Historical Note My biological father born in 1913 was already a test pilot with Grumman Aircraft delivery of US Navy planes before WW II He signed up B for the War broke out seeing the writing on the wall He was assigned to the US Navy Carrier VGS 27 Suwanee a Jeep escort carrier for US Army General Patton's allied troops landing in Tunisia during" OPERATION TORCH " in November 1942 He flew Combat Air Patrol to protect American Troops landing on the beaches from both NAZI and Vichy French fire radio wave Spirits wars electromagnetic spectrum radiation wars between different seeded race lines living here which are genetic coding wars of Intruder Races Alliance against the Founder races Indigenous ancient ancestral Spiritual Guardian bloodlines here that U C living in Prisoner of War Reservation Camps That's why we showed up to end Star War network radio programs of atmospheric warfare Ur own video highlights that TRUTH with the Aerosol drones U can't C delivering neurological breathing network dis order bio weapons against the genetic Morphogenic field structure ATP Kreb cycle immunity function Firewall shield of this planet to drain the oxygen transport levels of living cells that breathe heat fuel and oxygen levels to ignite a Tetrahydrolase fused with Helium to break ur breathing circulation speed and slow down ur electrical power supply B cuz War Games is a deadly blood sacrifices Racketeering Go Read the book by a 2 tyme recipient of the US Congressional Medal of Honor USMC General Smedley Butler who wrote the Book "WAR IS A RACKET" The US and global finite Artificial life form machinery coded intelligence Agencies have their own patches on their uniforms of " psychological recruitment operations to get their electrical Creative power attention attention to increase their Neurological breathing system dysfunction by signing up to use their electrical Creative power to use their electrical life force ATP Kreb cycle immunity function Firewall shield to annihilate their DNA software network communication genetic optical neurological character maps recording speeds to drain their electrical transport circulation speed to Implode and Go NOVA BARDO quantum vampiric probability math function of the logic Logic is a calculator capacity Ur awareness levels How much are U aware of that is happening simultaneously of multidimensional acceleration phasing speed Vacuum thermostat protection gauge so U are not being used as a source of battery operated slaves wearing Dogs of War Tags no different than a RFID Chip of surveillance tracking they put on Dogs,Deer,birds Radio Biometric identity scans Full spectrum dominance The CIA Domino principal When they fall they fall collectively like hitting the 9 pin crashing the 12 bowling pins playing War games The grid mechanics repair crew showed up How familiar are U with Maps and holographic mapping radio programs of programmable matter APIN planetary grid network communication codes Radio codes are genetic codes Mathematical radio frequency tones programs Remember in Major league Baseball " Get ur programs here " Or CBS NEWS Alien intelligence Correspondence of CIA psychological war operations " We interrupt Ur minds energy programming" to deliver the newspaper of ur programming to inform U the President is dead man's poets society Blank Slate memory wipe looking Glass AI QI coded Trap experiment Victim victimizer Game Traps to play games with the dead Dead man walking is a dead man's trigger Ask Walter Winchell Gossip column water table He had more AI press Agents in the 1920-60 than the CIA NSA NAZI intelligence AI apparatus that was recruited from NAZI Corporate Germany directly into the NSA CIA National Security Act with Reinhardt Gehlen organization who was Adolph Hitler's Chief SS Liebstandarte chevrons AI intelligence officer running intelligence War game video theater operations against Stalin in Russia Russian Gangs outsmarted the Gangs of New York and Irish Mob Bosses U gotta run a reconnaissance Mission Guardian Alliance Shield contract to map the genetic software when ur operating behind enemy held lines of communication That's what collecting data on the enemy is Target acquisitions Whose genetic codings are being targeted by Artificial Intelligence Finite War Game machine coded Theater of operations Go look at the patches of the US military such as " Wizards,Warlocks,Merlin nd and learn how they communicate through signs and symbols of what U C and mathematicallly translate their genetic race lines of communication network It's all about eternal Life force Encryption coded God source worlds mapping program applications of Mathematical electrical function Firewall shield to protect ur original divine born Spiritual Krystal River 🌈 Aurora's Spiral Council breathing Core Still point of a TRUE Vacuum NOT a false light finite vacuum loosh pumps siphoning off life force electrical power to play War Games Go watch the movie WAR GAMES with Ferris Buehler days off Go watch the movie Minority Report with Tom Cruz Judgement Day Rise of the Machines Mu ah VA 💋🌈 Aurora's Spiral Council quarantine security teams operating here
17 minutes of video.... basically just one flagpole.... and you kept all of our attention the whole time..... your voice ... the history you are able to find and share..... all mixed with your style of dialogue.... Always captivating thank you Steve
The rocks you saw were for the 736th--my Dad was there and part of the unit. 8 Ball was their battalion mascot. They were really upset when he was shot.
Thank you, Steve, as always. My hunch is the circle was where the main flag pole stood, or at least maybe the "center" of the Camp. Camp Locket in Campo, CA has a HQ flag pole. The poured concrete sidewalk to no where must have been where the VIP's walked. I loved your observation about GI's and rocks. Thank you for reminding my Fort Irwin memories.
That could be the case. It's pretty funny the effort was spent to make that sidewalk but whatever it was leading to or coming from was probably just a tent or a shack. Thank you for all your support.
@@SidetrackAdventures It may have been an hospital isolation tent for soldiers with communicable diseases. My father who was in WW II said that as new units were formed, some of the guys, from different parts of the US, would pass illness around. Kind of like 'freshman flu" on college campi each autumn.
I'm an 80 year old Arizona native and love desert exploring in my Wrangler. I know it isn't your goal to prospect but I'll bet there are times when you wish you had a metal detector with you. In the late 70's I followed a walking trail from an old homestead site to the site and remains of the old ill-fated dam site on the Hassayampa River North of Wickenburg. I found two unfired 45-90 cartridges in about 6 inches of hard packed dirt near the river. I left the old home site alone and only took photos. It belongs to the Cooper family who still occupies this land.(as far as I know) Four generations that I know of. The elder Mr. Cooper gave me permission to look around at all the relics. I worked with his grandson on the Phoenix fire Department (1967-1990). You go to places I haven't seen in decades or maybe even never seen. Keep up this great work as long as you can.
Steve, always enjoy the videos + the story behind them. Love the ending with the "colors" over your right shoulder and the broad background of the desert/mountains. Hoo-ah! !
Try to imagine living in tents out there in the summer, hot as hell. They had no evaporative cooling. I lived nearby around Parker in the '70s and it's a must have. Tough old folks, they were. Thanks Steve. Happy Humpday.
As a kid I lived in Camp Roberts in Ca. As an army brat I had to go to the hospital on post and it was a series of 1 story buildings that went on for miles (or at least it felt like it) Same at Fort Ord before they built a modern hospital. I imagine there was a series of small buildings along with that sidewalk.
@@michaeltaylor4984 At Ord or at Roberts? I joined the Coast Guard around a year later so I don't know where the destruction at Ord left off. After I got out I re settled in Washington State and they closed Ord as a base.
Ranchers leave those tires out there to put salt licks in for cattle. They put them in tires so the cattle don't break them up. Also, the rocks around the cactus were painted white so that troops didn't walk into a cactus at night, the same with the rocks on the pathways.
@@denniskoppo4259 It's not just there, they do it everywhere, it's nothing to do with Patton. It's like a lot of countries that don't have street lighting paint tree trunks white in towns.
Good morning Steve. After spending most of my life in the southwest, you find some of the most amazing and historical sites! I look forward to your Wednesday's upload! Thank you for what you are doing. I'm letting my friends and family to check out your videos and if they enjoyed it, give it a thumbs up!
Thank you for this video! An arid desert expanse with barely a few traces of former brief habitation. Spent a couple of weeks at Ft. Irwin on annual training and the environment was just like this. That era was prior to the age of miniature electronics to control drones, but it is still surprising that they overlooked the fact that bright lights are targets. As they used to say, there are two ways to do something, the proper way and the army way.
Steve -- Another well done episode in your series on the WWII desert training sites. And, belated Veteran's Day thanks for serving in the US Army from this Vietnam era veteran.
Steve, I could not have lived through the rest of this day if I had not known whether that last cactus had a rock planter around it or not…..😊 Seriously, another great video! You and your wife are a real asset to UA-cam. Keep up the great work!!
"If there's one thing you learn in the Army, it's how to landscape" got a good chuckle out of me. I've noticed this tradition is alive and well on the Baja Highway at the Mexican Army camps that have been set up to keep a presence and inspect passing vehicles. In the Navy, we got good at polishing brass and stripping/polishing tile passageways. Busy work to keep the military occupied between wars, no doubt. As always, really appreciate your research. Your drone shots certainly help in the appreciation of a lot of your destinations.
Steve, you inspired me to take my teens to visit most of the places you have documented. Titan Missile Museum has been their favorite so far. Thank you for educating us all...
Thank you Steve for another informative tour. You were led up the 'garden' path with that concrete path. Your video's and commentary about all those out of the way places in America is why i keep watching. I've said it so many times and will keep saying it, You and your wife would be great tour guides for both Americans and us 'foriegners'. With what you find out about area's in America should be used in American schools as history lessons.
I'm sitting in my chair in Dayton Ohio watching this, your videos are awesome! We'll be in Quartzsite with our food truck selling BBQ in a few weeks. Last year we spent Christmas in Las Cruces and then went over to the Salton Sea and just missed crossing paths with you! Small world, maybe one of these days we'll run into you guys
That’s crazy I live in San Diego and never been to the Salton Sea . I have a lot of exploring to do east off San Diego. Been to Yuma, AZ , El Centro Ca and Brawley but I saw the history of Salton Sea . The Engineers messed it up tapping into the Colorado River. It looks like a ghost town now. 🤷♂️👍
@Daniel-fd3wp what are you waiting for?! We stayed in El Centro at a hotel with classic cars while visiting the Salton Sea. I lived in Reno for about a year in 05. I had all that stuff right at my finger tips to explore and barely scratched the surface. I regret that.
Patton's desert training bases covered parts of California, Arizona, and Nevada. They have Patton's Desert Training Museum off of I-10 at Chiriaco Summit in California.
If I was local I'd be making a trip out this weekend specifically to replace the flag. Not military myself, but I had a Marine Scout Master, so some stuff stuck haha
My memory is getting hazy with age, but I thought I remember a VFW club was maintaining the flag. I was looking for something along those lines in Steves video, but I did not notice anything.
Thank you for an informative and entertaining trip into the past. I did not know there was more than one of these camps. I knew about the one near Chiriaco Summit off of I-10 east of Indio CA.
The one at Chiriaco Summit is Camp Young. It was the headquarters of the Desert Training Center. Also, where General Patton had his headquarters when he was there. By the way in those days the place was called Shaver Summit. It was not changed to Chiriaco Summit until the post office was set up in 1958.
Retired Army living in Az since 1978. This is the FIRST time I have ever heard of Camp Bouse. Thanks for the trip to my roots and the landscaping goes on...
Steve, frorm my 62 years of studying history I have concluded my ancestors were ordered to go to America in 1834, from Manchester, England. My ancestors went from Manchester to Rhode Island, to Ohio, to St. Louis, Sacramento, California, San Francisco, and finally several miles inland from Bodega Bay and the Russian River in Sonoma, County California. Bak then traveling that far in less that 10 years took some doing. Bye the way, their oxen were shot with bow and arrow in Nevada, ditched the wagon in the Sierras, and ate rancid butter, rancid salmon, and Indian acorn bread in Sacramento. Fortunately Eliza wrote a diary, and James was interviewed by the Bancroft Library before his death in the late 1890s. Take Care Steve, cause damn your'e Good!
I have visited Camp Bouse a couple of times now. Also, the other Army Camps of the Desert Training Center. I will say they all have deteriorated a lot from when I first saw them starting in the mid 1960's. I have come across practice anti-tank mines, pistol and rifle ammunition and 37mm tank "bullets". Camp Coxcomb and Camp Iron Mountain had the remains of the churches. Also, at Rice Airbase, 50 caliber ammunition for the airplanes. I have found your last few videos quite interesting for me as those are places I have visited or camped at.
I'm always on the lookout when I head out to these camps because people still find unexploded ordinance. The last thing I want to do is turn it into exploded ordinance.
@@SidetrackAdventures Interesting that you should say that. Back in the late 40's and 50's there were signs up along highway 177 North of Desert Center, warning people about unexploded ordinance. At the time I was a youngster traveling with my parents.
I was out on the western border of the Goldwater Artillery Range East of Yuma in about '74 and in the middle of the "road", I found a live 50 caliber. I picked it up and put it about 15' off the path and wrote the word, 'Live' in the dirt beside it. A week later I was back out there and picked it up and brought it home. Still have it up in my ammo box surrounded by papers. STL and 43 on the firing end.
@@EmptyHandshake I did bring home one of the live 50 caliber rounds from Rice Airbase. I have also traveled round the Goldwater Artillery Range. The thing I remember most is the tanks and other vehicles parked out there. My problem is that I am now in my 80's and my memory is fading.
It's amazing how you captured the remnants of such an important yet hidden part of history!♥ Can’t wait to see what other historical locations you’ll uncover next! 🌍♥
Watching all the way from nz. Love your content. Im too scared to get on a plane and visit all these amazing places so i say thank you for letting me live through your videos. Keep up the great work and cant wait for your next upload. Stay safe steve.
Your comment about landscaping in the Army is spot on. In 1986, while with the 82d Airborne Division, we deployed to the Sinai Desert as part of the Multinational Force and Observers, acting as a bit of a buffer between the Egyptians and the Israelis. We had to use the metal tines of a leaf rake to make parallel lines in the sand around the buildings we stayed in when not on patrol in the desert. It was so absurd and the locals who had occasion to enter the camp from time to time just shook their heads.
Hey Steve, I just realized what a jerk I am for not having profusely thanking you before for your wonderful videos. My great-great grandfather and mother crossed the country on the Oregon and California Trails in 1845. The met a mountain man named Caleb Greenwood at a fort up north where he persuaded James and Eliza to follow him and his sons on the second journey on the new California Trail. James later helped rescue member of the donor Party after they managed to somehow escape the deep snow, while he worked at Sutter's fort as a blacksmith. They settled in Sacramento, then San Francisco in 1848, and finally Sonoma County in 1850. James fought with the 300 other men during the Bear Flag Revolt in 1846, attacking Sonoma, Monterey, and Los Angeles. James along with three other men took Jacob Leese, the founder of San Francisco, and Mariano Vallejo the General of Northern California prisoner in Sonoma June 1846. James was a 6' 6" private under Col. Fremont and Explorer Kit Carson. Eliza had a tent at Kearney and Vallejo Street on Telegraph Hill in San Francisco, and she washed the clothes of the 49ers in Yerba Buena Bay below. I have multiple photographs of Eliza's tent on Telegraph Hill, and an incredible photograph of James wearing his finest clothes and black hat while working as a blacksmith in his shop, surrounded by his bellows, and his personal anvil which iOS on display at Sutter's fort in Sacramento. James was a Freemason, and was a founding member of the first Masonic Lodge in San Francisco. Freemasons like my great-great grandfather were sent to places that were "Crossroads" which were critical to the Etruscan Discipline, and Vegioa's Prophecy. Tempe, Arizona near me was founded by a Freemason as a River Forde on the Salt River. Dallas was founded by a Freemason who built a log cabin on a cliff overlooking the Trinity River where the infamous picket fence played a huge role in Kennedy's assassination which played out while I was home with a concussion. James father was born in 1798, and was a Millwright near Manchester, England, when he an his son left England in 1834 for Rhode Island. Eliza's father owned the four story cotton Mill Nicholas and James helped design and build southeast of Manchester. Get this, Eliza's father was sent to debtors prison when his cotton mill burned down, and the family escaped forced imprisonment at a factory in Millhavan, UK in 1834. Eliza Father bribed someone, and escaped debtors prison, and he along with his family escaped England on the Underground Railroad to Liverpool, UK. From there they boarded the Ship Atlantic, and sailed to Rhode Island. I have fully restored Nicholas's only photograph, circa 1845 before he died in an industrial accident in 1848. I have fully restored over seven generations of my ancestors photographs featuring both the the male and female sides of each marriage. Steve, I can not thank you enough for all of your fantastic videos. You have blessed my life with your fine videos.
I'm an Arizona native and love watching your content because though I've lived here my whole life a lot of the places you visit i never even knew existed. Plus the history you share about these places often makes me proud to be a native here. Thanks Steve!
Maybe you could do a piece on the origin of Ft. Irwin, near Barstow in WW2. General Patton built the modern part to train his men for North Africa, to fight Rommel. I think the Army had been out there earlier than that. A very interesting area is "Jack Hammer Pass", the mountain pass halfway from Barstow. You can see the original pass on the left as you enter the pass. It was cut mostly by hand, jackhammers, mules and dynamite. There are photos of the construction and the old fort and Patton himself out there...
I was OPFOR for 44 rotations at "The Planet", aka Ft. Irwin,Cali. I echo (no pun) the request to do a history of Camp Irwin. I know there were Japanese detainment camps there along with Patton's training excersises. But,alas,I am sure post access is tough to get. I wanted to do an OPFOR reunion there,but after almost 40 years,no one can help me in the quest. Keep up the good reporting,brother. Tanker Tough!
Great job Steve. Thanks. My Uncle was with the 701St Tank Destroyer Bn. in Tunisa during WW 2. He died in a Nazi field dressing station there. His military records were destroyed in the St. Louis fire. So it's possible he trained at Camp Bouse. Thanks again.
Great video, thank you. For all of my reading about WWII and Patton and spending most of my life in the Southwest - this is the first I've heard of this camp and the secret weapon development. Impressive work, as always Steve.
Cool video. I went to Fort Irwin in Barstow, Ca. last week. My great nephew got promoted to sergeant. It's another Tank Training base. Beautiful Desert out there.
The one I remember by Needles Cal., was Camp Ibis. It could get supplies from the railroad that ran right by there. Same for the Camps around Rice and the one at Goffs.
You offer such informative and entertaining videos. I'm definitely learning about things I never knew about the Southwest. Thank you for what you do. Keep up the great work!
Seems like nothing but miles and miles of nothing but miles and miles of nothing - and yet, you found SOMETHING out there! Thanks so much for sharing this relaxing journey into the past.
Another great video Steve! Have you visited any of the WWII internment sites? There are two close together on the Gila River Indian Reservation at Butte Camp and Camp Rivers. (I'm sure you'd need permission from the reservation to go walk them). It's also near the town of Maricopa where if you come by on Saturdays you can tour an old California Zephyr train car. (Maricopa was moved here from a few miles north because of the Union Pacific train line that's been in the same place since I believe the 1800's.) I'm sure you'd be able to find some other stuff to do around here (Dwarf Car museum is cool!) Those are just some ideas. I think the train car thing is cool, but it's a little more mainstream than a "side track" hah it's on the main highway between Maricopa and Casa Grande. Thanks for the content again! Have a great week! See you next week!
@@SidetrackAdventures Steve, I absolutely agree with that, it is super sad. There is one that has a list of names of people who were at the camp that ended up enlisting in the US military and serving almost as a, "you thought we were against you, but we instead fought beside you" type of vibe. While I agree they are sad places, they are places that need to be remembered for being as disheartening and inhumane as they were. People should be aware that the US did this and it was not out of love, but out of fear of someone different. That the US did not do the same with the large German immigrant population during the war. My feelings are that people should never be confined like that no matter the fear, and hopefully it will never happen again. I definitely understand your reasoning for not featuring them. I'll keep an eye out for other things to suggest. Thank you, again, for your videos.
Just a small correction, the picture you show of Patton, has 4 stars making him a General. A Major General has 2 Stars. Not as bad as the drawing I saw of him with 4 stars and 3 Chevrons on his sleeve. Making him a Sgt General. The original 2 Star was first called Sargent Major General, they later dropped the Sargent. The monuments in Bouse were erected by E Clampus Vitus over several years, it was too far to bring out a mixer truck, so they mixed the cement on site. ECV supplied the plaques. I enjoy your treks very much, keep them coming.
Thanks, Steve, for another excellent upload. Great subject matter thoughtfully presented! Plus, that beautiful sky! Cactuses with the rock surrounds are to me, are spiritually moving.
I learned in the U.S. Army how to rake "Rocks" and it all started in Basic Training at Ft. Leonard Wood, MO, if you had none to do, You were raking "Rocks", it's funny now, but it wasn't back then. And your right about the tires in the desert now that you mention it. THE SARGE
Thanks for another awesome video. I'll bet you didn't find any cigarette butts on the ground. Being in the Army, you and I both know how many times those guys had to😅 police the area for butts.
I so much enjoy your videos, thank you very much. Thanks to you, my wife and I got to visit the Parowan Gap Petroglyphs this summer on our motorcycle adventure back east.
Thanks for the video. I have been through Bouse a few times back when they still held the MS Best Dam Bike Ride from Phoenix to Parker back in the 80s or 90s. I never knew the history. I have also been to the Patton Memorial Museum in Chiriaco Summit off of the I-10 in CA. It was at the southern end of the DTC. While in the Army in the late 70s, we did training at Ft Irwin, now the NTC, at the Northern end. As a WWII buff all of my life it was interesting to walk through areas that Pattons troops were trained at. Seeing large chunks of shrapnel all around you as you walked through old artillery ranges. Picking up clips of M1 Garand ammo off of the ground and wondering who lost it so many years ago.
Geez.. You captured some really spectacular skies with those cloud formations. Another fascinating adventure, I love how you dredge up all of the historical tidbits of information, you must need to spent many hours of research for these videos. Thank you!!
Those cactuses are called saguaro (suh-wa- row) and are the largest cactus in the USA. They only grow in the Sonoran Desert which covers SW Arizona, a part of California along the Colorado river and the Mexican states of Sonora and Baja California. Saguaros can live 200 to 300 years so yes, it's quite likely they were there when the camp was active.
I’m glad that you posted that. While backpacking AZ in the 70s I had the rare experience of one falling unexpectedly 40 feet from my camp. Somewhere in the Superstition Mountains.
Your ability to find forgotten history in the middle of no where is amazing. It’s what keeps me coming back. Thanks Steve!
I totally agree with your observation.
@@mtnair3Ditto.
Thank you. There is so much out there I doubt I'll ever run out of places to visit.
Amazing discoveries week after week! you deliver as always.
Historical Note My biological father born in 1913 was already a test pilot with Grumman Aircraft delivery of US Navy planes before WW II
He signed up B for the War broke out seeing the writing on the wall
He was assigned to the US Navy Carrier VGS 27 Suwanee a Jeep escort carrier for US Army General Patton's allied troops landing in Tunisia during" OPERATION TORCH " in November 1942
He flew Combat Air Patrol to protect American Troops landing on the beaches from both NAZI and Vichy French fire radio wave Spirits wars electromagnetic spectrum radiation wars between different seeded race lines living here which are genetic coding wars of Intruder Races Alliance against the Founder races Indigenous ancient ancestral Spiritual Guardian bloodlines here that U C living in Prisoner of War Reservation Camps
That's why we showed up to end Star War network radio programs of atmospheric warfare
Ur own video highlights that TRUTH with the Aerosol drones U can't C delivering neurological breathing network dis order bio weapons against the genetic Morphogenic field structure ATP Kreb cycle immunity function Firewall shield of this planet to drain the oxygen transport levels of living cells that breathe heat fuel and oxygen levels to ignite a Tetrahydrolase fused with Helium to break ur breathing circulation speed and slow down ur electrical power supply B cuz War Games is a deadly blood sacrifices Racketeering
Go Read the book by a 2 tyme recipient of the US Congressional Medal of Honor USMC General Smedley Butler who wrote the Book
"WAR IS A RACKET"
The US and global finite Artificial life form machinery coded intelligence Agencies have their own patches on their uniforms of " psychological recruitment operations to get their electrical Creative power attention attention to increase their Neurological breathing system dysfunction by signing up to use their electrical Creative power to use their electrical life force ATP Kreb cycle immunity function Firewall shield to annihilate their DNA software network communication genetic optical neurological character maps recording speeds to drain their electrical transport circulation speed to Implode and Go NOVA BARDO quantum vampiric probability math function of the logic
Logic is a calculator capacity
Ur awareness levels
How much are U aware of that is happening simultaneously of multidimensional acceleration phasing speed Vacuum thermostat protection gauge so U are not being used as a source of battery operated slaves wearing Dogs of War Tags no different than a RFID Chip of surveillance tracking they put on Dogs,Deer,birds
Radio Biometric identity scans
Full spectrum dominance
The CIA Domino principal
When they fall they fall collectively like hitting the 9 pin crashing the 12 bowling pins playing War games
The grid mechanics repair crew showed up
How familiar are U with Maps and holographic mapping radio programs of programmable matter APIN planetary grid network communication codes
Radio codes are genetic codes
Mathematical radio frequency tones programs
Remember in Major league Baseball
" Get ur programs here "
Or CBS NEWS Alien intelligence Correspondence of CIA psychological war operations " We interrupt Ur minds energy programming" to deliver the newspaper of ur programming to inform U the President is dead man's poets society
Blank Slate memory wipe looking Glass AI QI coded Trap experiment Victim victimizer Game Traps to play games with the dead
Dead man walking is a dead man's trigger
Ask Walter Winchell Gossip column water table
He had more AI press Agents in the 1920-60 than the CIA NSA NAZI intelligence AI apparatus that was recruited from NAZI Corporate Germany directly into the NSA CIA National Security Act with Reinhardt Gehlen organization who was Adolph Hitler's Chief SS Liebstandarte chevrons AI intelligence officer running intelligence War game video theater operations against Stalin in Russia
Russian Gangs outsmarted the Gangs of New York and Irish Mob Bosses
U gotta run a reconnaissance Mission Guardian Alliance Shield contract to map the genetic software when ur operating behind enemy held lines of communication
That's what collecting data on the enemy is
Target acquisitions
Whose genetic codings are being targeted by Artificial Intelligence Finite War Game machine coded Theater of operations
Go look at the patches of the US military such as " Wizards,Warlocks,Merlin nd and learn how they communicate through signs and symbols of what U C and mathematicallly translate their genetic race lines of communication network
It's all about eternal Life force Encryption coded God source worlds mapping program applications of Mathematical electrical function Firewall shield to protect ur original divine born Spiritual Krystal River 🌈 Aurora's Spiral Council breathing Core Still point of a TRUE Vacuum NOT a false light finite vacuum loosh pumps siphoning off life force electrical power to play War Games
Go watch the movie WAR GAMES with Ferris Buehler days off
Go watch the movie Minority Report with Tom Cruz Judgement Day Rise of the Machines
Mu ah VA 💋🌈 Aurora's Spiral Council quarantine security teams operating here
"If there's one thing you learn in the army, it's landscaping" 😂😂 You always make me chuckle! Cheers Steve.
17 minutes of video.... basically just one flagpole.... and you kept all of our attention the whole time.....
your voice ...
the history you are able to find and share.....
all mixed with your style of dialogue....
Always captivating
thank you Steve
There was also a concrete block. And some nails.
@ yes.... those were covered under "basically"
Yet another well shot lesson on desert southwest history. Thanks for this video and your service, Steve!.
The rocks you saw were for the 736th--my Dad was there and part of the unit. 8 Ball was their battalion mascot. They were really upset when he was shot.
Mess with the women and it might get you 😅
Hmmm, I wonder what enticed 8 Ball to eat that nurses undies? 🤔🤭😲
Thank you for your service and happy veteran day.
Thank you, Steve, as always. My hunch is the circle was where the main flag pole stood, or at least maybe the "center" of the Camp. Camp Locket in Campo, CA has a HQ flag pole. The poured concrete sidewalk to no where must have been where the VIP's walked. I loved your observation about GI's and rocks. Thank you for reminding my Fort Irwin memories.
That is what I have seen in the other Camps that I have visited. I have always thought that is where the headquarters were.
That could be the case. It's pretty funny the effort was spent to make that sidewalk but whatever it was leading to or coming from was probably just a tent or a shack. Thank you for all your support.
@@SidetrackAdventures It may have been an hospital isolation tent for soldiers with communicable diseases. My father who was in WW II said that as new units were formed, some of the guys, from different parts of the US, would pass illness around. Kind of like 'freshman flu" on college campi each autumn.
I saw one image that shows the word "FLAG" in the middle of that circle. The tents were all off to one side of it.
@@AirDOGGe I had always thought that the "circle" was where the headquarters area was. Hence the location of the flag in that area.
I'm an 80 year old Arizona native and love desert exploring in my Wrangler. I know it isn't your goal to prospect but I'll bet there are times when you wish you had a metal detector with you. In the late 70's I followed a walking trail from an old homestead site to the site and remains of the old ill-fated dam site on the Hassayampa River North of Wickenburg. I found two unfired 45-90 cartridges in about 6 inches of hard packed dirt near the river. I left the old home site alone and only took photos. It belongs to the Cooper family who still occupies this land.(as far as I know) Four generations that I know of. The elder Mr. Cooper gave me permission to look around at all the relics. I worked with his grandson on the Phoenix fire Department (1967-1990). You go to places I haven't seen in decades or maybe even never seen. Keep up this great work as long as you can.
NEVER BORING STEVE..THANKS
Steve, always enjoy the videos + the story behind them. Love the ending with the "colors" over your right shoulder and the broad background of the desert/mountains. Hoo-ah! !
Try to imagine living in tents out there in the summer, hot as hell. They had no evaporative cooling. I lived nearby around Parker in the '70s and it's a must have. Tough old folks, they were. Thanks Steve. Happy Humpday.
Good thing the camp was only active from Fall of '43 until early '44. They missed out on a 120+ summer in that area.
Been there done that. August 1988 Combined Arms Exercise CAX 8-88.
They burned up during the day then froze at night.
As a kid I lived in Camp Roberts in Ca. As an army brat I had to go to the hospital on post and it was a series of 1 story buildings that went on for miles (or at least it felt like it) Same at Fort Ord before they built a modern hospital. I imagine there was a series of small buildings along with that sidewalk.
God, I miss the Planet Ord.
@@michaeltaylor4984 In the 70's I worked at Ord as a teenager tearing down the WWII barracks (including part of the old medical center)
@@denniss618 We still had the WW2 barracks and a mess hall in the mid to late 80s. Living with rats and snakes
@@michaeltaylor4984 At Ord or at Roberts?
I joined the Coast Guard around a year later so I don't know where the destruction at Ord left off. After I got out I re settled in Washington State and they closed Ord as a base.
@denniss618 At Ord we still had wooden barracks for NCOs who didn't want to put up with the 'ghetto dwellers '.
I will leave it at that.
Ranchers leave those tires out there to put salt licks in for cattle. They put them in tires so the cattle don't break them up. Also, the rocks around the cactus were painted white so that troops didn't walk into a cactus at night, the same with the rocks on the pathways.
CSMs love grass and need to see their peons working. It all goes back to Ft Bliss, TX. One bit of grass and white rocks.
More likely people dumping them so they don't have to pay a disposal fee.
Wonder why the cactus were left in place while the base was active. Don't think Patton had a particular respect for indigenous flora.
@@denniskoppo4259 It's not just there, they do it everywhere, it's nothing to do with Patton. It's like a lot of countries that don't have street lighting paint tree trunks white in towns.
Probably not placed on the protective flora list at the time but because they’re hundreds of years old and an icon to U.S. western deserts.
Thanks for another great adventure, Steve.
I have been there about 25 years ago. Found a few 30-06 pieces of brass. Very cool bit of history. Thanks Steve.
Good morning Steve. After spending most of my life in the southwest, you find some of the most amazing and historical sites! I look forward to your Wednesday's upload! Thank you for what you are doing. I'm letting my friends and family to check out your videos and if they enjoyed it, give it a thumbs up!
Thank you, I appreciate it.
Thank you for this video!
An arid desert expanse with barely a few traces of former brief habitation.
Spent a couple of weeks at Ft. Irwin on annual training and the environment was just like this.
That era was prior to the age of miniature electronics to control drones, but it is still surprising that they overlooked the fact that bright lights are targets. As they used to say, there are two ways to do something, the proper way and the army way.
Steve -- Another well done episode in your series on the WWII desert training sites. And, belated Veteran's Day thanks for serving in the US Army from this Vietnam era veteran.
Thanks you, I really appreciate it.
Steve, I could not have lived through the rest of this day if I had not known whether that last cactus had a rock planter around it or not…..😊
Seriously, another great video! You and your wife are a real asset to UA-cam. Keep up the great work!!
"If there's one thing you learn in the Army, it's how to landscape" got a good chuckle out of me. I've noticed this tradition is alive and well on the Baja Highway at the Mexican Army camps that have been set up to keep a presence and inspect passing vehicles. In the Navy, we got good at polishing brass and stripping/polishing tile passageways. Busy work to keep the military occupied between wars, no doubt.
As always, really appreciate your research. Your drone shots certainly help in the appreciation of a lot of your destinations.
In next week's video you'll see something pretty crazy that an army built too.
Good Job ! Thank you for your Service.
Thanks!
Thank you, Steve, for letting me live vicariously through your explores ! Another fascinating video!
Thanks for another fascinating trip back in time. If only rocks and cacti could talk! : )
Steve, you inspired me to take my teens to visit most of the places you have documented. Titan Missile Museum has been their favorite so far. Thank you for educating us all...
Glad I can help. That museum is great. I can't imagine sitting down there hoping the day is uneventful.
Thank you Steve for another informative tour. You were led up the 'garden' path with that concrete path. Your video's and commentary about all those out of the way places in America is why i keep watching. I've said it so many times and will keep saying it, You and your wife would be great tour guides for both Americans and us 'foriegners'. With what you find out about area's in America should be used in American schools as history lessons.
Thanks Steve. Close to home, yet Miles away. Some one must be tending the Flag and flag pole. Thank You, whoever you are.
I should have looked to see if it was a 48 star flag but didn't think of it at the time.
I'm sitting in my chair in Dayton Ohio watching this, your videos are awesome! We'll be in Quartzsite with our food truck selling BBQ in a few weeks. Last year we spent Christmas in Las Cruces and then went over to the Salton Sea and just missed crossing paths with you! Small world, maybe one of these days we'll run into you guys
That’s crazy I live in San Diego and never been to the Salton Sea . I have a lot of exploring to do east off San Diego. Been to Yuma, AZ , El Centro Ca and Brawley but I saw the history of Salton Sea . The Engineers messed it up tapping into the Colorado River. It looks like a ghost town now. 🤷♂️👍
@Daniel-fd3wp what are you waiting for?! We stayed in El Centro at a hotel with classic cars while visiting the Salton Sea. I lived in Reno for about a year in 05. I had all that stuff right at my finger tips to explore and barely scratched the surface. I regret that.
Patton's desert training bases covered parts of California, Arizona, and Nevada. They have Patton's Desert Training Museum off of I-10 at Chiriaco Summit in California.
I met G.S. Patton in Palermo, Sicily in August of 1943... TRue Story
@@johnmonaco1028 so you are 100+ years old?
@@heiner71 He could still be in his 90s. Many servicemen lied about their age to sign up.
@@heiner71Y'all are assuming he was enlisted. He could have been a local boy at the time.
Y’all should know what happens when you assume!
My Dad and I took a ride out there years ago. It was really cool to explore the place.
That flag needs replacing though.
If I was local I'd be making a trip out this weekend specifically to replace the flag. Not military myself, but I had a Marine Scout Master, so some stuff stuck haha
The flag was looking a little rough. Was glad to see lights for it at least.
My memory is getting hazy with age, but I thought I remember a VFW club was maintaining the flag. I was looking for something along those lines in Steves video, but I did not notice anything.
@@dscrivegood for you my man.
6:37 I'm so used to the George C. Scott version of gen. Patton that I had forgotten what the real general looked like. 😁
Yeah, George C. Scott is so iconic in that role I think he is what most people think of when they think of Patton.
Dang yeah ha 🎯
In fact, I don't think I ever saw a picture of Patton before now. He _sort of_ looks like himself, I guess.
Right
@@delstanley1349 Patton and Puller weren't very dashing and debonair
Thank you, Steve. For your service.
Thank you for an informative and entertaining trip into the past. I did not know there was more than one of these camps. I knew about the one near Chiriaco Summit off of I-10 east of Indio CA.
The one at Chiriaco Summit is Camp Young. It was the headquarters of the Desert Training Center. Also, where General Patton had his headquarters when he was there. By the way in those days the place was called Shaver Summit. It was not changed to Chiriaco Summit until the post office was set up in 1958.
Retired Army living in Az since 1978. This is the FIRST time I have ever heard of Camp Bouse. Thanks for the trip to my roots and the landscaping goes on...
Steve, frorm my 62 years of studying history I have concluded my ancestors were ordered to go to America in 1834, from Manchester, England. My ancestors went from Manchester to Rhode Island, to Ohio, to St. Louis, Sacramento, California, San Francisco, and finally several miles inland from Bodega Bay and the Russian River in Sonoma, County California. Bak then traveling that far in less that 10 years took some doing. Bye the way, their oxen were shot with bow and arrow in Nevada, ditched the wagon in the Sierras, and ate rancid butter, rancid salmon, and Indian acorn bread in Sacramento. Fortunately Eliza wrote a diary, and James was interviewed by the Bancroft Library before his death in the late 1890s. Take Care Steve, cause damn your'e Good!
Enjoy your videos and history lessons. Thanks for your service to our country in the Army.
I have visited Camp Bouse a couple of times now. Also, the other Army Camps of the Desert Training Center. I will say they all have deteriorated a lot from when I first saw them starting in the mid 1960's. I have come across practice anti-tank mines, pistol and rifle ammunition and 37mm tank "bullets". Camp Coxcomb and Camp Iron Mountain had the remains of the churches. Also, at Rice Airbase, 50 caliber ammunition for the airplanes. I have found your last few videos quite interesting for me as those are places I have visited or camped at.
I'm always on the lookout when I head out to these camps because people still find unexploded ordinance. The last thing I want to do is turn it into exploded ordinance.
@@SidetrackAdventures Interesting that you should say that. Back in the late 40's and 50's there were signs up along highway 177 North of Desert Center, warning people about unexploded ordinance. At the time I was a youngster traveling with my parents.
I was out on the western border of the Goldwater Artillery Range East of Yuma in about '74 and in the middle of the "road", I found a live 50 caliber. I picked it up and put it about 15' off the path and wrote the word, 'Live' in the dirt beside it. A week later I was back out there and picked it up and brought it home. Still have it up in my ammo box surrounded by papers. STL and 43 on the firing end.
@@EmptyHandshake I did bring home one of the live 50 caliber rounds from Rice Airbase. I have also traveled round the Goldwater Artillery Range. The thing I remember most is the tanks and other vehicles parked out there. My problem is that I am now in my 80's and my memory is fading.
@@allenegbert1669ordnance not ordinance
All that remains is the stunning beauty of the desert landscape.
and the concrete block with the thing poking up out of it.
Love your work Steve, Greetings from Australia.
Great vid Steve and thank you for your service.
Thank you.
Thanks again Professor for your weekly class on the southwestern U.S….old dogs like me can learn something new!!!😂
I appreciate this series. I worked in the Mojave Desert, in California, for 10 years and there is so much abandoned history in the West.
It's amazing how you captured the remnants of such an important yet hidden part of history!♥ Can’t wait to see what other historical locations you’ll uncover next! 🌍♥
Yeah. My great weather streak just ended though.
@@SidetrackAdventures I'm looking forward to more great content from you! ❤
I have no idea how you continue to find these obscure locations, but I always appreciate them and enjoy them vicariously! Keep it up !
Watching all the way from nz. Love your content. Im too scared to get on a plane and visit all these amazing places so i say thank you for letting me live through your videos. Keep up the great work and cant wait for your next upload. Stay safe steve.
Thank you and God bless the Greatest Generation!
Your comment about landscaping in the Army is spot on. In 1986, while with the 82d Airborne Division, we deployed to the Sinai Desert as part of the Multinational Force and Observers, acting as a bit of a buffer between the Egyptians and the Israelis. We had to use the metal tines of a leaf rake to make parallel lines in the sand around the buildings we stayed in when not on patrol in the desert. It was so absurd and the locals who had occasion to enter the camp from time to time just shook their heads.
That may have been to check for footprints!
@@louispaparella5766 Maybe, but the only ones we ever saw were the teeny tiny ones left by scorpions, lol
I was in the 82nd too! 1/504 PIR.
@@SidetrackAdventures I knew I liked you for a reason! I was a forward observer attached to the recon platoon of 2/504 from 1984-1988. AATW!
We had to do the same thing in Vietnam at Red Beach across the bay from Danang Air Base
Thank you earthling.
Hey Steve, I just realized what a jerk I am for not having profusely thanking you before for your wonderful videos. My great-great grandfather and mother crossed the country on the Oregon and California Trails in 1845. The met a mountain man named Caleb Greenwood at a fort up north where he persuaded James and Eliza to follow him and his sons on the second journey on the new California Trail. James later helped rescue member of the donor Party after they managed to somehow escape the deep snow, while he worked at Sutter's fort as a blacksmith. They settled in Sacramento, then San Francisco in 1848, and finally Sonoma County in 1850. James fought with the 300 other men during the Bear Flag Revolt in 1846, attacking Sonoma, Monterey, and Los Angeles. James along with three other men took Jacob Leese, the founder of San Francisco, and Mariano Vallejo the General of Northern California prisoner in Sonoma June 1846. James was a 6' 6" private under Col. Fremont and Explorer Kit Carson. Eliza had a tent at Kearney and Vallejo Street on Telegraph Hill in San Francisco, and she washed the clothes of the 49ers in Yerba Buena Bay below. I have multiple photographs of Eliza's tent on Telegraph Hill, and an incredible photograph of James wearing his finest clothes and black hat while working as a blacksmith in his shop, surrounded by his bellows, and his personal anvil which iOS on display at Sutter's fort in Sacramento. James was a Freemason, and was a founding member of the first Masonic Lodge in San Francisco. Freemasons like my great-great grandfather were sent to places that were "Crossroads" which were critical to the Etruscan Discipline, and Vegioa's Prophecy. Tempe, Arizona near me was founded by a Freemason as a River Forde on the Salt River. Dallas was founded by a Freemason who built a log cabin on a cliff overlooking the Trinity River where the infamous picket fence played a huge role in Kennedy's assassination which played out while I was home with a concussion. James father was born in 1798, and was a Millwright near Manchester, England, when he an his son left England in 1834 for Rhode Island. Eliza's father owned the four story cotton Mill Nicholas and James helped design and build southeast of Manchester. Get this, Eliza's father was sent to debtors prison when his cotton mill burned down, and the family escaped forced imprisonment at a factory in Millhavan, UK in 1834. Eliza Father bribed someone, and escaped debtors prison, and he along with his family escaped England on the Underground Railroad to Liverpool, UK. From there they boarded the Ship Atlantic, and sailed to Rhode Island. I have fully restored Nicholas's only photograph, circa 1845 before he died in an industrial accident in 1848. I have fully restored over seven generations of my ancestors photographs featuring both the the male and female sides of each marriage. Steve, I can not thank you enough for all of your fantastic videos. You have blessed my life with your fine videos.
Amazing discoveries week after week! you deliver as always.
Thanks' again Steve, another good vid.
Thank you.
Thanks!
Thank you, I really appreciate it.
Thanks!
Thank you, I appreciate it.
I'm an Arizona native and love watching your content because though I've lived here my whole life a lot of the places you visit i never even knew existed. Plus the history you share about these places often makes me proud to be a native here. Thanks Steve!
Maybe you could do a piece on the origin of Ft. Irwin, near Barstow in WW2. General Patton built the modern part to train his men for North Africa, to fight Rommel. I think the Army had been out there earlier than that. A very interesting area is "Jack Hammer Pass", the mountain pass halfway from Barstow. You can see the original pass on the left as you enter the pass. It was cut mostly by hand, jackhammers, mules and dynamite. There are photos of the construction and the old fort and Patton himself out there...
The problem with doing anything on Ft. Irwin is understandably, you can't access much of it.
I was OPFOR for 44 rotations at "The Planet", aka Ft. Irwin,Cali. I echo (no pun) the request to do a history of Camp Irwin. I know there were Japanese detainment camps there along with Patton's training excersises. But,alas,I am sure post access is tough to get. I wanted to do an OPFOR reunion there,but after almost 40 years,no one can help me in the quest.
Keep up the good reporting,brother. Tanker Tough!
Great job Steve. Thanks. My Uncle was with the 701St Tank Destroyer Bn. in Tunisa during WW 2. He died in a Nazi field dressing station there. His military records were destroyed in the St. Louis fire. So it's possible he trained at Camp Bouse. Thanks again.
May he rest in peace.
@@frankhinkle5772 Thanks
That fire was really convenient. 🧐
Great video, thank you.
For all of my reading about WWII and Patton and spending most of my life in the Southwest - this is the first I've heard of this camp and the secret weapon development.
Impressive work, as always Steve.
Interesting video as always, how you manage to find these little forgotten gems is amazing. Thanks again.
Beautiful country and sky. I love it.
great research always a good video
Glad you enjoyed it
Cool video. I went to Fort Irwin in Barstow, Ca. last week. My great nephew got promoted to sergeant. It's another Tank Training base. Beautiful Desert out there.
You had a great sky to film that expansive location under :-)
Thank you Steve for the great tour
Great video, thanks Steve.
One of the camps was at Needles Cal. I was in the camp are in 1964 with the army and it looked much like this area did.
The one I remember by Needles Cal., was Camp Ibis. It could get supplies from the railroad that ran right by there. Same for the Camps around Rice and the one at Goffs.
Not the George as on Cheers, but Cheers to George for making sure history lives on in the monuments. Thank you for another amazing program.
You offer such informative and entertaining videos. I'm definitely learning about things I never knew about the Southwest. Thank you for what you do. Keep up the great work!
Steve, happy belated Veterans Day from a brother vet! Great video, definitely top 5 for me of yours :) Keep them coming, love your content!
Vibing on the George Wendt and Where The Sidewalk Ends!
Hi Steve. Loving you guys and sending positive thoughts and prayers.
Another great fun video. Thank you for what must be hard work to make these interesting stories.
Seems like nothing but miles and miles of nothing but miles and miles of nothing - and yet, you found SOMETHING out there! Thanks so much for sharing this relaxing journey into the past.
I can't believe the registry has been sitting in the Mohave sun for 20 years and is still in-tact and readable :O
Another great video Steve!
Have you visited any of the WWII internment sites? There are two close together on the Gila River Indian Reservation at Butte Camp and Camp Rivers. (I'm sure you'd need permission from the reservation to go walk them). It's also near the town of Maricopa where if you come by on Saturdays you can tour an old California Zephyr train car. (Maricopa was moved here from a few miles north because of the Union Pacific train line that's been in the same place since I believe the 1800's.)
I'm sure you'd be able to find some other stuff to do around here (Dwarf Car museum is cool!)
Those are just some ideas. I think the train car thing is cool, but it's a little more mainstream than a "side track" hah it's on the main highway between Maricopa and Casa Grande.
Thanks for the content again! Have a great week! See you next week!
I visited the one near Delta, Utah. Not much left. A great area to live though.
I have visited a few but haven't done any videos on them. It's such a sad part of our history.
@@SidetrackAdventures Steve, I absolutely agree with that, it is super sad. There is one that has a list of names of people who were at the camp that ended up enlisting in the US military and serving almost as a, "you thought we were against you, but we instead fought beside you" type of vibe.
While I agree they are sad places, they are places that need to be remembered for being as disheartening and inhumane as they were. People should be aware that the US did this and it was not out of love, but out of fear of someone different. That the US did not do the same with the large German immigrant population during the war. My feelings are that people should never be confined like that no matter the fear, and hopefully it will never happen again.
I definitely understand your reasoning for not featuring them. I'll keep an eye out for other things to suggest. Thank you, again, for your videos.
@@kyleohara8700 FDR convinced our SCOTUS to rule that internment was legal. It was reversed after the war in Kobayashi v U S
Great video again Steve! Thanks!
Spent time in Bouse as a kid never knew about the Camp but the tank was always there near the bar
You mentioned you were in the Army...Thank You for your service!
I appreciate you taking time to walk around, so we get to see not only the first thing you come to, but the entire area.
Gorgeous sky today...
Steve, you have a great channel.
My Grandfather was in the 740th tank battalion and spoke of this secret training in the dessert.
Steve, you are on to something good 👍... Keep on bringing your fans your excellent and informative posts...🌹
Just a small correction, the picture you show of Patton, has 4 stars making him a General. A Major General has 2 Stars. Not as bad as the drawing I saw of him with 4 stars and 3 Chevrons on his sleeve. Making him a Sgt General. The original 2 Star was first called Sargent Major General, they later dropped the Sargent. The monuments in Bouse were erected by E Clampus Vitus over several years, it was too far to bring out a mixer truck, so they mixed the cement on site. ECV supplied the plaques. I enjoy your treks very much, keep them coming.
Thanks for another informative episode
Watching your video every Wednesday while having dinner has become a tradition at our place. Thank you Steve and keep up the good work.
I was there 25 years ago. Interesting history for sure.
And in 25 years I’m sure nothing has changed except maybe more tires. 😂Steve has a great channel.
Thanks, Steve, for another excellent upload. Great subject matter thoughtfully presented! Plus, that beautiful sky! Cactuses with the rock surrounds are to me, are spiritually moving.
My dad is one of the men who tapped many of the armored vehicles from Bouse. Testing new techniques with bombs/missiles.
Hola, fellow soldier.
My brother had to go to Bouse for summertime maneuvers, 1960s!
hehe.... (if you know what I mean!)
I learned in the U.S. Army how to rake "Rocks" and it all started in Basic Training at Ft. Leonard Wood, MO, if you had none to do, You were raking "Rocks", it's funny now, but it wasn't back then. And your right about the tires in the desert now that you mention it. THE SARGE
Thanks for another awesome video.
I'll bet you didn't find any cigarette butts on the ground. Being in the Army, you and I both know how many times those guys had to😅 police the area for butts.
I'm sure this area of the desert was very well raked in its time.
@@davidclark9150 If doesn't grow, Pick it up. THE SARGE
@@davidclark9150one good thing at Bouse There was no grass cutting details.
Very cool! Thanks for sharing…!
I so much enjoy your videos, thank you very much. Thanks to you, my wife and I got to visit the Parowan Gap Petroglyphs this summer on our motorcycle adventure back east.
Oh wow. I bet that was a great trip. Those petroglyphs are amazing.
Thanks for the video. I have been through Bouse a few times back when they still held the MS Best Dam Bike Ride from Phoenix to Parker back in the 80s or 90s. I never knew the history. I have also been to the Patton Memorial Museum in Chiriaco Summit off of the I-10 in CA. It was at the southern end of the DTC. While in the Army in the late 70s, we did training at Ft Irwin, now the NTC, at the Northern end. As a WWII buff all of my life it was interesting to walk through areas that Pattons troops were trained at. Seeing large chunks of shrapnel all around you as you walked through old artillery ranges. Picking up clips of M1 Garand ammo off of the ground and wondering who lost it so many years ago.
I forgot about the M1 Grand clips. I have found a few of those myself.
As always your the best. Thank you...
Another great history lesson!
Geez.. You captured some really spectacular skies with those cloud formations. Another fascinating adventure, I love how you dredge up all of the historical tidbits of information, you must need to spent many hours of research for these videos. Thank you!!
Lived in Arizona 65 years and never heard of this. WOW next time I feel adventurous I'm headed to Bouse Arizona.
Another one of Steve's great adventures.
Nostalgia from before my time. It's amazing what our forefathers have gone through to give us what we have today.
If only it was appreciated by all.
Fantastic, love your work!
Those cactuses are called saguaro (suh-wa- row) and are the largest cactus in the USA. They only grow in the Sonoran Desert which covers SW Arizona, a part of California along the Colorado river and the Mexican states of Sonora and Baja California. Saguaros can live 200 to 300 years so yes, it's quite likely they were there when the camp was active.
I’m glad that you posted that.
While backpacking AZ in the 70s I had the rare experience of one falling unexpectedly 40 feet from my camp. Somewhere in the Superstition Mountains.