Thank you for your worthy efforts of preserving this historical vision of Yosemite in all of its timeless glory! Jonathan, I really appreciate your efforts in preserving the lives of the early mountain people, native Americans, and protectors. Well done...
I did half dome yesterday and found this masterpiece. Thank you so much for the history. Now I feel the valley I looked at from top totally differently.
As a self described Yosemite “nerd”, I try to read or watch as much as I can about Yosemite as Ai can. Congratulations on a great documentary, I leaned a lot! Example, clarifying that Walker party never saw The Valley. I would love to see you take on NPS, Hetch Hetchy or Curry Company. Thanks!
I work for Hetchy, and it is a huge honor to be able to be a part of that project. There are more problems with people coming from the Bay Area and the Central Valley, thinking they are entitled for some reason to swim in the Reservoir and leave their trash for the Watershed Keepers to pick up. Half of them don't know a single thing about the Hetch Hetchy Valley, the No swimming laws or it's history. Folks at Hetch Hetchy know it's history and take a lot of pride in what they do out there. So yeah, come on out and learn something.
Inspiration Point. just above the Wawona Tunnel. Just west of the town called Foresta on a tall peak where the Yosemite K9 Kennels are. The last one is hard to tell due to the creative liberties arts took back then in natural areas. Could perhaps be Hetch Hetchy before it was dammed or completely unrelated to Yosemite. I don't know.
Hetch hetchy is the valley in Yosemite park. It’s the reservoir that was dammed up that provides water to San Francisco. Supposedly the area underneath the reservoir is similar to Yosemite valley. It was called hetch hetchy valley. It’s crazy they were able to make a reservoir in a national park. Many newspapers and citizens were against it as they knew it would destroy the area. Instead congress passed the raker act in 1913 which allowed the dam to be built.
@@johnmedina5399 It was built in response to the 1906 San Francisco Quake and the water shortage prior to the Quake that lead to slow responses in putting out the fires. That's what got the funding for damming Hetch Hetchy. It's a shame but, I understand why they did it then. Bad Sacramento politics why it remains in light of better engineering since.
Indigenous people in California definitely had horses, but this painting most likely does not depict indigenous Californians. Albert Bierstadt's 1865 "Departure of an Indian War Party."
Thank you for your worthy efforts of preserving this historical vision of Yosemite in all of its timeless glory! Jonathan, I really appreciate your efforts in preserving the lives of the early mountain people, native Americans, and protectors. Well done...
Thank you for the history. I live next to it and know it well, but I obviously didn’t know a lot of history you presented.
I did half dome yesterday and found this masterpiece. Thank you so much for the history. Now I feel the valley I looked at from top totally differently.
I was there about a month ago, first time with my family. It's astonishing beauty remains with us. Thank you for your historical documentary.
This was amazing. That’s for creating this 😊
Nice to see a good documentary about this topic. Thanks for doing it Johnathan.
Love it, when is part 2 dropping ?
Awesome documentary about the valley 👍👏👏
As a self described Yosemite “nerd”, I try to read or watch as much as I can about Yosemite as Ai can. Congratulations on a great documentary, I leaned a lot! Example, clarifying that Walker party never saw The Valley. I would love to see you take on NPS, Hetch Hetchy or Curry Company. Thanks!
Glad to see I’m not the only human being who can’t get those mountains out of my mind
I work for Hetchy, and it is a huge honor to be able to be a part of that project. There are more problems with people coming from the Bay Area and the Central Valley, thinking they are entitled for some reason to swim in the Reservoir and leave their trash for the Watershed Keepers to pick up. Half of them don't know a single thing about the Hetch Hetchy Valley, the No swimming laws or it's history. Folks at Hetch Hetchy know it's history and take a lot of pride in what they do out there. So yeah, come on out and learn something.
Great video. I will go on July. A couple of questions. Which places are this minutes? 6:20, 7:42 and 8:20. Thanks in advance
Inspiration Point. just above the Wawona Tunnel. Just west of the town called Foresta on a tall peak where the Yosemite K9 Kennels are. The last one is hard to tell due to the creative liberties arts took back then in natural areas. Could perhaps be Hetch Hetchy before it was dammed or completely unrelated to Yosemite. I don't know.
Beautiful land
The Hosmers ruined my life..
Them over in Murphy’s..
I have Yosemite to remember them by.
It’s bitter sweet.
I lived and worked there for 6 years. I lived on the meadow and my view when I opened my front door was Half Dome. The place is magical!!
Jonathan, Would love to touch base with you.
Good park history except the Hetch Hetchy is entirely omitted - hard to believe it’s an oversight
What’s the hetch hetchy?
Hetch hetchy is the valley in Yosemite park.
It’s the reservoir that was dammed up that provides water to San Francisco. Supposedly the area underneath the reservoir is similar to Yosemite valley. It was called hetch hetchy valley. It’s crazy they were able to make a reservoir in a national park. Many newspapers and citizens were against it as they knew it would destroy the area. Instead congress passed the raker act in 1913 which allowed the dam to be built.
@@johnmedina5399 It was built in response to the 1906 San Francisco Quake and the water shortage prior to the Quake that lead to slow responses in putting out the fires. That's what got the funding for damming Hetch Hetchy. It's a shame but, I understand why they did it then. Bad Sacramento politics why it remains in light of better engineering since.
The history of the violence and death are not covered here really. The First Nations people knew the danger.
3:25-sorry, but the Californian Indians did not have horses
Indigenous people in California definitely had horses, but this painting most likely does not depict indigenous Californians. Albert Bierstadt's 1865 "Departure of an Indian War Party."