I dont know anything about these ancient peoples, however as a bushcrafter I can tell you that burning the ends of wood that are going into the ground is considered a method of preservation to waterproof it, and also that cutting large timbers with stone tools is lots of work, but fire will cut it for you with minimal labor. Just some of the potential reasons for the burnt timbers.
You know whats crazy is they got us believing we can’t be explorers like the days of past almost like we already explored everything there’s nothing else to uncover but than we have videos like this one and it absolutely shows how LITTLE we really know about the land we all call home. Extremely interesting stuff man keep it up please ‼️
No, you have to be in team that is protected with isolation and exclusion without phone calls or outside influence. Like people who go into a restaurant, bar, bus or airplane and have no exchange with with the other people there. They leave, only knowing what they knew, when they arrived. Or, what they learned from the cloud on their smart phone. These are the leaders of our country who are destroying us with the AI and computer software. I am a real engineer who is on the list of endangered species. Iguana
You are a great kid! And you are a kid to me because this year, I will check off 74 years of being on planet earth! Thanks for being so respectful of the environment and the artifacts and ruins. We have many, many people who are not. Your parents did an excellent job of raising you! This was a great adventure. It would have been a very beautiful place for the people who lived there many years ago!❤
I spent 10 years working in the largest wilderness area in the lower 48 states in Montana and while most may laugh at some wilderness laws, I love that you are honoring them, wilderness is a gift most will never understand or even ever visit. Thank you.
Good for you, I know you have children. No one can expect their children to follow the rules, or have a good moral compass if their parents don't teach them both verbally and through actions. It's good to see that there is still good people like you teaching what's right and what's wrong. You will be blessed even when you don't realize it. I really enjoy your channel. Thank for sharing
Reminds me of a time I was in Hawai'i. I was following a path up to a sacred site. There were signs asking people to respect the site. There was graffiti on the signs implicating Christians had been there and defaced the signs and the site.
The burnt logs remind me of the ancient Japanese Shou sugi ban technique. Could that even be possible? The burnt logs were more impervious to insects and rot while touching the ground. Cool finds again! Great advice too!! 🙏 Thank you!
Burnt wood & pitch is a common technique found the world over. It's likely a very cool example of parallel invention. Some think it may have been discovered as a result of using fire to help cut wood.
What an amazingly awesome place you found there! Gave me the chills in a good way, thinking of the people who once lived there. Thank you for exploring & sharing
You are right. That place is an archeological treasure. Still so intact. Beautiful area. It would be nice to go back in time to truly see how they lived.
I think that's known everywhere? When making fence, it was my father's technique to burn the tips of the posts that are going into the ground to preserve them! We would either burn what goes in the ground and about a foot that's above ground to the point where it looks like it had Cinders on the outside of the post.
Yes if you check out those woodcraft videos about building a Viking longhouse etc they always char the pole ends. The Japanese also have a style where all the exterior of a wooden house is charred, which is intense looking and very clever.
What a lovely attitude you have. So kind and respectful. What you captured is amazing. I can only imagine actually being there, just the birds the vibrant colours and wall art. Yes , I could live there too. Love what you do so we are able to see this part of the world. You’re a fantastic role model to us all. Take care my friend.
Jeff I love watching your videos. Your awe and respect for these ruins is enjoying to see. I’ve always wanted to hike through canyons looking for ruins. I’m 72 and unable to do it now. You provide this adventure for me. Thank you from the bottom of my heart.
9:24 Watching “build your own cabin in the deep woods” YT vids, I learned that an old method of preserving wood longer, like from termites, moisture, and decay, was to char the end meant to go into the ground. When I first heard that, I thought “That works?” Well, our ancestors had nothing but millennia to use trial and error to figure out what works. Those deep woods vids were in Eurasia or Eastern Europe. How fascinating to see similar building methods in the American Southwest.
Thanks for taking us along. Just think about how difficult it was living there but without other reference they didn’t know that. Really hard to wrap one’s brain around it all. Thanks again for sharing.
It seems like that part of the country that Rocky Southwest is just full of an ancient dwellings it seems like that's where all the people lived I know about these things but I didn't know how many they were I kind of can't get over it I'm like there seems so much mystery to this whole deal there's got to be more reasons why they did this kind of living like I wonder if the flash floods that they say could come through if it was more flash flooding back then and had it gotten real high and did they make their homes high because they had had flash floods that were real high before I mean what is going on here
Out of the many who similarly do this, you show more respect and care to these archeological discoveries than all of them. I am disabled, and you inspire my old self desire to explore again. I wished I could get back out there in nature, but watching your clips is the closest thing to being there. Thank you for your sharing your enjoyable moments.
I am impressed with the deep respect you have for these sites. Thank you for sharing your finds with us. I love traveling with you each week. Keep it up!
Thank you for taking the time and effort to make these videos for us to watch. I am always looking forward to watching your new videos. All the best to you and stay safe.
Also loving that as you do all these adventures your knowledge base is continuing to expand! Think about it.... in a few years you will be a respected expert on the ancestrial pueblean ruins! Great work!!
Sometimes when I’m feeling down and having a bad day, I look at one of your videos. The steep red rocks, cactus and desert plants take me far away from whatever is going on in my life. Then there are the long-abandoned settlements that fill me with curiosity about how the heck did they build those places so high up. I mean, seriously, how did they get there? So, thank you. And stay safe.
I just have to say this. I feel compelled to hate all the other channels that do this also. Been watching you for a while, and I whole heartedly appreciate how much you respect these sites. Can’t say the same for the other channels. Thank you for the quality content and your honesty and integrity.
The enhancements on the rock art was fantastic.You need to go back to this area and explore the caves if they’re easy to get to ? Truly enjoyed this adventure. I haven’t seen much of the desert growing up in Michigan fished and hunted the Upper Peninsula and Lower Peninsula. However, your adventures are awesome thank you for sharing them.
Wow! What great finds! Your persistence paid off! Love that you have so much respect for the sites and the rules and regulations to keep these sites in tact!❤ Thanks for taking us along on all of your adventures! They don't have to be epic discoveries, but just the journey and exploration!
Thank you for taking us out on your adventure. It is so interesting seeing these ancient sites. I really appreciate you following all the rules. Your 3D maps help preserve the view of the structure but your care helps preserve the structures for others to hopefully see. They can't last forever but with people like you, hopefully it will last for a few more generations.
So proud of you holding to your standards! Don't do as others do. 😊 This trip was truly magnificent. Just think you can touch put your hands on things that oldest people touched. Amazing. 👍👏
I love how you painted a beautiful narrative of viewing the stars, and other celestial objects at night from this high and secluded location Jeff. What an extraordinary cloistered site high above the eyes of their adversaries gaze, who would have left clueless as to what lay above them. Here I sit at my iMac with a dislocated left arm trying to recover from a fall on Monday night's jaunt, and here you come Jeff with another terrific video. Thank You Jeff, and thank you for respecting the rules of engagement, and the spirits of the ancient ones we admire.
Oh wow, this was my favorite trip so far. The scenery and the ruins! Unbelievable. It did make me a little sad to think that these people went to such heights to survive. Like they were always fearful of being found 😢
Thanks man. I lost my Dad and Grandfather in late 2022. Your videos are awesome, wholesome, inspiring, and immensely respectful to the archeology of the area. You have lifted me up in my moment of extreme loss. Thank you.
Congrats on this amazing find and thank you for being so respectful to the area! I loved your analogy of going to someone’s home for dinner and being on your best behavior! I just found your channel and I can’t wait to see the rest of your videos! Keep up the great work!!
These clips are amazing buddy, the way you present them.. the friendly and unobtrusive narrative make it easy to watch. Best of all is your respect for the environment, and particularly your respect for the next people that stumble across these artifacts and ruins.. keep it up! 🙏🏼
That was very interesting. I always wish we could see these as they were...and how the people used them. Really appreciate how careful you are around the ruins.😊
Thank you for all the delightful places you have invited me along on your travels I have as I have told you spent 5 months on an AFB taking care of my grandchildren while their mom was in the desert war . New Mexico was such a wonderful delight you are allowing me at 77 to see and experience thru you so many wonderful hidden delites thank you keep up the good work and thank you for reminding the viewers who may happen on a site to leave the artifacts they belong to all of us and the ages to come. Gail Piccola Panama City FL.
Thanks for the adventure, Jeff, this one was a truly spectacular site with multiple rooms and still in amazingly good condition; still having “roof rafters” in place !! Thanks again as always for being so respectful of the people and the place; amazing to think that someone was gnawing on that corn cob perhaps many centuries ago. Mind blowing! Stay safe.
Thank you for what you are doing! I am truly inspired by your efforts. Your 3D scanning is fantastic! Think anbout creating an archive that can be accessed by archeologists.
I found your channel today in my recommendations. Excellent! Subscribed with all notifications. Thank you for treating our original national treasures with such care and respect. I can’t wait to have time to binge watch!
just my opinion, but i think others have been here before you. they put up the wall, and even placed items so that the next explorer would be sure to see them. that would also explain the missing mortar. they just ran out of tome to put it all back together. also would explain the sticks waiting to be used.
Hi Jeff, I needed to "get out" of sorts and see something beautiful and new. You always seem to arrive in my notifications at just the right time right when I'm feeling cooped up. Thank you, Have a Great Day my friend, you deserve it.💯🙏
Omg! You were right! One of my favories! Iove your curiosity, determination , dedication, respect, teaching, and ADVENTURE.. I was a bit sad for you that your time was so limited by nightfall . I imagin you were conflicted by the desire to explore and the need to get back to your car safely before dark ❤ THANK YOU for sharing. Much love from Grandma in Peru
Jeff, I just love following your adventures! Your enthusiasm, sense of adventure, and reverence for ancient places and the landscape restore my faith that these qualities still exist in people. Thank you for showing me that wonders are still out there!
Your channel is interesting because it is genuinely new to me. It’s not a rehash of personal theories of tv shows and movies that I’ve seen over and over.
your channel is the best for showing people the really cool nooks and crannies of the southwest. I think it's great and i hope you keep up what you're doing.
I really like the respect you show when visiting these sites in your videos and the tips you give people on how to be respectful. Not to mention not giving precise locations. There are literally millions of of archaeological sites in the four corners area of the southwest and the descendants of those who lived in many of these sites consider them to be markers of their migrations to where they now live and these old sites are considered to be sacred.
I dont know anything about these ancient peoples, however as a bushcrafter I can tell you that burning the ends of wood that are going into the ground is considered a method of preservation to waterproof it, and also that cutting large timbers with stone tools is lots of work, but fire will cut it for you with minimal labor.
Just some of the potential reasons for the burnt timbers.
What Trump calls common sense, GET SMART, GET TRUMP
Iguana
@@iguanaamphibioustruck7352A reptile supporting a fellow reptile. How am I not surprised?
I was coming here to say the same thing. My back ground is European prehistory and it’s very common to find burnt ends of logs as it preserves them.
@@iguanaamphibioustruck7352Get your politic out of here. this ain't the place for it.
*Thank you Jeff!*
“Be the good in somebody else’s bad day.” That’s a great quote! This was a wonderful adventure. Thanks for sharing it.
You know whats crazy is they got us believing we can’t be explorers like the days of past almost like we already explored everything there’s nothing else to uncover but than we have videos like this one and it absolutely shows how LITTLE we really know about the land we all call home. Extremely interesting stuff man keep it up please ‼️
Like the Truman show. His teachers told him everything had been discovered already. 😅😮😢
Just dont explore past the ice wall and find outer space or extra land though. That might get awkward.
like to see places where old movies were made , maybe brass blanks -camps, so on .
They had no cameras back in the day so what people saw was mostly in their memory
No, you have to be in team that is protected with isolation and exclusion without phone calls or outside influence. Like people who go into a restaurant, bar, bus or airplane and have no exchange with with the other people there. They leave, only knowing what they knew, when they arrived. Or, what they learned from the cloud on their smart phone. These are the leaders of our country who are destroying us with the AI and computer software. I am a real engineer who is on the list of endangered species.
Iguana
You are a great kid! And you are a kid to me because this year, I will check off 74 years of being on planet earth! Thanks for being so respectful of the environment and the artifacts and ruins. We have many, many people who are not. Your parents did an excellent job of raising you! This was a great adventure. It would have been a very beautiful place for the people who lived there many years ago!❤
I spent 10 years working in the largest wilderness area in the lower 48 states in Montana and while most may laugh at some wilderness laws, I love that you are honoring them, wilderness is a gift most will never understand or even ever visit. Thank you.
Did you ever see that (potential) monolithic walls in Montana ?
no, I never did @@bobgillis1137
Absaroka beartooth wilderness? Yup I was there in 1979 and 1980. No phone, TV or radio. Absolutely loved it.
@@jackiemack8653 Selway Bitterroot Wilderness mostly and some in the Frank Church River of No Return and Anaconda Pintler wilderness areas.
Good for you, I know you have children. No one can expect their children to follow the rules, or have a good moral compass if their parents don't teach them both verbally and through actions. It's good to see that there is still good people like you teaching what's right and what's wrong. You will be blessed even when you don't realize it. I really enjoy your channel. Thank for sharing
Amen
Always a good thing to follow the rules, or at least not post video evidence of breaking them.
I saw a video of a guy saying "This is the first gun I bought legally."
OKKKKKKKKK then......
@@Ron-d2s it didn't used to be a requirement
Reminds me of a time I was in Hawai'i. I was following a path up to a sacred site. There were signs asking people to respect the site. There was graffiti on the signs implicating Christians had been there and defaced the signs and the site.
The burnt logs remind me of the ancient Japanese Shou sugi ban technique.
Could that even be possible?
The burnt logs were more impervious to insects and rot while touching the ground.
Cool finds again!
Great advice too!! 🙏
Thank you!
Burnt wood & pitch is a common technique found the world over. It's likely a very cool example of parallel invention. Some think it may have been discovered as a result of using fire to help cut wood.
What an amazingly awesome place you found there! Gave me the chills in a good way, thinking of the people who once lived there. Thank you for exploring & sharing
Burnt ends are used in bush craft for that reason.
You are right. That place is an archeological treasure. Still so intact. Beautiful area. It would be nice to go back in time to truly see how they lived.
There is a Japanese technique to burn wood for preservation. Great adventure!
Brazilian also, still nowadays
I think that's known everywhere? When making fence, it was my father's technique to burn the tips of the posts that are going into the ground to preserve them! We would either burn what goes in the ground and about a foot that's above ground to the point where it looks like it had Cinders on the outside of the post.
Yes if you check out those woodcraft videos about building a Viking longhouse etc they always char the pole ends. The Japanese also have a style where all the exterior of a wooden house is charred, which is intense looking and very clever.
Great video. I appreciate the care and respect you have when visiting sites on your adventures. 👍👍🇨🇦
I was going to make the same comment. The ends are charred to prevent rotting, and it is observed by many cultures.
Very cool Jeff.
Great ending message too
What a lovely attitude you have. So kind and respectful. What you captured is amazing. I can only imagine actually being there, just the birds the vibrant colours and wall art. Yes , I could live there too. Love what you do so we are able to see this part of the world. You’re a fantastic role model to us all. Take care my friend.
Jeff I love watching your videos. Your awe and respect for these ruins is enjoying to see. I’ve always wanted to hike through canyons looking for ruins. I’m 72 and unable to do it now. You provide this adventure for me. Thank you from the bottom of my heart.
9:24 Watching “build your own cabin in the deep woods” YT vids, I learned that an old method of preserving wood longer, like from termites, moisture, and decay, was to char the end meant to go into the ground. When I first heard that, I thought “That works?” Well, our ancestors had nothing but millennia to use trial and error to figure out what works. Those deep woods vids were in Eurasia or Eastern Europe. How fascinating to see similar building methods in the American Southwest.
I love our hikes young man! You make them so interesting. I'm 75 and I always enjoyed exploring in my younger years. Thanks for taking us along!
Thanks J ❤. The 3D is great, gives another look of the ruins.
Thank you May good spirit be with you
Going to be another good one! Get your favorite snacks and drinks ready and sit down, relax and enjoy another awesome trek planner video!!
Thanks for taking us along. Just think about how difficult it was living there but without other reference they didn’t know that. Really hard to wrap one’s brain around it all. Thanks again for sharing.
It seems like that part of the country that Rocky Southwest is just full of an ancient dwellings it seems like that's where all the people lived I know about these things but I didn't know how many they were I kind of can't get over it I'm like there seems so much mystery to this whole deal there's got to be more reasons why they did this kind of living like I wonder if the flash floods that they say could come through if it was more flash flooding back then and had it gotten real high and did they make their homes high because they had had flash floods that were real high before I mean what is going on here
Your 3D models are great and give another insight to the ruins for me! Thanks👍👍😁
You bring Happiness to many.🙂
Thank you for respecting all of these amazing sites you visit. And thank you for taking us along to see what you've found! It makes my day!
Out of the many who similarly do this, you show more respect and care to these archeological discoveries than all of them. I am disabled, and you inspire my old self desire to explore again. I wished I could get back out there in nature, but watching your clips is the closest thing to being there. Thank you for your sharing your enjoyable moments.
Always waiting for the next!
Aren't enough words in the world to describe how much I appreciate you taking us along on your adventures.!
I am impressed with the deep respect you have for these sites. Thank you for sharing your finds with us. I love traveling with you each week. Keep it up!
Thank you for taking the time and effort to make these videos for us to watch. I am always looking forward to watching your new videos. All the best to you and stay safe.
Also loving that as you do all these adventures your knowledge base is continuing to expand! Think about it.... in a few years you will be a respected expert on the ancestrial pueblean ruins! Great work!!
Sometimes when I’m feeling down and having a bad day, I look at one of your videos. The steep red rocks, cactus and desert plants take me far away from whatever is going on in my life. Then there are the long-abandoned settlements that fill me with curiosity about how the heck did they build those places so high up. I mean, seriously, how did they get there? So, thank you. And stay safe.
The 3d was awesome, love your channel
Thanks for another great video and having us along!
I just have to say this. I feel compelled to hate all the other channels that do this also. Been watching you for a while, and I whole heartedly appreciate how much you respect these sites. Can’t say the same for the other channels. Thank you for the quality content and your honesty and integrity.
The enhancements on the rock art was fantastic.You need to go back to this area and explore the caves if they’re easy to get to ? Truly enjoyed this adventure. I haven’t seen much of the desert growing up in Michigan fished and hunted the Upper Peninsula and Lower Peninsula. However, your adventures are awesome thank you for sharing them.
I like that..."be the good in someone else's bad day".....cheers buddy ill use that philosophy ❤
Wow! What great finds! Your persistence paid off! Love that you have so much respect for the sites and the rules and regulations to keep these sites in tact!❤
Thanks for taking us along on all of your adventures! They don't have to be epic discoveries, but just the journey and exploration!
I think this is the best find yet
Thank you for taking us out on your adventure. It is so interesting seeing these ancient sites. I really appreciate you following all the rules. Your 3D maps help preserve the view of the structure but your care helps preserve the structures for others to hopefully see. They can't last forever but with people like you, hopefully it will last for a few more generations.
So awe inspiring to see where people lived and worked so long ago! I'm just filled with wonder! Thanks Jeff❤
So proud of you holding to your standards! Don't do as others do. 😊 This trip was truly magnificent. Just think you can touch put your hands on things that oldest people touched. Amazing. 👍👏
So interesting! Thanks for all the hard trekking!!! 🤙
I love how you painted a beautiful narrative of viewing the stars, and other celestial objects at night from this high and secluded location Jeff. What an extraordinary cloistered site high above the eyes of their adversaries gaze, who would have left clueless as to what lay above them. Here I sit at my iMac with a dislocated left arm trying to recover from a fall on Monday night's jaunt, and here you come Jeff with another terrific video. Thank You Jeff, and thank you for respecting the rules of engagement, and the spirits of the ancient ones we admire.
Really interesting site! Another great video. Thank you!
Respect. That is what I have for you. We must all have respect for these wonderful places. Thank you again.
Thank you for watching, Robyn!
Love seeing these places, that still retain roof structure!
Thank you! I really look forward to your posts…. It make my day!
4:35 That's what I love about watching your videos! You take it to a whole new level of exploring.
Oh wow, this was my favorite trip so far. The scenery and the ruins! Unbelievable. It did make me a little sad to think that these people went to such heights to survive. Like they were always fearful of being found 😢
"Be the good in someone else's bad day" What a wonderful thought, Thanks for telling me something that I'll remember forever.
Here's another, be the father you wish you had
I love your work keep it up! Thank you for respecting the ruins you find.
I loved the "stand by" music while we read the designated wilderness regulations for drone use....
You are the good in my day, thank you so much just being you. Safe travels. 🎉❤
Thank you so much, Care Bear Ann!
Thanks man. I lost my Dad and Grandfather in late 2022. Your videos are awesome, wholesome, inspiring, and immensely respectful to the archeology of the area. You have lifted me up in my moment of extreme loss. Thank you.
Thanks for the Adventure and Leaving the history for others
So nice and peaceful
Congrats on this amazing find and thank you for being so respectful to the area! I loved your analogy of going to someone’s home for dinner and being on your best behavior! I just found your channel and I can’t wait to see the rest of your videos! Keep up the great work!!
Great video, as usual. All that hiking seems to have built your stamina. Thanks for taking the long hikes, a bad hip keeps me from such fun.
Watching these post has become the high light of my week. Get all my work done and watch these and relax.
I want to be the first one to uncover the mystery today.
These clips are amazing buddy, the way you present them.. the friendly and unobtrusive narrative make it easy to watch. Best of all is your respect for the environment, and particularly your respect for the next people that stumble across these artifacts and ruins.. keep it up! 🙏🏼
That was very interesting. I always wish we could see these as they were...and how the people used them. Really appreciate how careful you are around the ruins.😊
Thanks again. Great site. I always love when you show petroglyphs & pictographs, I love how you emphasize being respectful of these places
WOAH! The sun really WAS getting ready to set! Amazing adventure, Jeff! Much respect for YOUR respectful attitude in these incredible sites. 🙌🏻🙌🏻
Thank you for always emphasizing respect and the rules of the explorer.
Keep up the great work/fun.
You take me great places I always imagined I would explore (but of course I got old instead). Many, many thanks!
Wow. Fascinating great find.
Thank you. So interesting. I really appreciate the careful and respectful approach you have.
Thank you for all the delightful places you have invited me along on your travels I have as I have told you spent 5 months on an AFB taking care of my grandchildren while their mom was in the desert war . New Mexico was such a wonderful delight you are allowing me at 77 to see and experience thru you so many wonderful hidden delites thank you keep up the good work and thank you for reminding the viewers who may happen on a site to leave the artifacts they belong to all of us and the ages to come.
Gail Piccola Panama City FL.
Burning the ends of the logs help to preserve them and keep them from rotting in the dirt.
And can also be a way to section a log, instead of having to use an axe.
Thank you for sharing your adventures!👍
Thank you for sharing this with us
Thanks for the adventure, Jeff, this one was a truly spectacular site with multiple rooms and still in amazingly good condition; still having “roof rafters” in place !! Thanks again as always for being so respectful of the people and the place; amazing to think that someone was gnawing on that corn cob perhaps many centuries ago. Mind blowing! Stay safe.
Thank you for what you are doing! I am truly inspired by your efforts. Your 3D scanning is fantastic! Think anbout creating an archive that can be accessed by archeologists.
Fantastic site! Thank You for inviting us along!!
You burn the wood to preserve it.
You hit the nail on the head ✅
You beat me to it.
Like the vikings
Yup. Like a natural seal
I found your channel today in my recommendations. Excellent! Subscribed with all notifications.
Thank you for treating our original national treasures with such care and respect. I can’t wait to have time to binge watch!
just my opinion, but i think others have been here before you. they put up the wall, and even placed items so that the next explorer would be sure to see them. that would also explain the missing mortar. they just ran out of tome to put it all back together. also would explain the sticks waiting to be used.
I agree, I was hoping that someone else would would have also notice, the freshly jumbled stacked stones and absence of mud mortar…
Hi Jeff,
I needed to "get out" of sorts and see something beautiful and new.
You always seem to arrive in my notifications at just the right time right when I'm feeling cooped up.
Thank you,
Have a Great Day my friend, you deserve it.💯🙏
waiting!
Thank you for showing us this treasure!
I appreciate the reverence and the respect you have when exploring these sites. Your integrity is admirable! Thanks for these videos.
Great trip,,,thanks for taking us along and keep on keeping on. Looking forward to the next one.
Glad I found your channel. This is one of the top explorations!
“Be the good in someone else’s bad day” is a great tag line.
Omg! You were right! One of my favories! Iove your curiosity, determination , dedication, respect, teaching, and ADVENTURE.. I was a bit sad for you that your time was so limited by nightfall . I imagin you were conflicted by the desire to explore and the need to get back to your car safely before dark ❤ THANK YOU for sharing. Much love from Grandma in Peru
Exploring and teaching by example in these beautiful places is so wonderful. Thank you for this journey.
Jeff, I just love following your adventures! Your enthusiasm, sense of adventure, and reverence for ancient places and the landscape restore my faith that these qualities still exist in people. Thank you for showing me that wonders are still out there!
Your channel is interesting because it is genuinely new to me. It’s not a rehash of personal theories of tv shows and movies that I’ve seen over and over.
Thank you for another great adventure!😊
Thank you so much for taking us with you on all your adventures and sharing all the beautiful places you visit.
Very cool site. Thanks for sharing your trip.
Awesome find! Thank you for being a respectful and responsible visitor. ❤️
Another great adventure! Thanks, Jeff.
Glad you enjoyed it, Chuck!
😊👍enjoyed this hike!
Thanks for your respect of these ancient ruins. Good work, Jeff!
Much appreciation for these things you show. Thanks!!
Amazing trek, thanks
your channel is the best for showing people the really cool nooks and crannies of the southwest. I think it's great and i hope you keep up what you're doing.
The petroglyph of the bull behind you in the beginning is freaking amazing!
Great videos keep them coming
Very nice , interesting how the center support was burned from the fire , glad you captured it !
I really like the respect you show when visiting these sites in your videos and the tips you give people on how to be respectful. Not to mention not giving precise locations. There are literally millions of of archaeological sites in the four corners area of the southwest and the descendants of those who lived in many of these sites consider them to be markers of their migrations to where they now live and these old sites are considered to be sacred.
Thanks for sharing your explorations , 😊
I’m happy to have you along on the journey with me! Thanks so much for your support!
-Jeff