Yosemite Nature Notes - 10 - Rock Fall

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  • Опубліковано 13 чер 2024
  • Since the glaciers retreated around fifteen thousand years ago, rock fall has been the major force of change in Yosemite Valley. Geologists work to understand this force of nature in order to protect the millions of visitors who come here each year. For an audio described version of this video, go to • Yosemite Nature Notes ... .

КОМЕНТАРІ • 328

  • @soyounoat
    @soyounoat 3 роки тому +4

    What makes this man's video special is the full stereo surround sound of those rocks falling.

  • @Smithschannel
    @Smithschannel 10 років тому +2

    Oh my gosh! The sound of those boulders falling and listening to the thunderous roar of those collapsing rocks is quite spectacular!

  • @taylorhill8001
    @taylorhill8001 3 роки тому +5

    Was in Yosemite for the Happy Isles rock slide, such an insane and profound memory for me. Such pandemonium throughout the park, the dust, animals and people running around, sirens going off. Wild!

  • @soularddave2
    @soularddave2 6 років тому +201

    I didn't read the whole book on rock falls, but I did read the Cliff Notes.

    • @DanielRamirez-li6zc
      @DanielRamirez-li6zc 6 років тому +2

      soularddave2
      I was caught between a
      rock and a...........................
      rock! 😨

    • @DelbertStinkfester
      @DelbertStinkfester 5 років тому +1

      LOL....WOW

    • @MrBobconner1952
      @MrBobconner1952 4 роки тому +12

      That's OK, the book was a pile of rubble

    • @1.4142
      @1.4142 4 роки тому +7

      I didn't read the whole book on fire-starting, but I did read the SparkNotes.

    • @CBeard849
      @CBeard849 3 роки тому +1

      HahahaHaHa.........Winner winner chicken dinner!!

  • @than217
    @than217 11 років тому +24

    The rockfall I heard while on Challenger Point in Colorado on Aug 1, 2012 was incredible sounding. I didn't see anything because there was a ridge obscuring my view but the sound echoed through the whole Willow Lake valley. The sound alone was awe inspiring. 3:06 on this video reminded me of that sound.

  • @contentdeleted670
    @contentdeleted670 3 роки тому +3

    The booming sound just gives me chills

  • @theoriginalchefboyoboy6025
    @theoriginalchefboyoboy6025 3 роки тому +4

    when mountains crumble to the sea,
    there will still be you,
    and me...

  • @utej.k.bemsel3199
    @utej.k.bemsel3199 7 років тому +50

    well,the BIG rocks laying around should tell everybody a story!

    • @TheTibetyak
      @TheTibetyak 3 роки тому +3

      90% of the visitors believe the highway and building structures have always been there. They think the animals are just Disney animations.

  • @Sheety33
    @Sheety33 13 років тому +34

    You can really get an idea of how tall the valley walls are by how slow the falling rocks are falling. Great footage!

  • @ruthhand5053
    @ruthhand5053 7 років тому +2

    Amen. Life, and every facet of it, ALWAYS comes down to the choices we make.

  • @bashfulbrother
    @bashfulbrother 8 років тому +9

    Thanks for loading this. Very interesting.

  • @jcsimonassi7151
    @jcsimonassi7151 3 роки тому +1

    For sure, one of the most spectacular place that a have chance to know. Such a wonderful natural landscape ever❤️

  • @joshuabennett5891
    @joshuabennett5891 4 роки тому +3

    January 2020 was the first time I got to see Yosemite national. Flew my mom out there for her 70th birthday. We also went to Alcatraz, Muir woods and Lake Tahoe. California state railroad museum in Sacramento was very interesting as well. Plus Stetson beach, just north of Muir woods is worth checking out.

    • @dudeonbike800
      @dudeonbike800 3 роки тому

      Glad you got to see some of California's famous scenery. There's just so much here to explore and enjoy.* I cannot say how truly lucky I feel to be a life-long resident of such a great place. Come back soon!

  • @johnm.evangelis693
    @johnm.evangelis693 7 років тому +14

    Great video...

  • @jimmacintosh6195
    @jimmacintosh6195 5 років тому +5

    This is amazing! In October 30, 2001, just after 9/11 I was sleeping next to my girl " my 2000 Honda 1100 Aero Motorcycle" when at 04:54 I was woken for the second time that night. 1st by raccoons eating my dinner that I left on my bike. The next was what I just learned was a rock fall! I stood straight up in my sleeping bag for I her this freight train rolling through the Park. It was so Amazing . I described this to many friends over the years. In my dark warm dry in a light rain. This train was rolling through. I herd the break and all. Never knew what it was. I was mystified to now saw a video on one of many that take place! Thx so much Jim McIntosh Nantucket. My cycle journey across the country. Because of the rain the pass was closed that day & I could not get to Mono Lake. But many other adventures awaited that day all great. I met a mechanic in a local town just outside that park night of Halloween in a bar. He never went out but the kids were in town with the mrs and we struck up a conversation. After sometime he invited me back too his house for the night. A warm bed great. The next day he asked me to breakfast and go to work. I said sure, He had to fly to work everyday as an airplane mechanic. He took me up over Yosemite which was covered in snow from the previous night. What an experience I had!! You never know who you'll meet on the road. The nicest people. Thx Mr.

  • @65byteme
    @65byteme 5 років тому +12

    Would absolutely love to hear the sound in person. Would also be absolutely terrified.

    • @budree4240
      @budree4240 3 роки тому +1

      Absolutely would

    • @lukeaurand5722
      @lukeaurand5722 3 роки тому +2

      I’ve heard that noise all night coming from mountains I was going to climb the next morning

  • @stephenjones6030
    @stephenjones6030 3 роки тому +2

    Great video! Thanks for putting it together!!

  • @DLPWIllyWonka
    @DLPWIllyWonka 13 років тому +1

    I love this series of videos.

  • @video3ish
    @video3ish 5 років тому +1

    Great video guys, very interesting. Love Yosemite

  • @justinski11
    @justinski11 6 років тому +1

    Amazing footage

  • @tinkmarshino
    @tinkmarshino 6 років тому

    beautiful.. I love that place..

  • @JohnnyAngel8
    @JohnnyAngel8 3 роки тому +3

    Thank you for the video. Fascinating. Sorry so many comments are nasty. Ignore them.
    Since I was a kid, I've always wanted to visit our national parks, especially Grand Canyon, Yosemite, and Yellowstone. Now that I'm nearing retirement, maybe I can visit. Hopefully, I will find someone to share it with.

    • @dudeonbike800
      @dudeonbike800 3 роки тому +2

      I'm very sorry that you are having to wait for retirement to visit our national wonders. No American should have to toil on the hamster wheel for almost a lifetime to finally be able to see his country. This is a very sad commentary on the state of affairs in the USA.
      This country needs a STRONG dose of universal basic income, health care, paid vacation, sick leave & retirement planning, among other things!
      Winner-take-all economic policy is a COMPLETE FAILURE!!!
      Get out there, Mr. Greenjeans before it's too late!

  • @roterstern1301
    @roterstern1301 3 роки тому

    Very interesting. Thank you 🙏

  • @pamtnman1515
    @pamtnman1515 2 роки тому

    Our family arrived and walked this area days before and then after the 2008 rockfall at Yosemite. It was incredible how much material collapsed.

  • @trusarmor4957
    @trusarmor4957 5 років тому

    this is beautiful

  • @farix1
    @farix1 6 років тому +2

    I never knew before that this phenomena could exist

    • @farix1
      @farix1 3 роки тому

      @Angelina Hahahaha Yes.. could be..

  • @YnseSchaap
    @YnseSchaap 5 років тому +15

    Would love to see a time lapse of the next 1000 years 😁

  • @merrickx
    @merrickx 5 років тому +9

    Witnessed what might very well be one of the most impressive rock falls a few years ago. Boulder was massive, and must have picked up some good momentum in its tumbling. When it finally became visible, it tumbled and launched so far away and violently from the cliff face, and so high up, and I don't think it contacted the cliff again before slamming into the ground. A SMALL piece broke off from it when it jutted out away from the face, and it must have been the size of a VW bug. Again, that was a small piece that broke off.
    We seemed to be directly under it. Pretty close to its landing zone. Started running after catching that glimpse, and all we could hear when it hit was the sound of twigs snapping, amplified by hundreds of times.
    Another rock fall I saw the next year was a really nice sight. It was a far away rock face clear in the open, and the massive rock fell right at the edge where the rock face meets the sky. So it was skylined/silhouetted, and when it disappeared behind the trees and hit the ground, I could feel it in my feet despite being maybe up to two miles away.
    I've only been there three times, for only two days each time, so it impressed on me the idea that this stuff happens frequent enough that one might be able to make it a sort of pasttime to try to spot rock falls.

  • @BatNestor
    @BatNestor 7 років тому +20

    5:34 This guy looks pretty confident wearing a helmet while sitting under the cliff :D

    • @raulvillalobos1882
      @raulvillalobos1882 5 років тому

      El No7oro he wants to make sure his hair looks nice when he's lying in his coffin.

    • @crivmaticneon4969
      @crivmaticneon4969 3 роки тому

      Yeaaaaaa

    • @garyjohnson4657
      @garyjohnson4657 3 роки тому +1

      That Helmut is not to protect you from falling rocks. It is to protect from banging your head on rock that doesn't give.

  • @patrickbrumm1282
    @patrickbrumm1282 5 років тому +4

    nice bright summer sunny days coupled with very cool summer nights can cause rocks to warm up & expand and contract until a fissure forms

    • @richardrejmer8721
      @richardrejmer8721 5 років тому +2

      Yep. .
      water gets in behind a rock, in a small crack.
      When that water freezes on a cold night, the expanding ice can exert TONS of pressure on the rock, causing it to crack further or even break off.

  • @clinthymes5067
    @clinthymes5067 6 років тому +2

    When the mountains crumble to the sea, there will only be you and me.

  • @roberte.andrews4621
    @roberte.andrews4621 3 роки тому +3

    I've enjoyed visiting Yosemite NP for 67 years now and am still curious as to why Camp Curry was sited many years ago amongst very large boulders that have fallen from Glacial Point directly above. Didn't the early developers realize that it might be hazardous to put a number of tent cabins in harm's way? A few years back, I sat at a picnic table in Happy Isles resting from a trek to the falls. When I got home a few weeks later (was it?), the news told of part of Glacier Point falling and wiping out part of Happy Isles. In fact the picnic table where I sat was crushed under tons of debris. Makes you think. On one of our trips I was taking photos from Glacier Point at about ten o'clock at night and the metal railing against which my tripod rested was rattling and shaking. At first, I thought some kids were climbing on the railing but it was late and no one could be seen. I realized it was an earthquake rumbling through. Makes you think. Periodic assessment of potential falls, as they do in Norway, should be done, in my opinion. In Norway, they use helicopters and a large metal ball on massive cables to loosen likely-looking pieces of cliff faces before they let go without warning and take lives. Frost expanding in cracks behind the rock faces loosen sections of the mountain walls. Seismic events contribute, too.

  • @arklat
    @arklat 7 років тому +4

    When I was young, I loved bouldering at Yosemite Falls. When climbing the big walls, especially on Royal Arches, there are huge gaps in the exfoliating granite slabs, between the slabs and the wall. It can really shake your confidence, because what if you set your protection on a huge slab, and that slab pops loose, with you on it? It would be your last ride.

  • @cindyland6273
    @cindyland6273 3 роки тому

    Wow, Great footage!!

  • @Visionery1
    @Visionery1 6 років тому +2

    Those boulders would make amazing kitchen counter tops. :)

  • @clifbrittain2972
    @clifbrittain2972 6 років тому

    Great video.

  • @bear5945
    @bear5945 3 роки тому +12

    Imagine sleeping in a hut right next to a 400 tonne boulder that fell out of the sky

    • @hakapik683
      @hakapik683 3 роки тому

      And thinking that it will not happen again.....

  • @bobshorkey1502
    @bobshorkey1502 3 роки тому

    Good catch very cool

  • @markb8793
    @markb8793 10 років тому +4

    Since sound travels through granite at over 19,000 feet per second, why not use acoustic sensors to listen for cracking sounds, much like a siesmograph? They could be stationed remotely throughout the valley. And I work for cheap.

    • @Wangdoodle444
      @Wangdoodle444 5 років тому +4

      markb8793 seismographs already in use in the park.....

  • @PikaPetey
    @PikaPetey 8 років тому +66

    rock and roll baby

  • @user-pf3vc8vh7u
    @user-pf3vc8vh7u 3 роки тому

    수많은 세월을견딘 바위산이지만, 저렇게 무너질때도 있네요, 처음 보았지만 암벽타시는 분들은
    조심 조심해야할것 같습니다.
    귀한 영상 잘 보았습니다.

  • @labrat748
    @labrat748 7 років тому

    Rock to rock talk would be interesting to listen to.

  • @aurtisanminer2827
    @aurtisanminer2827 2 роки тому

    Man, what a view at 8:03!

  • @johnfitzgerald2339
    @johnfitzgerald2339 3 роки тому +1

    That helmet's adorable. @5:57

  • @ArtisanTony
    @ArtisanTony 5 років тому +16

    why does gravity surprise so many people?

  • @tommypetraglia4688
    @tommypetraglia4688 3 роки тому +12

    5:10 I want to pitch my tent there for a week and feel the vibe off the rock

    • @ahmedkunbargi8096
      @ahmedkunbargi8096 3 роки тому

      do you say that knowing the significance of that rock, of which there is much significance?

  • @lawrencemullins
    @lawrencemullins 11 років тому +9

    Yosemite is a living thing. Constantly changing. How I love it.

    • @megabyte7047
      @megabyte7047 3 роки тому

      lawrence mullins Like Yellowstone.

    • @megabyte7047
      @megabyte7047 3 роки тому

      Matthew Williford Bet it outlives you, though.

    • @lawrencemullins
      @lawrencemullins 3 роки тому

      @@megabyte7047 Sad to say, I have never been to Yellowstone.

    • @megabyte7047
      @megabyte7047 3 роки тому

      @@lawrencemullins Gotta go. I thought I'd get tired of geysers after seeing so many of them, but actually craved more. They are all so different.

  • @dgronzega8073
    @dgronzega8073 3 роки тому

    I've never seen a rockfall and usually visit about 8-10 times a year. If you go during spring melt you can hear boulders tumbling down Merced river.

  • @Noble909
    @Noble909 3 роки тому

    As a boulderer, this process benefits me

  • @justingries
    @justingries 2 роки тому

    Watching someone stand that close to the edge of a cliff with no railing just freaks me out.
    Watching someone climb under a sheer overhang like that gives me anxiety.

  • @michaelp.3369
    @michaelp.3369 3 роки тому +1

    Yosemite has one of the highest count of missing people in that area. David with Missing 411 talks about strange disappearance that happens in the Yosemite national park! UA-cam Missing 411 to look deeper into what's taking these people!

  • @harrykuheim6107
    @harrykuheim6107 5 років тому +2

    The Rocks wouldn't fall if you would stop playing that Scary Piano Music....

  • @beauthetford7608
    @beauthetford7608 2 роки тому

    that grigri rappel down a double rope looked terrifying in the beginning, hoping that was a fixed rope!

  • @Catdore
    @Catdore 5 років тому +2

    I was wandering around a rock pile when I noticed a huge overhanging ledge, then it occurred to me that the pile itself was a good habitat for bobcat or even a cougar, so I left.

    • @budree4240
      @budree4240 3 роки тому

      What about a cougar driving a bobcat. Causing all this rockfall.

    • @Catdore
      @Catdore 3 роки тому

      @discorperted Good to know...I've seen bobcats...don't need to see cougars.

    • @Catdore
      @Catdore 3 роки тому

      @discorperted Yikes ! Did you see tracks later? I have bear instinct, and stay away from that path.

  • @fodank
    @fodank 3 роки тому +7

    "Geologic time includes now."

  • @Visionery1
    @Visionery1 7 років тому +1

    Imagine all the counter tops one could make with those rockfalls. :)

  • @chuckpryorl2842
    @chuckpryorl2842 6 років тому +3

    a few of the boulders shown are clearly glacial erratics......after spending over a decade in the Valley, I'm pretty clear about this, but that said, there are some....ass wholepin' huge boulders from slides around.....I remember the Arch Rock slide, in the nineties ,and watching friends from trail crew get ready to blast some of those big dads.......out of the impact zone.....

    • @dudeonbike800
      @dudeonbike800 3 роки тому

      Yes, you're right. But hard to say which are from falls and which were hitch hikers!

  • @WyattShipp
    @WyattShipp 4 роки тому

    I WAS THERE FOR THAT AUGUST 2009 ROCKFALL!

  • @jonanjello
    @jonanjello 11 років тому +1

    Are all of Yosemite's landslide's confirmed or reported? My family and I had visited the landslide area behind Mirror Lake. The next day, we were up at Glacier Point and heard a loud boom. Looking in the direction of the sound, we saw dust in the area that we had just visited the day before. The date was 8-8-12. Thanks for any helpful input.

  • @edwingraffius8961
    @edwingraffius8961 3 роки тому

    My wife and I were there for the 2008 rock fall.....it happened after two or three days of solid rain.

  • @imapaine-diaz4451
    @imapaine-diaz4451 6 років тому

    Gosh, its true! a rolling stone does gather no moss!

  • @MegaBadseed
    @MegaBadseed Рік тому

    Interesting

  • @gotsteem
    @gotsteem 7 років тому

    Epic

  • @trusarmor4957
    @trusarmor4957 3 роки тому

    wht kind of well adjusted person voted this a thumbs down
    ?

  • @TheMrfoxguy
    @TheMrfoxguy 4 роки тому +1

    Sounds exactly like thunder insane.

  • @budree4240
    @budree4240 3 роки тому

    My gosh. If I had a laser scanner like that I’d have so many friends.

  • @EJConrad
    @EJConrad 10 років тому +13

    I want a 400 ton boulder!

    • @dgronzega8073
      @dgronzega8073 3 роки тому +4

      if you can pick it up and run, doubt anyone will try and stop you

  • @shelby7188
    @shelby7188 2 роки тому

    For GeoSci106 folks: photography & laser-mapping cliffs

  • @digitraxanr
    @digitraxanr 3 місяці тому

    Is Crescent Ridge still hanging on El Cap?

  • @ChuckMcC
    @ChuckMcC 6 років тому

    Do you have a list of people who have gone missing in Yosemite national park?

  • @elliott3471
    @elliott3471 3 роки тому

    The puff of dust shooting out horizontally before the rock begins to fall ?

  • @dbzuunior
    @dbzuunior 13 років тому +1

    I would imagine that the rock falls that occur on clear days would be caused by the heating and cooling of the cliff faces. Anything from the rocks themselves, or the moisture that has seeped through. The temperature causing expanding and contracting would cause them to become fragile. Being thousands of lbs of weight, eventually it would just crack and fall.

  • @TreeLBollingTreeMan
    @TreeLBollingTreeMan 6 років тому +3

    "Fall mountains, just don't fall on me
    Go ahead on Mr. Businessman, you can't dress like me
    Nobody knows what I'm talking about
    I've got my own life to live
    I'm the one that's going to have to die
    When it's time for me to die
    So let me live my life the way I want to"
    Jimi Hendrix - If 6 Was 9 -

  • @Nuttyirishman85
    @Nuttyirishman85 Рік тому

    Is there a way to manually dislodge problem areas, so they aren’t falling randomly?

  • @rhtball
    @rhtball Рік тому

    We have earthquakes happening every day, I would think some of those would cause cracks in the granite as well...

  • @DonnierDarko223
    @DonnierDarko223 3 роки тому +1

    I mean I love these type of short videos but uhm why are there bongodrums playing which are commonly associated with Africa...Yosemite is in the US is it not?

  • @biggles9604
    @biggles9604 3 роки тому +1

    the sound of rocks hitting makes me relaxe dunno bout u.

  • @leerichards3682
    @leerichards3682 5 років тому +9

    As a Human, I am feeling very, very small right now, as I should.

    • @joshuabennett5891
      @joshuabennett5891 4 роки тому

      If you get a chance to get to Yosemite, I promise you'll feel really small, really quick. I got to see the valley in January of 2020. Simply amazing.

  • @EJConrad
    @EJConrad 10 років тому +1

    Michael the song is by Philip Glass. Not sure which one but I know it is him. Sry I couldn't reply to you.

  • @Wangdoodle444
    @Wangdoodle444 5 років тому +1

    “FLEX SEAL!”
    Problem Solved!

  • @bjornsmasher66
    @bjornsmasher66 3 роки тому

    theyre YUGE!

  • @IDGAF56852
    @IDGAF56852 3 роки тому

    And now in 2021 Yosemite national park is known for having the most disappearing people under strange circumstances of all the parks and forrests in America.

  • @forget2bhuman993
    @forget2bhuman993 3 роки тому

    think about it, someday people will go to find some boulders around the base, and find old climbing bolts that were once up on the face, nutty

  • @GamerRadar
    @GamerRadar 3 роки тому

    Just imagine. One day... mountains will one day cease to exist as everything is eroded or falls.

  • @dillonmech7206
    @dillonmech7206 5 років тому +11

    all forestry compounds should be built at the base of large cliffs

  • @frostforus98
    @frostforus98 4 роки тому +10

    "What does the presence of lichen on boulders tell scientists? "
    Saved a click for you.
    5:40

    • @symonrocks9847
      @symonrocks9847 3 роки тому

      Thanks, i'm glad you did.
      Scientists can tell us things we don't know but there is also something called common sense, dirty rock, old rock fall, clean rock, new rock fall, how many years of education did that need.
      If I could predict rockfalls I would go and watchhores racing.

    • @TimothyMcAleeSrGeD
      @TimothyMcAleeSrGeD 3 роки тому

      Every up there must come down. When is anyone's guess!?

  • @hanfucolorful9656
    @hanfucolorful9656 Рік тому

    Predicting rock falls ---------------- is the BEST job in the world 😄😄😄😄😄😄😆😆😆😆😆😆😅😅😅😅😅😂😂😂😂

  • @shinzou42
    @shinzou42 11 років тому

    what's that song called?

  • @SR-fx5sm
    @SR-fx5sm 3 роки тому +1

    2:07 thats your trigger...heat can make the rock expand in the slightest amount to force itself to break off from an already existing weak point

    • @dudeonbike800
      @dudeonbike800 3 роки тому +1

      But what gets the rock split and into a precarious condition, aka "weak points," in the first place is frost wedging. Repeated freeze-thaw cycles in the Sierra are like millions of little hydraulic jacks spreading apart little cracks in Sierra granite. The little cracks continue to expand.
      "!Stop Erosion & Plate Tectonics!"

    • @SR-fx5sm
      @SR-fx5sm 3 роки тому

      @@dudeonbike800 interesting!

  • @kaweah01
    @kaweah01 3 роки тому

    I think when a slab breaks off candy should come out.

  • @distilledfreedom1840
    @distilledfreedom1840 7 місяців тому

    Catching that on camera is fantastic, not a common thing. I mean prior to the advent of them they were just known by their evidence.

  • @ytubepuppy
    @ytubepuppy 3 роки тому

    I did some calculations on that 200' x 100' x 20' piece of rock, that's 400,000 cubic feet of granite which weighs 175 pounds per cubic feet. The slab weighed 70,000,000 (70 Million) pounds and hit the ground at about 135 mph.

    • @scotconnolly9073
      @scotconnolly9073 3 роки тому

      Was there after the Happy Rock slide and the falling rock sent out a blast of air that snapped a couple hundred trees in half and coated a large area in dust.

  • @firebir11
    @firebir11 3 роки тому +1

    Good thing he’s wearing a helmet ...I was a little worried ⛑

  • @MrPlooky
    @MrPlooky 3 роки тому +1

    go take a walk over there and hang out for the next one

  • @frankblangeard8865
    @frankblangeard8865 6 років тому +55

    It is a good idea to wear a helmet like the ranger does in case a 4000 ton boulder hits you on the head.

    • @PatKittle
      @PatKittle 6 років тому +2

      But not just any helmet!
      This is a perfect example of why it's so important to buy the most expensive helmet you can.

    • @Sowa56
      @Sowa56 6 років тому +1

      Frank Blangeard
      It's easier to avoid hitting with a boulder than with small debris, which is much more.

    • @gshrdy5415
      @gshrdy5415 6 років тому

      If you can move fast like a Mountain lion instead of a hippo.

    • @victoriataylor5457
      @victoriataylor5457 6 років тому +1

      Frank Blangeard oh yeah, if that boulder hits you, your gonna need a coffin, forget the helmet, lol🤣🤣

    • @jeremyjackson8196
      @jeremyjackson8196 5 років тому +1

      safety 1st.

  • @robert1739
    @robert1739 3 роки тому +1

    Trundeling.

  • @xm1756
    @xm1756 4 роки тому +1

    6:05 puts the degree of danger of this park into real perspective

  • @redlinep.r.a8368
    @redlinep.r.a8368 5 років тому +1

    I been there the tall ass rock canion mountain peeks what ever you call it its crazy it looks like prehistoric times it looks almost like a movie you would think that king kong really existed you have to see it it looks as amazing as seeing the giant trees at the redwoods up next to pelican bay state prison right by the oregon and California. Border

    • @Wangdoodle444
      @Wangdoodle444 5 років тому +1

      REDLINE P.R.A Yosemite is one of the youngest geologically actively growing upward locations on the planet....

  • @fyrfyter81
    @fyrfyter81 3 роки тому +1

    7:26 Did he say, "Perdict"?

  • @teddyrex1963
    @teddyrex1963 8 місяців тому

    you have a greater chance of surviving a artillery shell landing near you than being caught in that shit.