Mogok: The Legendary Valley Of Rubies

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  • Опубліковано 12 січ 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 344

  • @Dim-yz6wk
    @Dim-yz6wk 4 місяці тому +2

    Absolutely amazing documentary with people who are absolutely passionate about Bamese rubies, sapphires and peridots and the rich culture and history of Mogok. The gem fever is infectious. I have a renewed respect for these beautiful gems and how they are sourced and valued as a part tue country's unique history.
    Thank you!

  • @just1certifiable
    @just1certifiable Рік тому +19

    What really stands out for me, besides gem quality, is the way the mining is done. Very respectful to the landscape, leaving nature intact instead of stripping off every living thing and leaving a scar where nothing is able to grow again.

    • @potechhd
      @potechhd 4 місяці тому

      What really stands out for me, besides the gem quality, is the way the mining is done. It's so respectful to the landscape, leaving nature intact rather than stripping it bare and creating scars where nothing can grow again. How did you come to adopt such an environmentally conscious approach, and what challenges have you faced in maintaining this balance?

  • @jamieparker6402
    @jamieparker6402 Рік тому +17

    Wonderfully narrated - so clear and precise. Thank you!

  • @LuiTuraga
    @LuiTuraga 10 місяців тому +2

    Very informative documentary..thanks for sharing..now I know different types of gems ❤

  • @mariator445
    @mariator445 Рік тому +30

    This documentary is so precious like the gems that as I love them so much I appreciate all the work risks and sacrifice of the miners ,thank you so much for sharing your experience in Burma
    💖

  • @yanzain
    @yanzain 2 роки тому +12

    The best gemstone documentary ever..

  • @linaung2006
    @linaung2006 Рік тому +2

    Thank you this video.
    I'm from Myanmar.

  • @ggwell3916
    @ggwell3916 Рік тому +5

    I am Gary from Vancouver Canada. This is a real video. I have been living here for over 30 years. I am a amazed at this video.

  • @edenerashop
    @edenerashop Рік тому +2

    Thank you for sharing this awesome information. I love going to Mogok. It is a great source for ruby, sapphire, spinel, peridot and other rare gems.

  • @alumofnorthernpart7716
    @alumofnorthernpart7716 Рік тому +6

    Thanks.
    I so proud for born in land of Jade(Hpakhant) and rise up in land of Ruby(Mogok).
    BTW an aunt of mine was a retired professor of Geology Department from a Myanmar University and her husband also a gemologist. But he living as a mineral man😁😁😁...

  • @andreabontempo643
    @andreabontempo643 2 роки тому +44

    Incredible video. I am amazed at the dangers these miners live in their everyday lives. I have always loved gemstones as a child. Seein the hardships and difficulties it takes to mine these gems is mindblowing. Thanks for this awesome video.

  • @carlacosta5626
    @carlacosta5626 2 роки тому +19

    Wow!! This is amazing Bryan!!! Thank you so much for this and for all you do for our hobby. Mahalo!

  • @andeanphoto
    @andeanphoto 2 роки тому +12

    Gutsy fellow with plenty of knowledge. It was fun all around. Very informative. Thank you very much.

  • @dienz1
    @dienz1 Рік тому +5

    what an awesome documentary film about rubies thq for all team

  • @jlew5545
    @jlew5545 Рік тому +5

    I watch a LOT of videos........THIS IS A GOOD ONE.

  • @EricBearclaw
    @EricBearclaw 11 місяців тому

    Love this ! Watched a bunch of times ! Top couple gem stone documentary’s Forsure ! When they go way down in the mine near the end with the music and vibe ! Crazzz

  • @lindadekam1019
    @lindadekam1019 Рік тому +2

    I appreciate finding your excellent video today as im starting to learn about gems etc...
    And your journey showed how beautiful these beauties are created from our wonderful Mother Earth..
    Thankyou for the lesson and for sharing..
    Thank-you

  • @Jezze-rc6yv
    @Jezze-rc6yv 2 роки тому +7

    Honestly i would love to visit the place so that i can see the two towers... very beautiful even the way they are cleaning ..amazing video.. beautiful valley with beautiful people

  • @timan206
    @timan206 2 роки тому +70

    I have snuck into mogok 3 times, been caught by the cops who had no idea what to do with me once . Amazing among hundreds of amazing Burma stories of the total 2 years I spent bicycling around that country.

  • @phidiassourtzis3419
    @phidiassourtzis3419 2 роки тому +11

    Thank you for this excellent documentary! A breath of fresh air!

  • @travelermystery63
    @travelermystery63 Рік тому +8

    Simply excellent to watch ,the team are amazing ,and thank you for bringing us this amazing content.

  • @sumaneshjoshi7104
    @sumaneshjoshi7104 2 місяці тому

    The best documentary about gemstones mining prosess ever.
    I am mainly working from last 52 years with Indian, african ruby and star ruby 🙏

  • @cafekkoXoX
    @cafekkoXoX 2 роки тому +14

    Great video! Thank you for this unique peek of Myanmar 🇲🇲✨💕

  • @acmcgowan751
    @acmcgowan751 2 роки тому +17

    Burma as I remember the name as a child and the fascination of the ruby. The Burmese Ruby is the most perfect and beautiful rubys on the planet.
    They are oh so beautiful.

    • @bluecapproductions
      @bluecapproductions  2 роки тому +8

      It's an interesting history. There were two ways of referring to the country. In written words, it was referred to as Myanmar Pyi. But spoken, it was often referred to as Bama. When the English took over the country, the spoken name evolved into, "Burma" and that's how the country was referred to for many, many years. In 1989, the country officially changed the name to the historically written version and that's how we now have, "Myanmar." For those of us born well before 1989, we still think of it as Burma.

  • @ProspectorAl
    @ProspectorAl Рік тому +1

    World class video as well as the gems.

  • @interestings7866
    @interestings7866 Рік тому +1

    That pocket was insane! Those photos so amazing

  • @LuiTuraga
    @LuiTuraga 10 місяців тому +1

    Good Documentary 👍..Thanks

  • @lackoficko2242
    @lackoficko2242 Рік тому +2

    Ok,dear friends...
    I AM,IN GOOSEBUMPS !!!
    Thank you for the video.
    Once again,I learned more abauth my hungarien heritages..the one not to many people know...,,non,nunka,nada🙏 .It is so sad,my Soul is crying 😢.
    You are my people,and you don't even know it.I love you all !!!
    These is verry inportant !!!
    You ,MCP,Blue Cap production, you have mentioned a name Persian King.Who was he ? What famaly bloodline if not hungarien ? Becose the word Persia,Perzsa,is hungarien.Perzselt,Perzse ,Perzs3lten,ami egésszen egy Nagy per,,kerek perec,,.
    PLEASE,show these to a hungarien friend.He will tell you the rest....
    It is my nations,it is my Creations,where you are all,all of you, Period...
    First,let's look at the name Berma.So sorry,these is BírMa.In hungarien it means,,Wee can Handel it today,,
    Perzsa,Burma Mogok,Mendelé,my dear friends,you forgot,the EARTH History becose you never know it,the one is steel hiding,in the true,original undestanding...But who cares,,,just let get rich on ,,older people backs,,without any respect.
    Dear friends,Godd bless your soul,your comment's, your video,your everything.
    I LIKE TO JOIN YOU !!!,BUT,only you can stop it any time..
    These video you so,is coming from my past, and they creators don't even know it.Bless them !!!And I bless them to...
    They don't know whath they are doing , but they do it anyway...
    They don't understand me ...
    Ok.
    You must relay,on the hungarien truth today !!! Over..

  • @GaryM260
    @GaryM260 2 роки тому +9

    Thank you for showing me a part of the world i never realized existed. Also very interesting how technology connects us all.

    • @bluecapproductions
      @bluecapproductions  2 роки тому +2

      Technology makes our world smaller!! You always hear the stories about how much damage technology does to our society but it's truly a two-edged sword. Here's to using technology for good!!!

  • @stephanebelizaire3627
    @stephanebelizaire3627 Рік тому +1

    Very Instructive, Bravo !

  • @delfarama8912
    @delfarama8912 Рік тому +6

    As Ruby is my birth stone it really amaze me how beautiful it is ! ❤

  • @sumyatkhin3462
    @sumyatkhin3462 Рік тому +1

    I am really appreciated for this documentary. This is absolutely knowledgeable about the mogok and its gemstones.

  • @caturvenusanjono4505
    @caturvenusanjono4505 8 місяців тому

    Great film
    Nice people
    Beautiful gem
    Thanks all of you for have maked this very good documentary ..
    I very like to see this film.
    I love ruby and sapphire.

  • @mountainshadowart2103
    @mountainshadowart2103 2 роки тому +18

    Loving the higher-quality video! This is fantastic. As a rockhound, it must be amazing when they hit one of those pockets of massive crystals.

  • @bradstoner7226
    @bradstoner7226 2 роки тому +15

    I live in North Carolina. Our state is diverse in many gemstones. Emerald is our state gemstone and NC produces the best emeralds in the US. Recent finds in the Hiddenite, NC have produced emeralds comparable to Columbia, generally regarded the best in the world. Rubies and sapphires of good to exceptional quality occur here as well. In the southern mountains of the state mainly centered around the town of Franklin in Macon Co., NC are the famous Cowee Valley ruby mines. Almost all were alluvial deposits working the creeks where rubies of exceptional pigeon blood red color rubies have been found since the early 1800's. Extensive mining produced some excellent stones. The only drawback to the rubies of NC have been size. Most are seldom over a carat or two when of high quality. The rubies from NC tend to occur in wafer like hexagonal crystals usually very small and stout. This also hinders the lack of cuttable material. This of course isn't always the case. A few large exceptional stones do exist. Color is usually good and can grade from rich red, pink, yellow, blue sapphire, colorless to green. Here in NC, there is also some associated spinel although seldom is it gem quality, there is rutile, sillmanite, zircon and other minerals present as well. Most of the ruby corundum occurs in or adjacent to biotite gneiss and schist as well as ultramafic deposits, serpentine bodies, etc. but there is also some marble in the area that contains a little ruby as well. The source for the finest NC rubies is still a mystery as they have tended to be found in alluvial gravels rather that in-situ deposits. However, many fine specimens of cab and specimen grade ruby and sapphire have been found.

    • @shlby69m
      @shlby69m Рік тому +3

      Natives were kicked off that land for those rocks,

    • @koltoncrane3099
      @koltoncrane3099 Рік тому +1

      Michelle
      Natives have always been kicked off land. The Aztecs and others left azatland or their ancestral homeland in disgrace or offending their god. Then the Aztecs murdered the native Americans in Mexico. Foreigners stole land from Mexicans. But because they looked similar or were from the same continent it’s not called racist or an invasion. That’s like saying if Russia invaded Spain it’s not invaded by foreigners.

    • @alexdrockhound9497
      @alexdrockhound9497 Рік тому +2

      @@shlby69m natives kicked off the natives before them kicked off the natives before them, and the ones before them, etc etc. Welcome to human history. People have been taking land from each other since humans first existed. So whats your point? Did you know the sky is blue?

    • @sarahoilman5086
      @sarahoilman5086 Рік тому

      I too live in NC :) Spruce Pine ....,I watched this thinking its beautiful there , looks like home :) I have to admit other countires are a lil better , compared to us...But I do Love our lil amazing Spot and our Gems

  • @illumencouk
    @illumencouk 2 роки тому +109

    I appreciate the beauty of stones like everyone else but let's face it, they're mainly being mined to satisfy the vanity of the rich minority. Industrial mining techniques like those in the film will rapidly turn a rainforest into a nutrient devoid desert, this negatively impacts food production, resulting in conflicts, starvation and forced migration on a large scale - these effects then ripple out from the epicentre and unrest is felt far and wide. Small scale mining is sustainable but investors prefer to 'get rich quick!'

    • @drewskifrosty5955
      @drewskifrosty5955 2 роки тому

      Gtfoh! Do you realize how many centuries these people have been mining Rubies in Myanmar?

    • @illumencouk
      @illumencouk 2 роки тому +7

      @@drewskifrosty5955 I'm guessing it's less than 6,000 year's? Like I said earlier it's the commercial mining which destroys vast areas in a short time, family or village based mining is still destructive but it's sustainable.

    • @theCosmicQueen
      @theCosmicQueen 2 роки тому +3

      jungles grow back amazingly quickly. it's not nearly as endangered as you imagine.

    • @illumencouk
      @illumencouk 2 роки тому +7

      @@theCosmicQueen Not if you remove the organic powerhouse, the terra preta. This layer is recognized by many cultures as the 'key' driver in the amazonian effect.

    • @masterk5372
      @masterk5372 Рік тому +2

      Agree

  • @quinholzken7051
    @quinholzken7051 10 місяців тому

    I am grateful to those who recorded this, and to all the people who appeared in this ducmantere. and the presenter is an expert, unbelievable, what a beautiful documentary, unimaginable MOGOK!

  • @sabirhussain2387
    @sabirhussain2387 2 роки тому +7

    I appreciate you.very very nice work and very good job.ofcourse you are like to appreciate.your job Inspired

  • @SequoiaElisabeth
    @SequoiaElisabeth Рік тому +9

    Thanks for a great production on Rubies and Mogok. A professional job, without a doubt. The cultural value of this almost out shines the Rubies. 🙂

  • @JohnDoe-cf8jz
    @JohnDoe-cf8jz 2 роки тому +6

    Wonderful! Really loved this video, thank you.

  • @justmeonthebeach
    @justmeonthebeach 2 роки тому +15

    Thank you! It's always very interesting watching gem adventures around the world. I memorized the world map since I was a teenager 😄

  • @mohamedhagi8492
    @mohamedhagi8492 Рік тому +2

    I like this documentary about gemstones of Myanmar, hard working people. it seems isn't easy to find the precious stones. Good lucky!

  • @fredmac1000
    @fredmac1000 11 місяців тому +2

    Wonderful video,, hard to make,,🙏🙏🌷🌷👏👏

  • @FaithNanjalaTv
    @FaithNanjalaTv 2 роки тому +4

    Best adventure. Enjoyed every bit of this video.

  • @yetty4032
    @yetty4032 2 роки тому +3

    Thank you very much . Very interesting journey of stones wonderful 👏 thanks for sharing

  • @kujo5307
    @kujo5307 2 роки тому +13

    Very professional and interesting film. You are a real magnetic personality, Federico.

    • @Zandanga
      @Zandanga 2 роки тому +3

      I agree. Really enjoyed this. A part of the world I did not know about. Federico and company did an excellent job showing us Mogok.
      And fair, telling the truth. Thank you.

  • @chazzer1969
    @chazzer1969 2 роки тому +3

    What a fantastic video, eh?
    So great for both knowledge and education.
    Priceless.
    Simply Priceless.
    Thank you so much for sharing this wonderful video.
    ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ 👍

  • @rockcrazygal5166
    @rockcrazygal5166 Рік тому

    Fantastic. Wow, thx for taking us on this magic carpet ride!!!

  • @MisplacedAaMe
    @MisplacedAaMe Рік тому +1

    I am watching the video, not because of the gems but to listen the gentleman accented English - it reminds me of my friend Giovanni Capello during my Masters degree in Design in Domus - Milano. Though I been to the place Mogok along with my friend from ethnic Myanmarese community as I am native of the Indian territory bordering Myanmar and Bangladesh. During British Indian period my grandfather was British district administrator in Burma.

  • @wildriver_d
    @wildriver_d 2 роки тому +2

    Fabulous. Thank you for this incredible video

  • @somebody88888
    @somebody88888 2 роки тому +2

    Thank you very much for this great movie!

  • @MrContraestupidos
    @MrContraestupidos Рік тому +1

    orgolio Italiano vedervi prendere il posto di .... Forza a voi cotinuate cosi👌

  • @Lightanddark101
    @Lightanddark101 2 роки тому +4

    I see my uncle played pool table best childhood memory lovely village miss Mogok a lot.

  • @vildinsr.villano5715
    @vildinsr.villano5715 Рік тому

    Nice and beautiful picture with so amazing background view awesome

  • @lkthang
    @lkthang Рік тому +3

    Call “Land of the Ruby” for a reason. 40:58 I used to do this during summer school breaks. I missed my hometown.

  • @joshuablaze6536
    @joshuablaze6536 Рік тому +3

    Ruby has always fascinated me. However as mentioned it remains cheap compared to the difficulties in finding one. The mining is very risky indeed. Thanks a lot for a great documentary.

  • @almamiranda3214
    @almamiranda3214 Рік тому +1

    Interesting topic, country and its culture, Its like a fantasy and in the ends its also a reality. Thank you so much.

  • @fredmac1000
    @fredmac1000 11 місяців тому +2

    Excellent speaker,,, Great Job,,👏👏👏🌷🌷🌷

  • @VonAZ47
    @VonAZ47 Рік тому +1

    Amazing feeling I got . thank you

  • @kimberleywilliams5228
    @kimberleywilliams5228 Рік тому +3

    Top show - thanks heaps Aussie fan

  • @muaz148
    @muaz148 Рік тому +1

    Thank you for the amazing video

  • @johnminer007
    @johnminer007 2 роки тому +6

    A "must see" ! Thanks a lot !

  • @stallion738
    @stallion738 2 роки тому +6

    Very interesting topic. Informative.

  • @oviyaktm6531
    @oviyaktm6531 Рік тому +1

    great documentary thanks legend ❤

  • @LarryLaird-if6sc
    @LarryLaird-if6sc 4 місяці тому

    Great video about a country that I knew very little except for it's opium trade. But you brought into my home a romantic and stories from real miners and their families. Thanks ❤

  • @johnnypalughi1192
    @johnnypalughi1192 2 роки тому +2

    Great video! The best. Thankx!

  • @joshmacpherson6919
    @joshmacpherson6919 Рік тому +2

    mr. barlocher is global treasure., have been watching for a long time., could mr. barlocher please do an update on the MIM museum in beruit.,?.,? i have been worried about what may have happened after the explosion., that place is priceless and i have been wondering if it's amazing collection made it .,., so many thanks for your knowledge and allowing us to see such things.,.,

  • @knitwithjoy
    @knitwithjoy 2 роки тому +6

    such excellent documentary. thank you

  • @arunbadalkar6936
    @arunbadalkar6936 2 роки тому +7

    Incredible journey to the mines. It is very hard work for the miners & there life is without it, although they spent life time in these precious stones handling them everyday. !

  • @mohammedegyptian2527
    @mohammedegyptian2527 5 місяців тому

    nice film , thanks for all film crew , greetings from egypt

  • @shamparice007
    @shamparice007 Рік тому +7

    wow how dangerous this looks to get these Ruby gems out of the marble. I have several rubies on my wedding necklace of 24 karat gold setting, the gold is so soft I have to be super careful when I even touch it...been 36 yrs since I married...my mother gave it to me as a wedding gift and I had no idea of the value! So grateful to know how precious it really is! So grateful for these hard workers 🙏

  • @peggypeter8070
    @peggypeter8070 11 місяців тому +1

    Blessings to the workers who risk their lives for these gems!

  • @Nevadovski
    @Nevadovski 8 місяців тому

    Лучшее в ютуб об этом чудесном городе Могок!!!!
    Меня это видео вдохновило!!!
    Спасибо вам!!!

  • @debrawilder9551
    @debrawilder9551 2 роки тому +5

    Super great video!

  • @gary3270
    @gary3270 Рік тому +1

    Thank you for the eye opening truth of the gem mining industry in Myanmar! I wish I could afford a 1 carat unheated gem!

  • @SchantaKlaus
    @SchantaKlaus 3 місяці тому

    Highly entertaining and informative, thanks! 🎉

  • @yaddahaysmarmalite4059
    @yaddahaysmarmalite4059 2 роки тому +16

    I'm way more interested in mineralogical specimens than I am in jewelry. preserving the crystals on some of its matrix is important for that.

  • @edkaminski6355
    @edkaminski6355 2 роки тому +3

    Very nice, educational video. THANK YOU!!!!!!!!

  • @kristibbradshaw
    @kristibbradshaw 8 місяців тому

    It's very evident why gemstones are so expensive. The miners risk their lives every day. Thank you for showing us everything.

  • @TheSharperSword
    @TheSharperSword 2 роки тому +4

    A very good modern documentary

    • @bluecapproductions
      @bluecapproductions  2 роки тому +1

      Thank you!!! This film couldn't be made today because of the political situation in Myanmar so I feel EXTREMELY lucky that I was able to do this when I did.

  • @SundayRose99
    @SundayRose99 2 роки тому +5

    Amazing video, thanks for making it! ♥️

  • @sharon1775
    @sharon1775 2 роки тому +3

    this was excellent TY

  • @petepenn1
    @petepenn1 Рік тому +1

    Freddy is a Living Legend in our small world of Corundum collectors. He is a Rare Gem of a Gentleman!

  • @bluecollarbrothers
    @bluecollarbrothers 2 роки тому +6

    Great video, I appreciate the information over rubies and other gems. I also would like to hear about the miners conditions, share of the profits and safety of those mines, thank you.

    • @katherinem2896
      @katherinem2896 2 роки тому +4

      They said the share is typically one third for miners. The safety is hard hats and pictures of beautiful women from magazines as charms when working with dynamite.

  • @Dhel-Tsu
    @Dhel-Tsu 2 роки тому +3

    Wowww the wealth of their country😮they can give their people a good life

  • @sarahoilman5086
    @sarahoilman5086 Рік тому +1

    Enjoying this ....T is silent in peridot, I usually never say that out loud :) and are you Brazilian ? So Enjoyed .......Thank You... Nice people can see what we have to do to get these

  • @ulrichsigismund3999
    @ulrichsigismund3999 2 роки тому +9

    great video, thank you for showing the mineralogical aspects but also your sympathy for the people! Also nice to see Marco Lorenzoni and Federico Pezzotta. Greetings from the Elba addicted macchia crawlers!

  • @SercanGunaydn
    @SercanGunaydn Рік тому +1

    Peridot has such extraterrestrial look when the stone is good. Amazing

  • @adelezierler1547
    @adelezierler1547 2 роки тому +2

    Just a fantastic journey, I love it very much

    • @martyandrus5413
      @martyandrus5413 2 роки тому

      What are the people of Myanmar going to eat in the Future after all the land destroyed from mining stop now think about future of youngsters

  • @jlm1567
    @jlm1567 2 роки тому +3

    Spectacular!!!

  • @shanna74
    @shanna74 Рік тому +1

    Your video was hand on and very informative. Do you follow Dan Hurd gold prospector.

  • @peggypeter8070
    @peggypeter8070 11 місяців тому +1

    Very interesting video, thank you! Does heating a gem decrease the value or does it increase the value of a not as great a gem??

  • @vernamonte5662
    @vernamonte5662 Рік тому +1

    Omg i can't stop watching it. Bcuz i love blinds.

  • @Jordan-rb28
    @Jordan-rb28 7 місяців тому

    36:00 I absolutely love that gold chain. 22k is softer but the color it has is amazing

  • @patriciatewhetu6808
    @patriciatewhetu6808 2 роки тому +6

    This video was a great look into an area most can not go, that must've been an amazingly scary exhilarating trip down the mine 😂 been caving before never again I prefer to look for crystals above the ground. That Sapphire was breathtaking i was captivated by it but I am a Virgo.😍

    • @bluecapproductions
      @bluecapproductions  2 роки тому +5

      I'm glad you enjoyed it! The trip down into the mine was too exciting for me to feel any fear. Of course I was keeping an eye out for safety and never felt I was doing anything too dangerous. But part of that perspective might be from me as a child running through my father's Tourmaline mines with nothing but a candle to light my way. It was fun then and it's fun now.

    • @patriciatewhetu6808
      @patriciatewhetu6808 Рік тому +1

      ​@@bluecapproductions Tourmaline is soooo beautiful too, what a lucky childhood you had to have a father with mines to get these gems.

  • @sachibanerjee7748
    @sachibanerjee7748 2 роки тому +1

    One of the best video love it Hope l visit someday

  • @guillaumefleury1968
    @guillaumefleury1968 2 роки тому +5

    each time a new story! thank s.if any one want s to look a great video to look at The Pederneira mines !

  • @Elizabeth912-v6o
    @Elizabeth912-v6o Рік тому +3

    I feel like a bad person for loving the world of gems so much when i know the extreme human cost of them. It actually makes me love and respect the stones more. Does this make me a bad person???😔 for any confusion about this !!! What I mean is it makes me sad at how dangerous and difficult mining gemstones still is nowadays!!!! And because of that it makes me more grateful for the beauty of the stones!!!! And as a very very very new collector I will always cherish and care for them because I do all of the hard work that goes into bringing gemstones the people!!!!!!! I say this with love. Unfortunately I'm not an engineer so I have no idea how to make mining safer easier and more convenient!!!!!! But I am a country girl and I know what it means to work hard and for that all miners will always have my respect and admiration all over the world!!!!!!!! 💞

    • @bonnieklapel1825
      @bonnieklapel1825 Рік тому +1

      You love and respect the stones even more?
      What does that even mean?
      What about the people who work mines for them?
      I don’t know if that makes you a bad person or not.
      It’s not up to me to judge you nor anyone else.
      I just don’t understand how or why you say that, what you mean by that statement.
      Gems are nothing but an inanimate object that have neither a feeling or a thought and are incapable of even knowing what respect and love is. Let alone have any sense of appreciation for it.
      What about the people who worked hard to mine them? Or have you any thought or consideration for their efforts, their energy, and the risks they put their lives at to mine the gemstones because there are people who seem to value a shiny, sparkly and pretty object more than another human being’s life?
      I love beauty and awe inspiring sunsets, the colors and the uniqueness of each one. I admire them and am humbled by the awe I feel when observing sunsets. And I respect the universe, and whatever energies and forces of nature that caused that sunset that seems to have a force of its own that can affect me so deeply.
      And I love collecting rocks, finding stones and minerals that I find beautiful and/or interesting and intriguing for a variety of reasons. Yet those rocks, whether valued by others or not, compared to the value of another person’s life, their efforts, their struggles, their knowledge, their joys and sorrows, their energy and life force and emotions, they have my respect, my appreciation, my love as another living being similar yet uniquely different, as incomparable and of infinitely more value and deserving of love and respect than any stone, pretty and sparkly or not.
      I’m just not understanding where you’re coming from.

    • @goldslinger
      @goldslinger 5 місяців тому

      A good Person appreciates the Worlds beauty. Only Commie Liberals make You feel like a bad Person for appreciating Worlds treasures.

  •  2 роки тому +3

    I liked the video, commented and subscribed. ☝🇹🇷🤲🇹🇷

  • @Eugen_B1
    @Eugen_B1 Рік тому +1

    Wonderful trip to the ruby world .