Ancha Cliff Dwellings in Pueblo Canyon Arizona
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- Опубліковано 6 лют 2025
- PLEASE READ: due to obvious deterioration of some of these ruins in recent years, I won't answer any questions regarding their location beyond clues found in the videos. Information has become plentiful over the past 15-20 years, so due diligence will be rewarded for those that appreciate this stuff. And please, if you do seek them out, be respectful of the cultures that built them, as well as those who enjoy and appreciate them, and leave things the way you found them...
Hi! Love your Cliff Dwellings, and the Beautiful Hike! See you on the NEXT 1!!
Thanks for the video. Another UA-camr was there recently but he didn't give out any details and your video helped me track the location down. I won't be going there, not remotely in the best physical condition to be doing hikes like that anymore. But I was nearby a couple weeks ago and have drone video from the Workman Creek dwellings.
Amazing to consider why people would go to such lengths to build so high up and far away. I can't help but think it was because of other waring nations or tribes. It couldn't be just because of the water source. amazing building techniques. I recently learned about much older huge megalithic structures in Montana. Sage Mountain. HUGE boulders fitted together perfectly in walls like you find in S. America and Russia. Thanks for the video.
I never seen these Native American dwelling before, the higher, hardest places seem to the most interesting !!!!! Thank you for filming this location , great work !!!! Be careful not to get hurt !!!! They sure did want. Peace and silence. TERESA
I love the Sierra anchas young would be my first choice to live in Arizona again
Beautiful country nice and quiet like to live there .
Nice adventure. Thanks for the effort.
Above workman falls is a good dwelling to explore
You need to hold the camera steadier and take time to slowly scan structures and walls. The shots are too fleeting to make hards or tails of the ruins.
My favorite hike
Thanks hard hike disabled now love see
👍
I want to have a bbq in the wind cave with the waterfall view
A flood of water came down that canyon, carving out hollows, where ancient peoples would establish homes, until the water levels dropped too far. Then, they'd move to a new location, lower on the wall, until they moved out to the canyon floor, and out onto the plains.
What was there food intake up there so high.
Sad to see how little is now standing
..and this is one of them considered to be in 'good' condition..
Mostly walking and brush and when you do encounter a structure you don't spend any time there... wtf!
This Hike took a full day, not 15 minutes, lol. They aren't easy to get to; the hike and scenery getting there and back are a major part of the adventure, and we actually spent a couple of hours at the ruins... many people want to see the effort, not just the reward.
@@Gotdurt the effort would be much more appreciated if more time were spent at sights of interest. All the best 2 u and yours
I hoped to see some interesting ruins and get some interesting commentary on the ancients, but all I got was what appeared to be a high speed foot race across a canyon wall. What a waste of film.
I missed that... who won the race? Regardless, luckily no film was used...
I thought the same. Poor quality video for sure
@@bingoDingo2050 Both of you were free to scroll past it then. Negative Nancy comments unnecessary.
There where tough people that live there.
That was a waste of data but some of your other vids are Good!
I wonder if the water has higher levels of things like uranium??
I've read that there could be trace amounts, but not enough to harm people or animals.
You pegged the Pucker Meter on that hill!
What the address Im moving in
You need to get a gimbaled mounted chest rig for your camera... under $200 on Amazon. The first 6 minuites the viewer spends staring at the dirt as you climb. even when sped up to 2x it's annoying. A gimbaled mount will also better show the angle you are climbing, that most viewers probably don't appreciate.
Actually, I have a 3-axis gimbal that I sometimes use for my mtb videos (especially late 2016- 2018), however it has some major drawbacks and really doesn't work the way you described. It is stable, yes, and remains horizontal with the horizon, yes, but when you are climbing a 45+ degree angle, you are still looking at dirt, because that's what is in front of your chest. The downsides though are significant; you have to carry more batteries in addition to the camera, and must keep them charged as well (not convenient for camping and/or hikes longer than a couple of hours); when it's not on, it just flops about loosely in active scenarios; it extends further out from the chest and catches branches, etc, and is easily knocked around and out of alignment/calibration; it gets in the way of body movements, and extra care has to be taken in tight situations; if you fall and take a tumble, it is vulnerable and also hurts when you land on it... Instead, for most circumstances, I have since settled with the Hero 7 with the built-in image stabilizer as a compromise, with it's much lower profile, unobtrusive and virtually indestructible nature; I can pretty much just "set it and forget it" and enjoy my adventures.
15 minutes watching someone walk? No thanks.
😂😂😂