I like this. A lot! Question though, what did you do about his chain in the night time? Did you make it into a single speed or did he just walk to the campsite?
Fuck yeah! I feel better about being a one-bike guy now. Everyone seems to have multiples, but a cross bike does everything I want with some slightly aggressive commuter tires.
Wow Lucas what a beautiful video, the editing is amazing. What helmet gimbal is that? Do you use it now for all your videos? Like do you prefer the helmet gimbal over the standard GoPro mount?
Yes that was the gimbal, I don't usually use a gimbal unless the terrain is really rough, also gimbals are better in low light because you rely less on digital stabilization which can artifact the picture
Lol. I knew I wasn't the only one smoking the green when riding. MJ Joints or cookies are the way I like to go. I'm done hiding, and don't care about the MJ laws.
@@lucasbrunelle Coast to coast support. Fed need to reclassify it. It not right locking people up for it. A major injustice in this land of so called free. (I feel like a broken record on this subject).
@@lucasbrunelle Where did they escape from? If a zoo (for entertainment) or breeding facility (treated as profit) just makes humans look worse tri-fold. Curious if the Zoo in this area functions more as a sanctuary though? or rehab facility? (seems to be a common transition these days) as people are waking up to corruption inherent in circus, zoo, meat, dairy industry. People could capture and care for them, or return them somewhere safe (like a sanctuary) give them good homes. I take it most people are killing, eating, selling the skin etc? Flesh worship :( At the end of the day, humans are the reason these snakes are invasive, and now the snakes and other animals suffer for our mistake. Ah shit, yup! Just found this! "Native to Southeast Asia, pythons were first brought to the United States as exotic pets. When the exotic pet trade boomed in the 1980s, Miami became host to thousands of such snakes. Because pythons can grow to such unmanageable sizes, it was inevitable that some irresponsible owners would release the snakes into the wild. But most experts believe the pythons established a reproducing population in the Everglades sometime after Hurricane Andrew-a category 5 storm that devastated the state in August 1992. It was during that storm that a python breeding facility was destroyed, releasing countless snakes into the nearby swamps"
@@JB5D Indeed, that would be it, a ranger told me that over 90% of the wildlife is gone, I remember in the 80s the Everglades was a LOT more dangerous to get lost in, still is dangerous but I see so much less of the animals I did even a mere decade ago