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The Fascinating Mountain Range You've Never Heard Of (SUV Camping/Vanlife Adventures)

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  • Опубліковано 30 вер 2022
  • In this video I explore a mountain range that I'd never even heard of until recently, and it's amazing!
    ******************
    VIDEO LINKS
    ► In the Heart of the Sea audiobook: amzn.to/3CfNbLl
    ► More info about vision quest structures in the Pryor Mountains: pryormountains...
    ******************
    DATE FILMED: Late August 2022
    ► Adventure Know-How: adventureknowh...
    ► The SUV RVing Website: suvrving.com/
    GPS COORDINATES
    ** Petroglyph Canyon trailhead: 45.004636, -108.505306
    ** Top of Big Pryor Mountain: 45.16062, -108.46932
    ** Crater Ice Cave: 45.16169, -108.46803
    ** Big Ice Cave: 45.161820, -108.401194
    ** Where They Saw The Rope: 45.18301, -108.35459
    OTHER LINKS
    ** Gear I use: suvrving.com/gear
    ** SUV RVing the Book: amzn.to/2SUrtme (Affiliate link)
    ** The blog: suvrving.com
    ** Instagram: / suvrving
    ** My other UA-cam channel: / tenkaraaddict
    #adventure #travel #camping

КОМЕНТАРІ • 267

  • @SUVRVing
    @SUVRVing  Рік тому +13

    Here's the book/audiobook I mention in the video. So good! >> amzn.to/3CfNbLl -Tristan

    • @countgent
      @countgent Рік тому

      If interested in geology, you must read Velikovsky's "earth in upheaval" ! cheers mate, have a nice rest.

    • @markjung2766
      @markjung2766 Рік тому

      "Rock art in this canyon was created 850-1,250 years ago!
      Imagine WOMEN standing here in the hot sun and slowly pecking
      these pictures into the rock, their stone implements breaking
      the silence around them."
      "We know who spoiled this placard for you, your
      children, WOMEN and everyone else
      -- "MAN"dy.
      It's very sad to see that in 2022 (not 850-1250 years ago!) that male chauvinism is alive and well in Montana. Chauvinism is not cool. It's foolish.

    • @contremelodiagomez8785
      @contremelodiagomez8785 Рік тому

      Been wanting to read the book since watching the movie, I usually read the book first but missed it 😑

  • @donmcgowan2616
    @donmcgowan2616 Рік тому +51

    Tristan, I very much appreciate that you have begun to incorporate significantly greater amounts of factual information into your adventures. My old body at 75 will no longer get me to many of the locations you visit, but there is no less of a desire to see them and learn. Thank you. Walk in Beauty.

  • @sonny1597
    @sonny1597 Рік тому +55

    I'm actually following you on my maps and Google Earth. You hit the nail on the head! At 77 I'm not hiking any longer and love going along with you on your hikes. I've even gotten better with the vertigo from the drone! LOL I now have one and am learning to use it. I use Google Earth and all sorts of maps ... can't see how some folks just go via GPS. If you ever come south to the Tucson area I have a bunch of petroglyph sites I can point you too .. I even have a hidden site that few know about! 🤠

  • @charlesward8196
    @charlesward8196 Рік тому +45

    I instantly recognized the bentonite hills there south of the Gyp Springs Road. I drove that road at least once a week as the BLM Ranger for the Billings Field Office for 10 years, when I patrolled the Pryors. That is some fantastic country. In the rain shadow of the Beartooths to the west, the Bighorns to the east, the Pryors to the north, and the Yellowstone Plateau to the southwest the area is a harsh desert that gets about 4” of precip a year, and if you did not know better you would swear you were in southern Utah based on soils, and vegetation. The massive Paleozoic limestones and dolomites suck any rain and snowmelt deep into the ground, and streams only flow flash floods during summer thunderstorms. The petroglyphs just add to the feeling of being in Utah/Arizona. EDIT: If you hike Petroglyph Canyon, look for woody flood debris stuck in trees 6 - 10 feet above the canyon floor.
    The Dry Head overlook used to be my favorite lunch stop. Snow lingers late here, so don’t attempt to drive to the summit until mid-June: people driving around snow drifts on Memorial Day weekend are responsible for 90% of the off-road travel damage that occurs there. Access roads to East Pryor from the south on Burnt Timber and Sykes Ridge Roads are much more difficult, and Sykes Ridge should only be done on ATV/UTV unless you REALLY hate your truck.
    Campfire hearths and pottery sherds discovered at at some looted archeological sites off of Hwy 310 near Jack Creek are almost an exact match for the Fremont culture in Utah, though they were much older, indicating that “Fremont” peoples passed through the area on the way from Athabaska to the Colorado Plateau. Tribes also traveled seasonally from the Beartooth Mountains to the Pryors and left fabulous pictographs in the Valley of the Shields in Weatherman Draw.
    The ideal vehicle for most of those roads is 4-wheeler, either ATV or UTV,😊 espscially on the those old uranium/thorium mine roads, like the Lisbon Mine Road that you switch-backed down. EDIT: Stay out of abandoned mines! The USFS and the BLM remediated the abandoned mines 15 years ago. Normal background counts in the area of 80/minute on the counter ran as high as 20,000 counts a minute in the Lisbon MIne, right next to the campfire ring, before it was backfilled with rock.
    The fire there was in 2002, started by lightning a few miles further up Crooked Creek. As the fire roared down Crooked Creek, making runs into the Douglas Fir and Limber pine on the slopes of Big Pryor, the flame fronts were 700 to 1000 feet high, the roar could be heard from Britton Springs corral facility 7 miles away, and the pyrocumulus cloud was astounding. The fire was called the “Red Waffle Fire” because the fire dispatcher was eating strawberry waffles when the initial report came in.
    For the Tenkara Fishing Addict there are remnant Yellowstone Cutthroat Trout in the bottom of Crooked Creek, if you can get down there, which is a real BIG if.

    • @lindamartin2045
      @lindamartin2045 Рік тому +7

      Thank you Charles. Marvelous addition to the video. Take care.

    • @jenstafford7692
      @jenstafford7692 Рік тому +7

      Amazing comments. Thank you for this information!

    • @krisg3984
      @krisg3984 Рік тому +3

      Good stories - thanks

    • @user-xz8bi1yj6b
      @user-xz8bi1yj6b 5 місяців тому +1

      Thank you so much for all that additional info- it always adds so much dimension and historical/environmental appreciation of the visuals of the videos.

  • @bethcook1576
    @bethcook1576 Рік тому +18

    Your trips are part of my Sat morning ritual. Thanks as always. Very interesting, especially the "beds"

  • @katz4dancing
    @katz4dancing Рік тому +11

    I have heard about this mountain range and surprised you didn’t mention it.
    It’s known for the Pryor Mountain Wild Horse Range - a refuge that protects a unique and distinct wild horse herd that frequents the area.
    I’ve been to Glacier NP twice and the Pryors are my next bucket list item.
    I wasn’t aware of the petroglyphs there and will seek them out on my trip.
    Thanks very much - interesting vid as always!!

  • @MountainHobbler
    @MountainHobbler Рік тому +4

    3:23 my guess would be a scorpion judging from the curled tail

  • @janaspencer6008
    @janaspencer6008 Рік тому +13

    Your videos always take your subscribers to amazing places! Thank you so much! I'm planning on a big move north. My last hoorah while I can. Property is getting expensive in the northern areas for sure! I wish my southern house was worth alot more. My travels were on hold 25 years - caring for family and then recovering from injuries myself. Prayers that things go well for both of us!

  • @angel444ful
    @angel444ful Рік тому +16

    Beautiful scenery! Love it! Thank you so much for sharing your adventures. You are so appreciated 😊

  • @robertross2596
    @robertross2596 Рік тому +7

    Well that video hot the nail on the head for the 4 P's - Potholes, Petroglyphs, the Prior Mts & Pine Trees. The fasting beds & ice caves were equally fascinating. You certainly covered a lot of ground and topics in this one. I still wonder how you get drone shots while driving. I'd love to hear how you do it.

  • @ajaxvarble
    @ajaxvarble Рік тому +3

    The stone box with the gourd on top is actually a type of sacrifice alter. We would consider them a mouth for the mountain to eat. It's somewhere people can come to pay tribute to the mountain and feed her so as to not upset the mountain when taking from her.
    And yes I refer to all mountains as "she" because mountains birth rivers and humans have always settled near rivers for survival.

    • @BeefNEggs057
      @BeefNEggs057 Рік тому +1

      Thanks Alex. Was hoping someone knew what that was and satisfy my curiousity. Hope Tristan will tag your comment so others will see it.

  • @dixielambrecht7009
    @dixielambrecht7009 Рік тому +2

    It's hard to pick a favorite part when it is all so amazing and interesting

  • @_damdifino
    @_damdifino Рік тому

    Nothing quite so satisfying as driving a dicey road in a Land Cruiser!

  • @rh4791
    @rh4791 Рік тому

    My heart hurts for you and your family. I know exactly how you are feeling. Please take comfort in your memories and love you have of Bella. Special times. Hugs for all of you.

  • @RC-74
    @RC-74 Рік тому +1

    Stalagmite, might someday reach the ceiling. Stalagtite, holds tight to the ceiling. Only way I can remember. Was taught this as a child visiting a cave in either Missouri or Arkansas.

  • @bobbeckman3735
    @bobbeckman3735 Рік тому +1

    Coffee and Tristan. Good Saturday morning. Thank you spirit animal.

  • @jeffreykreiley7265
    @jeffreykreiley7265 Рік тому +1

    Yeah, that book was a good read, from beginning to end.

  • @Cheyla
    @Cheyla Рік тому

    I'm so glad you're sharing indigenous people's story's of their homelands! It's so interesting and important to learn!

  • @sanepeter2034
    @sanepeter2034 Рік тому

    Thank You for risking your life for us. I hope you have arranged your Videos will always be available in your memory.

  • @johnb3118
    @johnb3118 Рік тому +4

    Hi Tristan,
    I'm from Oregon, but not only have I heard of those interesting mountains, but have also been to those caves you showed as well as others in the Pryors.
    You are sure right about the roads. I didn't have a high clearance vehicle, so that was not good for the car, but we were able to make it through all over with patience.
    I was there in the 80s, so that burned-over area where you had to clear trees was interesting to see...that wasn't burned back then.
    Thanks for bringing back old memories.

  • @dddoda
    @dddoda Рік тому

    I think driving out there in the middle of nowhere, and then coming to one of those switchbacks impossible for your car to continue. Now you would have to back up who knows how far without getting stuck backing up. Bravo for your bravery!

  • @philgriswold2133
    @philgriswold2133 Рік тому

    Looking on maps and finding a spot has been the source of many of my dream adventures over my career at adulthood. Now that I have retired, I am beginning to follow those map dreams. The unexpected and off the beaten path are always the best. Neat area.

  • @mark222b
    @mark222b Рік тому

    I think you are the best candidate to write that book. You have extensive knowledge and experience on the subject, you have written a book before, you came up with the idea, and you also mentioned the title - “The Road Up Here”

  • @hamlinsondra
    @hamlinsondra Рік тому +3

    I rarely comment, and so this will have to cover all your videos. I subscribe and watch all your content. I wonder how many others, like commenter Al Maurine and myself, whose hiking days are long past, watch with great interest and appreciation for your informative, entertaining and lucid descriptions. Thanks for taking me along. Will you travel through the Big Horn Mountains someday? I found them very good.

    • @SUVRVing
      @SUVRVing  Рік тому

      I appreciate you watching! And I think there’s a large percentage of the audience that fits what you’re describing. I didn’t go to the Bighorns on this trip but did make a video or two there a couple years back.

  • @dbelden
    @dbelden Рік тому

    I often don’t watch your videos due to length, but I’m always glad when I do!

  • @Dwsrs24
    @Dwsrs24 Рік тому +7

    Love this video! So beautiful. The one rock art figure you questioned looked to me like a scorpion climbing up the rock. Question: do you ever see wild horses in the distance on your adventures? Pryor mustangs are very popular. Unsure if the BLM (Bureau of Land Mgmt) has captured them all yet. 😠 Heard there's a Pryor Mustangs Museum near Lowell MT.
    Love everything about your videos incl the music. Very professional, educational, entertaining. Did I miss the food stop in this one? 😁

  • @emmieHD
    @emmieHD Рік тому +3

    I love all the 'little known' places you take us. Those caves were very cool and the fasting beds. I wonder if that hearth was built more recently just by people out exploring the area. I'm glad you included some of your drive. That looked nerve racking for sure.

  • @reserve4todd
    @reserve4todd Рік тому +5

    I so look forward to your videos each week 🤗. Thank you for your work and sharing parts of This amazing country most of us will never have the opportunity to see in person.

  • @margreetanceaux3906
    @margreetanceaux3906 Рік тому +3

    Love how you make these documentaries so interesting and beautiful, including tons of information and even sound. And doing this single-handedly!

  • @saginawdan
    @saginawdan Рік тому +1

    Thanks Tristan! 🌲🌲🌲

  • @HEKNBAK
    @HEKNBAK Рік тому +2

    So cool! The fact that there is still snow and ice in August is amazing. Love the view from the top of the mountains - another place to add to our exploration wishlist! Thanks for the great video

  • @angel444ful
    @angel444ful Рік тому +2

    I hope to someday to go meditate in that area. The sacred energy has to be amazing there. ❤

    • @wandermt4315
      @wandermt4315 Рік тому +1

      You can nearly see Medicine Wheel in the Big Horns in Tristans vid to the East,

    • @angel444ful
      @angel444ful Рік тому

      Thank you for sharing the info. 😊

  • @ashwinvasavada8401
    @ashwinvasavada8401 Рік тому +1

    Take that, “Andy” 😂. Love the offbeat finds. Nice drone shots, too!

  • @jenstafford7692
    @jenstafford7692 Рік тому +4

    I have not yet been to this area and have never even thought of it until this video! I have been to places surrounding this area. I had some wow moments. That being said, it’s October in Michigan for me. I loved two things in this video that I don’t get here. The first is sound of the usually annoying clicking crickets and the second was the water sounds from inside the ice cave. Thank you for that!

    • @BeefNEggs057
      @BeefNEggs057 Рік тому

      Lol I suppose it’s October everywhere haha

  • @anndebaldo7381
    @anndebaldo7381 Рік тому +1

    What a wonderful place! Loved to see the Native American fasting beds...Thanks so much. I love your videos and look forward to more. ATB

  • @GamerplayerWT
    @GamerplayerWT Рік тому +2

    I can picture native peoples spending time in the ice cave during hot summer months.

  • @CrankyOtter
    @CrankyOtter Рік тому +2

    This was fascinating. Great editing to hit highlights while still showing the vastness of the area.
    I particularly liked the petroglyphs (of course) , but also the cave ice and odd geologic formations, and the ‘more harrowing than I would enjoy’ cliff edge driving sequence with tree clearance.
    Thanks also for being respectful of the area and not doing weird poses in the sleeping circles.

  • @sharondavis8003
    @sharondavis8003 Рік тому +2

    Great total trip, Tristan. Loved the ice caves but poor Crow Indian with stakes in his back pulling a buffalo skull. 😮 Hope the park service appreciates your tree removals from the road 😊. Be safe in your travels. 👍🏻

  • @KristenMaine
    @KristenMaine Рік тому

    Amazes me how you find some of these mountain roads!
    I think you're the perfect person to write that book!!

  • @melissahankoff4034
    @melissahankoff4034 Рік тому

    Those ice caves were unbelievable 😵‍💫🤩

  • @Walter-ol6gd
    @Walter-ol6gd Рік тому +1

    Wow the acoustics at the watering hole make the audio sound amazing. You should start a podcast from there !

  • @sagecoach
    @sagecoach Рік тому

    You already are my access to places I am too old to go. Thank you for doing this service business, a form of accessibility.

  • @rogerbmcdaniel
    @rogerbmcdaniel Рік тому +2

    Those ice caves were really neat. Much more shallow and exposed than I would have expected. Thanks!

  • @donaldscott3921
    @donaldscott3921 Рік тому

    The Pryors are named for a member of the Lewis and Clark Expedition who wandered through them looking (appropriately) for stolen/lost horses:
    Sergeant Nathaniel Hale Pryor
    They lie south of Billings, Montana, and north of Lovell, Wyoming. The mountains are named for Sergeant Nathaniel Hale Pryor, a member of the Lewis and Clark Expedition who vainly pursued horses stolen from the expedition in the area.
    Also - a word of advice from old Ranger Don: When driving on wagon roads, drive at wagon speed.
    Wonderful series - you have the soul of a Ranger

  • @richard_n
    @richard_n Рік тому +1

    Year round ice caves is pretty awesome. I'll have to put those on my list.

  • @michelleharrell8452
    @michelleharrell8452 Місяць тому

    Thankyou for this video. Natives were way tougher in the old days. Fasting is good for soul.

  • @bobhorne8410
    @bobhorne8410 Рік тому +4

    Scorpion. 3:23

  • @DeerheartStudioArts
    @DeerheartStudioArts Рік тому +2

    what an amazing trip! Thanks bunches!🦌💌❤️🚙👍

  • @wandermt4315
    @wandermt4315 Рік тому

    Good to see you in my neck of the woods. I was in DryHead Basin last weekend, even saw a few wild horses - I may have been looking over at you in the Pryors from the Big Horns about a month ago, I was at a place the Crows call Windy Point. A Buddy and I were headed for Big Ice Cave about 5 years ago - we gave up, the trail was so rough we got tired of being beat up and he was worried about his tires - we exited area, I believe, down Crooked Creek - wonderful day.

  • @nicholasforrester8587
    @nicholasforrester8587 Рік тому

    I'm a senior and enjoy your videos. Thanks 😊

  • @leemowers9395
    @leemowers9395 Рік тому +1

    Great trip. interesting sites. Thanks for sharing Tristan. The Three Rivers Petroglyph Site on BLM land in New Mexico, east of the White Sands Missile Range is very nice, 21000 or so images on rocks, Near Lincoln National Forest. Capitan NM (Smokey Bear Historical Park), and Lincoln NM (Billy the Kid), are on the way to Roswell.

  • @funzeevanzee
    @funzeevanzee Рік тому +2

    Astonishing. Crazy that snow and ice are in those caves.

  • @terrafirma9328
    @terrafirma9328 Рік тому +1

    Roan Mt. TN is a mountain your can drive to the top. Grandfather Mt. NC you can drive up almost to the top. It has a couple of higher peaks you can trail but your pretty much at the top.

  • @ManivanAdventures
    @ManivanAdventures Рік тому +4

    You always find the coolest spots man! Love your videos!🤙🏼

  • @royalsocietyjazz
    @royalsocietyjazz Рік тому +1

    I look forward to each of your videos. Your dry humor is most entertaining. You bring out the poetry of the locations you visit. Love your fresh enthusiasm. Your artistic film making make your videos awesome. Thank you for sharing your discoveries with us!

  • @carolpadgett8618
    @carolpadgett8618 Рік тому +1

    Thanks for sharing the many places folks don't know are out there. My first visit to Pryor mountains was with a local friend that used them as his back yard. Wonderful experience! There were wild horses there, but they may have been relocated now.

  • @don_sharon
    @don_sharon Рік тому +2

    Thank you for doing all these videos. I have crafted a western US tour for next year, based on your exploring. I've been visiting these areas since the 70s and just now realized how much I have missed through your videos. I am going to visit with a whole new view on this world. All the best..

  • @BrendaHaltom-cs6ck
    @BrendaHaltom-cs6ck 10 днів тому

    I enjoyed the Ice Caves!❤️😀🇺🇸🚙

  • @robertdunn3960
    @robertdunn3960 Рік тому

    Your definition of high clearance and what we drive in Alabama is totally different. 👌

  • @dianespears6057
    @dianespears6057 Рік тому

    Beautiful. Quite moving landscape even though not dramatic. Thank you.

  • @larrymcbryan5630
    @larrymcbryan5630 Рік тому

    Great video. Foresty Forest carries a chain saw with him for windfalls. Nancy

  • @mosquitobite101
    @mosquitobite101 Рік тому

    I love the history of things. I've not heard of the fasting beds. Thank you for seeking out history points.

  • @bevliechty1161
    @bevliechty1161 Рік тому +1

    So neat to watch😊

  • @alvashoemaker8536
    @alvashoemaker8536 Рік тому

    I’m not much of an “outdoors” person; (physical limitations; OTHERWISE…l’m ALL IN!” I live vicariously through your adventures!! THANK YOU!! 😃👍🏼👣👠

    • @alvashoemaker8536
      @alvashoemaker8536 Рік тому

      BTW…NICE ACCOMPAINMENT; that strumming is…SO MOTIVATIONAL!! 👍🏼👠👣

  • @bethcollier3789
    @bethcollier3789 Рік тому

    Loved the trip. Thank you for the view, the information, the historical content. Thank you, thank you.

  • @rouxchat6033
    @rouxchat6033 Рік тому

    Goodness, I would have had to lay in one of the fasting beds and meditated for a spell. Fasting is an important part of my life and to experience that would have been amazing. Thank you for sharing. Hope to go there in my travels.

  • @terris6322
    @terris6322 Рік тому +1

    Thanks Tristan, another great video.

  • @itchingtogo7362
    @itchingtogo7362 Рік тому

    Again, your comment about just looking at maps for ideas rang true to my adventures. I physically cannot go to some of the places you discover, but I agree about maps. They offer such GREAT insights for new journeys!! Thanks so much for sharing your great adventures!

  • @deanfirnatine7814
    @deanfirnatine7814 Рік тому

    There was a place near where I grew up where the local tribe had done its fasting rites, it was on top of a hill above a beautiful waterfall.

  • @Ostrom38
    @Ostrom38 Рік тому

    I love that drive down the mountain! That is such an adventure. I love exploring like that. Glad your LC made it through ok!

  • @jamesmays701
    @jamesmays701 Рік тому +1

    TY...for ur travels

  • @brkaz5864
    @brkaz5864 Рік тому

    Wonderful book, glad you are reading it. The 2015 movie was very good, but the book was fantastic.

  • @barryraven4745
    @barryraven4745 Рік тому

    In Big Bend National Park they call those water holes tinajas.

  • @budsakornsarnthorsri8176
    @budsakornsarnthorsri8176 Рік тому

    Another little known fact about the Pryor Mountains is that there was a railroad line that went through the Pryor Gap between West Pryor Mountain and Big Pryor Mountain. The rail line was operated by the CB & Q railroad and was known as the 'Pryor Cutoff' saving 100 miles on rail service between Cody, Wyoming and Toluca, Montana which is west of Hardin. The rails where laid in 1900 and completed in 1901. The line was in service only until 1911 and fell out of favor as operating costs where high -winter weather conditions, crossing the Pryor Gap involved mountain grades and a short tunnel, no real business could be generated along the route and the only passengers on the line where local Native Americans. The 1911 decision by the railroad to close the line was a legend! The order came down literally overnight, and in order for the company to avoid a court order and litigation to keep the line open, they organized crews and equipment to remove all the rail literally over a weekend while courts where closed! Today much of the railroad grade through the Pryors is still evident and has been repurposed as dirt roads. It makes for an easy and great drive through history but beware, old iron scraps and junk can easily flat Your tires!

  • @musicmarlene
    @musicmarlene Рік тому

    Nice video, we love Wyoming and Montana. You speak clearly. I like your content. Thank you.

  • @Jeff-jg7jh
    @Jeff-jg7jh Рік тому

    That's one heck of a road.

  • @davidviner5783
    @davidviner5783 Рік тому

    Excellent video of an off-the- beaten track area.

  • @tedpreston4155
    @tedpreston4155 Рік тому

    Thanks for taking us with you!
    Next time you make that trip, you should make an effort to get down into the Bighorn canyon, and try to find some Dryhead Agate. It is a very distinctively colored agate (orange, white and tan bands in a chocolate-brown matrix) found along the riverside in the canyon, near the state line. I've heard that the only way to reach the agate collecting area is by boat, but I suspect the people who reached that conclusion are less adventurous than you are! Oddly, though I have a large collection of Dryhead agates, I've never been there to search myself.

  • @kc195556
    @kc195556 Рік тому +1

    Enjoy this adventure as I enjoy all of them. Really appreciate you showing how the drive was.

  • @kimprocarione5473
    @kimprocarione5473 14 днів тому

    Wow! Those are some interesting mountains! I've been to ice caves in Lassen Volcanic National Park in Northern California. It would be over 100° up top and very cold just under the ground. The ones I've seen are just holes in the ground. These are huge! ❤

  • @bettybrigance6784
    @bettybrigance6784 Рік тому

    I love how you always provide history facts on your adventures, what a great video..thanks, stay safe

  • @las174
    @las174 Рік тому

    Mary's Peak, Oregon, drive to the top, great 360 degree view.

  • @SteveEdzPainter
    @SteveEdzPainter Рік тому

    There's an enclosure, apparently for a dwarf with a gourd. So many mysteries.

  • @timmccaffery4826
    @timmccaffery4826 Рік тому

    Cool finds from an out of the way place or mountain range. I recall the Crow do not strangers to wander on their land? I can understand since we took much of their land.

  • @sdw2is
    @sdw2is Рік тому

    I'm from this part of Wyoming it sits right adjacent to where you're at. If you look at a geological 3d relief map you'll see that the priors are actually an extension of the bighorn mountains and were formed at the same time. What divides what they call the priors from the bighorns proper is Bighorn Canyon.

  • @alwaysfourfun1671
    @alwaysfourfun1671 Рік тому

    Great shots. Appreciate it. Beautiful view into the vally between Pryor and the Big Horn. Indian land. Thanks for showing the "fasting beds". Easy to miss, if you don't know.

  • @isabelmendi3973
    @isabelmendi3973 Рік тому

    Really nice, your very brave to explore the caves by yourself. Be safe on your travels. I liked the caves and the fasting mountain

  • @phyllisbonner8900
    @phyllisbonner8900 Рік тому

    Another great adventure. So interesting. I enjoyed the story about the ropes and also the tip on the book. I had never heard of fasting beds. I watch all your videos. Thanks .

  • @steveegbert7429
    @steveegbert7429 Рік тому

    Had you traveled another mile or so past your last stop, you would have entered the Pryor Mountain Wild Horse Range. I've spent many weeks there photographing the horses on their Summer range. There is another way there from the south but it's a true 4wd route. Your rig can do it but you can't be concerned about pinstripes or making time.

  • @jamesgunn1606
    @jamesgunn1606 Рік тому

    I enjoy your off the beaten path destinations !

  • @mykirbs2002
    @mykirbs2002 Рік тому

    I liked the ice cave. And the Andy part 😂

  • @virginiaallen4723
    @virginiaallen4723 Рік тому

    Drive to the top of Brian Head near Cedar Breaks. There is an ice cave near Duck Creek Visitor Center and Cascade Falls.

  • @cherylmiller-day5932
    @cherylmiller-day5932 Рік тому

    Thanks Tristen. Loved this series!!

  • @grantgrow
    @grantgrow Рік тому

    Always makes you glad to find a "better" dirt road 🙂

  • @guiart4728
    @guiart4728 Рік тому

    Great acoustic guitar music!

  • @hikeNbikeCK
    @hikeNbikeCK Рік тому

    Excellent find! Loved this one.

  • @markg3025
    @markg3025 Рік тому +1

    Yikes what a drive, be safe.

  • @terrynewell8968
    @terrynewell8968 Рік тому +1

    Beautiful! I also would appreciate a book on handicapped trails or drivable sites. I can walk, but not very far before I'm in terrible pain. Thanks

  • @craftytraveler9238
    @craftytraveler9238 Рік тому

    Thanks for the video. I like seeing all the places you go that I am not able to visit. I like the idea of a book about mountains one could drive up.

  • @Will-Parr
    @Will-Parr Рік тому

    An excellent adventure. Congrats