Hi everyone. Goodonya for watching! Hey, if you wanna check out the awesome folks who did the science for this film, check out www.envirodna.com The not so big secret is that my bloody incredible wife works for EnviroDNA (I got myself a sweet freebee!). Helen and I will do a 'science' explainer film shortly to unpack a little of this projects potential (I'll keep it lively, as will Helen...).
His message of "I want to have my RU-vid cake and eat it." If you think we're fucking up the environemnt (we are) then go live like the Amish, otherwise keep quiet.
@@andrewcurtis4568 Huh, he lives about as close to Armish as you can get in a practical sense and puts out nothing but good vibes and thoughtful stories
@@andrewcurtis4568 did you watch the whole video mate ? He acknowledged that precious metals are necessary for humankind to be what it is today, he's just questioning the methods of how we extract them and interact with our environment. It's okay to be thoughtful, unhappy and question your surroundings dude. You don't have to be all or nothing, like "well if it's f***ed then I may as well accept it", one man turning amish will achieve less than putting up a video raising awareness
Wow, according to Screen Australia, Beau was awarded the Skip Ahead grant in 2020 to make this film. Shows you how much effort goes into making these amazing and inspiring videos. Goodonya!
You're never 'just' a story-teller, Beau. You're a consummate story-teller who lives the story first, then opens the eyes of all who stop to hear you tell it. Another great video, mate. Thank you.
As someone who's done a loft of rafting and kayaking in west Virginia, I have seen runoff like this from the mines. Poisons the rivers and destroys the life that surrounds it. Great video my friend. Great video.
@@joe52428 preach! It's disgusting what we allow industry to do to our own back yards. And what's even worse is these days, those industries have some individuals convinced that strip and pit mining and the pollution that follows is not only necessary, but good. It's madness I say.
So glad you did this video. As a Tasmanian born and bred, this is sadly all too common. Between the mining leases and the logging in some of the most diverse and special wilderness in the world, it's a real head scratcher. What ARE we doing? Really.
Is there really no plan to do something about this? No funding or even an non profit organisation to help??? I just cant understand it. It makes me very sad and angry.
Hi from Michigan is the United States. I live a half mile from a chrome EPA superfund site( our well water has been tested and is supposedly safe). I am nearly 64 years and have long regarded our environment as the most important thing in my and our lives. I enjoyed your paddle trip and look forward to more from you. Your words chosen are beautiful and inspiring. I hope some day they can clean up the river in Tasmania. Peace.
As someone who’s ancestors have worked in copper mines and many other destructive industries, I appreciate your ability to tell this story without vilifying those who were just doing their job to get by. I think your way of telling these stories makes it easier to accept that as humans we screw up and need to change.
@@blakeryan7894 Yet too many fail to see this point and buy all the propaganda that surrounds it, sad really. Climate change isn't the problem, large corporations and corrupt three letter organizations are and they used to be held accountable until they became lobbyists (legal bribery) and commonplace in legislation.
Stunning film Beau. Beautifully anger inducing. Over the 100+ years this mine was in operation and the $4bn (in 1995 value) extracted, there will no doubt be a murky paper trail to some extremely wealthy companies and individuals with eyewatering intergenerational wealth. No matter how much time has passed, these people should be compelled to fund remediations, not leave it to the communities or the state. As a society we should no longer be allowing those that caused, and continue to cause this damage to go unchallenged. These pollution profiteers have the taste of blood on their hands.
wow such great rhetoric. meaningless and unproductive but a great word salad. What does "beautifully anger inducing" mean? And what does being outraged on RU-vid do?
@@iluvbewbies23 what part of what i said is bullshit and what does it being edited have to do with anything? This one's edited too? What's the significance? If you're going to be critical be specific.
you made multiple thousands of people aware of current natural atrocities by showing it to them through the eyes of your lens and your wonderful storytelling. This is more than any of the creators are doing these days, and I am so grateful I have found a channel that can share his own experiences in a fashion that makes me aware of it and makes me thinker about these issues through my own eyes. Thank you so much Beau for your wonderful channel
Thank you. Thank you and your amazing team, this is one of the best local productions I've viewed in quite some time. The pre-production and planning paid off big time and the entire team should be extremely proud. I encourage everyone to like, leave a comment, subscribe and reshare this video. Tell your friends and family.
When I was a kid in the 80s I would spend my summers in Queenstown with my grandparents. Back then the river was a dark grey/green sludge colour with a glistening oil appearance. With an odour to it that can't quite be explained. I can still hear Nan telling us not to go near the Queen River, it is not somewhere to play. Beau, I love your storytelling and videography. Thank You for your hard work.
I'd say we might know each other, I'm from Queenstown but went to high school in Hobart in the early to mid 80s and generally went home for school holidays staying at my nans place next to the high school on Conlan st.
Beautiful filmography, connective storytelling, effective visual communication through the graphics, personal touches and humour, and a realistic perspective that doesn't pretend mining is not needed. These are among the best conservation documentaries being made in the 2020s. Good on ya Beau.
Mate, what a great storyteller you are. As a Tasmanian myself, I never realised how polluted that water way was. I'm in total agreement that something needs to be done to save it.
and it should be the descendants of the owners of "Mount Lyell Mining and Railway Company" paying for it, because there's no doubt they've enjoyed a life of effluence.
Not only is the editing, content, and storytelling top tier, the introspection I always get from this guy is amazing. I often feel misunderstood, seeking out uncomfortable adventures. This guy wants to learn about himself and the world. I get you, my friend. Keep it up.
This video touches a subject close to my heart. I was born, raised, and still live in West Virginia, USA, in the heart of Appalachian coal country. AMD laden water-ways quite literally litter our landscape though I am happy to say that progress has been made in the last 20 years. I can name a number of waterways off the top of my head that went from 100% totally stone dead to vibrant and lively again thanks to concerted, community led efforts (and lots of money) so I know first hand that it is possible. We have an incredibly long way to go - in Appalachia and globally - but I think like minded folks with the right attitude can get this done. Thanks so much for making this.
What a great video. We had the same thing in Squamish BC Canada, a half hour north of Vancouver. The Brittania Beach copper mine was once massive throughout the 1900s, and polluted an ocean inlet so bad that it also couldnt sustain life. After many years of trying to fix it, theyve finally found stuff growing in the water again. It can be done, just takes a lot of work
The carefully considered narration sets these videos apart from others in my humble view. A beautiful tragic story told wonderfully carefully. A real pleasure to watch, Beau.
I've just finished vacationing around Tasmania and those areas mentioned. They are some of the most amazing places I've ever seen. If I could pack up and relocate today - I would move there. To see how bad those waterways were truly hurt my soul, as if someone punched me in the gut (and I don't even live there, I can't imagine how a native Tasmanian would feel)! Something needs to be done and I'm glad this video was made - it's all about spreading awareness.
This is such a great and important video. Rivers are polluted across the world, these are the lifeblood of the water system and we throw garbage and waste into them.
Brilliant video Beau. It's very difficult to convey just how beautiful Tasmania is, but you have done so with your footage. Considering how much of Australian history and culture comes from Tasmania, especially with its penal colonies which a lot of our ancestors passed through, it's so important that we preserve it. I'm really glad the Australian Government is helping you make these videos through Screen Australia funding.
This is an awesome video! The story telling and the scenic shots are brilliant. I'm glad Screen Australia is supporting short films like this. Hopefully we see more authentic educational adventurous Aussie content from our creators
i desperately love your videos mate. any time i feel a yearning towards adventure that im not able to answer i just watch your them. they are possible the most comforting yet inspiring films out there
Very cool video! I like how you included how important mining is rather than just the "human = bad" narrative, while also displaying the honesty of the destruction. A really nuanced approach. 💜
Thanks Beau for putting your heart down a polluted river and keeping your rage on the river and enjoying what it once was and hopefully becoming a beautiful majesty once again...
Beau’s passion really came through on this one. I have enjoyed all of his stories but something about this one was evident he had a deep emotional connection to it.
This hits home,I lived and works in Queenstown from 16-19 yrs old {2007-2010} and did my apprenticeship directly beside one of the mining deaths mentioned at the beginning for a company who did shutdown work for mt Lyell, I often reflect on them days and consider myself lucky to have left the environment but definitely do miss the location and the every friendly residents that call Queenstown home. My father is a local Rosebery resident working in a far more stable mine.
I genuinely and wholeheartedly believe you make some of the most entertaining and educational videos out there, not only that but they’re beautifully shot too, i think that teachers should be playing your videos in classes because if they had when i was in those classes i would have learnt SO much AND have been entertained.
"this river tastes like blood" Is a good thought to end on, thanks for doing this Beau I think you captured the impact of human activity that hasn't even been active for a long time! Lots of this reminds me of LOTR with Isengard and the river, good fiction lives on to reflect reality!
“It’s exciting because I’m not really sure what will happen, what I’ll see what I’ll experience but more importantly what I’ll think” I really like this take on optimism for adventure
Incredible film Beau, it's insane how far you've come with them. I dare say the colour of that river made for some of the most beautiful cinematography yet. I'm sure something like this will raise a lot of awareness. Well done mate.
having seen an earlier stage of this video live at his show, im glad Beau got through the legal troubles he had been having to get this video out for over 6 months.
Beau, I live half a world away in West Virginia, USA. Your videos constantly inspire me to see the beauty, unnoticed, and most importantly, the story in the world around me. This one especially hit home for me, as West Virginia's mountains have a long history of coal mining, exploitation, and pollution into some of the most beautiful scenery in the country. Thank you for your memorable storytelling.
Thanks for the story Beau. Hope you took enough precautions to not get sick. The world needs more of your stories. This river is a lesson. Hope it gets the clean up it deserves like so many others we humans take for granted
This story needed to be told. I sit here naively thinking of all the places in the world, the land down under would be the least polluted. Thank you for helping me remember that greed is universal. Hopefully your little swim didn't make you sick. As always, a great video!
These are the stories that must be told, and we're just so lucky to have such a wonderful storyteller as yourself to tell them. I hope that this story resonates with your local crowds, this is exactly how to reach so many who can feel inspired to act.
Thank you Beau ,I have lived in Tassie for 20 yrs and you have filled in a lot of gaps for me re Queenstown.Have done walks in and around KingRiver, I love my adopted home and the likes of you make it even more special
Beau, you're at your best here. Combining your storytelling, enthusiasm, and environmental message with an actual scientific component took this up 10x. Good on ya!
Thank you for bringing attention to this issue. As a Canadian, living in a country that created the tar sands in Alberta, i know this is a global problem and pointing fingers isn't going to help. We need to clean and protect our environment. I also liked that you acknowledged that we need the minerals, but that we need to mine them responsibly. Thank you for the great content.
As an Ontarian, the words "Grassy Narrows" were bouncing around my head all through watching this. All of us living in industrial societies have to deal with these kinds of legacies.
Pointing a finger is a funny thing due to 3 of them pointing back at you. How much does one need to get through life. As an Aussie I find it hard Sydney being one of the most expensive cities to live in but during covid and through boredom those of us that have the space went back to growing herbs and veggies, recycling hobbies and we all got to see the smog clear in the most polluted cities of the world. It's pretty easy to get caught up in all of our "sociatal" duties and keep up with the jones next door.
You're so much more than a story-teller, Beaudy. you bring life (hah, lordy this river needs it) and inspiration to the challenges you undertake, and present it to the masses in a way that is not too digestible, having just enough grit to keep you fascinated and pumped for the next installment. my lecturers love showing you for a reason, and I'm so glad to have come across your mini-docos however many years ago.
My wife has family roots in Queenstown, when I first came to visit Tasmania back in 2009 she took me here and I was astounded and saddened to see the impact humans have had. More concerning many locals I spoke to seemed to think it was no big deal, some even commented that they loved how the landscape and river looked and said 'those bloody greenies just don't want us digging stuff up". Perhaps attitudes have changed a little now the mine is shut though.
Beautiful video. From one aussie to another I thank you for the amazing story-telling and the awareness your spreading. Truly a noble quest, sir. You live life right
When I rolled through Queenstown a couple of years ago I only saw a former mining town that had obvious signs of no longer being in its heyday. That story was truly eye opening, thanks for making it mate.
It's improved a fair amount actually. Back in the mid 70's the Queen river where it runs along the esplanade was grey sludge. Toss a stone in and it would take about a minute to sink below the surface. The hills were also bare and looked like a moonscape. Since the mine reduced their mining in the 80's the trees started to come back and when I visited in the late 80's the river had started to recover while a lot of the local hills had trees at about a meter in height.
Beau. Thankyou. Thank you for providing an example of how to give an open minded assessment of our problems. It was factual, evidence based but still humanistic towards historical mistakes. You were not narrow sighted in your assessment of the problem. This approach in highlighting our shortcomings is one of the best I have seen. It is so refreshing to see a level minded approach in a world that is becoming more and more polarised. I feel this style of conversation would enable a greater percentage of people get on with problem solving and leave behind arguing over the problem. Thanks for the effort Sir.
I’m from the nw coast and an avid trout fisherman, I’ve been all over the state fishing rivers and lakes for more than 30 years, I’ve never heard or seen this before I can’t believe it. Seeing this breaks my heart 😢
Thanks for making this. I know it would have been much easier to go to a pristine river and paddle but these stories need to be told. Was awesome to see you in Perth recently, thanks for coming!
Thanks for the insightful film Beau. I love that as you engage in these seemingly arbitrary physical activities, and as you stick it through, it creates a much larger story and thought. It feels like the haphazard act of rafting down the most polluted river gives us perspective for where we are, where we have been, possibly, where we are going, and perhaps (most importantly) who we are. Thanks for sharing our story Beau. Keep on mate. Also, shoutout to Alpacka rafts. Love me some packraft.
Such a great video with a important story. Both if the history and impact of humanity and the responsibility we have to ensure our impact doesn't outlast us. The cinematography was excellent, you can tell four people really put in effort to tell this story yet only one ever is on screen. That makes the video personal and gives the sense of man vs river even though it's not just him out there. To the cameramen, editors, artists and all those behind the scenes thank you.
This is horrific Beau, and you know other places are becoming this way while we focus on the ones we can already see. I don't know what we're going to do.
This is one of the most well shot documentaries I have ever watched. You are shedding light on something that is broken--something that we, humans, broke. There is amazing value in that, and I thank you for it. Keep up this good work.
"Life abounds around it but the water itself is unlivable." When the map popped up I made an immediate parallel to human life. When the very essence of life is poisoned, no matter how many healthy tributaries, sustaining life becomes an insurmountable challenge. Brilliant story telling as usual Beau. 👏
Beau, the videos just keep getting better and better. The quality of videography, editing and storytelling make for such an enjoyable watch - keep up the brilliant content!!!
Another superb, informative, provocative and entertaining video story; thanks. Let’s hope this gets the attention and resolution it needs. Makes our sewerage spills in to our rivers in the UK look like a very simple fix.
Conflicting emotions. Thoroughly entertaining, sad, angry, hopefull. Great story that needs spreading and people held accountable. Not to overlook the rafting skills on the river. Thanks Beau.
The Bad river series is hard to watch man, its hard to not feel helpless watching on and while you can do all you can in your own small circle to clean up/ pick up a bag of rubbish on your camping trip, or pick up a few cans or bottles from the roadside to take to the redemption place, it never seems to be enough to combat this level of environmental terrorism.
I've loved all of your videos, but this may be the most beautiful (though bittersweet) one you've made. Incredible work that went into this, and it shows. Thank you Beau.
Great work Beau, your passion for the environment shines through. Such a shame this has happened and is still happening. In NZ a large mining company recently let toxic waste leach into our waterways. Keep up the inspiring work
Beau you are so inspiring, you've honestly changed how I experience the world and look for unique and meaningful adventures. Thanks for being a guide to so many and sharing your experiences - happy travels
@@paddlefasterI don't get why anyone wouldn't be an environmentalist. Surely they want the place they live to be as nice as possible for humans, clean sky air water etc which is also what everything else needs
Thanks Beau and the team for this great vid. The sweetspot for your videos is for sure at 20+ mins, it really gives some time to get immersed in the story and especially the environment. Great stuff.
Thanks for doing this work Beau. It's deplorable to think, disasters like this aren't the most important things on our (governments) minds to fix. It cripples me to watch and learn
These bad river expeditions are brilliant. Thank you so much for showing us what's happening to the rivers in australia and the impact that humans have caused. The world needs more people like you.
Thank you Beau for shining a light on Tassie's worst river. We pride ourselves on the cleanest air and our wilderness but I bet half of us Tassie's don't even know about this problem. Something we all need to get behind & like that child wrote, to build a better future! ☀ (P.s was great to see you down Hobart, you're welcome back anytime)
Love the way you tell your story’s, telling it how it is no song and dance like all the crazy greenies, just beau miles highlighting a problem that need attention! good job keep the story’s coming. I look forward to your next adventures. You tell a good yarn.👍🏼
Mitch Drummond is seriously a gem, very hard to find any social media regarding the guy who's doing so much work behind the scenes. Could you post his handle?
No clue how I came across this channel years ago, but I’m glad I did, I watch a video or two thoroughly enjoy them, and come back a few months later to find more excellent videos. Top quality stuff
I guess it gives me some solace to know just how much the people who own sorry run this country really care about continuing to sell out to companys who want future generations to be able to appreciate what once was. Thanks to the likes of Gina Arseheart and co. 🥳
you are an inspiration... more people should be made aware of what we are doing to the planet... most holiday destinations they hide all the filth from the tourists... when i went to India, there were clean beaches outside hotels, then walk a few hundred metres and toxic waste would be pumped out of pipes, and dead turtles would be everywhere, tangled up in fishing lines & bits of discarded netting etc.. go to a touristy village and its all clean and nice on the main street... go off the street slightly and you would find trash everywhere and human faeces all over the place. corporations are ruining our environment and polluting everything... in Ecuador an oil company dumped tons of waste products, poisoning 1000s of hectares of rain forest causing cancers and multiple diseases in the local tribal populations.. people who get rich quick from destroying our planet should be classed as the most immoral and heinous criminals on the planet in my opinion