I'm 80 and live in a rest home but when I was younger I would explore the California desert and woods and it made me just feel good when I was there. Now that I can no longer do that you feel the void for me. I have been watching you from day one and can't wait for your new videos. I had a bad stroke five years ago and it hit hard and my coordination and memory is not what it used to be so I save your videos and they are almost new to me five months from now. This video was totally awesome! I will probably watch it again tomorrow! Thanks so much for sharing your videos with us, Dave
@lineil298 ай бұрын
Good luck in your recovery Dave
@richardmann26878 ай бұрын
74
@patricknoveski64098 ай бұрын
Right on brother.
@estherhuser75498 ай бұрын
All the best for you from Switzerland!
@marc2-fl3du8 ай бұрын
You should look into the carnivore diet. lots of info on youtube. good luck. Marc from England
@Danbag38 ай бұрын
You're not just a youtuber. You're a great videographer and storyteller Brent. Thanks for sharing your adventures.
@GhostTownLiving8 ай бұрын
I appreciate that! Thank you!
@MakingUsThink8 ай бұрын
We have been telling him that for years. I think it is why he made this video just for us :)
@Danbag38 ай бұрын
@patrickt118 are you talking about Cerro Gordo. If so, you haven't watched Brents channel since te beginning.
@Vancofe8 ай бұрын
@@patrickt118 and ?
@CalTheDamned8 ай бұрын
@patrickt118 I swear he bought the other share off that dude?, so he is only backed by himself.
@jameseastwood49848 ай бұрын
I'm almost lost for words. The content, the cinematography, the narration and the emotion, are just spell binding. No one else delivers this with such enthusiasm, such passion and authenticity. That one person can bring this directly to us without having his story edited and changed by executives and marketing staff, is truly the power of KZbin. Incredible that an individual can tell his story directly to us.
@carolbroome65598 ай бұрын
♥️
@flojotube8 ай бұрын
I just commented something very similar... this is a bizarre roller coaster of emotions and I can't even pinpoint why... I was glued to every second of this... what an unexpected treasure
@dazwhit8 ай бұрын
Ken Burns has competition!
@jackanderson14188 ай бұрын
Thanks Brent absolutely spectacular!!!! Thanks for taking us along especially for us who are not up to the physical challenges this type of hike requires, I pray you and Serigado Ghost town are all well and that all this wonderful mining history stays exactly the way it is what a treasure.God Bless you.😊❤
@nathanweese38128 ай бұрын
Would you feel differently If you found out he was a tech bro that made millions and is taking no personal risk? Or that this dude is a marketing wizard and everything he says is very considered and meant to elicit your reaction? Cause that info ruined his stuff for me.
@reneprovencher83956 ай бұрын
I’m 76 years old. Many years ago my wife and I passed through Nevada and Calif I kept telling myself that when I made it in life, I would do what you are doing!!!!! It never happened of course. So I’m living through videos. TY
@GhostTownLiving6 ай бұрын
Oh wow, thank you for the note. I'm glad you're enjoying the videos and if you're ever in this area, come up and visit!
@RVingwithG5 ай бұрын
@@GhostTownLiving maybe he can come visit you at the mine
@user-zr7yo1cj3g5 ай бұрын
Thank you for being such an awesome speaker allowing us to be there with you in our imagination🎉❤
@moisesperez46057 ай бұрын
Brent, I am a blind individual just want to say you’re awesome and thank you for taking us that cannot see, and be able to visualize through your eyes things that we would not be able to experience, so you are making a big difference in what you’re doing to a lot of people man love it
@Dude00007 ай бұрын
Your humility really stands out. The joy you can allow yourself to feel is quite inspirational for me, putting the ‘problems’* I have into context. So thank you for that. *I do have real problems, but that’s a part of life. In fact, a large part of meaning in life is experiencing and dealing with these problems. It’s been demonstrated time and time again, take away peoples problems and they’ll create their own. Drug addiction amongst the children of the wealthy is the most obvious example I can think of, right now. I hope you can find a way of hearing this, as I feel a connection to you, through your comment. It has given me a little moment of joy, which is the most rare and precious thing we, as humans, have in my opinion. 🙏
@harpoonhunter16837 ай бұрын
Ok thanks for sharing this.
@th7238 ай бұрын
This is better than a lot of stuff on TV. The geographical location, the history brought to life, the enthusiasm for his subject, great documentary making. Deserves some kind of award. 👍
@GhostTownLiving8 ай бұрын
Thank you so much! I really appreciate that.
@Dude00007 ай бұрын
@@GhostTownLiving when you say we can sense water 16:55 , I think we can smell it. But as it’s so subtle, we aren’t really aware we sense it that way, consciously at least. Maybe we feel the raised humidity in the air, too. Whatever, it’s very interesting for me, too.
@dennisschlieckau87236 ай бұрын
Brent, it’s pronounced Mc-a-Voy. say it fast. Not Mc-el-Voy Just a wonderful Video!Thank you so much for sharing your experience and history lessons. It always fascinates me how any Old shaft mine came to be. What was it the original miner found that said to him I’m gonna start digging a hole in this location? So remote!
@johnramirez50326 ай бұрын
@@GhostTownLivingyou are a little crazy if you ask me. It only takes one wrong move in those mountains. Leaving you bag and finding it was a risky thing. I dont think many dare go were you went. Im 65. It aint never goibg to make it there but thanks for taking me along. It was the next best thing !
@romerides906 ай бұрын
@@Dude0000humans can sense when it’s about to rain just like animals
@CoyoteSticksbyWILEY8 ай бұрын
Dear Brent - Thank you from the bottom of my heart for sharing this magnificent voyage with us. My age and health would not allow me to make these kind of trips, so my opportunity has passed, but you have given us your spirit of exploration and opened our eyes to these wonderful and exciting places and times in history. This was a hike of a lifetime and I am beyond being able to find the words to express what I felt as you shared each one of these mines, homes, stories, structures and lives with us. Stay Safe. Kindest Regards, Randy in Oro Valley, AZ
@SandraGagliotti8 ай бұрын
You said that so wonderfully. I agree.
@GhostTownLiving8 ай бұрын
Thanks Randy! I’m glad you enjoyed it. I enjoyed sharing the experience. There’s a lot of history out there
@freedomforever19628 ай бұрын
❤💯🙌🏼😘 Agree. . You are looking well Brent. GBU 🙏🏼
@sf91458 ай бұрын
@@freedomforever1962 I agree! He's looking healthy with great coloring, not so washed out as sometimes he looks from living in such a rugged place. His house is obviously becoming a warm home.
@DogRoar-dq4ri8 ай бұрын
Brent really is a fine presenter, isn't he? Good tone, cadence, thoughtful with the idealism if youth. Yeah, he is my hero these days. It's a fine thing he is doing with the town.
@vrolsh7 ай бұрын
I wish this video went on for 10 more hours. Each of these small spots were so nice to see. The beekeeper's cave, and the minecart still sitting and moving on the tracks. I loved all of it. This seems like the hiking/camping trip of a lifetime.
@Jayellbee6 ай бұрын
Agreed. This could easily have been a 10 hour series, Much better than the trash on Netflix now. Thanks for your work on this documentation of a disappearing place and time.
@Cat-Branchman8 ай бұрын
Hey Brent, I spent 40 years in the television industry and I would put your story telling up at the top, and more so because you dream it, then let the story reveal itself while capturing it on the go. The freedom you have simply can't be replicated in a studio system today. On a more personal note, I spent my youth in-between projects in the Sierra, and your visuals bring back very strong emotions that I humbly thank you for.
@robotpizza7 ай бұрын
Wow, such a great compliment! I hope Brent sees it!
@bobgillard9937 ай бұрын
Brent, I am also 81 years and am still in good shape compared to many others. You chose wisely when you purchased Cerro Gordo and although I picked up on a little uncertainty, a little regret I watched it slowly disappear. You have become one with Cerro Gordo. You have spread the peace and joy you have gained with so many of your viewers. Really loved your trip that ended in that great cabin in Beveridge. Much Love lil bro!!!!
@portermeeka8636 ай бұрын
using the term "lil bro" at 81 huh???? OK im your huckleberry.
@tomassanchez38995 ай бұрын
Play for keeps remember.
@HerrHeckler4 ай бұрын
Sit down Pedro .
@deannacalef35138 ай бұрын
My mom would so love your work. She explored the Great Salt Lake, especially the dumps and rail road sites. She wrote a book called The Diggers. She too felt it was important to document the history of the region. Kuddos to your wonderful spirit.
@oldblood_eyes8 ай бұрын
you should send Brent a copy of that book for his cave library!
@kadensgotgame8 ай бұрын
Kudos to you
@GhostTownLiving8 ай бұрын
Thank you!! I'll have to check that book out!
@Nursense20248 ай бұрын
I walked back trails near “Nine Mile Canyon”…Inyo County… UGH…brings back memories.. Have you ever thought of a burro..They are “sure footed”and eat that scrub…
@PlatinumIrishrose8 ай бұрын
Is your mom's book in mainstream print?
@brettallenthomas5 ай бұрын
Just a note on that Yellow Shipping Container next to the generator... As a 25 plus year employee of Caterpillar, I can tell you those clam shell shipping containers are still used today for transporting equipment around the world.. The Division I'm in still uses them to ship Industrial Gas Turbines around the world to our customers.. They are air tight and pressurized, have a sight glass on one end so the contents can be verified without opening it... and I wouldn't be surprised if that Generator was partially disassembled, packed into the container and flown in under a helicopter.
@Mike1941-r8y4 ай бұрын
Back in the day, 50-60 years ago, a lot of those containers were declared as surplus and, split into two, made their way into the cattle industry to be used as water troughs. They have since rusted out and I have not seen one in years.
@krisptaco7 ай бұрын
Brent, this one video deserves an Academy Award for Best Documentary, and your channel deserves one for Best Docu-series. This is better than Anything on regular television! As always, I can't wait for the next one. Thank you for everything!
@GhostTownLiving7 ай бұрын
Wow, thank you! I really appreciate that!
@happycowabunga8 ай бұрын
This is one of your best episodes you've made so far. I love the history of California mining, specially in the desert area. Keep it up Brent.
@thedude77268 ай бұрын
I also love these style of videos so much
@SandyWolf-8 ай бұрын
Definitely a cool explore!
@j16m028 ай бұрын
Not to mention, the quality of the video is just mind blowing. I'd enjoy these even without the narrative. The scenery is just so amazing!
@deathvalley15928 ай бұрын
THANKS BRENT. I HIKED INTO BEVERIDGE DECADES AGO. YOU DID AN EXCELLENT JOB PRODUCING THIS VIDEO. I WISH I COULD STILL DO THESE TYPE OF HIKES….BUT AT AGE 83 IT IS NO LONGER POSSIBLE. MAKE FULL USE OF TIME….WE’RE ONLY HERE ONCE. GREAT JOB!!!!!
@GhostTownLiving8 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it! That must have been great to see decades ago. And a great reminder to make use of time. I'm doing my best! Thanks!
@CatDaddySteve8 ай бұрын
Awesome. Did You bump into any interesting people such as the miner's ???
@WendyMonaghan8 ай бұрын
Superb video,so glad I found it.Have you written any books? I felt as though I was travelling with you.Thank you
@tyleruskating98748 ай бұрын
what was it back like then? any better or mostly the same?
@Nowee168 ай бұрын
My great grandma is also 83
@kategrayson34905 ай бұрын
My grandmother, who died in 2004 at the age of 95, backpacked all over California, Oregon and Washington state. One of her favorite foods was onion soup made with bouillon cubes and dehydrated onions. Sometimes she would even use fresh onions on the 1st couple of days. Really light to carry.
@ytmahsdad8 ай бұрын
I always admire you outdoor videographers who extend their hiking by at least 25% (if not more) by having to hike ahead, setup your camera hike back, hike past your camera, hike back TO your camera and then hike forward again. :)
@BuilderofRat8 ай бұрын
Not to mention packing extra batteries for the awesome drone shots.
@TroubledOnePaydirt8 ай бұрын
Oh my god. I never even thought of that. That’s wild! Amazing stuff.
@Safteassemblies7 ай бұрын
I don't think he has nobody with him he solos . I could be wrong ?;
@fjckfam5 ай бұрын
@@Safteassemblies he's wise enough to not solo hike in the wilderness, regardless how experienced he is. He must've had a hiking buddy.
@HerrHeckler4 ай бұрын
Yes he does solo . Always has done..
@GregoryJohnston778 ай бұрын
I can't express how thankful I am to be able to see these places. 2 back surgeries 13 stomach surgeries and 3 knee surgeries I can say I'd never be able to see these places otherwise. Thank you so much. You are such an amazing author, storyteller, and KZbinr. True hard work and dedication just to share these videos. THANK YOU SO MUCH BRENT.
@kpal29468 ай бұрын
Me too, not as many operations but it is my back. I can still take my big old dog on some mild hikes, so grateful that people like Brent shows us his travels. I watch another guy who hikes to some of the most stunning places. His channel is Desert Drifter. I wish you well.
@matt.endlesscourage8 ай бұрын
Sending you love and strength
@avacadovich7 ай бұрын
Why 13 stomach surgeries.??
@GregoryJohnston777 ай бұрын
@avacadovich I caught an infection and the mesh they installed kept felling.
@mel38238 ай бұрын
Love seeing an adult playing with big boy equipment and being as happy as a little kid playing in the sandbox. I had lots of smiles this video. Thank you so much, Brent.
@deirdrepasko90568 ай бұрын
Yeah, I got a chuckle from that too. 😄
@ludwigvonrothbard12075 ай бұрын
The quality of the cinematography and storytelling is second to none. Thank you.
@tikiroyce7 ай бұрын
Brent, you met my dad in Bishop last week at the grocery store. He sent me the picture of you two and it really meant a lot that you took the time to say hi to him. I’ve been watching your videos since your first upload and I couldn’t imagine missing a single one. Thank you for documenting your story and bringing history to life in Inyo county. It really is a special place and I hope to come up, see Cerro Gordo, and say hi one day. Awesome video as always!
@billseymour-jones32248 ай бұрын
4 magic words in this vid - "…for my next book." Really looking forward to reading that!
@asakurad8 ай бұрын
I understand your ambivalence about sharing these wild places with the internet, but with my physical limitations, this is the only way I could ever experience a place like Beverage. Thank you so much.
@GhostTownLiving8 ай бұрын
Thank you! I appreciate knowing that people are able to experience these remote places this way.
@jerryfitzgerald17055 ай бұрын
What an amazing adventure you took us all on! I am way too old to be taking this on, but you took us so lovingly along with you that I feel as if I was with you , and I want to thank you from the bottom of my heart. What a fascinating journey ! Those cabins ! Omgggggg! People living so remotely, working hard, making their dreams come true . Beautifully done, well crafted, wonderfully shot with all the drone footage… Thank you again Brent! Bravo !
@trinketsmusings8 ай бұрын
Oh Brent. You are a scribe. I am SO thankful that you became custodian of Cerro Gordo. When Mike died I was scared for the town's fate. I could have never imagined someone so perfect would discover it and help all of us rediscover it in amazing and beautiful ways. When I visited with Mike, he told me about Beveridge and I have wanted to see it ever since. I am so grateful you released this video because I will likely never get to any of those places. Now, I'm off to explore my own backyard, as you suggested.
@GhostTownLiving8 ай бұрын
That means a lot. I know how much Mike and Jody cared about this town and to add to that lineage feels very important. Thank you for those kind words!
@RickWalshCleaning5 ай бұрын
I also knew Mike ... and Jodi ... I was their UPS driver for many years ... I felt the same as you when I learned that Mike had passed ... who could possibly fill their shoes?? And now we have Brent ..... amazing ! 👍
@kevinchaneldavis26858 ай бұрын
I just finished the ghost town living book. It was absolutely awesome. If you have seen all of Brent's videos it makes the book that much better because it helps your mind travel to the places Brent speaks of. It was the best book I've read in a long time. I can't wait for the next one.
@GhostTownLiving8 ай бұрын
Thank you! I'm really glad you enjoyed it! I appreciate the kind words.
@chasm36078 ай бұрын
I second that. The best biographical (I was thinking how to classify it) book I’ve ever read. Now waiting for the next book.
@malcolmallen36878 ай бұрын
Back in 1979 I was living in the Fresno area and was offered an opportunity to work for gold in the areá near the area of your video today... Twenty years of age at the time... I am glad that I chose to go to university instead... Thanks for the update of the area today... The narration of this video today was marvelous. Thank you... May other viewers of this story enjoy it as much as I Brent... 😎
@truthteller90006 ай бұрын
I LOVE this stuff! Its incredible that most of that stuff is still around... I always love to sit there and close my eyes and picture what it use to be like when everything was thriving. always try to picture the people walking around doing their daily duties.. incredible
@seanfrank41588 ай бұрын
I'm always amazed at the perseverance and determination of the people who built the mines and the mills back in the day. The labour it would've taken to get all the material into these areas really speaks to the drive and conviction it took to get things done.
@ryanbravo59417 ай бұрын
Amen to this!! I wonder if this same drive and conviction still exists today, or are we as a society just super lazy? Something to definitely ponder. Thank you again!
@thomasrusso43985 ай бұрын
You are making you are making history my friend how do you remember when you first went into that town in farro Gordo or whatever that thing is since the beginning of the first journey I've been with you all the way love your work
@waynearndt45438 ай бұрын
Sir Brent you have taken a Disabled Old Man on a Most Incredible,Beautiful,Historical 4 day Adventure in 54 Glorious minutes and I want to thank you so much. Amazing the History you just showed the World. The Highlight Bonus was The Feeling of Being In Shangri-La with You. GOD Bless and Keep You Safe....We Love You Brent Underwood🥰
@GhostTownLiving8 ай бұрын
Thank you so much! I'm glad you enjoyed it. I like sharing the adventures and history all around here!
@danielgulbransen84768 ай бұрын
One of the nice things about the difficulty of the location, is that it means that less people would be crawling all over those ghost towns taking "souvenirs". Which helps to preserve the locations for future hikers.
@BestArtist8 ай бұрын
Personally I'm torn. It's so beautiful the way it is but every year it wears away just a little more. I'd love to see some of this stuff preserved in a museum or something.
@Cwra1smith7 ай бұрын
I think I'd be crawling around about half dead by the time I got there!🍻
@SkylineSquid5 ай бұрын
id take a souvenir and preserve it. it would just rot in the town
@Josiahcarter20814 ай бұрын
People should leave them exactly where they are kinda annoying seeing him move the stuff and not return it to where it was left, video is great otherwise!..
@HerrHeckler4 ай бұрын
He's not the first there . Who's to say it hasn't been moved already by a hiker before him . But yes you have a point .
@carlspiva55707 ай бұрын
So grateful for the love you have deep within you Brent & like so many out there, we thank the lord for the light within you shines so brightly. I used to do things like these years ago & rode my Cr250R dirt bike hundreds of miles all over California from Bishiop to the far sand dunes of southern California in Buttercup, with so many trips camping & fishing the Owens River, & seen it all over 38 years hiking & camping & fishing, now 15 years of beating CML Leukemia & chemo every day now 61. Brent, you have brought such joy for me so deep with your excellence & purity in journalism, at times I had to stop just so I could take it all in. Respectfully & forever a fan, Carl S, now living back in East Texas.
@DogRoar-dq4ri8 ай бұрын
Last of the Americans! Brent, you are quite the amazing person. I used to play in the Cerro Gordo mines in the 70's. Great wonders await you starting at 1100 feet. It gets spooky and very real down there. Worth the venture! Many artifacts and great wonders!
@GhostTownLiving8 ай бұрын
I've been trying to get down there! The access from the 900 is collapsed now. Do you know how you got down there?
@torxxx18 ай бұрын
I'm wondering the same thing as Brent. I've been hoping for a while now that access to the lower levels will get found. There has got to be a bypass or emergency path out one would think.
@saltyXrice8 ай бұрын
Come visit and share your stories !
@chriscanterbury86478 ай бұрын
Agreed, someone who's been down there would be valuable to go give Brent some tips and insight
@DogRoar-dq4ri8 ай бұрын
@@GhostTownLiving You are in fine young shape. I am 75 and getting long in the tooth. The 70's was long ago. I do remember taking a corkscrew 3 foot diameter tunnel down from one deep level and ending up in the 1100 foot area as charcoled on the wall. Tracks were still intact with many carts and a larger room with what looked to be a hoist, but pretty collapsed. Many areas we went through were very crumbly and dangerous of caving at any time. It wasn't shored up and timbered as many mines are. Lots of old decaying dynamite, tools, and various buckets of stuff just laid were it was left many moons ago. We had to climb back up that corkscrew tunnel at the end of the adventure. I remember three sardine cans un opened still stacked on a little table. Lots of steel drill bits, a compressor or generator. Looked like a Disneyland adventure ride. We decided they must have had a timber shortage and took timbers down and rebuilt them where they were digging? That might explain the abundance of collapses? That mountain is amazing. Many many mineral changes and colors. Lots of really fine dust. Many unseen dangers until it's too late. Be careful! You tempt fate spellunking alone in there. It is a different world, isn't it? It calls to you......"Brent, come on down! The price is right!" You rule, Brent. You have the 60/70's spirit with you! Live long and prosper!
@tubalee38498 ай бұрын
No new video for 2 months and now you came back with bombshell!! What a video Brent. This is probably one of the best videos on your channel. I love this type of content when you go on a long hike and uncover the history, tell some stories about place, tell some secrets... Well done Brent and keep it up 👌
@jum52388 ай бұрын
That's how long it takes to upload via carrier pigeon. ;-)
@robotpizza7 ай бұрын
@@jum5238 Thank goodness he doesn't use USPS. Would end up being 4 months and good chance it gets lost on the way!
@sandysp14408 ай бұрын
I love virtually trekking with you and the history you share. It's awesome that you respect the areas and artifacts you find along the way. Thank you Brent!
@GhostTownLiving8 ай бұрын
Thanks for checking it out! Appreciate it
@madrew20032 ай бұрын
I really enjoy the history associated with all your videos but the 4k footage simply puts it over the top! I'm so glad to have found your channel. Great job!
@jum52388 ай бұрын
I have a 90 yr old father in law living with me, and I'm going to introduce him to your videos. I think he would really enjoy them! This was an excellent episode! Thank you for taking us along with you. I dream of visiting there, but I'm not in the best of health, and my wife isn't into the same kinds of adventures. And... we have 90 yr old inlaws to take care of - one a recent stroke victim.
@stevecochrane69487 ай бұрын
Kudos to you…hang in there…not easy I know, but don’t give up on some r&r now and then…and support groups can really help…
@TammyHiland8 ай бұрын
Wow Brent I've been watching you channel since overnight or TFIL was out at your place when you had it for just a little while. Look how your channel has grown ! You have over a Million Subs now! So Proud and Just honored to have watched you grow so much these years!
@loumos83648 ай бұрын
Agreed. I thing we as a community are honored to have been a part of this journey over the years.
@jovanyrodriguez99408 ай бұрын
I have be watching for years now and evry vidio i watch i finish watching satisfide with the video everytime thenks for your hard worck.
@freedomforever19628 ай бұрын
🙌🏼 Agree 💗🐾
@valerielove98378 ай бұрын
Well said!!!
@GalacticMarine20128 ай бұрын
Such profound, deep thoughts and so well spoken and narrated! Not to mention, all the cool video shots and then editing it all! You truly make great videos, dude!
@GhostTownLiving8 ай бұрын
Thank you!! I appreciate that!
@dacallpАй бұрын
This is content on another level, dude. More people have to see this! PS: I've just bought your book for me and my dad to read since both of us have been watching your channel since day 1! I'm excited to see what it contains!
@Funwithhighnotes8 ай бұрын
Helicopter or no helicopter it never ceases to amaze me all the supplies that they were able to get into such remote locations. Crazy.
@GrantStaveley5 ай бұрын
No helicopters 1880!
@JimHugg4 ай бұрын
But that bull dozer how? did they bring it in pieces or drive it all the way there imagine the fuel that took
@MericanAdventures8 ай бұрын
What I always find fascinating about all these remote mines is how they got all that stuff up in them canyons (the last 1800's mines), no helicopters, no motorized vehicles, all done on the backs of mules, horses, and men. Just amazing the amount of will power they had.
@GhostTownLiving8 ай бұрын
It's really incredible. The camera doesn't do justice to how steep these valleys were to get into.
@ThatZyberGuy8 ай бұрын
Yeah considering that some folks today complain about having to walk a mile on sidewalks mind you. Folks were drastically built differently back then..
@Patriots-Inc.17768 ай бұрын
@@GhostTownLiving stay safe, Brent! We are all here rooting for you! Thank you for such amazing content!!
@Patriots-Inc.17768 ай бұрын
Men were just different back then. They didn’t have the technology that we have now, but nothing stood in their way. They are hero’s in my mind!
@marilynsommerdorf45198 ай бұрын
One added thank you. Your adventure is so well shared that I was hiking with you. Beautiful from every angle. Please keep sharing your experiences.
@LesAtlas7 ай бұрын
I love this great video. That's because I love this area, going back 50 years. In about 1982 I climbed Mt. Langley, across the Owens Valley, had a spill, and got disoriented coming back. I made it back to my partners at our camp many hours later, with some injuries. They helped me down to the clinic in Lone Pine the next day. That made me more interested. I used to hike all over, from Saline Valley to Darwin Falls. But I'm now 70, and with age advancing all I can do now is enjoy it vicariously thru your videos. Thanks for this one! I hope to visit in Cerro Gordo some time.
@CouplesLite7 ай бұрын
Been watching since the beginning there was something calming and wholesome about this Trek, Just slowed things down and revealed so much about that Area. Good one Brent.
@GhostTownLiving7 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@carolineindacityphx8 ай бұрын
I had to watch this twice, to actually take in the views and appreciate everything I saw. The fact that you woke up and saw the same sunrise that Pat Keys would have seen all those years ago...the view is still the same, untouched, wild. I love these types of exploration that you do. When you say, if I can't find the springs, I will have to turn back, but would you have enough water for the hike back? As you mentioned, a hiker cannot pack 4 days of water without finding water. In the end, you found water and the remnants of the mines were the only trace of those who lived there so long ago. You are reigniting the history of these places by discovering them and taking us along with you. Thank you for including us. I love to see you journaling because that could mean you are working on another book. I hope so because I loved your first book. Time travel with Brent Underwood. Until the next video, take care of yourself.
@SomeDudeSomewhereOverThere8 ай бұрын
Brent is living the life I dreamed about at 15. How awesome.
@ivanmaureirabutler80838 ай бұрын
55:17 Brent, I cannot thank you enough for sharing your life with us. You just remind me what is important in life, and what is to be a human Keep it up Brent !
@fqknqueen37618 ай бұрын
From the moment I witnessed your remarkable journey with your truck stuck in the snow and your perseverance to hike up the mountain, I was inspired. During the pandemic, I discovered your video and have been following your incredible endeavors ever since. Your determination and passion are truly motivating, and I have no doubt that you will continue to push boundaries and achieve greatness. I eagerly await the day when I can visit your ghost town and witness your remarkable work firsthand.❤
@GhostTownLiving8 ай бұрын
Thank you! I hope you can visit one day soon.
@MastaT_1508 ай бұрын
I always find the equipment left behind as mesmerizing as the view and nature. In fact I’d venture to guess that some of that heavy equipment left behind like that dozer would fire up with some fuel, batteries, and a little tinkering. What a sweet trip though, thanks for taking us along.
@chuckbardiamond93828 ай бұрын
Thanks for the history, and a walk back in time into a real mining camp. The pictures were also really cool to see. I have watched your videos for about two years and envy the life you're living there, and life there.
@johnathanhurd35615 ай бұрын
Awesome Stuff! I'm 57 and I think I'm fixing to start my adventure, while I'm still young enough to do it. 39 years of oil patch and personal disappointments. No more, from here on in it's explore, discover, learn, appreciate and evolve as a person. Thanks for including us with your travels and discoveries. Bravo
@pip54618 ай бұрын
Thanks for taking us along with you, as you made your way along the somewhat precarious mountain paths to times of old. Seeing the remnants of the mines clearly shows that they were a tough breed of men, determined to make their fortunes.
@GhostTownLiving8 ай бұрын
Thank you! They were some very determined folks out in those mountains
@pip54618 ай бұрын
@@GhostTownLiving They sure were...!
@freddking43898 ай бұрын
Brent, no one that I watch is a better creator than yourself. Your production of these are above great. Seemed like a 15 minute video. Thanks for taking me on that journey with you.
@GhostTownLiving8 ай бұрын
Wow, thank you! I enjoy sharing these adventures
@CruizinWithTheCarsons8 ай бұрын
Brent, I can't even put into words the magnitude of your preservation efforts. Everything about this video made it one of my favorites you've done. The beauty, the romance of the history, almost as though the mountains are calling out toy you, and you heed the call. The time and effort you pour into this video is such a testament to your passion for the journey you have chosen, or perhaps, the journey chose you. This is a very powerful video on so many levels.
Wow! Finding that canvas bag you had read about… in situ, on site like frozen in time; but to read about it and put your hands physically on canvas, simply beautiful, amazing, nearly unbelievable and just can’t find the words to express just how cool and unique that experience is!
@markdimmitt51498 ай бұрын
I’m speechless and teary-eyed, Brent. Thank you for sharing this remote beauty that’s inaccessible to most of us.
@pamabernathy87288 ай бұрын
This is beautiful & special. Thank you for sharing your journey. I am a huge fan of your FIRST book. Preordered in hard back. Have been reading via Kindle for a very long time. I knew that I needed to hold & see your book. Visionary. Many blessings, young man, from an old, disabled lady in Southern California. 2nd gen native born. Mother born in 1919 on the family ranch, outside of Brawley, CA.
@phoenixignitus8 ай бұрын
The videography is magnificent. Just finished your book yesterday. Thank you for sharing your experience. Really.
@GhostTownLiving8 ай бұрын
Wow! Thank you so much! That is very kind. I’m glad you enjoyed it
@nothin_but_dinks6 ай бұрын
I cant imagine the feeling of discovering something that's been left behind, to be a part of history and discovered so many years later. That in itself is a treasure. Beautiful!
@meglaw747 ай бұрын
Pat's set up and the bee keeper's was amazing and got us all imagining what it would be like to be him and to live there among the mountains.
@random220268 ай бұрын
54:28 Talk about putting things into perspective!🙌🏻🙌🏻Brent's outro...and look at the size of that stamp mill! 😲😲
@roykalista10138 ай бұрын
As soon as I start to worry you have given up on KZbin, you give us a Great video like this one. Thank you for keeping us informed and entertained Brent!!!!
@chriscanterbury86478 ай бұрын
I was wondering where the videos were and had to search to find he never posted one. Hope all is well with him, probably just needed a little break
@itsbadambro5 ай бұрын
8:02 "There's something a little comforting if you see a small carin along the way." No truer words, brother.
@waxore11428 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for taking me with you on this magnificent journey!
@jamesbarden29008 ай бұрын
Thank you Brent for taking me along. A great trip into the past.
@GhostTownLiving8 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@mymnm86258 ай бұрын
Being stuck at home with a horrible back injury...your work helps lift my heart ❤ I'll never be able to hike like you do yet at this point in my life I am living threw you! THANKS! YOU YOU
@markthomas4083Ай бұрын
Very peaceful and informative video. Well done sir.
@jamescrabtree92408 ай бұрын
I've watched this channel since its beginning and this is easily one of your best videos. It's obvious that a lot of time and effort went into it. Thank you for sharing it with us.
@GhostTownLiving8 ай бұрын
Wow, thank you! This one I definitely took some time on, so I appreciate you noticing that
@peggybaxter84808 ай бұрын
Your a true Old Soul Brent. Thank You for letting me tag along! You've got the beginning for another book. I really enjoyed Ghost Town Living. Brent of all trades!
@gregmonger57478 ай бұрын
Thank you Brent for another great adventure. I've done my adventures traveling all over the world, in the U.S., Germany, England, S. Korea, Japan, China, Philippines, Mexico, Canada. Your feelings of "gatekeeping" are accurate and understandable, hopefully those other adventurers who come along will be as respectful as you desire of the history, culture, and take care to avoid damaging or destroying the fragile sights we get to see. Take care.
@7thHanuman5 ай бұрын
Thanks! You could survey the mountains with a drone to locate the water springs before your hike. Long hikes are dangerous, please be careful.
@springvisuals8 ай бұрын
yeeeeeew! another brent banger! knowing how hard you work on cerro gordo and how much time you commit to it, it's awesome to see you be able to get out of that bubble for a change and do something likethis.
@DarkSiv8 ай бұрын
Missed ya, Brent. Can't wait for the next full update episode! Cheers!
@KEbanez8 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for sharing your adventures to these beautiful places most of us will never go. I love the way you educate us through your videos to see things through your eyes while encouraging our minds to wander! Thank you again!!! 😊
@aporter.seattle3 ай бұрын
Thanks for the great tour and amazing photography! 🙏🏻👏🏻
@jimo33938 ай бұрын
Incredible video !! I love seeing the history as it was left many years ago, which is much better than seeing artifacts in a museum. The videography was second to none !!! Great job, Brent.👍
@ledesclos53218 ай бұрын
Thank you for this amazing hike and telling of history. You are a special man.
@GhostTownLiving8 ай бұрын
My pleasure!
@Tim_Tucker8 ай бұрын
I could see a slightly tweaked version of this being submitted to film festival award shows. This was a sight to behold, and deserves a grander platform than a regular KZbin release.
@donhoughton271Ай бұрын
Very intersting video in the history you told .Thank you .I am 78 and have done my share of😂 prospecting and have had fun d oing so
@whatranch8 ай бұрын
Just popped in to tell you that my father was a hobbyist beekeeper about the same era(1960's) at our humble home in the Carolina countryside. Just seeing the old bee smoker you rediscovered brought back beautiful memories of him. We'd laugh at his "safari hat" with the screen mask but, we'd always enjoyed the delicate sweetness of the bees labor! Thanks Brent for being.
@gimpgangster8 ай бұрын
I really appreciate you going out and publishing these videos. When I became paralyzed I couldn’t hike in some back country anymore. So your videos actually help me deep down.
@SolidStateSoul8 ай бұрын
Thanks for taking us on this hike man, very pretty views and interesting history. You gotta start wearing gaiters though man, getting snake bit out somewhere like that would be extremely bad.
@jimcranston10316 ай бұрын
Brent! I stumbled upon this video, read the posting by Daveneil3963, and then decided this might be a worthwhile experience. I'm now 74 years old and have aways been curious about the history of my country and the people who built it for me. I was awed with the spectacular views and history along this trail. I would have loved to trek this trail, sit and imagine the people who had created all of this; what were their hopes, their dreams, and how they must have lived here. They are now gone but they've left behind an inspiring legacy for me to appreciate and enjoy. Unfortunately, I am unable to make such a strenuous hike as I have suffered many disabling injuries due to my 26 years of military service so I have to rely on others such as yourself to take me on these amazing adventures. Thank you and I look forward to watching you make more amazing adventures with historical accounts of this amazing country to which I was blessed to have been born into and to have served with great pride. Your passion and cinematography were inspiring.
@darrenchard22218 ай бұрын
Welcome back Brent, it seems like for ever since your last video! What fantastic scenery, you thank us for watching, thank you for taking us along to places many of us would otherwise never see or even know existed.
@eviltoybox8 ай бұрын
Can we take a moment to appreciate how Brent lined up the music perfectly when he had the shimmer on the elevation levels?
@XanBos8 ай бұрын
Capturing these forgotten places is such a great way for those of us who don’t get a chance to see these gems in real life. The fact that you live in a mining town, you bring something to the table about the history of these abandoned mining camps and towns. It’s good to see that for the most part everything is kept the way it was left when the last of the miners walked away. Simply beautiful in its own way. Thanks for what you do. It is much appreciated!
@wasblindbutnowsee5 ай бұрын
In the late 70s, I lived in "Beautiful Downtown Keeler" at Inyo Dry Lake. I was collecting VA disability that my dear, unemployed, hard rock mining, uncle used for prospecting. We climbed and climbed, then dug and dug . One fellow known as "Coyote" actually struck it rich while I was living there. He found a huge deposit of shealite (tungsten ore) . It was close to a power line, and in Bishop, I think, there was a huge tungsten mine that bought his ore and dumped it in their milling process. The ore looked like kernals of popcorn in red rusty sandstone , and it showed like bright blue stars under a black light. The first load he shoveled onto his pickup was worth enough money to buy a NEW pickup.
@susanalbone51018 ай бұрын
This video was stunning. Your thirst for knowledge knows no bounds and because of that we are able travel with you to these amazing places, without the leg work of course which is tough. The history is absolutely fascinating and I love that you keep it alive through your adventures. A book detailing this trail and its history would be awesome. If it could be as good as Ghost Town Living I would buy it. Take care, keep safe and thank you. Take care, keep safe. ❤ Dorset, UK
@darrenmarrable25308 ай бұрын
It's simply amazing❤. Loved every second of this episode, just like all of your episodes. Truly awe-inspiring. Your storytelling and sharing of these amazing places is wonderful. LOVE your channel all the way from Gold Coast, Australia. Thankyou😊
@TammyHiland8 ай бұрын
51:43 now Brett that is a beautiful place right there. Ready to be fixed up and brought back to life.
@MikeSmithson-ti2oh7 ай бұрын
I have been a fan of your explorations for years but never commented. This video was like most of yours... very interesting of course but extremely inspiring. Your words are a gift to us all.
@rdallas815 ай бұрын
Awe. How sweet!
@PearlJam2k68 ай бұрын
The Beekeeper story sounds almost like a local cryptid, such a charming story of a unique individual that was just determined to live his own life. I fell on your channel through the Corridor crew and im so glad i did. Each episode is a small story on its own with a new bit of lore added to the mountains around you.
@jum52388 ай бұрын
How did you ever track him down??
@sobek_20128 ай бұрын
We have all been waiting for an update ❤❤❤❤❤
@lauritsboel20368 ай бұрын
!video idea! How about you make a video dedicated to going through and showing the entire museum and explaining the artifacts? I would love to see the items😊
@JanetWallace-fe3kxАй бұрын
This was interesting stuff, though I almost got vertigo watching- I remembered an abandoned logging setup on the lake our cottage was on-ladder down to the lake, the booms full of logs stretching almost across the lake (bloodsuckers!) , iron spikes in the bedrock onshore-something dark and eerie about these massive booms -the left behind history of a once functioning industry, now gone forever, not sadly really but still a part of the history of Kokotows mill and Wendigo Lake. Thanks for the story of these brave, rich adventurers and for twigging my own similar memories. Janet - Ontario, Canada
@BassmasterwitacasterАй бұрын
Finding stacks a rocks was always comforting when out in the middle of nowhere following no paths, always something id see from a distance and head towards. Always liked adding to them. Out in beaty Nevada, at the peak of Burton mountain, there was a stack of rocks a few feet high. I spent a good while adding to it until it was bout 8ft tall. Tall enough so you could see it with binoculars while down in Beatty. Used a rock of mahogany obsidian to cover the geocache that was in those rocks, wasn't even on the geocaching app. Uses a black rock so it was similar to Shawshank, you'd see a black rock that didn't seem to belong there, pull that one and you'll find a container. I was the first person to write my name in that cache for a long time
@budinfield97468 ай бұрын
Thank you for the most awe inspiring video that I have ever seen! An absolutely amazing journey, by an absolutely amazing soul.
@GhostTownLiving8 ай бұрын
Thanks for checking it out!
@eternal30838 ай бұрын
This video was so freaking cool Brent amazing documentation of the uncovered history in the mountains!
@livininmontana17318 ай бұрын
Brent, what an adventure.! Thanks for allowing us to come along. I'm happy that due to the remote nature of many of those locations, you got to share so many interesting artifacts left behind. Thanks, also, for your admonition to leave these area as you found them for others to enjoy. I'm enjoying your journey. Many happy trails!
@cillnvrmind55772 ай бұрын
My dad was a be keeper. I'm 69y. The smoker looks exactly like the one my dad had. The head net to keep bees away from his face. His best honey was from the vetch flower, almost clear honey. Looked like I saw some there in the area? Its purple and bet hardy. Lovely video.
@1432bАй бұрын
OMG! I'm 69y My dad was a bee keeper in Or for many years. I remember going to gather the honey. Then the pollen he also dried. His favorite honey was Vetch fields. Absolutely the sweatest and nearly clear. Your comment brought back so many memories. Thank you. I always wondered what lavender honey would've been like. Very medicinal flower and even for many topical uses. I thought about it when I saw the field of them by the 1st mine.