very enjoyable video. Imagine all the work they put in the the bunker, finding and stacking all those stones, it will probably survive for many more centuries. Have a great day :)
Thank you, Kringsja 🙏 All night, I was wondering about who built that shelter, who used that, what happened there ? I think it was built before WW2 by loggers (the original bushcrafters) But clearly, the sandstones are local, while the chimney is made of cement blocks. 😶
such a great video bro !!! I swear back in the day like 5-6 years ago videos like that would have sooo much views, it really sucks they promote so much those shorts these days
@AdamCeladin Haha, many thanks, brother ! Yeah, I guess youtube is not pushing me... probably because I mix the type of content. Well, I'm going to film my camping trips anyway 🤣 Thank you Adam, receiving encouragements from an elite youtuber is great 😌🙏 Take care, brother 🫡
@@ARAW-__- Idea for you bro - make classic camping trip and during that do some focused tutorial on something and maybe put it in to name/thumbnail so people might learn new thing plus check the rest of the camping trip i am sure some video will catch eventually you have really nice production value! Keep it going my friend ,))
@AdamCeladin That's a great idea, Adam ! I will look into it, I often make short tutorials linking to full video... maybe I should do them in vertical format, but I don't like it (I know you want horizontal shorts, too 🤣)
@@ARAW-__- nono do it horizontal but do it in full video because from my experience shorter videos dont do well in longer format i think you need at least 8 -12 minutes video to get some more views and PERFECT thumbnail thats the key
@AdamCeladin That's what I feared... I don't like catchy thumbnails 🤣 but yeah I'll have many tutorials to show, and I guess it is what people would want to watch. Thank you Adam 🙏
This looks like it's going to be spectacular; M and I will watch it this afternoon... with some mint tea. ;-) My grandpa was among the first into Paris, during the war, and also had notable dealings with the FFI, so... this history seems a bit more personal to me than it might. 👍👍
@TheShurikenZone Hah, many thanks, Ryan. This is absolutely serious stuff, and no mistake, important things to ponder on. The book "ordinary men" by Browning is edifying in that sense. And yeah, I just stole your sentence 😁🖐
@ARAW-__- This was a truly spectacular film; many thanks for sharing it with us, brother. As for the other... Some things must never be forgotten, specifically because they were so horrible; to forget is to allow the same horrors to occur again, in the future. This is why my grandfather brought back some things from the war... German things, if you understand me... which could be seen as talismans of evil. He brought them back, as sobering reminders. He was one of the first me inside Buchenwald, for example, when it was liberated. And he photographed what he saw (he had a camera, even though GIs weren't supposed to, and he had his pictures developed by the guys who developed the recon photos), because even then, he knew that people would try to deny the reality of what took place. Heavy, very serious lesons from history.
@TheShurikenZone Many thanks, brother. That one took more effort than usual. Both hiking. I searched for maybe 3h going up and downhill with a heavy pack. Also, I did not remember where it was, just a general section of the forest, and some facts like tree species and topo 😅 Mackenzie's grandfather was right. People will doubt anything, and they're right to do so. But in that case, it's not due to a lack of evidence... and that becomes a problem. It was a dark area, and some of the mechanics that allowed it to happen are part of today's world. Lack of accountability and the destruction of social circles ( in town with neighbors, in families, fake friends, general weak relationships...)
@ARAW-__- Well, said, and unfortunately, all too true, brother. Except that it was my grandfather, rather than M's. 😝 But indeed, it's awesome that you were able to locate this fascinating historical site, thereby raising awareness, but in a subtle way. 👍👍 Ah, and M and I really enjoyed our tea, yesterday. Did the Machines alert you to the short about it on M's page, or have they let us down, once again? 8-/
@TheShurikenZone Sorry I got them confused ! The machete is from M's grandfather, though, right ? Both your grandfathers served during WW2 ?That's amazing... Regarding M's channel... UA-cam only shows me the cat video 🤣 and I'm not even a cat guy 😅
Another excellent video brother!
@@blacksprucesurvival Thanks, man !!
This looks and feels great, some views are simply amazing!
Thanks Ervin ! I think I need to continue this style of shooting and storytelling for a while 🫡
very enjoyable video. Imagine all the work they put in the the bunker, finding and stacking all those stones, it will probably survive for many more centuries. Have a great day :)
Thank you, Kringsja 🙏
All night, I was wondering about who built that shelter, who used that, what happened there ?
I think it was built before WW2 by loggers (the original bushcrafters)
But clearly, the sandstones are local, while the chimney is made of cement blocks. 😶
"Hey, it's been a while! Loved the video, absolutely fantastic views. Keep up the great work and keep those awesome posts coming!"
@siddheshraorane1209 Thank you Siddesh ! 🙏 Going to a 3 to 4 days trip this week... I'll do my best for the video 🫡
such a great video bro !!! I swear back in the day like 5-6 years ago videos like that would have sooo much views, it really sucks they promote so much those shorts these days
@AdamCeladin Haha, many thanks, brother ! Yeah, I guess youtube is not pushing me... probably because I mix the type of content. Well, I'm going to film my camping trips anyway 🤣
Thank you Adam, receiving encouragements from an elite youtuber is great 😌🙏
Take care, brother 🫡
@@ARAW-__- Idea for you bro - make classic camping trip and during that do some focused tutorial on something and maybe put it in to name/thumbnail so people might learn new thing plus check the rest of the camping trip i am sure some video will catch eventually you have really nice production value! Keep it going my friend ,))
@AdamCeladin That's a great idea, Adam ! I will look into it, I often make short tutorials linking to full video... maybe I should do them in vertical format, but I don't like it (I know you want horizontal shorts, too 🤣)
@@ARAW-__- nono do it horizontal but do it in full video because from my experience shorter videos dont do well in longer format i think you need at least 8 -12 minutes video to get some more views and PERFECT thumbnail thats the key
@AdamCeladin That's what I feared... I don't like catchy thumbnails 🤣 but yeah I'll have many tutorials to show, and I guess it is what people would want to watch. Thank you Adam 🙏
This looks like it's going to be spectacular; M and I will watch it this afternoon... with some mint tea. ;-) My grandpa was among the first into Paris, during the war, and also had notable dealings with the FFI, so... this history seems a bit more personal to me than it might. 👍👍
@TheShurikenZone Hah, many thanks, Ryan. This is absolutely serious stuff, and no mistake, important things to ponder on.
The book "ordinary men" by Browning is edifying in that sense.
And yeah, I just stole your sentence 😁🖐
@ARAW-__- This was a truly spectacular film; many thanks for sharing it with us, brother. As for the other... Some things must never be forgotten, specifically because they were so horrible; to forget is to allow the same horrors to occur again, in the future. This is why my grandfather brought back some things from the war... German things, if you understand me... which could be seen as talismans of evil. He brought them back, as sobering reminders. He was one of the first me inside Buchenwald, for example, when it was liberated. And he photographed what he saw (he had a camera, even though GIs weren't supposed to, and he had his pictures developed by the guys who developed the recon photos), because even then, he knew that people would try to deny the reality of what took place. Heavy, very serious lesons from history.
@TheShurikenZone Many thanks, brother.
That one took more effort than usual.
Both hiking. I searched for maybe 3h going up and downhill with a heavy pack. Also, I did not remember where it was, just a general section of the forest, and some facts like tree species and topo 😅
Mackenzie's grandfather was right. People will doubt anything, and they're right to do so. But in that case, it's not due to a lack of evidence... and that becomes a problem. It was a dark area, and some of the mechanics that allowed it to happen are part of today's world. Lack of accountability and the destruction of social circles ( in town with neighbors, in families, fake friends, general weak relationships...)
@ARAW-__- Well, said, and unfortunately, all too true, brother. Except that it was my grandfather, rather than M's. 😝 But indeed, it's awesome that you were able to locate this fascinating historical site, thereby raising awareness, but in a subtle way. 👍👍 Ah, and M and I really enjoyed our tea, yesterday. Did the Machines alert you to the short about it on M's page, or have they let us down, once again? 8-/
@TheShurikenZone Sorry I got them confused ! The machete is from M's grandfather, though, right ? Both your grandfathers served during WW2 ?That's amazing...
Regarding M's channel... UA-cam only shows me the cat video 🤣 and I'm not even a cat guy 😅
Awesome video. 🤎💚
@lottidd6037 Thanks, Lotti !! That one will stay one of my favorite hikes ! Also, the red deer called were powerful 😮