California's Dirty Secret: Exploring the Lakeview Gusher, Biggest Accidental Oil Spill in History

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  • Опубликовано: 9 июл 2024
  • Welcome to Wonderhussy Adventure #810
    Date of adventure: 6/13/24
    Checking out the site of the biggest land-based oil spill in history, which you've probably never heard of -- in the middle of nowhere, outside Bakersfield!
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Комментарии • 643

  • @mal1465
    @mal1465 20 дней назад +140

    Hi Wonderhussy, this is Mark and I lived and grew up in Bakersfield. I’m the one who sent you sunglasses from the Corn Palace. I worked 10 years in the oil patch and you are right outside of the town or Maricopa. The oil company you pointed to at the beginning of the video was Berry Holding Oil Company when I worked out there. Next time you are in Bakersfield, I suggest you take the time and go to the Kern County Museum located on No. Chester. Years ago Chevron built a multi million dollar oil exhibit at the museum and even tho I worked in the oilfields for years, I learned a lot more going through the exhibit. Oil derricks were the permanent wooden structures built over every hole drilled and the big units going up and down are pumping units or producers. You are also very close to the Purina and Johnny Cat kitty litter factories. My understanding is that it one of the best places in the country to make kitty litter. Great video as usual

    • @cheranschick
      @cheranschick 20 дней назад +3

      You and wondering jeepsy should of done a video together since she was in the area of San Francisco call it Sarah's in San fran

    • @jamesf4405
      @jamesf4405 20 дней назад +10

      Sarah doesn't read any of her comments. Sorry guys.

    • @BakersfieldGuru
      @BakersfieldGuru 20 дней назад +7

      @@mal1465 sad she doesn’t read comments. I would volunteer to take her to the Museum. I highly recommend it to anyone interested in the early years of Bakersfield and its history.

    • @tysmith_6844
      @tysmith_6844 20 дней назад +5

      they call them pump jacks too right?

    • @Callipygous1975
      @Callipygous1975 20 дней назад +1

      @@tysmith_6844 ​ Yes and oil field guys use terms like horsehead or donkeyhead pump. Petroleum Engineers called them Beam pumps or walking beam pumps.

  • @jeffwoodard1
    @jeffwoodard1 20 дней назад +57

    You have become an addiction....a very nice one...I look forward to Wednesdays...you make an old man smile....Good Job

    • @letsgobrandon7567
      @letsgobrandon7567 20 дней назад

      There are videos still on RUclips with Wonderhussy completely nude, showing everything. Tasty !

    • @jackdacop9827
      @jackdacop9827 20 дней назад +1

      Friday too.

    • @Burritoslay3r
      @Burritoslay3r 20 дней назад +2

    • @mikeb3603
      @mikeb3603 20 дней назад +6

      I hear you. Wife and I look forward to her weekly videos! She is great therapy for a messed up world! Love her take on things!❤❤

    • @Russell-w9k
      @Russell-w9k 19 дней назад +2

      Agree totally with that 1st line, jeff. Man can she talk, but it's all good, as it seems she does a lot of pre trip research.

  • @harrybond1485
    @harrybond1485 20 дней назад +42

    In 1909, gasoline was about 4.5 cents per gallon, and was sold in glass jars.Most of the oil was used for lubrication at that time, as there were few cars as yet.

    • @robertcornelius3514
      @robertcornelius3514 20 дней назад

      Our poor Earth is doomed.

    • @patrickvanden8322
      @patrickvanden8322 20 дней назад +4

      Nope most of the oil was refined to lamp oil also known as petroleum as electric lamps where not a thing yet. Gasoline was a by product which they had no use for as is was way to flammable.

  • @leddygee1896
    @leddygee1896 20 дней назад +37

    Oil is also extremely hot
    When it comes out of the
    Ground. You don’t want to
    Be near it when it goes
    Off!! Great story Sarah😎

  • @mikeazeka1753
    @mikeazeka1753 20 дней назад +30

    And just when you think Wonderhussy has made every kind of abandoned desert video, we get the pimple popping gusher saga!

    • @tomrinde4487
      @tomrinde4487 20 дней назад

      Interesting story told like only Sarah can.

  • @alleghenytrade9421
    @alleghenytrade9421 20 дней назад +28

    A barrel as a measurement is 42 gallons. 55 gallons is a commercial drum.

    • @daveneil3963
      @daveneil3963 17 дней назад

      I was going to Google it. I thought it was less that the drums we think of but didn't know how much. Thank you for clarifying that for us.

    • @randypower6832
      @randypower6832 16 дней назад

      gotta leave room for expansion LOL thus the 42 to 45 gal measurement put into a 55 gal drum if you lucky and they don't put less in to make more money LOL

  • @NetWit20
    @NetWit20 20 дней назад +24

    The horsey-looking things that go up and down are referred to as "pumping units" . Blow out preventers are known as "BOPs" and then there's "sucker rod", "polish rod" and "pump jacks" all related to pumping oil. There's an old pump jack out in the middle of nowhere in Oklahoma that's been in operation since 1959! It looks like it should have fallen apart fifty years ago, but it keeps going!

    • @alcarter9373
      @alcarter9373 20 дней назад +4

      In Alberta Canada we call the horsey looking things "pump jacks"

    • @Russell-w9k
      @Russell-w9k 19 дней назад

      In Albion, Wt20, they're known as "nodding donkeys".

  • @andrewortiz9257
    @andrewortiz9257 20 дней назад +25

    I remember seeing them all around here in Southern California back in the 70’s and some were set up to look like big grasshoppers with antennas and painted on eyes.

    • @stevec5576
      @stevec5576 20 дней назад +6

      At pico & lacienega.

    • @wolfsmith2865
      @wolfsmith2865 20 дней назад +5

      I remember the oilfields near Long Beach and LAX. I liked the painted one that looked like bugs.

  • @Super_Chief
    @Super_Chief 20 дней назад +31

    Hey Sarah - I just wanted to inform you that now that you are no longer a Las Vegan, and are now officially a T-Town girl, you cannot (by law) call it “hot” or complain about the “heat” until the temperature officially exceeds 115 degrees. Just thought you might want to know about that. Stay cool! 😎

    • @Super_Chief
      @Super_Chief 20 дней назад +1

      @iTeI3gram_.WonderhussyOfficial It’s obvious you are not Wonderhussy. My question is - do you attempt to impersonate girls in real life too? Yeah….I’ll bet you do! LOL 🤣

  • @EveningShadeLori
    @EveningShadeLori 20 дней назад +15

    Being from Texas I found this video very entertaining. Its a pumpjack. The weird thing that goes up and down that looks like a rocking horse or grass hopper. Now days they take many precautions and drilling for oil is not the hazard some may want you to believe it is.

    • @LuckyBaldwin777
      @LuckyBaldwin777 10 дней назад

      As a kid in California, I remember guys sneaking out and painting faces on them. The oil men must have liked them because very few were painted over.

  • @barbarasummers280
    @barbarasummers280 20 дней назад +25

    My High School Yearbook was Black Gold, and our colors were Black and Gold! Ventura was quite the oil town and they still have the oil rigs out in the Santa Barbara Channel, nearby.

    • @LuckyBaldwin777
      @LuckyBaldwin777 10 дней назад

      I read somewhere that the oil from the Channel is pipelined to west Texas. Too bad it doesn't go to the refineries in El Segundo.

    • @petewells5593
      @petewells5593 9 дней назад

      Only 97 try it when it’s 115 😊

  • @D.A.B-w7n
    @D.A.B-w7n 20 дней назад +19

    Lived in Cali and went to school there till I was 16, never heard about this incident once! Thanks for the history lesson. 8:55

  • @KMaC-wt9lr
    @KMaC-wt9lr 20 дней назад +6

    Jed Clampett would be so envious. 😁

  • @dwightethridge3335
    @dwightethridge3335 20 дней назад +17

    I learn new things from you every time I watch you videos

  • @mikecore1637
    @mikecore1637 20 дней назад +14

    Oil is all over the place in Ventura - Santa Barbara - Kern county . Some Farms ranches pump oil and if you don't pump it out some times it just seeps out by its self . Oil leaks out the side of the mountain on HWY 150 smells like rotten eggs . The road is closed from last years storms but they are working on it .

    • @pismorichy
      @pismorichy 6 дней назад

      I live in Pismo and it stinks here because of Price Cyn road drove by it an hour ago! It's sickening

  • @poodles4u
    @poodles4u 20 дней назад +18

    Crunchy peanut butter on warm toast, black coffee and Wonderhussey video.

    • @jolenecreech7648
      @jolenecreech7648 20 дней назад

      Sounds perfect to me! 😊

    • @TOM-C.
      @TOM-C. 20 дней назад

      I'm right there with you! Why anyone would want creamy is beyond me! Unfortunately, my family likes the creamy, go figure! Same with coffee, I like it black, but the wife likes creamer, and a ton of sugar! I can't win! 😁👍✌🗽

  • @BakersfieldGuru
    @BakersfieldGuru 20 дней назад +20

    Used to ride pumping units when I was a kid. There called pumping units. ❤ wonderhussy.

  • @jimrobertson7080
    @jimrobertson7080 20 дней назад +10

    Wow and yikes and wow really enjoyed this video on 76 native California and never heard of that oil spill. Thank you darling for all that information you're such an educational teacher. And a Explorer

  • @wolfsmith2865
    @wolfsmith2865 20 дней назад +8

    The Derricks are the tall towers. They facilitate the actual drilling process. The moving pumps are called pumpjacks, among other names.

  • @ozhalljr
    @ozhalljr 20 дней назад +7

    Great episode. Glad you pointed out that the oil was in fact naturally occurring. We sometimes lose sight of that fact when it comes to spills.

    • @ozhalljr
      @ozhalljr 18 дней назад

      @WonderhussyAdventuresza ok

    • @skyh
      @skyh 13 дней назад

      The La Brea tar pits in Los Angeles the oil comes right to the surface even in small patches coming up through the grass

    • @LuckyBaldwin777
      @LuckyBaldwin777 10 дней назад

      ​@skyh LA Brea is the most famous. There are several tar pits in the California oil country. There was an old mission that had a tar pit near it. The stuff was prized for roofing, and the mission did a bustling business in it.

  • @bwinford1561
    @bwinford1561 20 дней назад +50

    Oil was first discovered in Pennsylvania 1859, which brought an end to the commercial whaling industry. Imagine that.

    • @karnubawax
      @karnubawax 20 дней назад

      Yup... and if you think oil rigging is a dirty, disgusting job, harvesting whale oil has got to be the worst job ever. Read about how they got "sperm oil" out of the heads of whales. Yuck!

    • @luckydog-js3nf
      @luckydog-js3nf 20 дней назад +2

      cool fun fact

    • @craigdarby9533
      @craigdarby9533 20 дней назад +3

      Unless you're Japanese or Norwegian

    • @kimballamram552
      @kimballamram552 20 дней назад +3

      Titusville, Pa to be exact

    • @onlyone2948
      @onlyone2948 20 дней назад +1

      In the 1960s, I learned oil was first drilled in a ghost town named Pithole, PA., which is near Titusville. Colonel Drake is given credit for drilling it.

  • @r0024smith
    @r0024smith 20 дней назад +14

    You are a great "Story Teller" I always enjoy, Thank you.

  • @danweidman6004
    @danweidman6004 20 дней назад +10

    Thanks for unknown California history. You are one great reporter. Keep up the good work.

  • @puppetmaster8106
    @puppetmaster8106 20 дней назад +11

    Used to work electrical there in the late 80s and those pipes are for steam injection. Worked at the Exxon Formax.

  • @banditjones3632
    @banditjones3632 20 дней назад +14

    Great history lesson on that area.

  • @shibui99
    @shibui99 8 дней назад +3

    FYI: Gas was .25 cents a gallon in the 1950's. AND, gas stations gave away S & H Green Stamps, or pieces of tea sets, or 6-pack soda, or many other items that were used to attract customers.

  • @leerod
    @leerod 20 дней назад +25

    Oils well that ends well Lol

    • @ssQ2U
      @ssQ2U 20 дней назад +1

      Lol

  • @chrisfimple973
    @chrisfimple973 20 дней назад +9

    Great episode,wonderhussy you break 💔 my heart I live thirty five minutes away and my parents were from close to where the spill was, could have shared more.👍🇺🇸

  • @misfitjones5214
    @misfitjones5214 20 дней назад +7

    The Steampunk devices you mentioned are called pumpjacks. They're everywhere down south where I'm from. Enjoy seeing your videos! Hydrate!!!!

  • @wideawaketotruth5301
    @wideawaketotruth5301 20 дней назад +10

    Sarah coors light is the silver bullet. That was a coors regular. Rick Amarillo texas.

  • @jefftuckercfii
    @jefftuckercfii 20 дней назад +10

    I grew up and lived in Bakersfield for many years myself. The devices you are pointing out at the start of the video are not derricks, they are pumping units (I made my living as a software engineer supporting oil exploration and production for...a long time). The pumping unit is connected to a pump far underground by a stack of rods (you can see the rod attached to the head of the unit going up and down) just like any other old fashioned pump: the rod goes up and down and the oil pumps up and out. Derricks were the frameworks (originally wood, later steel) erected over the site of a well for supporting the drilling equipment. They could be left in place or dismantled after drilling was complete. Later the companies figured out it was simpler and cheaper to use a portable drilling rig that they could move from location to location and not have to build or dismantle anything. You still see old ones from time to time that were left in place back in the day. Oil exploration and production in Kern County and the Bakersfield area goes back well over 100 years. Thanks for all the videos over time; I haven't watched one for a while, then when RUclips showed me the Lakeview Gusher and it was your video, I had to watch. I learned about the Gusher back in junior high in a local history class.

  • @KWGamers
    @KWGamers 20 дней назад +2

    Wow! Your narrative was fantastic. You're a natural at story telling and entertaining. Great work!

  • @leonardoglesby1730
    @leonardoglesby1730 20 дней назад +15

    When you have the time take a look at the 2007 movie, "There Will Be blood" which is tale oil and corruption in California derived from an Upton Sinclair novel "Oil".

    • @victoriabaker4400
      @victoriabaker4400 20 дней назад +2

      I didn't know that film was based on Sinclair. Will watch, thanks.

  • @naturalimmunity3040
    @naturalimmunity3040 20 дней назад +5

    I always enjoy your posts and commentary Wonderhussy. Thank you!

  • @user-vk5kw3kx4b
    @user-vk5kw3kx4b 20 дней назад +4

    I love your channel, I have learned soo much from you. Thank you for all the information you include in your videos. 😊

  • @Rickyracer155
    @Rickyracer155 20 дней назад +3

    Hey sweetie! The fact all that oil was spilled with out killing the planet should make some tree huggers think 🤔

  • @richardegamezjr
    @richardegamezjr 20 дней назад +2

    Fabulous as always!once again demonstrating your incredible story telling style presentation! ❤👍

  • @dennisquinn8558
    @dennisquinn8558 20 дней назад

    Another interesting video detailing a nearby historical event.
    Thanks Wonderhussy!

  • @greggonzales8969
    @greggonzales8969 8 дней назад

    Hey Wonderhussy - As someone who worked in the oilfields west of Bakersfield for about 2 years, we called those mechanical thingys "above-ground pumping units." In Texas, they call 'em "pumpjacks." They stuck the oil out of the ground and into storage tanks. Hope you enjoyed our heat!

  • @AB-kg6rk
    @AB-kg6rk 20 дней назад +5

    Well done history lesson as always! ❤

  • @pato6334
    @pato6334 20 дней назад +1

    Thanks for another fascinating video. I’d never heard of this before, and I can’t wrap my mind around the amount of oil spilled or the time it went on. Amazing!

  • @SingleTrackMined
    @SingleTrackMined 20 дней назад +1

    Somehow you make the most mundane subjects ultra-fascinating. Great video!

  • @YosemiteJ
    @YosemiteJ 10 дней назад

    Your videos are my comfort watches. On a day when I'm not feeling well and laying up in bed, watching your adventures is so comforting and takes my mind off feeling like crap. I think me and you are the only people on earth who still say GAAAAAWLEEE! 😂 Thank you Wonderhussy!😊

  • @deepseadirt1
    @deepseadirt1 20 дней назад +1

    Thank you Wonderhussy, your vids are educational as well as adventurous!

  • @jdfmfb03
    @jdfmfb03 20 дней назад

    Great video Sarah you are an AWESOME person Thank you for taking us along
    Stay COLD in your travels🥶

  • @robertvogt5606
    @robertvogt5606 17 дней назад

    This was more interesting than just another hot spring . Thank you for pursuing everything & anything odd , unusual , different or strange. There's a finite number of hot springs but you'll never run out of content . Happy trails .

  • @faerieSAALE
    @faerieSAALE 20 дней назад +2

    Fascinating information Sarah. Thanks

  • @rickybobbytexas3487
    @rickybobbytexas3487 20 дней назад +8

    The seesaw deally is an oil pump jack.

    • @bearmcquade2846
      @bearmcquade2846 20 дней назад

      They just don't Stop ! Arms Legs Gone 😮

  • @UniusPoenitentis
    @UniusPoenitentis 20 дней назад

    I just love Wonderhussy Wednesdays and Fridays 🥰 Nothing weird about you sweets!!! 😉 I love all these places you visit and share with us--all right up my alley too as the old saying goes. Californian here too who never heard of this story before, although I've been to Bakersfield many times over the years. I would like to visit this site myself one day. Out here in California and the West in general, you will never run out of content for your videos. Thanks again Sarah and keep 'em coming! Please stay safe as you travel and by all means, have fun! 🤗♥️

  • @PAPOOSELAKESURFER
    @PAPOOSELAKESURFER 20 дней назад +3

    Union Oil's first oil wells south of Orcutt, CA, gushed for three years before getting pumps. Single 12" diameter cylinder diesel fired once every three minutes on filtered crude oil, huge flywheel ran pump between unmuffeled exhaust explosions.

  • @jacksrbetter1870
    @jacksrbetter1870 20 дней назад +7

    Howdy Sarah! You stay safe ok. Thanks for taking us along! 😉

  • @kevinwest7912
    @kevinwest7912 20 дней назад

    Another great historical video. Never heard of this before. Great find WH.😊

  • @randybrown6795
    @randybrown6795 20 дней назад

    Hey wonderhussy great video I love exploring places like that that's a great piece of California history your biggest RUclips fan Randy from Kentucky.

  • @cambeaton8364
    @cambeaton8364 20 дней назад +7

    It’s 118 in Vegas today

  • @markpashia7067
    @markpashia7067 20 дней назад +2

    The first drilled oil well was at Oil City, PA near Titusville, PA about fifteen years before Spindletop.

  • @wasatchrangerailway6921
    @wasatchrangerailway6921 20 дней назад +6

    Hi Sarah. I was just watching your vid on the Shingles on your backside. I can help you prevent it from happening again!!! The skin has its own immune system that is apart from all of the other immune systems in the body. When someone develops a skin infection (of any kind), it is a broken enzyme chain that is almost always responsible!!! 99% of the time it is the Amino Acid---L Lysine link in that Enzyme chain that is broken. Go to the Pharmacy, and in the OTC section, get a couple of bottles of L-Lysine. Take 4 pills in the morning, and 4 pills in the evening until the Shingles rash disappears. Then as a daily supplement, take 2 in the morning, and 2 in the evening, and the Shingles should stay away for good. The reason Shingles got you right at this spot is most likely because of the rubbing right there in the first place. The Lysine should do the trick---STAY SAFE OUT THERE!!! Don't run yourself down!!! You seem to me to be a perfectly wonderful person to me!!!

    • @elizabethharttley4073
      @elizabethharttley4073 20 дней назад

      Hi, I concur that L lysine is wonderful for skin issues.
      I don't know if WH reads comments. She has mentioned before that she doesn't because of negatively. If you find her email you'll be able to share.
      Carry on ❤

    • @sallys2423
      @sallys2423 13 дней назад

      I got the vaccine for shingles and insurance paid for it. No pills for me!

  • @keithcrampton1438
    @keithcrampton1438 16 дней назад +1

    Loving your show is easy because you make it very simple!

  • @RHD360
    @RHD360 20 дней назад +3

    Can relate to your comment about getting your phone heated up too much. Got myself one of those phone mounts that clips directly onto the A/C vent on my dash. It works wonders getting the phone to cool down.

  • @JonStein-mu5eb
    @JonStein-mu5eb 20 дней назад +3

    Cerro Gordo is cool this time of year. When are you going to spend time at your mother's place in northern CA?

  • @katherinespencer2633
    @katherinespencer2633 20 дней назад

    This is a great video, as usual, Sarah. I learn more US history from you than I probably got from my teachers in school.

  • @williamhickstein685
    @williamhickstein685 20 дней назад +12

    At the time I am watching this video, oil is going for $82.40 a barrel.

    • @patrickvanden8322
      @patrickvanden8322 20 дней назад +2

      Historically, Crude Oil reached an all time high of 147.27 in July of 2008... Back then gas was cheaper then now. Not sure who is shafting us!

    • @petewells5593
      @petewells5593 9 дней назад

      @@patrickvanden8322you don’t? It’s the communist I. The Oval Office
      Trumpn24!!!

  • @davidruppel1216
    @davidruppel1216 20 дней назад

    Very cool. Never heard of the gusher before. Thank you!

  • @theonemanbandit7374
    @theonemanbandit7374 20 дней назад +7

    I think the Deepwater Horizon gusher in the bottom Gulf of Mexico that polluted everything and created by Halliburton was bigger or more destructive than this.

    • @theonemanbandit7374
      @theonemanbandit7374 20 дней назад +2

      Deepwater was close to 5 million barrels of oil also….. i guess its a tie… bravo humanity.

    • @crphilipp
      @crphilipp 17 дней назад +1

      Deepwater Horizon spilled more barrels of crude oil into the Gulf of Mexico

  • @pismorichy
    @pismorichy 6 дней назад +1

    I drive thru this area often for work, I also am a huge Jimmy / James Dean fan! Isn't it strange that Jimmy became a huge star after only 3 films ? And in GIANT he became a oil baron mogul and he died literally a few miles from this gusher! In fact he had to drive by here just minutes before he died😢

  • @johnglasgow4176
    @johnglasgow4176 20 дней назад +21

    I'll bet you're near Taft California thanks

    • @TheBlackDog73
      @TheBlackDog73 20 дней назад +3

      Yeah she's by Maricopa and that oil facility was Aera

    • @user-tn5xq6fe7x
      @user-tn5xq6fe7x 20 дней назад +1

      Yeah, interesting area. I love the Carrizo Plain too.

    • @petewells5593
      @petewells5593 9 дней назад

      No one know where taft is lol

    • @user-tn5xq6fe7x
      @user-tn5xq6fe7x 9 дней назад +1

      @@petewells5593 I think you'd be surprised how many folks know where Taft is.

    • @petewells5593
      @petewells5593 9 дней назад

      @@user-tn5xq6fe7x only us ratchet souls in kern co

  • @socalifone3044
    @socalifone3044 20 дней назад +2

    Coors Banquet Beer can. 😂
    Fantastic video as usual. 👍❤️👍

  • @SequoiaX
    @SequoiaX 20 дней назад +3

    Thank You WonderHussy ♥
    Also, thank you for questioning misinformation. There are hundreds of internet images of pump jacks labeled as derricks. An oil Derrick is the tall structure used to drill the original well to the underground reservoir of oil.. Once the oil is reached, a Pump Jack ( the dinosaur structure ) is installed to bring the oil to the surface.
    I lived near Santa Barbara long ago, and tar balls from off shore oil reservoirs would occasionally wash ashore. Old timers told me that prior to the installation of the off shore oil fields, much more 'natural' oil / tar balls washed up along the shore.

  • @ralphcrosby4051
    @ralphcrosby4051 20 дней назад +1

    Thanks for sharing another fun adventure and history lesson your the best stay safe and hydrated 🎉

    • @ralphcrosby4051
      @ralphcrosby4051 18 дней назад

      @UCqXnen9vGDtyc9GPQOvRh2g thank you for the response love the content you rock

  • @phlodel
    @phlodel 20 дней назад +1

    I worked in those oilfields. We called the horse looking things pumping units, aka iron trees. They're about the only shade.

  • @tomretrop5315
    @tomretrop5315 10 дней назад +1

    Lady, every oil spill is accidental. I think it is amazing that such a big oil spill didn't effect the environment much in the long run.

  • @richardb7892
    @richardb7892 20 дней назад +6

    97 degrees is nothing for Death Valley. A day or so ago it was like 131. I want to hear how you survived that? 😰

    • @petewells5593
      @petewells5593 9 дней назад

      @@richardb7892 we are not Death Valley

  • @dezertraider
    @dezertraider 20 дней назад

    THANK YOU SARAH AND ANOTHER GREAT,FASCINATING VIDEO,,SAFE TRAVELS..

  • @ChrisBrown-bs2ek
    @ChrisBrown-bs2ek 20 дней назад

    Someone needs to tell nomadic fanatic this is how you make a great video by going places that are interesting love all your videos

  • @LuckyBaldwin777
    @LuckyBaldwin777 10 дней назад

    Great video. Another place/incident I've never heard of before.

  • @davec9244
    @davec9244 20 дней назад +3

    "TOP OF YOUR GAME". good job as always thank you stay safe ALL

    • @janetceniza8091
      @janetceniza8091 20 дней назад +1

      Husband speaking age 81 1/2. My mother told me about her and a neighbor driving around in a model T, gas was 10 cents a gallon. This had to be about 1938 - 1940. 1963 and I am on the way to Air Force basic tng. Stop over at LAX, 3 other guys and I grab a cab, (about 9pm at night) we ask the driver to show us around. We have the driver about $50. From all 4 of us. , we had about 90 minutes until our flight to Texas. I saw my first oil derrick up close. Great story Sarah. ❤

    • @janetceniza8091
      @janetceniza8091 20 дней назад

      #2. Yuck, age 7, 1950 and Ihad a boil on the bottom of my foot. My dad broke it, thought I was going to die. Dad put something called Denver mudd on it to draw out any infection.

  • @davidborgerding8429
    @davidborgerding8429 20 дней назад

    Love the oil blubbing effects. You're tough, just enough for the wild places

  • @victorshipley1707
    @victorshipley1707 20 дней назад +6

    I Worked In Those Oil Fields In 78 79 .......

  • @TheBrianjsharp
    @TheBrianjsharp 20 дней назад

    Thanx for this one !!! i grew up in Taft on Wood Street

  • @johnholcomn8560
    @johnholcomn8560 20 дней назад +6

    California...huge and mysterious.

  • @roseapple8786
    @roseapple8786 20 дней назад

    Miss Wonderhussy, amazing info on that their oil. Too bad they couldn't save all the oil. Thank you for sharing and God Bless you and your family. Stay safe and happy traveling. 🥰💖👍👍👍👍👍(🌹🐞🦂🌵)

    • @Skidderoperator
      @Skidderoperator 20 дней назад

      They probably set the 9 million barrel mess afire, to get rid of it.

  • @Plantagenaut
    @Plantagenaut 20 дней назад

    Yay, Wonderhussy! We all love you! Yes, we love our deserts and oil fields ! You are a courageous woman. God bless you! (Love you)

  • @briang70
    @briang70 20 дней назад +3

    The pumping units are also called "pump jacks". That's how I know them as. As a kid in SoCal, I saw those pumps and thought they resembled praying mantises.

  • @magicone9327
    @magicone9327 20 дней назад +7

    Black gold, Texas tea. In this case cali tea

  • @jackbest6677
    @jackbest6677 4 дня назад +1

    You make all things interesting. 😊

  • @dwightethridge3335
    @dwightethridge3335 20 дней назад

    Thank you for sharing this video

  • @charlenetrawick1647
    @charlenetrawick1647 20 дней назад +3

    GOOGLE officially says ( not sure ) that a "barrel" of oil is 42 gallons.

  • @user-dw4ps3zb6e
    @user-dw4ps3zb6e 20 дней назад +3

    I remember early 60s gas was 16.9 cents a gallon.

  • @LesMorrisracing
    @LesMorrisracing 20 дней назад

    Hi Sarah, I drag raced at Famoso Raceway in Bako Now plans to move to Pahrump to race in Vegas Thanks for the video.

  • @ghosty426
    @ghosty426 20 дней назад +2

    Those Toyota 4RUNNERs aren't known for getting good gas mileage. It's even worse in the Summer when you have the air conditioning on all the time. But Toyota definitely has the coldest and best air conditioning systems.

    • @petewells5593
      @petewells5593 9 дней назад

      @@ghosty426 Infiniti had the best.

  • @LoganSkeele
    @LoganSkeele 10 дней назад

    Since you asked to learn more about oil. I can suggest 3 movies that explain the oil drilling process fairly well. First is War of the Wildcats also known as In Old Oklahoma (1943) with John Wayne. Second is Tulsa (1949) with Susan Hayward. Third is Hellfighters (1968) with John Wayne

  • @bobbowers5708
    @bobbowers5708 20 дней назад

    Thanks for sharing 😁

  • @keithcrampton1438
    @keithcrampton1438 16 дней назад +2

    You are a 100% desert Queen!

  • @elizabethweston8000
    @elizabethweston8000 15 дней назад

    Love your vidoes🎉
    The hammer thing in Texas we call a " Pump Jack"

  • @BigDragsGarage
    @BigDragsGarage 20 дней назад

    Love your videos! You go to some sketchy places and I often wonder....do you ever encounter any snakes in your travels?

  • @ivaneberle3972
    @ivaneberle3972 20 дней назад +3

    "Donkey" is a term for the reciprocating wellhead pumps. (Drive SR 198 W of Coalinga and you can find them painted as a variety of other creatures as well)

    • @ivaneberle3972
      @ivaneberle3972 20 дней назад +2

      "Tipping Bird" is another colloquial term

    • @robertsolomielke5134
      @robertsolomielke5134 20 дней назад +2

      Coalinga! No way, I passed thru there when I was 18 enroute to Tiajuana Mexico.
      Big TY to "Wanda's world of beauty", great folks put me up, was traveling from Canada.

  • @FASKY2788
    @FASKY2788 20 дней назад +2

    Always great to see you and see your show! Yipes! Mother Gusher! If'n y'all wanna see a great movie where the Iraqi oil wells are depicted burning - and it's a STUNNER - Watch 'Jar Head'!

  • @user-rb8cs3jo8p
    @user-rb8cs3jo8p 20 дней назад +1

    Beautiful pump jack( the large metal rocking horse)

  • @richardsheehan6983
    @richardsheehan6983 20 дней назад

    She made it sooo exciting!

  • @oscarmeyer4338
    @oscarmeyer4338 20 дней назад

    Youre right down the road from the taft oil museum❤

  • @TOM-C.
    @TOM-C. 20 дней назад +1

    2:17 The sign states 90,000 barrels a day at 42 gallons a barrel which equals 3,780,000 gallons pouring onto the desert floor. Then we get to the older marker 11:04 that states 18,000 barrels a day which equates to 756,000 gallons. That's quite a discrepancy, I wonder which is correct? I would put my money on the older marker as it seems more plausible, but still impressive! 👍✌🗽