Amazing Quest: Stories from Tasmania | Somewhere on Earth: Tasmania | Free Documentary
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- Опубликовано: 23 фев 2023
- Somewhere on Earth - Tasmania | Free Documentary
Somewhere on Earth - All episodes: • Somewhere on Earth | A...
Somewhere on Earth invites you to Tasmania, where the Pacific and Indian Oceans meet, in the "Roaring Forties"… south of Australia. First, we meet Richard Bennet lives on Bruny, a little island off Hobart. On this slip of land, this photographer has found the light, colors and the seascapes that never cease to delight him Then we meet Steve. He likes to explore the forest on the lookout for Huon Pine trees .They are one of the oldest forms of life on our planet. Steve is one of the rare people able to recognize them in the forest. Liam and James are two brothers wild about surfing and deserted beaches… Their passion leads them into the heart of the bush. Tasmania is their playground.
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Free Documentary is dedicated to bringing high-class documentaries to you on RUclips for free. With the latest camera equipment used by well-known filmmakers working for famous production studios. You will see fascinating shots from the deep seas and up in the air, capturing great stories and pictures from everything our beautiful and interesting planet has to offer.
Enjoy stories about nature, wildlife, culture, people, history and more to come. - Развлечения
I think being in certain parts of Tasmania must feel like you're the only person on Earth. Or that you've traveled back 10,000 years. A place that looks south to Antarctica- that has to influence your perception of everything.
So, we meet Richard who has never lived anywhere else.
We meet Steve, protector of the Huon Pine trees - trees that can and have reached an age of 10,000 years. Which is insane.
And then there are brothers Liam and James Correy - surfers. All of them live with the land and have a deep respect for it. Enjoy another trip to Down Under.
I think it's very poor judgement to have one of the national parks staff lighting a fire which is illegal in national parks. The same parks where other people have been fined around $700. But that's the way the Australian government works, tells the public one thing while doing that exact thing😂😂😂😂😂😂
Watching from the south east corner of Tasmania, I can confirm that living here is like stepping back in time 🥰
Thanks for the documentary! 🇦🇺
This is the life I lead, even at home, just stay with my small family, away from the crowd. The crowd can be very tiring. Tasmania is beautiful, and I can tell it is very peaceful. I love the sound of the waves.
Thank you so much. This is the best documentary about my favourite hiking place. I am 77 years old and I can't stop myself hiking in Tasmania.
Tasmania really is a special place. It has many different climactic regions and a diverse range of environments. I left Perth and moved there when I was 24 years old. Spent eight magical years there, much of it in the bush like the people in this video. Eventually, as a still relatively young man, I began to feel the isolation and especially the cold. Also the lack of economic opportunity. I moved to Noosa, Queensland and have thrived there in the sub-tropical environment for the last 25 years. My daughter is still in Tassie and I return occasionally. I feel truly blessed to have spent my life in the most beautiful places in the most beautiful country on earth.
Thanks for sharing
just want to let this channel know - i absolute love this channel. it really takes you outside yourself. i feel inspired to do something completely different when i see people surviving in all kinds of ways.
Free Documentary 💪❤️🔥💥 Great View on the Light House 👌Tasmania 💚❤️
One of the best videos ever! Thank you for giving me this thrilling opportunity to see and share these adventures!
I love the opening montage of this show with the sound of that bird 🐦 or whatever it is. It gives me some weird sense of happiness and peace inside my my very sad and unhappy soul.
see a Psychologist. Im not being mean, you are crying out for help. I moved to Tasmania but it didnt help. I needed inner healing. Its working. Hope things improve for you.
'forms unique patterns that become like a signature to a particular place that is unique'
sounds original
Lucky me…going back to Tassie end of the year, treating my wife for her special birthday….so looking forward to the adventures, going down to the remote SW of the island, weather permitting…..love Australia and really love Tassie….just a very very long flight to get there……but so worth it…
Watching from Kona, Hawaii…Beautiful place Tasmania is, one of the last vastly untouched wildernesses left on our diminishing earth. And the character, the vagabond soul, is a true reflection of personal freedom. What a vastly appealing lifestyle, one rare and unattainable by most. Many thanks for this documentation of the last vestiges of coolness. ☺️
and thanks for the awesome comment
It's all changed now ,, it's now a flat out tourist spot thanks to our government we now pay alot of money on rent and normal every day living
Vagabond lifestyle. Not anymore, have to be willing to give them half your pay check just for one night
Beautiful. Visiting the wilderness in Tassie has been a dream of mine for some time now.
Tasmania is one of the relatively unknown gems of the natural world, a place of amazing beauty wherever you look. I always remember my first visit to Tassie when I drove out to Lake Pedder. A place of amazing beauty and solitude and so inspiring that the first place I visited after returning to Hobart was the office of The Wilderness Society and became a member. When we emigrated to Australia 54 years ago, the choice was Tassie or Western Australia for the place to live. Dad chose Western Australia because of the weather. After visiting Tassie for the first time, I think that was a huge mistake!
thanks for sharing your story!
Hey Ian! My Grandfather emigrated to Australia roughly 54 years ago and his choice was SA or TAS, he chose South Australia but then Grandma couldn't handle the heat so they moved to Tasmania for the mines in the NW.
My mum feels the opposite to you, she's always wished her father settled the family on the mainland 😊
Interesting to hear it from the other side of the penny!
Fantastic I really enjoyed the show. Especially with the boys surfing around Tasmania.
I used to live there and I miss the NATURE!
You should of included Tassie Boys Prospecting... these guys are great in Tasmania for gold prospecting and traveling thru the dense outback forest!!
This is a beautiful and informative description of Tasmania and it’s inhabitants thorough the eyes of someone one from another place, and Richard the photographer. Some of the statements about tasmania being almost as it was when Europeans came, while attention grabbing, are arguable. It seems that way to those coming from more populated places and it is more so, but it has and is changing rapidly. It also ignores the hard fact of the first inhabitants existence and how things changed for them forever.
Amazingly beautiful.
What a pleasure to watch:)
What a beautiful place to live. I would love to live in that solace,so I could live in peace and paint.
Wow,beautiful place.
Worth-watching doc series👌👌👌👌💞💞💞
Only the southwest is largely untouched due to it's world heritage status, so this doco is highly romanticised. Where there are people, there is ruin. Not meaning to pop your bubble, but we also host some of the most polluted rivers on earth.
Which rivers are they? I bet you have never left the state and were told that and just believed it.
That is an awesome documentary
Absolutly amazing
Superb, superb
Many many thanks - we will pass on the praise
Beautiful ❤️, how old is this documentary?
Brothers bonding nice good documentary
Neat seeing my birth place again, altho now living some 4,000 kms away .Do miss it heaps.
Got two beautiful pieces of 'Birdseye' Huon Pine furniture out in storage in my garage here, one wardrobe and a chest of draws crafted back to the early 1900's.
They are still giving off those exotic scents of the natural oils in the timber.
Would have liked to have seen the addition of some footage on Tassie's unique wildlife in this doco though.
Living in a crowded city..it's a dream to live a life like Richard..into the wild..
Ive lived in Sydney, etc. I live in Tasmania now. We will always need others in life. From supplying Supermarkets to Brain Surgery. Even Richard relies on supplies from the Mainland. Nice video however.
Watching from rainy cold weather the Netherlands. Greetings.
Wonderful!!! I'll try living my life like them... Living their passion...
I defintely want to go to Tasmania! I love visiting places that have a limited human footprint!
I also wonder how the brothers found their bikes again after wandering around the bush for a few days. I would have lost them!
Thank you for showing the world what a beautiful place my home Tasmania is .
This man is my kinda guy! There are so few of us!
Going into the southwest on a pushbike towing in a surfboard via lake pedder is crazy. Doesnt look bad on a map but that is a crazy thing to do just on its own.
Wow what a place , we’re the claim. Looking forward settle in a place like this.
Very poetic and beautiful
“I don’t often do what I don’t want to do.” Damn all my life is doing things I don’t want to do, and I remember my parents telling me that’s what makes life. You’re here so do things you don’t want to do, to support oligarchs. I never thought of something different.
That statement hit me hard as well.
What a beautiful place
It really is!
Its a crime scene. They wiped out the indigenous inhabitants! No one with conscience should visit or live on the island- a crime scene of horrific proportion!
The only problem with Tasmania is that it's full of Tasmanians. Trust me, I have lived here for a fair time.
My birth place .... 5th generation ..... my GGrandparents were pioneers of their districts .... I left Tassie to live in the tropics of Far Nth Qld .... but going home is like going back into a time warp of the 1950s or 60s, I grew up roaming the beaches in solitude and my Dad was an old bushie who would take me up the bush & teach me what all the trees were & all the bird calls
Good 👍😊
Awesome a tree that regenerates itself
Yun yung bottomline non kung sa subdivision tayo nakatira disinsana'y di tayo mamromroblema sa problema ng iba! Tanga! Dika nagiisip ang tanda-tanda mona gago ! Ulul!! Hahaha
I know right? Who knew and thank goodness some still exist! What fantastic wood no?
Actually most of Australia's trees are like that, especially the eucalypts. The difference is that they will only live for hundreds of years, not thousands like the Huon Pine.
Good 😊😊
Not seeing other people and space sounds like so much peace.
❤️
Richard living everyone's dream
Richard lighting illegal fires in a national park
😲😲😲😲😲😲 Wow
👏👏👏❤
Did the parks and wildlife person know that you are not allowed to have fires in national parks it's illegal to do so.
These are rangers and people who go to most densely traveled areas of the forests, they have been doing it half of their lives.
They aren't clueless tourists or teenagers and they aren't in your regular national park areas.
😊
@LeePearce-wq6pv I know that but as it has been previously told your not aloud to use sticks or anything for a fire in national parks it is illegal under the law. So why is it good for one and not the other ??
@@smurfzilla5756 Experience.
@@LeePearce-wq6pv that means nothing if it illegal
@@smurfzilla5756 okay.
I want to move to OZ or NZ. I also want to see what benefits this tree may have for medicinal purposes.
14:43 min in....I almost missed it.😂👏😍
I think the estimated age of that Huon Pine at 10,000 years is a bit fanciful seeing the earth was only created 6,000 years ago !
5:48. I just go ga ga......wish I was right there.
4:28 😵
Thanks for unearthing "Steve" who lit an illegal fire in a national park, and "Chris" his mate who condones illegal activity in Australian National Parks.
My home you ain’t seen nothing yet
South of Australia? South of mainland Australia you mean.
South is descriptive enough for Non Tools
Yes
Yes you’re right. Tasmania is not south of Australia… it’s the southern most state of Australia which happens to be an island. They made it sound like a different country.😂😂
@@MinutesWithMates Thank you for understanding my point.
@@scottgordon9931 i'm pretty sure you are the tool scott
Born and bred in Tasmania...
Lucky you. What an amazing place. Wow.
Show us ya scar 🤣
do you have two heads?
19:50 A good friend of mine was fined over $700 for lighting a small cooking fire in that exact area. Looks like NP&W isn’t following their own rules? What’s your excuse?
tasse 🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉
I thought your not a loud have open fires on Crown land.
42:22 ok duuuuuuuuuuuude
that port jackson shark looked pretty dead
Felt sorry for the dead shark in the net
He released it to swim free.
I would love to obtain seeds from a Huon pine. Unfortunately they won't export them. It doesn't make sense to me. If they grow so slow they wouldn't be a threat to our ecosystem and it would aid in their proliferation so why can't we get seeds?
Just because it grows slowly hear doesn't mean it wouldn't or couldn't where you are. Look at Lantana, ornamental in England. But a massive pest in Australia
Sassy the Sasquatch lives.
I'm curious as to why there is so little human habitation here. It doesn't make sense to me.
Forced relocation of original inhabitants. Murder and land theft.
Tasmania is pretty isolated. The whole of Australia has only 25 million people - about the same as a major Asian city like Jakarta or Tokyo. Tasmania is the most sparsely populated state in Australia.
Thats because the invading Brits killed and wiped out the indeginous inhabitants!
Lots of people here no different to other places
Is it not forbidden to make fires in a nationalpark? And shouldnt Steve know that?
Day by day views are getting low team free documentary need to take it as a serious concern...
Deep respect with a net fishing??
Tasmanian Aboriginals of pure plasma have been wiped out and mingled out yeah.
I love Tassie and spent many years there but it certainly does have a rather dark and tragic history. The total lack of indigenous people is clearly noticeable. There are a few descendants of mixed race but they are virtually indistinguishable from the rest of the population. But hey, it's history and cannot be undone. Feeling guilt for the acts of previous generations is pointless. We must live in the present and strive to preserve the best of what we have and create a better future for our descendants.
I have a long Aboriginal history in Tasmania it's more like we hide our history from what ruined us
That was not a Port Jackson shark.
Bare legs ... spiders,snakes, poisonous plants?
Who’s saying Mother Earth is overpopulated?
Bird calls of mainland species were dubbed in. They were not Tasmanian bird species! Lyrebird! etc. Would have been good if they took some effort to pronounce names properly/correctly.
This appears to be an odd subject for this channel.
For a "native American", aka "the halluci-nation" perspective, see John Trudell you tube video titled "33,000,000 million prisoners by 2100". Trudell told us all this stuff in his own words, with a word of caution to Americans, way back in the 1990s. If folk on this channel do not yet know John Trudell, who died last year, please take this as an opportunity to listen to his wisdom, such as "whatever happened to the tribes of Europe".
I think it's very poor judgement to have one of the national parks staff lighting a fire which is illegal in national parks. The same parks where other people have been fined around $700. But that's the way the Australian government works, tells the public one thing while doing that exact thing😂😂😂😂😂😂
1mm a year ? so in 10 000 years it is only 10m high 🤣
He's talking about width.
Ever notice when men are having fun there's no women around?
Yep, there’s no poontang down in Tassie. The sheep are used to it, though…
The viewer could be forgiven for thinking that there are no females in Tassie. Boys and bearded men only, it would seem. 😂😂😂
Good 👍😊