I love your spirit, how you love exploring the past, looking at how our ancients lived and flourished in places modern day people can't imagine how they did it. When I was much younger I loved doing that too! Keep on keeping on as long as possible, my body gave out, now I'm enjoying watching people like you, "Johnny Out West." What joy you bring to so many of us.. I for one am loving it! Thank you!
You know, if there were more people like you out there the world would be a better place. Really appreciate your kind words, it means a lot. More western adventures coming soon - stay tuned. -Johnny
@@johnnyoutwest you're doing a wonderful thing for everyone and may not know it. These videos might help to get officials to pay you or someone to put simple signs out there saying "do not touch or remove anything." Maybe official stickers so it doesn't weigh anything. Thanks again! Take care out there. 🙏
When I was a young man back in the 1970's living in New Mexico we went to many cliff dwellings. We used to hike for miles in the mountains with butterflys waiting for what we might find around the corner. Im glad to see this adventurous spirit still ;ives on today. Thanks for the free ride.
*Amazing building remains. Some of the best I've seen in US. "Blue rock" is green chert, used for arrowheads. The corrugated surface is from a basket mold where they pressed clay inside it to forma pot.*
Cool video guys! The pictograph color is quite rare. Keep in mind to avoid eating snacks near ancient structure sites as crumbs and food scents attract rodents who will further erode the ancient structures. Best etiquette is no food on the site.
You should familiarize yourself with arrowheads and stone tools so that you can recognize a worked tool artifact. Most of the things you thought were artifacts were simply rocks or flakes. Rock Country Relics would be a good channel to check out 😜. Fun adventure. Thanks for sharing
I watch Desert Drifter and Treck Planner and you have found the best habitats artefacts and Pictoghraphs by far.. You have a gift for sussing them out!
Cammie's nails are awesome. A mere snake has little hope against them. I read that texturing pottery increases the surface area and maintains temperature much longer. Also, that pottery was smashed upon the death of the person who owned it. Despite today's luxuries and time saving technology, everybody's still working their tails off.
The mud with sticks is called “dab and wattle,” or something very like that! It’s a very common primitive mode of construction everywhere. This is one of the most impressive ancientAmerican sites I ever saw, that wasn’t already a museum. I hope the scientists notice. This site deserves to be recorded, studied and protected.
22:16 my guess is that would be just a general cutting tool. It's edge is smooth from being struck off the rock they were spalling, but it hasn't been worked. So the edge is sharp, but fragile and dulls fast. A worked edge will look wavy from continuously pressure flaking. (also maybe could of just been a piece they were saving to make into an arrowhead but just didnt get around to doing)
The thing about rain, it’s not the rain nearby that is so dangerous, it’s the rain 10 or 20 miles away, way upstream, where it is joined by dozens or hundreds of other similar streams… which all feed into your canyon!
You need to be cautious around structures with deer mice pee dried in inside of them. If you see feces, there is likely dried urine. This is the source of hantavirus pulmonary syndrome, (HPS) prevalent in the southwest. When disturbed, it can become airborne. This is just an extra caution to take. Approximately 38% of those contracting the respiratory virus die. Archeologists don't recommend entering ruin sites, but cliff sides can have concentrations too. Another suggestion in rattlesnake country: never put your hand where your eyes haven't first seen. ❤ Happy trails from Arizona.
I have seen that black and white decorated pottery before. Maybe at the Navajo National monument. And if you havent seen the film on chaco canyon narrated by robert Redford it has a bit on there about the spirals. The number of coils and the way the Sun intersects the spirals on solstice days, had meaning. The pottery in different patterns almost looks like it has been gathered up and left there. Where I live it is rare to see any remnants of wood, certainly not ladders. Nice soundtracking. Thanks! I see a lot of the purple varnish but never colors, and where I am no vegetation or water.....plenty of fossils though.
Its beautiful, isnt it? I havent but I most definitely want to watch it now. I can't wait to go see Chaco canyon. Really appreciate your kind comments my friend. I just posted a new video, and would love to hear your feedback. Thanks! -Johnny
The Anasazi used stone like what you see, not adobe. The stone was often set in place with mud mortar and then sometimes mudded over for a smooth appearance. Second, the "grainery" at 16 minutes, isn't. It's a cultural object meant to be seen. And, your commenter was correct. The people who lived out there were masters of their environment in the same way you're master of yours. It was only when the weather changed, making it hard to live, that they moved on.
I believe these you have found today have been inhabited more recently. Meaning others came upon possibly an early site, which was green, had water, was too high or difficult to access. Hence, building up, keeping up, and living there for a period of time before moving to other areas or dying out. This can confuse dating, etc. Still good finds that I have enjoyed viewing etc. 😀 thanks
Love watching your videos BUT, after watching some other southwest hikers exploring for any type of ruins, NOTE…they always say that you should NEVER EVER go inside of any ruins you find. I noticed your girlfriend was in one of the ruin rooms in this video and that is a huge NO-NO. Anywho, keep on exploring and showing us these beautiful and very interesting ruins (just never go inside; they just stick their cameras in to film the insides, if they can. ☮️ & 💟
I found interesting at about 27:26 the way all the pottery was laid out in a very unnatural way, also I thought it was pretty interesting to see the corn cobs in place like that one would think the little animals would have carried them away
Yeah it seems like some times people like to create piles of the pottery. I assume to help others find it. But there are some mixed opinions on that. Yeah not sure how much interest animals have in the very core with nothing left to eat off the cob. But it is interesting nevertheless. Thanks so much for watching! New video coming next week, hope you stay tuned -Johnny
Dude I think you just made a discovery🎉 the green pictograph looks like Aztec or Mayan hieroglyph🎉. Somebody of some intelligence should look at this would like a professor of archeology no joke. This means something. Wow🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉
Love the theory about it being a possible booby trap to distract unwanted travelers, beautiful findings love the adventure. Always great content. Glad I subscribed.
The idea of not leaving your negative imprint on these Prehistoric Dwellings & grainerys, is synonymous to each layer & the time of their Societies, rebuilding of perhaps a grainery, suited to the Environment from when they were practical. So, these rebooters, were of an unkown clovis culture, [20,000 to 6000 B.C. & Anasazi, around 4000, Pueblo & Navajo?
Yea I am realizing after the fact that I was jumping to a few conclusions on this hike. Still learning more and more about the vast characteristics of the canyons. Thanks for the info though and thank you for watching!
At 15:43 look at where you are sitting and look at the curve of rock over your head, look at the matching curve of rock under you. I remember seeing in your video just before you arrived of the climb of the slope, the loose scree. The rocks were small, sharp, they looked either worked of the debris of shaping stones. I have done stonework with hammer and chisel. Stood in the front yard with a sawhorse bench and shaped limestone for the next puzzle piece for a chimney. My debris looked like your debris. Also, look at the smoke stains,, but there is no matching hearth below. Yes, there is a hearth,, and very likely a large habitation under where you are sitting. You may well be sitting on the top of the collapsed roof of where there was a habitation. It is all under you,, and yes the small square, stand alone structure was meant to be seen. It is the funerary monument to the family buried below when the cliff house ceiling collapsed.
I've always seen those as signs of subsistence, merest survival culture existence, almost as if running from something, that is, if I were to believe those were living quarters and not just high ground storage caches. I don't know the likelihood for flash floods in those arroyos or canyons during the periods when used. The idea that they were "safe rooms" from some natural disasters or predator are suggested, again, only to my own gut reaction. You'd probably know better. Still i find it hard to fit that habitude in that environment with the verb "thrive".
Yeah you raise some interesting points. From what I understand, the Anasazi would inhabit locations until the local conditions were no longer providing sustenance (long droughts would force them to move elsewhere so they could continue their farming). Its an interesting thing to ponder
I watch Like a dozen RUclipsrs or more do the same thing you do I've never seen any Adobe you mentioned all the same as what you're standing in front of. The only Adobe I've ever seen is in New Mexico. For some reason no one wants to cover that. I comment a lot if it bothers you let me know. I figure it helps your channel helps your algorithm.
28:40 funy this one look like the wind or the rain the design look like zapotec god of rain really strange for this ancient Pueblo area maybe they got influenced or maybe just cohincidence
@@mysteriousoklahoma777 dn't know mate iv studie those nevr heard abt it maybe some of them did but not all the tribs yu have huge diff between north america natives and maeixan one ...
@@FunkyPyramid-t5n …there are still true indigenous villages in Mexico, central and South America. Only remnants of the old ways are left of Americas indigenous cultures. Too much modernization.
@@FunkyPyramid-t5n … when you get into the archeological evidence of cannibalism and sacrifices at ancient sites in the USA….does one see the influx of foreign cultures throughout the southwest. From the parrot clans of Acoma to evidence of cannibalism cults at Chaco and many Anasazi sites…one can’t doubt outside influences.
@@FunkyPyramid-t5n even the venerated kokopelli is theorized to be be flute player who entered villages playing his flute as to not startle Pueblo sites…of course he was naked and had brought trade from the central Mexico and as far as South America.
Interesting that you regard that can as an artifact. It’s a pop top, and not the original kind. I forget when those came in, but I’d guess the 1980s, well within my lifetime. I consider it to be (old) trash, which is interesting, but not very…
You guys need to watch all the Native American stories on how they live etcetera to understand the the structures better. From what I understand you're thinking of these places in a western concept like as a house is something you stay in. Native Americans Simply Built them as shelters with only for sleeping and getting out of the weather. That's what the Native Americans say. They weren't sit around people. They got up in the morning first light to do whatever they needed to do. According to them. I think the big question is what were they hiding from. You said yourself they blend in you really have to look for them that's on purpose. It's very apparent to me and other people who do this then they're hiding from something or what it is nobody knows. I think either 6 finger Giants or other tribes. The indigenous people said they had to deal with both unfriendly other tribes and red-haired six-fingered Giants that tried to eat them. Like in the Lovelock Cave Story. A mother mentioned this to you before so I apologize I watch a lot of these I'm just really into it and like discussing it. Thanks for the adventure you guys have a great day🎉
You see all over this site where people have come and stacked all the pot shards and artifacts on the Rocks don't do that the Rangers tell you don't do that pick it up look at it and put it right back where you found it if you must pick it up at all. It ruins it for everyone. Let me illiterate if they're looking for the other pieces of this pot which they often do and put back together. You've just removed it from the closest place where it might be containing the other parts of it. It's not helping anyone. It does not look good either. Just like rock Karen's
nice to see you my friend im shaman and artist from france and love yur knowledge abt the ancestors iv studye mainly mayan and olmecs culture but all native culture was peacefull and really in deep relation with there suroundings
'...possibly covered in ancient ruins.' Why would you think that.....if it were, then it would be well-documented and you would have known that if you researched it.
MORE OGHAM! Bro just look into ancient ogham or read any work by Barry Fell or Dexter Warren. Those are ogham the same as your last video was. MaBo the Irish God was in your last video.
The term "ancestral pueblo" is a recently manufactured fake terminology that is not true. The people who built these defensive living positions, did so to escape the threat of the raiding, murdering, cannibal slavers who came from the south... the Ana Sa a' Zi ... Who were eventually wiped out completely... SOME of these places you consider to be "graineries" were burials, that were raided in antiquity.. But again, "ancestral Pueblo" is a fake terminology... Two things are apparent.. You don't really know what you are describing about building techniques at THIS location. And the soda can was left there in 1978 during the time that Safeway sold Cragmont Soda... 😂
Please don't leave the trash that you find and call it artifact. Have respect for those who call that land sancred. I am not of that tribe but I am native and we are still here!
@@johnnyoutwest I appreciate that you wanted to err on the side of caution, so much better then most. For anything modern, it is safe to say that if it hasn't been modified, then it really is trash. We are all for repurposing like with the cones on our jingle dresses, the started out being the lids from snuff cans. We use bleach bottles in making some of our traditional hair pieces (Choctaw of Oklahoma).
I worked with the Arizona conservation corps and I had a few jobs cleaning out overgrowth so Archeologists could more accurately document certain sites. UNFORTUNATELY tin cans, pieces of metal, glass, fabrics....if they are over 70 years old they are infact protected and must be left in place. Remember most of the pottery pieces, broken points and flakes were once TRASH as well. 200 years from now a beer can from 1950 will be just as interesting as the pottery is to us today.
btw yur wife and yu remind me and my gf true love my friend yur blessed by the ancestors for what yu doing and for yur cute wife :) yu guys are so cute
Just a bit of a pointer, as to what you are calling “soot” or smoked areas. For the most part, most of that is oxidation from the rain and snow, leaching out minerals as well as botanical stains. It’s not soot. Become a bit more familiar with the difference, as it could give you wrong concepts about where the ancestors lived. I spent a fair amount of time monitoring such sacred places for BLM/FS and State Trust Lands.
Overall a nice video with beautiful nature shots, but unfortunately there is way too much video of people, as in close-ups of peoples faces, which ruins it completely for me; I click to see the nature and the ruins/dwellings and not human beings, I know what they look like. And why is everything a 'GRANARY', and why so much endless babble about what these structures could have been for and what every room was used for... We don't know much about the people who lived here and we don't have a clue about the utility of every room, nor does it matter until we have some real proof. The only highlight was when the lady said that one of the rooms was probably a baby's room...:):):) It was hillarious but just as likely as all the constant guesswork and babble about something we don't know. But bottom line is that for me these videos are worth watching because of the beauty of the nature, but from here on in I'll be watching w/o sound; the non-stop babble is just too annoying, and I do my best to FF through all the close-ups of faces so it's all good. I've been to many of these sites, including this one, and they are amazing. So keep exploring. Cheers
U need to be careful exploring ancient ruins specially indigenous ones, you should smudge urself before so nothing sticks to you, spiritually stick, sage smudge to keep them from connecting to you. Thank you for not taking anything that's respectful something the colonizers did not have respect! Please don't leave any way of viewers being able to retrace ur steps because there's still alot of people who for no reason hate indigenous groups and history! But they want to live in our country!! All indigenous groups lived peacefully unless they were forced to fight, history books have our history all wrong! With everything still standing shows how well they were made! Something the white colored people of this planet couldn't figure out how to do.but sadly it's haters that destroy it. I watch another explorer that goes to these sites, he's learning our ways to understand the way and area they were built.
Relax, Jungle Jim! You're trying to sound too smart. This is RUclips, not National Geographic. Don't get into the weeds. We're just here for the adventure, not for a PHD.
It’s funny how you say “this is youtube” as if you couldn’t literally acquire the knowledge of a PHD from the thousands of RUclips channels that educate. See what I’m saying my man? Appreciate your viewership. More jungle Jim adventures coming your way soon
25:50 the ppl should let the artefact at there place ...... regroup them alll in the same area is lame and not constructiv at all .... better to keep them than doing that ...
I love your spirit, how you love exploring the past, looking at how our ancients lived and flourished in places modern day people can't imagine how they did it. When I was much younger I loved doing that too! Keep on keeping on as long as possible, my body gave out, now I'm enjoying watching people like you, "Johnny Out West." What joy you bring to so many of us.. I for one am loving it! Thank you!
You know, if there were more people like you out there the world would be a better place. Really appreciate your kind words, it means a lot. More western adventures coming soon - stay tuned.
-Johnny
@@johnnyoutwest you're doing a wonderful thing for everyone and may not know it. These videos might help to get officials to pay you or someone to put simple signs out there saying "do not touch or remove anything." Maybe official stickers so it doesn't weigh anything. Thanks again! Take care out there. 🙏
@@corine422 Hello Corine! I just posted a new video, a super cool adventure. Hope you check it out and would love to know what you think of it!
When I was a young man back in the 1970's living in New Mexico we went to many cliff dwellings. We used to hike for miles in the mountains with butterflys waiting for what we might find around the corner. Im glad to see this adventurous spirit still ;ives on today. Thanks for the free ride.
Thanks so much for the kind words! Glad to hear you enjoyed the adventure.
-Johnny
*Amazing building remains. Some of the best I've seen in US. "Blue rock" is green chert, used for arrowheads. The corrugated surface is from a basket mold where they pressed clay inside it to forma pot.*
Cool video guys! The pictograph color is quite rare. Keep in mind to avoid eating snacks near ancient structure sites as crumbs and food scents attract rodents who will further erode the ancient structures. Best etiquette is no food on the site.
Thanks so much! Appreciate your note about etiquette - good to know!
-Johnny
You should familiarize yourself with arrowheads and stone tools so that you can recognize a worked tool artifact. Most of the things you thought were artifacts were simply rocks or flakes. Rock Country Relics would be a good channel to check out 😜. Fun adventure. Thanks for sharing
Will do thanks for the tip! Lol look forward to checking out your channel my friend.
-Johnny
I watch Desert Drifter and Treck Planner and you have found the best habitats artefacts and Pictoghraphs by far.. You have a gift for sussing them out!
Both great channels! Thanks so much for the kind words, means a lot. More western adventures coming soon.
-Johnny
Hey Buddha! I just posted a new video to my channel a couple days ago. I think you’ll like it, let me know what you think!
Great explore! Thank you for sharing with all of us. ❤🎉
Thanks so much for watching! Appreciate the kind words.
-Johnny
Desert drifter has some awesome videos!!😊also.
Love Desert Drifter. Thanks for watching!
-Johnny
Cammie's nails are awesome. A mere snake has little hope against them. I read that texturing pottery increases the surface area and maintains temperature much longer. Also, that pottery was smashed upon the death of the person who owned it. Despite today's luxuries and time saving technology, everybody's still working their tails off.
Thanks so much for watching and commenting! Interesting notes about the pottery! more western adventures coming soon
-Johnny
The mud with sticks is called “dab and wattle,” or something very like that! It’s a very common primitive mode of construction everywhere. This is one of the most impressive ancientAmerican sites I ever saw, that wasn’t already a museum. I hope the scientists notice. This site deserves to be recorded, studied and protected.
👌Wattle and daub, but that is normally loam and not mortar.
oh cool, really appreciate this comment. Good to know. Appreciate you my friend
Yea, great history in this video.
22:16 my guess is that would be just a general cutting tool. It's edge is smooth from being struck off the rock they were spalling, but it hasn't been worked. So the edge is sharp, but fragile and dulls fast. A worked edge will look wavy from continuously pressure flaking. (also maybe could of just been a piece they were saving to make into an arrowhead but just didnt get around to doing)
cool, thanks so much for your insights! More western adventures coming soon
-Johnny
Very fascinating! Gotta be so much more in those canyons! The pottery! Wow!
Thanks for the kind words! Appreciate you.
-Johnny
I just love what they’re doing and what has been done! Sooooo cool!
Thank you for the kind words! Appreciate you. More western adventures coming soon.
-Johnny
Hi Kimberly! I just posted a new video to my channel a couple days ago. I think you’ll like it, let me know what you think!
Amazing footage! Nice storytelling, always a hidden gem
Thank you my friend!
The thing about rain, it’s not the rain nearby that is so dangerous, it’s the rain 10 or 20 miles away, way upstream, where it is joined by dozens or hundreds of other similar streams… which all feed into your canyon!
Great video, Johnny and Cammie! Keep em coming!
Really appreciate your words of encouragement! More western adventures coming soon
-Johnny
What’s up stringdoc! Just posted a new video yesterday, I think you’ll like it! Let me know what you think
Incredible structures and you found more pottery and more variety than most people do, great video loved the internal view.
Thanks for those kind words! I was stunned by all the pottery. More western adventures coming soon.
-Johnny
It’s like a Hopi pueblo, probably a very early version of one. This is more than the usual site. It is complex. I think it’s special!
Pretty amazing, right? thanks for watching my friend! more western adventures coming soon.
-Johnny
A roof, intact. Very unusual and super cool.
Brother you are absolutely awesome 😊
Really appreciate your kind words brother. Means a lot
-Johnny
Crazy these places still exist. super cool
Nice video. Thanks!
Thanks for the kind words! Really appreciate you
-Johnny
Thanks for sharing your adventures. So interesting, also many pottery shards.
Thanks for the kind words. More western adventures coming soon.
-Johnny
Hi Susan! I just posted a new video to my channel a couple days ago. I think you’ll like it, let me know what you think!
You need to be cautious around structures with deer mice pee dried in inside of them. If you see feces, there is likely dried urine. This is the source of hantavirus pulmonary syndrome, (HPS) prevalent in the southwest. When disturbed, it can become airborne. This is just an extra caution to take. Approximately 38% of those contracting the respiratory virus die. Archeologists don't recommend entering ruin sites, but cliff sides can have concentrations too. Another suggestion in rattlesnake country: never put your hand where your eyes haven't first seen. ❤ Happy trails from Arizona.
Wow really appreciate all the tips! Thanks for watching and commenting my friend.
-Johnny
Ceiling intact is very rare.
That was enjoyable. Thank you
Thanks so much for watching! More western adventures coming soon.
-Johnny
Nice find
Thank you my friend! More western adventures coming soon
-Johnny
That cube-shaped granary is not in a difficult to access spot. It was probably used in peaceful times.
What a cool way to spend the day
Thanks for watching! More western adventures coming soon
-Johnny
just posted a new video to my channel a couple days ago. I think you’ll like it, let me know what you think!
Another great story
Thank you my friend!
I have seen that black and white decorated pottery before. Maybe at the Navajo National monument. And if you havent seen the film on chaco canyon narrated by robert Redford it has a bit on there about the spirals. The number of coils and the way the Sun intersects the spirals on solstice days, had meaning. The pottery in different patterns almost looks like it has been gathered up and left there. Where I live it is rare to see any remnants of wood, certainly not ladders. Nice soundtracking. Thanks!
I see a lot of the purple varnish but never colors, and where I am no vegetation or water.....plenty of fossils though.
Its beautiful, isnt it? I havent but I most definitely want to watch it now. I can't wait to go see Chaco canyon. Really appreciate your kind comments my friend. I just posted a new video, and would love to hear your feedback. Thanks!
-Johnny
@@johnnyoutwest I was hoping it would drop today....been checking the feed
Yeah it’s live now. Go to my channel and you should see it!
I noticed metates ground into that large sandstone rock eith several mono stones on top
Archaeologists could go there and make a thorough record and analysis. Untouched or relatively untouched sites are rare.
Archeologists are modern grave robbers who desicrate sites and steal artfacts.
The different masonry techniques can identify the different Pueblo periods along with the pottery type
I think their biggest struggle was their enemies. Look at how defensive most sites are in the way they were built and where they were located.
Yeah, pretty interesting. Thanks for watching!
-Johnny
The Anasazi used stone like what you see, not adobe. The stone was often set in place with mud mortar and then sometimes mudded over for a smooth appearance. Second, the "grainery" at 16 minutes, isn't. It's a cultural object meant to be seen. And, your commenter was correct. The people who lived out there were masters of their environment in the same way you're master of yours. It was only when the weather changed, making it hard to live, that they moved on.
Appreciate your insights Jeff! Just learning as I go, constantly fascinated my the endless history there is to explore.
-Johnny
Brave Cami! Hiking & climbing with those amazing long, painted fingernails! You go, girl!
Very brave indeed! That was a tough hike!
I believe these you have found today have been inhabited more recently. Meaning others came upon possibly an early site, which was green, had water, was too high or difficult to access. Hence, building up, keeping up, and living there for a period of time before moving to other areas or dying out. This can confuse dating, etc. Still good finds that I have enjoyed viewing etc. 😀 thanks
Love watching your videos BUT, after watching some other southwest hikers exploring for any type of ruins, NOTE…they always say that you should NEVER EVER go inside of any ruins you find. I noticed your girlfriend was in one of the ruin rooms in this video and that is a huge NO-NO. Anywho, keep on exploring and showing us these beautiful and very interesting ruins (just never go inside; they just stick their cameras in to film the insides, if they can.
☮️ & 💟
Just posted a new video with some pretty amazing ancient findings. hope you check it out. please let me know what you think!
-Johnny
I found interesting at about 27:26 the way all the pottery was laid out in a very unnatural way, also I thought it was pretty interesting to see the corn cobs in place like that one would think the little animals would have carried them away
Yeah it seems like some times people like to create piles of the pottery. I assume to help others find it. But there are some mixed opinions on that. Yeah not sure how much interest animals have in the very core with nothing left to eat off the cob. But it is interesting nevertheless. Thanks so much for watching! New video coming next week, hope you stay tuned
-Johnny
the green snake like one...i seen a love snake do same thing,i think it was getting vibes from the ground,maybe over a lay line no clue
Dude I think you just made a discovery🎉 the green pictograph looks like Aztec or Mayan hieroglyph🎉. Somebody of some intelligence should look at this would like a professor of archeology no joke. This means something. Wow🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉
Thanks for watching!
Love the theory about it being a possible booby trap to distract unwanted travelers, beautiful findings love the adventure. Always great content. Glad I subscribed.
Thanks for the kind words my friend!
The idea of not leaving your negative imprint on these Prehistoric Dwellings & grainerys, is synonymous to each layer & the time of their Societies, rebuilding of perhaps a grainery, suited to the Environment from when they were practical. So, these rebooters, were of an unkown clovis culture, [20,000 to 6000 B.C. & Anasazi, around 4000, Pueblo & Navajo?
Water running down the side of the cliff leaves black stains that look like soot, not all black marks are soot, scratch and sniff!
At 14 minutes 26 seconds isn't that numbers up on the top of the cave looks like 14 and then 1967 or 1987😮
Where is this
7:30 that is not soot, you can tell because it is on the vertical walls and is everywhere
Yea I am realizing after the fact that I was jumping to a few conclusions on this hike. Still learning more and more about the vast characteristics of the canyons. Thanks for the info though and thank you for watching!
@ of course. That area was amazing! I have been looking for areas to look but can’t get out of the house much
Wow that was awesome thanks for the adventure 😊
Thanks for the kind words! means a lot. More western adventures coming soon.
-Johnny
You missed the steps/footholds carved into the rock face around 30.00 when you wondered how they got up there!
29:50 right here. Do you see them? Kinda fait but...
Yeah I see what you're referring to! Would be super hard to climb up, but very well could be.
@28:26 there's a foot pictograph to right.
Supposedly, they were the first to cross the Pacific Ocean during/after the 3rd great flood, which is known more of as Zisudras/Noah's flood.
At 15:43 look at where you are sitting and look at the curve of rock over your head, look at the matching curve of rock under you. I remember seeing in your video just before you arrived of the climb of the slope, the loose scree. The rocks were small, sharp, they looked either worked of the debris of shaping stones. I have done stonework with hammer and chisel. Stood in the front yard with a sawhorse bench and shaped limestone for the next puzzle piece for a chimney. My debris looked like your debris. Also, look at the smoke stains,, but there is no matching hearth below.
Yes, there is a hearth,, and very likely a large habitation under where you are sitting. You may well be sitting on the top of the collapsed roof of where there was a habitation. It is all under you,, and yes the small square, stand alone structure was meant to be seen. It is the funerary monument to the family buried below when the cliff house ceiling collapsed.
Interesting, I appreciate all your insights. Pretty wild. Thanks for watching!
-Johnny
It looks like you all are in my backyard. Literally. We find this stuff all over here.
Right on! Where are you located??
West of cahone Colorado. Nestled up next to the canyon of the ancients.
Just curious, how do you find your way back?
Honestly just pay close attention to the features of the canyon.
Look at all the other black stains that dont even go under the edge inside of the overhangs of cliffs
the one you think was for a trap, i think it was where they smoked meat and cured it.
oh interesting theory. totally could be
I've always seen those as signs of subsistence, merest survival culture existence, almost as if running from something, that is, if I were to believe those were living quarters and not just high ground storage caches.
I don't know the likelihood for flash floods in those arroyos or canyons during the periods when used. The idea that they were "safe rooms" from some natural disasters or predator are suggested, again, only to my own gut reaction.
You'd probably know better. Still i find it hard to fit that habitude in that environment with the verb "thrive".
Yeah you raise some interesting points. From what I understand, the Anasazi would inhabit locations until the local conditions were no longer providing sustenance (long droughts would force them to move elsewhere so they could continue their farming). Its an interesting thing to ponder
That green rock you found definitely was a stone tool and looked like a possible chopper for butchering
The little jaws and bones are pack rat bones.
Interesting, thanks for the info!
I watch Like a dozen RUclipsrs or more do the same thing you do I've never seen any Adobe you mentioned all the same as what you're standing in front of. The only Adobe I've ever seen is in New Mexico. For some reason no one wants to cover that. I comment a lot if it bothers you let me know. I figure it helps your channel helps your algorithm.
Appreciate you my friend!!
Have you ever seen McKenna's gold. Check out the trailer.
No but will do!
28:40 funy this one look like the wind or the rain the design look like zapotec god of rain really strange for this ancient Pueblo area maybe they got influenced or maybe just cohincidence
The Mexican Indigenous tribes traveled all over New Mexico, Arizona…even up into Colorado…the trade route trails were mapped with LiDAR
@@mysteriousoklahoma777 dn't know mate iv studie those nevr heard abt it maybe some of them did but not all the tribs yu have huge diff between north america natives and maeixan one ...
@@FunkyPyramid-t5n …there are still true indigenous villages in Mexico, central and South America. Only remnants of the old ways are left of Americas indigenous cultures. Too much modernization.
@@FunkyPyramid-t5n … when you get into the archeological evidence of cannibalism and sacrifices at ancient sites in the USA….does one see the influx of foreign cultures throughout the southwest. From the parrot clans of Acoma to evidence of cannibalism cults at Chaco and many Anasazi sites…one can’t doubt outside influences.
@@FunkyPyramid-t5n even the venerated kokopelli is theorized to be be flute player who entered villages playing his flute as to not startle Pueblo sites…of course he was naked and had brought trade from the central Mexico and as far as South America.
Interesting that you regard that can as an artifact. It’s a pop top, and not the original kind. I forget when those came in, but I’d guess the 1980s, well within my lifetime. I consider it to be (old) trash, which is interesting, but not very…
hi from canada
Hi!! Thanks for watching!
-Johnny
You see all this structure, where did they put the dead? Think they would have tombs in the rocks
You guys need to watch all the Native American stories on how they live etcetera to understand the the structures better. From what I understand you're thinking of these places in a western concept like as a house is something you stay in. Native Americans Simply Built them as shelters with only for sleeping and getting out of the weather. That's what the Native Americans say. They weren't sit around people. They got up in the morning first light to do whatever they needed to do. According to them. I think the big question is what were they hiding from. You said yourself they blend in you really have to look for them that's on purpose. It's very apparent to me and other people who do this then they're hiding from something or what it is nobody knows. I think either 6 finger Giants or other tribes. The indigenous people said they had to deal with both unfriendly other tribes and red-haired six-fingered Giants that tried to eat them. Like in the Lovelock Cave Story. A mother mentioned this to you before so I apologize I watch a lot of these I'm just really into it and like discussing it. Thanks for the adventure you guys have a great day🎉
Super interesting. Thanks so much for joining the convo! More western adventures coming soon.
-Johnny
These were little people
Please take your backpacks off when exploring native buildings!
Do you ever find pieces of stone and beads that once were used to make jewelry?
I didnt, that would be super cool though.
Why are all these structures called graineries?
They were used for grain storage
@@johnnyoutwest what evidence is there that these structures stored grain?
@@johnnyoutwest no really, what is the evidence that those many, or any, of those structures were granaries?
@@user-Mike755
Corncobs left behind. And nearby, stone tools & hollowed out surfaces for grinding corn, seeds, nuts, etc.
You see all over this site where people have come and stacked all the pot shards and artifacts on the Rocks don't do that the Rangers tell you don't do that pick it up look at it and put it right back where you found it if you must pick it up at all. It ruins it for everyone. Let me illiterate if they're looking for the other pieces of this pot which they often do and put back together. You've just removed it from the closest place where it might be containing the other parts of it. It's not helping anyone. It does not look good either. Just like rock Karen's
Yeah good point - i always try to put things back where I found them but there were a number of collections we came across as you saw.
Why would you leave anything that you find?
To preserve the history. Some say the artifacts are a part of the soul of the canyon. some places just deserve to stay the same
@@johnnyoutwest
Also so that others can enjoy & learn from them.
nice to see you my friend im shaman and artist from france and love yur knowledge abt the ancestors iv studye mainly mayan and olmecs culture but all native culture was peacefull and really in deep relation with there suroundings
Thanks so much for watching my friend! More western adventures coming soon.
-Johnny
'...possibly covered in ancient ruins.' Why would you think that.....if it were, then it would be well-documented and you would have known that if you researched it.
Thanks for watching baba, appreciate you taking the time out of your day to watch the video and ponder it and leave a thoughtful comment.
MORE OGHAM! Bro just look into ancient ogham or read any work by Barry Fell or Dexter Warren. Those are ogham the same as your last video was. MaBo the Irish God was in your last video.
Ok I gotta look into this. Gonna do some research. Thanks for watching brother
-Johnny
@@johnnyoutwestlove the videos bro genuinely jealous as can be
Thanks brother I appreciate you
The term "ancestral pueblo" is a recently manufactured fake terminology that is not true. The people who built these defensive living positions, did so to escape the threat of the raiding, murdering, cannibal slavers who came from the south... the Ana Sa a' Zi ... Who were eventually wiped out completely... SOME of these places you consider to be "graineries" were burials, that were raided in antiquity.. But again, "ancestral Pueblo" is a fake terminology... Two things are apparent.. You don't really know what you are describing about building techniques at THIS location. And the soda can was left there in 1978 during the time that Safeway sold Cragmont Soda... 😂
Please don’t wear packs around ruins..
Please don't leave the trash that you find and call it artifact. Have respect for those who call that land sancred. I am not of that tribe but I am native and we are still here!
Yeah fair enough. I generally pick up trash when I see it in nature, but this felt different. Thanks for watching!
-Johnny
@@johnnyoutwest I appreciate that you wanted to err on the side of caution, so much better then most. For anything modern, it is safe to say that if it hasn't been modified, then it really is trash. We are all for repurposing like with the cones on our jingle dresses, the started out being the lids from snuff cans. We use bleach bottles in making some of our traditional hair pieces (Choctaw of Oklahoma).
I worked with the Arizona conservation corps and I had a few jobs cleaning out overgrowth so Archeologists could more accurately document certain sites. UNFORTUNATELY tin cans, pieces of metal, glass, fabrics....if they are over 70 years old they are infact protected and must be left in place. Remember most of the pottery pieces, broken points and flakes were once TRASH as well. 200 years from now a beer can from 1950 will be just as interesting as the pottery is to us today.
oh interesting. Thanks so much for the insights!
btw yur wife and yu remind me and my gf true love my friend yur blessed by the ancestors for what yu doing and for yur cute wife :) yu guys are so cute
Hah thanks so much! Appreciate you
Just a bit of a pointer, as to what you are calling “soot” or smoked areas.
For the most part, most of that is oxidation from the rain and snow, leaching out minerals as well as botanical stains.
It’s not soot.
Become a bit more familiar with the difference, as it could give you wrong concepts about where the ancestors lived.
I spent a fair amount of time monitoring such sacred places for BLM/FS and State Trust Lands.
Really appreciate the tip! Thanks for watching my friend
@@johnnyoutwest I can’t get out like I used, so watching you that do is great!
@@drobertsmithjewelry Love that. and with your help, I am getting better at navigating these environments. learning as I go
@@johnnyoutwest we all began somewhere.
Overall a nice video with beautiful nature shots, but unfortunately there is way too much video of people, as in close-ups of peoples faces, which ruins it completely for me; I click to see the nature and the ruins/dwellings and not human beings, I know what they look like. And why is everything a 'GRANARY', and why so much endless babble about what these structures could have been for and what every room was used for... We don't know much about the people who lived here and we don't have a clue about the utility of every room, nor does it matter until we have some real proof. The only highlight was when the lady said that one of the rooms was probably a baby's room...:):):) It was hillarious but just as likely as all the constant guesswork and babble about something we don't know. But bottom line is that for me these videos are worth watching because of the beauty of the nature, but from here on in I'll be watching w/o sound; the non-stop babble is just too annoying, and I do my best to FF through all the close-ups of faces so it's all good. I've been to many of these sites, including this one, and they are amazing. So keep exploring. Cheers
Thanks for the feedback. As they say - "to each their own". glad to hear you are enjoying the nature shots.
cheers
Perfect example of a constant complainer trying to find something to harp on and can’t. So he complains anyway just to watch himself type. Pitiful!🧐
U need to be careful exploring ancient ruins specially indigenous ones, you should smudge urself before so nothing sticks to you, spiritually stick, sage smudge to keep them from connecting to you.
Thank you for not taking anything that's respectful something the colonizers did not have respect!
Please don't leave any way of viewers being able to retrace ur steps because there's still alot of people who for no reason hate indigenous groups and history! But they want to live in our country!!
All indigenous groups lived peacefully unless they were forced to fight, history books have our history all wrong!
With everything still standing shows how well they were made! Something the white colored people of this planet couldn't figure out how to do.but sadly it's haters that destroy it.
I watch another explorer that goes to these sites, he's learning our ways to understand the way and area they were built.
Relax, Jungle Jim! You're trying to sound too smart. This is RUclips, not National Geographic. Don't get into the weeds. We're just here for the adventure, not for a PHD.
It’s funny how you say “this is youtube” as if you couldn’t literally acquire the knowledge of a PHD from the thousands of RUclips channels that educate. See what I’m saying my man? Appreciate your viewership. More jungle Jim adventures coming your way soon
25:50 the ppl should let the artefact at there place ...... regroup them alll in the same area is lame and not constructiv at all .... better to keep them than doing that ...