Discovering my Primitive Artifact 4 Years Later...and a rattlesnake
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- Опубліковано 25 тра 2024
- While exploring areas that have a history of native culture I am always looking for clues to their past existence. Often I find mortar holes which provide evidence that a site was used for the processing of wild food and often for gathering of wild foods too. In this video I revisit the site where I placed a clay pot with pumpkin seeds four years earlier to experience a little of what it may have been like when people long ago left items hidden away in small caves or elsewhere. Along the way I pass a rattlesnake and find palm fruit to eat.
Protect your feet while allowing them to be free with my favorite sandals:
Luna Sandals are the original sandals that I've worn on my adventures: www.lunasandals.com/?rfsn=102...
My social media links:
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Facebook @ChadZAdventure
Drums of the Deep by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license. creativecommons.org/licenses/... - Навчання та стиль
I love this channel. A return to nature like this is something we as humans all need.
I love doing this.
I've been one of your audience since the day you started your survival. I've been watching you building your first hut, cooking cactus with quail eggs, and learned a lot of stuff on wilderness with your experiences and trivias, even today I'm still enjoying the world you made. Keep on surviving, you really are the chad, Chad.
Thank you so much for staying with me so long. I really appreciate that.
What a fun little moment with the pumpkin seeds and 4 yrs. That was a great idea. Let's see what the next 4yrs bring. 😊
I was excited to find it still here.
I think instead of replacing the same white rock that was left there, you should have put something else there to let them know that they had mail.
@@mikesavoie3142 I'll go back soon and do something different. I wasn't expecting to find something added to the cache.
@@ChadZuberAdventures I wonder who took the seeds ? 😊
Your dedication and effort in creating videos are truly inspiring! I've enjoyed watching your journey of primitive discoveries and connecting with ancient heritage.
Keep delivering engaging and curiosity-arousing content!
Thanks, I appreciate it.
Its incredible how many different plants and foods that are in a desert like that! Almost everything has a use!
It's fascinating
Think about beekeeping. You can make a beehive out of rotten log, wax for candles, honey for eating. If there are flowers - this can work.
You need to work on that sentence structure homie 💀
@@user-en7wl7nt8y Regardless of the former sentence structure, but the bees he's talking about aren't native to the United States or the Americas in general. Would keeping honey bees be conform with Chad's "philosopy" anyway?
Edit I was wrong, see Chad's reply!
A quick research, even if Wikipedia, showed Melipona beecheii is the bee kept for honey by Mayans
According to what I've read bees did exist in the Americas since a very long time ago. I have read from numerous sources that the Maya people of Central America collected and used honey.
@@marcwpunkt418 don’t tag me in bee dissertation nerd 💀
@@ChadZuberAdventures thanks for this interesting piece of information!!
Welcome back, Chad.
Unearthing your Primitive Artifact after four years, alongside encountering a rattlesnake, exemplifies your deep connection to nature and the profound journey of exploration you embark on. Your curiosity and resilience in facing unexpected challenges make your adventures both captivating and inspiring.
And I Am Floating Village Life
Thank you for the wonderful comment. Is Floating Village Life your UA-cam channel? That sounds interesting.
Sunday Blessings to you Chad and all your loyal followers
Thank you and blessings to you too.
Hey, figured I'd offer my 2 cents for getting that palm fruit easier: Use the aforementioned rake to knock the berries down, but instead of letting them fall and collecting them off the ground (necessarily missing at least a few because of their small size), have a wide-mouthed basket on a second stick just underneath them. I realize that might be a lot of work to invest in a project only useful for 1 task, so making the basket attach to the stick in a way that you can detach it and use it regularly would be smart. Another plausible method would be making a ladder(as you mentioned), but that relies on having even ground and carries a significant risk of falling and hurting yourself badly.
Three years ago I had that same idea and I actually made a tool like what you describe with a basket hanging underneath. However it didn't work well because the rake kept getting hung up on the branches. The branches are really strong and don't break easy so anything less than steel is a challenge. Perhaps my design could be improved. You can see the video here: ua-cam.com/video/ESbDBCMp6EA/v-deo.html
@@ChadZuberAdventures I just took a look and yes, it does seem like the branches are a bit too sturdy for a primitive rake to snap off. Something else did strike me: Maybe a primitive snare, similar to those used for hunting lobster while diving, could be used to pull the branches down and into range of a stone cutting tool attached to another, shorter stick(for better leverage/control)? I think it might be possible if your cordage is strong enough and makes the way the branches prefer to bend work to your advantage, though snap-backs once the branch is fully cut would be a potential hazard.
You did very much hard work to make a video. Thank you, sir. i do appreciate you. ❤👏👏
Thanks for watching
A chap of the first water..bravissimo.from prague
Hello From Lancaster California 🇺🇸 #neff ❤
Hello Ryan!
a vert interesting video indeed so much so that i may even start to do this
Sống ngoài da mạc thật nguy hiểm ,con rắn đuôi chuông to quá .
I've missed you chad!😍...u quite for a long time🤗
Where have you been?
@@ChadZuberAdventures 💞😁
Oh that's just cool😆👍
Wow, so beautiful yet so dangerous. Stay safe out there 😊
It's a really interesting landscape out here.
Nice video. Can't wait to see a video visiting the hut made about 2 years ago.
I'm going there soon
I'm from Indonesia, enjoy watching your videos
Thank you!
Wow amazing
Excellent video my friend greetings from Peru
My hero chad. From mizoram
Me gustan los videos de ofrendas!
Que bien. Gracias.
I respect your skills, I am a Vietnamese commando, you remind me of many things about the past
4 años en la naturaleza.! Like si lo sigues viendo después de 4 años y crees que él será un caso de estudio para la ciencia en el futuro
Chad can teach those Science Hippies a thing or two.
Your back ❤
It's YOU'RE *
absolutely love to do what you do Mr zubar. what a life. 🤜😎❤️
It keeps life interesting.
This was really awesome. Cheers, Chad! ✌️
I'm glad you enjoyed it!
Thank you for another wonderful vid. That is very cool, I was just thinking, would be interesting if many hundreds of years somebody found an artifact of yours. That rock was a nice addition, wonder what would happen next. maybe a little slate with a picture as a welcome or waving figure... why not break the ice with whoever eh?
Yeah, I am going to make more artifacts, not just pots but maybe baskets or tools or even art, and leave them hidden in caves. Maybe leave a message and see what happens over time. That will be fun and interesting.
❤👏🏻🙌🏻
I've been here the whole step of the way, like four months before I came out as female. You're teachings along with pt and junk yard foxes teaching helped me get through very tough times in my life. Today I use it as an art. But would rather wildly with money in my pockets for mental health and medical needs. Life wasnt great to my bones. I managed to live sober, quit alcohol, help outreach find people, helped others build a stealthier shelter, and also shared your videos alot with friends in the local area. Honestly, some of the homeless folks are learning to live better here in Nashville, since homeoessness is basically illegal now when it comes to having somewhere to sleep. I survive and I teach, the greatest outdoor UA-camrs I know. I used youtube to share my life occasionally. I remebered your gardening tips type of video. I have a vague memory but that video helped me discover you and boom, I learned rope.
I'm so happy that you have made so much progressed and are living a more purposeful life with meaning. That is awesome. And may you continue to grow. If we are not growing, then we are dying.
ALONG TIME FOR CREATE VIDEO !
Que paisagem linda,so fascinado por desertos
Man the videos are aways great
I'm glad you enjoy them.
Imagine the people in the year 4000 finding Chad's things and thinking that we were still living in the Stone Age until the year 2024 🤣🤣
It's funny how stone age skills are being practiced more and more today.
@@ChadZuberAdventures 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻🫶🏻
Best of luck on your journey so far🎉❤
Thanks a lot!
id be really interested in seeing a video about all the cacti in your area, or maybe a playlist.
There are only a few that I use.
Would be awesome if one day you would make a video here in Finland or some other nordic country.
I would love to go there
Great vid Tarzan and love the scenery as well it's great all the pot is really holding strong too time has did it good
Looking forward the next chapter of the pot offering! Maybe the seeds were taken and the quartz was offered in trade :)
I think that rodents ate the seeds.
always great videos Chad. The washingtonia Filifera fruit looked nice and plump. I bet that cups got a story to tell.
Dear Chad, I wonder if you can fashion some sort of pruning hook to make collecting thel Fan Palm fruit easier?
Yes, I'm sure I could make a serrated knife blade and attach it to the end of a long pole. That would work. I will need to fashion together some materials to do that.
It almost seems like the pretty rock was like a trade for the seeds in the pod.
I doubt they took the seeds. A mouse probably ate them. Maybe they even saw the video when I first put the pot there. I should check the comments again.
Hello my fish story telling friend.
I see where someone was asking about bees.By chance did you ever get to go back and check on those bees that were making a hive in your old chimney? If so..any honey?
Pretty neat about the pot with seeds and now fruit in it.
It reminded me of when i was 12 and threw a couple bottles into the intracoastal waterway at my grandparents house with a note inside asking the person that found it please write me back telling me where they found it.
Well a few weeks later in the mail i got a letter from a gentleman (for any younger folks reading this...this was way before emails.lol)
He told me where he found the bottle which was about 3 miles from where i threw it in at.
I thought it was awesome that i actually got a correspondence from a complete stranger !
Now fast forward 40 years.
When i was commercial fishing about 60 miles off the coast of Florida i always checked (and removed) any bottles i found floating for a note inside.No i never did throw one into the ocean as today i am strictly against littering.
But i often wonder where one would of went if i threw it into the Gulf Stream.
Until next time my friend...stay safe.
That's really cool. I remember seeing cartoons of notes being put in bottles and thrown into the ocean but I never did that. I guess this is kind of the same thing however I'm using natural materials that aren't considered littering so it's totally cool.
@@ChadZuberAdventures Your idea is totally cool !
An other great video!
Отличный сюжет 👍
Спасибо
@@ChadZuberAdventures 🤝👍🖐
Hay un lenguaje interior en la historia de la vasija, por un lado, sientes al necesidad de un experimento, por otro obtienes una respuesta de quien descubrió la vasija, que a la vez siente la necesidad de dar respuesta a tu apto.
Símbolo de cordialidad, comunicación. Es genial esta historia. 🤠
Sí, tienes razón. Voy a dejar más vasijas en distintos lugares.
Hello everyone watching the video... Wishing peace and happiness always be with everyone
i managed to avoid getting sunburned too badly so far, but with the holiday weekend alot of our outdoor goods go on sale, its hot there so stay hydrated folks.
If it is sunny on the holiday weekend then many tourists will probably get burned.
@@ChadZuberAdventures good thing we don't get tourists wherreim from
Epic
🔥🔥🔥Greetings, colleague🤝 And in what maximum range, temperature difference, did you have to take pictures? Minimum and maximum values. How were you dressed at the same time? Over the past 3 years of filming, I have been in the temperature range from minus -60 ° C to plus +60 ° C. And in life, up to plus + 70⁰C. Moreover, the first temperature variation was in the same area a little to the north in the middle zone of our planet.
Are you in hell? I've never heard of temperatures even close to 70˙C
@@ChadZuberAdventures
It doesn't happen every year. And minus 60 is also quite abnormal. It was just such a year - abnormally hot in summer and abnormally cold in winter.
@@bushcraft_bushcraft The hottest it gets here is about 40˙C.
@@ChadZuberAdventures The human body adapts to many environmental changes. Including severe temperature changes. In Russia, we have a "200 club" in the north. The members of this club are avid walrus steamers. They heat the steam room to a temperature of plus +135; +140 ° C and dive into an ice hole at minus -60; - 65 ° C outside. It turns out a difference of 200 degrees. Of course, this requires an appropriate hardening of the body - preparation and fitness. Plus, take care of your fingers and especially your toes, as we stand on cold ground. I tried it myself from minus 40 to plus 135- 140 - it turns out 180 degrees. It was just that there were no severe frosts, and above 140 degrees is critical.
Hello from India 🙌🙌
Pot scene is mysterious 😊
I would try to put very Sharp Stone (preferably obsidian) on the edge of the stick and jab off the whole branch. Safest and most effective option, I think.
That won't work. The branch is extremely strong and fibrous. It needs to be cut with a serrated blade.
A wide shallow plate or sheet covering the ground while you use a hooked pole to pull down the date branches and hit them off would help. the sheet would protect them from getting onto the ground and make ease of picking up easier. PS - makes me wonder if you would a note in a couple of those pots if someone would reply back. Like a primitive message in a bottle kinda thing.
It would have to be a very big plate. Like a really wide basket would be great. It would have to be like two meters in diameter and that would take sooooo long to make. So that doesn't seem like a good idea. Of course a big plastic sheet would solve the problem but I'm not looking for modern ways which are always so easy and always lead to massive exploitation of the resources. I want to find out how they did it a long time ago. I think a long pole with a serrated stone or bone knife would work to cut the branches.
@@ChadZuberAdventures is it possible to twist off the entire stem that the berries are on using a long forked stick maybe with some flint lashed to it, with a long narrow basket attached to the stick to catch them before they land on the ground. if not maybe the natives of the area already have a proven method.
@@ramboturkey1926 They won't twist. These branches are really fibrous and strong. They must be cut with a serrated knife.
Have been in the southern Utah desert or close to Zion also known as makuntaweap.
Never been there
very nice chad bro ... i always waiting for your video .. great pleasure to watch you .. loyal viewer from long years ... love from india bro
Thank you very much.
🔥🔥
Either a Coyote shaman spirit, the spirit of the desert and sacred knowledge of the hopi left you that grander Mica for sacred rituals or you have a secret admirer UA-camr who also wants to preserve your passions. I lean towards the latter.
Are you the one who left the stone?
How does it feel living in-between 2 worlds? I'm homeless and go back and forth between living in the desert for a couple months and the back to town to wash windows. to me it feels like I'm a time traveler.
Love your vids
It's weird in a way. When I'm in the modern world I'm always thinking about the wilderness life. When I'm in the wilderness life I'm in my element and not much concerned about the modern world.
Hola 👋 me encantó muchísimo 💕 estos vídeos saludo amigo desde España Isla 🙏🏻 soy marie hija Luciano ...ciao❤
Já parou para pensar porque tem este tanto de pedras enormes ai
Tem que perguntar a Deus. Só ele sabe.
Stilts? Throw a lasso or weighted fishing line around the berry stem and pull it down? Have you been watering & composting & mulching the garden area?
Stilts? That would be dangerous. As I stated in the video, you can't pull down the stems. They are extremely strong.
@@ChadZuberAdventures Well I couldn't see if there was room for stilts. I thought the stem could be pulled from the side until it bent or snapped, palm seed stems here around Miami are tough to cut but not as rigid.
I saw a Mexican fan palm recently, very thorny all over, do you have those there?
@@DDeden These palms are closely related to the Mexican fan palm. The Mexican fan palm produces a fruit that seems to be exactly like this one but the leaves and stems have more thorns.
There's a face in the rocks at the end of this video it looks very interesting to me
❤❤❤❤❤ I Love you
Chad, when will you upload the next ASMR video? I remember asking a long time ago and you said soon but it never happened :( a tip for an ASMR video can be you using the dried yucca fibres for flossing, I remember a Camp Chat video where you did that and it was very soothing to hear. Have a great day bossman!
I wanted to start an ASMR channel but I need to buy really good microphones. They are really expensive and I can't afford it.
My Chad ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
Leslieeeeeeeeeeeeeeee!
@ChadZuberAdventures miss you my Chad ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
The land wights got your food
maybe that beautiful rock was a offering to you for the seeds
Maybe. It's very interesting to think about.
Hi Chad, l love your pots my type of pottery. Do you ever burnish your pots before firing? Its time consuming but I find it strengthens them also makes them much more water tight. Also coating then buffing the outside with a natural wax or oil helps and brings out the beautiful patina from the firing. 😊
make a stone saw and then on location find a long stick to attach it to so you don't carry it with you a sone saw or a makeshift blade on an small handle so you have something to tie to
Yeah, that's an excellent idea. I'll also bring plenty of cordage to tie a few sticks together to make a really long pole.
4 years already
i love video for you
Chad's too much chad's got no way
bro has be like this longer than the stone age
🤣
❤🙏
The small stone over the pot at the end looks like quartz. Did you find such mineral around easily before? If that is the case, you could collect some of it to create sharp stone tools easily (somehow similar to obsidian).
I have often found quartz but it is very different from obsidian. It breaks rather easy too.
А что, если использовать технику завязывания узлов или плетения, Вами освоенного, чтобы сделать на стволе масленичной пальмы петли, на которые можно наступать для подъема?
Это интересная идея. Я не думал об этом. Я думаю, это может сработать. В следующий раз мне придется принести много веревки. Спасибо за вашу идею.
Bring a walking stick with sickle on top might help. God bless you MARANATHA
I would need to make one.
Do you always live there? Beautiful
Rattlesnakes don't want to bite you, they just want you to leave them alone.
Love from Pakistan 🇵🇰💖
Like for old drums 😁
in the bigfoot community there are stories of people leaving food or tobacco for the forest people and they would leave a rock like that in the place of the food or tobacco, you should have took the rock.
Really? Wow! I never heard that. I'll go back again soon and I'll take the rock then.
That Rattlesnake would have made a good meal.
If only the cavemen had invented ladders those fruits would be all yours
I'm sure they did use ladders.
have you ever eaten snake, Chad? I heard it's not too difficult to cook and doesn't taste half bad
Yeah, I've eaten rattlesnake. It is good to eat. I liked it.
8:13 - 9:10 one of my favorite videos, I loved how you looked at that time (2019-2021) wearing only a loincloth and completely barefoot, you looked like a real-life Tarzan, I hope one day you will wear only your loincloth again 😉
The problem with just a loincloth is that I'm usually in areas with lots of thorny bushes. It makes travel very difficult.
Just wondering if the palm fruit tastes similar to dates?
Similar yes, but not as sweet.
Выходит эти места совсем не безлюдны
That is a nice rock I wonder what it is
I don't know. I'm definitely NOT a geologist.
@@ChadZuberAdventures hahaha well someone on the internet is... that I'm almost sure of, I'm also sure I'm not 😅. Give it some time an internet investigator will most likely solve this mystery.
@@jenreal360 Everyone says it's quartz.
Hi bro❤❤❤
Hey there!
What does washingtonia taste like?
Like dates but less sweet.
in any town this place is?
Subhanallah...
Saya punya doa khusus untuk pengusir ular tuan Zuber...
Terima kasih
Salam dari indonesia kawan
Salam juga untukmu
Preemptive time capsule. Make some wine and see if it still tastes good when you go back to it.
I wonder y some1 found that pot and didnt took it with him considering it an artifact
But they also put a nice stone on top of it. Very strange.
Have you tried using clay as a sunscreen?
I've used mud before. It works. It's not fun to wash off though. It requires a lot of water.
A stone as payment for the seeds?
Maybe, but I bet rodents ate the seeds first.
@@ChadZuberAdventures I wonder if they ganged together to get you a nice rock for your troubles? 😁
@davet.4945 Haha, probably