Exploring Relatively Unknown Ruins - Cedar Mesa Utah

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  • Опубліковано 1 лют 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 51

  • @Jake-vt4ow
    @Jake-vt4ow 3 місяці тому +1

    This video should have gotten tons more views!!!

  • @stephanieyee9784
    @stephanieyee9784 Рік тому +12

    That canyon, geology and scenery are stunning.
    Amazing architecture and engineering from the Ancient Pueblo people.

  • @OZARKMEL
    @OZARKMEL Рік тому +5

    If you continue to speak of them.....they will be remembered forever. Beautiful.

  • @random22026
    @random22026 Рік тому +7

    Beautiful ruin--felt sacred, somehow.
    The red earth of Utah is exceptional. 😌😌❤❤

  • @octaviatheappalled912
    @octaviatheappalled912 Рік тому +6

    I enjoy your trek videos, and I love your background music.

  • @blue_canyon
    @blue_canyon Рік тому +6

    Holy crap! My brother, Jared, and I were roommates with Brett back around 2005. Well, his dorm room shared a bathroom with ours.

  • @tedpreston4155
    @tedpreston4155 Рік тому +7

    That mud roof reminds me of the kivas in Road Canyon. If you haven't seen them before, they are well worth a visit! From the kivas in the canyon bottom, you can look upward toward the Citadel, though it's not really visible. From the Citadel, looking down, the kivas are in plain view.

  • @toughenupfluffy7294
    @toughenupfluffy7294 Рік тому +11

    Before he died, my father told me about living in NW Colorado in the 1930s when he was a kid. They would go out and explore the sagebrush hills, which had occasional pinyon and juniper trees scattered across the landscape.
    He told me about finding a traditional tree burial, where natives would place the deceased in a bower up in a big juniper tree. He said it creeped him and his brother out, so they left it alone, but it had remnants of the burial cloth hanging down from it. They couldn't see the body from the ground, but they knew what it was.
    Now, over ninety years later, I wonder if there's anything left of the unfortunate soul who was 'buried' up in a tree so long ago?

  • @TheRockgremlin
    @TheRockgremlin 9 місяців тому +2

    You always have the best music.

  • @corneliusdinkmeyer2190
    @corneliusdinkmeyer2190 Рік тому +2

    I would say that some of these people were better builders than others. So my of the structures you find are so well preserved & some have just fallen down.

  • @alwaysfourfun1671
    @alwaysfourfun1671 Рік тому +7

    A beautful hike and fantastic finds. Hope it remains undisturbed and a forever memory to those that actually lived there. The native people must have been perfectly adapted to their environment, even if the climate a while back was offering more sustenance. Great video!

  • @Lougallops
    @Lougallops Рік тому +5

    wow amazing feeling just through your video. I can only imagine how it feels to actually be there.

  • @ingvarellingsen2925
    @ingvarellingsen2925 Рік тому +5

    Those ruins are fascinating either they are partly destroyed or just very fragile. Awesome!

  • @Redfour5
    @Redfour5 Рік тому +6

    So cool reminding me of my youth before technology... I have been to ruins few if any white men know of but we only had old timers telling us generally how to get there. I love how you use google earth and gps to find places and then drones and video to illustrate them to others hopefully raising interest in protecting them... All I have are memories.

  • @gmccl
    @gmccl 3 роки тому +19

    Went through those in the mid 1980's just before the government went through them and destroyed all the pottery and collected what they put on display. First time seeing it since. Has been many years now. Thanks for sharing your exploration!

    • @TheTrekPlanner
      @TheTrekPlanner  3 роки тому +7

      I'm jealous you got to see it when it was in better shape, Greg! It definitely looked like it was picked over many times. We did find some larger pieces of pottery (not on the video), but it was all broken or gone. Thanks for watching!

    • @oldyoungArt
      @oldyoungArt Рік тому +6

      Why in the heck would the "government" destroy pottery???

    • @ToddBradley-pz2jr
      @ToddBradley-pz2jr Рік тому +3

      @@oldyoungArtjust OP's paranoid fantasies

  • @sevenirises
    @sevenirises Рік тому +1

    Thank you. This was amazing. So beautiful.

  • @toughenupfluffy7294
    @toughenupfluffy7294 Рік тому +8

    I had a bear crack open a big log about twenty feet from my tent one night, looking for grubs, about one o'clock in the morning. I had been sound asleep, but I was immediately awake and on high alert. I laid there for a few minutes, then decided I had to act now or remain paralyzed and who knows? Get eaten?
    So I put on my glasses, got out of my sleeping bag, grabbed my headlamp, grabbed my cooking pan and a spoon, then quietly unzipped my tent and crawled outside.
    It was cold, up in the high SW Colorado Rockies, and the stars were shining to beat the band. I looked over towards where I'd heard the log cracking, but it was too dark to see. All I could see was the silhouettes of the big pines against the amazing starry sky.
    So I suddenly clicked on my headlamp and started spinning around, hooting and hollering at the top of my lungs, banging and clanging on the metal pan with my spoon, like a demon-possessed, disco dancing Aborigine, which I've heard is a racist term, so please forgive me.
    After about a minute of this, I stopped and listened. I could hear the echo of my voice coming back down from the high cliffs far above my camp, then nothing but a light, chilly breeze blowing the pines around a little in the cold silence.
    That bear no doubt went home and told its family about an alien encounter it had up in the mountains, with flashing lights and alarms and everything.
    Or not.

    • @linkylou13
      @linkylou13 Рік тому +2

      Thank you for this story. 😁😇

    • @candusochs8473
      @candusochs8473 Рік тому +2

      I had quite the picture in my mind..thanks for the laugh..

  • @mercedithcompala8148
    @mercedithcompala8148 Рік тому

    Cool adventures, thanks

  • @markmark2080
    @markmark2080 2 роки тому +1

    Enjoyed it, an amazing region...

  • @grangranzulaski1084
    @grangranzulaski1084 12 днів тому

    Cool Place

  • @mirandamom1346
    @mirandamom1346 Рік тому +3

    Cedar Mesa is my happy place

  • @jeffreywickens3379
    @jeffreywickens3379 Рік тому

    Amazing. And I didn't see you take anything. Very cool.

  • @PatriciaRodriguez-vn6cv
    @PatriciaRodriguez-vn6cv Рік тому

    Your narration is hilarious.

  • @JamesJones-cx5pk
    @JamesJones-cx5pk Рік тому +4

    I wouldn't doubt that many of these places (especially near rivers) were still occupied right up until the Spanish diseases killed them off. Have you ever had any of the wood dated?

    • @redrock250x
      @redrock250x Рік тому +2

      the archeologists estimate this area was abandoned before 1300

    • @JamesJones-cx5pk
      @JamesJones-cx5pk Рік тому

      @@redrock250x I still think the "experts" haven't tested hundreds or thousands of the sites.

  • @tughoward
    @tughoward 3 роки тому +1

    Awesome video!

  • @giuliom8520
    @giuliom8520 Рік тому +1

    Another amazing video! Try to find some blood sacrifice alters they used in the future. They had the same religion at the Aztec and Inca. They were also cannibals, look up Utah study called, "Man Corn".

  • @robertodebeers2551
    @robertodebeers2551 Рік тому

    Excellent.

  • @chuckzehnder530
    @chuckzehnder530 Рік тому

    WOW!

  • @lorichaplin7328
    @lorichaplin7328 Рік тому +2

    The areas are so rocky that I don’t see how they could have farmed grain. Can you explain?

    • @redrock250x
      @redrock250x Рік тому +1

      many of their fields were not in the canyon but up on top. there are acres of flat level ground on the mesa tops above the canyons

  • @Redfour5
    @Redfour5 Рік тому +1

    In Montana, the speed limit on that road would be 70mph.

  • @photolee1618
    @photolee1618 2 роки тому

    Looks like a fine pair of granaries across the gulch at 3:44 - 4:10 minutes. Could an approach be made from the ledge to the right?

  • @alienallen2983
    @alienallen2983 Рік тому

    👍🙏>>>💚

  • @dannywhitley6801
    @dannywhitley6801 2 роки тому +3

    Love your videos! Heading to Utah this fall. If you don’t mind telling me how do I get to this trailhead and how long was the hike out and back? Did you have a trail map?

  • @chevychase3103
    @chevychase3103 3 роки тому +2

    Who were these ancients?

    • @TheTrekPlanner
      @TheTrekPlanner  3 роки тому +4

      Most likely the Ancestral Pueblo. They are also known as the Anasazi!

    • @jimmoses6617
      @jimmoses6617 Рік тому +1

      They were the ancestors of the modern Hopi and Zuni. If you go to Hopi today, you can walk through their villages, and see modern trash and 500+ year old pottery mixed together. The Hopi still live in those pueblo villages and have lived on those same villages since before the Spanish arrived ca. AD. 1540. Hopi is like going back in time. There are no McDonalds, franchise stores, gas stations, etc. at all. Unlike the neighboring Navajo Reservation.

  • @sheckyfeinstein
    @sheckyfeinstein Рік тому

    Early Saltaire.

  • @jimmyrios9905
    @jimmyrios9905 Рік тому

    Hay u ever ran across ancient Pueblo remains

  • @scottdunn2178
    @scottdunn2178 Рік тому +1

    You definitely don't want to be screwing around out there at night though.

  • @raimundohenriques1433
    @raimundohenriques1433 Рік тому

    👍🇧🇷

  • @charlielaudico3523
    @charlielaudico3523 Рік тому +1

    Do any young people actually know the history of any of these places they travel to?

  • @jcee2259
    @jcee2259 Рік тому +1

    When I find the unknown I make two reports. One to my NSS and our explorers.
    Another is addressed to NASA. Which helps the NSS evaluate where I alone was
    the first of my species to go there. I touch nothing and use my entry footprints
    to exit within leaving all else unmarked. NASA said explorers like myself by
    exploration conservation policy offer mankind future Apps: on moons and
    other planets. I also volunteer my time for US Park Services underground.
    in 2022 I was invited to party with men and women who used cartography
    to verify they had explored more than 150 miles under US Government land.
    Did my reader get that snail mail ?