Stunning Palouse - Scenic Roads & Rolling Wheat Fields - Guided Documentary Tour in Washington State

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  • Опубликовано: 5 окт 2024
  • Rolling hills and fantastic landscapes, the illusion of a raging sea and incredibly beautiful nature - this is not another planet! All of this is the Palouse region - the famous pearl, located between the Rocky and Cascade Mountains in beautiful Washington state. This is not a sea or a desert. All you see is endless wheat fields and other cereal crops. You can endlessly admire the change of colors depending on the seasons! This 4K documentary film with narration will tell you some facts, history, beauty and usefulness of the region. Great shots will allow you to truly and fully appreciate the perfect beauty of nature. You will drive virtually along the scenic Palouse roads, either looking at the dunes of wheat as if from a car window, or rising into the sky and admire stunning landscapes.
    Our filmmaker shot the Palouse region already at the end of summer, when the combines went to the fields to harvest wheat. Roman has always being amazed by this place by and the fact that with each change of season, the colors radically transform these fields! They are bright green in spring, yellow in late summer and autumn, and pristine white in winter when snow falls. This time the shooting was focused specifically on the roads of the Palouse region and aerial photography using a drone. Well, the history of Palouse will reveal its charm to you even more!
    Pleasant music, magnificent landscapes and an interesting story of our narrator at a comfortable pace will allow you to relax, learn something new and incredible, and expand your inner horizons!
    Video from: Palouse region, Washington state, USA
    Video title: Palouse Roads Narrated
    Time of filming: August 2018
    Equipment used: Z Cam E2-M4, Wireless lenses
    Video type: Documentary with narration
    Video resolution: 4K UHD
    Producer and videographer: Roman Khomlyak, Pro At Inc
    Editor: Oleksii Mandryko
    Voice over: Tim Hunter
    Text by: Nikita Petrov
    Please join our community on Facebook: / proart1nc
    #documentaryvideo #rollinghills #nature #scenicdrive #proartinc

Комментарии • 12

  • @mathbrown9099
    @mathbrown9099 Год назад +9

    I spent four summers there, well on WSU-Pullman campus. On return from weekend furloughs from studies, as one drives eastward up to and past the little town just west of Pullman, the grain shows its beauty, especially in the wind. Early weeks of study the crops show the green of fresh growth. As those studies move through July studies, the grains turned from green to yellow-gold. When in this color, the Palouse becomes its most attractive. I earned a masters and nearly completed PhD studies. Pullman, Washington USA is a most beautiful blessing from God. Yes, Go Cougs!!!)

  • @marinaleer914
    @marinaleer914 Год назад +4

    i love the view from above

  • @MegUSN52
    @MegUSN52 Год назад +3

    GO COUGS! We love the Palouse and are thankful it's so close to us in WA State.

  • @mariabrut2467
    @mariabrut2467 Год назад +2

    great trip around palouse

  • @ShadowVFX
    @ShadowVFX 6 месяцев назад +1

    Went to college in Pullman and Moscow. I miss living in that region. It was so peaceful and the sky was always gorgeous.

  • @michaelcurcio4025
    @michaelcurcio4025 Год назад +1

    Great roads,scenic with cool towns in every direction.Go Cougs!!!

  • @pnwoutdoorlife
    @pnwoutdoorlife 6 месяцев назад

    I live in SW Washington and seeing this was amazing. Great video! I definitely want to start exploring more out thst way. 👍👍

  • @countryguy72065
    @countryguy72065 8 месяцев назад +4

    Great video .. but why don't you match narration to the actual areas... You are showing different locations while talking of other locations

    • @lklc1219
      @lklc1219 5 месяцев назад

      I agree, It would also be nice if the narrator pronounced the names of communities properly. He got about half of them wrong.

  • @GraniteChief369
    @GraniteChief369 Месяц назад

    At the end of the ice age as ice melted it formed a dam producing ancient Lake Missoula in MT. The dam broke n flooded WA through the Palouse area. The rolling hills are giant sand patterns formed when the water backed up at Wallula Gap, like sand ripples at the beach or in a stream, only giant. Truly an event of Biblical proportion that was relayed through the generations by the Nez Perce tribe.

  • @jamesberg3106
    @jamesberg3106 11 месяцев назад +3

    Nice photography. Living in the area, it would have been nice to time the video with the location names. Someone needed to share the pronunciation of the towns with the narrator

  • @vdub5030
    @vdub5030 27 дней назад +1

    Too bad you didn't match the video to the narrative. And, since you included the Camas Prairie as part of The Palouse (some do, some don't), you should have included video of "the prairie" in the spring, when its in full bloom with bright yellow canola. BTW, we live here and will most likely die here.