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Why the World's Tallest Tree is Kept Hidden 

Aidin Robbins
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California's Northern Coast is home to the tallest trees on Earth- but their height has been more of a curse than a blessing. I spent a snowy week in the Redwoods exploring this forest and its history.
🎵 Music I use for my videos (first month of an individual subscription free with code AIDIN): share.mscbd.fm/aidinrobbinspla...
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📧 Contact Me: hello@aidinrobbins.com
📸 Instagram: / aidinrobbins
Further Reading:
Richard Preston - The Wild Trees: amzn.to/3ZHNgAE
National Park Service: www.nps.gov/articles/000/coas...
John Muir - Hunting Big Redwoods: www.theatlantic.com/magazine/...
Archival Images/Footage:
W.W. Ericson Photo Collection: calisphere.org/collections/6916/
Library of Congress:
www.loc.gov/resource/cph.3b43...
www.loc.gov/item/2016649585/
www.loc.gov/item/96522359/
www.loc.gov/item/90709647/
Save the Redwoods League: • Save the Redwoods Leag...
Logging Footage: • 1940s Lumberjacks fell...
Maps/Documents:
William J Cody and Donald M Britton - Fern and Fern Allies of Canada: amzn.to/3lapSgj
Matt Streiby: mstrieby.myportfolio.com/
Library of Congress:
www.loc.gov/item/2022589241/
www.loc.gov/resource/g4362r.c...
www.loc.gov/resource/g3200.ct...
Crannell Creek Giant: www.newspapers.com/clip/12068...
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11 мар 2023

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Комментарии : 6 тыс.   
@whiteouthamstra
@whiteouthamstra Год назад
As someone who lives in the wilderness in Canada, I can agree.. the only way to keep some areas beautiful is to keep them a secret. Humans are incredibly destructive. It’s a sad reality
@captainobvious6070
@captainobvious6070 Год назад
Twilight vibes.
@itypethetruthnobshere8975
@itypethetruthnobshere8975 Год назад
It’s human nature.
@whiteouthamstra
@whiteouthamstra Год назад
@@itypethetruthnobshere8975 it is, we are a plague to this planet.
@leaguixxx9736
@leaguixxx9736 Год назад
​@@itypethetruthnobshere8975 that's what they said.
@smmichie
@smmichie Год назад
Except the tax paying citizens are paying for these locations to be preserved and have every right to access these areas.
@Not_Built_For_This_World
@Not_Built_For_This_World 8 месяцев назад
He did state the most obvious "problem with being the tallest tree". In Michigan, there was a giant sequoia near the coast of Lake Michigan. So the people put up a plaque, made it a monument and cleared the trees from around it. The next day it was struck by lightning and killed. By trying to separate it from the near by trees, they basically turned it into a lightning rod. There's still a few giant sequoia in Michigan. One in Manistee planted in 1942 and over 100' tall.
@peppermeat8059
@peppermeat8059 8 месяцев назад
how could they be incredibly stupid to clear all the other trees just for that one tree that is SO much more vulnerable. place a taller fucking lighting rod to protect it
@Mika-ph6ku
@Mika-ph6ku 8 месяцев назад
@@peppermeat8059does it really surprise you? The average global IQ is less than 100...
@DOWNTOWN_AUDIO
@DOWNTOWN_AUDIO 8 месяцев назад
​@peppermeat8059 not to mention, the first ice storm would have destroyed it too! All the other trees were a wind barrier too!
@Not_Built_For_This_World
@Not_Built_For_This_World 8 месяцев назад
@DOWNTOWN_AUDIO True! I hadn't considered that. The only way they got a sequoia to grow in Michigan was because it was near the southwest coast where winds are tempered by the lake effect. It's why they call it "the fruit basket" and plant the commercial orchards there. As an added benefit, the topography is hilly, which allows cold air to flow away from the trees and sink into the valleys.
@Shvetsario
@Shvetsario 8 месяцев назад
Some people should burn in hell
@Jane_8319
@Jane_8319 5 месяцев назад
We used to have redwoods all over the west coast, and now there’s so few. Those researchers are heroes
@smmichie
@smmichie Месяц назад
There’s tons of redwoods in the Northern California coastal counties from Big Sur in Monterey County to the Oregon border.
@MitsukiDiablew
@MitsukiDiablew 29 дней назад
@@smmichie I can't believe that after seeing your comments and threads of all your replies to others...just seeing comments from you actually angers me. You are an extremely annoying nuisance and a waste of oxygen. You should really consider of give it back to the lives that really matter on this planet...like these trees. Seriously 🙂
@jonruger
@jonruger 16 дней назад
There are still redwoods everywhere they are supposed to be dont let propaganda fool you. Sure many old ones are gone but it isn’t logging that endangers them now it’s lack of wildfires that is how they propagate.
@Diddy730
@Diddy730 9 дней назад
There’s redwood in the west, huge trees but u need to know where too look
@smmichie
@smmichie 9 дней назад
@@Diddy730 They’re pretty damn easy to find.
@mrrj44
@mrrj44 8 месяцев назад
I work amongst these gentle giants. So sad what we have done to the ancient forests of the west coast, but I’m glad we can finally have some cleanup happening and people like you making videos educating us about it. Please help Save the Redwoods
@melhupby
@melhupby 8 месяцев назад
"Gentle giant" Bitch it's a fucking tree, what else would it be? A _charging rhino_ of a giant?
@amberwiese364
@amberwiese364 6 месяцев назад
I would love to work in that environment! What do you do for a living...if u don't mind me asking? Lol ... And are u hiring!? ☺️❤️
@melhupby
@melhupby 6 месяцев назад
@@amberwiese364 Lumberjack. We're always hiring if you can swing an axe and occassionally bolt-cutters.
@nuntana2
@nuntana2 6 месяцев назад
Stunning video but heartbreaking watching them take those humble giants down. Human greed! And then people have to go and share locations. Glad they are now off limits because we just can't help ourselves!
@amay167
@amay167 6 месяцев назад
How can we save them, when the logging companies have absolute power and they have bigger machinery than what we do? Also, the logging companies have way more money than us.
@alfredstewart1261
@alfredstewart1261 Год назад
I makes me really angry and anxious how these beautiful locations are being destroyed for short term profit and long term suffering. Love your videos!
@BEDLAMITE-5280ft.
@BEDLAMITE-5280ft. Год назад
Try holding your breath forever it will really help.
@raphaelfoer9826
@raphaelfoer9826 11 месяцев назад
I don’t think you should let it cause you to suffer. That’s giving something completely outside of your control way too much power.
@FranckLarsen
@FranckLarsen 10 месяцев назад
So when did you write this ? 1917 ? Maybe you are commenting on what goes on with other forrests on earth ?
@johannes6760
@johannes6760 9 месяцев назад
You could be living in a home made out of these trees that were cut to make lumber.
@jimmiewomble416
@jimmiewomble416 9 месяцев назад
@raphaelfoer9826 I used to do pool and spa work decades ago. I lost all enjoyment of the job after the owner told me the outer shell of the spas were constructed from Redwood. I'm hoping he was wrong about that.
@Silvasvisuals
@Silvasvisuals Год назад
Dude. Honestly wow, This is one of my favorite docs yet. The way you paved the story leading into the ending and the secret tree to finish off with a wonderful message is incredible.
@AidinRobbins
@AidinRobbins Год назад
Means the world my friend!
@maxwalsh234
@maxwalsh234 Год назад
@@AidinRobbins these trees mean the world to me. hopefully someday I can use my photography to make a meaningful deference like you have in this video. Please keep making videos like this!!!!
@jeldebom
@jeldebom Год назад
As an Europan this is epic... we have men made structurs like the romans did... you have nature like gaia did? Not sure butt damn want to see those trees... and no spelling corrects 😂
@sesa2984
@sesa2984 Год назад
plat.
@jaredkinneyjr
@jaredkinneyjr Год назад
Be sure to fly your Chinese drone to make sure China has all of that data as well
@Reneelwaring
@Reneelwaring 8 месяцев назад
Years ago I found a giant white oak in a State Park in PA. This tree was massive, probably 700 years old, its two main limbs were bigger in diameter than I am tall. Just beautiful! One week later it was hit by lightning and fell. The park says it has other giants within the park but I haven't been back.
@dantownsend761
@dantownsend761 5 месяцев назад
Wow! What park was it in?
@Reneelwaring
@Reneelwaring 5 месяцев назад
@@dantownsend761 Moraine State Park above Pittsburg, PA
@headfullofacid8088
@headfullofacid8088 3 месяца назад
The largest Eastern White Pine ever cut down in Pennsylvania was 220’ tall. Yes… two hundred twenty feet tall. It was cut to make a ship mast for the English navy
@anthonymetaxotos8446
@anthonymetaxotos8446 3 месяца назад
Wow interesting! ​@@headfullofacid8088
@appaloosa42
@appaloosa42 2 месяца назад
There are trunk sections on a side street on Pittsburgh that are 8’+ across. Rumored to have come from Butler County.
@Louie_Ponce_Motography
@Louie_Ponce_Motography 6 месяцев назад
The production and amount of value in these short videos is unmatched. What an inspiration to get out. Thanks, man.
@insertphrasehere15
@insertphrasehere15 Год назад
Minor correction: a Fairy ring isn't caused by seeds, it's caused by new trunks spawning around the perimeter of the fallen tree (from it's existing and still living root system. This creates a clonal colony in a ring shape of redwood trees, but really they are the same tree, both genetically and also connected physically through the roots.
@hooktraining3966
@hooktraining3966 Год назад
The same thing can happen with mushrooms as well. One large fungus will grow in a circular shape underground and spring up mushrooms around the perimeter of that circle. It looks awesome!
@zora_noamflannery2548
@zora_noamflannery2548 Год назад
- We only have 500 yr old Live Oaks in Florida and they make rings from the acorns when they die creating circular rooms when the trunks join together after another century. The Spaniards and Brits decimated the ancient ones looking for boat lumber. There are pines in Fla that probly would get nearly as tall as the Redwoods if the hurricanes, incessant lightning, timber companies and vandals didn't knock them down or poison them. Same for Cedars and Cypress.
@witchhazel4135
@witchhazel4135 Год назад
Do closely growing redwoods fuse together as one like aspen do?
@insertphrasehere15
@insertphrasehere15 Год назад
@@witchhazel4135 Its not that they fuse together, they are clones of each other (originate from a single individual). Clonal colonies of Quaking Aspen (like pando) are similar, but expand through a root network and additional stems.
@notone4540
@notone4540 Год назад
Oof at least someone who knows. I was just gonna say the same thing... it spits out seeds all its life...When it breaks and falls over but the roots are fine it coppiced itself and grows new trunks just like yew and many other trees. They can live for thousands of years if this happens regularly. Coppicing can make trees live more than double their normal lifespan.
@Adventures_with_nick
@Adventures_with_nick Год назад
From one videographer to another, this guy is top 0.1% of videographers AND he is a documentary genius! Well done
@kitrichardson2165
@kitrichardson2165 8 месяцев назад
Photography is amazing. I think the background music a little louder times that would be my only nitpick, but a very special project and a worthy project.
@jackmorris2999
@jackmorris2999 8 месяцев назад
@@kitrichardson2165I stopped watching this around the 3:00 mark just for that reason, I couldn’t understand half of what was being said due to the loud background music.
@profoundwanderer1441
@profoundwanderer1441 8 месяцев назад
As a pornographer who's in to tree stuff especially BBT.. Top notch. 😘🌲🍆
@obliterator1543
@obliterator1543 8 месяцев назад
@@jackmorris2999 Meh, there's definitely varying opinions for the volume of the background music. I could hear every single word just fine and enjoyed the music taking over my ears.
@511kinderheim.
@511kinderheim. 8 месяцев назад
@@jackmorris2999 i could hear it just fine
@RanndiMarie01
@RanndiMarie01 5 месяцев назад
I’m currently in Humboldt county as a travel nurse and I can’t get enough of these trees! Since I learned about this forest in a book in 3rd grade it’s always been at the top of my bucket list. I feel so lucky to be living less than an hour from the national park for a few months. This forest is such a spiritual place for me. It’s hard not to look at it as a mystical place with so much rich history. If you travel here please explore with care and respect so people can enjoy it for years and years to come. ❤
@redpilledcovfefe
@redpilledcovfefe 2 месяца назад
WORKED UP NEAR THE AVENUE OF GIANTS FOR A FEW YEA. BEAUTIFUL PLACE
@pmc2999
@pmc2999 Месяц назад
As a traveler I watched the lava flowing in Hawaii. I hiked along the Grand Canyon rim. And they were awesome. But the Red Woods just had a completely different feel. They were alive. It truly did feel like walking solemnly through a cathedral.
@deangregoric4735
@deangregoric4735 Месяц назад
Why people think Worlds biggest tree is in America?
@reecequinn5436
@reecequinn5436 7 месяцев назад
I grew up in the gorge, and I left to live and work in Southern California then Hawaii and these are both incredibly beautiful places, but there is this specific feeling being back home in the trees, I didn't know that trees were some of the oldest organisms on Earth but maybe we feel their wisdom and old spirt similar to how we can feel emotions from animals like our pets (not suggesting trees are pets lol). Anyway I miss trees.
@reecequinn5436
@reecequinn5436 7 месяцев назад
Aidin Robbins where
@timwootton4649
@timwootton4649 Год назад
As a supposedly 'intelligent' species, humans do some pretty dumb and shortsighted things, and we are not learning from our mistakes! Great documentary Aidin!
@tonradar
@tonradar Год назад
supposedly!!!
@SurfinTheKaliYuga
@SurfinTheKaliYuga Год назад
But when tree fall down go BRRRRRRR
@jbwise2002
@jbwise2002 Год назад
Tolkien saw this and wrote as well.. “I am (obviously) much in love with plants and above all trees, and always have been; and I find human maltreatment of them as hard to bear as some find ill-treatment of animals.”
@andreashansen5313
@andreashansen5313 Год назад
@@jbwise2002 I wonder if these Redwoods gave him inspiration for the huge trees in Lothlórien.
@muradm7748
@muradm7748 Год назад
I'm pretty sure 90% of people wouldn't touch the tree, but we are diverse groups of animals with different worldview. I'm not talking about poor or starving people, I can't deny anyone to feed themselves.
@dontask7898
@dontask7898 Год назад
I have now been in those trees for 35 years. Me and my family have hiked 99% of those trails and still enjoy them to this day. It is truly sad to know the trails I was able to do as a kid, my kids will never be able to. Every year more and more area is closed off to people due to the trash and destruction for sheer lack of respect for the area. Pretty soon the whole area will be closed to people at all. Thank you for the video, and stay on the trails.
@ghostwhite1648
@ghostwhite1648 Год назад
Thats what theyll tell you they closed it for.
@WavveBoi
@WavveBoi Год назад
​@@ghostwhite1648 yeah. While they Profit from it.
@yaykruser
@yaykruser Год назад
how are the gonna controll if you walk there?
@ghostwhite1648
@ghostwhite1648 Год назад
@@yaykruser theres a whole bunch of cameras everywhere how do you not know that by now lol
@SimonVanliew26
@SimonVanliew26 Год назад
@@ghostwhite1648 who’s watching them lol nobody
@saljavin3287
@saljavin3287 8 месяцев назад
The camera filming, Editing, Voice over, History, and journey in this video is absolutely incredible! Really good work to whoever helped to make this video
@kylefoster6795
@kylefoster6795 8 месяцев назад
This video was made better than a Netflix show.
@xp0da
@xp0da Год назад
The tallest tree we had in Norway was just a few meters from a road, and everyone living in the area knew it as "Goliat" after the giant. In 2005, someone took a chainsaw to the base, just for the heck of it. The tree died a few years later from the damage. If nature gives us something beautiful, keep it secret, keep it safe.
@DAMfoxygrampa
@DAMfoxygrampa Год назад
Some people don't deserve to live, that man is one of them
@TheSonOfDumb
@TheSonOfDumb Год назад
Horrifying.
@VenoXj1
@VenoXj1 Год назад
Man, what an idiot. What did he even get from doing that? Nothing but being a complete fool. What an achievement.
@nzmanhdee6246
@nzmanhdee6246 Год назад
Did they arrest the person
@danielberrett2179
@danielberrett2179 Год назад
I wish someone would take a chainsaw to the Culprits ankles.. Just for the heck of it.
@rafaelperalta1676
@rafaelperalta1676 Год назад
I felt a roller coaster of emotions in just a span of 10 min. Well done! Anyway, props to those 8 people who went there, saw the tallest tree without creating a mess, and left without telling anybody its location.
@BEDLAMITE-5280ft.
@BEDLAMITE-5280ft. Год назад
Try holding your breath forever, I’ve heard it can really calm you down.
@FranckLarsen
@FranckLarsen 10 месяцев назад
@@BEDLAMITE-5280ft. Try holding your breath forever, I’ve heard it can really calm you down.
@BEDLAMITE-5280ft.
@BEDLAMITE-5280ft. 10 месяцев назад
@@FranckLarsen I’ve tried so many times, the closest to eternity I ever made was a little over 4 minutes. But I know it’s possible. I’ve heard a plastic bag over the head then quickly super gluing your hands to your feet will give you the best chance. Don’t quote me on that tho.
@tomn4483
@tomn4483 8 месяцев назад
@@BEDLAMITE-5280ft. dont do it bro theres so much more for you to experience
@early2exit
@early2exit 8 месяцев назад
do it@@BEDLAMITE-5280ft.
@goodvibrations6723
@goodvibrations6723 8 месяцев назад
Beautiful video man.. I hope to see the redwoods in person one day but after seeing this video and learning how delicate these giant trees can be I’ll know to be extra careful and mindful of their habitat
@grntchstrmdws
@grntchstrmdws 7 месяцев назад
Excellent work. And your timing could not have been more fortuitous. Snow of that kind is rare on the North Coast of California. A very unique experience. Beautiful to see.
@x-shift8937
@x-shift8937 Год назад
I still remember the very first time I heard of redwood trees. I was absolutely blown away that something soo majestic exists in the real world. It looked even more interesting than things out of fantasy
@dirkdillary4925
@dirkdillary4925 Год назад
These are the Biblical Trees spoken about in Scripture!! People will soon realize that America is Gods Country and is the land of Milk and Honey!
@xelthiavice4276
@xelthiavice4276 Год назад
@@dirkdillary4925 rofl....
@simra2272
@simra2272 Год назад
@@dirkdillary4925 lmfao
@Vizible21
@Vizible21 Год назад
​@@dirkdillary4925 Your name sounds like a milk company so nice advertisement.
@earkittycat5421
@earkittycat5421 Год назад
​@@dirkdillary4925 goofy ahh American
@rezamuradi6363
@rezamuradi6363 8 месяцев назад
This is probably the best story-telling and camera work of nature I've seen recently. None come close to it. Please keep it up and let us know if there is anything we can do to support your work monetarily.
@Zzzztoolate
@Zzzztoolate 8 месяцев назад
I was just about to say this exact thing!
@garynettles5919
@garynettles5919 5 месяцев назад
I visited Yosemite valley in 1979&1980 as a teenager and visited the redwoods. It was life changing the magnitude of the beauty. Bless the people who fought to keep these areas protected.
@OzLeedsCrew
@OzLeedsCrew 8 месяцев назад
Great little video my man! As an Aussie i'm proud of our whopper trees - the Eucalypts. Humbling to be in their presence.
@klomilgio
@klomilgio Год назад
I'm sure you've been told but you are insanely fortunate to have seen this area in the snow. I've grown up here and am 28 and I've never seen snow like this. In fact I've only seen snow below 1000 feet less than a dozen times in my life. This is an incredible documentary!
@B31L
@B31L Год назад
we live under 1000 feet and it just snowed for the first time in over 10 years a few weeks ago
@eldongav8n378
@eldongav8n378 Год назад
I wish I was back when it snowed my sister still lives there and sent pictures very nice thing to see
@grumpygrumps
@grumpygrumps Год назад
I was in Tahoe during that storm not fun
@clouds3063
@clouds3063 Год назад
yeah 2023 is crazy cold
@sconartist
@sconartist Год назад
Been an extremely mild winter over here on the east coast.. but yeah climate change isn’t a thing
@PacifistNinja
@PacifistNinja 8 месяцев назад
I was lucky to find Hyperion 15 years ago after years of searching. Glad it’s being hero hidden and protected so heavily.
@1Elusiveshroom
@1Elusiveshroom 8 месяцев назад
I have been fortunate enough to lay my hands on the trunk of the tallest tree…it’s almost the same feeling as seeing a planet for the first time as a kid with your naked eye. (You feel very small and insignificant) definitely a secret worth keeping. Unfortunately people don’t care and will continue to trek through fragile environments trying to popularize and find it.
@jackdiao4576
@jackdiao4576 7 месяцев назад
@@1Elusiveshroom By that means, aren't you one of them?
@tidaltidaltidal
@tidaltidaltidal 7 месяцев назад
@@jackdiao4576 But he kept the location secret for himself instead of posting it online for the public. Two different things
@jackdiao4576
@jackdiao4576 7 месяцев назад
@@tidaltidaltidal He's talking about people trekking through the fragile enviroments to find it. He did the exact same thing didn't he?
@richardrose9943
@richardrose9943 6 месяцев назад
Typical hypocritical environmentalists all the same
@MrMetalDanny
@MrMetalDanny 5 месяцев назад
I actually live in Santa Cruz County where we have state parks dedicated to Redwoods I'm very grateful of this part of my life for living here Ive walked through those forests thank you for this video it was fantastic
@deneseiB
@deneseiB 20 дней назад
I am an old sailor, SCUBA diver, camper, hunter, hiker, fisher-woman, horse/bicycle/motorcycle rider, photographer, painter, writer, and have done probably anything else you can think of. I lived up and down both coasts of the US including Alaska. We tried to tell you on Earth Day [today] 1970 to reduce, re-use, recycle, and take care of the planet. It sickens me to know that no one paid attention, and the beautiful country I grew up in is now a pile of reeking garbage I'm ashamed to show my grandkids. Thanks, America. I hope you enjoy your 15-minute cities, fake-air, indoor lives~🤬
@zafloforseti470
@zafloforseti470 Год назад
Man, as a nature buff. That hits right in the feels. People never realize the damage theyve done till its too late
@beefstickswellington1203
@beefstickswellington1203 Год назад
People being too damned selfish and reckless is what it comes down to. Some know exactly what they're doing but don't care. Others oblivious because they think only within and of themselves in the short term.
Год назад
@@beefstickswellington1203 Exactly. This is leading us to a swift downfall globally, unless there's a gigantic, improbable reckoning.
@goodtimesgivecancer1
@goodtimesgivecancer1 Год назад
They know the damage, they just care more about the profita
@maythesciencebewithyou
@maythesciencebewithyou Год назад
And some never do nor want to. If this forest ever lost its status and becomes free real estate, you can bet that a lot of people are just waiting for such a chance.
@TGSSMC
@TGSSMC Год назад
Unbelievable, how long does it take for such tree to grow? I can only imagine, whole world must have had such gigantic trees. Probably different varieties. I originate from Croatia, we have an olive tree which is 2000 years old, my family owns one that is 1000 years old they still harvest the olives every year. I've heard that the oldest olive tree is 4000 years old, somewhere on Crete. Imagine that,1000 years ago was time of crusades, age of great schism, 2000 years ago was Roman empire, 4000 years ago was times of Minoan civilization. Old trees are sacred.
@elyace
@elyace 8 месяцев назад
The trees in this video are probably a thousand years old or more.
@KanyeKetchup
@KanyeKetchup 8 месяцев назад
3-5 years to full height
@trevorx7872
@trevorx7872 8 месяцев назад
@@KanyeKetchup lol what
@ForeverHobbit
@ForeverHobbit 8 месяцев назад
@@KanyeKetchup press X to doubt. If that was the case we wouldn't have so many issues regrowing forests, you are either trolling or uninformed
@KanyeKetchup
@KanyeKetchup 8 месяцев назад
@@ForeverHobbit I sat at the back of the class
@dovaniliemarian
@dovaniliemarian 8 месяцев назад
You are one of the best documentary cinematographer I have ever watched on RU-vid. Congratulations!
@Car3rd
@Car3rd 4 месяца назад
Your cinematography and sorry telling are unmatched. 👏🏻
@whatugonnadu
@whatugonnadu Год назад
Having grown up in Humboldt county, this short documentary really touches me. It brings back such awesome memories. The smell, the sounds, the feel of the air in the morning....the sheer magnitude of such a wondrous place can never be imagined through description alone. I wish everyone could experience those things, but I genuinely hope they stay away more so.
@AK-rv6dq
@AK-rv6dq Год назад
I moved away when I was 11. I miss it so much.
@jesseperez2616
@jesseperez2616 Год назад
What made yall move ?
@whatugonnadu
@whatugonnadu Год назад
@@jesseperez2616 mills shut down
@T0ZZY09
@T0ZZY09 Год назад
Awww....home sweet home
@joeblow5087
@joeblow5087 Год назад
I live in Del Norte, and I wish tourists would stay home.
@HumcoHenry101
@HumcoHenry101 Год назад
Being a Humboldt resident I can say that the trees here are definitely special, and hold a place in the heart of most people around here. Ive lived here my whole life and have spent a lot of time in the redwoods and definitely recommend stopping to look if you ever pass through.
@stoniebro-nies
@stoniebro-nies Год назад
As a Humbodt resident as well. I think it’s hilarious. How much information he got wrong in this video. 😂😂
@shanescull9552
@shanescull9552 Год назад
Murder mountain was a good watch. I was scrollling comments I’m like wait I heard of that area
@DF-jr9pk
@DF-jr9pk Год назад
Been here 10 years it’s a special place to me grateful to have found it.
@whiteobama8265
@whiteobama8265 Год назад
have you seen any wendigos yet
@BooTub3
@BooTub3 Год назад
@@shanescull9552 LOVED it.. I felt for y’all out there 🫶🏽 I’m a Bay Area resident.. When that dude got shot in the house after confronting the dude 🥺
@christopheralbano7862
@christopheralbano7862 8 месяцев назад
If you can ever find your way in, there's a grove of magnificent trees on the central Oregon coast called "The Valley of the Giants".
@SHIFTYreal.
@SHIFTYreal. 5 дней назад
As a person who lives in Humboldt. These trees can be a blessing, and a burden. They can be really intimidating but are also really calming. You feel so small that all your problems seem to go away
@petemellows
@petemellows Год назад
Likewise, the world’s oldest stand of trees (over 5,000 years old) is located somewhere in Tasmania. A handful of people know the exact location. The National Park it sits within has zero access roads and no established tracks whatsoever. It is vitally important that places like these are not loved to death. Knowing about that stand of trees and that we also have the second tallest trees in the world (the tallest flowering) brings immense pride. There is no need to seek them out.
@JoPro06
@JoPro06 Год назад
There is actually an older “tree” at around 10 000 years old in Sweden, but it’s debated as it is the root base that is such old, but the main trunk has snapped, broken, rotted away, and grown back several times. So if it is judged only upon the trunk, then the spruce in Sweden is not the oldest, but if you take into account the root, then it is the oldest.
@PolumbiusTheThird
@PolumbiusTheThird Год назад
buddy if i wanna see the big trees im gonna see the big trees.
@thezanzibarbarian5729
@thezanzibarbarian5729 Год назад
If you google _"where is the oldest tree in the world"_ it comes up with a number of answers. California and UK having a 5,000 year old tree. Odly, it also says that the oldest tree in Europe is in Greece. But that's under 2,000 years old and if I'm not mistaken, both the UK AND Sweden are in Europe!!?? 8-\\... But the Swedish tree, as far as I can find out, is thought to be well over 9,000 years old.
@alksmdlaks
@alksmdlaks Год назад
"loved" to death is a weird way to put it. Most people who travel to these locations do it out of vain, not love for the object. They want to be able to say that they have seen it and show off to others.
@darkclownKellen
@darkclownKellen Год назад
Theres a forest 8n the usa I believe that is all one individual organism, attached at the roots. 80 000 years old. Remember seeing a sci show video on it years ago
@josiahfernandes
@josiahfernandes Год назад
It's so heartbreaking to see such magnificent trees being cut.. Thank-you you very much for presenting this video in such a wonderful way.. Really I feel seeing the tallest tree is not important, but knowing that it is peaceful growing in the forest makes me feel satisfied.
@BostonBlues
@BostonBlues Год назад
if only every human shared the same compassion and love for these behemoths
@sutekaa
@sutekaa Год назад
same i just love how beautiful the trees are i do not give a shit about if one is the tallest, and just the fact that these interesting gigantic trees exist is enough to make me happy
@BEDLAMITE-5280ft.
@BEDLAMITE-5280ft. Год назад
Try holding your breath forever, i heard it can really mellow you out.
@BostonBlues
@BostonBlues Год назад
@@BEDLAMITE-5280ft. my guy, you realize ppl can see what else you've commented on this video? You comment the same thing on multiple posts. If your going to try and be funny atleast have more than one recycled joke in your repertoire
@BEDLAMITE-5280ft.
@BEDLAMITE-5280ft. Год назад
@@BostonBlues stop reading my posts. Stalker.
@GladysAlicea
@GladysAlicea 3 месяца назад
Thank you so much, Aidin! I lived in California, north, south and on, off. The furthest north I ever drove was Mendocino, where the spirit of the Old West lives in its architecture. Watching this beautiful video, I regret not driving further north. I can only imagine being there, embracing its air, color, sounds and breathing presence. Thank God, I'm still breathing, so it's now on my itinerary for upcoming Cali trip and certain points due east. Nature's a divine gift and spiritual healer, and I could so use a forest right now.
@shoto42
@shoto42 Месяц назад
This was my first video of your’s when it first released, it is by far my favoirte as this stuff is pretty much in my backyard that I haven’t even hiked yet(I live in Northern Oregon). In fact, this video plus a game(funnily enough) got me into hiking and I have a deep appreciation for nature and the beauty of it now, so I wanted to thank you for it. Now every time I watch a video of your’s I make a mental note of it so that one day I might be able to visit these places(respectfully ofc).
@TheDude1391
@TheDude1391 Год назад
This was absolutely beautiful, I admired every minute of it, my native American tribe took me and our relatives to Humboldt county for a field trip and made a trip up all the way to see the forest along this 2 week expedition to visit national sites and learn about the history these places had, no words can ever describe how beautiful and amazing it is to really explore the area, you reach a sense of calm you'll never reach being in a city, and you have a bit of astonishment about it to be living in this time to see it yourselves, if anyone truly has a love for nature like me please go visit this place it is absolutely worth it. Thank you for making this video, it definitely earned a like, comment and subscribe 😎👌🙏
@veqonce
@veqonce Год назад
Or maybe we shouldn’t visit it at all. Maybe, as the documentary suggests, humankind should respect it from a distance, as to not further damage what little there is left.
@TheDude1391
@TheDude1391 Год назад
@@veqonce so your suggesting to cancel all field trips to national parks? We did nothing of the sort to destroy the area, rather quite the opposite and preserve the nature that is still there today, our native american tribe constantly works with wildlife preservation to help all local and national parks anyway we can, even picking up trash in these areas helps greatly, so i encourage people to experience it, but respect everything like it's a home just for the wildlife ☺️ don't experience nature through a screen, please explore this beautiful world with an open heart of understanding that your not the only thing living on this great world of ours 🌎🌹🌷🌻🌳
@danpozzi3307
@danpozzi3307 Год назад
Great comment. The more people that visit and take the time to pick up trash they see, love on the trees, and the planting, the better for the planet.
@TheDude1391
@TheDude1391 Год назад
@@danpozzi3307 exactly ☺️ treat the area as it was your own home and enjoy this planet while we still can, we have a symbiotic relationship with mother earth so we shouldn't ruin it with littering or pulling any plants while walking on trails, it's the littlest things that have the biggest impact so we just gotta teach this to our future generations so we don't lose this great planet of ours 🙏🌎
@danpozzi3307
@danpozzi3307 Год назад
@@TheDude1391 right on. We can go to every place on the planet and find where man has forced other life Of course, in the United States, we almost killed the Buffalo into extinction. Once people took ownership and protected the Buffalo. They would only be in photos now. Now, with private ownership, we once again have herds of them wandering around. I even saw where you could buy buffalo meat to eat. My grandfather was a logger in northern California. He owned 80 acres which has been logged three times in the 1900s. The last time was 1996 and they harvested thousands of board feet of old growth redwoods on just 40 acres of the original property. The property looks like a park.
@ricefields4547
@ricefields4547 Год назад
"mount everest of all living things" gave me chills as someone who grew up around redwoods and went on frequent field trips into these forests that quote is a perfect way to describe walking into these forests
@maythesciencebewithyou
@maythesciencebewithyou Год назад
calling it that, after having cut 96% of the forest, thereby cutting trees that were much bigger.
@reidflemingworldstoughestm1394
I think of them as the Gobi Desert of all living things. Your metaphor may vary.
@koro287
@koro287 Год назад
The Dyerville Giant by any chance?
@SouthernBelleReviews
@SouthernBelleReviews 3 месяца назад
So glad I found your channel. Its a breath of fresh air. ❤
@carlosllamas7193
@carlosllamas7193 8 месяцев назад
This is nothing but amazing man. So beautiful. Looking at your videos is like being there in person, you do an am one job with the edits. Forrest green is a very very beautiful dark side color
@Human_G
@Human_G Год назад
A similar thing happened in the local community I live in. (The internet leading to the destruction of nature.) There was a beautiful waterfall park that had to be shut down because too many people from outside of the area found it, resulting in dozens of deadly falls every year. This proved very difficult for rescue crews to get to, they would need to bring in helicopters. The locals knew how to navigate it, or just didn't go; it was understood that care was needed to scale the waterfall's side. Now there is just a restricted sign leading to nothing, everything was ripped up and flooded to ensure that nobody can go to it now.
@nigelrg1
@nigelrg1 8 месяцев назад
Stupidity is contagious, or cowardice is a survival trait, whichever you prefer. Virtually every year someone falls off the top of Yosemite Falls in California, a 2,500' drop (if you bounce twice).
@peppermeat8059
@peppermeat8059 8 месяцев назад
so thy have to destroy an ecosystem just because people were too stupid to not fall off? fuck humans
@johannuys7914
@johannuys7914 8 месяцев назад
Yanks, eh?
@KevinSorbo.
@KevinSorbo. 8 месяцев назад
So it was destroyed by the local government but you're blaming people that visited? Maybe it's you that is the problem
@Ruseofpoison
@Ruseofpoison 8 месяцев назад
I was an active observer in the local nature photography community around the time the race to find the Grove really reached its peak and location reveal. As a NorCal native that visited Humboldt a lot for its parks, it was an area of interest for me and I was devastated when the location information became widely known. I see other NorCal natives mentioning the actual name of the location and surrounding landmarks. I urge those folks to please avoid specifics, as even just road names can start people down the trail of finding this location to go to it regardless of legalities and warnings.
@Toastybear1
@Toastybear1 2 дня назад
This, and your doc about true silence, are truly some of the very best pieces of filmmaking I’ve seen. I come back frequently to both. Thank you for doing what you do.
@richpaydirt
@richpaydirt 6 месяцев назад
There’s an area of mixed species old growth forest near lake Quinault in Western Washington state . It’s a rainforest that holds some of the largest trees on earth. In fact, several are documented as the largest of their kind. The problem is that most of the trees, especially the world largest sitka spruce, are way to accessible. People are damaging the trees by climbing as far up the trunks as possible for photos and trashing the entire area. It’s sad that while people want to take the time to visit these places, they can’t respect them when they get there.
@PostCallwithPaul
@PostCallwithPaul Год назад
The cinematography in this video is just absolutely breathtaking. You say it’s difficult to capture the depth and beauty of the redwoods but as someone who’s visited these forests many times, this feels as close as you can get. Paired with your amazing story telling, I can’t get enough of this. Thanks to Jonny Harris for sharing this gem and you can bet I’m subscribed for more!
@rachel844
@rachel844 Год назад
I went and visited the redwoods last October, it was honestly the most phenomenal experience of my life. You are so accurate by saying it’s impossible to convey how huge they are. The video is wonderful and I came away knowing so much more, and I sincerely love the pacing and the beautiful shots
@veronica0406
@veronica0406 Год назад
Beautifully done.
@stephanrosos4957
@stephanrosos4957 8 месяцев назад
Thank you for an awe inspiring glimpse into the realm of untouched Nature's magnificent splendor in that forest. The wonder of the gigantic scale of the Redwoods in an ecosystem in unadulterated balance: such a huge contrast to the man-made realm most of us only know. I am for the better after seeing your great work. Bravo!
@blackspell9890
@blackspell9890 8 месяцев назад
Dayum the video quality of this video is insane. Together with the ambient sound and music this makes some very relaxing atmosphere. Thank you!
@mr_peach7704
@mr_peach7704 Год назад
I've been to the Sequoias many times but had never been up to see the Redwoods before last fall. What struck me, driving and hiking in the area, was how dark it was in the middle of a sunny day down on the forest floor. And I don't think you mentioned it but supposedly the Humboldt Redwoods have the highest biomass of any place on earth. (You were so lucky to see them in the snow, too!)
@AK-rv6dq
@AK-rv6dq Год назад
Sequoia is Redwood.
@stoniebro-nies
@stoniebro-nies Год назад
Redwoods are sequoias, sequoias is redwood, sequoia is a scientific name for redwoods, coming from someone from the redwoods
@mr_peach7704
@mr_peach7704 Год назад
@@stoniebro-nies Also, we call the coastal variety "redwoods" and the sierra nevada variety "sequoias". So there's that.
@markrobinowitz8473
@markrobinowitz8473 Год назад
Prairie Creek is where the highest density of biomass per hectare was recorded.
@DG-kq8zf
@DG-kq8zf Год назад
Thanks for mentioning the biomass. Yes, even more than the densest of rain forests. The pamphlet at the Dyerville giant (founder's grove) mentions that, also. The dyreville giant was one of my favorite trees, along with the flatiron tree. Both now fallen.
@aj7470
@aj7470 8 месяцев назад
My wife and I were driving through the Redwood forest. I think it was a old logging road. We saw a a creature coved with hair drinking from a small steam. It wasn’t very big. My wife was frozen in her seat. I watched it stand up and walk into the forest and disappear. Super thick and over grown
@darlenericotta
@darlenericotta 5 месяцев назад
Big Foot!
@strawberyyicecreamdream216
@strawberyyicecreamdream216 24 дня назад
I've been binging your videos and you have seemingly perfected nature shots of foresty mountain areas. Superb work.
@klamathmountainultralight
@klamathmountainultralight 4 месяца назад
Great video bro. I've lived in this area most of my life, am familiar with these locations and you represented them here with perfection.
@cemsarioglu5947
@cemsarioglu5947 10 месяцев назад
The oldest tree I've ever seen was an olive tree in Ayvalik-Turkiye. It was supposedly over 1000 years old. It is so sad and heart breaking to see those b&w pictures of gigantic trees being cut. By the way this video was so beautifully made, I watched it three times in a row. Thank you for your effort Aidin.
@SofaKingShit
@SofaKingShit 8 месяцев назад
The perfect place for a gender reveal. They always go so well. Very classy.
@trxtech3010
@trxtech3010 8 месяцев назад
They should log that entire forest because we need to build more houses in the forest. Looks ugly anyways.
@PGAC22
@PGAC22 8 месяцев назад
Oldest tree I've seen is still alive, it's over 2100 years old, it's a Yew tree.
@Mika-ph6ku
@Mika-ph6ku 8 месяцев назад
@@trxtech3010bait
@Mika-ph6ku
@Mika-ph6ku 8 месяцев назад
I think the Japanese had a 10,000 year old sakura tree that was destroyed during ww2. Sad stuff...
@bradley163
@bradley163 Год назад
This video made me cry for some reason. You know when you see something so unfathomably beautiful, your body doesn't know how to react? My body decides that I should cry. Thank you for creating this wondrous piece of art.
@AK-rv6dq
@AK-rv6dq Год назад
Just wait until you are under one!
@whatthetreetaughtme
@whatthetreetaughtme 6 месяцев назад
Beautiful video, thank you for making it. There is nothing more inspiring to me than standing in the presence of an old tree that has and will outlive me. Magical.
@chaseD707
@chaseD707 4 месяца назад
I grew up in a small old logging town in northern California about 10 minutes from the well known “Avenue of the Giants” Redwood forest and in short driving distance to multiple other big redwood groves all around my home town. Not to say I took it for granted when I lived there but I definitely didn’t realize how rare it was to have these trees in my back yard and should of spent a lot more time than I did exploring them
@Editinggeek
@Editinggeek Год назад
The amount of effort you put into your videos and research is inspiring. Keep up the good work and I hope more and more people discover your videos!
@MichaelSchmittMasterMadCraft
Thank you for making this video. For its poetic to conservation. The redwoods are one of the most magical places I have ever been. I spoke with the park rangers as they explain their struggle to me. People were hiking in and causing a lot of damage trying to find the tallest trees. Relinquish those urges and realize the whole forest is amazing. There is plenty of fun to be had the in Redwoods as is. You don't need to be carving out the landscape to a tree you think is the tallest. You wouldn't even be able to tell from the ground anyway. tldr: If you cant see why these trees should be respected you aren't a good human
@arebee9024
@arebee9024 9 месяцев назад
how do people hike in every other forest without destroying it? why is hiking around the redwoods so particularly bad?
@MichaelSchmittMasterMadCraft
@MichaelSchmittMasterMadCraft 9 месяцев назад
@@arebee9024 Its not necessarily bad to hike through a path but a lot of people leave trash and go off path. If the red woods weren't the only place on earth with these trees left, the rangers would be less strict. The environment there is perfect for the trees but the microbiology in the soil is in fact very delicate. Sequoia trees are also very spongy and soft which was just what I personally observed.
@montananerd8244
@montananerd8244 8 месяцев назад
​@@arebee9024it's the numbers. 200, 500 hikers a year is one thing, but when 5k come, destruction is inevitable
@vincentmihalic7433
@vincentmihalic7433 26 дней назад
Hey ! Just wanted to say how beautiful your video is ! I loved it and honestly I felt at peace watching it :) Thank you
@JS-gt1rq
@JS-gt1rq Месяц назад
Thank you for what you are doing. Your videos have been suggested to me just at the right moment. I have been spending too much time on internet lately, overthinking about things beyond my control, but your videos reminded me that there are plenty wonders in this world that are much more worthy or my attention, so sincerely thank you.
@Daniel-if7gz
@Daniel-if7gz Год назад
This is such a beautiful shot and written video. All the while conveying respect and having respect for the outdoors and these special places. Your the best Aidin!
@BinaryBlitz
@BinaryBlitz Год назад
I am absolutely loving these short form video essays. They're succinct, very well paced and narrated, and most importantly engaging. Definitely earned my subscription and looking forward to your future content. Keep up the great work Aidin.
@danielmahler16
@danielmahler16 8 месяцев назад
Wow, this was a great video. I'm usually not one to comment but when you said "social media makes it easy for beautiful and impressive locations to blow up" it struck a nerve and I thought I'd share my experience in Florida with it's natural springs. The hidden gems went from local knowledge to travel tips on huge social media platforms. Overcrowding, pollution, just an overall lack of concern for keeping these places intact as they are for the next generation to experience. It is sad what we have done and continue to do to this planet. Thank you for making this video.
@aarons7563
@aarons7563 Месяц назад
That zoom out at 0:23 did a decent job at portraying how massive those trees are. That was impressive. The videography and the message was on point
@The_sinner_Jim_Whitney
@The_sinner_Jim_Whitney Год назад
These forests are the most awe-inspiring, special, almost holy place I've ever been. Simply walking through them, nearly everyone (including even a lot of kids!) are silent or speaking softly, the wonder of it isn't lost on anyone. Genuinely amazing, doesn't feel like a part of even the same world as most of the rest of our world. I considered going to the grove where Hyperion stands before it was banned many times, and I wish I would've now that I can't. It's just absurd to me that anyone willing to make the formidable trek to where the very tallest live (nowhere near the most scenic of the groves of giants, most of which are readily accessible) would be so disrespectful as to be destructive. I hate that the dumbest and most thoughtless among us always ruin it for those of us that deserve to experience what they've ruined.
@max_wheelwright
@max_wheelwright Год назад
The pacing on this one absolutely blew me away. The changes in tone and visuals, the contrasting red and green hues, and new things you tried out like the focal length stitching and the projector-- this has to be my favorite docu of yours yet 😮 EDIT: Dude this video is gonna BLOW UP 🤯 Mar 16: 7K Mar 24: 11K Mar 25: 20K Mar 26: 40K (casually hits 300K subs) Mar 27: 90K Mar 28: 200K Mar 29 ☀️: 400K Mar 29 🌒: 800K Mar 30: 1,000,000!!!!!
@CassidyHansen
@CassidyHansen Год назад
Now I need to look up what focal length stitching is! :)
@pilotpat
@pilotpat Год назад
as of mar 28 he has hit 155k.
@jaysparrow6631
@jaysparrow6631 Год назад
@@pilotpat 168k when I viewed this video
@pilotpat
@pilotpat Год назад
@@jaysparrow6631 yea this vid bout to blow up.
@kimyungill2149
@kimyungill2149 Год назад
197k as of now
@dullesbrad
@dullesbrad 8 дней назад
Such great storytelling. I have a young growing sequoia in VA and this is the best 'redwood video' I've seen.
@gonzalpi
@gonzalpi 7 месяцев назад
I’m halfway through the video and I’m fascinated by these trees and the story you tell about them, which led me to this question: how do you go about researching the topic of a video?
@bpoirier4
@bpoirier4 Год назад
Randomly came across your channel. I appreciate your dedication to your craft… from creative pieces like your “one shot” to documentary-style like this- truly excellent work man. Keep it up.
@willieshawjr
@willieshawjr Год назад
I always leave your videos feeling informed, creatively motivated, a little upset with social media’s effects on nature and so impressed with the work ethic you put in. Love this 🤙🏾🙏🏾🙏🏾
@Jbird1189
@Jbird1189 4 месяца назад
Beautiful cinema work, great music, well informative, and easy to watch. You’re doing an amazing job! Your videos are addicting and very informationally lucrative!
@eiuscommodi575
@eiuscommodi575 24 дня назад
Aidin, thank you. I fell in love with your image colours and I really love the story. I'm definitely going to visit RedWood National Park!
@ashdoes
@ashdoes Год назад
What an incredible documentary and piece of work. The quality of direction, production, sound and visuals is just amazing. Hats off to you man. I have a feeling I've found this channel early. There is no way that work like this won't surpass 1m subs soon enough. I just hope it attracts an audience with as much respect for the subjects and forests such as these. Thank you for producing this!
@stoniebro-nies
@stoniebro-nies Год назад
Good editing and good visuals, but does not mean good product because most if not all the information he came across was false information that was spread throughout the 80s by tree lovers.. he stated “facts” but with no proof to cover his arguments. This is coming from somebody that worked for the forest service and lives in the heart of the redwoods. Nothing he said was 100% true.
@ashdoes
@ashdoes Год назад
@@stoniebro-nies I said production, meaning the media aspect. Though appreciate your comment and notice re the info 👍
@MultiRobinL
@MultiRobinL Год назад
Just stumbled upon your channel and I only really have one word, wow. Your way of storytelling and your visual style is just incredible!
@morganthompson1718
@morganthompson1718 3 месяца назад
That was so beautiful and moving. Thank you for sharing so we could all enjoy, this video proves to be one of the few good things about the internet!
@jaredlandberg7514
@jaredlandberg7514 8 месяцев назад
This is my first time seeing any of your content, and I am hooked! This is great work
@ForgottenSouls
@ForgottenSouls Год назад
Just found this channel and this video is AMAZING, I love the effort put into the script and the editing and the filming. The quality of this truely shows your passion for these projects. Great work!
@reconnaissance7372
@reconnaissance7372 8 месяцев назад
One of the reasons why I love Tasmania so much is because it feels so prehistoric. It's very similar with it's trees. Huon Pine for example is supposed to be one of the best materials to build boats because of its natural oil content.
@maxzytaruk8558
@maxzytaruk8558 6 месяцев назад
Huons are gorgeous!!! Wollemi too ❤
@richardn4875
@richardn4875 4 месяца назад
But so slow growing.
@danielrojas7937
@danielrojas7937 2 месяца назад
Wow, I'm so glad I came across your video. There are so many jaw-dropping shots in this wonderful video. You have managed to capture the magical beauty of old growth Redwood forests for all of us to enjoy. If you ever get the chance to see this extraordinary species of tree, I would take it. Cheers and thank you for the video, amazing work my friend!
@paintedskies
@paintedskies 2 месяца назад
I really appreciate this. I grew up in Northern California with the tall red trees in my back yard. I miss the smell of pine and the sound of the wildlife that live in the trees. It's a wonderland! Thank you for doing this ❤
@LeviSpangler
@LeviSpangler Год назад
I've been watching for years, and I can confidently say that you have found your niche. Definitely keep going with this type of content. Good job mate!👌
@UentilSecure
@UentilSecure 8 месяцев назад
I was born on the far north coast of California. These trees really are magical. It’s by far my favorite part of visiting home
@gabledeweese1040
@gabledeweese1040 5 месяцев назад
Fantastic video. Something similar happened near where I grew up in Southern California. Although not to the same scale at all, there was a local waterfall in a canyon just up the street from my house. A local gem with beautiful rock walls carved out from the stream. One year the news stations did an article on places to beat the heat. Within a few months, the rock faces were full of graffiti, trash and baby diapers were all over and access was blocked off by local government.
@infjstardust4357
@infjstardust4357 4 месяца назад
I don't know why it's very hard for some people to properly throw their garbage....this should be taught over and over in classes. I learned proper waste disposal when I was a Girl Scout. It stuck in my head what I had learned there until now.
@jbach2002
@jbach2002 3 месяца назад
I live in an area of Georgia that’s part very small region of southern Appalachia covering a couple states that’s considered a rainforest. It’s beautiful. The southeast also has the highest tree diversity in the country with many endemic species and this region has a lot of those trees so there’s just so much variety and it feels like you’re in a jungle. But with that, I spent a couple years in boy scouts growing up and one thing that was drilled into me was leaving any place like you found it or better than you found it. I’ve adopted that for whenever I’m outside. I love going on trails here, camping, and exploring. But it pisses me off how many beer bottles, plastic wrappers, crumbled up pieces of paper, etc. that I find wherever I go. I definitely understand and agree with the levels of protection for these trees because people just don’t care about protecting what we have.
@TheRiverweasel09
@TheRiverweasel09 11 месяцев назад
I think, tonight on a totally random click, I just stumbled across the best nature documentary channel on RU-vid. This is like "History of the Universe" for ecology fans. Utterly loved this and you do such a phenomenal job making these places I've always wanted to visit feel so magical. I grew up in the midwest, there's nothing huge there except for the endless hazy void of the sky and telephone poles spanning giant prairies going past both horizons. I now live in Denver and the sight of the Rockies never fails to amaze me, but I've always wanted to see the Sequoias and Redwoods and just let my jaw drop below my ankles. It's hard to truly comprehend how tiny we are until we stand next to the planet's giants like these.
@WanderingSwitchback
@WanderingSwitchback Год назад
Beautifully told and shot! The way the fog comes through the trees up there is so amazing. I grew up in those redwoods, and totally took them for granted growing up, not realizing how incredible and special they are. It's so sad to see the damage from unaware people. That terrain is no joke, and it's so fragile and easily damaged, especially by folks who don't know how to be gentle with it. I hope you got to visit Lady Bird Johnson Grove while you were there- it's AMAZING!
@DH432hrtz
@DH432hrtz 5 месяцев назад
Great work absolutely stunning footage! All the best. Doug 😎
@solarswan4286
@solarswan4286 6 месяцев назад
Found your channel just now, and gladly subscribed. Awesome material
@CallieC143
@CallieC143 Год назад
This is an impressive display of work. I have spent much of my life loving nature but never getting to explore and appreciate it for what it is, and this video filled something in my soul that I think I needed. Thank you.
@petthepotat
@petthepotat Год назад
this video, is amazing. love the story, love the editing, I love how you document everything in this video while highlighting the beauty of nature. My personal favorite is the snow covered tree scenes! keep up the amazing work!
@DrachenGothik666
@DrachenGothik666 20 дней назад
First time I visited Muir Woods, I was in awe. It's pretty built up compared to other forests, but still an amazing experience, being from the Prairies like I am, where trees rarely reach over 60'. Then I visited Mount Tamilpais, which is _much_ more wild, & that place blew me away. The fog among the Sequoias was magical. We camped among the trees for a night. Everything was soaked, but I loved it. We hiked the trails the next day. Fairyland.
@SkyStepDrones68
@SkyStepDrones68 2 месяца назад
Great video sir! I appreciate people who love and respect the outdoors and the love for nature which is why I love capturing this beautiful world from the sky. Thanks again for this amazing piece.
@kieranbingham7207
@kieranbingham7207 Год назад
This is one of the best made Docs i've ever seen. The attention to detail is incredible. Well done, man. You're exceptional at this and I hope you continue. This is the first vid i've seen from you, i'm keen to catch up on your older stuff. Nicely done :)
@frenchys_prospecting
@frenchys_prospecting 8 месяцев назад
I live in the Victorian high country in Australia and we have some incredibly big trees here but these redwoods, they're something else. Something special. I hope we can protect these trees for future generations
@wabbeltje11
@wabbeltje11 Месяц назад
The way you make your videos is so touching!
@shxdix
@shxdix 5 месяцев назад
when i die, i wanna come back to all of your videos and watch them to see one last time the beauty of nature. thank you for everything aidin!
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