Look What I Came Across Exploring a Desert Trail I Have Never Been on Before

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  • Опубликовано: 6 апр 2023
  • While exploring a desert trail I have never traveled on, I came across this abandoned mine that was begging me to explore it.
    Join me as we explore together for the first time this abandoned mine.

Комментарии • 601

  • @roguecheddar
    @roguecheddar Год назад +34

    Not gonna lie, I felt a sense of relief when I finally saw the light at the end of the tunnel.

    • @MrSniT
      @MrSniT Год назад +4

      I was kind of wondering what it would be like to see that opening suddenly close as you approached it. That's nightmare material.

    • @7hilladelphia
      @7hilladelphia Год назад +1

      Me too 🎉🎉🎉🎉

    • @janeck.8695
      @janeck.8695 Год назад

      Me too! I had this spooky thought of getting lost in there and not finding my way out.

  • @harrysmith524
    @harrysmith524 Год назад +11

    You would never get me in that hole I got spooked just seeing you doing it.

  • @coptertim
    @coptertim Год назад +58

    I love the desert. People think it's dead but it's full of life. I was exploring a similar mine in the western Mojave, about 200 feet in when an earthquake rolled through. We were out in about 8 seconds....

    • @paulrauscher6695
      @paulrauscher6695 Год назад

      What's the point

    • @spidersinspace1099
      @spidersinspace1099 Год назад +4

      @@paulrauscher6695
      I’m guessing you’ve never experienced an earthquake.

    • @DougPoulton
      @DougPoulton Год назад +3

      If you had night vision and could camp out in the desert overnight and see the activity of the predators moving around out there you would never camp out again in a tent. That ended tent camping for me. Now I only go out in a vehicle large enough to sleep in.

    • @PatrickCrossfire.
      @PatrickCrossfire. Год назад +3

      Me too. The desert is my favorite. And I lived in nearly every type of enviroment.

  • @myfavoritemartian1
    @myfavoritemartian1 Год назад +235

    That was to be a main haulage adit. It was driven in across the grain of the rock and crosses several veins, but none were worth developing. The material in the waste rock pile was 90% country rock of no importance. Only where it crossed a vein was of interest. But after they crossed the area where there was an outcrop on top and found nothing, they gave up. (old miner) This is the most common mining result. edit: that stuff on your fingers is clay.

    • @ahhdamm11
      @ahhdamm11 Год назад +9

      How long do you think it took to dig an exploration hole like that?

    • @myfavoritemartian1
      @myfavoritemartian1 Год назад +48

      @@ahhdamm11 About 8' of shaft per day in that type of rocks. They would drill in afternoon, blast at dusk. Then the dust is settled in the morning to pick big rocks first then scoop up muck. Then drill again the next afternoon, on and on.

    • @markeverson5849
      @markeverson5849 Год назад +17

      I can see you're very knowledgeable about mining cool but what kind of material were they seeking or mineral?

    • @myfavoritemartian1
      @myfavoritemartian1 Год назад +24

      @@markeverson5849 There is no indication I could see. But with the surface being gravel looking and the fractured rock(Hydrothermal activity), I would be looking for gold. US Mining registrations could tell you.

    • @rudyrissone4298
      @rudyrissone4298 Год назад +14

      I found some old diggings like that by Virgina city NV. . There was a washed out road with Deep washes. And in one I found bunch gold dust.

  • @johnprentice1527
    @johnprentice1527 Год назад +16

    I've explored about a dozen caves with research colleagues, but never a mine. They were always exciting to explore but I was always a bit relieved to walk/climb out of them. I don't think I would walk into an abandon mine without a companion. I felt total relief for our Desert Trails when I saw the light coming from the entrance. Whew!

  • @oldhardrock2542
    @oldhardrock2542 Год назад +8

    Whoever drove it were good miners. No overbreak, straight as an arrow in the early feet, consistent arch.

  • @stubromac2711
    @stubromac2711 Год назад +56

    There’s just no way I would ever go alone into some mine…😬

    • @kateapple1
      @kateapple1 Год назад

      Yeah it’s stupid. I could care less about “history” who cares that it’s from way back lol. It’s just dirt and rocks 😂

    • @spidersinspace1099
      @spidersinspace1099 Год назад +1

      I’d be afraid of finding a rotting body being mualed by a mountain lion.

    • @kitkakitteh
      @kitkakitteh Год назад

      Mountain lions LOVE abandoned mines and caves.

    • @vodatube2591
      @vodatube2591 Год назад

      What a dull video… Nothing to see here…

    • @bluflaam777
      @bluflaam777 Год назад

      @@vodatube2591 What a dull comment... Nothing to read here...

  • @bigrich7026
    @bigrich7026 Год назад +22

    I explored lots of mines in Arizona. When I started getting into bigger ones I worried about quality of air and didn't have money for the right gear so I stopped going into the big ones. Lots of fun! Some shafts are still accessible to accidentally fall or drive into where I explored..Be safe!

    • @DougPoulton
      @DougPoulton Год назад +2

      The San Tan Mountains in Queen Creek, AZ were great for exploring mines back in the 1980's. Now the entire area has been closed down as a park and it's all blocked off to off road vehicles. But even back in the 80's several of the mines had big steel doors all welded closed with signs saying "Danger Poison Gas". There was a lot of low grade turquoise laying around on the ground and the tunnels that were open were full of bats. We always fired a 45 round in the entrance and about a million bats would fly out. After seeing that poison gas warning we never fired into a tunnel again.

  • @mysky6312
    @mysky6312 Год назад +2

    I was literally shaking watching you go in . No no nope no thank you 🤣

  • @glevideo
    @glevideo Год назад +45

    I can't help but remember the experience of Aaron Ralston who had no one with him and didn't let anyone know where he was going. He got his hand pinned by a rolling boulder down inside Blue John Canyon and was stuck there for several days. No one knew where to start looking for him. He only got out by cutting his hand off at the wrist and was able to wonder out and find other people for help. I sure hope you'll explore with another person staying out of harms way. Hopefully someone knows in what area you are exploring and your expected time of return. Other than that - it was an interesting tour.

    • @sirenscalllntothedeep6306
      @sirenscalllntothedeep6306 Год назад +7

      I couldn't help note:. Not a single support in the entire Mine. Vanes of clay running through out. Surprised 🙀 no cave ins. Probably wouldn't take much. Don't touch anything.

    • @ExploringCabinsandMines
      @ExploringCabinsandMines Год назад

      moron alert , that mine has probably survived HUNDREDS if not a thousand earthquakes but it's going to collapse when he simply walks in ? is that logic or wet your pant fear speaking ? one guy gets his hand pinned therefore it could happen to anyone? LMFAO are you serious???

    • @johnjerman3421
      @johnjerman3421 Год назад

      actually he cut off more than just his hand it was all the way up to his forearm

    • @ExploringCabinsandMines
      @ExploringCabinsandMines Год назад

      @@johnjerman3421 And how often does that happen?? NEVER

  • @UrbanGardeningWithD.A.Hanks14
    @UrbanGardeningWithD.A.Hanks14 Год назад +17

    That slick "mud" you encountered is most likely bentonite clay. It is so greasy that it was used to lube wagon wheels as long as it was kept wet. If you find some that's dry, put a fair amount into a container and add a LOT of water. A few hours later, it will have absorbed the water and swelled to an astonishing size. That's why it hasn't caved in, as soft as it is. If it ever dries out it will though.

  • @sandymckee6958
    @sandymckee6958 Год назад +7

    That was amazing!!! You are braver then I could ever be, going in all the way to end. I think I would have gotten maybe 15 ft in and freaked as I ran back to exit. Lol

  • @iichthus5760
    @iichthus5760 Год назад +12

    A fair amount of silver ore in thinner veins. As a miner, I can’t stress enough how incredibly dangerous that is. Please don’t do that again.

  • @markomaticd4106
    @markomaticd4106 Год назад +64

    Very neat to see. I don't think I would have gone in for fear of animals or possibly gas. Especially being by yourself. Hope you let someone know where you were heading at least. Stay safe, thanks for the video.

    • @jkitto2008
      @jkitto2008 Год назад +12

      Never go, underground alone, rule number one in mining

    • @jamesrobinson8247
      @jamesrobinson8247 Год назад +6

      @@jkitto2008 that’s for sure. I appreciate the video footage but not at the risk of that guys life. You never know what’s in that tunnel.

    • @smokenjoe4022
      @smokenjoe4022 Год назад +5

      You took the words right out of my mouth! You should never do this alone!!

    • @rickyhurtt5568
      @rickyhurtt5568 Год назад +1

      I'd think there's a good chance it wasn't his first time going in this mine and there's no guarantor he was alone. There can always be somebody else there but then again what do I know

    • @lorenzoparedes2306
      @lorenzoparedes2306 Год назад +1

      My first thought is the consideration of the thousands of hours of hard, super hard labor that it took to excavate the tunnel. No one would do that without expecting a high value payoff. After that, the testing of one's bravado. At what point do I still feel confident that it's safe to continue on? Obviously, the longer you go on, the greater the potential for risk. If there are no dangerous animals dwelling there, and if there are no toxic gases present, there is always the possibility of inhaling dangerous molds that could invade the moist, warm interstitial cavities in your lungs and given time, do you in, little by little, months, or years after that exploration.

  • @dalegray934
    @dalegray934 Год назад +40

    I enjoyed the video. I've recorded about 1500 historic mines mostly in Montana, Idaho and Nevada, but those days are over. Listen to "My favorite Martian", he has it right. BTW, the giant pile extending out in front of the adit portal is not tailings, the proper term is waste rock. Tailings are what come out of mills or placers. Just a small detail.

    • @craigharding475
      @craigharding475 Год назад +4

      Tailings also come out of well-digs.

    • @notwrkn2mch
      @notwrkn2mch Год назад +2

      @@craigharding475 Out here in Arizona where i live tailings/talings are what come out of a drywasher

    • @craigharding475
      @craigharding475 Год назад +2

      @@notwrkn2mchThanks, Joe. I had to look-up dry washer--pretty interesting.

    • @finnberglander7816
      @finnberglander7816 Год назад +1

      I explore mines all over western Montana too. Great stuff out around Butte and Dillon!

  • @cavolante
    @cavolante Год назад +26

    No way would I have stepped into that tunnel 😮 my heart was pounding just watching the video.

    • @nevadadesertrat267
      @nevadadesertrat267 Год назад

      LOL the idiot posted the video so he clearly got lucky and made it out alive. But he is a fool

    • @felixrodriguez7423
      @felixrodriguez7423 Год назад +2

      It's quite stupid to go in there. Bad air can easily overcome you.

  • @Javelina_Poppers
    @Javelina_Poppers Год назад +19

    A tunnel of broken dreams.

  • @desert-walker
    @desert-walker Год назад +16

    Wow, that’s a long tunnel. I’ve come across a lot of exploratory mines here in Tucson mostly limestone it appears some copper, but nothing like this pretty cool😊🌵😎

  • @RAMelloh-ij5sl
    @RAMelloh-ij5sl Год назад +17

    Small scale mining is fascinating, especially the level of industry focused by a few human beings. The miners at this site didn't leave much kit behind. It was a clean getaway.

    • @tomhenry897
      @tomhenry897 Год назад +1

      It was all valuable
      Miners took it to the next mine
      Then scrapers
      The desert got the rest

  • @kathleenvaughan3709
    @kathleenvaughan3709 Год назад +6

    First viewer. Thank you for sharing this. I’m having a panic/excitement attack watching it. I love exploring.

  • @danosmixedgrill6067
    @danosmixedgrill6067 Год назад +36

    Hi, A nice find. That clay vien is called fluken pronounced "flooken" as in book or cook. Its a crossvien composed of clay. Its notoriously dangerous for sudden caveins, though this one is way too small. The bad ones Ive seen were 2-3 feet wide +. As far as I know its caused by a fault where 2 rock faces move & rub against each other over time thus grinding to clay. The flat exposed faces of the rock is usually very smooth & shiny. I love your videos.
    Cheers Daniel.

    • @carolinemcgreal2382
      @carolinemcgreal2382 Год назад +1

      Interesting, but why is the clay a different color to the surrounding rock if it's come from the same rock just ground down ?

    • @dennisvestby4432
      @dennisvestby4432 Год назад

      Very interesting❤

    • @markfergerson2145
      @markfergerson2145 Год назад +2

      Too small? Several patches of gravel on the floor, including where he stopped to handle a pebble, looked like ceiling falls to me.

    • @markfergerson2145
      @markfergerson2145 Год назад +1

      @@carolinemcgreal2382 Clay can wash into fractures in rock over time. Give it enough time and it will solidify into sedimentary rock.

    • @danosmixedgrill6067
      @danosmixedgrill6067 Год назад +3

      @@carolinemcgreal2382 Exellent question, I dont know, but every example Ive ever seen was white or grey regardless of the surrounding rock color.

  • @TroutWest
    @TroutWest Год назад +6

    So many great spots like this out there... shocked more people don't go out and look around for this type of stuff

  • @speedspeed121
    @speedspeed121 Год назад +8

    The deeper you got, the creepier I felt

  • @chickensrcool67
    @chickensrcool67 Год назад +15

    As always you knock it out of the park! Thanks for the hard work.

  • @gwiyomikim5988
    @gwiyomikim5988 Год назад +14

    8:21 First time visitor to your channel so seeing “the light at the end of the tunnel” was really awesome. Cool video 👍🏼

    • @joevarga5982
      @joevarga5982 Год назад +4

      That was the light at the BEGINNING of the tunnel.

    • @valazuniga
      @valazuniga Год назад

      ​@Joe Varga Thanks for explaining that. I didn't understand or see where he turned around and arrived back at the beginning.
      Also, do you know what type of mineral they were trying to find in this mine?

    • @joevarga5982
      @joevarga5982 Год назад

      @@valazuniga 6:06 He says "That's it" and shows the end of the tunnel. I don't know what they were mining.

  • @amyhort8359
    @amyhort8359 Год назад +1

    Wow! That was amazing!! Thank You for sharing.

  • @robertdriscoll711
    @robertdriscoll711 Год назад +1

    Spent a few years in desert locations while in ARMY..............the Mojave is truly an incredible place!

  • @prieten49
    @prieten49 Год назад +1

    Cool mine. Thanks for taking us along!

  • @markcantemail8018
    @markcantemail8018 Год назад +1

    Thank you for the Video , its nice to see that You are doing so well .

  • @sandysue202
    @sandysue202 Год назад +11

    Oh my goodness! My claustrophobia would have kept me to within 5 feet of that mine entrance. Going along with you, I kept saying, "No...no...no!" Thank you for letting me see what was in there, but I did expect Gollum to pop out at any second!! You are way braver than I ever was, even in my youth! Good video!!

    • @robertdouglas8895
      @robertdouglas8895 Год назад

      I expected to see a Bud Light can which will soon be an archaeological artifact.

    • @aldo5428
      @aldo5428 Год назад

      Yeah, you’re an archaeological artifact…

  • @007JHS
    @007JHS Год назад +2

    Very neat work by those who dug it.

  • @jagitmax
    @jagitmax Год назад +45

    I think you should give a call to a friend before you make entrance into a mine like that and at least give them your approx location and time , just in case the worst happens.

  • @noonzeeb
    @noonzeeb Год назад +11

    I just came back from a jeep trip there ( early march )we parked for the night on the tailings and two of us slept in the mine instead of our tents because the wind was fierce and cold. I wear glasses and had to take them off near the end of the adit because of fogging ,very warm place to sleep. Thanks for the video

    • @freedom4830
      @freedom4830 Год назад

      What’s this trail called?

    • @noonzeeb
      @noonzeeb Год назад +1

      I don't know the name of the road but it's just off the chloride cliff's road on the Nevada side

    • @WilliamCasey-ro5vz
      @WilliamCasey-ro5vz Год назад

      WHAT THE FRACK WERE THEY MINING FOR ?

  • @Acein3055
    @Acein3055 Год назад

    Thanks for the walk thru.

  • @wonderboy3513
    @wonderboy3513 Год назад +11

    I absolutely love watching your videos, I really like the desert, the feel of it, and all of the exploratory vibes I get. I’ve always wanted to do these types of things and would love to accompany you on one! Lol Keep up the great work and I’ll keep enjoying you’re professionally put together pieces.
    That cave was a little creepy, I’m surprised you went in that far all alone:)

  • @dalecflowers
    @dalecflowers Год назад

    Fascinating video.

  • @denverbowen4430
    @denverbowen4430 Год назад +1

    What an adventure!!!!

  • @OG-Everthing
    @OG-Everthing Год назад +1

    you are my hero bro ... i would never go inside by myself

  • @mudman619
    @mudman619 Год назад +1

    kept waiting for a pair of red eyes to be reflected in the darkness ahead, lol . . .

  • @prospexican
    @prospexican Год назад +4

    wowww, THAT thing goes very deep. seems to be like you walk w not fear at all

  • @heroknaderi
    @heroknaderi Год назад +3

    Wow that was amazing find i enjoyed it. i guess it used to me a mine at some point.

  • @sc2824
    @sc2824 Год назад +11

    It's an exploration drift a couple hundred feet long, but it looks barren of any pay grade. Just another unsuccessful gamble, probably took a month or two, quit and moved on elsewhere, I imagine.
    I've got a friend who's now mucking out an old drift originally planned to intersect successful workings above it in Pinos Altos, NM. They abandoned the effort about a hundred years ago due to an economic depression. My pal hopes to intersect ore extensions from up above. One man job,: uncovered adit entrance, cleaned drift, built new timbered portal, fabricated beautiful steel door, shored up bad ground inside, laid old salvaged track, built a new steel tilt ore car, and spent a lotta time dealing with the BLM. Why all this work for a 70 year-old man? "Always wanted to do what the old timers did", he says. He'll begin extending the drift and/or working a couple cross-faults pretty soon.

    • @kozzackkelt
      @kozzackkelt Год назад +1

      good luck to him ! I hope he hits "payrock!"

  • @ray77j
    @ray77j Год назад +3

    Cool little tunnel.

  • @monroetruss4737
    @monroetruss4737 Год назад +5

    Counting your steps that would make the length of the cave 600 ft or more. Takes a little moxy to charge straight ahead.

  • @jerryhorn5866
    @jerryhorn5866 Год назад

    I enjoyed your video. I"m not much of a cave or mine explorer, but you made it look fun. Thanks!

  • @cledberry8962
    @cledberry8962 Год назад

    What a cool mine. Very safe. Puts me in mind of a mine we'd explore up on scratch gravel hills in Montana back in the early 80's. Fun times.

  • @jenniferbruns2432
    @jenniferbruns2432 Год назад

    Super cool!

  • @haljohnson6947
    @haljohnson6947 Год назад +3

    'be safe' just walked 300 feet into a dead air mine by self

  • @bradleyjanes2949
    @bradleyjanes2949 Год назад +2

    Nice video thanks

  • @kwaichang368
    @kwaichang368 Год назад +2

    Nice hike! Was almost expecting a shaft to drop out at the back.

  • @Jeepboy
    @Jeepboy Год назад

    That looks like jeepers paradise!!

  • @meh11235
    @meh11235 Год назад

    So many caves, mines and old tunnels across the old world

  • @briansharp4388
    @briansharp4388 Год назад +2

    Yeah, you want to avoid old mines, in some places what you Think is an old mine, or hole in the ground may in fact be an active claim, and in the middle of nowhere you may attract lead.

  • @lancepeterson5408
    @lancepeterson5408 Год назад +1

    You crazy going in there that deep.

  • @shaynejenkins446
    @shaynejenkins446 Год назад +9

    I'm thinking you just broke a bunch of survival rules exploring that day. Unless you told someone you were going into an abandoned mine by yourself your taking a risk with your life.

  • @captaincoyote1792
    @captaincoyote1792 Год назад +6

    Was I the only one saying “turn around right the EFF now, buddy!”? As a kid in New Mexico, late 1960s, we used to explore the old mines around Orogrande. We came out of there with loads of gorgeous turquoise and iron pyrite.

    • @alfonsomunoz4424
      @alfonsomunoz4424 Год назад +1

      I remember in the 90s a kid fell down a shaft at Orogrande. It was covered with chain link but not secured.

    • @captaincoyote1792
      @captaincoyote1792 Год назад

      @@alfonsomunoz4424 Damn, Alfonso, that’s terrible! I remember that my dad, me, his co-workers, their sons….we all spent a day “rockhounding”, then camping in the Gila Wilderness…..how simple those days seemed to be. I hope that boy was saved!

    • @alfonsomunoz4424
      @alfonsomunoz4424 Год назад +1

      @@captaincoyote1792 no he died. Tragic. Those Orogrande mines are fraught with hazards.
      BTW, I absolutely love spending time in the Gila Wilderness, last went about a year and a half ago, to the Catwalk.

    • @captaincoyote1792
      @captaincoyote1792 Год назад +1

      @@alfonsomunoz4424 I agree, Brother…I fully agree. I loved living in and going to college in New Mexico, both my daughters there now (one in Cruces one in Carlsbad). And the Gila…how magical is that area? Stay strong, stay well, be safe!

  • @Lee-xn8by
    @Lee-xn8by Год назад +4

    We all need to start sharing videos of how boring the desert is, the last thing we need is more people out there. 🙂

  • @thepawanderer
    @thepawanderer Год назад

    that would be really cool to explore

  • @archstanton_live
    @archstanton_live Год назад +18

    The veins of "mud" or "powder" are fault gouge. The wet ones have tapped into some water and are in the process of mineralization. Many veins are ancient faults (or cracks) that have mineralized over hundreds of millennia. Faults are cracks where the 2 sides have moved and ground against each other forming the fine gouge.

    • @rosewhite---
      @rosewhite--- Год назад

      nonsense. there has been no hundreds of millennia only 6.

    • @archstanton_live
      @archstanton_live Год назад

      @@rosewhite--- LOL

    • @rosewhite---
      @rosewhite--- Год назад

      @@archstanton_live it's above the level of your intelligence?
      keep watching your Planet of Apes documentaries! LOL

  • @randallbarton7975
    @randallbarton7975 Год назад

    That was a pretty cool video. Kinda like being there...

  • @benth162
    @benth162 Год назад +3

    Before even starting the video I see a pile of mine tailings. Yep it was, but what is strange, who would have dug a tunnel almost or more than a hundred yards into that mountain when the earth had no discernible type of rock that would actually hold Gold.

    • @rosewhite---
      @rosewhite--- Год назад

      there may have been small outcrops of quartz visible when the prospector first walked up the hills.
      Read my comment at top.

    • @benth162
      @benth162 Год назад

      @@rosewhite--- Sorry I can't find your other comment, as it is not at the top and with 463 comments I"m not going to look all the names to see what this site put your comment.

    • @rosewhite---
      @rosewhite--- Год назад

      @@benth162 This is what is at the top:
      'what these old mines prove is that at the start of The Flood 4,370 years ago GOD shook Earth to allow the internal superhot water to escape out.
      The shaking thorougly shattered the rock and as the water surged out it preipitated out the basic elements that were dissolved in it.
      That is why gold is found in solid veins of quartz which obviosuly must have been liquid when it was deposited in the rocks!

  • @PatrickCrossfire.
    @PatrickCrossfire. Год назад

    Nice truck man!!😊

  • @sambarberfilms8641
    @sambarberfilms8641 Год назад

    That was fun

  • @SonyaLongacre-ch7md
    @SonyaLongacre-ch7md Год назад

    I love caves and I love your videos

  • @therealkrystalvintage
    @therealkrystalvintage Год назад

    oh sweetie thankyou for sharing no apologies necessary for me here .. much to see huh!!

  • @gibbogle9486
    @gibbogle9486 Год назад

    Wow!

  • @johnfetzer9637
    @johnfetzer9637 Год назад

    nice mine !!!

  • @PatrickCrossfire.
    @PatrickCrossfire. Год назад

    Nice video bro. Keep it up!

  • @mikethemaniacal
    @mikethemaniacal Год назад +1

    This gives off the vibes of an ancestral tomb in Morrowind.

  • @kurtkaster1403
    @kurtkaster1403 Год назад +7

    6:18 Imagine turning around to go back out and it's another dead end right in front of you.

  • @mattwedelich347
    @mattwedelich347 Год назад +2

    Cool video😎

  • @robertmartin837
    @robertmartin837 Год назад

    WOw you found a mine in the desert, one of thousands, I'm gonna subscribe to your channel

  • @gordbaker896
    @gordbaker896 Год назад +1

    Nice trip. Hope you had extra Flashlight but not likely.

  • @jaymehatfield9540
    @jaymehatfield9540 Год назад

    Great walk with you! Love being subscribed. I bet water is not far away...

  • @kitkakitteh
    @kitkakitteh Год назад

    Most people think they only need worry about the ceiling coming down: the worst thing is the floor giving way due to disintegrated shoring of lower levels. Be safe people.

  • @patmancrowley8509
    @patmancrowley8509 Год назад

    FLY-OVER COUNTRY! I've flown over these areas many times and have seen the roads out in the middle of no where and wondered what it would be like to sojourn through the area.

  • @______IV
    @______IV Год назад +1

    That slippery "clay" reminds me of the consistently and feel of wet borax in Death Valley.

  • @dorothylewis1207
    @dorothylewis1207 Год назад +14

    I worry about Rattlesnakes wondering around in those places. Yikes! LOL.

    • @tallguy0887
      @tallguy0887 Год назад +4

      Death comes for us all. Go out there and get some life before then.

    • @dalegray934
      @dalegray934 Год назад +6

      I recorded old mines for 32 years all over the west. Never saw one rattlesnake. I have seen some rattlers while doing field survey, but never at mines. Don't know why -- maybe because I deliberately tromp my feet and they are long gone before I arrive. Falling and ticks were my main concern during that work.

    • @ronaldstarkey4336
      @ronaldstarkey4336 Год назад

      @@dalegray934 ticks suck... lol

    • @ronaldstarkey4336
      @ronaldstarkey4336 Год назад

      Avoid falling... lol

    • @rockjockchick
      @rockjockchick Год назад +2

      @@ronaldstarkey4336 and possible deadly if you catch lyme disease.

  • @azdbuk
    @azdbuk Год назад +1

    In the 80s before the gazillion new developments in AZ there were many mine shafts and vent holes southside of South Mtn. in Phx. Some were flat ground level vertical access holes deep deep deep and uncovered. We were riding motorcycles zoomed right past one, easily would have fit a mini bike and a kid straight down. We stopped and dropped a rock to see how deep it was, insanely deep. Now they are covered, but in the 70s and 80s, they were a hazard, some fun, but some deadly.

  • @ridealongwithrandy
    @ridealongwithrandy Год назад +2

    This is way cool, we sort of do the same thing. I'm going out for a video walk on Monday the 10th in Southern Anza Borrego Desert State Park. I am extremely claustrophobic, and watching you in that cave made me uneasy, but loved it none the less. Cheers!

    • @savsmiles3042
      @savsmiles3042 Год назад +1

      It’s going to be 100 degrees.

    • @sigalsmadar4547
      @sigalsmadar4547 Год назад

      Omgosh yes i was getting the willies watching it too with claustrophobia

  • @JimNichols
    @JimNichols Год назад

    Thems some mighty big gopher holes you found there mister... :)

  • @calscottoh
    @calscottoh Год назад

    Cool video!

  • @RemoteTrooper
    @RemoteTrooper Год назад +2

    Finally getting the views your content deserves 👏

  • @user-tm2ie8ok5j
    @user-tm2ie8ok5j Год назад +2

    That's a well-constructed adit. Plenty in the Nevada desert and agreed there is little reason for anyone to be there a hundred years later. I explored more than a few when working for a mining company in 1990. The started nowhere and ended nowhere, when the vein(s) played out. Surprised how deep this one goes. Had I GPS back in the day I'd have kept records but alas not so much. What you picked off the walls appear to be on fault line(s) they were following...I'd bet if you had that assayed it'd come in relatively rich in Ag (a guess, from the consistency and color)! I'm an optimist and as others indicate might just be clay / junk. BTW, USGS 7.5 and 15 min sheets used to have these marked (shafts, adits) but far from "always!"

  • @DangolWhopper
    @DangolWhopper Год назад +7

    Walking down a strange, abaonded mine shaft unannounced and unprepared seems like a 'begging for a long, painful death' situation.

    • @Coolhansolo
      @Coolhansolo Год назад +1

      It's more dangerous driving on a highway. We explore them all the time in Colorado.

    • @DangolWhopper
      @DangolWhopper Год назад +1

      @@Coolhansolo There are few common activities more dangerous than driving a car on a public road. One of the differences is that most people have to drive to make a living. Dude walked down a mine shaft out of curiosity. It makes for good video but it's foolish!

    • @Coolhansolo
      @Coolhansolo Год назад

      @negativespace000 In Colorado I've been 1,500 feet back in mines and it was a tour but no problem. Another time over 1,000 feet back. Been in lots of them and I'm not dead. You go back and roll out. It's not like you go back and chill for the day. They are safer than you think it's solid rock. Drugs are more dangerous than driving. If your scared that's because you live in the East. It's flat and safe there. We live in the west and can do cool shit the east people can't do so they cry.

    • @ronaldstarkey4336
      @ronaldstarkey4336 Год назад

      @@DangolWhopper don't forget sex with a stranger... lol

    • @MalachiWhite-tw7hl
      @MalachiWhite-tw7hl Год назад

      ​@@Coolhansolo Perhaps, but it's the "long, painful death" part that worries me . . .

  • @larrysorenson4789
    @larrysorenson4789 Год назад +3

    Well, I do hope they got something after the HUGE effort to dig this mine. I wish he had counted his steps.

  • @casedoumasr656
    @casedoumasr656 Год назад +1

    I do believe the location to this mine is 100 miles North then 25.5 miles west now you have the starting point good luck ⛏️🏆🇺🇸🤔

  • @sherryrector2275
    @sherryrector2275 Год назад

    I feel your pain. This weather even in Tennessee is killing my sinuses and throat.

    • @peggycole7162
      @peggycole7162 4 месяца назад

      Notice when he was in the mine and out of all the pollen outside he wasn't clearing his throat anymore

  • @stevewhalen6973
    @stevewhalen6973 Год назад

    Thanks!

  • @sandramcdaniel2
    @sandramcdaniel2 Год назад

    Light at the end of the tunnel. Whew.

  • @yasminenazarine1629
    @yasminenazarine1629 Год назад

    Nice beautiful 🤨

  • @gwaithwyr
    @gwaithwyr Год назад +1

    This guy is a bolder man than I am.

  • @patriciawarner1274
    @patriciawarner1274 Год назад

    Pretty brave of you

  • @davekreitzer4358
    @davekreitzer4358 Год назад +7

    I to was surprised , waste rock pile didn't look as big as the mine was , maybe a lot of rich ore was hauled out of it !?!? Nice explore 👍😎

    • @tomhenry897
      @tomhenry897 Год назад +1

      Washed down the hill over time

  • @greatfullded
    @greatfullded Год назад

    A friend of mine and I ran across a couple mines like this near Death Valley.. We mostly afraid of hitting Bad Air.. but it was in the summer and the mine was alot cooler.

  • @drewolm
    @drewolm 11 месяцев назад

    Pretty cool people haven’t trashed that mine shaft.

  • @glendavis3257
    @glendavis3257 Год назад

    went into a mine similar to this in the Superstition Mountains years ago, it had about 30 javelina in it! it wasn't nearly as long as this mine only 50 yards or so.

  • @BillyBennecke
    @BillyBennecke Год назад

    Very brave man handling any thing found in those mines without knowing what it is. I've seen Mercury and asbestos mines that would give you all kinds of health complications.

  • @jamespaulsell9385
    @jamespaulsell9385 Год назад +2

    That must have had good ore for them to tunnel that far in, and obviously would have produced a large tailing pile. Any mine with a large tailing pile is almost certainly going to have had some way of getting a wagon to it as easily as possible, like the path you discovered once up there.

    • @jamespaulsell9385
      @jamespaulsell9385 Год назад

      @Pat Luxor He used the word tailings in his description, but there are waste rocks mixed in. Either way, a pile that size indicates a good size mine, which would have had wagon access like he found when he reached the adit.

  • @hidingfromu5293
    @hidingfromu5293 Год назад

    I was counting your steps. Lost count about a 100 going out but your pace was definitely faster going out than in.