ULURU: Australia's MOST FAMOUS rock | WIDE
HTML-код
- Опубликовано: 25 сен 2022
- Situated in the middle of a red desert, the great rock of Uluru, 350 meters high, dominates the plain.
For the Aboriginal people, it is a sacred place, carrying memories and legends. Ceremonies have been performed there for over 10,000 years. Nowadays, a small community of 300 people continues to organize discreet ceremonies around the rock.
Uluru is listed as a UNESCO World Heritage site and remains an unmissable spot for anyone visiting Australia.
From the film: "World of Colors - Australia in red"
Director: Philippe Moreau
Production: ZED
Australia is a beautiful land, there is a very positive vibration . I wish one day to come back and live there ❤
When i look it becomes sculpted amazing 😊
Well done! Thanks!
Thanks so much!
yesterday i read about this place and today visiting ,, thank you slice team
Thanks so much! and good trip to you!
Hey Kabir, I am planning to visit in June for 24 hours. What do you recommend I do in Uluru ? Planning to do the sunset dinner with Ayers Rock View, next day morning use the hop on hop off to watch the waterhole. Then going to head back to the airport. Let me know if you have any recommendations.
@@adhishrane6487 hey Adhishrane , spend some time alone their, without any disturbance , u will feel such amazing things , thank you
It is a giant heart
Uluru has such smooth, graceful lines, unlike any other mountain /rock / monolith in the world.
Apparently it is a giant heart... the heart of Aus
❤❤❤
감사합니다 🎉
우아하다는 울룰루 🎉
세상아름다움을 축복합니다
Very engaging video. I didn't want it to end. I'd love to hear an Aboriginal voice on Uluru. Thanks for another great video.
ruclips.net/video/_qyjKND3dAE/видео.html
They don't want you up there.
@@petefluffy7420 who said anything about going to climb it or anything. We are just visitors in this life.
@@nomaanhaque1704 You did. You spoke about wanting to hear an aboriginal voice on the rock.
@@petefluffy7420 Yes but that can be heard from a human. And seen in the carvings that are visible. I gave you one such voice.
One doesn't have to disrespect themselves to find their answers.
Stay well, scrutinizer. I mean no ill will. Your assumption is unfounded here. ❤️✌🏽
Lord knows the EIC stole every gem of my land. I will not be that cause to another culture or history.
Its called Ayres Rock, its been there for over 400 million years
It belongs to the Aboriginals no more then us, what makes them think they have the rights to it, they didn't build it. Its a land formation.
Fool, it was originally called Uluṟu, what right do we have to replace that name then, if that was its original description. Ayer’s rock also has a colonial tie to it, which brought along genocide on the aboriginal people. You need to learn history
Most of those 400 million years, it was not representative of a colonist and named for him.
Would love to go there 1 day
I first visited Uluru in 1986 (when it was still Ayers Rock) and did climb it then. Times had changed when, in 2010 I revisited it with my 2nd and AU wife, who was born and raised in Melbourne. Although climbing it was discouraged, it hadn't yet been banned, but out of deference to my wife, we both walked around the base and I didn't climb it a 2nd time.
@Jim-zd6mn Or alternatively, how very respectful and not being an arsehole.
It seems so Peaceful
السكان المحليين مع الصحراء و هذا الصخرة الرملية التي تشكلت منذ ملايين السنين . كل شي في هذا المكان يذكرني صخور البتراء الرملية و البدو الرحل .
هذا المكان جميل ❤❤❤
It gets the summer lightning storms in Uluru- Kata Tjuṯa in Central Australia and it is very spectacular to watch in the sky and it can be very dangerous when the lightning strikes. Please be careful during a lightning storm not to swim or hike. Trees are attracted to lightning. Lightning easily travels through water and it is at too dangerous for the swimmers. People are watching the lightning storms in Uluru -Kata Tjuta and it can vê stunning to watch by the Rock Ayers Rock is one of the most beautiful places in the world in Australia.🇦🇺
I climbed Ayres Rock in 1990's..Back then it was a 5$ entrance fee...Today it's 38$...All about the $$$
I bet he went back and ate that berry when the film crew left.
LOL!!!
It's amazing to see Jaime Lannister introduce us to Australia
You cannot do this place enough justice in film and still images. It has to be experienced in person, to truly appreciate it and the incredible feeling of awe you get from it. Just be aware that the rest of the experiences around it, are very commercialised.
Its my Rock ship, ill show yall in 6 months when I take flight again for the skies
Dream land
Uluru spiritual vortex
So uluru is a giant pimple on the earths surface
울룰루 🎉
아름다워라 🎉감사합니다
축복합니다
Thank you!!
You can feel the spirit. You cannot explain the spirit, especially from the scientific method. When mankind's science awakens to the spiritual reality, then the explanations may sound ok.
Like make believe?
@@neddyladdy For sure its make believe because it can be felt. Its a different make believe to the scientific method of observation, measurement, and discrete mathematics though, because it has the human factor and planet earth as its foundation. Maybe far more than 50,000 years of human feeling experience.
@@87gob54 I cannot agree, but you are free to go on believing if that is what you want. To me it is utter nonsense.
울룰루 트래킹을 해본 사람들이 부럽다 🎉
Before this place was discovered by white Australians, it was revered by a handful of indigenous Australians who lived in the general vicinity. To say that it is sacred to ALL indigenous Australians is drawing a long bow. It's no more than a symbol for the majority. How many Wiradjuri saw Uluru b4 white settlement? Very few I'd say. It's over a thousand miles between them, with deserts in between. On foot? Just saying.
The symbol this rock serves as is powerful enough to draw people's curiosity and reverence from around the world. In short I really think you are just saying. It's an icon of the Outback, and of Australia.
울룰루 지켜 야 해요🎉
@@TV-by4pcwhen must protect the entire planet but you don't care about that to you ?
Saw it form the sky, as I flew over it in 97.
Who told you that is is the birthplace of Aboriginal legend? Why did you believe them ?
Only for the Pitjantjajatjara people
3 miles under ground
It is a global hart
Anyone from R:1999?
Its proper name is Ayers Rock
Climbed it 3 times in 1986,2001 and 2018. The reason I think closing it was the right decision? Shear volume of visitors…even at 20% of increased visitors numbers - it had become too dangerous with so many people doing it…often with no experience (its steep!).
Kann nix ohne doofe Werbung sein?
Let's worship a fcking rock.
But it's banned climbing this rock
no
So can u still swim in the water hole..? I can’t believe u didn’t pick and eat that berry..? Come on man
The 'natives'..?
Nothing wrong with that stop getting all hysterical over terms .
It’s bs you can’t climb it anymore
“ceremonies have been held here for over 10,000 years..” come on now love be for real😂 this world is no longer then 6,024 years old🤦🏽♂️
It's a rock ffs, people should be allowed to climb it if they want.
Agree politics bull frog
Until inevitably we see plastic bags from takeaway foods left over and graffiti on a rock which is an international heritage sight. Humanity, especially in the time we are in, will not respect the beauty of the place beyond their own convenience
Supatition is a FOOLS RELIGION
You can't prove that either way