UNFORGETTABLE Things To Do Around KANAB, UTAH!

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  • Опубліковано 6 вер 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 18

  • @destinationdos
    @destinationdos  6 місяців тому

    WATCH NEXT, 10 UNBELIEVABLE Things To Do In MOAB, UTAH!
    ua-cam.com/video/vJOCQ_ZBYjg/v-deo.html
    or
    CLICK HERE to watch all our videos and subscribe : www.youtube.com/@destinationdos?sub_confirmation=1

  • @sherrieallen0514
    @sherrieallen0514 4 місяці тому +5

    What a trip down memory lane this video was for me. One of my best vacations was partially spent in the Kanab area. Hard to pick whats was the highlight but one thing I remember most was visiting Moqui Caves and Museum. Must have been a really slow weekday because a gentlemen there spent 2 or 3 hours telling us all about the area. Gosh he was a wealth of knowledge, especially about dinosaurs. Thinking back on it, a really great part of the visit was all the people who live there. Some of the friendliest people I've ever met. I think I might visit again and that's saying a lot. Not many places I've been I'd care to visit a 2nd time but Kanab is one of them.

    • @destinationdos
      @destinationdos  4 місяці тому

      It's wonderful to hear about your fond memories of Kanab! Thanks so much for sharing your experience and adding a personal touch to what makes Kanab so unique. Safe travels on your next adventure, whether it's a return to Kanab or somewhere new! 🌄🦕

  • @nicolafigini784
    @nicolafigini784 4 місяці тому +1

    I spent three months living and working at a hikers' hostel in Kanab in 2018 (I'm from England). I absolutely loved the town, with the stunning red rock cliffs as a backdrop. It's the perfect place to stay whilst visiting all these fantastic places. The landscapes in southern Utah are sublimely beautiful. The places I liked best were Zion National Park and Bryce Canyon.

    • @destinationdos
      @destinationdos  4 місяці тому

      Having such beautiful scenery right outside your door must have been amazing. These red rock hills in Kanab really are beautiful, and I'm glad you enjoyed them so much. Thank you for sharing your story. It's always inspiring to hear from someone who has lived in or visited a truly unique place. 🏜✨🌟

  • @karteekmenda3282
    @karteekmenda3282 5 місяців тому +1

    Absolutely love this place

    • @destinationdos
      @destinationdos  5 місяців тому

      We're thrilled you love Kanab as much as we do. 😊 Did you have a favorite spot or activity from the video that you've experienced or would love to try? Always exciting to hear what others enjoy about this beautiful area!

  • @kobalt77
    @kobalt77 3 місяці тому +1

    beyond awesome :) Thank you

    • @destinationdos
      @destinationdos  3 місяці тому

      Thank you so much for your kind words! I'm thrilled you enjoyed the video. Stay tuned for more adventures! 😊🌟✈️

  • @TheAnarchitek
    @TheAnarchitek Місяць тому +1

    A whole lotta water went over that region! How ironic it is desert, today.

    • @destinationdos
      @destinationdos  Місяць тому +1

      It really is fascinating how the landscape has transformed over time! Nature sure has a way of surprising us. 🌵💧⏳

    • @TheAnarchitek
      @TheAnarchitek Місяць тому +1

      I've been researching and writing about the Southwest, in general, and the FOUR Corners region for most of the last 40 years. The events that formed it were not "millions of years ago", but between 3,500 and 4,500 years ago. The critical forces were the same we read of in the Old Testament, sturm and drang, water, tempestuous storms, and inexplicable (especially to peoples with no scientific vocabulary)
      The Fremont People arrived in central Utah, near the confluence of the Uinta Mountains with the Wasatch Front, about the same time Greeks were picking themselves up, preparing to build the second Golden Age of Greece. The Anasazi emerged, descendants of those earlier travelers, around the time of Jesus. They "disappeared" around the time the Dark Ages were coming to a close, in the 13th Century AD, leaving few traces but fascinating ruins.
      Where did they go? Not "into the mists of history", as it turned out, but "on the road again". Their story continued, and came full circle, when the people who would become Navajos returned to the American Southwest, in the 15th Century AD. The people who returned were no longer Anasazi, intermarried with other peoples, to become Navajo, and the Puebloans.
      The landscape of the region shows the effects of massive amounts of water, moving through the area, at speed, sitting, for long, long periods. I believe there was an "inland sea", sitting atop the Four Corners, from north of Helper UT, to south of Pie Town NM, from the San Francisco Peaks, to the Sierra Nacimientos. It formed a body of water that probably ranged between 1,500 to 2,500 feet deep, and remained for nearly three millennia, before gurgling down the Grand Canyon to the distant sea.
      The water came out of the northeast, above northern Colorado, across the basin of Wyoming. Nine Mile Canyon was created by the water dribbling out of that area, probably more than a century later. I say this because I am reliably informed it would take more than 191 years for Lake Superior to drain, and the amount of water I speak of would dwarf Lake Superior. It would take the better part of three thousand years for the water to drain away, blocked by a lava plug in the western reaches of the Grand Canyon, and by Black Canyon, itself a lava plug.
      As it crested the Uintas, the water carved out Arches, and the other features of central Utah, before pouring across the Canyonlands plateau, revealing the "steps" of the Grand Staircase, and blowing through Monument Valley so fast, it peeled away the sandstone layers, like a hot knife through butter, pushing the silt southeasterly, down toward the central valley of Mexico. The wall of water would have been pushing whole forests, large boulders, and unimaginable quantities of debris. Whatever had been there, before, was wiped off the face of the Earth.
      The Fremonts arrived almost 1,500 years after the "flood", descendants of PIE people who'd "emerged on the Russian Steppes, in the 3rd Millennium BC. Some of these people traveled easterly, presumably searching for their lost "homeland", arriving in Alaska around the 17th Century BC, before sea levels rose to drown the Bering Strait. From there, groups began to trek southerly, toward the continental US, slowly making their way into the continental US, skirting the eastern foothills of the Canadian Rockies, leaving numerous "medicine wheels" in their wake.
      The Fremont People would be the first to see the wonders of southern Utah, still covered with water, at their arrival. Slowly the water receded, at times quicker, but soon replaced by the water still north of the Uinta Mountains, until the water north could not cross the shoulder. The Fremonts moved onto the clifftops, as they appeared, using their isolation defensively, then down onto the cliffsides, as the water fell more dramatically. Eventually, they moved out onto the prairies, when water levels dropped enough, becoming Anasazi, building a trading empire, and those amazing ruins at Chaco, Hovenweep, and Wupatki, among the many others.
      The water continued to swirl away down the Grand Canyon, eventually revealing the desert region we know, today. When life-giving water became too far away to sustain life, the Anasazi "moved away", in search of greener pastures. By 1200AD, the San Juan and Colorado Rivers were the only water sources left, the area scarred by the passage of water that no longer existed within its boundaries. The desert began to bake, cementing its weird shapes and unusual creations in their modern forms.

    • @destinationdos
      @destinationdos  29 днів тому +1

      Wow, thank you for sharing such an in-depth and fascinating perspective on the history of the Southwest and the Four Corners region! Your knowledge and research bring a whole new layer of understanding to the area’s incredible landscapes and history. It’s amazing to think about the forces that shaped the land and how they tie into human history as well. I appreciate you taking the time to provide this detailed insight-it really adds depth to the conversation about this remarkable region. 🌄📚🤯

    • @TheAnarchitek
      @TheAnarchitek 29 днів тому

      ​@@destinationdos Thank you for your kind words! I've been researching the topics I write about most of my life, starting very young, playing on "ruins" so old they might have been from another world. I started asking questions about the anomalies that pepper the Southwest, as a young child, often receiving incorrect answers, and all too often, exactly wrong replies.
      I stumbled aacross a reference to a book that might offer clues, in a Reader's Digest article, in 1976. When I had to spend three months in the hospital, that year, I asked a friend to track down a copy, and set in to read it. I read everything I could find by the author, setting out on the course that would reveal many answers to my questions, over the coming decades.
      We are told a confused, and confusing, story, about our ancient past, before 700BC. All of a sudden, peoples all over the world started "rebuilding" (or, as history books put it, "setting out to build") civilization. My question, once I began to understand, was "WHY?" The reason is part of what I was writing about, in the response to your comment. The world, OUR world, was "torn apart", leveled, and raised, inundated with massive amounts of water, in places, and drained of water, in others.
      All of this is "known" to us. The stories make up our "cultural knowledge", the lore of stuff we "know", or assume, the stories of heroes, legends, and mythical figures (many of whom were not mythic, but real), and the story has been concealed, to burnish the Story of God. What kind of God would let millions die? What kind of God would kill His people? These, and worse, happened, again, and again, to our distant ancestors. We are all descendants of the "survivors" of the times I write about, those who lived through the "times that try men's souls".

    • @TheAnarchitek
      @TheAnarchitek 29 днів тому

      @@destinationdos I have written close to a thousand pages about the events that shaped the world into the one we know and love, today! I'm looking for a publisher, but I think I want to make a video, because it is difficult to communicate the totality of the events that scarred, and shaped, the world of antiquity, especially to those who do not read well. I need to find a videographer who can do animations, to show the world crumpling, twisting, and shattering.
      The latter is an artefact of the forces that acted on our planet, in its 1,700-year-long contest of wills with a Big Dumb Rock. The era gave rise to Religion, and inbred the many phobias, irrational fears, and weird behaviors humans exhibit, more than 2,750 years after the last episode.
      Homer's The Iliad mashes up an earlier Trojan War his family had sung about for generations, with one he witnessed, four hundred years later. The "story" told by the 15,693 lines of dactylic hexameter (easily one of the hardest forms of poetry) is one that stretches the imagination, and challenges belief, but the saga was intensely popular, outliving the poet by almost 500 years, before it was written down!
      The work's longevity suggests its importance, to me, more than anything. People of the times recognized the inherent truths Homer was telling, supported by other stories, myths, and legends then popular (and still, for the most part, in circulation, today). These "myths", "legends", and "Bible stories" invest our literature, and film/TV libraries, more than 3,000 years later. We draw on cultural influences when we create, and those "influences" were indelibly etched into the cumulative human soul.
      There are messages in the stories from the ancient past, left for modern audiences, as significant as they were, all those many centuries ago! According to a NASA report released a year ago, "rogue planets" (aka "Big Dumb Rocks") outnumber stars in the Milky Way Galaxy, meaning there is a real possibility the scenario could be repeated, at some point in the future. Maybe that was why the ancients made a point to pass on the tales of unbelievable, unimaginable, and/or highly improbable events and occurrences. The stories that made their way across the thousands of years, still intrigue people of today.

  • @jimwheeler8865
    @jimwheeler8865 4 місяці тому +2

    Utah has two separate peek-a-boo slot canyons. One is down near Escalante Utah, and the other is just outside of Kanab. The video footage you are showing in this video is not from the peekaboo Slot Canyon in Kanab so it may be construed by some as being a little misleading.

    • @destinationdos
      @destinationdos  4 місяці тому

      Thank you for pointing that out! I appreciate your keen eye for detail and for bringing this to my attention. I'll make sure to clarify this in the video description. It's always great to have viewers like you who help maintain the accuracy and quality of the content. Thanks again for your valuable feedback! 🙏🏼🎥🌟