Nick Zentner & Gary Paull | June 3, 2024 Scouting and Brainstorming for a new 'Nick On The Rocks' episode. 'Nick On The Rocks' playlist: • Nick on the Rocks
Nick & Back Country Gary ! Geology at its finest. In the field, Walking the walk and talking the talk... 36 minutes of heaven! Thank you Nick & Gary. Wonderful informative video.
OMG Gary Paul! This is great! What fun it would be to follow these two around. My family is from that area, and I lived and worked there in my early adulthood. I sure miss it. This is a real treat.
Are there actual hot springs at Garland? As I went there in the scouts as a kid and we were told that it was Garland Mineral Springs and the springs we were shown seemed as they should accordingly to be of mineral almost carbonated seltzer springs and now later in life i hear of them being reffered to as hot springs of which I do not recall at least not to the similar hot springs I've experienced at scenic which were truely very hot. I'm not saying that they are not hot springs or mineral springs either way I'm simply trying to understand of my own experiences is all and it seemed to me that you maybe of agood person to ask? Thx for any info if you happen to respond.
@@williambrodmanvi5944 I was about 5 years old at time ... He had like a little hippie commune going on 🤣 any who ... Yes your correct it's mineral springs alot of iron in water .... I was told it was built as a training camp .... Winters were tough had to snowmobile in and out .... 🥰
Holy smokes I just noticed Nick has over 90 thousand subscribers I have be following Nick for well over 4 years.Nick really doesn’t promote his channel The content and the community is what is bringing people here.Gary is one of them .
The North Cascades ain't the Tetons. The range is almost entirely hidden from highways. Hiking to highpoints will always yield unique views. Take us there! Rugged peaks, hidden cirques, hanging glaciers, waves of ridges - the reason we love these mountains, the American Alps.
Some beautiful granite specimens and gorgeous views. I always loved traveling to the PNW. I used to look for loads up there just so I could stop and study the geology.
My family had a mining claim on mount Index in the 1990's, 2 square miles of the mountain. East on Hwy 2 from the town of Skykomish is an ancient town called Scenic. There you will find the Scenic Hot Springs. These are non-Sulfuric hot springs coming from the source at upto 120 F. I am looking forward to learning more about this region and can't wait for the fall!
you'd probably be amazed at unchecked floods on rivers, Nick. Those boulders are just tossed around like nothing by the water. They make the loudest bangs as they're bashing against each other.
Your reaction to the big boulders in the Sky got me thinking. Could it be that we get so captivated by the spectacular geology of eastern Washington that we tend to overlook the interesting stories in western Washington rock?
Very cool! When I came to the Bretz A to Z I drove Hwy 2 threw Monroe and several of those small towns. I would pull over at the bridges and even stopped at two of the small towns. Had coffee and a danish plus a couple little antique shops. Glad to know I stumbled bumbled threw a possible Zentner movie site! lol It's a absolutely gorgeous drive. I only did this because some of the roads south of I90 were still closed for snow(or so I thought) by the big volcanos.
You 2 get into the best adventures. Wish Backcountry Gary was available to come look at and give us advice on our public access trails into our Limestone forest restoration project. 11 acres on Guam, Community Forest. We have spent 8 years cutting paths to clear invasives and establish natives. Its time to think about how the public are going to access our wonderful park.
Have you considered also going to the Index Mine? It's a spur off the Lake Serene trail and you can see inside the Index granite and also see the veins of copper ore they were trying to mine. That would be an interesting perspective as mining was a big part of settlement in the area, and it also shows some more of the local geology. The mine is fairly stable, but there is one open shaft to watch out for.
Excellent video! I happened to be in Index recently to climb and noticed that the index granite has occasional blobs of more fine-grained granite. I found a reference to this phenomenon in Dave Tucker's "Geology Underfoot in Western Washington" when talking about its use in the Smith Tower (p. 215) that attributes this to a hotter more mafic magma mingling with a more silica rich magma and forming enclaves in the rock. If you do another video about Index's geology, I would love to hear more about this. 😁 Also, love the idea of Volcanoes A-Z in the Cascades.
For some really stunning examples of large polished boulders in the area you should take a look at the boulder drop. Really unusual polished heucos and some 20ft+ rocks
OMG NEW A TO Z ANNOUNCED, IM SO EXCITED!!!! CASCADE VOLCANOES, HERE WE COMEEEEE!!!! Love Gary by the way, thank you for introducing him to us. He looks like such a gentle and generous soul.
I love this stuff 🎉 you really bring forward degrees of comprehension that lacks everywhere else. Just wish you could do other states as well. Colorado, Utah, new Mexico, Arizona.
Come climb Mt Adams (or at least part of it) with me Nick. Lots of Cascade Volcano stories from many different ages and incredible visuals from the gorge going north up 141 to Mt Adams. Can figure out housing for you and whatever crew you might want to bring. I’ve summited Adams over 40 times. Imagine the content!! 😎
Right when Mr Paul was holding up that piece of granite...... Around 6:00 plus minutes into your video..... I was noticing what a good listener he is..... There's reasons why you guys are so smart ....... He didn't interrupt you. Extremely interesting listening to both of you. I remember up there by Snoqualmie pass you said Denny mountain was part of the plumbing for the volcanic rise... Because it had marble exposed...
If you went upstream (up highway 2) a couple of miles, at Eagle Falls, the bedrock is dished out from the erosive activity of the river and the material it moves. It's pretty amazing. Probably still part of the Index Granite. Avoid on weekends!
Got a fishing pole? Lots of good fishing here, fish behind those big rocks. Toward the end I noticed a shelf, that is eroding looked like some big rock in that too. Thank you looking forward to NEW A-Z stay safe ALL
So... what was that 'big blue blob'? I've been fascinated by this type of stone on the Upper Cowlitz - another west-side river with really big boulders.
I can already see "Cascade Volcanoes A to Z" may look like! Maybe, Nick on the Rocks could also shift the stories in that direction?! Why not!😉 How exciting!!😃💞💗Aww✨
😎👍 Iv been to index few times in rockhoundg n finding gold 👍 And each rock you see has been tumbling for years of floods Someone asked me this question once👍
Hey nick just a thought from someone very familiar with that area around mine 34 35 your wandering how the rocks were so polished…look at the sand between those boulders..garnet everywhere from further upstream crushed very fine
Superficial geologic map of skykomish and Snoqualmie rivers area, Snohomish and King counties, Washington By Derek b. Booth I found this paper to be very informative
I've lived most of my life in Monroe and this is wonderful! Thank you. FYI if you go upriver where the valley narrows, even bigger rocks are regularly rolled along in our HUGE high water events (we've had several "hundred year" floods in the last few decades) Year round cabin residents have reported they can hear the boulders crashing together (while nervously watching the water rise) This has been going on for thousands of years, so...
Ive done the Persis-Index traverse. Its a beautiful area. It feels like a much taller, more alpine mountain than its summit elevation might suggest. I remember a lot of variety of rock. Ive also done some climbing at the Index town walls. Its good climbing, although some of the areas on Icicle creek near levenworth are much more picturesque. Its cool seeing you explore areas close to home.
Gorgeous day. Lake Serene is a lovely hike, and the falls. WOW, Fascinating info, Gary. I didnt know the names of most mountains in the Skykomish area. I drive Hwy 2 west often, so thank you very much. I love it!❤
doing 'episodes' around places like lake serene, which is a popular place, makes the science relatable - the audience has some context, and that will help draw a broader audience. I think that Gary is gonna be a good field producer, as he understands what will make compelling content.
Do the hike to Lake Serene, you will not be disappointed, used to be a glacier right at the lake. When the Skykomish floods it has some amazing power and can move the course of the whole river, those rocks would be easy for it to move. Thanks for the video of Index. 👍
My home crag. Did you notice all the freshly broken boulders and trees at the base of the quarry area? Late last year it came down. If you poke around the sand you will see many river spuds that came down from the top of the cliff. And even higher up by the Upper Town wall I find lots of river stones. When I think about the large very well rounded granite boulders on the river I imagine the river being higher and eroding down so some of those boulders might have been 1000-2000’ higher but in the same spot. Also did the continental ice sheet come up river this far?
You were near the spot on the railroad where, back in the late 80's, my friends and I (accidently) broke off a huge chunk of rock from the hillside. It rolled down, going through trees like toothpicks; rolled up to the tracks, then rolled back. It sounded like thunder echoing off the valley walls. The rock has since been shoved off the grade.
More Gary is always a good thing, his ability to put 2D information in to 3D is a stunning asset. We don't know the Cascades so someone who can contextualise the geo map blobs gets three thumbs up from us.
Awesome video and would love a video on Mount Index and the area! I’ve climbed there a couple times and always so fascinated in the rock, it is very impressive. If you guys walk around and find a couple of the routes like “Toxic Shock” it is a super cool splitter crack.
I love watching you explain the mountains, I have been up a lot of them logging, always enjoyed the views and beautiful rocks you'd find in the streams or logging roads blasted from the mountains.
34:17 Well it sure seems to me that the granite boulders had to be a result of glacial outburst flooding. What else could have sent boulders this size tumbling down for miles and getting them rounded out like river cobbles? Even accounting for what might be age-old granite? They couldn't have been rafted in on the glacier nor drop-stone, otherwise they'd be much more jagged. That's as far as my thinking goes.
I love that area. I had a memorable post hike meal at the Index Cafe after a four day hike up in the Alpine Lakes/West Foss. While you're in this area, I'd like to know more about the marble found in the Foss area. Cheers!
I have to ask, how is the fishing? Such a nice spot. Wild rivers and rugged peaks. Thanks for the geology Nick, I really like the energy the two of you bring.
My cousin RIP was the leading salmon gill scale scientist and he used to take me "counting" on various riviers right there and further north. What an amazing place, the PNW.