Definitely! Silk is warm, cool when wet and strong. I don’t dress Western style. I’m a dedicated old school hippie in appearance and silk bandannas are used for lots of things. People frequently mistake me for a mountain man.
@@dr.froghopper6711 That's funny, I'm a mountain man and I sometimes get mistaken for being a hippie. To be fair, though, I am a little bit of a hippie!
Nice one, Santee. I carry around a 27"x27" camo bandana on a daily basis. Nowadays it is thought of as an XL or Jumbo size. Very handy for all sorts of tasks. About 20 years ago, used a bandana to fix a torn pocket lining on a pair of black dress-pants that was part of my security uniform. Folded it up carefully, then shoved it down into the pocket. The bandana was much wider than the tear. So, instant, improvised, new pocket lining. Worked well until I could get home from work so my mother could sew up the lining. Easily the most unusual thing that I used a bandana for.
Greetings from Ireland. I've been wearing bandanas for years but I never knew that there was any kind of special knot's, you'll have to return to this subject and do a video just featuring the knot's and how to tie them. Thanks for all your great content down through the years.
Santee, Thank you very much my Gun Slinging Brother. You and Mrs Pew Pew have a beautiful and blessed weekend. Hug the kitty cat for me. LORD GOD Bless and stay vigilant.
Great episode! That's a lot of a bunch of pile of bandanas / neckerchiefs you have now with a great mix of materials. I found some new patterns and will have to get you some more. 🤠
My wife came to me all happy, saying, “Look darling, you got me this 40 years ago on our honeymoon, and it still fits!"... I love her so I let it pass. It was a scarf.
Didn’t you make a masked bandana video “trying” a heist at a Wells F@rgo?!! That was funny! Bill was great in this episode! 👍🖖🖖🖖 My favorite banana color is grey. Not hot, not cold, and won’t stain the wash! My knot is “not!” It’s whatever I do in the moment… 👍
That was so cool. I love the bandanas' look. Thanks for sharing this info with us, Santee. I guess I just thought they were part of their outfits. 🤠👏🏻👏🏻🤠
Great video Santee. Eric Heisner over at "Lean Dog Productions" makes EXCELLENT Hollywood Film Bandanas, including reproductions of John Wayne's, Tell Sackett, Gus McCrae and others.
We prefer our "fancy" Silk ones over the cotton. I see a perdy scarf, and I am drawn to it and admire it. But I don't have many. I think I have 3, the husband has 4 or more. Not counting all the ones he carries for daily use (YUP, he is old school in that matter)
Thanks for sharing another informative video with us Santee. I found the bit about the Dying of the Turkey Red Bandanas very interesting. I'm sure glad a better way was found to color them. I use my Bandanas quite frequently as a Hankerchief. They're kinda bulky in my back pocket but, as mentioned in the video, I find many uses for them. Again, thanks for sharing this video.
So some had slides, just like us ex-boy scouts? (Boy's Life magazine used to feature "slide of the month"). BTW, doesn't $18.95 seem a bit pricey for a square yard of cloth, even with the sides hemmed?
I thought the title was "Old West Bananas!" I was wondering how they got bananas in the Old West! Y'know, Santee, when Bill Brazleton talks without the echo, he sounds a lot like, well, Santee! -Desert Rat Rick
I just typically do the shemagh from Amazon mainly because of there size in a extreme emergency they have a plethora of use a I was actually stuck in a snow storm in Montana horse broke a leg could not get tinder started to wet I actually used my knife scraped little particles off of 1 that cotton lit no problem
Always bring a large bandana and don't panic. How about one on the Restaurant on the Line of the Santa Fe, Harvey House? So Long, and Thanks for all the Facts.
I've been wearing a bandana or wildrag around my neck for sun protection since before 2020. In 2020 you started to see more people wearing cotton ones to double as masks. I try not to get annoyed when people compliment my "ascot."
An old Wrangler/Stuntman friend of mine -- now long gone to fly with eagles -- taught me to tie my bandana with an overhand slipknot on one end, the other end going thru, and the overhand tightening around it. The advantage being if the loop of the whole bandana got caught, it would would come off harmlessly, instead of strangling you.
I started wearing bandana's over 40 years ago when I began working full time outdoors in the Deserts of California. Now even though I am retired, I still wear them here in Ridgecrest Ca, which is in the Mojave Desert. I feel undressed not wearing them.
I have a bottle opener that is a ring 💍 I use for a slide 🤠... had my neck fussed so i wear a bandana often in the cold 🥶 months, helps alot. I also like something called a Buff. Great product 👌
Giday. Santee. Thanks again For making a nuther great Video. And for the history lesson. There were quite a lot of interesting things i did not no about them. 🤠👍🏻
you have to respect a piece of clothing that is utilitarian and usable for any way imaginable and still holds true to this day had to wear these in the scouts and never quite liked them, but given the timing of their creation, the significance of the colors, and the connection to the west it makes sense: military corps colors(yellow, orange, red, blue, green), clasps to make a “knot” similar to the ones you showed, and varying ways of furling them 😎
I feel your pain on the neckerchiefs. My collection somehow keeps growing too. And St. Andrew’s video on different ways to tie is great. At the last shoot I was complemented on my knot. Great Video Santee.
I've never really worn one. I've got such a fat head and neck that I'd need more than a yard of fabric. Great info yet again. Thanks Santee. Stay out of the sun. Ha.
Well, ain't dat sumpin Santee. I wore a bandana at work every day since I was in concrete dust every day and that dust eats the hell out of hair. I used it as a head covering, the one way to wear it you didn't cover. I wonder if you have ever seen a picture with somebody using it that way. I think I have seen a picture of an Indian or Mexican wearing it to cover their hair.
Why would anyone, especially someone riding drag, want to wear a banana around their neck? Have you ever tried to eat an extremely dusty banana? What? ....... Oh ......... never mind 🥺
Thanks again Santee & Co. I wore a neckerchief with my US Navy dress uniforms . When I sailed in the Persian Gulf I bought a couple of those Arab kerchiefs . I'm in Upstate South Carolina , and we've been hit hard by Hurricane Helene . There's no power in huge swaths of the area , and gasoline is hard to come by . I own a generator , but only enough fuel to run for a few hours a day . The internet is intermittent . Please pray for everyone effected .
@ArizonaGhostriders Thanks . I was riding with my brother in search of gas . He crashed into a fallen tree , and I nearly got beheaded . There's been several deaths from Florida , through Georgia , the Carolinas , and Tennessee .
When it's windy out my way, I wear mine with the knot on the side. That way, when the wind blows, the pendants or the triangle don't blow up into my face. Like you, to protect my neck in the heat, I wear it pendants forward. Whatever the weather is, I wear the bandana to protect me from it.
I think it would be interesting if you did a video on the use of General Lee's battle flag, or the use of the Confederate flags in the West after the 1860's.
Is a bandana and a wildrag the same thing. I always heard them called wildrags. I have a green silk wildrag with my cattlebrand embroidered onto it. It is a lot larger than the average bandana. Loved the video.
During the Great Covid Scare, we had to wear some facial covering to work, so I wore a stetson, bib-front shirt, and bandana almost daily. People weren't sure if I were going to teach my classes or rob a stagecoach. 🤠
The reason the cavalry used yellow is because it was an indication of what part of the army they were in red for artillery, light blue for infantry yellow for cavalry and so on. It matched the stripes on Officer and NCO trousers.
So very awsomely awsome and interestingly informative video, I really liked and enjoyed it, I got a lot of inspiration for my old west frontier, 1920s through,the early/mid 2000s retro/rermtrofuturism,mario,zelda and ancient mesopatamian,sumerian, hebrew and biblical studies,mythology,angelogy and demonology inspired writing projects, that I have already written a lot of short vinyette SceneStories for. I learned alot about bandanas in the old west as well. Great job,well done and keep up the great work. Im definitely going to be adding bandanas to my stories world, alongside fashion scarves and a little bit of alternative clothing from the scene aesthetic culture of the early 2000s. The story Im writing today takes place in a flooded lake at the center of a island, that I named Alessaeia Isle, that I named Lake Shenuah, which has the Tahnèna TundraFields and the Aurorealis Woods near the lakes shore. The characters of the story are Aeh'Trou/AhTrou and his friends Luwith, Zinkth/Zynth, Zaldrah/Zepheldra and Aryl. Theres a phantom venturer character in my story named Zanny Phathom.
@@ArizonaGhostriders Thanks. Right now Im watching videos on the paranormal,supernatural, retro video games histories and zelda videos both official and fan projects as well as true DMT and psychedelics stories for even further inspiration, so I can start more story typing after I gather more inspiration for the other newer stories.
@@ArizonaGhostriders thanks, the first video on the paranormal that Im getting further inspiration from is videos on real paranormal videos,photos,encounters,stories and legends.
I think there will be a part three in the future, you didn't talk at all about how women wore / used them. But they were definitely a purely male accessory 🙂
Always great to see another video from you Santee
Glad you like them!
Upgraded to a silk wild rag a bit ago from cotton. Wow those cowboys were on to something. Great vid
Thank You!
Definitely! Silk is warm, cool when wet and strong. I don’t dress Western style. I’m a dedicated old school hippie in appearance and silk bandannas are used for lots of things. People frequently mistake me for a mountain man.
@@dr.froghopper6711 That's funny, I'm a mountain man and I sometimes get mistaken for being a hippie. To be fair, though, I am a little bit of a hippie!
@@dr.froghopper6711 Cool!
Awesome Video Thanks For Sharing 👍
You're welcome.
That is gross how they dyed the red bandana. So I can suggest a yellow color. Oh, that's gross too. I won't get into that.
HA!
Thanks!! I love these!
You're welcome!
@@ArizonaGhostriders hi santee
Nice one, Santee.
I carry around a 27"x27" camo bandana on a daily basis. Nowadays it is thought of as an XL or Jumbo size. Very handy for all sorts of tasks. About 20 years ago, used a bandana to fix a torn pocket lining on a pair of black dress-pants that was part of my security uniform. Folded it up carefully, then shoved it down into the pocket. The bandana was much wider than the tear. So, instant, improvised, new pocket lining. Worked well until I could get home from work so my mother could sew up the lining. Easily the most unusual thing that I used a bandana for.
Glad you use one!
Why do you spell bandanas with a D?
Because to do so without it is bananas.
An appealing joke.
@@ArizonaGhostriders Those two are beyond Stuuupid! Np peels of laughter.
@@ArizonaGhostriders I slipped on that one...
@@51WCDodge HA!
@@HootOwl513 HA!
Greetings from Ireland. I've been wearing bandanas for years but I never knew that there was any kind of special knot's, you'll have to return to this subject and do a video just featuring the knot's and how to tie them. Thanks for all your great content down through the years.
An old tinker used to visit our yard when I was a kid, he showed me how to make dandelion tea...I still remember his bandana! Slainte !!
I will at some point, do some knots!
@@simiouno6125 I drink the stuff myself.
@@ArizonaGhostriders I look forward to it.
For a moment there I misread the thumbnail as "Old West Bananas" 😂 Especially because of the shape of the word! 😂
Wel, it's also the shape of a bandana. So, there ya go!
Bandana-nana-nana peel…and the Bandana-nana-nana…SPLIT!
*Mexican Hat Dance plays*
@@ArizonaGhostriders yup, realized that after I read that properly 😂
Amazing how u make a small thing as a bandana into an interesting and informative video! U rock!
Thank you! Cheers!
Great info
Thank You!
Santee, Thank you very much my Gun Slinging Brother. You and Mrs Pew Pew have a beautiful and blessed weekend. Hug the kitty cat for me. LORD GOD Bless and stay vigilant.
WIll do and thanks.
Great episode! That's a lot of a bunch of pile of bandanas / neckerchiefs you have now with a great mix of materials. I found some new patterns and will have to get you some more. 🤠
Cool, thanks!
My wife came to me all happy, saying, “Look darling, you got me this 40 years ago on our honeymoon, and it still fits!"...
I love her so I let it pass. It was a scarf.
LOL!
Didn’t you make a masked bandana video “trying” a heist at a Wells F@rgo?!! That was funny! Bill was great in this episode! 👍🖖🖖🖖 My favorite banana color is grey. Not hot, not cold, and won’t stain the wash! My knot is “not!” It’s whatever I do in the moment… 👍
Thanks and yes, I did.
That was so cool. I love the bandanas' look. Thanks for sharing this info with us, Santee. I guess I just thought they were part of their outfits.
🤠👏🏻👏🏻🤠
Glad you learned, Rhonda!
That was the only positive thing about the pandemic, I had an excuse to wear a bandana in modern day Ohio. Great video Santee!
I felt the same!
I wear one often .. handy to have with you for many things while I'm out in the wild
Good!
I can't hear "bandana" without subluminally adding "Roseanne Roseannadana"
HAHA!
@@ArizonaGhostriders You young whippersnapper. How do you know about Rosanne Roseannadana?
You did a great job on wrapping this one up with no sweat.
Thanks.
I have a Mexican peso that I use for mine
Ooo fun!
I cover my breathing hole with my underpants !
Wrong hole brother.
That's what she said !
Great video Santee. Eric Heisner over at "Lean Dog Productions" makes EXCELLENT Hollywood Film Bandanas, including reproductions of John Wayne's, Tell Sackett, Gus McCrae and others.
He does. Excellent remakes! I almost bought one, but the price stung me. $85 is steep for most reenactors (it's more expensive than a shirt).
"We have sunshine 364 & 1/2 days here in Arizona..." Ha-ha! Except for the monsoon or when it's snowing. But it sure feels like it sometimes.
Yeah...even when it rains. I always welcome a cloud cover during the day...and rarely get it.
We prefer our "fancy" Silk ones over the cotton. I see a perdy scarf, and I am drawn to it and admire it. But I don't have many. I think I have 3, the husband has 4 or more. Not counting all the ones he carries for daily use (YUP, he is old school in that matter)
Nice!!!
Thanks for sharing another informative video with us Santee.
I found the bit about the Dying of the Turkey Red Bandanas very interesting. I'm sure glad a better way was found to color them.
I use my Bandanas quite frequently as a Hankerchief. They're kinda bulky in my back pocket but, as mentioned in the video, I find many uses for them.
Again, thanks for sharing this video.
You're welcome.
Maybe I got this wrong Santee, didn't the vaqueros of California wear bandanas under their sombreros? To soak up the sweat?
I've seen some paintings showing that, so I don't doubt it.
My Saturday is complete. A new video from the Great Santee. And, on a much neglected, but essential, piece of the cowboy's gear.👍
Right on!
So some had slides, just like us ex-boy scouts? (Boy's Life magazine used to feature "slide of the month"). BTW, doesn't $18.95 seem a bit pricey for a square yard of cloth, even with the sides hemmed?
Many bandanas that size now run over $25!
I thought the title was "Old West Bananas!" I was wondering how they got bananas in the Old West!
Y'know, Santee, when Bill Brazleton talks without the echo, he sounds a lot like, well, Santee!
-Desert Rat Rick
Good thing he's never talked without the ghostly echo, then!
I just typically do the shemagh from Amazon mainly because of there size in a extreme emergency they have a plethora of use a I was actually stuck in a snow storm in Montana horse broke a leg could not get tinder started to wet I actually used my knife scraped little particles off of 1 that cotton lit no problem
Interesting. Yeah, those are pretty great for coverage.
Always bring a large bandana and don't panic. How about one on the Restaurant on the Line of the Santa Fe, Harvey House? So Long, and Thanks for all the Facts.
OK!
I've been wearing a bandana or wildrag around my neck for sun protection since before 2020. In 2020 you started to see more people wearing cotton ones to double as masks. I try not to get annoyed when people compliment my "ascot."
HA! Well, an ascot is in the same family.
An old Wrangler/Stuntman friend of mine -- now long gone to fly with eagles -- taught me to tie my bandana with an overhand slipknot on one end, the other end going thru, and the overhand tightening around it. The advantage being if the loop of the whole bandana got caught, it would would come off harmlessly, instead of strangling you.
Right. I think that is the slip knot variation.
I started wearing bandana's over 40 years ago when I began working full time outdoors in the Deserts of California. Now even though I am retired, I still wear them here in Ridgecrest Ca, which is in the Mojave Desert. I feel undressed not wearing them.
I agree
I have a bottle opener that is a ring 💍 I use for a slide 🤠... had my neck fussed so i wear a bandana often in the cold 🥶 months, helps alot. I also like something called a Buff. Great product 👌
Very cool you wear a bandana often.
Liked your no banana song . Too funny. You usually do that to old pictures,but now to yourself..!! Ha😅.. pex
Thanks.
Hey Sandy thanks for another Saturday video. As usual, jam-packed of information and such a short period of time thanks so much 🤠
Thank you very much!
Giday.
Santee. Thanks again
For making a nuther great Video.
And for the history lesson.
There were quite a lot of interesting things i did not no about them. 🤠👍🏻
You're very welcome.
you have to respect a piece of clothing that is utilitarian and usable for any way imaginable and still holds true to this day
had to wear these in the scouts and never quite liked them, but given the timing of their creation, the significance of the colors, and the connection to the west it makes sense: military corps colors(yellow, orange, red, blue, green), clasps to make a “knot” similar to the ones you showed, and varying ways of furling them 😎
Thanks for watching.
I feel your pain on the neckerchiefs. My collection somehow keeps growing too. And St. Andrew’s video on different ways to tie is great. At the last shoot I was complemented on my knot. Great Video Santee.
Thank You!
Wow! Has it been 6 yrs already? Been a sub since then, passing the time while on dialysis (no l9nger on it). Thanks, Santee.
You're welcome
Could you do a video on the Horse Marines? Or the battle of San Jacinto? Or both?
Sure.
I've never really worn one. I've got such a fat head and neck that I'd need more than a yard of fabric. Great info yet again. Thanks Santee. Stay out of the sun. Ha.
LOL!
Can you do a video about stiff detachable collars? Best regards folks :DD
I think I did...like in a shirt video or two.
Hi Santee,yep a bandana is very useful to carry around. I've had one with me for many years. It does get washed of course! LoL 😂 🤠🇺🇲
Of course it does....!
Outlaws of the wild West Wearing bandanas was butch Cassidy and the sundance kid
Oh yeah.
I never hike, camp, or go fishing without at least one bandana.
Smart
It's funny, cause when I first looked at the title for the video. I thought it said bananas in the old west. Lol. Then I put my glasses on.
Right.
Cub Scouts use a bandana slide, or they did when I was one, some 45ish years ago...
Yes they do!
Bandanas are just as useful today - hair bands, dog collars & here in the UK you can even get them in the merch stores of most soccer teams. ⚽🤠
Yes!
Well, ain't dat sumpin Santee. I wore a bandana at work every day since I was in concrete dust every day and that dust eats the hell out of hair. I used it as a head covering, the one way to wear it you didn't cover. I wonder if you have ever seen a picture with somebody using it that way. I think I have seen a picture of an Indian or Mexican wearing it to cover their hair.
Yeah, a head covering was used as well.
My cow dog wears a blue one. She takes on a very sassy personality when she’s wearing it. What else would a cow dog do?
Nice!!
The return of bandanas ! Very useful item in the old west! I must do one about bandanas holders instead of a using a knout!
Please do!
I haven't worn a bandana since I was Boy Scout, but we were taught a dozen uses for it.
They know their stuff.
I would think with all the whipping sweat and such, a bandana would be a nasty bandage.
In a pinch, if you have nothing else...
Love all these videos. Thank you all for making me smile.
Our pleasure!
I found it interesting that they would take the silk bandana and wrap it around them to keep their kidneys warm at night.
Hmmm....that may make some sense.
And, when they get too stained up. They are great 2A cleaning cloths!
Yes
Howdy Sante, I was wondering if you could do a video about factories in the old west
-buddy the cowboy
Like what kind?
@@ArizonaGhostriders all kinds really
@@buddythecowboy I'll take a look at what I can come up with.
@ArizonaGhostriders thanks and if you do end up making a video on it, then could you do the we got mail?
Great video I learn so much from your videos. I look forward to more.
Awesome, thank you!
Hey Santee. What is the first part for this video so I can watch them in order?
Link in the description.
So glad your vid popped up! I couldn’t find Bandana part 1
In the description field.
Can you do one on the infamous Apple Dumpling Gang?
Oh yes!
Nice of you to tie up the loose ends on the subject of bandanas
Thank You!
I’m so glad your vid popped up on YT! THX!
You're welcome!
Awesome. Part 2 Bandanas., thanks
You're welcome.
Always a fun bit of history❣️
Thank You!
Very interesting. Enjoyed this one!
Awesome, thank you!
Awesome episode Santee. Thanks
Glad you enjoyed it
Love them great video!👍🏽😊❤️🇺🇸
Glad you like them!
Sounds like my drawers. 😉
HA!
Sashes and their use would be nice.
Will put it on the list
Great video Santee
Thank You!
Why would anyone, especially someone riding drag, want to wear a banana around their neck? Have you ever tried to eat an extremely dusty banana? What? ....... Oh ......... never mind 🥺
LOL! Doesn't sound too...apeeling.
@@ArizonaGhostriders Bwahahahahahaha
Vielen lieben Dank für den zweiten Teil. Auch wenn ich nicht viel verstanden habe, die Bilder sind sehr anschaulich.👍👍🤠✌️
Grüße aus Germany
Vielen Dank fürs Zuschauen
Cool stuff, thanks Santee.
Any time!
Almost passed this one by. Thought I'd seen it, but thought I'd see when it was posted. Ooops.
Enjoyed seeing more of these pieces of daily wear.
Thanks again Santee & Co. I wore a neckerchief with my US Navy dress uniforms . When I sailed in the Persian Gulf I bought a couple of those Arab kerchiefs . I'm in Upstate South Carolina , and we've been hit hard by Hurricane Helene . There's no power in huge swaths of the area , and gasoline is hard to come by . I own a generator , but only enough fuel to run for a few hours a day . The internet is intermittent . Please pray for everyone effected .
I hope you are all safe there!
@ArizonaGhostriders Thanks . I was riding with my brother in search of gas . He crashed into a fallen tree , and I nearly got beheaded . There's been several deaths from Florida , through Georgia , the Carolinas , and Tennessee .
When it's windy out my way, I wear mine with the knot on the side. That way, when the wind blows, the pendants or the triangle don't blow up into my face. Like you, to protect my neck in the heat, I wear it pendants forward. Whatever the weather is, I wear the bandana to protect me from it.
I also prefer silk to the cotton ones. It feels better and lays better.
Nice!
I love bandanas, cool video!
Thank You!
I think it would be interesting if you did a video on the use of General Lee's battle flag, or the use of the Confederate flags in the West after the 1860's.
Is a bandana and a wildrag the same thing. I always heard them called wildrags. I have a green silk wildrag with my cattlebrand embroidered onto it. It is a lot larger than the average bandana. Loved the video.
Could you do a video on pepper box pistols? Since they are pretty unknown in western media and books.
Excellent content as always Santee!!! I wonder if there will be a part 3🤔
Love you guys !
Thank You!
During the Great Covid Scare, we had to wear some facial covering to work, so I wore a stetson, bib-front shirt, and bandana almost daily. People weren't sure if I were going to teach my classes or rob a stagecoach. 🤠
Nice!! I'd go for "rob a stagecoach" personally.
Why not both?
@@ArizonaGhostriders 😂👍
Santee thank you so much for sharing this and I really enjoyed the history.
Always👌
Thank You!
The reason the cavalry used yellow is because it was an indication of what part of the army they were in red for artillery, light blue for infantry yellow for cavalry and so on. It matched the stripes on Officer and NCO trousers.
Pretty sure it's a Hollywood invention.
@@ArizonaGhostriders they still use color designators today
I'm sure. The bandanas back then, nope.
Can you do one on purses, satchels, and other daily-carry in the west?
Nice
Thank You!
5:37 The credit card. Movie Mistakes live on!
HEY SANTEE YOU EVER DO ONE ON OLD WEST SCHOOL MARM ?
Yes, I did a couple on teachers and education
@@ArizonaGhostriders OK MUST HAVE BEEN A WHILE .. HAVE FUN .. ADIOS SANTEE
So very awsomely awsome and interestingly informative video, I really liked and enjoyed it, I got a lot of inspiration for my old west frontier, 1920s through,the early/mid 2000s retro/rermtrofuturism,mario,zelda and ancient mesopatamian,sumerian, hebrew and biblical studies,mythology,angelogy and demonology inspired writing projects, that I have already written a lot of short vinyette SceneStories for.
I learned alot about bandanas in the old west as well.
Great job,well done and keep up the great work.
Im definitely going to be adding bandanas to my stories world, alongside fashion scarves and a little bit of alternative clothing from the scene aesthetic culture of the early 2000s.
The story Im writing today takes place in a flooded lake at the center of a island, that I named Alessaeia Isle, that I named Lake Shenuah, which has the Tahnèna TundraFields and the Aurorealis Woods near the lakes shore.
The characters of the story are Aeh'Trou/AhTrou and his friends Luwith, Zinkth/Zynth, Zaldrah/Zepheldra and Aryl.
Theres a phantom venturer character in my story named Zanny Phathom.
This is great news!! Keep it up.
@@ArizonaGhostriders Thanks.
Right now Im watching videos on the paranormal,supernatural, retro video games histories and zelda videos both official and fan projects as well as true DMT and psychedelics stories for even further inspiration, so I can start more story typing after I gather more inspiration for the other newer stories.
@@chelseadanico877 Pretty deep!!
@@ArizonaGhostriders thanks, the first video on the paranormal that Im getting further inspiration from is videos on real paranormal videos,photos,encounters,stories and legends.
👍🏻
🥃
👍👍👍😎☕
Thank You!
I like to make slides out of horn, antler or bone. I have seen some like them on line
Yeah. Just kinda smelly to make 'em.
@@ArizonaGhostriders Yeah, outdoors unless you are using period tools
Yup
I think there will be a part three in the future, you didn't talk at all about how women wore / used them. But they were definitely a purely male accessory 🙂
Because I couldn't find an example of women using them in the Old West. Shawls were not bandanas, so maybe I'll do one on those at some point.😎
💪
🥃
@ArizonaGhostriders been watching your videos for a long time love your channel lots thank you for continuing to educate us!