Did you enjoy this video and find it to be informative? You can help ensure that more videos just like this get made by supporting the project on Patreon. www.patreon.com/currentlyrockhounding
I'm the president of a local rock club in New Mexico. We have a number of new people, so at our last monthly meeting I played this video in its entirety for our 50 or so members. It was educational and everyone enjoyed your presentation. Thanks, Teach!
exactly, its hard to find that, and also where to look for them. Portugal as supposedly a lot of good places, but no one talks about them. I d love to make some hunts, but first I have to gather knowledge on what conditions to look at and its seems to be even more dificult!!
@@killzilla Everyone gatekeeps because they're afraid of losing their shiny spot. But they don't just gatekeep spots, they gatekeep generalist knowledge because they plain don't want too many people getting into 'their' hobby. It's not just rockhounding, it's tons of hobbies that rely on a certain degree of specialist knowledge.
Agates are heavenly. I could happily spend the rest of my life alone on a pebble beach. Even if found a dull quartz pebble, it would still be worth it.
As someone that is new to getting into rock collecting/finding, this helps immensely. The lines really can be blurred at times so I really found relief in this video. Thank you
I was in a lapidary class that had an elderly scholar of earth sciences. He called the silicate family of rocks weeds. They get in cracks and grow everywhere. He was a fun teacher and now whenever I run across a “weed” out in the field, I fondly think of him
I'm a happy new subscriber !!! Been rockhounding since childhood when my uncle found a real big amethyst geode near my house. Really got back into it a coupla years ago, I have a bunch of rocks in vinegar, hot water and dish soap. today..the ones i picked on the coast of the Atlantic ocean in New Brunswick and PEI Canada 2 year ago....man they already look amazing after 10 minutes!! Love this channel! Keep up the great work! From Montreal Canada ;)
I really enjoyed that! It was like being back in one of my geology/mineralogy classes in college. I’m looking forward to watching your video about the methods of formation. You are wonderful at explaining things and making things clear.
Thank you so much Mr . I'm infatuated with agets i have a large collection such as yours though I was finding it hard to explain to others that they come in so many forms and descriptions. Thanks for your time 😊
Just found your channel with this video today. Your teaching style is clear and reasoned for looking at things in grey, not black & white, which is the way of most things in life. Instant subscription to this wonderful asset!
Good video CR. As I’ve only been back in the hobby a couple of years it’s very interesting to view this information and the context of complexity of just this one portion of rocks. Keep Safe & Keep Rockin
Your channel came up in my feeds I am a lover of Gemstones. Watched my 1st video of yours and was immediately hooked and Subscribed! I look forward to seeing many more of your Rockhounding Adventures and your viewpoints about this vast topic. As for Agate and Jasper, I love them both. Sadly they are two Gemstones that are vastly underrated by the general public. Their natural beauty oftentimes gets downplayed with dying and overprocessing in the marketplace. I recently Hand Knotted a beautiful natural Agate 32 inch necklace for myself. That's my personal Hobby (not a business of any kind) just for me. It'sa very calming Hobby and let's me enjoy different ways of enjoying my retirement life. At 70 plus years old I don't go rock hunting too often nowadays. Glad to see the younger ones doing that and learning about the vastness and historic values of Gemstones found in Nature.
Awesome video with very valid points! I shared this to a beginner's rockhounding page on Facebook. Hopefully it gets to more people and helps them understand better. Thanks Jared!✌😎
I like your bottom line message in the video. A whole plentitude of amalgams out there and stones certainly don't know or care about our naming rules. Lovely array of eye candy as well.
Thank you for the great video! I am just getting into the hobby and you helped me learn a few things, looking forward to watching more of your content!
Love this! As a fellow rock hound this is a great “back to basics” video! Well explained/described and very well done! Just subbed, keep up the great work!
Nice explanation on how to identify different agates and jasper. It is very educational to someone like me who really interested about the classification of different agates and jasper.
I LOVE this video sand your take on the argument! I have jasper with chalcedony where the bands are formed by the jasper and someone told me it can’t be an agate even though the jasper formed patterned bands over the chalcedony underneath.
I recently had a bunch of contravercy over my rocks on a Facebook group and I don't know much . This video was perfect for my growth in knowledge !! Thank you for a awesome video
Great topic .A few thoughts , the more I learn about rocks the more I realize how little I know. I do know I really really like Agates. Keep up the good work.
It's a complex subject for sure that no one person can fully understand and if someone says they do, well that really shows how little they actually know.
That was the greatest "Actually" I have ever heard. I had to listen to it a few times. I love rock hounding. I love learning a little here and there about what I have. And I now live where it is productive just a quarter mile from my house, which is pretty cool. I'm here to learn some more, to see it differently than I currently do. I always challenge myself that way. And now I have this "Actually" to throw out for humor's sake. Thanks!
I literally bought a box of rocks at a yard sale and was interested in learning how to identify them and polish them up, and you were the best video so far. Thanks for the details, will be back to learn more.
I really like the comparison you made between the Sunset picture jasper and that piece of rhyolite. Good information. I just ordered a new blade for my old Hi-tech trim saw using your discount code. Thanks for that!
WOW...thanks so much for this video. I was hoping I would find an individual who would go further in depth as to how these various stones are formed and what they should properly be called. Look forward to more of your info. Thanks again for posting.
First time watcher, loved the video. Funny how everyone wants to correct everyone else, the deficit of our society. This helped a lot, I will be binge watching your videos now. Would love more videos like this.
I feel like I can hear my geologist friend now, "It's all SiO2!" Lol That's literally what he says when ever someone brought in an agate/jasper/quartz/chalcedony for identification
Lovely specimens! Personally i love getting to know the different names to Moss Agates, Sagenites, Carnelians, Botryoidal or Microcrystalline features (i often find Cherts looking like yellow or green Jasper and vice versa!) and so on.. but knowing the names/identification of specific rocks, helps me identify gems quicker while hounding and also it helps me build a mental map of where gems may have formed, based on what they are, where i find them and the condition they're in. Although it's all silica, how the silica is expressed is down to the chemistry/environment it was forged in - at least in my view :) Also aren't Picture Jasper's and Rhyolite's techniaclly cousin's - they both have upwards of %60 silica content?? XD
Thank you. That explains a lot. My grandson and I decided to go agate/jasper/petrified wood collecting in NE Nebraska. I thought it would be rather easy to identify which was which. "Look!, there's and agate....no, that's jasper...hmmm. Is that a Nebr prairie agate? No! I think that's a Fairburn Agate. What's this crusty stuff? Lot's like agate or opal inside. Arggg!! i might have to go back to my own classification system...."Purdy rock....ugly rock". Still not sure if one of them was a Fairburn or not.
YOU ARE AMAZING...It's refreshing that you provided this for us NEWBIES. I would really like to see more of these for various rocks and minerals! THANK YOU! Most "rock" channels do not consider the beginner. THIS IS INVALUABLE! KUDOS!
Thank you, I try to make content that I wish I had when we were starting out and trying to navigate these topics. I like the idea of doing it for other rocks and minerals as well.
Wow, thank you I’m glad I’m picking good specimens, I wondered about the identity of my collection and you taught me what I have. Thank you for the valuable information. Much ❤️
Thank you for this. I always thought of jasper as opaque agate. But, I didn't really know. Around here we have lots of fieldstone and soapstone in streams that collect chunks of ruby.
I highly enjoyed your take, this is something I try to explain but don't have the exact wisdom to pass on as to why I see things this way and how it is sometimes more in the 50 shades of grey over black and white when it comes to categorizing stones or really anything for that matter. Thank you for the content I appreciate you !
Hahaha, 30 seconds in, and I answered no to all the above. Haven't the first clue about any of it. That's why I'm here, because I'm curious and want to learn! Thanks for all the info. Very appreciated.
I'm new to this I went on two rock hounding trips in September 2020 and found lots of cool stuff. Now I want to know what they are, my mind is a sponge thank you for your time.
I've enjoyed several of your videos as I've embarked on this new hobby, but this video is the one that made me subscribe. Fantastic stuff, thanks so much for sharing!
Very helpful video! Thank you so much! I just came back from a trip doing fossicking for the first time in my life. Your video helped me to identify some of the stones I digged out or found in the river.
Great video! My girlfriend and I are beginners at rockhounding. Started with hunting native American artifacts. We find lots of rocks we have questions about. Very helpful 👍 thank you so much for the explanation of some of your rocks.
Loved this video because it has let me know I can relax about my 'finds' that are sometimes confusing. I'm new to trying to correctly ID the rocks and mineral specimens of which I now have a few hundred pounds' worth, all locally sourced here in The Big Mitten, inland. Your channel is exactly what I needed to add to my small library of UA-cam rockhounding sites. Thanks!
I just have to say, this is one of my favorite videos ever. So helpful!! For the past year, my boyfriend and I can't stop quoting it every time we are out looking for agates on the beach 😂
The huge variety of examples was so helpful. I feel like so many resources only show one or two really "perfect" examples of the rock, all cut and polished. I wanna see the "ugliest" examples of the rock, because that's what I see more often when rockhounding. However, I actually know for sure that 13:17 is a Starship Enterprise communicator 😂
Awesome thank you:) I have a collection of rocks most I assumed to be agates but I was able to pick out the jasper pieces using this video :) Also fun learning about the make up and good ways to pick them out. I’ve got some of the crystalline(?) glad to put some names to my rocks 💜
yo u answer my questions as i am just thinking them in my head like i am in the conversation. This is the perfect type of informational video ... to the point ... presented perfectly ... no wasted bs ... all extractable knowledgeable data... u earned the sub brother ... awesome job ... checking the link video next .. i would love to see the video u speak of at the end about how they could be formed ... new to collecting myself .. but i literally find my self picking up the pebbles on the ground when i am waiting and i try to identify and think of how it was created ..and at the grocery store i am looking at the rock beds and my woman has to yell at me.. get in car honey time to go... lol .. any way amazing job brother nice collection as well ..big fan from Detroit MI
I'm glad you liked the video, I try hard to make helpful content without all the fluffy that is in so many videos these days, I just want to make the kinda of content that I would enjoy watching.
Thank you! This gave some clarity to a few of the jaspers I have and a few of the agates I have. We have been very busy cutting and shaping with a 7" wet saw. Polishing and tumbling equipment coming down the pike soon! My creek is LOADED.... STL, MO
love your explanation I have directed this video to tons it gets very frustrating arguing with people about chalcedony, agate and jasper especially those who are the sticklers for like the scientific definition of them I know that it's just your take on these but we share the same opinion keep em coming
Did you enjoy this video and find it to be informative? You can help ensure that more videos just like this get made by supporting the project on Patreon. www.patreon.com/currentlyrockhounding
I'm the president of a local rock club in New Mexico. We have a number of new people, so at our last monthly meeting I played this video in its entirety for our 50 or so members. It was educational and everyone enjoyed your presentation. Thanks, Teach!
Thank you so much for leaving this comment! It made my day.
Finally a rockhounder explains the science of rocks, instead of only how pretty they are. Thank you!
I try really hard to provide insight and value to those who watch my videos here. I think you will find a lot of content on my channel just like this.
exactly, its hard to find that, and also where to look for them. Portugal as supposedly a lot of good places, but no one talks about them. I d love to make some hunts, but first I have to gather knowledge on what conditions to look at and its seems to be even more dificult!!
@@killzilla Everyone gatekeeps because they're afraid of losing their shiny spot. But they don't just gatekeep spots, they gatekeep generalist knowledge because they plain don't want too many people getting into 'their' hobby.
It's not just rockhounding, it's tons of hobbies that rely on a certain degree of specialist knowledge.
Geology the more you learn the more you become aware of the vastness of what you don't know. Great video you rock.
As a beginner rock hunter, with an 11 year old rock hunting partner, this is the exact kind of video that I need!! Subbed.
Thank you, I'm glad you liked it.
My kids are excited for our next river walk rock search
Agates are heavenly. I could happily spend the rest of my life alone on a pebble beach. Even if found a dull quartz pebble, it would still be worth it.
I needs lots of videos just like this! I love the explanations of overlapping mineral traits. This was a refreshing and open conversation, thank you!
I'm happy you liked it.
@@CurrentlyRockhounding I think your one of the best when it comes to explanations, new fave rock dude! cant wait to binge watch em all!
Just wait until you find out why...the overlapidry.
As someone that is new to getting into rock collecting/finding, this helps immensely. The lines really can be blurred at times so I really found relief in this video. Thank you
I cant tell you how much I needed this video my good sir. Absolutely invaluable to have things laid out clearly and coherently 🙏
I was in a lapidary class that had an elderly scholar of earth sciences. He called the silicate family of rocks weeds. They get in cracks and grow everywhere. He was a fun teacher and now whenever I run across a “weed” out in the field, I fondly think of him
I'm a happy new subscriber !!! Been rockhounding since childhood when my uncle found a real big amethyst geode near my house. Really got back into it a coupla years ago, I have a bunch of rocks in vinegar, hot water and dish soap. today..the ones i picked on the coast of the Atlantic ocean in New Brunswick and PEI Canada 2 year ago....man they already look amazing after 10 minutes!! Love this channel! Keep up the great work! From Montreal Canada ;)
Love the video, I'm always learning. Keep it coming. Thanks, Chris.
I really enjoyed that! It was like being back in one of my geology/mineralogy classes in college. I’m looking forward to watching your video about the methods of formation. You are wonderful at explaining things and making things clear.
Thank you. I like to think that I'm fairly good and taking complex subjects and breaking it down for other people.
Thank you so much Mr . I'm infatuated with agets i have a large collection such as yours though I was finding it hard to explain to others that they come in so many forms and descriptions. Thanks for your time 😊
Just found your channel with this video today.
Your teaching style is clear and reasoned for looking at things in grey, not black & white, which is the way of most things in life.
Instant subscription to this wonderful asset!
Thank you, I try to make fun and helpful content.
My favorite quote is “ the waters get muddy “ 😊
Love this! I'm new and sometimes I get tired of seeing quartz, but this makes it brand new and exciting!
For real, everybody knows everything, I love that you teaching and I'm loving it
Apparently he thinks he knows everything too...?
Thanks 😊 I really appreciate you helping me out with the types you shared. I have lots of fun looking for agates, jasper, and buying geods.
Good video CR. As I’ve only been back in the hobby a couple of years it’s very interesting to view this information and the context of complexity of just this one portion of rocks. Keep Safe & Keep Rockin
Your channel came up in my feeds I am a lover of Gemstones. Watched my 1st video of yours and was immediately hooked and Subscribed! I look forward to seeing many more of your Rockhounding Adventures and your viewpoints about this vast topic. As for Agate and Jasper, I love them both. Sadly they are two Gemstones that are vastly underrated by the general public. Their natural beauty oftentimes gets downplayed with dying and overprocessing in the marketplace. I recently Hand Knotted a beautiful natural Agate 32 inch necklace for myself. That's my personal Hobby (not a business of any kind) just for me. It'sa very calming Hobby and let's me enjoy different ways of enjoying my retirement life. At 70 plus years old I don't go rock hunting too often nowadays. Glad to see the younger ones doing that and learning about the vastness and historic values of Gemstones found in Nature.
Loved this video. Wish more people had this open mindedness with these types of stones 👍
Awesome video with very valid points! I shared this to a beginner's rockhounding page on Facebook. Hopefully it gets to more people and helps them understand better. Thanks Jared!✌😎
I'm glad you liked it and thank you for sharing it.
Thank you!! Finding this video has helped dispel the insecurity of not knowing what I’m holding!!
Great info! Thank you again!
I like your bottom line message in the video. A whole plentitude of amalgams out there and stones certainly don't know or care about our naming rules. Lovely array of eye candy as well.
I think its good to try and be accurate but its good to not get too hung up on it.
Thank you for the great video! I am just getting into the hobby and you helped me learn a few things, looking forward to watching more of your content!
This is the best explanation I have seen. You broke it down so well that even I can understand. Thank you, thank you, thank you!
I'm glad you liked it.
Love this! As a fellow rock hound this is a great “back to basics” video!
Well explained/described and very well done! Just subbed, keep up the great work!
I'm glad you liked it! I think we can all use a refresher from time to time.
Nice explanation on how to identify different agates and jasper. It is very educational to someone like me who really interested about the classification of different agates and jasper.
I think what you have really cleared up for me is why this has always been so fuzzy to me.
I'm glad you liked it.
The variety is what makes rocks so amazing!
New to rockhounding, this was by far the best video ever. Going to look at some more😁 TY
I'm glad you liked it!
Hello CR, thanks for another great video. I love this topic and it's very helpful to know more about them.
I'm glad you liked it, I think its a good topic and I'm going to expand on it in the future.
Thank you Jared. Wonderfully done. I will be watching this several times it is so helpful.
I'm glad you liked it!
The truth is I love them when when they are pretty ,that is what drives mu passion !
I LOVE this video sand your take on the argument! I have jasper with chalcedony where the bands are formed by the jasper and someone told me it can’t be an agate even though the jasper formed patterned bands over the chalcedony underneath.
Thanks for opening up the door to more fun rock hunting experiences and conversations!
I'm happy you liked it.
I recently had a bunch of contravercy over my rocks on a Facebook group and I don't know much . This video was perfect for my growth in knowledge !! Thank you for a awesome video
Facebook will be like that most of the time. I'm glad you liked the video. I got lots more just like it.
Those jasper stones are so pretty. I love their deep red color. Thank you for sharing.
OMG so glad I found you! I can totally relate to your style of explaining. Thanks!
Welcome! I have lots more videos to watch as well!
Great topic .A few thoughts , the more I learn about rocks the more I realize how little I know. I do know I really really like Agates. Keep up the good work.
It's a complex subject for sure that no one person can fully understand and if someone says they do, well that really shows how little they actually know.
That was the greatest "Actually" I have ever heard. I had to listen to it a few times. I love rock hounding. I love learning a little here and there about what I have. And I now live where it is productive just a quarter mile from my house, which is pretty cool. I'm here to learn some more, to see it differently than I currently do. I always challenge myself that way. And now I have this "Actually" to throw out for humor's sake. Thanks!
I literally bought a box of rocks at a yard sale and was interested in learning how to identify them and polish them up, and you were the best video so far. Thanks for the details, will be back to learn more.
I'm glad you liked it, I have many many more videos as well!
Excellent informative video! Thanks for sharing your expertise. 🙂
Soo enjoyed this! Thanks bro .. cleared up a lot of questions for me👍🏼🌻
I'm happy you liked it.
Thank you for doing this video. I struggle with these questions daily because their is so much different stuff out there.
I'm glad you liked it.
thanks for another excellent video Jared, I always worry too much about defining quartz rocks so this helped a little to improve my understanding.
I hope the take away here is that its not really something to get too hung up on. It good to understand but not really something to split hairs over.
@@CurrentlyRockhoundingindeed that's what i was trying to say
I really like the comparison you made between the Sunset picture jasper and that piece of rhyolite. Good information. I just ordered a new blade for my old Hi-tech trim saw using your discount code. Thanks for that!
Thank you for watch and I appreciate the support.
Thank you for this excellent and informative video!
WOW...thanks so much for this video. I was hoping I would find an individual who would go further in depth as to how these various stones are formed and what they should properly be called. Look forward to more of your info. Thanks again for posting.
TY for helping to sharpen our observational skills!
Absolutely loved this video! I shared it with my rockhounding FB group 😃
I'm glad you liked it.
First time watcher, loved the video. Funny how everyone wants to correct everyone else, the deficit of our society. This helped a lot, I will be binge watching your videos now. Would love more videos like this.
I'm glad you liked it.
I feel like I can hear my geologist friend now, "It's all SiO2!" Lol
That's literally what he says when ever someone brought in an agate/jasper/quartz/chalcedony for identification
@@deepfriedmackerel2263 0p
This is very informative, especially in Kansas!!! Thank you!!!!
Lovely specimens! Personally i love getting to know the different names to Moss Agates, Sagenites, Carnelians, Botryoidal or Microcrystalline features (i often find Cherts looking like yellow or green Jasper and vice versa!) and so on.. but knowing the names/identification of specific rocks, helps me identify gems quicker while hounding and also it helps me build a mental map of where gems may have formed, based on what they are, where i find them and the condition they're in. Although it's all silica, how the silica is expressed is down to the chemistry/environment it was forged in - at least in my view :)
Also aren't Picture Jasper's and Rhyolite's techniaclly cousin's - they both have upwards of %60 silica content?? XD
The banded clam shell shaped agate on the right is very cool.
Thanks for sharing your knowledge with us.
Awesome video man, thank you for this!!! Now I just wish you weren't so cold where you had to record this!!!!
Thank you, yeah I hope to have some heat next year if the videos keep doing well.
Thank you. That explains a lot.
My grandson and I decided to go agate/jasper/petrified wood collecting in NE Nebraska. I thought it would be rather easy to identify which was which. "Look!, there's and agate....no, that's jasper...hmmm. Is that a Nebr prairie agate? No! I think that's a Fairburn Agate. What's this crusty stuff? Lot's like agate or opal inside. Arggg!!
i might have to go back to my own classification system...."Purdy rock....ugly rock".
Still not sure if one of them was a Fairburn or not.
If you need a hand you can always shoot me an email with some photos and I might be able to help.
YOU ARE AMAZING...It's refreshing that you provided this for us NEWBIES. I would really like to see more of these for various rocks and minerals! THANK YOU! Most "rock" channels do not consider the beginner. THIS IS INVALUABLE!
KUDOS!
Thank you, I try to make content that I wish I had when we were starting out and trying to navigate these topics. I like the idea of doing it for other rocks and minerals as well.
@@CurrentlyRockhounding I just found some massive specimens one I believe is 50 pounds of solid translucent quartz. this is very helpful!
Wow, thank you I’m glad I’m picking good specimens, I wondered about the identity of my collection and you taught me what I have. Thank you for the valuable information. Much ❤️
I'm glad you liked it.
Thank you for this. I always thought of jasper as opaque agate. But, I didn't really know.
Around here we have lots of fieldstone and soapstone in streams that collect chunks of ruby.
I highly enjoyed your take, this is something I try to explain but don't have the exact wisdom to pass on as to why I see things this way and how it is sometimes more in the 50 shades of grey over black and white when it comes to categorizing stones or really anything for that matter. Thank you for the content I appreciate you !
Thank you, I really enjoy making content like this and I have tons of other videos as well that you might enjoy.
I am just beginning to get into rocks. Thank you for the simple well organized explanations.
Welcome to the very best hobby! I try to keep it all really simple.
Watching this again. Thanks. Jaspers and agates are some of my favorites. And quartzite.
Thank you for watching!
This is awesome! Thank you for sharing your knowledge. You rock sir!
I'm glad you liked it!
Great video thank you for sharing your knowledge with us 🤙🏼
Thanks for the explanation and the examples. That was very interesting and informative !!!
I'm glad you liked it.
Fantastic information with beautiful samples. Thank you for creating this interesting video.
Thank you.
Hahaha, 30 seconds in, and I answered no to all the above. Haven't the first clue about any of it. That's why I'm here, because I'm curious and want to learn!
Thanks for all the info. Very appreciated.
I'm new to this I went on two rock hounding trips in September 2020 and found lots of cool stuff. Now I want to know what they are, my mind is a sponge thank you for your time.
Well its becoming the season to get out for some more trips. What part of the country do you live in?
I've enjoyed several of your videos as I've embarked on this new hobby, but this video is the one that made me subscribe. Fantastic stuff, thanks so much for sharing!
Thank you! I'm glad you enjoyed it.
Thanks for this video. Very insightful ❤
Very helpful video! Thank you so much! I just came back from a trip doing fossicking for the first time in my life. Your video helped me to identify some of the stones I digged out or found in the river.
I'm glad you liked it!
Great video! My girlfriend and I are beginners at rockhounding. Started with hunting native American artifacts. We find lots of rocks we have questions about. Very helpful 👍 thank you so much for the explanation of some of your rocks.
*so glad I found this channel*
cheers mate !
Thank you!
Loved this video because it has let me know I can relax about my 'finds' that are sometimes confusing. I'm new to trying to correctly ID the rocks and mineral specimens of which I now have a few hundred pounds' worth, all locally sourced here in The Big Mitten, inland. Your channel is exactly what I needed to add to my small library of UA-cam rockhounding sites. Thanks!
I'm glad you liked it. :)
You ROCK!
Please forgive the pun but you are seriously the Man I need in my life to learn about rocks & minerals!
Thank you so much !!!
Thank you!
As a real newbie, I learn so much from following your adventures! You're an Inspiration, keep up the amazing videos Sir! Mike.
Thank you!
Your explanation is very impressive. Thanks for sharing your knowledge. 👍
Thank you for coming by and watching!
I just have to say, this is one of my favorite videos ever. So helpful!! For the past year, my boyfriend and I can't stop quoting it every time we are out looking for agates on the beach 😂
Thank you very much! I'm glad you have been finding the videos to be helpful.
The huge variety of examples was so helpful. I feel like so many resources only show one or two really "perfect" examples of the rock, all cut and polished. I wanna see the "ugliest" examples of the rock, because that's what I see more often when rockhounding. However, I actually know for sure that 13:17 is a Starship Enterprise communicator 😂
Loved this video .. it really helped me understand why I have so much trouble identifying these rocks !!! lol ... keep them coming ! and thank you :)
Thank you!
Thank you for the lesson! New to rocks, and I have a separate bag of rocks labeled weird ones. This will help clarify them. 🍻
You are an excellent instructor/illustrator...great video thanks !
Thank you!
Awesome thank you:) I have a collection of rocks most I assumed to be agates but I was able to pick out the jasper pieces using this video :) Also fun learning about the make up and good ways to pick them out. I’ve got some of the crystalline(?) glad to put some names to my rocks 💜
Just came across your video. Thank you for uploading this. Learnt a lot from it.
I'm glad you liked it.
Outstanding Video, very informative. I learned much from this. Thank You!
I'm glad you liked it.
Thank u always learning new stuff when I watch ur channel
yo u answer my questions as i am just thinking them in my head like i am in the conversation. This is the perfect type of informational video ... to the point ... presented perfectly ... no wasted bs ... all extractable knowledgeable data... u earned the sub brother ... awesome job ... checking the link video next .. i would love to see the video u speak of at the end about how they could be formed ... new to collecting myself .. but i literally find my self picking up the pebbles on the ground when i am waiting and i try to identify and think of how it was created ..and at the grocery store i am looking at the rock beds and my woman has to yell at me.. get in car honey time to go... lol .. any way amazing job brother nice collection as well ..big fan from Detroit MI
I'm glad you liked the video, I try hard to make helpful content without all the fluffy that is in so many videos these days, I just want to make the kinda of content that I would enjoy watching.
Thank you! This gave some clarity to a few of the jaspers I have and a few of the agates I have. We have been very busy cutting and shaping with a 7" wet saw. Polishing and tumbling equipment coming down the pike soon! My creek is LOADED.... STL, MO
Very informative! Thank you so much!! Great video. 😊
I'm glad you liked it.
I’m fairly new to the hobby. Thank you for the video. It was very helpful.
Hi sir. Glad to see you. Thank you so much. God bless you. I'm grateful to you.
I'm glad you liked it.
love your explanation I have directed this video to tons it gets very frustrating arguing with people about chalcedony, agate and jasper especially those who are the sticklers for like the scientific definition of them I know that it's just your take on these but we share the same opinion keep em coming
Thank you!
Excellent video! I watched it while at work shhhhh! 🤫
You're secret is safe with me.
Ohhhh I also do that!!! Watch rock hounding videos in work!!!!
@@aydamercado6798 I won't tell... I promise!
I wont tell on you if you dont tell on me ;D
Love the video! and the poetic license for classified the silica beautiful rocks!!!
This was so interesting, thank you for your knowledge 👍💕💕💕💕
I'm happy you liked it.
I had many questions. After this video...I have even more questions...😁
Seriously...great video! Thank you so much!!!
Ask away!