to but many cactus and what I would call scrub brush . The area has since taken a whole different view in my mind. Its absolutely beautiful. When you see your first sunset over the sea of Cortez , your hooked. I felt the same when I first started watching your videos, I certainly wasn’t overly impressed with the landscape and the canyons. Everything looked the same .Now, I find them absolutely gorgeous and mind blowing . I have certainly come to appreciate the difficulty of the lifestyle of the original dwellers in that area. Thank you for taking the time to video your experience. I only wish you would use two hands when climbing. 😂😂

    • @CashCatz
      @CashCatz 6 дней назад

      You've convinced me. I've had Baja on my list for a while. What are the must see places there?

  • @ericchilver9113
    @ericchilver9113 12 дней назад +150

    I found a place while hiking 40years ago here in Australia. Walked around a rock outcrop and immediately it was as though a large group of ancient people were living there, children playing freely with elders and parents watching with open light hearts. That was before tourism and government intervention or interference. When I walked around the outcrop of rocks it was just like I was living thousands of years ago , I was welcomed then I was returned to present day. The land is timeless , we are a blink of an eye..this is why I enjoy your videos so much it takes me back to my experience some 40 years ago. Wonderful to see your slowing yourself down to be mindful of your surroundings and aware of what's before you ...thankyou

    • @rebeccacarter1914
      @rebeccacarter1914 12 дней назад +11

      There have been other reports of similar experiences by others. I have no idea how or why it happens, but it seems to be happening. What an incredible experience!

    • @scottanderson3751
      @scottanderson3751 12 дней назад +3

      In the grand scheme of things even the life/death of Adolf Hitler is as insignificant as a gnats fart in a tornado ✌️

    • @SSHitMan
      @SSHitMan 12 дней назад +9

      That happened to me here in the USA, I was traveling and all of a sudden it was as if I was back in time and the people hadn't changed in centuries. This place was called Arkansas.🤣

    • @-oiiio-3993
      @-oiiio-3993 12 дней назад +4

      I lived and worked in Norther AZ from 1994 - 2007 and that attitude is still prevalent there when 'off the beaten path'.
      The default mode, particularly among Hopi, was of acceptance and 'friendly neighbor', but I was not a tourist with camera barging in to their private business. I found myself an invited guest.
      Watch out for Mudheads!

    • @ibdalia69
      @ibdalia69 12 дней назад +3

      @@scottanderson3751 Uh huh, but in the grand scheme of things it's wonderful that some of the beauty of human life stands out, even if not forever.

  • @pdmullgirl
    @pdmullgirl 12 дней назад +105

    I used to work for BLM (Bureau of Land Management) and I cannot possibly tell you how many pieces of pottery, arrowheads, beads and drawings and carvings on walls and things that I ran across. It was all fascinating. I think it’s so sad that there are some who do not appreciate our history (and they are included in that history!!)
    and they disrespect it. It’s just so sad. Even if you don’t find it interesting, leave it for the next person who may. Enjoyed the video!
    ❤️💜💚

  • @moegamatabrahams6773
    @moegamatabrahams6773 12 дней назад +26

    One thing about ancient people.. They sure loved a property with amazing views ❤

  • @wesley5nipes
    @wesley5nipes 10 дней назад +13

    I'm addicted to your channel for many reasons, but by far the greatest is vicariously experiencing those views when you're up by the ruins. How epic it all is!

  • @freakbag
    @freakbag 12 дней назад +84

    That balanced rock, wow!

    • @sunshinelee2345
      @sunshinelee2345 12 дней назад +4

      Yes! Leaves me speechless!

    • @sallywardle14
      @sallywardle14 12 дней назад +8

      I believe the balanced rock was once an arch. You can see the other side of it.

    • @slowjoeman1084
      @slowjoeman1084 12 дней назад

      Think I saw a bird in the crack

    • @paulcaine2603
      @paulcaine2603 12 дней назад +3

      Yes it was amazing. It could fall tomorrow or stand for another two hundreds year.

    • @keiranbradley3238
      @keiranbradley3238 10 дней назад +1

      I bet the old inhabitants had some colourful names for it, I wonder what some of them where/are?.

  • @lawrencecarlson2425
    @lawrencecarlson2425 12 дней назад +181

    A Pueblo descendent said she had some of these ruins near her 20th century village. As a young girl, she visited a few of them. She said there was always a safe way down from the mesa. Unfortunately, rockfalls can destroy access in a single generation as she could no longer find the pathways today.

    • @LoreTunderin
      @LoreTunderin 12 дней назад +18

      Yeah, it's possible some of those large boulders and cliff fragments were positioned differently in the past, making a partial ramp that could be supplemented with wood or rope for easier access to the cliff faces. The people living there may have selected the site for the precarious nature of reaching it, allowing them to quickly pry away a rock slab to drop the ramp / ladder in the event of an attack, storing food supplies at the site along with other materials needed to climb down when the threat had passed. Like a mostly natural version of a castle keep and draw bridge.

    • @causewaykayak
      @causewaykayak 12 дней назад +10

      Thats great information. Hopefully the ancestral remains are protected. concerned about that in Europe .

    • @flinch622
      @flinch622 12 дней назад +12

      Mesas deliver unbelieveable weather at times. Years ago I was in the nw Arizona area, with clear skies & blazing sun all around... except this one mesa: it was dark, dark, dark above it... and a monsoon raging right on the table top, clouds lit up by a continuum of lightning. Things like trails can flat out disappear when over 4"/hr pound it all day.

    • @-oiiio-3993
      @-oiiio-3993 12 дней назад +12

      @@flinch622 Do not camp in washes.
      I lived in Northern AZ and worked on 'the Rez' for over a decade. How's the weather? _Changeable,_

    • @lbj4993
      @lbj4993 12 дней назад +2

      @@LoreTunderin They had little to no water storage as far as I can tell, so after 2-4 days they're either dead or dying from thirst; even the best fortification is useless without water, so what's the point of all this...somebody explain please...???

  • @drnz647
    @drnz647 12 дней назад +19

    I think people nowadays underestimate how hard it must have been to live like this. But they have survived for thousands of years. We are just babies compared to this way of living. If you get my drift. But those views down that canyon….magical

  • @janesmith9024
    @janesmith9024 11 дней назад +7

    It is hard to explain that very special feeling of being in an ancient place. I have the same feeling here in the UK when I go to places like Avebury and also the White Horse near Faringdon near the Ridgeway - the Ridgeway is 5000 years old and the oldest walking route in the whole of Europe including UK. It makes you feel so in touch with the past particularly when no one is around you. Thank you for so much for this wonderful video. Many of those places have not been recorded and will be lost just to erosion in due course so it is helpful to have a record.

  • @timmcmullen5
    @timmcmullen5 12 дней назад +134

    Man you deserve a " Like " just for that climb !!

  • @mikebrown9718
    @mikebrown9718 12 дней назад +57

    Thank you Andrew for another amazing video! My wife was talking to you as if you were in the same room telling you to “be careful, you’re standing too close to the edge.” I really love modern technology when it comes to drones and extended camera sticks to find ruins way up on the mountains and the camera stick to put it inside structures without causing any damage. Keep up the great work and be safe! (The “be safe” was from my wife!).

  • @lorenstribling6096
    @lorenstribling6096 11 дней назад +12

    The beauty of these places is breathtaking, but I cannot imagine the fear that drove people to live in such inaccessible places.

  • @phlebgrl6064
    @phlebgrl6064 6 дней назад +4

    These ruins were so amazing to see. I think the most intact structures tend to be the hardest ones to find and reach. It’s sad how people have treated our historical artifacts with such disregard. Thank you for highlighting this important issue, and for being as respectful as you are on your travels, and thanks for taking me along on another cool adventure!

  • @user-wp7zn8ii5u
    @user-wp7zn8ii5u 12 дней назад +75

    Whenever I see these videos I think of the people living there, giving birth, raising children. What a difficult life they had. Thank you for showing me something I would have never seen without your videos.

    • @farginargle
      @farginargle 12 дней назад +4

      It is hard to describe the experience, how wonderful that even getting to watch these videos is deeply spiritual, a newfound blessed connectedness.

    • @maryperry1773
      @maryperry1773 12 дней назад +6

      Imagine climbing down with a squirming toddler strapped to your back 😮

    • @TYMETUBE
      @TYMETUBE 10 дней назад

      😅

    • @Ren505nm
      @Ren505nm 10 дней назад +5

      I'm of Zuni pueblo and,These were worriors out posts,or religious areas for men, women and young children would have been in the villages .

    • @adrian7583
      @adrian7583 9 дней назад +1

      I keep wondering how they kept the toddlers from rolling over the edge. Makes me wonder if they generally lived down below and only on the cliffs when in danger?

  • @KA4UPW
    @KA4UPW 12 дней назад +111

    Dude,
    These climbs scare the shit out of me.. and im watching on my phone.

    • @juriaan13
      @juriaan13 12 дней назад +10

      Same

    • @richardhorvath7851
      @richardhorvath7851 12 дней назад +7

      Me too 😅😂

    • @scaredholy
      @scaredholy 12 дней назад +10

      A lot of times it’s easier or feels safer going up and more treacherous or dangerous having to go back down.

    • @BrookeMonfort
      @BrookeMonfort 12 дней назад +10

      Not afraid of heights but holy crap, count me out. I break a sweat just watching.

    • @donvincentwalters2705
      @donvincentwalters2705 12 дней назад +3

      Don't drop yer fone!😊

  • @robertscheinost179
    @robertscheinost179 8 дней назад +4

    You are doing a real service by bringing us viewers on your trips to these ancient sites. Thank you. Please keep the good work.

  • @Chompchompyerded
    @Chompchompyerded 12 дней назад +3

    I think a lot of you do not understand what these places are. Most of you call these "granaries" and that is because you find corn cobs in them. But they weren't for storing grain for later use. We did, and do, put corn, among other things in them, but the main purpose is to make a safe place for our dead. The corn was put there to sustain them on their way to the spirit world. There were usually other things in there too, which is why you sometimes find pottery in them. You don't very often find human skeletal remains because the animals consume the bodies, including the bones, which is fine by us. We would much rather that our bodies nourish the plants and animals of this world, as the plants and animals nourished us during our lifetime. A lot of us still prefer this sort of burial to the traditional western burial, which is usually required by state governments in order to make funeral "homes" wealthy. If you were to dig up a cemetary on our reservation you would find more than half of the coffins are empty. That's because to keep up appearances and keep the state off our ass, we bury an empty box, then quietly spirit the bodies away to a remote place and into one of these "granaries'" where we put them with offerings of corn, blue or red mush, berries, meat, and any of their favourite foods. These are quickly consumed by animals, though they are consumed spiritually by the person.
    I request that when you enter these structures that you recognize that you are entering the final homes of our dead ancestors, and sometimes of people who died not that long ago; some within living memory. They are difficult to get to for a reason. We don't want our dead and their possessions disturbed anymore than you want yours disturbed. We don't go digging up you cemeteries and take the grave goods, or disturb your dead. We would appreciate it if you granted us the same courtesy. If you come across one which has been recently re-used, we know you will call the police, and there will be a big to do about it. Appreciate these from the outside, and leave our people alone, just as we leave your people alone. We ask for only that little bit of respect.
    As for the rock art, it is was very likely my tribe, my ancestors who made that horse. Our people were the first to ride when Escalante brought horses into this area in the 1500's. It is very likely that it was made by a Ute. I don't know which band, but possibly the Wemanuche or Uncompagre, because they were in that area back then. I am a member of the Wemanuche and have heard the stories. I heard them from my grandmother, who was alive in the late 1800's, and heard them from her grandmother. These stories are passed down unchanged, generation to generation. Story telling is an important part of our culture, and is also our way of keeping our history. We know that we got horses from a Spanish man named Escalante, and that he did not give horses to the Dine or the Pueblo cultures. We traded horses to the Dine for silver and turquoise, which they had in abundance. That was the time of the yellow air.

  • @fardicus0004
    @fardicus0004 12 дней назад +21

    I was just in Moab this week, and on the side of a road, unmarked, was a site with a few pictographs and petroglyphs. Someone at some time had defaced a portion of them. I feel your deep sadness when I see the lack of respect for these precious historical sites. Keep on teaching respect and the importance of preserving our past. 👍

    • @stpfs9281
      @stpfs9281 10 дней назад +2

      Stonehenge used to be an open monument, then it was vandalised.
      Now fenced in, with an admission fee, parking for coaches and cars, a museum.
      It still gets defaced, why?
      Joni Mitchell song? "Don't it always seem to go?
      That you don't know what you've got 'till it's gone.
      They paved paradise,
      and put up a parking lot!
      They took all the trees,
      put 'em in a tree museum."
      "Perfume of the Timeless"
      ruclips.net/video/oHCaZmIzr0o/видео.html

  • @brunobarks6544
    @brunobarks6544 12 дней назад +65

    One of my favorite channels brother.
    Thanks again

  • @hermanprez
    @hermanprez 10 дней назад +3

    I just want to say your videos have become my favorites. The subject matter is fascinating, the photography is beautiful, and your demeanor is very serene. You have hit on a winning combination and I hope you desert drift for a long time.

  • @222good
    @222good 8 дней назад +2

    It's fantastic to see these ruins! Thank you Andrew, for making that possible for those of us who are half planet away!

  • @maryhart637
    @maryhart637 12 дней назад +53

    Your integrity and respect for the sites you explore is inspiring and I am so grateful for your channel and the stories you attempt to tell! Thank you!!

  • @Hitmans30a
    @Hitmans30a 12 дней назад +51

    I don't comment on many videos , but just wanted to say I'm really enjoying your videos. Living half way around the world and being able to see this stuff is amazing . Another location added to my bucket list . Thank you sir .

    • @-oiiio-3993
      @-oiiio-3993 12 дней назад +1

      Do it.
      Northern AZ is amazing.

    • @GavTatu
      @GavTatu 11 дней назад +1

      i'm from jersey, 5 miles by nine... the scale of these places blows my tiny island mind !

    • @-oiiio-3993
      @-oiiio-3993 11 дней назад +1

      @@GavTatu I lived and worked in Northern AZ for over a decade. The vastness is good for personal perspective.
      I gave tours at Meteor Crater. The road from HWY 40 was six miles and 40 was easily visible from the crater rim as were distances beyond.
      The crater itself is (approx.) 4100 feet across and 560 feet deep.

  • @nicolelesher2202
    @nicolelesher2202 11 дней назад +3

    Your videos are our families favorite to watch together! Our 4yr old daughter frequently says "can we watch Andrew?" My husband and I love exploring the PNW (we are from OR) and haven't been back to Utah in a while, so your adventures keep our itch scratched! Keep the videos coming!!

  • @harriotteworthington3147
    @harriotteworthington3147 12 дней назад +4

    Andrew, your videos have always inspired great awe for me - this one is more than intriguing, it is downright scary. You are so respectful and amazing, the ancients definitely protect you!

  • @jamiedarnell1
    @jamiedarnell1 12 дней назад +36

    Thanks!

    • @Desert.Drifter
      @Desert.Drifter  12 дней назад +11

      Wow, thank you Jamie, that is incredibly generous

  • @susanstone3588
    @susanstone3588 12 дней назад +55

    I get weak kneed just watching you access these ruins, but I keep coming back every week to journey along with you, amazing.

    • @seeharvester
      @seeharvester 12 дней назад

      Don't be scared. He's a professional.

    • @wanttogo1958
      @wanttogo1958 11 дней назад

      @@seeharvesteryou’re just full of it aren’t you.

    • @seeharvester
      @seeharvester 11 дней назад

      @@wanttogo1958
      OK, so maybe he's not a professional.
      Maybe he's just "experienced".
      Still, no reason to be scared.

  • @phyllisbonner8900
    @phyllisbonner8900 11 дней назад +2

    I know you are an experienced rock climber so you know what you are doing. So enjoy the scenery, views and the ancient places you find.

  • @suechristy363
    @suechristy363 11 дней назад +3

    I love your respect for the sights you explore and the people that once lived there, Andrew. It's contagious and has touched all of us dearly. May we all slow down enough to bask in the beauty of ancient past events/people/sacrifices made, as well as current day living.

  • @patriciaann3379
    @patriciaann3379 12 дней назад +136

    People, don't forget, back in the 1890s many of these sites were dug up and those specimens are now in museums, which was accepted with enthusiasm. Later in the 1950s, many sites, if not all that were left, were hunted down and dug up by universities. Those collections are now deep in their archives and likely never to be seen. Just saying, not every site that shows signs of digging was done by modern day marauders...

    • @jeffhildreth9244
      @jeffhildreth9244 12 дней назад +5

      Marauders, looters First Responders.

    • @GrandmaBev64
      @GrandmaBev64 12 дней назад +19

      A lot of these sites were destroyed by the Calvary from 1863 on. There was a $5 bounty for a Native scalp. The "Relocation Act" should have been called the "Extermination Act". $5 was a month's wage or more. The Indigenous went through so much. Natural disasters, being hunted, man damming up the waterways, it was one thing or another.

    • @ram1brn
      @ram1brn 12 дней назад +13

      you are correct my Dad was one of them back in the 1950's he worked for the government its been going on for a long long time . Dad had a gieger counter with him on these excursions Sooo Looking for something

    • @inharmonywithearth9982
      @inharmonywithearth9982 12 дней назад +7

      Believe it or not there was a mummy craze in the 1890s to 1930s and they paid high prices for mummies. They sold these southwest desert mummies for mummy parties as Egyptian mummies. They thought also they were medicinal and ingested them. They sold for much more than what gold was worth at the time. You can look it up about the mummy unwrapping parties and stuff. These cliff areas are not homes for the living but for the dead ones. The mummies are all gone as are their valuables for the afterlife.

    • @patriciaann3379
      @patriciaann3379 12 дней назад +8

      @@ram1brn they even used helicopters to fly up and down the canyons looking for ruins to dig. Not many stones left unturned.

  • @joestrada2675
    @joestrada2675 12 дней назад +65

    I don't blame you for not disclosing your adventures. They need to be protected😊😊😊😊

    • @yaakw
      @yaakw 12 дней назад +1

      It’s no secret anymore.

    • @JustBill82
      @JustBill82 12 дней назад

      Unless they are on reservation lands, most are either protected by national parks or in national monuments on established trailheads, or BLM protected. Just wandering in a place like Bears Ears you can see like 400 of them.

  • @dianeschroeder5882
    @dianeschroeder5882 10 дней назад +2

    So nice to watch a video with a human being narrating his own content. I wonder how on earth people would have hoisted necessities up to the structures you discovered. Truly amazing! Thank you! 🙏☮️

  • @ed.puckett
    @ed.puckett 11 дней назад +3

    This one ended on a literal cliff-hanger! Thank you for your remarkable videos.

  • @user-rg9mi7ok1k
    @user-rg9mi7ok1k 12 дней назад +87

    The bottom scoot was too much for me . . . too afraid for your life!! It is with sadness to see the looted sites but YOU are carving a monument for the ancients that NO ONE can violate or take away. Thank you so much for that and God Bless you.

    • @mlgauss60435
      @mlgauss60435 12 дней назад +3

      I agree about that bottom scoot. My stomach flipped!

    • @lucasolson9132
      @lucasolson9132 12 дней назад +2

      Ugh, my palms were sweating just watching that

    • @LJP2112
      @LJP2112 9 дней назад

      Mine too! I hate heights!

  • @adevriesc
    @adevriesc 12 дней назад +114

    Theory: wood posts were jammed into the large vertical cracks in front of the sites, allowing ladderlike ascent with reduced risk.

    • @teresadvorak6145
      @teresadvorak6145 12 дней назад +4

      I was in a place several times where U could just walk & climb up or down to the location without any thing like boards being in it. But that's a really practical idea & I'm sure it was & still is used. It was a great shortcut once I figured it out 😂

    • @BrookeMonfort
      @BrookeMonfort 12 дней назад +7

      What I was thinking, too. And I'm sure there were wood and rope bridges between some of the outcroppings. Of course, wood and rope are quickly consumed by time and the elements.

    • @roxysimmons
      @roxysimmons 12 дней назад +2

      my theory too.

    • @remcovisser3732
      @remcovisser3732 12 дней назад +2

      If you look closely at the last site... You can see one round hole and one hole with the brick wall in front... There is a faint color difference and it goes all the way down... Could this be from rope rubbing against the wall?

    • @user-gx3mj8gd3j
      @user-gx3mj8gd3j 12 дней назад +3

      Your videos are the best!

  • @candymcclure2476
    @candymcclure2476 11 дней назад +2

    I lived in the desert when I was a youngster but it didn't give me a longing to experience it again. Your series and Trek Planner have opened my eyes to new interests. Thank you, Gramma Candy

  • @teamflanneloutdoors5631
    @teamflanneloutdoors5631 11 дней назад +4

    Gorgeous landscapes. Thank you for taking me along👍

  • @consentofthegoverned5145
    @consentofthegoverned5145 12 дней назад +79

    You know they made ladders back then, and there may have once been a relatively safe route that collapsed.

    • @adamr149
      @adamr149 12 дней назад +8

      This is a key observation... organic matter disappears and was certainly a primary part of access to these sites.

    • @kevinparker9407
      @kevinparker9407 12 дней назад +4

      My thinking also. The original structures and entrances are now the rock boulders on the ground below. Water ingress plus freezing temperatures could split it all away.

    • @TylerChamb
      @TylerChamb 11 дней назад +3

      @@kevinparker9407 You can tell if a ledge has collapsed in the past because it leaves all the rubble on the ground right under it.

    • @1joku2
      @1joku2 10 дней назад +2

      Some buildings still has wooden structures. If there was wooden ladders, there would be signs of it (at leas some of them). I think it is difficult to build ladders over 10 mereters (30feets) high... Even half of that is difficult.

    • @adamr149
      @adamr149 10 дней назад +1

      @1joku2 Rope ladders were common in many sw cultures... no magic happening.

  • @paulas2218
    @paulas2218 12 дней назад +21

    I’m one of the people who has asked where you were in your videos, but after thinking about it realized that it’s good that you don’t give that information out. When you see what modern day knuckleheads do to deface precious antiquities it makes you realize that not everyone thinks before acting. It was so sad to see the plundering of these sites you showed us today. Our family went to some caves in Texas where we live and they had turned it into a tourist trap with cement floors and handrails. They charged admission to see a natural formation. It was depressing. My husband and I really enjoy watching your videos. We look forward to seeing them on the weekends you post. Keep them coming!

    • @stpfs9281
      @stpfs9281 10 дней назад +1

      Joni Mitchell song? "Don't it always seem to go?
      That you don't know what you've got 'till it's gone.
      They paved paradise,
      and put up a parking lot!
      They took all the trees,
      put 'em in a tree museum."

    • @paulas2218
      @paulas2218 9 дней назад +1

      @@stpfs9281 a Joni fan! Me too. She tried to warn us.

  • @ToeiuFioua
    @ToeiuFioua 11 дней назад +4

    I appreciate your respect, honesty, and lack of disturbance. These are my forefathers.

  • @jamiedarnell1
    @jamiedarnell1 11 дней назад +3

    I watch most of the videos about the South West on You Tube. There is a special quality and beauty about your videos. Your videos are by far the best. You deserve to be compensated. I bet you would have great success if you started a Patreon account.

  • @ObamAmerican48
    @ObamAmerican48 12 дней назад +28

    Another wonderful but nerve-wracking video from Andrew! Have you ever asked to speak with Elders in the Ute and/or Navajo nations? It would be interesting to hear them talk about the dwellings. Love your videos and the respect and deference you express for the ancient ones.

    • @Desert.Drifter
      @Desert.Drifter  10 дней назад +2

      The Ute and Navajo are believed by most professionals not to descendants of, or related to, the people who built these sites

    • @ObamAmerican48
      @ObamAmerican48 9 дней назад +2

      @@Desert.Drifter Really, that is interesting...I feel like I should know that. Are there any American Indian nations who identify themselves as descendents of the ancient Puebloans?

  • @KHAZ-tl4pt
    @KHAZ-tl4pt 12 дней назад +28

    Ive been following you for a little over a year now. I live in Northern Arizona, which puts me "nearby" the areas you are discovering. I just want to say how much I appreciate that you keep these areas to yourself. I just dont want to see these areas meddled with. Humans are naturally very curious creatures, but unfortunately, being respectful and leaving well enough alone, doesnt seem to fit our species. You are an exception, and thats why I continue to follow your adventures. Please keep up your excellent discovery work. Stay being curious. Stay safe- because you certainly push the boundaries sometimes! Just keep being the Desert Drifter that I have come to know. And thank you for the amazing knowledge and perspective that you bring to us with this wonderful channel.

  • @donaldbrown9437
    @donaldbrown9437 11 дней назад +3

    Thanks for sharing your adventures, and thanks for being so respectful of the history and integrity of each location!😊

  • @SchoolforHackers
    @SchoolforHackers 10 дней назад +1

    Andrew, this is madly beautiful and provocative. There’s a solid community forming in the comments. I appreciate hugely the knowledge everyone is sharing, and the guy who’s making it happen.

  • @WindsEternal
    @WindsEternal 12 дней назад +21

    That rock is literally outstanding!

  • @johnnynada7078
    @johnnynada7078 12 дней назад +85

    I miss that feeling: Sitting on the edge and staring out over the expanse with 2,000 plus years of history at your back. Getting old is a mother.

  • @marcellepesek3038
    @marcellepesek3038 11 дней назад

    You are a very courageous gentleman! Thank you for sharing these incredibly beautiful treasures of the past and being respectful of them. I applaud you and only worry about your safety. Are you out there all alone? The climbs you undertake are certainly not an everyday easy climb. I hope you have a satellite phone and let the relevant people know where you will be - more or less- and when you intend to return. I am delighted at having found your channel and look forward to seeing more of your fascinating videos. Thank you for recording these sites for us and future generations. I wish others who came before you had had the same respect and consideration! Please be careful out there and come
    back safely from each one of your amazing travels. These shots into the life of other people and civilizations and the harsh conditions they must have faced are just awe inspiring. You really must have felt heavily impacted as you sat
    there, feeling the ancients still all around you. I have really enjoyed going on this journey with you & all other viewers.

  • @billseggie4578
    @billseggie4578 9 дней назад

    As a native Arizonan, I am blown away by your videos! Keep them coming and keep the specific locations to yourself, Please.

  • @pttpforever
    @pttpforever 12 дней назад +7

    My parents were old enough to remember the Great Depression and Dust Bowl, but they didn't want to talk about it much and I don't blame them for that. I know there was suffering and great lack, but nothing more. I can't go back to the house in Kansas City my father lived in as a child. I feel fortunate to have a few photos of it, but it's gone. Torn down to make room for an office building. The house my mother was born in (in the Kansas county that was the very center of the great drought and locust swarms of 1936) was destroyed by a tornado. No photos of it at all, sadly. I've traced the family name back 11 generations before my parents, but the trail grows fainter and fainter.
    I hope the descendants of those who once lived on those cliffs have been told of them and like you, keep their location a secret. I hope they can visit that place, walk the land there and tell their children. I hope they can tell the whole story and say, 'Here. Here is where your ancestors were born and lived. This is what they did there. This is why they had to leave.' Ruin that it is, at least some of it is still standing.

  • @SandraG-dx6zk
    @SandraG-dx6zk 12 дней назад +96

    Do you ever come across any burial sights? I absolutely love what you do, but you do scare the s**t out of me sometimes ;) please take care..

    • @seeharvester
      @seeharvester 12 дней назад +4

      sites

    • @lmm.5619
      @lmm.5619 11 дней назад +1

      @@seeharvester don't be a troll

    • @seeharvester
      @seeharvester 11 дней назад +3

      @@lmm.5619
      Sandra has an edit button.
      When she corrects her spelling, I'll remove my correction and this comment.
      Just trying to educate todays youth, since the schools don't seem to be doing a very good job.
      Have a nice day!

    • @wanttogo1958
      @wanttogo1958 11 дней назад

      @@seeharvesterat least you are consistently full of it.

    • @seeharvester
      @seeharvester 11 дней назад

      @@wanttogo1958
      I'll take that as a vote for ignorance.

  • @Ali-iqq1z
    @Ali-iqq1z 11 дней назад

    Definitely stunning! Every frame is like a painting, I could almost feel and smell that sandstone with your story telling, at times a touch of time travelling, too. It's as close as many of us following you will get. Thank you, DD! What you do is very much aporeciated.

  • @richardskaff1
    @richardskaff1 11 дней назад +1

    You clearly have an amazing ability to tell stories about the sites you find. Thank you for the creativity and special stories of your adventures and "finds". You go to places I will never get to. With your description of those places, you make them come alive for me. Thank you!

  • @MrPINKFL0YD
    @MrPINKFL0YD 12 дней назад +21

    I've really started to enjoy these over the past few months. Thank you.

  • @rickpetrinack1540
    @rickpetrinack1540 12 дней назад +12

    DD hi from Alberta, Canada. I was fortunate to be introduced to the US desert SW young on vacation. I remember others asking me why go get all dirty, dusty and hot we're going to the indoor pool then mall. My response I can do that back home.
    The desert/rock lands are special and alive have history, adventure and peace. I appreciate many things about your channel no location ident, look and put back for others to enjoy and choosing to not desecrate places of the ancient ones. Taking pictures and experiencing is more than enough I respect all of that about Desert Drifter. Thanks .

  • @DenzLeeby-sl1jb
    @DenzLeeby-sl1jb 12 дней назад +1

    That balanced rock looks like a wisp of wind could topple it! And those “more impossible “ ruins. Once again, you’ve outdone yourself. Thanks for doing this!

  • @ryanjcollier
    @ryanjcollier 12 дней назад +9

    I’ve noticed in your videos your postulated about the purpose of rooms. The larger rooms with soot on the ceilings are most likely from drying/smoking meats, the smaller that are nestled up against walls for firing ceramics. Having fires in dwelling spaces is rare. Often hot rocks were used for safety and oxygen and hygiene.
    Also as for access to many areas ladders and ropes were quite common. Those items you can imagine were hard to come by, and in the final days as each site was looted for resources those rope and ladders were likely taken as they were valuable and useful to accrete sites and are time consuming and use rare resources.
    Rope was very likely used for access and securing your hold on some rock faces.
    Also, because it has been seen in other site and the defensive nature of many of there sites, ladders were likely used as security, were as a person could retreat into a secured dwelling or positing and remove the ladder bridges to make it impossible for an enemy to follow.
    When these sites are viewed within the context of the tool on hand at the time these sites make a little more sense. Still impressive.

    • @JohnDoe-420
      @JohnDoe-420 10 дней назад +1

      Actually having fires in dwelling spaces is extremely common throughout history - you have to remember that fire was the only source of heating at night and the temperature can drop below freezing in the winter in the desert. The cliff builders absolutely understood the need for ventilation and those buildings of theirs that have been found intact all feature ventilation shafts above hearths.

  • @erniemajor
    @erniemajor 12 дней назад +17

    Oh my gosh those rocks are so beautiful! I would like nothing better than to lean against the warm surface and just be at peace. Thanks so much for sharing your adventures.

  • @deja00
    @deja00 12 дней назад +2

    12:41 Mesmerizing. Desert Drifter is back!

  • @XCocoaCutieX
    @XCocoaCutieX 11 дней назад

    New subscriber! I’ve watched a few of your videos that’s been recommended and I’m amazed by how you not only find these places through Google earth and drones, but the fact you actually trek, hike, and climb these remote locations is truly inspiring and very impressive. I appreciate your respect for the sites and not disclosing locations of certain sites out of respect for local Native American tribes.

  • @phillipwallace7211
    @phillipwallace7211 12 дней назад +8

    This really makes me think of how we take our security and resources so much for granted. We really do live a blessed life.

  • @IOSALive
    @IOSALive 12 дней назад +16

    Desert Drifter, awesome video keep up the amazing work

  • @barbaracarlisle8930
    @barbaracarlisle8930 12 часов назад

    An absolute favorite channel! I love your respect for the places, the times they were created, and the people who faced the challenges of life with creativity. Your pauses for reflection give me pause as well. Thank you for so realistically bringing me into your world, even the practicalities and necessities you consider when hiking in a harsh land.

  • @HenryKlausEsq.
    @HenryKlausEsq. 12 дней назад

    The straight-line horizontal scrolling along the ruins with the drone is really illustrative and a good technique for demonstrating scale/complexity.

  • @paulglawson2866
    @paulglawson2866 12 дней назад +29

    Going Ham on something is a term I’ve never heard but completely understand. The real issue is something called Intrinsic Value. There’s no treasure here, no gold, no silver, just valueless artifacts. But because of the value as an historic site everything is priceless. Therefore there is nothing that needs taking from these quite beautiful structures. Nothing. And shame on anyone who sells or buys this stuff from wherever it’s being proffered. Respect to the First People who lived in these primitive homes.

  • @-mattwood
    @-mattwood 12 дней назад +15

    I grew up in the western deserts - and it's been years since I've walked out in that environment. It always feels like home when I watch your videos... even if it seems barren and difficult... it has an appeal to it that makes me feel that magic again. Thanks for bringing us along on this channel.

  • @michaellewis5133
    @michaellewis5133 11 дней назад +1

    Thank you for sharing your incredible journey into a past generation of people. I enjoyed your video and your explanation of the people who lived in these mountains and how they used the mountains for protection. I too got to imagine what life was like living in that era through your narrative. I look forward to your next adventure.

  • @lpittman1509
    @lpittman1509 12 дней назад +1

    Thanks for another video. I love how you respect the sites and explain that they are a natural museum and to leave them as you find them. It is sad that the sites have been disturbed, but that also tells a story of the human condition. Keep those videos coming, but safety first!

  • @Retired-nohurry
    @Retired-nohurry 12 дней назад +29

    I wonder if some of those sites have had significant erosion and rock slides that make current access more difficult?

    • @lesley1484
      @lesley1484 12 дней назад +2

      I was thinking the same thing! There are large structures at Hovenweep NM perched on rocks leaning out over the canyon. Time takes a toll.

    • @allenfarmer6491
      @allenfarmer6491 12 дней назад +1

      Me too...many violent storms, and strong winds, have probably came and went over the many, many years since these were constructed....mild earth quakes are a real possibility as well, that could have caused large portions of the cliffs to break away, which is really quite apparent by the large bolders strewn about. Also getting the wood beams and packing the water to plaster the walls would have been nearly impossible for anyone to do in there present condition. Ladders and ropes would have also been necessary to transport things . It's really mind boggling when you think about it. Keep doing this Desert Drifter!

    • @Colorado68
      @Colorado68 12 дней назад +3

      Looking at the the water erosion levels in the canyon, maybe it was flooded and they used canoes to access/build their structures?

    • @ShaneLadd-fw4cr
      @ShaneLadd-fw4cr 12 дней назад +3

      ​@@Colorado68 you are not seeing what you think you are seeing. Those "water levels" are millions of years ago old. Those water levels you are seeing are ancient sea floors from the time of the dinosaurs. This area has been dry since before mankind came to inhabit it. Each layer represents eons of incomprehensible time

    • @Colorado68
      @Colorado68 12 дней назад +1

      @@ShaneLadd-fw4cr We don't know that for sure. Maybe the canyons were eroded millions of years ago, but could have flooded again. History has repeated itself.

  • @SenseiOwens
    @SenseiOwens 12 дней назад +14

    These videos are so cool. I can't walk, let alone hike any more. I will just ride along with you!!! Thanks!!!!

  • @vincentramosph.d.7540
    @vincentramosph.d.7540 11 дней назад +2

    Keep up the fine and respectful work. It is a gift to all of us.

  • @dfuss2756
    @dfuss2756 11 дней назад +1

    I am so grateful that you are documenting these ancestral places, for too soon they will be lost forever. We may never know their total history, but I do know there have been times of great joy and times of great suffering that has been felt while visiting sites such as these.

  • @gnp4360
    @gnp4360 12 дней назад +7

    Your videos bring me great peace. The cadence of your narrative and your reverence for the land is unmatched in this time. Thank you. 😌

  • @oatis053
    @oatis053 12 дней назад +15

    I know you are a good climber and experienced but please be careful man.

  • @nicolelecompte1969
    @nicolelecompte1969 10 дней назад +1

    Great job filming & explaining to us the possibilities.So far this is one of my favorite ruins you’ve visited.I can’t believe how intact & well preserved those white rooms & walks were. Just amazing. Thank for the videos.😁

  • @nanderpaulus8728
    @nanderpaulus8728 12 дней назад +15

    Dude this is my new favorite channel! keep it up!

  • @user-iy7uk5rb2g
    @user-iy7uk5rb2g 12 дней назад +5

    Been watching your adventures with joy and admiration. Having the technology and skill to access these places, and the reverence to honor the Ancestors, is breathtaking. Bring a geologist along with you on your next trek into this canyon. I think where you are was beachfront property. Read the rocks.

  • @jojo1960uk
    @jojo1960uk 12 дней назад +1

    Thank you for your love of history and the clues left by the ancestors. Your videos are a joy to watch. How I would love to explore some of those canyons and mesas. Sadly there are too many people who have no reverence for the past, we have the same problems in the UK and it's heartbreaking. The clues will always be there though, and new ones will be a gift to those who see. Keep seeing and sharing the incredible but also keep them hidden 💫

  • @ceceliavoss9174
    @ceceliavoss9174 12 дней назад +1

    That balanced stone is incredible!

  • @susanalbone5101
    @susanalbone5101 12 дней назад +23

    Your videos never disappoint. They keep me spellbound all the way through. Yes, I’m with you on respecting the land and properties therein. They are not ours and should be left as they are. Sad that some others don’t see it that way. Take care, keep safe. ❤ Dorset, UK

  • @coltmanus
    @coltmanus 12 дней назад +12

    I just want to sit out there with this guy and talk about anything and everything.

    • @Janer-52
      @Janer-52 12 дней назад +1

      Too bed there couldn't be an interactive livestream with him in those mountains.

  • @josephlilly8314
    @josephlilly8314 12 дней назад +1

    What a beautiful, fantastic video. Artistically constructed, thoughtful, the music enhances the experience too. So grateful you are taking us to places we will never visit in person.

  • @dannypayne8150
    @dannypayne8150 12 дней назад +1

    Glad you document your trips. Loved the presentation and thank you for your hard work to show this to the world.

  • @dolliecain8475
    @dolliecain8475 12 дней назад +6

    The hills truly did “have eyes!” So absolutely incredible it really is!:)

  • @deckiedeckie
    @deckiedeckie 12 дней назад +10

    Dude......be careful.....I love ur videos ....I'd like to continue watching them!!.....Cuidate mucho chaval!!

  • @loro3849
    @loro3849 19 часов назад

    When I was in 4th grade (1965) our teacher read aloud to us a story of a native boy living in the cliff dwellings and it really stuck with me. I've studied SW cultures and tried to pass along my fascination and respect to my students. The drone really gives us new access and viewpoint. Your channel is so interesting.

  • @adammillwardart7831
    @adammillwardart7831 11 дней назад +1

    Wow, great way to end it. I look forward to the follow up! I enjoy the calm and inquisitive vibe of your videos. Thanks for making & sharing them.

  • @DaveCollierCamping
    @DaveCollierCamping 12 дней назад +16

    Watching now -- truly amazing

    • @daveberry2177
      @daveberry2177 12 дней назад +2

      same as im in the uk, we have nothing like this, why did folk live like this, to me they were trying to stay very safe, why i ask myself,

  • @waynemiller6156
    @waynemiller6156 12 дней назад +6

    I love going along with you on these trips. I live in Pennsylvania USA and don't get to travel much till I curl up in bed and watch your videos. Thanks for the amazing experience. 😊