Crater Lake: Relic of a Vanished Mountain - 1987

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  • Опубліковано 14 жов 2015
  • A documentary produced by Panorama International from 1987 profiling Crater Lake in Oregon. From the VHS Box: "Take a tour of Crater Lake, a remnant of nature's fiery holocaust. View volcanic cliffs and formations, wildlife, human and natural history, the changing seasons, cross country skiing, and much more."

КОМЕНТАРІ • 141

  • @stephg4400
    @stephg4400 6 років тому +11

    Crater Lake is magnificent, breathtaking, and inspiring. The ride to Crater Lake is just as enjoyable. Stops on the way. Little towns. Breathtaking.

  • @pegrasp2584
    @pegrasp2584 4 роки тому +8

    when the lodges first opening after the face lift in 93 I was the pantry chef,i stayed on property,and got to know the volcano personally...what a life changing experience..

  • @FRAME5RS
    @FRAME5RS 3 роки тому +6

    This film looks like one of those projector films we watched in 6th grade in 1972.

  • @Stacie45
    @Stacie45 3 роки тому +2

    A friend and I camped overnight on the rim in June 1993. We competed at the U.S. Outdoor National Track & Field Championships at Hayward Field in Eugene and then took a road trip around the western USA. Crater Lake was our stop the first night. There was still a lot of snow on the ground. In the morning a park ranger stopped by and told us we couldn't camp in the park. We said no problem. We were cool, we just wanted to spend the night, mission accomplished. We had breakfast, broke camp and hit the road. It is a beautiful place.

  • @rodneyjohnson8907
    @rodneyjohnson8907 8 років тому +48

    Just back from Crater Lake. No picture or documentary can describe this lake. It is something you just have to take time off to go see. The blue color of the lake cannot be replicated. I took over 300 pictures of the lake and the surrounding formations at different times of the day and no picture can capture it. Only your mind and heart can remember what this place is like. Pictures simply "jar" the memories back.

    • @mattglad
      @mattglad 8 років тому +7

      i moved to southern Oregon about a year and a half ago. I've been up to the lake 4 times and it never stops overwhelming.

    • @rebeccaoreilly9461
      @rebeccaoreilly9461 7 років тому +3

      that's awesome. can't wait to see very soon !!

    • @burninglass
      @burninglass 6 років тому +1

      Rodney Johnson. I appreciate your post. For some reason I have always been drawn to this lake. I've always wanted to see it. Lately tho I've heard some eerie things that scare me. So glad to hear a positive critique of this legendary peak. And glad to hear you had a good safe experience.

    • @Lonzosvideos
      @Lonzosvideos 6 років тому +3

      Rodney Johnson I’ve visited crater lake over a dozen times. One of the reasons why I stopped taking pictures. I can’t capture the beauty of this caldera

    • @rahulbhaskar6790
      @rahulbhaskar6790 6 років тому +2

      It's funny how all the majestic wilderness accessible to man are in the United States.....No where else.

  • @cathykristensen4440
    @cathykristensen4440 7 років тому +18

    yep,I moved three 24 years ago crater lake,the coast, mountains so so beautiful!!!!do

  • @Sennmut
    @Sennmut 7 років тому +13

    Nice to see the old docus again.

  • @almeggs3247
    @almeggs3247 6 років тому +9

    My parents and his brothers family that lived in Stockton drove here around 1956
    I didn't realize then perhaps I was too young how beautiful and didn't recall its incredible history
    Thanks for the memories
    Enjoyed it very much

  • @inkyguy
    @inkyguy 5 років тому +2

    Lovely, attractive and loving documentary. For those who don't care for it, people have different tastes, and not everyone has the attention span needed to appreciate this.

  • @semperfidelis2970
    @semperfidelis2970 6 років тому +30

    This is an old documentary, of course. But the way it's presented is phenomenal. Not only the scenery, but also the music and even the voice and the pace and the presentation of the narrator to the story is unrivaled. It's a gentle soothing Serene way of presenting a documentary and it totally suits the feeling of what the documentary is about. It is a wonderful piece of art.

    • @jonmacdonald5345
      @jonmacdonald5345 5 років тому +7

      Semper Fidelis Right this was from back in the Days! they Need to Make Documentaries Great Again!

    • @TheDevler23
      @TheDevler23 5 років тому +7

      They also managed to tell the story as the natives know it, without mocking or being dismissive. Instead, showing how their verbal histories tell the geologic history.

  • @donsimon5937
    @donsimon5937 6 років тому +5

    beautifully done with just the right amount of scientific information added at just the right time

  • @douglasscott5623
    @douglasscott5623 6 років тому +8

    In the 60's there was a dead tree trunk floating upright in the lake. The roots had grown around a rock, and when the tree fell in the water the rock provided just the right amount of ballast. I remember seeing it, it was called the "Lady in the Lake" or something like that. I think it floated around the lake for years... Does any one else remember?

    • @douglasscott5623
      @douglasscott5623 6 років тому +2

      ok they just showed it 30:33 it's the Old Man of the lake!

    • @michaelchristensen9004
      @michaelchristensen9004 6 років тому +2

      That tree trunk is called " the old man of the lake" and it's still floating in the lake.

    • @housetopranch
      @housetopranch 6 років тому +6

      I had the unique privilege of standing on the Old Man Of The Lake back in 1973 or thereabouts after my hike on the Pacfic Crest Trail from Mt. Hood to Crater Lake. Unlike the footage shown here, the top had been sawed flat. It was probably 3 feet across and rock solid, almost like standing on a concrete pier. When that tour boat pulled away from me and left me all alone standing on that tree trunk in the middle of Crater Lake I felt pretty small and vulnerable. (The boat returned for me in a few minutes.) My buddy, who worked at the lodge and had arranged for my short occupation of The Old Man Of The Lake as well as the boat driver, got into plenty of hot water when the story got back to the higher ups as it is strictly forbidden! But I still cherish that memory! I bet fewer people have stood on that old stump than have claimed Mount Everest!

  • @morgangrey4020
    @morgangrey4020 8 років тому +9

    wow haven't seen this in ages..ty for posting

  • @serendipitysisters84
    @serendipitysisters84 Рік тому +1

    This video really highlights the beauty of it’s nature. Thank you for this resource 😊💎💙🏔️

  • @rainierzedda6801
    @rainierzedda6801 3 роки тому +2

    What a fantastic place .

  • @conspiracyoftruth6770
    @conspiracyoftruth6770 5 років тому +3

    That was an outstanding documentary film and I'd love to visit there this summer!

    • @IanP1963
      @IanP1963 Рік тому +1

      They were in the 1970's and 1980's - today the film bods have no clue !!!!

  • @jimholmes2555
    @jimholmes2555 5 років тому +18

    The lousy music drowns out the narration.

    • @frankherman5195
      @frankherman5195 3 роки тому +1

      Get your hearing checked.

    • @migranthawker2952
      @migranthawker2952 3 роки тому +1

      @@frankherman5195 Why? He's quite right!

    • @cowboykelly6590
      @cowboykelly6590 2 роки тому

      Aahhh...the flute. BAHAHAHA..🤣 UGH !
      Aahh yes, The Ear piercing Ambiance, 🤣 The uninteresting tune 🤣

    • @cowboykelly6590
      @cowboykelly6590 2 роки тому

      @@migranthawker2952 BAHAHAHA..🤣 He sure is . UGH ! 🤣

    • @cowboykelly6590
      @cowboykelly6590 2 роки тому

      @@frankherman5195 UGH.. BAHAHAHA 🤣... But , he is so right . 🤠🖖

  • @JasonLambek
    @JasonLambek 2 роки тому

    I got to go to CL when I was 8 and again at 10 years old. I still think the place was the most beautiful and amazing place I’ve ever been. And that was back in ‘81 & ‘83.

  • @mjwierzgac
    @mjwierzgac 5 років тому +47

    Crater Lake is still considered an active volcano. It is not extinct, just dormant. It can rise again.

  • @elisabird6245
    @elisabird6245 6 років тому +8

    I live inside the crater of an ancient volcano. It collapsed into the sea some 90,000 years ago. It was called El Golfo and you can see it on a map ot El Hierro, Canary Islands. The island was formed by this and two previous landslides, so it is the shape of a boot. It is to the south west of Tenerife, which still has a huge volcano.

    • @dmcnamara9859
      @dmcnamara9859 6 років тому +4

      Elisabeth Bird:
      Pictures/Postcards don't give Crater Lake justice...ditto for Hawaii. You must see it in person...the presence of both is un-describable. I live near Mt. Shasta (another beauty of Volcanism and Nature)..and every summer when the Park Service has "free-entry day"...I make it a habit to make the 1 1/2 hour+ drive and walk the tremendous Graded 2-Mile path down to the Lake...swim/jump off the precipice nearby. When I was a kid, the Environmental Nazis did not allow the public to swim in the lake.....through much lobbying over the Years, Park Service gave in to the Public demand.
      Canary Islands? WOW!.... I share a close B-Day with a tragedy that took place on Tenerife.....when those two Jumbo Jets slammed into each other on that foggy day.

    • @elisabird6245
      @elisabird6245 6 років тому +2

      Love to go there, but right now can´t afford it. Will add it to my bucket list.

    • @dmcnamara9859
      @dmcnamara9859 6 років тому +4

      Restricted (non published) Airfares are still dirt cheap (usually bought 6 months to a year + out direct from the Carrier).Here in the USA, one can rent a cheap new Korean car for $79.00-120.00 a week from a National Rental Agency with unlimited miles. Once you get to the States, head for a National Forest area for "free lodging"after you buy some "expendable" groceries and trip to Walmart for $30.00-$50.00 tent. It costs nothing in the United States to camp on National Forest areas. There is however...a customary 3 week limit.
      Many people (with families) from Europe come to the Mt. Shasta area,etc....and vacation on the cheap...they camp in a tent and make their own food. They can't believe you can just find any spot and camp for free.... a Right here that is absolutely forbidden/Regulated in Europe.
      It's easily conceivable with a Restricted airfare,rental car,tent,basic food items included....two people can easily have good time doing the "nature thing" in the USA for two to three weeks. for under $1500.00...even getting from you are at. Naturally,more people means less money....as that rental car amount can be split even more (when you're talking friends traveling together).

    • @walther7147
      @walther7147 4 роки тому +1

      Elisa Bird It may awake again

  • @hemlock3088
    @hemlock3088 2 роки тому +1

    that flute almost made my head explode.

  • @Road_Rash
    @Road_Rash 2 роки тому +1

    I so want to see this one day...so awesome...

  • @Cheshirekass
    @Cheshirekass 3 роки тому

    I live here and have for 20 years. I love it here!

  • @kitty8448
    @kitty8448 Рік тому +1

    I really love this video! So beautiful and educational! Where are these videos today??? 😮

  • @leecoffman2594
    @leecoffman2594 4 роки тому +1

    I visited Crater Lake in June 1997 and it was snowing ! I wanted to stay longer but I was afraid of getting snow bound so I left very quickly.

  • @jws1948ja
    @jws1948ja 3 роки тому +1

    I love the music.

  • @redlegs7426
    @redlegs7426 5 років тому +3

    I SWEAR THAT NARRATOR IS THE ACTOR THAT PLAYED THE CAPT ON THAT MOVIE COMEDY AIRPLANE LMAO

  • @tanakeilidh384
    @tanakeilidh384 2 роки тому

    The music is amazing, and perfect

  • @michaelfabian3036
    @michaelfabian3036 5 років тому +2

    FANTASTIC🌟👍👏, comprehensive & detailed ~ LOVE how the natives/ first peoples’ perspectives & traditions are so well covered. This is a MUST~see for anyone wishing to behold this grandeur for the first time, as well as those of us who have beheld it again & again! THANK YOU🌟🙏🙏 for this!

  • @adwood201
    @adwood201 6 років тому +18

    I don't mind flutes but after about 5 minutes it's time to play another instrument or 2..............

  • @zeom76
    @zeom76 4 роки тому

    BEAUTIFUL 😃

  • @byBeauxARTFULIVING
    @byBeauxARTFULIVING Рік тому

    Yes ! The spiritual world is so much more fascinating than the 3D world, thank you for sharing this.

  • @priyageorge7792
    @priyageorge7792 4 роки тому +1

    It's beautiful in the winter. Short video of the snow in jan 2020

  • @benbearden9289
    @benbearden9289 6 років тому +4

    Love this documentary. Anyone know what the music is during the mountain climbing? 32:30

  • @rudyrush6015
    @rudyrush6015 5 років тому +3

    next on nova: the woodwind instrument, narrated by Jodie Foster

  • @draconis0469
    @draconis0469 6 років тому +20

    I have some awesome drone footage from all around this beautiful lake! Before they made it against the law to fly in National Parks! Oh the land of what used to be free

  • @chriscontreras1817
    @chriscontreras1817 Рік тому

    There are so many Sasquatch in the region surrounding the lake I will never camp alone there ever ever again... Footprints ,howls, stalking -never again...

  • @lanerailvideo5928
    @lanerailvideo5928 3 роки тому

    An amazing display of nature. Whoever may of lived when it did it's thing I doubt survived, & if they did they probably went deaf. Aside I think it would be kinda cool of one if the volcanoes came back to life.

  • @rainer250
    @rainer250 6 років тому +9

    It's amazing the deepest lake in the United States occupies the caldera that was once Mount Mazama. The eruption was 42 times more powerful than the May 18 eruption of Mount St. Helens. That shows just how destructive a volcanic eruption can be.

  • @georgealexander8661
    @georgealexander8661 3 роки тому +1

    Been there..Crater Lake is beyond description!! Thanks for the video, but in all honesty must say
    that the dull colors were a bit disappointing. Any-
    way, I enjoyed a second viewing via your video!

  • @philliprogers4255
    @philliprogers4255 3 роки тому

    Yep, I made it through the whole damn documentary. Waited and waited but Billy Jack never did make an appearance

  • @stephenhatley1599
    @stephenhatley1599 3 роки тому +1

    Sounds like the voice of Peter Graves.

  • @raynechantel2738
    @raynechantel2738 3 роки тому

    The lodge is great to stay at also --make restaurant reservation if staying there - limited seating and there is very little other options for food - Mazama village is it. Well worth it!

  • @ronnydiehl7262
    @ronnydiehl7262 4 роки тому +2

    Good doc if it weren't for the music score...

  • @intersections2428
    @intersections2428 6 років тому +3

    i saw the lake in the 70's

    • @orgami100
      @orgami100 6 років тому +1

      Fepe Vegan Same here. . Motorcycling up there in the 70s..

    • @intersections2428
      @intersections2428 6 років тому +1

      first sight as i made my way from olympic national down the coast, saw crater lake and fell in love with beauty and the awe of it

  • @pegrasp2584
    @pegrasp2584 4 роки тому +2

    I highly recommend the space ship..at night.

  • @bradphillips6081
    @bradphillips6081 Рік тому +1

    Reminds me of this gal I Used to Know

  • @conniehoward447
    @conniehoward447 6 років тому +4

    Beautiful . (The background music is a downer )

  • @dalecarpenter8828
    @dalecarpenter8828 5 років тому

    The thunderbolt project !!!

  • @ab-il1gk
    @ab-il1gk 6 років тому +2

    who is the narrator

    • @inkyguy
      @inkyguy 5 років тому +1

      c w, read the credits and find out then post it for others.

  • @jensen7194
    @jensen7194 6 років тому +1

    The POWER of NATURE!!!....How about YELLOWSTONE , a SUPERVOLCANO!!!!.....an End to Man as we know it!!!!! but What BEAUTY is NATURE!!.....Was there in 1954.......Was Awesome then!!

  • @FloozieOne
    @FloozieOne 4 роки тому +3

    When you think of 2000 feet deep and that wide that was an incredible amount of rock to have blown out during the eruption. Although there are big pieces of course and many smaller ones most of that must have been ash. I still have trouble with the concept of rock turning to ash, after all rock doesn't burn, but there is no doubt that it must have been a real killer for 100's of miles.

    • @paulrandig
      @paulrandig 4 роки тому +4

      Volcanic ash is not like the ash of your camp fire. Think of it as snow. Rock can melt when it gets really hot. When it gets thrown out of a volcanoe, it happens as drops. Those drops eventually cool down. If they are big they are called "bombs". But if they are tiny, smaller than 2mm, you can regard them as a kind of mist. They are so small that they cool quickly and turn solid after just moments during their flight. Like water drops, they cristallize, but the minerals take on different shapes than water ice. So you call those small, very light - and due to their shape very aggressive - grains "volcanic ash".

  • @bdrichardson403
    @bdrichardson403 6 років тому +18

    Flute is pretty but way too loud. It takes away from natural sounds and the narration.

  • @ramoncitoross6849
    @ramoncitoross6849 5 років тому +1

    That looks like a volcano
    Caldera volcano IT scares me

  • @domestikgoddez9823
    @domestikgoddez9823 9 місяців тому

    did steele not notice the indigenous people? he DISCOVERED not much...and the only stops at wizard island these days is by the klamath and other nearby native indian groups . .i knew an old woman who lived on the siuslaw river ( She was half klamath and half siuslaw indian) - the siuslaw is a couple of hundreds miles away from crater and it empties into the pacific at florence oregon. she told me stories about visiting wizard island for sacred ceremonies as a kid (she married a white guy) and that white people weren't allowed there anymore. the boats had to stay a respectful distance from it to not disturb the spirits there.....
    she was one of the most unique people i've ever met. she'd stand in an aisle that she saw me headed for (kitchen) and she say in a feeble voice "am i in your road sister?" i was 5'9" and she was about 4'9" and in her 80s. i feel honored to have known her.

  • @metalhead0274
    @metalhead0274 3 роки тому

    I am surprised so many people in here in the comments are so ignorant of North American history.and want to know so little of it. You live on a landmass that is forged by the history of this continent.
    There is a lot more here than just the folklore of the ancient people who lived here. First of all you get an idea how long ago all of these lands were settled by various tribes and nomadic civilizations.
    If you listen to the folklore and stories passed down, you can piece together history of what the land and regions were like. How dangerous it was. How active the volcanic regions were.
    For an example when the folklore of the Modok tribes and others tell of the eruption, you can also co.pare it to other folklore and oral lore passed on by other tribes elsewhere. When Mount Mazama blew, its eruption and explosion was so great that it was heard on the east coast. The Native American folklore in regions like New York areas tell of a oral tales that explain that sound and event.. how they related it to gods and spirits of their own understanding.
    Talk about destructive power.. volcanic explosion so massive it could be heard nearly 3000 miles away. And it was a distinctive loud explosion. Not just faint rumble..
    The volcanic ash covered parts of the northwestern states to as far as central Canada. Rare particles of Mazama ash have even been found in ancient ice from Greenland. The airfall pumice and ash covered a total surface area of more than 2,600,000 km2 (1,000,000 mi2) at least 1 mm (fraction of an inch) thick, and no less than 13,000 km2 (5,000 mi2) more than 15 cm (6 in) thick. A volume of 42-54 km3 (10-13 mi3) of the mountaintop had disappeared.
    This was no eruption. The blast by what can be estimated indicates that magma was blown upward and out to nearly 8000 ft in elevation above the volcano...not just ash and cinder but the magma itself.
    Yes maybe something like Yellowstone a super volcano could be one massive eruption. . But look atthe size of it in comparison. And there is the fact that the magma chamber that feeds Yellowstone is 11 grand canyons in size and is far bigger than Yellowstone itself and stretches under multiple states.
    Mount Mazama is geologically recorded as one of the largest and most effective volcanic blasts that effected a good portion of the world. It had effects on weather everywhere..as the fine ash s
    Is found on other continents .

    • @MattCookOregon
      @MattCookOregon 3 роки тому

      Great info thank you. Us whiteys only been here for 200 years.

  • @faxRfax
    @faxRfax 5 років тому +15

    Oregon.. poverty with a view!

    • @kristinebailey2804
      @kristinebailey2804 3 роки тому

      When houses cost 300,000.00 and up, it isn't poverty honey. Not unless you're lazy and don't mind living in a 100,000.00 house trailer.

    • @seanwarren9357
      @seanwarren9357 2 роки тому

      ​​@@kristinebailey2804 Tell us, Kristine, what is the cause of that inflated property value leaving many completely displaced from the market, one which is providing unstable wages no longer capable of sustaining property ownership?
      He's not wrong, even if you're fortunate enough to not have fallen, yet.
      Enjoy it while it lasts.
      Your remark casting a finger to lazyness and castigation to those who would pay a hundred thousand to live in a trailer is a perfect example of what is wrong out here in the otherwise perfect Northwest.
      Lazy, indeed, I wonder what you would call a hard day's labor that you would think to make such a claim.

  • @pippastone6018
    @pippastone6018 3 роки тому +1

    Music wrecks this programme, sorry cannot watch as my hearing is affected because off music.

  • @carolv8450
    @carolv8450 6 років тому +3

    Many people have disappeared there

    • @inkyguy
      @inkyguy 5 років тому +2

      Carol V, that will happen in any wilderness area that attracts visitors, especially visitors who don't know what they are doing, and even perhaps a few who do.
      I remember talking to two guys a number of years ago that had gone camping in Alaska who came very close to dying simply because of their sheer ignorance, negligence, and lack of any reasonable preparation, from the clothing they were wearing to basic equipment. It would be all too easy for people, whether traveling solo or as a couple, to disappear and their remains found much later if ever.
      If you are going to go into wilderness everyone going MUST thoroughly educate himself and take adequate supplies to sustain life even outside of the expected weather and intended trip duration. This takes far more time and money than most people are willing to invest and they opt to gamble with theirs and others' lives. Sometimes they loose their bet.

    • @kristinebailey2804
      @kristinebailey2804 3 роки тому

      Many have disappeared on Everest too.... so.................... and in Yellowstone and any place remote.

  • @deormanrobey892
    @deormanrobey892 5 років тому +2

    This is an old travelog of Crater Lake National Park. If you're looking for a scientific dissertation on volcanism or geology, you'll have to look elsewhere.

  • @ElicBehexan
    @ElicBehexan 9 місяців тому

    Anyone else find the shots of the swimmers and snow climbers boring... more lake, less people. It is also not considered extinct, just dormant - not unlike the super volcano under Naples (and I'm not talking about Vesuvius.

  • @DanielDahlman
    @DanielDahlman 5 років тому +1

    w-o-a-h

  • @ajoliver74
    @ajoliver74 6 років тому +7

    The Natives that lived there survived this mountain exploding, moved back and thrived. However, could not survive the white invaders. Such a sad fact of this documentary.

    • @RubenANorte
      @RubenANorte 6 років тому +2

      Well, being perpetual hunter gatherers and never embracing the scientific method... they eventually were going to encounter people that were more advanced and more knowledgeable.

    • @gurumac8992
      @gurumac8992 5 років тому +2

      @@RubenANorte the cultural genocide of indigenous peoples has nothing to do with science or advancedment, its imperial barbarism!!
      Modern science is materialistic at its core & it will never unlock the keys of the universe until it reconciles its understanding of spirit, so those perpetual hunters gatherers you spoke of were the true advanced peoples, as they knew how to live in harmony & revered life in all its forms..✌🏼

    • @MountainFisher
      @MountainFisher 5 років тому +1

      @@gurumac8992 The Indians didn't live in harmony with each other. Many tribes wiped out neighboring tribes and the Aztecs grew an empire that was wiped out, not by barbaric imperialism, but by smallpox and measles. One of the reasons I'm not an atheistic materialist is because, whether they like it or not, their credo is adapt or die, only the strong survive and might makes right. Man is not good and that also goes for the mythical 'Noble Savage'.

  • @louisvilleslugger3979
    @louisvilleslugger3979 5 років тому +4

    Im just wondering how many Mountain Dew bottles, used baby diapers and heroin needles are floating around in that lake now

  • @Gunbucket1964
    @Gunbucket1964 3 місяці тому

    Like a really long episode of Kung Fu.

  • @luklopskywalk
    @luklopskywalk 3 роки тому +1

    i hate that fucking whistle

  • @sherrifreeman6398
    @sherrifreeman6398 2 роки тому

    Not true Steele did not find Crater Lake. This is a lie.He never started Crater Lake.

  • @raviwangad441
    @raviwangad441 Рік тому +1

    वाव

  • @richardgunther1658
    @richardgunther1658 5 років тому +1

    Sloooww....

  • @cyc7lops
    @cyc7lops 4 роки тому +9

    I wish they would stop making documentaries with music.

    • @1pcmedic
      @1pcmedic 4 роки тому

      Turn on CC and mute!

    • @hjpngmw
      @hjpngmw 3 роки тому

      If only they'd stop using really obscure, pendantic piano....

  • @andrewfrank7222
    @andrewfrank7222 4 роки тому +1

    1:30 And the evangelicals are triggered...

  • @kenfischer123
    @kenfischer123 3 роки тому

    This one just doesn't do it for me. Too much fluff not enough stuff

  • @sopla35
    @sopla35 6 років тому +10

    Your flute racket makes this film impossible to watch...

    • @thisutuber
      @thisutuber 6 років тому +2

      Stops at 8:50

    • @bradwhitham4115
      @bradwhitham4115 5 років тому +3

      Install an equalizer app and simply drag down that frequency. Easy, and works for all kinds of videos with bad sound.

    • @DanielDahlman
      @DanielDahlman 5 років тому +1

      ahahahah

  • @bruceblake9942
    @bruceblake9942 5 років тому +3

    That damned flute makes this video painful to watch !! [Aussie in BC]

  • @TheBandit7613
    @TheBandit7613 5 років тому +2

    Please stop the repetitive annoying flute crap!

  • @pat8988
    @pat8988 6 років тому +5

    ABSOLUTELY BORING. I was hoping for something more educational. This thing nearly put me to sleep. And the piccolo drove me nuts. Never finished it...

    • @conniehoward447
      @conniehoward447 6 років тому +1

      Pat Me either , beautiful place , terrible documentary .

    • @inkyguy
      @inkyguy 5 років тому

      Or poor attention span.

  • @maxl5657
    @maxl5657 3 роки тому

    They have to insert the bs story of some Greek like tragedy.
    Just give the documentary without trying to continuously disprove God.

  • @TheBandit7613
    @TheBandit7613 4 роки тому

    Monotonous music and lack of scientific facts. A pre-schoolers documentary.

  • @barbarakepley1777
    @barbarakepley1777 2 роки тому

    Turn down the music

  • @sharonwhiteley6510
    @sharonwhiteley6510 2 роки тому

    Were the Native People's ever given any portion back? How are we protecting the lake by running boats on it? Are the Park Rangers closely watching open fires at campsites?

  • @garynorris4648
    @garynorris4648 6 років тому +1

    Horrible.

  • @jameywc2
    @jameywc2 4 роки тому +1

    Borrrrrrr... rrrrrrriiiiiiinnnnng!!

  • @latinguy67
    @latinguy67 4 роки тому

    i wish that stupid music wasn't on in the background

  • @TheBandit7613
    @TheBandit7613 3 роки тому +1

    Horrid music ruined the video

  • @user-pj1dk7se4e
    @user-pj1dk7se4e Рік тому

    i was there in 1987 drove from whistler bc