It occurs to me that one of the best things about your channel is no bs opening, scratch screen, music or entry video. You get straight to the topic, and I really appreciate that.
It's hard finding youtube channels that haven't sold out to pleasing the algorithm. His subscriber growth has been slow but very organic and I hope he keeps his content structure this way for the forseeable future.
Thanks for creating clean, no frills, educational content. And thanks especially for not recycling the same tired humor and dumbing down of content. I love the straight forward presentation of facts. Keep it up please.
Thank you! Your addition of fort rock to the hole in the ground was perfect. I've been there, it is a bit hard to get to but it is quite the thing to see, the elevated rim is surprising. the Newberry crater is one of my favorite places to camp. I know your coverage of volcanos drives most of the views and subs on your channel, but I really appreciate coverage of these smaller formations.
What is that thing? "A big hole in the ground." Yeah I know, but what do we call it? "The Big Hole In The Ground."... I swear, geology gets more interesting every time I watch one of your videos.
@@deanfirnatine7814 Crack in the Ground had been used as trash dump site. Just a short distance from Christmas Valley, some friends and I back in the early 1960s noticed a sign pointing to it. When we got there we were surprised see all the garbage in it. We thought it was some kind of joke to have a sign pointing a garbage dump as a scenic site. Obviously since then, most of the trash has been removed, but I think there might still be a few old bicycles in there. It's pretty long for a good hike these days. I'm pretty sure most of the Crack was still clean even back then, but we decided to move on and visit Hole in the Ground.
@@NightBazaar I spent a summer in Christmas Valley in the 90s working on irrigation with my cousin. I went and found Crack-in-the-Ground while I was there. I can only imagine the difficulty of removing trash, much of the bottom looks inaccessible. I wanted to climb down and explore, but my cousin reminded me that the helicopter ride to the nearest medical facility is quite expensive.
When you uploaded your older video of this place, I put it on my list of places to visit. There are some rockhounding areas on the route to Hole in the Ground from the Willamette valley. One of my family's planned upcoming road trips will take us near there, since my kids and I are mild rockhounders. and I look forward to seeing it. Last year my husband and I camped near MT. Jefferson and I am going to see if you've made any videos about the mountain. Central and Eastern Oregon is an incredible place.
Thanks as always! Hole In the Ground's shape is quite smooth; its outer rim is very circular and uninterrupted. This volcanic field, as a whole, is very interesting.
I tried going there while snow was still on the ground 😳. Even with a AWD vehicle, be prepared to get stuck if you haven’t got the right mud and snow tires !
Thanks for giving the Ft Rock area some coverage. Nowadays Ft Rock has a much shorter dirt road, and some of the surviving Pioneer Houses have been moved nearby.
The North American plate hears you and is working on it. 😊 ... Juan de Fuca plate will be gone soon (for geological time values of "soon"), when the spreading ridge subducts.
From Nick Zenter's crazy Eocene A to Z series and some of the related papers I'm pretty sure that explanation is wrong as slab rollback requires the existence of a subducted slab but seismic tomography shows that instead the slab suddenly and abruptly terminates here at the high lava plains with no evidence for any slab continuation to the east. Instead there is a abnormally warm buoyant mantle associated with a linear translationally offset solid mantle low sheer velocity anomaly continuous with the Snake river Plain Yellowstone the Rio Grande rift the Gouda ridge the Juan de Fuca ridge and the East Pacific Rise. In essence this is the site where the East Pacific Rise a deep rooted fast spreading abnormally warm Mid Ocean Ridge cuts beneath North America.
@@Dragrath1I also connect the EPR divergent activity under the SW NA Cordillera with the B&R extension and the California Trinity conveying NW into Oregon, which is also the source the NW rotation.
What a delightful, unexpected, and informational video. Much better then many youtube shorts i watch. and in 5 minutes roughly. This is really great. thank you.
Great video. That for the explanation. There’s another formation near Christmas Valley Oregon called “Crack in the Ground” that’s worth the road trip and a video.
Thanks for another great video! I live in Oregon and have been to Fort Rock. Always interesting to see how things came to be. Our local PBS station OPB has a show titled Oregon Field Guide and a recent episode was about a recent scientific expedition to the Axial Seamount. I think you might be able to find it online or even on UA-cam. Now I am going to watch your video on it from last year. Somehow I missed it. So cool that the 2015 eruption was actually predicted and the only volcanic eruption to be correctly predicted!! Thank you for such great content.
The view of Fort Rock from the top of Paulina point is amazing. Go in late summer though or snow can be a problem. So much geological activity in that area even as recent as when people lived there 10,000+ years ago.
Thanks for covering that area. Lots to check out, for those that explore. Ft Rock is now under a couple of miles off pavement, and some of the surviving pioneer houses have been moved near Ft Rock.
Question: would there be differences in the remnants of these explosions if they occurred underneath the water as opposed to on land near the lake? Thanks and I love your videos, concise and packed with info.
Such a fascinating volcanic area. I still wonder what process generated the huge circular mountain range between crater lake and Fort Rock. You can also find active cascades volcanoes (crater lake) and ancient Yellowstone hotspots in the area. It's full of activity in recent geologic times.
Been there. Looks just like an impact crater. Thanks for explaining it! Fort Rock is a pretty amazing place too on a moonless night for astrophotography
Vid has been up more than 30 minutes and no one has yet pointed out that since it's a circular feature west of Greece it must be the ruins of Atlantis. What's more, there are other circular features in the area. Multiple lost ancient cities! Wow!
Just curious here, when you zoom in at about 1:16 it appears there is a large circular structure to the west, about the size of the dry lake. Any details on that?
Wow! Thank you for covering central Oregon. On a side note: for the past 3 days a wildfire has been burning outside of Prineville. I mention this because, typically, wildfire season doesn't begin until August.....
Love the randomness of this showing up on my home screen, and I love learning about random stuff like this. I only have one complaint, only one, and I know it might be a pet peeve of mine, but you seem to hold the mic too close to your mouth and I find the resulting effect on the voiceover distracting 😂 please consider pulling the mic away a bit so it doesn't have that almost ASMR quality to it. Additionally, I'd recommend opening your mouth a bit more when you record these voiceovers in order to give your voice a bit more brightness, and as an added benefit, this can also help compensate for any volume changes from pulling the mic away
Nice to get the history of the area, I had always wondered about the features there. I live in the willamette valley, but have done work around the hilariously named "Christmas Valley" area a few times. Oregon just has an amazing variety of features when it comes to geology and biomes. That said, it takes a special kind to get excited about "hole in the ground" oregon. If that's your thing though, I definitely recommend "crack in the ground" as well. Note that Christmas valley has a hotel and 2 places to eat last I checked a few years ago. Those may or may not still be around...
Been to all the discussed features and one more: Crack In the Ground! When we arrived at Hole In the Ground, a club of cannon owners were shooting from the rim down into the center at a target. We had previously considered walking down into it, but our plans changed, lol
Could you explain the really large circular feature the you can see on google maps that is just west of the same area as in this article. It’s really large and I’ve never seen anything mentioned about this.
@@MrWiseinheart A craton is a large chunk of the "original" continental crust that has survived more or less intact for the last several billion years or so. Basically areas that have never gone through rifting or subduction.
The fort Rock outcropping is the location of a cave that they discover 30,000-year-old Indian sandals in and other copper lights indicates that they are One of the oldest proofs of human occupation in the Pacific Northwest. Indicates that there must have been multiple human crossings of land bridges during or just at the peak of glaciation. Both fort Rock and hole in the ground are great places to go visit You can actually camp at hole in the ground. But is also probably not discussed yet in this video is that there's tons of lava tubes in the area that you can freely enter and explore
I'm really curious to know what that gigantic, almost perfectly circular terrain scarring is just to the southwest of the big hole in the ground. What caused that? Was it also remnants of a vocalnic crater or is is something different? Or is it anything at all?
Yeah, I've noticed that too, but to be fair, the amount it expands depends on pressure and temperature. Dunno if GH is working out the weight of the overburden with a crib sheet of the Ideal Gas Laws. ;-)
Pretty good chance that if they occured 20,000 years ago that people were in the area. May have even had people fishing in the lake. In similar lakes in Nevada there are records of villages and fishing communities along the shorelines of these lakes. They probably did not enjoy the big bangs.....
Whee! I love these discoveries! PS. Watching the old Westerns (like Wagon Train), I spend more time looking at the rock formations than paying attention to the story.)
Good explanation of the mechanism. The dates -- maybe. It could have been formed durimg the YDC after the Cordilleran and Laurentude ice sheets melted abruptly.
What's up with the vaguely circular feature just to the west of Fort Rock? Is it an impact crater? Coincidence of erosion? Volcanic caldera? It seems to have a handful of volcanic features within it and is suspiciously located between Yamsay mountain and Newberry, so it seems like it could possibly be an old eroded caldera. Or, considering the volcanic history of the region and the very large size of this feature, perhaps a very _very_ old caldera from the time when caldera volcanism was going crazy in the region.
I wonder how the known name of the lake from that time got to us! :P Maybe it's just my poor english skills but that sounded funny to me. Great content as always ofc...
There are two of those volcanic craters just west of Mountain Home Idaho. They are located right next to each other. They are slightly smaller than this one.
Great video. Straight to the point Very informative No before video telling to like and subscribe and hit the bell crap. Thank you and im gonna hit the subscribe button.,..
I thought a Maar referred to a Volcano that produces carbon dioxide. Like the deadly one in Cameroon. I remember it was Chapter 10 of the Volcanology text book. But you did not mention carbon dioxide. There is also an ancient volcano somewhere in Europe which had eruptions that preserved such puzzling and interesting fossils... like turtles mid-coitus, though I learnt that from SciShow.
It occurs to me that one of the best things about your channel is no bs opening, scratch screen, music or entry video. You get straight to the topic, and I really appreciate that.
Bonne remarque 🙂
ditto
It's hard finding youtube channels that haven't sold out to pleasing the algorithm. His subscriber growth has been slow but very organic and I hope he keeps his content structure this way for the forseeable future.
It's so nice to have actual educational content that isn't just getting pumped out for views.
And his voice is extremely easy to understand and monotone much like old-school educational content.
Thanks for creating clean, no frills, educational content. And thanks especially for not recycling the same tired humor and dumbing down of content. I love the straight forward presentation of facts. Keep it up please.
Thank you! Your addition of fort rock to the hole in the ground was perfect. I've been there, it is a bit hard to get to but it is quite the thing to see, the elevated rim is surprising. the Newberry crater is one of my favorite places to camp. I know your coverage of volcanos drives most of the views and subs on your channel, but I really appreciate coverage of these smaller formations.
What is that thing? "A big hole in the ground." Yeah I know, but what do we call it? "The Big Hole In The Ground."... I swear, geology gets more interesting every time I watch one of your videos.
Hole in the Ground is very close to Crack in the Ground, not joking.
@@deanfirnatine7814 Crack in the Ground had been used as trash dump site. Just a short distance from Christmas Valley, some friends and I back in the early 1960s noticed a sign pointing to it. When we got there we were surprised see all the garbage in it. We thought it was some kind of joke to have a sign pointing a garbage dump as a scenic site. Obviously since then, most of the trash has been removed, but I think there might still be a few old bicycles in there. It's pretty long for a good hike these days. I'm pretty sure most of the Crack was still clean even back then, but we decided to move on and visit Hole in the Ground.
So maybe Boring, Oregon is actually named after a big bore hole.
Whoever named it was incredibly imaginative! 😂😂😂
@@NightBazaar I spent a summer in Christmas Valley in the 90s working on irrigation with my cousin. I went and found Crack-in-the-Ground while I was there. I can only imagine the difficulty of removing trash, much of the bottom looks inaccessible. I wanted to climb down and explore, but my cousin reminded me that the helicopter ride to the nearest medical facility is quite expensive.
When you uploaded your older video of this place, I put it on my list of places to visit. There are some rockhounding areas on the route to Hole in the Ground from the Willamette valley. One of my family's planned upcoming road trips will take us near there, since my kids and I are mild rockhounders. and I look forward to seeing it.
Last year my husband and I camped near MT. Jefferson and I am going to see if you've made any videos about the mountain. Central and Eastern Oregon is an incredible place.
Here is my Mt. Jefferson video: ua-cam.com/video/McXVCyG8kfI/v-deo.htmlsi=IGnhGihY70wx4f6r
Plenty sasquatch here
Love your channel, just the facts, no junk filler's, no long winded self praising monolog's...THANKS !
Oregon has the highest percentage per square mile of volcanic originated topography in North America @82%, second only to Hawaii at 100%.
Wow I would have never thought.. good to know.
Sometimes driving around Oregon I have to remember that because there is volcanic s*** everywhere
regon used to be over the hotspot that created yellowstone . plate tectonics is impressive
Thanks as always! Hole In the Ground's shape is quite smooth; its outer rim is very circular and uninterrupted. This volcanic field, as a whole, is very interesting.
I tried going there while snow was still on the ground 😳. Even with a AWD vehicle, be prepared to get stuck if you haven’t got the right mud and snow tires !
Lots of clay and silt Im guessing.
Made it with my Mercury Milan
Had no issues in my Highlander. Road was unremarkable. Did a drone video of HIG and Fort Rock. Cool area.
Try the roads next time.
@@DM-wp9vq always that “one” guy 😆
Your concise explanation of the eruption process really
paints a picture in one's mind . . . almost like being there, seeing it.
Way cool ..
And you start with actual pictures, photographic and maps, on which to build from your narration. The three-axis pans and zooms are especially great.
Thanks for all the hard work on these videos
"The Big Hole" and "Hole-in-the-Ground," in my opinion gotta be one of the best volcano names cause it's such a simple name
How about Crater Lake?
Grand Canyon is pretty good too
Thanks for giving the Ft Rock area some coverage.
Nowadays Ft Rock has a much shorter dirt road, and some of the surviving Pioneer Houses have been moved nearby.
Sasquatch dig Fort rock
That Juan De Fuca plate is a real problem, someone should do something about it. lol
LOL 😂
The North American plate hears you and is working on it. 😊 ... Juan de Fuca plate will be gone soon (for geological time values of "soon"), when the spreading ridge subducts.
From Nick Zenter's crazy Eocene A to Z series and some of the related papers I'm pretty sure that explanation is wrong as slab rollback requires the existence of a subducted slab but seismic tomography shows that instead the slab suddenly and abruptly terminates here at the high lava plains with no evidence for any slab continuation to the east. Instead there is a abnormally warm buoyant mantle associated with a linear translationally offset solid mantle low sheer velocity anomaly continuous with the Snake river Plain Yellowstone the Rio Grande rift the Gouda ridge the Juan de Fuca ridge and the East Pacific Rise. In essence this is the site where the East Pacific Rise a deep rooted fast spreading abnormally warm Mid Ocean Ridge cuts beneath North America.
@@Dragrath1I also connect the EPR divergent activity under the SW NA Cordillera with the B&R extension and the California Trinity conveying NW into Oregon, which is also the source the NW rotation.
Drywall screws and Spackle...fixes everything around here...
I've been here so many times and I'm so happy to see an explanation of what happend. Thank you!
What a delightful, unexpected, and informational video. Much better then many youtube shorts i watch. and in 5 minutes roughly. This is really great. thank you.
I went there 20+ years ago. It’s impressive but it’s a long drive down a washboard dirt road to get there. 😂
So did I, fun to see the geology there!
Was VERY glad to be driving a rental last time I was on that road!
@@bryanpritchett 😄😄😄
I used to that way,
Slow down, enjoy the drive and be glad you're not walking.
✌️🍀
Great video. That for the explanation. There’s another formation near Christmas Valley Oregon called “Crack in the Ground” that’s worth the road trip and a video.
Passed through Christmas Valley on an Epic Cross Country Motorcycle Adventure in 1984....
Thanks for another great video! I live in Oregon and have been to Fort Rock. Always interesting to see how things came to be. Our local PBS station OPB has a show titled Oregon Field Guide and a recent episode was about a recent scientific expedition to the Axial Seamount. I think you might be able to find it online or even on UA-cam. Now I am going to watch your video on it from last year. Somehow I missed it. So cool that the 2015 eruption was actually predicted and the only volcanic eruption to be correctly predicted!! Thank you for such great content.
I love it when you feature my backyard!! 🥰
The view of Fort Rock from the top of Paulina point is amazing. Go in late summer though or snow can be a problem. So much geological activity in that area even as recent as when people lived there 10,000+ years ago.
Thank you for covering this big ace hole.
My parents used to live in the area for 20 years and we spent a lot of time in the area and it’s looks even bigger when on the ground
Thanks for covering that area. Lots to check out, for those that explore.
Ft Rock is now under a couple of miles off pavement, and some of the surviving pioneer houses have been moved near Ft Rock.
As always, great job.
Fought fire in this area. Very cool geology around there. Rapidly changing and lots of caves
Very nice and informative. Thank you
How have I lived in Oregon all my life and not heard of much less been to either of these places?! I think they will go on my list of places to go!
thanks for the information
I saw this from the air on a flight to Vegas once and had to Google Earth it when I got to the hotel. Quite distinct from that vantage point!
Very interesting! I love to know about stuff about history! Great channel
Great episode. Thanks
I really enjoy your videos!
Question: would there be differences in the remnants of these explosions if they occurred underneath the water as opposed to on land near the lake? Thanks and I love your videos, concise and packed with info.
Such a fascinating volcanic area. I still wonder what process generated the huge circular mountain range between crater lake and Fort Rock. You can also find active cascades volcanoes (crater lake) and ancient Yellowstone hotspots in the area. It's full of activity in recent geologic times.
Been there. Looks just like an impact crater. Thanks for explaining it! Fort Rock is a pretty amazing place too on a moonless night for astrophotography
Oregon is amazing. Geologists and rock hounds wonderland.
Vid has been up more than 30 minutes and no one has yet pointed out that since it's a circular feature west of Greece it must be the ruins of Atlantis. What's more, there are other circular features in the area. Multiple lost ancient cities! Wow!
😂😂
Been camping there a couple times; it hasn’t changed since the 90s for as far as I know. Cattle will come through once in awhile
Just curious here, when you zoom in at about 1:16 it appears there is a large circular structure to the west, about the size of the dry lake. Any details on that?
Wow! Thank you for covering central Oregon. On a side note: for the past 3 days a wildfire has been burning outside of Prineville. I mention this because, typically, wildfire season doesn't begin until August.....
Love the randomness of this showing up on my home screen, and I love learning about random stuff like this. I only have one complaint, only one, and I know it might be a pet peeve of mine, but you seem to hold the mic too close to your mouth and I find the resulting effect on the voiceover distracting 😂 please consider pulling the mic away a bit so it doesn't have that almost ASMR quality to it. Additionally, I'd recommend opening your mouth a bit more when you record these voiceovers in order to give your voice a bit more brightness, and as an added benefit, this can also help compensate for any volume changes from pulling the mic away
Went there few years ago along with crack in the ground and fort rock
Nice to get the history of the area, I had always wondered about the features there. I live in the willamette valley, but have done work around the hilariously named "Christmas Valley" area a few times. Oregon just has an amazing variety of features when it comes to geology and biomes.
That said, it takes a special kind to get excited about "hole in the ground" oregon. If that's your thing though, I definitely recommend "crack in the ground" as well. Note that Christmas valley has a hotel and 2 places to eat last I checked a few years ago. Those may or may not still be around...
Been to all the discussed features and one more: Crack In the Ground! When we arrived at Hole In the Ground, a club of cannon owners were shooting from the rim down into the center at a target. We had previously considered walking down into it, but our plans changed, lol
I have been to fort rock. Amazing place to visit. Now I got to go back to see the big hole
Very interesting! Thanks for sharing. 😊
The Pacific Northwest really is Disney Land for geologists.
Could you explain the really large circular feature the you can see on google maps that is just west of the same area as in this article. It’s really large and I’ve never seen anything mentioned about this.
Could you cover Cratons?
That's a really big topic.
Is that another location...?
@@MrWiseinheart A craton is a large chunk of the "original" continental crust that has survived more or less intact for the last several billion years or so. Basically areas that have never gone through rifting or subduction.
@@Regolith86 Thanks 👍 good to know.
Fascinating episode.
Pretty awesome content
The fort Rock outcropping is the location of a cave that they discover 30,000-year-old Indian sandals in and other copper lights indicates that they are One of the oldest proofs of human occupation in the Pacific Northwest. Indicates that there must have been multiple human crossings of land bridges during or just at the peak of glaciation.
Both fort Rock and hole in the ground are great places to go visit You can actually camp at hole in the ground. But is also probably not discussed yet in this video is that there's tons of lava tubes in the area that you can freely enter and explore
this is an impressive crater. Google earth doesn't tell the story. I've been there... It is HUGE !!
I'm really curious to know what that gigantic, almost perfectly circular terrain scarring is just to the southwest of the big hole in the ground. What caused that? Was it also remnants of a vocalnic crater or is is something different? Or is it anything at all?
I stopped by there once on my way to Reno about 30 years ago.
Toured through Craters on the moon national monument. Was quite surprised how volcanically active the region was.
I find it amusing that when you describe steam expanding in volume that you rarely use the same number...
Yeah, I've noticed that too, but to be fair, the amount it expands depends on pressure and temperature. Dunno if GH is working out the weight of the overburden with a crib sheet of the Ideal Gas Laws. ;-)
You can drive down to the bottom, my brother and son did it last year. Bring some cajones and a 4x4 though. Very cool place to visit
Wow, a huge blowout!
I've been to this. The drive to get in to it is awful, but worth it. Fort Eock is beautiful
We like exploring that whole area .
My daughter and I travel there by using dirt roads only as much as possible .
I was just there last week! Interesting area.
Pretty good chance that if they occured 20,000 years ago that people were in the area. May have even had people fishing in the lake. In similar lakes in Nevada there are records of villages and fishing communities along the shorelines of these lakes.
They probably did not enjoy the big bangs.....
Whee! I love these discoveries! PS. Watching the old Westerns (like Wagon Train), I spend more time looking at the rock formations than paying attention to the story.)
Been there how many times and never quite realized how it was made, until now
The circular agriculture is a blight on the landscape.
I have been there multitudes... very interesting.
Good explanation of the mechanism. The dates -- maybe. It could have been formed durimg the YDC after the Cordilleran and Laurentude ice sheets melted abruptly.
What's up with the vaguely circular feature just to the west of Fort Rock? Is it an impact crater? Coincidence of erosion? Volcanic caldera? It seems to have a handful of volcanic features within it and is suspiciously located between Yamsay mountain and Newberry, so it seems like it could possibly be an old eroded caldera. Or, considering the volcanic history of the region and the very large size of this feature, perhaps a very _very_ old caldera from the time when caldera volcanism was going crazy in the region.
I wonder how the known name of the lake from that time got to us! :P
Maybe it's just my poor english skills but that sounded funny to me.
Great content as always ofc...
There are two of those volcanic craters just west of Mountain Home Idaho. They are located right next to each other. They are slightly smaller than this one.
The narrator sounds like he's trying to emulate Carl Sagan.
Oh yeah, I remember when this happened! I still had to walk to school 5 miles uphill both ways!
And in the snow during a blizzard
Really interesting.
I learn something every day 👍AND IM 60 :)
The computer narration sounds like a Dutch version of Carl Sagan.
Is that why the ore is gone in Oregon?
(Couldn't resit -- great setup. ;)
What a place for a concert! 🎉😊
Great video.
Straight to the point
Very informative
No before video telling to like and subscribe and hit the bell crap.
Thank you and im gonna hit the subscribe button.,..
Interesting!
I wonder if you could do a video featuring the Malaga Landslide in WA state, the largest known landslide in WA state.
There is a lot of erosion due to the amount of rain as well as logging activity like the Oso landslide a few years ago
Are these related in any way to the Idaho lava fields?
Barely missed the road and visitor's center.
What is with the videos of topics you've covered? Just curious because I'll watch em all anyway.
He's redoing/updating some of his earlier videos now that he has more experience and more info is available.
So can we expect mass lava flows/explosions when the Cascadia-SZ goes?
Vid about the deserts in Greece?
WOW, almost took out the road.
I have camped there many times. Dusty and hot in summer. Quiet. Windy. Need high clearance or perfect weather.
I thought a Maar referred to a Volcano that produces carbon dioxide. Like the deadly one in Cameroon. I remember it was Chapter 10 of the Volcanology text book. But you did not mention carbon dioxide. There is also an ancient volcano somewhere in Europe which had eruptions that preserved such puzzling and interesting fossils... like turtles mid-coitus, though I learnt that from SciShow.
Wonderful ❤
Santa Bárbara, in Azores Terceira island, Portugal, volcano updated to V3, today´s news!
Righteous structure 🎉
Has this channel covered all the natural wonders found in Civ VI?
Zentner is talking slap brake off to explain other anomalies too. thank you
54m is pretty deep, right? Sounds deep.
If some of these maars formed under the lake, would they have caused "tsunamis" whose traces could still be found along the ancient shoreline?
My fav place!
Volcano in Minnesota?
Gotta throw a rave at Fort Rock❤