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@Akira_78126 күн бұрын
Great shots, great finds and info along the way! 💚 Thanks for taking us along with you on your adventures. ☮️🍻💪
@roman11469Ай бұрын
Nice finds! I love how that material changed as you moved about. Looks like you got some mossy material too!
@jscottchrist5178Ай бұрын
OMG...I'm drooling. I wish I lived closer. So many pieces for my tumbler. It would be non stop for tumbling for years. I need a place like this in Oregon.
@Akira_78126 күн бұрын
Great shots of the National Monument in the not-so-far distance! 👍
@upperpeninsulabeautifulАй бұрын
Hey Jared....UPB here! Its been a while ...ive been absent for many months! Its great to be back! I really like your videos....this one is no exception! Awesome landscape, beautiful huge agates! Love you explore where many dont venture! Thank you for taking us along on your adventures! Our channel just had our one year anniversary and our 1k subscribers milestone. Thank you Jared for a great video!!!
@ocklawahaboyrocksАй бұрын
That pinkish piece that Sara found ~11:50 was really pretty.
@largent45Ай бұрын
I just love the material from Brian Head! That colorful dendritic chalcedony is so beautiful not to mention huge! That stuff is beautiful and yes there are some fractures but some not or not in serious places and for tumbling, it doesn't matter. It's just really beautiful colors and so abundant, you are sure to find something!
@orion84037Ай бұрын
Great content. My wife and I found some great specimens while there in early summer of this year, great colors and big unfractured piece. I have had limited success with tumbling the material, as it does not seem to polish up as well as other agate from nearby, such as agate hill near Panguitch. Lots of material left to play with, hopefully will find the right formula. We have had better luck with the yellow jasper containing pieces.
@melissastott8191Ай бұрын
Just visited here for the first time Saturday. We did the basic hunt everyone does but it was amazing! Already have the tumblers going
@DonohueLabsАй бұрын
Looking forward to when you get around to building an agate shed like those petrified wood pueblos in Arizona with all these huge Utah agates.
@CurrentlyRockhoundingАй бұрын
Ha! That would be a fun project.
@RaymondMosier-cp6pnАй бұрын
Holy cow those are huge
@adventuresofshadowdogАй бұрын
Great video! ❤
@coffee19837Ай бұрын
Hi Jared and Sarah great video with your dog Lika very cute dog. Great finds you both picked up. Keep up the awesome work
@CurrentlyRockhoundingАй бұрын
Thank you!
@kylecduncanАй бұрын
Excellent walkabout near Brianhead. Some of that darker material is not dissimilar to the large agates found nearby in Mammoth Creek.
@forttreehouse6450Ай бұрын
I'm so glad you guys moved to Utah!
@CurrentlyRockhoundingАй бұрын
We are also thrilled to be here.
@DanFarrarАй бұрын
Dang, those are massive! Pretty though 🎉🎉🎉
@CurrentlyRockhoundingАй бұрын
They are impressive to see in person.
@patriciamckean4186Ай бұрын
Can't wait for the intarsia designs with those color combinations.
@GREEKEXPLORERSАй бұрын
Amazing video!! Thanks for sharing!!
@CurrentlyRockhoundingАй бұрын
I'm glad you liked it.
@michaeltrimble7680Ай бұрын
Utah seems full of places to go!
@nazzakashieernАй бұрын
Nice place I wish I were there😊
@Mike-br8vbАй бұрын
Very awesome specimens! That is a beautiful area, great views and a tremendous amount of great material. Did Laika get a lamb chop?😂
@geoffjohnson6555Ай бұрын
i will say, since i was just there last month, that your camera does a great job of showing pretty realistically what it looks like in person. i know you talked about that a little while ago in regards to different cameras and colors, but now i now personally and it's pretty cool. brian head is such a blast and totally beautiful. i've been polishing some pieces recently and i love the crazy amount of dendrites with the blues/greys the most. thanks for the video, take care
@CurrentlyRockhoundingАй бұрын
Thank you so much for mentioning this. I do the very best I can to show these different materials as best I can.
@kellyharper367Ай бұрын
Old Disabled House Bound Dusty Rusty Rockhound here: That's some beautiful color. I would loveto see it slabbed.
@BackcountrywithShaughnАй бұрын
What type of land is that? Looked like would be excellent summer pasture land for cattle. Anyway, Thx for sharing. Lotsa stuff to choose from is always a good time in my book! Thx again for the post. Much appreciated. Have a great rest of the week!
@CurrentlyRockhoundingАй бұрын
I'm not really sure what to call it. It's a mixture of grassy areas that they publicly grass sheep on and aspen trees.
@j.ericswede7084Ай бұрын
Thanks for putting us on your strong, young legs and showing us the upper reaches of Bryan Head. What a beautiful area. Do you still have the huge chunk of agate you brought back to Spokane from your trip there in 2021? Looking forward to more of your Utah Adventures.
@CurrentlyRockhoundingАй бұрын
That big chunk ended at a friends house in Spokane as it was too much to take with me.
@sandmakerАй бұрын
It's beautiful and the varied rocks are cool. Just no air for us. Why doesn't Mica have saddlebags to help carry rocks for you. When we had dogs they all loved it. Keep having fun!
@BenPetty5Ай бұрын
The orange and black Jasper my uncle would call chicken scratch Jasper there is a good site by the town of Eureka where I picked up quite a few
@pumpkinholdАй бұрын
A beautiful collecting area, even if the oxygen's a bit thin. On your previous trip three years ago, did you ever look in that gully that is off to the right of where you parked the car? Or is the soil too loose & slippery there? Thanks for another great video!
@CurrentlyRockhoundingАй бұрын
We never really made it up there.
@fennynough6962Ай бұрын
8:30 is rainbow chert, so many colors here. Me likey!😊
@BenPetty5Ай бұрын
Wanted to show a few of the zebra stones I found rock hounding and few of the many slabs I got from Uncle
@tenaedmonson1213Ай бұрын
Beautiful place.
@HighSocietyHobbiesАй бұрын
Hey Jared! Super random but just watched this documentary on how quarts was used for radios back in WW2, nothing new we all knew it but first time I’ve always seen the process on video and it reminded me of the local spot hansen creek because I believe (at least I’ve always been told) that it was originally found from the US army for using the crystals for their radio development but I’ve had trouble finding any research online to prove that! kzbin.info/www/bejne/mqa9nYqNrN18hrMsi=af4q13cJi7vWAyFO great old documentary tho I thought you may find it interesting as well! This video also peaked my interest extra cause I heard recently they are now using quarts again but for AI microchips, quiet fascinating.
@CurrentlyRockhoundingАй бұрын
That video was pretty good, I love seeing things like that. As far as Hansen Creek goes, I believe Bob Jackson discovered it. You can always track him down and ask him as he answers his emails.
@Joel-McConnellАй бұрын
Lots of big agate there! 👍 You should bring a water bottle to spray the rocks with instead of carrying them back to water. Makes for good viewing for us as you find them when they are wet.....
@CurrentlyRockhoundingАй бұрын
We do when it makes sense to pack around but that wasn't the case with this location but maybe next time.
@fennynough6962Ай бұрын
So, before you cut open, any of these man made Chalcedony hand tools, knives & cutting blades; see if they have been worked to fit in your hand, please. PLEASE PROTECT OUR ANCIENTS HAND TOOLS, at 6:08, 6:29, 9:00, 9:20 10:20, 10:40 12:15. These are 100,000's of years old & pricless as well as the hardest, enduring cutting tools. Thanks yall are the bestist rock hounds!
@ragnarocks9121Ай бұрын
None of the fragments are man made hand tools.
@fennynough6962Ай бұрын
@ragnarocks9121 That's why they are fragmented. Quite obvious. When you see pecking points, handheld cutters (notched to fit to each digit), & the different tools, (from hocked blades to scrappers).🤷♂️
@CurrentlyRockhoundingАй бұрын
I'm sorry, but you are not correct here, just because something is a broken rock doesn't make it an artifact, these are just rocks broken by the natural process of fracturing.
@CurrentlyRockhoundingАй бұрын
Agreed.
@fennynough6962Ай бұрын
@@CurrentlyRockhounding Thanks. And if you can prove they have been knapped, then these would be some very expensive artifacts!😋
@SilaspostonАй бұрын
That green and yellow chalcedony is sweet as a Wi packers fan. Would love to make some cabs outta that. 🤌🏻