Exploring Deep into the Grand Canyon’s Hidden Mysteries

2024 ж. 25 Сәу.
830 485 Рет қаралды

While exploring the Grand Canyon I came upon ancient ruins from a prehistoric civilization that once thrived in this rugged place. I backpack into this remote natural wonder to explore some of the stories hidden within these massive walls. Intriguing discoveries still need to be made for us to fully understand this place. #ancientdiscoveries #grandcanyon #ancienthistory #exploration #adventure
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Пікірлер
  • Hey everyone, thank you for watching! A couple quick comments. - My friend Josh helped me with filming this vid. He's a professional photographer/videographer and does great work. You can find his site and contact info here joshthomson.website/work - If you want to learn more about the Native perspective in Grand Canyon, you may want to check out this book amzn.to/4dhNWUy

    @Desert.Drifter@Desert.Drifter9 күн бұрын
    • I'm sure you know this, but These are called 'Tambo' in Peru ( food storage ) the Inca stored quinoa in round Tambos which made for easy cleaning, and hidden along trails for extended hunting trips.

      @BrickHausFischer@BrickHausFischer9 күн бұрын
    • 7:06 snake sitting next to that toad

      @erberIsSillyhawk@erberIsSillyhawk8 күн бұрын
    • They were hiding there from dinosaurs! 1

      @WojciechGlapa@WojciechGlapa8 күн бұрын
    • makes you wonder if there are ruins that's are still prestine out there some were somplace that hasn't been touched since the regional people left still holding what they stored in them

      @linearburn8838@linearburn88388 күн бұрын
    • ​@@linearburn8838 I was wondering that very same thing 🤔.

      @kellyhill4410@kellyhill44107 күн бұрын
  • I’m not sure what you’ve changed but the cinematography in your videos has improved dramatically. Those shots of you with the river as a backdrop are just incredible. Keep them coming! Great job

    @santefia@santefia12 күн бұрын
    • Ditto, Andrew! Those opening shots of you in silhouette were spectacular! Thank you for continuing to care about all of us who merely watch your videos, but do NONE of the work, happy to watch you! And I'm so glad to see you brought your friend along this time; I know I will never meet you, but that doesn't mean I don't care about you! I have three sons and I always want them to be safe, as I do you.

      @dianehenry6540@dianehenry654012 күн бұрын
    • The camera my mother has on her new I phone is Hollywood quality. It is 😮🤩🌹😍🥰

      @JamesJones-cx5pk@JamesJones-cx5pk11 күн бұрын
    • I told you in the video his friend Josh is helping film a lot of this and has that really large selfie stick

      @haroldsprayberry9937@haroldsprayberry993711 күн бұрын
    • @@haroldsprayberry9937Remember, the quality of the video isn’t dependent upon the length/size of the selfie stick…. 😂

      @darlenefraser3022@darlenefraser302211 күн бұрын
    • A better camera.

      @edward8606@edward860611 күн бұрын
  • I'm a 99 year old brain in a jar and I just want to thank you for making these videos since I can't exactly go around hiking and camping myself. god bless ❤❤💯

    @RussellB@RussellB10 күн бұрын
    • You can see amazing things still. It's called a dji mini 4 pro and a little help

      @AtradiesInc@AtradiesInc11 сағат бұрын
    • ​@@AtradiesInc they dont go all that far 😢😢

      @SamtheIrishexan@SamtheIrishexan8 сағат бұрын
  • I'm in my 60's & I'm completely blown-away by the high-quality of videos being shown on youtube, so-much-better than the standard programs that you'd find on television today, this one here is Top-Notch Material, keep up the great work !!!

    @Diogenes1360@Diogenes13609 күн бұрын
    • Glad you enjoy it!

      @Desert.Drifter@Desert.Drifter8 күн бұрын
    • @@Desert.Drifter so theres no indians you can ask for the history.. i know they have stories from 100,000 s yrs ago.. should so a story on why the military owns part of the canyon.. might be your last vid if you did.. ausie..

      @harrywalker968@harrywalker9685 күн бұрын
    • People have been doing it for over a decade, theirs like a million of these dudes making basically the same video regularly

      @gate7834@gate7834Күн бұрын
  • *I'M 70 YEARS OLD AND DISABLED, HAVE PRETTY MUCH ACCEPTED MY NEW PHYSICAL LIMITATIONS* 😻😻😻 *THANK YOU FER TAKING ME ALONG VIA TECHNOLOGY. WITH YOU ON ADVENTURES I'M NO LONGER ABLE TO HAVE* 😻😻😻

    @ZIZTERGABRIELLA-hs8hp@ZIZTERGABRIELLA-hs8hp9 күн бұрын
    • Quit yelling! Sheesh

      @jimsalabim9203@jimsalabim92038 күн бұрын
    • @@jimsalabim9203…to me, it’s not yelling…it’s emphasizing…and it’s so much easier to read when you’re up in age…it’s clarity to our eyes…especially the black print as it used to be in the beginning of the internet…after the color changed for the print to this grey color, I noticed more complaints about one’s vision becoming impaired…intentionally done…?…in today’s world…?…I don’t put anything past anyone anymore…

      @chadfarber6147@chadfarber61478 күн бұрын
    • ⁠…to me, it’s not yelling…it’s emphasizing…and it’s so much easier to read when you’re up in age…it’s clarity to our eyes…especially the black print as it used to be in the beginning of the internet…after the color changed for the print to this grey color, I noticed more complaints about one’s vision becoming impaired…intentionally done…?…in today’s world…?…I don’t put anything past anyone anymore…

      @chadfarber6147@chadfarber61478 күн бұрын
    • Lol ok, we'll to everyone else it's what you do when you want to yell something in type.

      @jimsalabim9203@jimsalabim92038 күн бұрын
    • @@jimsalabim9203yeah, the fact it's *bold* caps lends additional credence to the idea that she's doing it for better visibility. gota be hard to proofread your comment when you can barely see it. anyway, what a cool old lady- reminds me of my grandma. she never let her age and increasing disability keep her spirit from adventure.

      @420Khatz@420Khatz7 күн бұрын
  • The finger marks and prints give a very real human touch to these ruins. The desire to know more about these people is never-ending. Looking forward to the longer video, thank you.

    @garytull7730@garytull773011 күн бұрын
    • Evidence suggest they were cannibals

      @Clownmagics@Clownmagics11 күн бұрын
    • r u sure u wanna know more and the truth it is very dark and violent and drama and heart ache

      @feelinghealingfrequences7179@feelinghealingfrequences717911 күн бұрын
    • Europe already had huge stone castles for 1000 years when these people were living in mud huts. Not really that fascinating, is it?

      @NPCHSN@NPCHSN10 күн бұрын
    • @@feelinghealingfrequences7179 The truth is always best

      @t16205@t1620510 күн бұрын
    • I will politely disagree. There are many places in the world with "wear and tear" that don't resemble water levels perfectly. No one on earth was around back then, nor were there pictures available that long ago, so there is no way possible to rule out what it really looks like. They are signs that there was a global deluge, which has evidence.

      @americanlostinvietnam3721@americanlostinvietnam372110 күн бұрын
  • My oldest brother did a grad school internship in the Canyon and village 1972-1973. When he was done he retrieved my 13 year old butt to come there and help him pack up to return to school. I was there for a week and helped him minimally! What a wonderful week it was. One day I decided I was going to hike to the bottom and back; when I told him he said no you won't, so of course that made me more determined. I filled his old fashion canteen with water and made a beeline for the Bright Angel Trail. What an adventure! I made it to the two mile marker and decided to rest a bit. Next thing I remember is a middle aged couple patting my knee and asking me if I was OK. I'd fallen asleep! I had a big decision to make: continue my journey or head back to my brother's apartment. Suffice it to say I returned to my brother's apartment. He knew I couldn't do it, which is why he said no you won't instead of can't (he also knew it would be easy to locate me if I was stupid enough to try it). Andrew is spot on...a Grand Canyon Mile is different!

    @ObamAmerican48@ObamAmerican4812 күн бұрын
    • That’s so funny! 😂🤣 You must have strong Guardian Angel’s! Or The Spirits helped you. 👍🤗😘

      @anniekirts6621@anniekirts662111 күн бұрын
    • I hiked down the Kaibab trail and up the Bright Angel trail. I was in my prime, active duty military and the hike up was the most strenuous day long torture I have ever been through lol.

      @GusMitchell-mh7pl@GusMitchell-mh7pl10 күн бұрын
    • Haha, great story! Thank you for sharing

      @Desert.Drifter@Desert.Drifter9 күн бұрын
    • That's my favorite trail. Haven't been there since I was 13 either though...

      @Tina-mt9cl@Tina-mt9cl7 күн бұрын
    • I love your story!

      @angelalewis3645@angelalewis36455 күн бұрын
  • First, you do a good job of narrating your excellent video without resorting to sensationalism. Thank you. Secondly, you clearly respect the canyon, culture and the journey of humankind. Thank you again. I visited The Canyon once. In about 1980. I knew I could devote a lifetime of study to it, but that was not to be. Now I am 75 with time on my hands but not the where-with-all to do what you are doing. Thank you for following your passion and for sharing it.

    @vicfeazell@vicfeazell9 күн бұрын
    • Your channel popped up in my feed…and am thrilled to have found your awesome content! I was born and bred in the Southwest. Been to The Grand Canyon several times in my life. Moved away for about 3 decades then moved back. It’s in my soul to live out here in the SW. My late mother was an archaeologist and anthropologist out here. You can have a lifetime of history and experience out here. I look forward to watching more from your journey…❤

      @ramonarichardson7904@ramonarichardson79045 күн бұрын
    • Well said!

      @johnnyoutwest@johnnyoutwestКүн бұрын
    • dude it used to be a building a a cataclism melted it all, check out @thetartarianmeltdown

      @thesurferguy21@thesurferguy21Күн бұрын
  • I've been to the Grand Canyon twice from Australia. The first time, as you say, I'd only ever seen it in pictures and in documentaries so I wasn't prepared for the scale and grandeur and beauty of the place, nothing can prepare the visitor for what unfolds. Sadly, I could only experience it from the South Rim, though on my second trip I wanted to take the mule ride down to the Colorado but it was booked for two years, so I ended up taking a helicopter down to the Havasupai reservation. There, along with three Japanese tourists and our "Indian" guide took a three hour horse ride down to Moonee Falls along trails that followed the canyon walls not much wider that a meter and a half. On one side was the canyon wall, on the other was a long deep drop. If I was a much younger man I would love to walk Bright Angel Trail and walk some of these trails you guys walk on the North Rim, though I wouldn't be brave enough to "mountain goat" those very high ledge trails. I love the Grand Canyon and if I had a choice, when i pass away I would have my body left on a high sunny ledge somewhere. Thank you guys, so much for showing us sights that most people will never see or experience in person.

    @ellesmerewildwood4858@ellesmerewildwood485810 күн бұрын
  • Thank you for including us in your adventures. This is new life for many with illness and infirmities that cannot travel to these places. Magical

    @seuthsayer@seuthsayer11 күн бұрын
    • DITTO Loving his awesome adventures !!!

      @user-fk8nd1pf2t@user-fk8nd1pf2t5 күн бұрын
    • Yes ditto, I took am disabled and can't do it anymore, and we thank you for doing this!

      @APBinVTA@APBinVTA4 күн бұрын
  • I`m 70 and hill walk in Scotland. I would`nt dare walk where you do, but I admire you for your stamina and determination in your explorations of ancient sites and structures. The scenery and views of the Grand Canyon are awesome. Thank you for sharing your adventures, and may you continue to do so.

    @polyboroides2615@polyboroides261510 күн бұрын
    • I've backpacked in both locations and they are both dangerous in their own ways, encountering potentially life threatening unexpected situations in both places if you are not prepared and react accordingly. The high temperature low humidity environment in the Grand Canyon is very stressful on the body if you are in it for more than a couple of days, especially on the south side of the canyon. Not so much where these guys are on the north side for a short trip when snow is still on the ground. Either way, you would be wise not to attempt hiking in the canyon if you have a cardio issue.

      @TomJones-tx7pb@TomJones-tx7pb2 күн бұрын
    • bro its all melted check out @thetartarianmeltdown

      @thesurferguy21@thesurferguy21Күн бұрын
  • Seeing you hiking with a friend and not alone makes a video more soothing. Great storytelling too.

    @svkva@svkva8 күн бұрын
    • Never hike alone, make sure to have a SAT phone and personal locator beacon, and carry a firearm that you know how to use. I used to love hiking alone, I usually only took my dog with me. After learning about the dangers of hiking alone- I don’t do it anymore. Be smart and prepared. But go forth with love in your heart for nature and all life, while staying tuned into your surroundings- too many people disappear or are injured and far from help, and perish, in our national parks and state forests, and in other remote areas, when they go out on their own. Take a reliable friend with you. Be safe and God Bless👍💕✨

      @jacquelyndiamond3301@jacquelyndiamond3301Күн бұрын
  • “Commanding view” couldn’t have explained it anymore simple and more perfect.

    @ShangDi_became_Jesus@ShangDi_became_Jesus8 күн бұрын
  • When you showed the night skies it reminded me of the beautiful clear night skies, I saw back in the mid to late 80's in the high desert area of 29 Palms in the high desert of the Mohave desert, only they were so much more spectacular back then. I was in the middle of a huge Marine Corp training area with zero light pollution and when I would get off of radio watch in the middle of the night when it was clear I would sit out there instead of getting the sleep I needed to get and just look up at the bands of stars that was nothing like I had ever seen before, beauty in its purest form. Seeing it with your own eyes is the only way to properly enjoy it, I can't put it into words, I don't think anyone can. Maybe earlier peoples saw seeing something like what I saw as a religious sign that made them do what they did back then, it's likely been talked about many times before.

    @tommychew6544@tommychew654412 күн бұрын
    • The stars, star lore and astronomy are very overwhelming. I cast my vote with people who see the stars as religious signs as is stated in the Genesis account.

      @0U8123MTA3@0U8123MTA311 күн бұрын
    • I think you put into words of your experience very simply and beautifully.

      @kathieburchett@kathieburchett10 күн бұрын
    • I was in 29 palms in 95-99. I know what you’re talking about. Absolutely amazing. Four years of that never got old.

      @TheSeanpm76@TheSeanpm769 күн бұрын
    • Instantly thought of the night sky there too! Lived in Joshua Tree, less than 1/8 mi from the NP west entrance, and worked on the 29 base, 2000's through late 10's. The night sky way out at Camp Wilson was utterly beautiful. Was better than that of my front porch looking over JTNP. You're so right, you cannot put into words what you see. You do have to experience the magnificent beauty with your own eyes. Miss those Mojave high desert nights.

      @RaeS3@RaeS39 күн бұрын
  • As a seventy year old woman with a lifelong fear of heights your films fill me with both awe and terror. Thank you for taking us to places most of us will never be able to see. Some wonderful film making 👍🏼👍🏼

    @grigorisgirl@grigorisgirl10 күн бұрын
    • When I see heights my neuropathy takes a hit by coming in several waves. I wonder if it might be helping me? What do you think if you also get that feeling from heights? It certainly isn't going to hurt while watching.

      @HellNoMoreBiden@HellNoMoreBiden10 күн бұрын
    • @@HellNoMoreBiden I just think well he’s posted the film so hasn’t fallen over the edge!😆

      @grigorisgirl@grigorisgirl10 күн бұрын
    • @@grigorisgirl Never want that to happen. There's a story of a guy working for a newspaper I believe in Utah and his camera was found after they went looking for him. A bear he was following did something.

      @HellNoMoreBiden@HellNoMoreBiden10 күн бұрын
    • @@grigorisgirl Well, eventually he probably will. IMO, it's not if but when. Also IMO, it's DF/S to be doing this stuff solo -- a Darwin Award candidate for sure. Hope it was worth it... When it happens though, people will say the same old (and tired), "Well, at least he died doing something he loved." Right...but I think he'd rather still be alive though, yes? ;-) -- BR

      @billredding2000@billredding20009 күн бұрын
    • 34 seconds into this video there's a guy looking in one of the caves standing on a rock with his right foot and looks like he's about 800 ft from the river up Man that looks like suicide to me I don't see him tied off or nothing that is freaking scary if that rock ever moved you'd be finished man I don't get it it's just what I'm seeing😮😮😮

      @davidroberson8030@davidroberson80309 күн бұрын
  • Six years ago, we rafted here with a company and climbed to the Grainery. On the way down a friend snaped a picture of the wife and I with the canyon and river below. One of my all-time favorite pictures.

    @craiglenhard-rvrguyd@craiglenhard-rvrguyd10 күн бұрын
  • Coming from Ukraine years ago, I found myself at the Northern rim of the canyon one day. When I stood there, my jaw dropped, I couldn’t move. I’ve seen plenty of other beautiful corners of this planet, yet nothing came close to leaving an imprint as big, as Grand Canyon. Camped at a small campground housing only few camp spots at the rim. One day I tried using a trail there (don’t remember the name anymore) to get down to the river. Made it nearly to the bottom, yet had to turn around helping two young hikers in distress to get back up. Perhaps next lifetime I will be able to repeat the trail?

    @YuriMazur887@YuriMazur8877 күн бұрын
  • I confess I really enjoy longer videos. I can't get enough of these beautiful places!!!!!

    @sallysilvershoes847@sallysilvershoes84712 күн бұрын
    • How long is long enough? I think you’ll enjoy the extended cut version :)

      @Desert.Drifter@Desert.Drifter9 күн бұрын
  • I Absolutely LOVE the GC! My best friend and I hiked the Rim2Rim, South to North back in 1999. We took it easy, more so, to take the time to explore side canyons and such. We started planning the trip two years before, learning all we could concerning needs, foods, water consumption, dangers, wildlife, etc. We would practice hikes going up and down mountain terrain along the Wasatch Front, as we lived in the SLC area. I've always felt a connection to the GC but our hike into the bowels blew our mind. My friend had a degree in Geology and I am a Registered Nurse with experience in both emergency and surgery. I can't stress enough how being prepared and knowledge going into the GC is tantamount. It is not a hike for the unprepared. Yet, every year, people need to be rescued or their body recovered. The GC is unforgiving. But it is also the most amazing place. I am 71yrs old now, and due to health reasons, I am restricted in my movements. I've told both my children to cremate my remains and have them spread in the GC.

    @lindabriggs5118@lindabriggs511812 күн бұрын
    • My brother and his best friends hiked R2R probably about the same time...late 90's? also hailing from SLC...but he went with a group, not just one friend and he's in his 60's now. They did the same as you, hiking up Grandeur Peak or canyon hikes. From above the Parley's Walmart (he tells me) there's a spot where you can see the entire spread of the Avenues. They went out nearly every morning, no matter the weather, and after a couple of seasons of that they decided to hike the Grand Canyon. They didn't stay overnight, they hiked down and back up in one day. How cool, what a small world.

      @HeidiSue60@HeidiSue6011 күн бұрын
    • @@HeidiSue60It is indeed. My friend and I would hike from the bottom of Snowbird to the top of the tram and back down again. We also did the 5K runs every Saturday morning. There was some cause or group we'd always did. After the run, we'd go to the Farmers Market and grab a BBQ'd Salmon sandwich. Our favorite, after a hike in Little , a famous Garlic Burger at the Cotton Bottom. My friend and I hiked everywhere. She still lives in West Jordan, but I'm living now in the Southwestern Appalachian's of North Carolina. My family lives here now. It's not the same, but is lovely. And the Appalachian Trail is only a few miles west of here.

      @lindabriggs5118@lindabriggs511811 күн бұрын
    • @@lindabriggs5118 And every bit as beautiful. I've laid a lot of miles on the Appalachian trail...

      @Jreb1865@Jreb186511 күн бұрын
    • Good for you. I think R2R is best done more slowly, as you did. You get to actually enjoy it that way

      @Desert.Drifter@Desert.Drifter9 күн бұрын
  • Even on camera the magnitude is impressive. I can't even imagine what it looks like in real life.

    @MascletaTheFirst@MascletaTheFirst7 күн бұрын
  • Hello, I'm from Germany and recently discovered your channel on KZhead. I quickly watched all of your videos. What you do is first class. Better than Discovery Channel or National Geographic. Videos of a very high standard, very good camera work and first class editing - in my opinion not always at a high scientific level but that's what makes it good because I can really identify with your style. That's how we should deal with what our earth offers us - always very respectful of the previous inhabitants and their landscape. And you do it all alone! It's amazing! Above all, your manner and way of speaking puts the viewer at ease without becoming boring or losing the suspense. I really appreciate your work. Thank you very much! Best wishes from Germany! Please keep going!

    @73brio@73brio11 күн бұрын
    • Glad you recently found the channel. Yep, I’m definitely no scientist, just a guy who likes drifting around the backcountry. Thanks for watching!

      @Desert.Drifter@Desert.Drifter9 күн бұрын
    • Mein Gott...so well spoken Sir, about this wonderful gentleman !! My sentiments EXACTLY ❤

      @BPantherPink@BPantherPink8 күн бұрын
    • Hello from Australia. An meine landsleute.....stamme aus Trier.

      @norbertschmitz3358@norbertschmitz33588 күн бұрын
  • As a Swede......keep e',m coming!.......I love history and I love Geografy! Your Channel are The Goat!! Greetings from Sweden 💛💙💛💙

    @TobiasLundqvist-ys2xw@TobiasLundqvist-ys2xw12 күн бұрын
    • Hello, I hear you have some spectacular geography there too... I was in europe in the army ages ago but was amazed by all the great geography and old and ancient structures that still stood. We have great geography all over the u.s. but ironically when you travel to them no matter what state you are in you find yourself traveling through a garbage can. It amazes me to this day people are so lazy, and so stupid to throw their trash out the window rather than take it home and throw it away properly. I have to give European's props for taking care of their environment much better than we do. You can travel for miles without seeing a piece of trash and use maps from hundred years ago that still relevant. They cut tree, they plant fifty in it's place. The same nuts that riot about climate change thrown their trash out the window lol..... So props to you my friend.... don

      @donbot5671@donbot567111 күн бұрын
    • ​@donbot5671 My experience as someone who believes in man's effect on climate change is different than yours. We're more likely to reuse, be careful about the packaging of food we buy, avoid buying one-time use plastics, buying fresh food items or growing our own food items, and most likely to pick up the trash of others along our paths. However, this country could learn a lot by following the cultural lessons of your forefathers - use only what you need and give thanks as you go. We have a long way to go, but we'll get there. :)

      @KeePenne@KeePenne11 күн бұрын
    • @@donbot5671 I agree with you. I have been exploring the west and southwest of the US for 25 years. The trash problem has gotten worse. Unless you get way off trail you find it all over. I am not saying everyone in a group is bad. But some of these nomads and van life people leave a mess. Another issue I see is the increase of off road vehicles going off trail. I am all for having fun in a rzr or jeep. But stay on the marked trails and stop tearing up the land. These people then get mad at Bureau Of Land Management when they close areas down to off roading. What do they think is going to happen? The last three years more and more camping and 4x4 roads have been closed off. Or in the case of camping areas being changed to fee areas.

      @billping2633@billping263311 күн бұрын
    • Thanks for watching from across the pond!

      @Desert.Drifter@Desert.Drifter9 күн бұрын
  • Thankyou so much Andrew!!! Your passion to explore and drag all of us You Tube 3rd string bench sitters along for the ride is completely a fantastic gift to us old farts!!! How vast and how deep is the legacy of this great land America and the ancient peoples that lived here before any of us were even thought of? To even get a small glimpse of how these people lived is quite amazing. Surrounded and immersed in a natural world setting and experience many of us can barely fathom. To live one's life totally steeped in the natural rythems sounds sights and experience of the natural world must have been both magic and raw as life ebbed and flowed not only around you but through you! The energy of glowing fires radiating through the canyons beacons of human life to the inhabitants. With bedazzling stars overhead the sound of water falling and flowing, the brilliance of the sun by day the moon by night. Neither an electric or high frequency microwave,radio wave or buzzing electri high power line to disturb the crystal clear silence of the sky. Except for the cracking power of a lightning storm and the ominous thunder claps rolling through the canyons! What thoughts raced through those peoples minds as they huddled in their cliff shelters on cool brisk nights seeking the warmth of their precious fire. Possibly eating ground corn cakes and deer meat heated on a rock . With watchers eyeing the perimeter of their dwelling knowing that what they had worked so hard for could possibly be taken away from them if marauders attacked. Maybe the inhabitants were peacefull cooperative and accepting of their neighbors to a degree. However given human history present day included what are the chances of that! I wonder how many of us could even stand to survive in their world for a few days let alone a month or a year. Would any of us even have the mental capacity to cope with the shock of being in their circle of experience? Thanks Andrew so much!

    @edwardbain5391@edwardbain53913 күн бұрын
  • I’m 42 and can’t thank you enough for making these amazing videos. I can barely get off the couch to drive to McDonald’s let alone hike the Grand Canyon. I’m really enjoying the scenic views

    @paulywalnuts24@paulywalnuts242 күн бұрын
  • Don't change a thing about how you do these vids...the photography, the narration, the chill. I click the button and am lulled...

    @kcouche@kcouche12 күн бұрын
    • Yeah, he does a good job of capturing the mood of the place, or at least what I imagine would be the mood.

      @highplains7777@highplains777711 күн бұрын
    • Thanks homie 🤙🏼

      @Desert.Drifter@Desert.Drifter9 күн бұрын
  • Building the granary up high makes sense.The desert southwest has periods of a lot of rain followed by long droughts. Also the Colorado river in the past before all the dams were built was known for its unpredictable floods especially in the spring. So where would be the best place to store your food and materials? Up on the side of a cliff not only to keep it safe from floods but rain. If part of your village gets flooded or destroyed you can rebuild. If you also lose your tools and food reserves now you have a much larger problem.

    @billping2633@billping263311 күн бұрын
    • This! It seems really obvious to me that protection from the elements on the canyon floor is the reason. In addition, I would imagine one would have to work with the terrain and find the best nook to build your storage.

      @ruthreyes7843@ruthreyes7843Күн бұрын
  • I’m 33 and recently disabled, I can’t get out anymore due to a neurological condition. Watching these makes me feel like I’m there. Thank you

    @deanhughes3179@deanhughes3179Күн бұрын
  • Narration and filming both really great. One of the best hiking channels around. Keep up the adventures!

    @cribbsprojects@cribbsprojects8 күн бұрын
  • ok, here's my analysis...you hired a hollywood producer...bought a $750,000 camera...hired an archeologist and forensic scientist...and i forgot a few more things. all kidding aside...this is your best video thus far...so well done...s and t up. well done. we appreciate the location, because we all knew this was not kentucky...cheers.

    @FLYBOY123456789@FLYBOY12345678911 күн бұрын
    • *Agree, this one was fantastic!*

      @1nvisible1@1nvisible19 күн бұрын
    • Thanks Flyboy, I wonder what a 750k camera would make this look like 🤔

      @Desert.Drifter@Desert.Drifter9 күн бұрын
  • As a 67 yo woman with arthritis, I love watching your videos! Thank you for the tours!

    @carlaperkins655@carlaperkins65511 күн бұрын
    • Yeah. #metoo😂😂

      @paulapridy6804@paulapridy680411 күн бұрын
    • Same age; same ailment; sentiment!

      @suej4834@suej483411 күн бұрын
    • @@suej4834 get some Ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine, its parasitic

      @kinchegayowie6167@kinchegayowie616711 күн бұрын
    • Thankyou for these incredible landscapes & explorations that you show us. Even in my Long ago backpacking days this is not a trip I could have done. I did not know that the ancient archeological sites in the South West were so extensive, & ranged in such difficult areas. Seeing is believing. Thankyou.

      @user-te6rt5uu3v@user-te6rt5uu3v11 күн бұрын
    • I can say the same!

      @jeffreyyoung4104@jeffreyyoung410411 күн бұрын
  • I’ve been to the Grand Canyon three times (which is quite a feat when I live in England) for a few days each time, and I always find it awesome. The fact that it was carved out by the Colorado river is mind blowing. Depending on the time of day the canyon seems to change with the light, and I’ve been there first thing in the morning, late evening and mid day and the scenery constantly seems to change. I’ve told other people it’s a must visit place.

    @charliegould5865@charliegould58658 күн бұрын
    • Ah yes, you are so correct. That’s one of my favorite attributes of the canyon, how it changes color depending on time of day

      @Desert.Drifter@Desert.Drifter7 күн бұрын
  • Thanks for taking us on this trip. Stunning. Very thoughtful too. I can hear in your hushed voice your reverence for that place. Excited to see more. Be safe too.

    @briann7744@briann77449 күн бұрын
  • I am SO looking forward to the extended cut, Andrew!! And I'm glad you had a compadre with you, on this adventure. Blessings.

    @pamabernathy8728@pamabernathy872812 күн бұрын
    • Thanks for watching! I look forward to hearing what you think of the extended cut

      @Desert.Drifter@Desert.Drifter9 күн бұрын
  • My dad and I hiked down the Canyon a few times together back in the 80's and he had been down there dozens of times. The glorious splendor of the space never ceased to amaze me, even as a youngster, and to think that people once called it home. Just awe-inspiring. Thank you for sharing your exploration.

    @GTAADDICT3D@GTAADDICT3D11 күн бұрын
    • Thank you for sharing your videos of the GC. Is just a beautiful place to visit and the Petrified Forest too. They still have a Tribe the lives there can only visit by invitation not sure if is the Hoppy Tribe. We have visited

      @anacleta424@anacleta424Күн бұрын
  • Just discovered your channel last week, have watched most of your recent posts, and look forward to seeing many more! I'm 77 and not able to travel anymore, although I DID make an auto trip via Route 66 in 1969, from Alabama to California. Your videos are well done and I enjoy them immensely. I appreciate your reverence and consideration for the locations you visit, how you never damage the artifacts. The history info is spot-on. I follow Time Team and always I think of how I wish we could experience the past as it was instead of having to "guess" how structures looked and functioned... Thank you for what you do!

    @13milfy@13milfy5 күн бұрын
  • Another amazing video. I have always wanted to visit the Grand Canyon. Thank you for bringing me closer to it. I love that you always take us on adventures one would not have the chance to experience, but you bring the experience to us . Thanks for this adventure 😊

    @waynemiller6156@waynemiller61564 күн бұрын
  • Oh yay! I’ve been waiting for another video! I’m 5 minutes in and am overwhelmed with the massiveness of the canyon. Beautiful photography. The colors are breathtaking. Also, the size of the space is deceiving. Even watching on my tiny screen gives me vertigo. I can only imagine being there. Your videos are my respite in my busy day. ❤ *Waiting patiently for the next one*

    @joannarippon3910@joannarippon391012 күн бұрын
    • Each one is well worth the wait.

      @fly_speck_cafe@fly_speck_cafe12 күн бұрын
    • Oh my the VERTIGO is real! Would love to do this in real life, but i know i would be a blubbering idiot.

      @todd8737@todd873711 күн бұрын
    • It is a place like no other. Thanks for sharing it with me

      @Desert.Drifter@Desert.Drifter9 күн бұрын
  • I did this hike two years before I had my hip replacement. That was one of the toughest hikes I have ever done. Yet the Puebloans or whomever lived here probably did that hike a few times a year. They could hunt elk and deer on the No.Rim at 7,000 ft and farm at 2,000 ft. Even more crazy to contemplate is that they must have had to carry food stores, elk meat, pottery for water, and small children. I was really scared about some of the exposure. I will never forget that hike. Truly exceptional work with this video.

    @tomgaffney7127@tomgaffney712711 күн бұрын
    • It probably why u had to get a hip replacement! But good for you. U did it.

      @jessamynspain1466@jessamynspain14669 күн бұрын
    • It’s a good one, glad you’ve experienced it for yourself

      @Desert.Drifter@Desert.Drifter9 күн бұрын
  • I we enjoy your trips makes me feel the thrill,I am 89 years old ,thanks

    @encarnacionramirez8678@encarnacionramirez86782 күн бұрын
  • Thank you for being respectful when traveling thru the indigenous sites

    @craigallen7427@craigallen74278 күн бұрын
  • Warm greetings from New Zealand, Andrew. This Kiwi was incredibly fortunate to visit The Grand Canyon and to do the overnight mule ride in July, 1996. A highly emotional experience for me, with tears on entering the Canyon, and tears and strong emotion when nearing the top of the trail out. I have never looked at geology in the same way. This stunning place woke me up somehow. Thank you so much for this excellent video. 😊

    @lindamckenzie4543@lindamckenzie454311 күн бұрын
  • Archeology, native oral stories, evolving age technics. Theories put forward, tested, discussed,vetted, researched. No ends ever absolute. Resembles life’s mysteries. The joy is in what we can imagine. Observe the smile on his face as he does what we wish we could do. The world is full of wonderful things. I’m sure we should all be happy as kings! Thanks for letting us peek into this part of the world!

    @kentstringer4160@kentstringer416011 күн бұрын
  • I"m french and I went to the Gand Canyon 20 years ago. The view from south rim just overlaoded my brain: too big, too complex and too beautifull! We went down Bright Angel trail, ate and slept in Phantom Ranch, and went back by South Kaibab trail... As it was in winter, we started with snow and ice at the top, to the lower part showing a desert landscape with agaves and catuces... A kind of reverse mountaineering! Nice to see those rocks and rivers again in your video! Thanx!

    @remoussenardremi9026@remoussenardremi902610 күн бұрын
    • Sorry English is hard to spell. You're really good at it. Even where you got it wrong it was easily understood, well-educated guesswork. Thank you for your testimonial. It is somewhere I would like to visit someday. - from the USA

      @natanluiza2936@natanluiza29364 күн бұрын
  • As so many commenters have stated, your work is beautiful, professional and so very welcomed by those of us who haven't the ability or means to do what you do. You are a blessing. I thank you so much. The way that you narrate is such a welcome change. Your voice is calming, your informative yet somewhat awestruck tone is proof of the reverence that you hold for the canyon. Also, it is such a refreshing change to be able to find a video that I can watch in front of small children. No profanity, no whoops every time that the trail turns the bend to reveal an entire new landscape of profound majesty. Thank you. Sincerely, New Subscriber

    @cwavt8849@cwavt88495 күн бұрын
  • Badass brother! I hiked the GC when I was 17. Camped 2 nights in the bottom. Still one of my favorite memories! Thanks for taking us with you. Memories came flooding back!

    @caddydaddy53ify@caddydaddy53ify11 күн бұрын
  • Andrew, only a little way into this video. Camping in the Grand Canyon -- priceless.

    @pamabernathy8728@pamabernathy872812 күн бұрын
  • First time I've seen one of your videos. Absolutely amazing! Thanks for sharing your adventures with us!!!

    @davidjimenez7556@davidjimenez7556Күн бұрын
  • Keep walking so we keep watching. Thank you for your love for exploring and your youth!!!

    @stevegardenhire5698@stevegardenhire5698Күн бұрын
  • Such amazing country! When I was a boy and young teenager, back in the 1960's, some of my favourite books and stories were set in and around the Grand Canyon. I've never been in the canyon but I have flown over part of it. What an amazing sight from high above! Those people that lived, all those centuries ago, in the canyon must have had a very rugged and difficult existence. I lived, as a hunter/gatherer, for some years far north of the southwest, in high mountains and deep rich forests. My dwellings, thirty plus years ago, were tepees and old abandoned prospector cabins. I know how hard and sometimes very difficult that existence is, often in survival mode. Your videos are so well done. Thank you for sharing your adventures and knowledge. Safe travels and happy hiking! Cheers from an old timer that has climbed mountains and spent cold winters by myself in the bush.

    @kestrelfeather@kestrelfeather11 күн бұрын
  • Experience and taking NOTHING for granted is key to survival. I loved hiking, camping, boating, hunting, and living in Arizona desert and the Canyon.❤️❤️🇺🇸

    @patriciau6277@patriciau627710 күн бұрын
  • An absolutely incredible watch. Thank you so much for sharing your adventures in the Grand Canyon. You include everything that makes my heart sing... Geology, wildlife, photography, history, nature at its spectacular best. So glad i found your channel ❤

    @jojo1960uk@jojo1960uk9 күн бұрын
  • It's very kind of you to share with us, thank you!

    @stefanschleps8758@stefanschleps87585 күн бұрын
  • You ask why they would build their grainaries so high up, and my personal take is: Food security. It looks like a southern wall, where it has a good overhang. That immediately controls the temperature inside to help preserve dried foods like grains, seeds, etc. It protects the contents from water of any kind. Great flood, or pouring rain, the supplies will remain dry. Because it is so well protected, they only need to build it once, and then never really need to maintain the structures themselves, unlike anything on the confluence, which will see exposure to all of the weather the valley will see. So it saves on labour. Instead of having to maintain the roof of their storage, they have more time to tend their crops, hunt, gather, train their children, play games, maintain their own dwellings, make tools and clothes, and other manufactured supplies, etc. I remember reading in a book, something that really makes a lot of sense, and I'll paraphrase here, _"Real wealth is knowing you won't go hungry before the next harvest season in ready."_ For people living in such an area, i think that would resonate with them strongly. For the highest one, with the wooden supports? It makes me think of a lookout tower. It is high, with a very commanding perch over the valley below. It might have held a ceremonial purpose even. Just randomly thought of what it would be like if you had a fire on a perch light that, and when it burned through a thin bottom, it would disperse glowing coals and ashes into the wind, which could be akin to fireworks at night. Thinking along those lines, it might have held a signal fire, for alerting other settlements down the river (though I do doubt this one due to lack of extreme range sight lines). These are just the musings of an average idiot in B.C. Canada, who has utterly no experience with the cultures and histories of those who lived in the southwest.

    @dposcuro@dposcuro12 күн бұрын
    • Yeah, I think so too. I agree with your thoughts on this & I have encouraged Andrew to consult the older Natives on this 🌞 🔥 🌟

      @teresadvorak6145@teresadvorak614511 күн бұрын
    • I disagree, it wouldnt be made from wood,if it was to house fire. For me its a final drying platform.

      @stevensalt3683@stevensalt368311 күн бұрын
    • Be cool to measure both temperature and humidity at the structures vs canyon floor over the winter and spring

      @jamesgrisham9700@jamesgrisham97009 күн бұрын
  • Absolutely the best video I have ever seen, as a 76 year old I would have never been able to see these wonders had it no been for u and your channel- a heart felt Thanks!!

    @vannrollins9464@vannrollins946411 күн бұрын
  • Just one word - beautiful! Thank you Andrew for all you do.

    @Flashjan1@Flashjan110 күн бұрын
  • Amazing trips! Can't wait for the extended version. Thank you for sharing with us.

    @budiprasetya@budiprasetya9 күн бұрын
  • Thank you once again for your exploring the grand canyon I haven't been there in years. Thank you for always being so respectful to my ancestors cultural sacred sites you have my deepest respect ! ! !

    @jamescharles3210@jamescharles321011 күн бұрын
    • I am amazed at the beauty thank you, how sad we cannot know who lived there and all the answers to the mystery of there lives . An extraordinary life the buildings so very high the work and effort so amazing to see the engineering the wood used the mud stuko, we are constantly amazed that these ancestors and wonderful people could build and had stamina and skills that put us to shame with the stuff we build today that does not last. Respect to the ancients so little is known about and thank you for a wonderful time with you and your friend Aussie says hi.😊

      @elsiecater156@elsiecater15610 күн бұрын
    • Glad you enjoyed it!

      @Desert.Drifter@Desert.Drifter9 күн бұрын
  • Just awesome. Beautiful. Breath taking

    @CynthiaMauk-bv3mu@CynthiaMauk-bv3mu12 күн бұрын
    • Many thanks!

      @Desert.Drifter@Desert.Drifter8 күн бұрын
  • Thank you very much. I live in Australia and most likely never get to see the Grand canyon. Your footage was easy to watch and your knowledge was well presented. I love rocks.. The thing most that I would love about the Grand Canyon is looking at the earth history. Seeing all those layers of rock etc. It is an amazing place

    @cenedraleaheldra5275@cenedraleaheldra52759 күн бұрын
  • Thank you for taking us to these out of reach places. It really gives us so much insight into a country that we’ve lived in for so long, but know so little about.

    @CHEEZNIP12@CHEEZNIP123 күн бұрын
  • I grew up out there in the West. People who live there get it. Those who don't can only imagine. The desert Southwest is truly sacred terrain. The Native Americans were right. It is holy land. I would absolutely love to travel with a guide like you!

    @BugTheRoot@BugTheRoot12 күн бұрын
    • I bet you don't even understand 5ge real history and true history not the made up one that man made up

      @kengreen4933@kengreen493311 күн бұрын
    • Why didn't they make pyramids?

      @herohour6496@herohour649610 күн бұрын
    • @@herohour6496they did

      @Grace-ui3bs@Grace-ui3bs9 күн бұрын
  • Mind blowingly fascinating. Those paths were pretty loose and rugged, my heart was in my mouth seeing you both teetering on the edge with hundreds of feet below you. Thank you again. Look forward to the next part. Take care, keep safe. ❤ Dorset, UK

    @susanalbone5101@susanalbone510112 күн бұрын
  • Very well filmed and relaxing narration - you've gained another subscriber! I think there has to be so much we just don't know about The Grand Canyon along with the other canyons & mesas inhabited down the millennia throughout the 4-Corners region/Desert Southwest. I've imagined living in those places and why I would risk life & limb, & that of my children to daily traverse such treacherous terrain - with the tools of my existence on my back and then carrying baskets of produce hundreds of feet up those canyon walls, and it really doesn't make sense... Then I look at the river and I think of the desert - when it rains, all hell brakes loose and you certainly don't want to be at the bottom of a canyon then. Maybe it's that along with a relic memory of historic catastrophes that dictated they could farm and hunt on the canyon floor, but felt it safer to live at height, above the risk of flash floods. and would protect them from other predators... You'd love an X-ray machine that could look back in time. Safe travels & thanks for bringing the desert to us. I always loved it!

    @SmallWonda@SmallWonda5 күн бұрын
  • Absolutely beautiful scenery! Thank you for sharing.

    @tiffanyroybal3315@tiffanyroybal33157 күн бұрын
  • Yes.... perfect way to enjoy a great Friday.

    @ValkryieRising@ValkryieRising12 күн бұрын
    • Hope it was what you needed!

      @Desert.Drifter@Desert.Drifter8 күн бұрын
  • Dude, this is my favorite channel. Thank you so much for doing this and sharing it with us.

    @barfthebarf@barfthebarf12 күн бұрын
    • I agree - my favorite channel too ❤😊

      @Catherine1151@Catherine115111 күн бұрын
    • My pleasure! Thank you for supporting the channel by watching the vids

      @Desert.Drifter@Desert.Drifter8 күн бұрын
  • Thank you for being so respectful of the area's history.

    @carolcoopertaylor@carolcoopertaylor9 күн бұрын
  • You guys have the best camera work, and interesting educational comments. Also good music. Thank you.

    @cecilelaforce3686@cecilelaforce36863 күн бұрын
  • Being an Aussie, you guys are so privileged to have this in your country .brilliant tour mate loved it

    @waynedavis9397@waynedavis939711 күн бұрын
    • You have your own amazing places that are just as glorious. You have King's Canyon in Watarrka National Park. You also have Capertee Valley which is a geological wonder too.

      @jazzcatt@jazzcatt10 күн бұрын
    • Check out the Blue Mountains. Even larger than the Canyon if I remember correctly. Amazing view's.

      @roytrenneman2200@roytrenneman22009 күн бұрын
    • Thanks Wayne. The Grand Canyon is one of the 7 Natural Wonders for a reason. But you guys have one too, it’s just underwater

      @Desert.Drifter@Desert.Drifter9 күн бұрын
  • The twelfth century is about the same time as the demise of the Mayans too. Some have purposed a El Nino or La Nina climate event is responsible. Years ago I enjoyed a helicopter tour down below the rim of the Grand canyon. I shot many photos looking up the canyon walls from inside the Heli. I've also experienced a ten day hiking trip in Wyoming's Wind River Range wilderness area where ten miles in a day will kill your ass and the horse flies are so big they knock you down to tenderize you before they take a bite. Thank you man.

    @secularsunshine9036@secularsunshine903612 күн бұрын
    • The Winds and the GC, my two favorite places. You’ve got good taste

      @Desert.Drifter@Desert.Drifter8 күн бұрын
  • It is worth reading the chronicles of the exploration of García López de Cárdenas, one of Coronado's men, and who was the first European to visit all these lands in 1540. What an adventure! Good video and thanks for sharing it.

    @jaxric8518@jaxric85188 күн бұрын
  • im not in usa im in australia and the only movies weve seen of grand canyon is related to old explorers boating the length. i ve never see such beautifull scenery ,ty Sir you are indeed incredible .

    @ROBByJONEs-2@ROBByJONEs-29 күн бұрын
  • Your videos have sparked a new appreciation and interest in the southwest indigenous peoples. Incredible.

    @EchoCascade79@EchoCascade7911 күн бұрын
  • your videos not only educate, but inspire me to enjoy my surroundings even more. You truly encapsulate the feelings of wonder and awe in your videos and I appreciate it immensely. Thank you!

    @fuzzywumble@fuzzywumble11 күн бұрын
    • Wow, thank you

      @Desert.Drifter@Desert.Drifter8 күн бұрын
  • Such a beautiful video! Amazing! Thank you for it. I enjoyed it alot.

    @kiprice8327@kiprice83278 күн бұрын
  • I am mesmerized. My palms were sweating as you walked the ledges. Thank you.

    @sandralindberg8548@sandralindberg85485 күн бұрын
  • As soon as we see that you uploaded a video, we click on it immediately!!! Your videos are so incredibly interesting...and enjoyable. We've watched other Southwest exploration videos, but yours beat them, hands down. It's your commentary that does it. You are quite knowledgeable, but throw in enough curiosity to make us really think about the past. Can't wait for the next video to drop!!!

    @jackofnone9439@jackofnone943912 күн бұрын
    • Thanks for the continued support my friend

      @Desert.Drifter@Desert.Drifter7 күн бұрын
  • I look forward to your treks through canyons and valleys. Thank you. 😊

    @wealthyraeharward5334@wealthyraeharward533412 күн бұрын
  • Well done gentleman. Thank you for the beautiful journey and history lesson.

    @seanb.4712@seanb.47128 күн бұрын
  • I’m soo glad ,that I found your channel!!! I be able to see all that places I ever dream of ! Thank you !🙏 keep on doing it for the people around the world!! ❤

    @happymoon5991@happymoon59919 күн бұрын
  • Close to where I live is a beautiful park with canyon, streams, hills, etc. A logging company / mill set up at the end of the 1800's. It was wiped out by a massive flood, only a few artifacts remained. A few years ago, we had another massive flood - and the whole place was destroyed. We're talking water 50+ feet deep. Takes a long time to drain. I can imagine a flood raging through the Grand Canyon might induce the natives to relocate. I enjoy your channel. Thanks.

    @Janer-52@Janer-5211 күн бұрын
  • My how huge this place is, I just can’t comprehend. Absolutely breathtaking. Also thanks for being so respectful towards all you find out there - Native pottery, stones etc. Thanks so much for sharing this x

    @PeppieP@PeppieP11 күн бұрын
    • It really is!

      @Desert.Drifter@Desert.Drifter8 күн бұрын
  • first video I've seen of yours, enjoyed it thoroughly 👍🏻

    @BostonBlues@BostonBlues20 сағат бұрын
  • Excellent narration and videography. Wild America is still wild… even today.

    @568843daw@568843daw7 күн бұрын
  • Man, this is some of the best filmed archaeology on u tube! Thank you for telling us what you do know, and being humble enough not to surmise that which you don't! I'm from the anza borrego d sert, and much of the plant life I've been taught is similar to that I've seen on your excursions, so I find pleasure identifying what I recognize....though I'm currently living in tornado Alley, I miss my desert, and you help that yearning a great deal.For that, I'm extremely grateful. Thank you for sharing!!!!😂

    @MichaelHards-rn6ee@MichaelHards-rn6ee11 күн бұрын
  • Dude 90,000 views in 8 hours with 170,000 subs is insane. Needless to say, we've all been waiting for this vid

    @kevinsippeljr9984@kevinsippeljr998411 күн бұрын
    • Haha, seems like it doesn’t it?

      @Desert.Drifter@Desert.Drifter9 күн бұрын
  • First time viewer. It's windy in Denver tonight and I can't sleep. So I went to the Grand Canyon. Thank you this was incredible. I enjoyed your narration too. Extremely good quality video too. Thank you...subscribed. Let's GO!

    @7msjster@7msjster2 күн бұрын
  • Your videos are amazing and I keep returning to watch more. Thanks for giving us all the vicarious experience of hiking the southwest.

    @phillipabsher3469@phillipabsher34698 күн бұрын
    • Thanks for being a return viewer!

      @Desert.Drifter@Desert.Drifter8 күн бұрын
  • I found out one night staying in a cabin on the north rim that I get altitude sickness and had to take at bus the next morning for the southern rim once there I felt soooo much better and stopped throwing up now I carry an altimeter so that I stay lower when in the western lands. so I will never explore the state of Nevada and the Himalayan mountains. I can only watch others. I did manage to hike the canyon north rim to south by quickly descending from the north rim. my one and only trip so I enjoyed to the fullest. and I enjoy every bit of this filming!! thank you

    @jb-fp2vs@jb-fp2vs12 күн бұрын
  • Went to the G.C. about 20 years ago. The first time we walked up to the first stop on the bus tour I cried. Until you've actually seen it, the pictures cannot do it justice. I remember the feeling of how loud the silence is. I know that sounds strange but it's the only way to explain the feeling being there.

    @anniesundene4047@anniesundene404712 күн бұрын
    • Even seeing it in person, I couldn’t comprehend it. My brain was treating it like a really beautiful painting.

      @Wanderlenz@Wanderlenz11 күн бұрын
    • Many people have the same experience when entering Yosemite Nat'l Park from the South entrance, coming out of the long, dark tunnel and seeing their first expansive view of the vast valley below and the towering granite walls with waterfalls. It's equally stunning in Spring, Summer, Fall, and Winter. When I was a kid my family and I camped on the North Rim of the Grand Canyon and then hiked to bottom of the Canyon and back up in one (long) day. It was brutal for me as a kid even though we were avid hikers & backpackers. But the landscape and environment was like nothing else I had experienced up to that point and was well worth the effort. The night before we set out it was snowing on the North Rim and had just cleared when we set out at 4:30am with 5" of snow on the ground. As the day went on and the sun beat into the walls and bottom of the Canyon, the temperature rose to 104F that day! The only motivation to keep moving uphill and forward on the return back up the trail to the rim was that the temperature would cool with every additional mile. :)

      @bbfoto7248@bbfoto724811 күн бұрын
    • Well said. The saying, “the silence is deafening” seems cliche, but when you’ve felt the silence of the desert, you understand it

      @Desert.Drifter@Desert.Drifter8 күн бұрын
  • I appreciate your interest, understanding and just your physical stamina to continue exploring these canyons. We are all benifiting and enjoying your work.

    @Mechman0925@Mechman09257 күн бұрын
  • I really appreciate the way you've developed the narrative of these videos. You've moved on from just some guy climbing around saying "Hey, this is cool, I wonder ..." to providing more context and information.

    @KrisHughes@KrisHughes11 күн бұрын
  • Such absolutely stunning landscape!

    @Moraren@Moraren12 күн бұрын
  • This was an amazing video. Kept watching to the end. Very well done, entertaining and kept me focused on the topic. Great photography audio was superb. I subscribed to see more great content. Thank you for the awesome quality of your documentary. Looking forward for more.

    @ALeAnn365@ALeAnn3654 күн бұрын
  • Great Work for those of us who cannot physically duplicate your efforts. Thank You!

    @cariboupetepeterson3711@cariboupetepeterson37118 күн бұрын
  • Your delivery and photography are spell binding! I honestly can’t put one of your videos down. Totally enjoy your channel! Orlando, FL🏝️😎

    @patcallahan485@patcallahan48512 күн бұрын
  • The museum in Flagstaff has lots of artifactsfrom G.C. and surrounding areas. My great grandparents(Kirby) and my grandparents(Walter and Mary Strange) built the MOQUI LODGE back in the 30's in Tusayan. It was torn down long ago.

    @MrSnakerock@MrSnakerock12 күн бұрын
  • The scenery and cinematography in this episode is amazing! Thank you for taking me along on your latest adventure!

    @phlebgrl6064@phlebgrl60646 күн бұрын
  • Drifter,.. this is one of your best! Very interesting and beautifully filmed. MORE please!! Ever since I was a kid I've wanted to visit the Cliff Dwelling throughout the South West..... but sadly never have. As a Kid I dreamed of sleeping overnight in some remote site. Wonderful memories. Thanks for sharing my friend. Ax

    @axerxes3981@axerxes398110 күн бұрын
  • Great respect brother, I’m glad you have a buddy along.🇦🇺

    @malcolm120@malcolm12011 күн бұрын
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