I'm convinced I was Australian in a past life. Although I can't speak their language, I can understand what they are saying BEFORE the narrator interprets...
Paul Henderson I know, this woman is annoying ! Reminds me of that movie Galaxy Quest where Sigourney Weaver's job was to repeat exactly what the computer had already said!
Thank you for uploading this look into Australian opals, but that must be the most bizarre experience I have encountered on RU-vid having an English voice over... for English... ???...
"I am addicted to alcohol, gambling, and hard drugs. I need a better price." This is exactly how I tried negotiating a raise with my boss. I was let go the next day
lol i was just about to say the exact same thing. if the damned translator would shut up, we could hear and understand them just fine without her being involved at all.
36:14 I've studied and researched opal for many, many years and this is the first and only not-staged footage I've ever seen of a miner making a new opal find
I disagree with everyone here. The BEST part is the constant ads at the bottom, not the 720p resolution, english to english translation, or the the variant volume.
I have mined Opal in Coober Pedy among other places in Australia and the 'boulder' Yani described as having been opened with a screw driver is not, from Coober Pedy. The specimen is probably from south-west Queensland and is actually known as 'boulder opal' which is famous for a particularly brilliant lustre. But with the occasional exception of a variety of boulder opal known as 'Yowah Nuts' the opal deposits in boulder are very thin. As I said boulder opal does not, occur in Coober Pedy.
First time I'm enjoyed watching a video about Opals. Beside learning a lot I've go say a real fantastic informative documentary. Thank for this really good work.
When I was inPerth in1987 there was a jewel’s shop that had a complete skeleton of a dinosaur about the size of a kangaroo. The whole skeleton had become opalized and it looked amazing. I don’t know where it came from but I suspect Coober Pedy in SouthAustralia.
You have to realize the producer Patrick is French himself so it is needed in the country of the videos origin. I still love every single one of his videos. I commented on one of his videos years ago and last year and have bought a colored diamond from Arthur Langerman the "Rainbow collection" man. So watch with an open mind stay focused in life and let your dreams become reality
It’s fragile as gemstones go, and requires some care that other gemstones don’t, such as keeping it from drying out. That may have contributed to it being a less valuable gemstone in general. However black opal can be extremely expensive
Because some mega rich banksters decided that diamonds would be exclusive and thus Society blindly falls for nearly every bs rat trap those child trafficking occult scum Sell.. OPALS are Amazing but the occult scum running society turn everything upside down to suit themselves... they also said that diamonds are rare And when they found heaps of diamond they hid it or sunk it in rhe ocean to keep selling their lies .. William Casey ex head ov cia said .. we'll know our dis information programming is complete when everything the public believes is a Lie.. etc etc etc
@@touchmycamerathroughthefence Australian Opals are stable, do not absorb water and are 7 on the hardness scale. Diamonds are 10 so 7 is quite hard. You are thinking of Ethiopian Opal, which is less dense and readily absorbs water and can crack or craze when it drys out.
@@Mass-jab-death-2025 I’ve never read that any opal has a higher hardness than 6-6.5. I’ve also never heard any mention of the porosity of Australian opal being any different than any other opal, as most opal on the market is Australian. Please provide a source for your claims.
because the diamond industry is a collusive monopoly with price fixing, while the opal industry involves a great diversity of miners/businesses. Diamonds aren't the best gemstones; DeBeers spent tons of money on marketing to make people think they were the best. IMHO, opals are better because every one is unique.
I enjoyed this documentary and admire how beautiful opal stones are...unfortunately we dont have such stone in the Philippines...how I wish I could have one ..even if its just the raw one( in its natural state, not polished)...They are amazing...God bless Australia.
I thought the sparks coming out of the end of the fuse, was only a cartoon thing. I got a shock to see it really happens as on cartoons.. great show. Love it.
Patrick you are living a dream. I have travelled a lot in my life as a child and seen many places. But have never seen any of the places you've been or seen anywhere near the things you've seen. But I believe this is a calling as when you see so many parts or the world and see all this great world we live in provides. Like Charlie Chaplin said this world is rich and provide the way of life should be free and it's TRUE over population? U must not get out much lol this world still has things to offer and explore.
thank you without this video i would have never had the pleasure to see a glorious work of art breathtaking beautiful i could go on and on .My thanks again to the artist i bow to your talent
All the Opal he had was White Opal and White Crystal Opal. Worth a fraction of Black Opal. I think the large stone the buyer had was Boulder Opal. Also understand that none of those were cut and polished Opals. Once they have been properly cut and all the potch excess is removed, and then polished. It’s 100% brighter and magnificent. If you are interested the finest place in physical space and on the internet to learn and see the finest Opals is a place in Australia called Black Opal Direct.
Classic that a local Aboriginal is saying Pedy as peedy and the translator is saying it right after as peddy. Nice to see Yani again; I've sold to him quite a few times.
BEAUTIFUL ARTWORK AND WHAT A GREAT, GREAT HISTORY LESSON.!!!!! I have never heard such detailed information. I personally love opals myself but I will be watching it to see all the opals and all the history. The only thing I knew about opals is that the biggest opal mines are in Australia. Video is well done and that’s why I have subscribed. The opals look so interesting under a black light. Depending on the setting, I have seen some gorgeous rings and pendants.
I loved this video. Even with the English speaking translator translating English lol. Ever since I first laid eyes on Opal as a young boy I’ve always been fascinated with Opal. Being born and raised in Nebraska there isn’t much of a chance for a Cornhusker like me to get involved with the gem. However, I am finally in the position to purchase my very first cabbing machine, and I plan on buying a few parcels of beginner rough to teach myself how to cut oval cabochons. Once I have some cabs of potch worth setting I’ll buy some color and attempt to make a few pieces of jewelry to sell. We shall see how far I can take this new/old interest of mine.
I found this Gods rainbow set on a silver ring. A year and a half after finding it, it has influenced my friends and family to seek out precious opals of their own of many variety. There is truly a magic in this stone like no other.
Great documentary! Translation was a little weird as it was english before the translation lol... And marine reptiles are NOT dinosaurs. Dinosaurs only lived on land. But other than that it was a really cool documentary!
If you repost without the voiceover, you should also try again on the de-interlace. Every other line of the picture is out of order, so motion has horizontal line artifacts.
@Voillot Patrick once more, great footage, great story, crap post production......................... i always click like just for the information and exploration of culture. maybe hire a post production company who share your desire for Quality Work........ you are working with and paying under-achieving students. i am watching the playlist entitled ENGLISH..... the other playlists are worse....... sadly.
@20:00 minutes the guy got screwed bad out of that deal.. those opals are worth 200k to say the least sad that the local miners are getting screwed over
Great documentary but I would have preferred hearing the peoples voice's instead of a translator. Didn't make too much sense considering they were all talking english.
Ok back in the 70s my uncle went to Australia on a trip and he brought back a number of things for me and my cousins one of the things he brought back was a ring with this EXACT blue green stone in it it looks incidental to this stone at 22:34. Do I have a black opal do you think?? Is it worth a lot?? How and where do I find out??? Its a large stone too the table is flush in the setting I dont believe the setting is gold but it may be. I'm good at spotting gold and this doesn't seem like it is but then again I could be wrong its never tarnished in all these years since the early 70s. Who can I go to to have this ring checked out? Or can I post a pic of it somewhere to have an expert check it out? The stone size may be as big as a 10x13mm.
Wow this blows my mind. Compared to today the quantity and quality is incredible. Even the buyer offered more right from the start. Today seems buyers screw the miner with their song and dance of one excuse or another.
consider Red Beryl in Utah and Black Opal from Nevada, and perhaps consider a Post Production Company from USA....... you have fabulous content that is totally trashed by a horrible lack of Post Production continuity........ you do the Gemnology and Study, and let a Professional do the Post Work.....
It's pronounced "cooper pee dee" but Lightning Ridge has better opals, the legendary "red on black" Even in the sunlight licking an opal cut or not makes the colours shine.