I feel so fortunate that my home is literally minutes away from this unbelievably stunning mountain range. Some day my ashes will be spread here by my children.
I feel so fortunate that I can seem them from across the valley near San Tan. I am more grateful that I don't love next to them. Bad stuff happens there are night. Skinwalkers
To me, the odd shaped rocks looked like a gathering of strange different types of beings just congregated there for some reason across the hillsides, except for the big blocked square stones; they seemed like the large building stones in South America that you can't get a knife edge through. The down hill shot toward the end of the video looked as if the cactus were tombstones with wild flowers adorning the sites. The great big huge mountains looked like fortresses or castles; just my observations. One rock reminded me of a climbing bear, and the hill with the huge rock at the top with everything below kind of reminded me of temples seen in India, and some looked like temples in Greece and places like Petra.
Excellent capture of nature.... you are a very good human being... your heart is very pure.. full of love towards nature.. that's why your videos are soo worthy...i love to watch your videos again n again...i would like to thank you from the bottom of my heart... may God bless you and your team for your fantastic work...🙏🙏🙏🙏
In the early 1980’s, I was stationed at an Air Force base located at the base of the mountains. The base has long been closed. Great video and thank you for a trip back through memory lane.
Williams AFB, it is now Mesa gateway airport. Back in 1981 or so I drove down ellsworth road to watch AF jets land. Back then this was a remote area. Thanks for your service
Beautiful viewing sceneries, thanks for this production. I also liked your human scale presentation and wild life of the area. I almost moved to live in Arizona (2018).
Olá Meu Amigo Parabéns Por Compartilhar Mais Um Belíssimo Vídeo Dessa Vez Mostrando Essas Lindas Montanhas Com Belezas Incomparáveis é Um Espetáculo é a Natureza Com Suas Maravilhas
Having grown up in Scottsdale and walked the superstitions, I must say this is one of the most beautiful compilations of the Supers that I have ever seen! Beautiful job!
Excepcional vídeo donde la belleza de las montañas con sus miles diseños ,,un trabajó del tiempo y el viento han echo figuras y han moldeados las gigantes montañas ,,un lugar árido ideal para la belleza de hermosos cactus gigantes,, y un acompañamiento musical bellísimo,, me encantó...... gracias
Thank you for filming this beautiful place in Arizona. I have very good memories to that state. The pics of Sahuaro brought them all back ! Love your docs.
3:36 shows Weaver's Needle, a well-known landmark in the Superstitions. 6:34 "Flatiron" is seen on the right side of the screen, the goal of many a hiker. And for anyone that wondered, the plant at 3:07 was an Ocotillo, pronounced Oak oh tee' yoh. It's not a cactus, but a shrub, looks grey, spiny and dead during dry seasons, but is very much alive, as its response to good rains show, putting on countless, small green leaves over the length of each arm, tipped with coral red, small trumpet-shaped blooms, which Hummingbirds pollinate, and which Mule Deer eat, standing on their hind-legs to reach them. ~ This is a very good video, saved to my Arizona playlists to share with others.
@@tonyporco9524 Nice! I don't know if you're aware, but I have created numerous organized Arizona playlists you might enjoy, including my most recent one of "Stargazing Arizona's Night Skies." You're welcome to see them.
Only saw Superstition Mountains from a distance when we last visited Apache Junction - really wish we had made the time to see them up close., Great video!
You can see them "up close" via my large Arizona playlist, a video tour, in the Phoenix section of the playlist. Only high quality videos, you can spend the time to enjoy the hikes and rock formations, Springtime blooms, wildflowers, waterfalls and thunderstorms, the caves and the views, in so many videos, "up close". Arizona has much more to offer than people realize: they don't realize that after good downpours, we have many waterfalls in our mountains, and gorgeous Springtimes and a second blooming season in the latter half of the summer monsoon. Lest anyone think I'm exaggerating, I'm a lifelong Arizonan, born in southern Arizona, and I know it well.
Te admiro muito. Sua dedicação, em gravar e postar estas belas imagens, eu viajo nelas, amo ❤ E as músicas que trás paz. E essa foto sua do Perfil que amo! ❤❤❤🎶🌱
You certainly have some interesting geology in the US, I have always been fascinated by massive rocks. A hostile yet exotic place and I had to chuckle, the ball shaped cactus with the curved spikes is one I own. Quality is excellent as usual, like looking out a window.
I think the western Superstitions is called a collapsed caldera? that got pushed up again? It seems like very chaotic geology. I been to the Flatiron a few times, whiskey springs, boulder canyon, peralta trail etc. and it is not a walk in the park! Barrel cacti is fairly common. Avoid Cholla!
If you can't go in person, you can always visually explore them via my Arizona video tour playlist, in the Phoenix section of the playlist, high quality videos.
I was only one time in Arizona in my life but it strangely felt like... home? Even though i'm from Europer there is something in Arizona canyons and mountains that makes you want to go back there...
Excellent. Truly inspiring. Your video travelogues are without a doubt the best. I look forward to them all. Especially now that the pandemic is restricting our travel. My only reservation in watching your great videos is a concern that the ever present green logo in the lower right of the screen might burn an image in my OLED TV. Would you consider adding a feature introducing a subtle shift in position as the video progresses to preclude this possibility?