You complained, no, lamented, that there were no large parking lots full of visitors to this area. I would bet that you’d be complaining if there WERE giant parking lots near there!
@stphns17378 күн бұрын
@@samiam619I don't think he was complaining or lamenting. I think he was simply using that to demonstrate that this was an amazing natural wonder that people don't know about.
@edmolash3401Ай бұрын
The honey mushroom patch in OR has expanded to 3.4 square miles and it’s unstoppable.
@fjb4932Ай бұрын
Like the Titanic is Unsinkable...oooopppss . . . ☆
@vallejoborncalihasbecomeal9022Ай бұрын
If edible, big batches of spaghetti and pizzas can be made to keep it in check!😊
@Stevie-JАй бұрын
Team Honey Mushroom 🫡🍄
@edmolash3401Ай бұрын
@ According to chatgpt, they are edible but have to be cooked for a long time or they’ll give you the squirts.
@NotHappening-b8tАй бұрын
@@edmolash3401 well s**t
@fj9460-lrАй бұрын
Steven, hi I’m Frank an avid backpacker in my day, once a Boy Scout leader and Marine Veteran. I’m 74 yoa and I can’t hike very far anymore; so why am I sharing this- well I just discovered your channel and I really enjoyed watching and listening to you describe how aspens propagate and it reminded me of my long hikes through our New Mexico mountain ranges so many years ago: thank you! Your calm easy style, apparent knowledge and your willingness to share it are both refreshing and of academic interest to me! I will be seeing you again soon.
@kimsundermeyer3295Ай бұрын
Likewise :)
@skeeterburkeАй бұрын
I pray for more handicap accessible routes, people in wheelchairs need paved sidewalks, they need to get outdoors too 🙏 #hikingforall
@jackstrubbe7608Ай бұрын
@@skeeterburkeat 76, this former avid outdoorsman is now wheelchair dependant. I have an electric balloon tire unit that can traverse tended bark paths, sod, and gravel. While I do use concrete paving I am not limited to them.
@michaelmcconnell730229 күн бұрын
you may enjoy Steve Wallis, the Stealth Camper
@katiekane524724 күн бұрын
@@michaelmcconnell7302different vibe, different generation but Crime Pays but Botany Doesn't is an excellent channel. I'm 66 and enjoy seeing things I'll never get to see irl
@xaphara7117Ай бұрын
I just wanted to take a moment to appreciate the incredible scientific rigor and depth of empathy you bring to each discussion. It's rare to find someone who so seamlessly blends a meticulous, evidence-based approach with genuine understanding and compassion for the outdoors. Your dedication to both the facts and the feelings of those around you is truly inspiring. Keep up the fantastic work - you're making a real difference! 🌟👏
@zubenelgenubi9 күн бұрын
Saying that people don't care ignores the vast numbers of us who DO care about the Quaking Aspen forests! My personal "100-acre forest" as a kid was tuned into private home lots for people claim to love forests! A relative sold that forest of GIANT-diameter "quakies"; I've watched other 100s of acres of quaking aspen treated as weeds and trash, leaving the wildlife to find a life elsewhere!
@martywithawhyАй бұрын
“You can tell that it’s an aspen tree because of the way that it is.”
@RyanSchellАй бұрын
I hope you receive all the likes you deserve for this comment! 😄
@Bizoza9Ай бұрын
That's pretty neat
@freshlimejuiceАй бұрын
Yes, exactly
@glenncordova4027Ай бұрын
@mellocello187 "Quakey". Quaking Aspen.
@vorpalbladesАй бұрын
How neat is that?
@DDunham7Ай бұрын
You're becoming the Bill Nye of backpacking and I'm really digging it. Keep it coming, my dude.
@MyLifeOutdoorsАй бұрын
BILL BILL BILL BILL! Thank you. As someone who grew up watching Bill Nye that is a big compliment
@engineenjoyer3000Ай бұрын
Bill Nye but actually nice
@sethgsf4120Ай бұрын
@DDunham7 bill nye but he's just spreading misinformation instead of facts
@engineenjoyer3000Ай бұрын
@sethgsf4120 what do you mean have you ever looked up what aspen groves are.
@bkbland1626Ай бұрын
@@sethgsf4120your evidence? Truth doesn't care if some doofus isn't listening.
@Andy-x3i8yАй бұрын
I dig this! Glad someone’s making content that isn’t just about gear, but rather about exploring nature. That’s what it’s all about.
@SpaceRanger18718 күн бұрын
It will be destroyed and they will have to write new laws in a year.. Good job everyone. Its like the Redwood forest, they literally had to pay guards to sleep in the woods to stop yall
@ChrisHufnagel_PolymathАй бұрын
I have a small grouping of aspens growing in my backyard. Seeing new clones popping up all the time is amazing.
@72marshflower15Ай бұрын
Careful..
@ChrisHufnagel_PolymathАй бұрын
@72marshflower15 i assume you are referring to be careful about the aspens getting out of control.
@charmedprinceАй бұрын
@@ChrisHufnagel_Polymath yep you don't want them all shooting up through the entire town!
@katiekane524724 күн бұрын
@@72marshflower15imagine seeing you here ❤️
@72marshflower1524 күн бұрын
@@ChrisHufnagel_Polymath something like that..✨
@HikingwithGusАй бұрын
Steven, your videos are what the backpacking community needs and enjoys. Channels that are strictly trips, or reviews or dedicated to one single subject can get, well, boring. I thoroughly enjoy your content, keep it up.
@sethgsf4120Ай бұрын
It's be better if it wasn't flat out wrong and misinformation but yeah
@HikingwithGusАй бұрын
@sethgsf4120 Care to expound on your accusation?
@sethgsf4120Ай бұрын
@HikingwithGus a quick Google search "what is the largest living organism on earth" will let you know it's a mycelium network in Oregon
@sethgsf4120Ай бұрын
@@HikingwithGus google "largest living organism on earth" and it says mycelium network in Oregon
@BackcountryExposureАй бұрын
That area of Utah, my amazing state, is simply incredible. Loved this video, Steven!
@prototropoАй бұрын
Colorado guy here--wonderful video. More science like this! Colorado's waterfalls and ruins are worth a look, as are Utah's fossil beds and New Mexico's incredible landscapes.
@wolfpecker5710Ай бұрын
As a lifelong Utah resident, I totally agree! Tons of awesome places throughout all the four corners states!
@trevorhawkins91463 күн бұрын
Life long Utah resident here. I live near the 4 corners, roughly 75 miles south of Moab. Nothing more beautiful and diverse than what's right outside my house. I feel truly blessed to have lived here for the majority of my life.
@timmo971Ай бұрын
I highly approve of niche content about locations like this. When you go for a walk you just go for a walk but when you know things like this you’re much more interested and more likely to go too.
@Tina-zi9dvАй бұрын
Your videos are so interesting, entertaining and extremely valuable. A wonderful change from the gear reviews and backpacking trips. I love those, too, but yours are fascinating and I look forward to every video. Thank you for the learning experience. Keep on accepting sponsors.
@tc2156Ай бұрын
I really enjoy the variety of content/topics your channel has! I also really appreciate that you’re videos aren’t 57 mins long. Sponsors don’t bother me at all. Ignore any comments that condemn having sponsors. You are doing backpackers and nature a service by education people. Keep up the great work!
@moomoo3031Ай бұрын
I live at 8300' in northern NM. I planted some aspens 15 yrs ago, some did OK but deer scratched their antlers on some and killed them. But this last year, so many new trees sprouted - in rows! but they are too close to the house so Im letting them grow into lattias then will cut them down. I just love aspens and am thrilled at my grove!
@KwgriffАй бұрын
I love how nature always has the ability to surprise me and just blow me away.
@johnbuiatti366Ай бұрын
The heavens declare the glory of God; and the firmament sheweth his handywork. Psalm 19:1
@adrian.inthewildАй бұрын
Your videos keep getting better and better! The topics, the photography, the edit.. Thank you very much. Keep them coming
@FJX2000_ProductionsАй бұрын
I did my undergraduate studies in Utah, and while taking a plant ecology course we actually took a field trip to Capitol Reef National Park, and stopped at Pando along the way. It was neat to visit it in person after studying it in class. What’s also neat is that there is a road passing through Pando that has signs letting you know when you’ve entered and left the Pando clone. Also present along the road is a wooden sign that gives a brief description of Pando, but really doesn’t do it justice. So an assignment in our class was to write a new sign describing the unique wonder that is Pando, but using the same or less number of characters as the original sign. Maybe one day they will actually change the sign to something that is more informative to what Pando really is and why it is so special. However being that I grew up in Colorado, I wouldn’t be surprised as all as you mentioned if there wasn’t a larger aspen grove somewhere waiting to be discovered. The forests are massive and it would be a nearly impossible task to test all the trees and figure out which aspen clones are largest. Thanks for sharing!
@suejones5295Ай бұрын
These are my favorite trees! They are beautiful and when the wind blows they sound wonderful.
@NinerKАй бұрын
Thank you for this awesome video. The sound of the wind/breeze blowing through aspen leaves is one of my favorite sounds I’ve ever heard
@LuckyBaldwin777Ай бұрын
In the Sierras, I've seen hillsides covered in aspens where different patches of the trees turn yellow at different times. I bet that's because they are different clones. Always wondered about that and now I know because of your video. Thanks, man.
@DubTDubАй бұрын
Looks like a beautiful location! Thanks for sharing - and breaking down the science behind it all!
@mikes9438Ай бұрын
Years ago I did a massive 3 week road trip of the western half of the U.S. (I’m from Pennsylvania). We saw every major national park and city and touched almost every state. The most fascinating and biodiverse state of them all? Utah! Deserts, rock formations, snow capped mountains & skiing, a giant salt lake, salt flats, and a huge variety of animals.
@In3rdMillenniumАй бұрын
Hope you enjoyed camping in the quakies, many fond memories listening to the wind through the leaves. 🍂
@jamieferguson3131Ай бұрын
When I was a kid I apparently said that the leaves were singing. It’s still a sound like no other tree.
@lisaphares2286Ай бұрын
I enjoy your fact based content. You put forth what you learn and leave it up to us to decide what best suits our needs. Glad you and GGG are supporting each other.
@jimmcevoy3392Ай бұрын
it is a joy to see you bring the science of the outdoors to others. Keep up the good work!
@kylemargot3352Ай бұрын
I like how this channel is evolving. Gear is fun and all and I still enjoy those videos but this is the content I really appreciate. You’re a wonderful storyteller!
@ItsAStephanieBАй бұрын
How amazing. I had no idea. Thank you Steven!
@julieduncan1996Ай бұрын
Fascinating and stunningly gorgeous miracle of nature! Thank you for sharing this with us! We have a little grove of aspens on our school property here in Michigan, and I love taking my students out there to listen to the leaves. ❤
@evanwalters6574Ай бұрын
Happy to see something of actual value on KZbin
@coloradonativeguideАй бұрын
Some say the Aspen grove in western Colorado inspired the movie Avatar. James Camron has a place near Crested Butte (near this groove) and a large mining company was going to tear into the mountain, but the town and the mayor (in a wheelchair) fought back and won... sound familiar. Although, that is just the talk you hear around CB
@MyLifeOutdoorsАй бұрын
I had no idea. That’s awesome
@cynthiagraven3343Ай бұрын
I love Pando! I made my family stop to check it out on a vacation. They couldn’t seem to understand my interest, but I think it’s really cool & should be preserved. Thanks!
@lwilliams946Ай бұрын
Thanks for taking the time to educate us on the trees! Had heard of them prior, but not that they were threatened.
@stagiestpizzaАй бұрын
1:36 me driving to your moms house
@dylangapinski5058Ай бұрын
Beat me to it god damnit
@richardharding7767Ай бұрын
Perfect. The moment he said it I had to search the comments.
@MichaelNorthrup-c1rАй бұрын
Here.....have an upvote, you comedic genius! 😂
@LDT200118 күн бұрын
Thats pretty good. Got a solid laugh outta me.
@johnhege6502Ай бұрын
Here in NC we have black locust which grows the same way. I've cleared some around my home to make a garden space. When I dug out the stumps I found each root ball wrapped around a rock. It looks as though the trees send out a loot and when it encounters a rock, it takes a turn up and grows a tree.
@GeorgeGeorge-yb2szАй бұрын
I have a Black Locust tree that I have to use a bladed weed eater to control. I love the tree, so I don't poison the suckers, but they are a real pain. Lucky for the tree that I like it!
@erinmac4750Ай бұрын
This is my first watch of your channel, and I love walk through discussion about Pando. Aspen groves are one of the wonders of the world. Thank you for sharing your knowledge, subscribed! 🍀
@chucknelson1676Ай бұрын
Thanks!
@MyLifeOutdoorsАй бұрын
Thank you!
@Hunt_or_DieАй бұрын
I'm not a hiker or backpacker... But I like this content, it is very well thought out and presented. Your ad spot was very well presented as well, not obnoxious or silly and I actually gave the video a thumbs up during the ad! I watched the whole thing ad and all and that is a first for me. Thank you for just being normal 🙏. Liked and subscribed.
@tiffanylance6015Ай бұрын
Excellent video! I live in Southern Utah And wanted to clarify that this is more toward Richfield (middle of Utah, north of Beaver) than Southern Utah. We're more red rock and sand down here 😊
@vallejoborncalihasbecomeal9022Ай бұрын
Something confuses me. If deer and other animals eat the young Aspen sprouts, wouldn't that cause them to grow more plentiful in other areas? If fire is good for Aspens to proliferate, wouldn't animals chewing them down do the same thing? If roots of Aspens have been around for up to a million years, wouldn't those roots have experienced different climate conditions over that time? Do you think nature will find a way? It appears, the Aspen can teach us more than we seek!
@hetteen1Ай бұрын
Yeah the comment about over-hunting just didn’t make any sense and I’d really like it if he would explain the logic behind it. State natural resources departments often use hunting as the tool to reduce the population of grazing animals in order to protect valuable flora. Hunting actually is just a straw man in this case. The fence is doing exactly what hunters would or could do. In fact, if they wanted to be more economically efficient, they could’ve not spent the money on the fence and then sold hunting tags for that area and actually brought in money and actually solved the problem at the same time!
@jasonhernandez619Ай бұрын
@@hetteen1it was overhunting of predators. If the original large predators were still thriving there, the fence to keep out grazers would not be needed. In answer to the question about grazing vs fire, any given area would burn only at intervals of many years, whereas grazing pressure is constant in the absence of large predators.
@hetteen1Ай бұрын
@@jasonhernandez619 fair point about predators. I should’ve considered that. My point about hunting the grazing population still stands though, as humans are pretty good at removing populations when used in a regulated manner. That would likely be less cost to forest service. But now I’m thinking the fence is as much about keeping out all recreation out of that area. All foot and hoof traffic probably does damage.
@brentaagardАй бұрын
@@hetteen1you are trying to make killing animals okay in your book lmao use all the animal or you are going to hell
@hugh26120 күн бұрын
It appears that you can teach us more than we seek?
@patrickperkins7011Ай бұрын
Thanks for the video! Aspen Groves are pretty amazing. The other issue with us stopping the fires is that the duff layer builds up more, and when fires DO roll through, they burn hotter, and for longer, which could possibly damage the root system. :(
@alfredwotanson7971Ай бұрын
I absolutely love quakee's. The sound they make when the wind blows through them just feels like home.
@abpljacks9201Ай бұрын
Grew up camping in this area, it is beyond beautiful.
@lachutequimarche8074Ай бұрын
You’re doing amazing work!
@ThomasWatsonHollingworthIVАй бұрын
0:46 self cloning is actually quite common among trees. It's quite common in plants in general as a matter of fact.
@VeniceInventorsАй бұрын
It sounds like a good way to replicate in the absence of pollinators.
@joedirt3563Ай бұрын
I know mushrooms are not a plant but they clone themselves to.
@BrianWoodruff-Jr5 күн бұрын
I live in Utah, and I took my mom to see Pando last summer. No one else was there, so we got to experience it all to ourselves. We felt small, yet welcome there. It felt ancient, yet young. I want to go back again some day.
@douglasstemke2444Ай бұрын
Biology geek here. Your question maybe right, maybe not. There are three other SUPER organisms that maybe larger than the aspen grove you've noted. 1) Amillaria ostoyae known as the Humongous Fungus in Oregon is said by many to be the largest organism in the world at 8.8 square miles in size. Contender #2 is a sea grass (Hybrid Seagrass) clone in Shark's Bay Australia that is 110 square miles, and #3 Is another tree in Tasmania. No doubt it's a monster though
@jasonhernandez619Ай бұрын
It's no coincidence that none of these contenders are in Europe or Asia. The long history of intensive civilization on those continents means that similarly sized organisms there were long since killed off. I find it entirely plausible that primeval Ireland, for example, could once have had trees as impressive as those in the climatically similar Pacific Northwest.
@es2056Ай бұрын
There is another huge aspen grove in the Dixie National Forest near the Zion/Bryce Canyon area. I was aware of the way the aspen clones itself and with that knowledge I saw the grove in a totally different way. It truly is amazing. Great information you have provided here.
@aalhardАй бұрын
Not only have I heard of it. I spent time with Pando in 2022😊
@MegaLivingIt24 күн бұрын
So beautiful! All gold and white! 🧡
@carolineray2155Ай бұрын
Love this kind of content! Thanks.
@vincentvega5686Ай бұрын
Great video. Thanks for the update on Pando. Nice to hear they are trying to protect it.
@VelcorHFАй бұрын
It’s crazy to think that a single blight or insect that prefers to eat that kind of tree could wipe out that entire organism overtime. It sounds like a pretty important thing to be protected.
@robertjohnson1962Ай бұрын
I have read that the presence of white bark trees are one of the prime predictors of riparian health. I find myself looking for them while hiking. Beautiful, thank you.
@daveinnh3410Ай бұрын
Brother, you are my single most trusted source for gear reviews on the internet. Love all your content, espesically nature content like this, and your car-camping trips with that kind of gear, reviewed. I'm on a fixed income, would love to support you financially but just can't, but I do watch your videos to the end and hit LIKE on each one. Keep up the good work and thanks again for sharing your content.
@MyLifeOutdoorsАй бұрын
That’s all I ask. Thank you for watching till the end!
@TheAcademicOracleАй бұрын
What a beautiful focus on nature’s best! 😍
@Handle-q6xАй бұрын
Did you mis-speak when you said it was a Century old trees (1:49)? Seems like that much growth would take longer.
@sammyisanoctopusАй бұрын
The individual aspen stalks live up to around 100 years. Scientists are not entirely sure how old Pando as a whole organism is. I've seen estimates from 9,000 to 14,000 years old, but I also found an article from a week ago citing a study--which has not undergone peer review yet--giving an estimated age between 16,000 and 80,000 years old. The upper end of that age range came from aspen pollen that dates to 60,000 years go in a nearby lake bed. The article says 16,000 is more likely, because of the presence of glaciers in the area 20,000 years ago.
@jamieferguson3131Ай бұрын
I grew up under the branches of Pando. We owned land near Fish Lake, & spent all of my childhood free time there. The whole area feels like magic.
@JonathanNielsen-n5k14 күн бұрын
Such a great place, my family lives a 1.5-hour drive away and we make sure to visit every year.
@67L48Ай бұрын
6:03. That's part of what is called the "Smokey Bear Effect." The ultra-aggressive campaign to eliminate forest fires has caused many problems, including making some forests actually more susceptible to fire and increasing the severity of forest fires.
@strixtАй бұрын
Well said. Not only are there more forest fires now, they get significantly larger.
@sandman4198Ай бұрын
I'm really liking the new content. If you combine this content with the gear you're using then you'll be covering the things that we all love. To be fair, many of us have been doing self-supported light weight camping for 40+ years and we know what we want to carry and what we don't but introducing some science to your videos has breathed a fresh take on them. Nice work. Keep it up 👍🏽!
@ShortGuysBetaWorksАй бұрын
"...walk among the trees..." Very John Muir of you, and I mean that as a complement.
@mikeholt1248Ай бұрын
I just subscribed and will continue watching his videos and even consider some of his backpacking gear for sale. The compelling reason to subscribe besides the fact that I do enjoy the outdoors and nature is that this man is an honest man. Right in the middle of the video he stops to tell you yes, he does have a sponsor because he needs one in order to continue doing these videos. I don’t remember any one of the channels that I follow looking at the camera and telling the truth like this. So, apparently, with no hidden agendas, and his offerings of his own passionate studies and work is more than enough for me to be a grateful subscriber.
@petersparker1278Ай бұрын
Easily one of the BEST outdoors channels on KZbin.
@sirius4kАй бұрын
Was expecting Your Mom™, disappointing.
@WildernessMapperАй бұрын
😂
@JustinMcGarryАй бұрын
I love all this new content that you're trying out. Keep it coming and thank you for what you do!
@Owen4OnMyResumeАй бұрын
half hidden face etched into one of the trees at 3:29? 👀👀👀
@MyLifeOutdoorsАй бұрын
Oh that’s creepy. Didn’t notice that when I was there.
@Owen4OnMyResumeАй бұрын
For a second I had thought it was an illusion lol. Interesting video and concept. Older life is a fascinating thing, whether that's plants like these aspens or animals like giant clams, all pretty cool.
@Dr_LarkenАй бұрын
I thought I was the only one that saw that! Someone put effort into it! Looks like Calvin, from the comic strip!
@lenathenurse92349 күн бұрын
Good eye
@skippylippy547Ай бұрын
I LOVE this content! ❤ Please do more of this! Thank you. 💯 💥
@TimberiusАй бұрын
This is ridiculous. It's survived since the ice-age through everything (cooling, warming, predators) you you erect a fence. Really?!
@RiomojoАй бұрын
You haven’t seen my mama
@DesertPackratАй бұрын
Some of the best KZbin content I have seen in years. Thank you for such a comprehensive overview. I know in England there are researches talking about individual tree organisms that have interwoven roots that communicate to each other about insect threats and other important survival information. What this means is that even killing one tree in a forest of trees can be detrimental to the living ones. We shouldn’t let this stop us from harvesting, but we need to do it in a smarter manner.
@mtamech535Ай бұрын
6:23 Adios. "Pando" has been around for 100,000 years and between that time it has been far far warmer and far far colder. But now, because of 'warming' it's being threatened...c'mon man.
@goranurlic712Ай бұрын
Maybe you should do your research again.
@Brett_S_420Ай бұрын
Have you heard about what methane is doing right now? The positive feedback loop is out of our hands now. There will be no stopping this train.
@Marynicole830Ай бұрын
Dude. It’s because of how fast it’s warming. He even said that right after your time stamp. We are making it warmer much faster than nature ever did and organisms don’t have time to adapt. The tress can’t grow toward their preferred temperature in time. Come on now. Pay attention before going off. It’s always been about the speed at which it’s happening. Also we wouldn’t like the world the way it was in the past. We were literally born into one of the most stable climates earth has ever achieved in the last 10k years and we ruined it. We literally inherited the garden of Eden and messed it up.
@RauchenWirАй бұрын
Aspen groves in the springtime feel like a fairy tale. Year-round, really, but when everything is green on the forest floor, it's quite something.
@Thedude5401Ай бұрын
Actually, the largest living organism on Earth is the Armillaria solidipes (Honey fungus). A network of this fungus in the pacific northwest spans 5.5 kilometres across, covering about 2,384 acres. It is estimated it to be over 2000 years old. And the Pando aspens may simply be dying of old age.
@dontpanicbotanicsАй бұрын
He's considering by mass as well which would be Pando
@mattsheetsАй бұрын
You should actually watch the video before trying to correct him. See 2:25 specifically.
@Thedude5401Ай бұрын
@@mattsheets I did. Still true.
@johnhorne1427Ай бұрын
Oregon Public Broadcasting aired a short video on the humongous fungus literally hours before MLO’s dropped. H.Fungi stats: 3.5 sq miles 7,500-35,000 tons 200 grey whales Sorry Utah, Oregon wins
@PatG-xd8qnАй бұрын
As a non American, I always found funny this American obsession of always wanting to have the "biggest" or the "best" of anything Meanwhile, there's most likely another organism even larger somewhere else in the world, but you guys won't ever know about it
@RobTremp18 күн бұрын
Dude you’re awesome! Learned a lot and can’t wait to share with my 14 year old son tomorrow. He will love learning about this. Thank you.
@wyregrasser7540Ай бұрын
I like it...thanks for sharing. Good luck with your changes. 👴
@michaelthomson8065Ай бұрын
I'm so glad I found your site.I live in the Pacific Northwest ,and I also love backpacking.Always fascinated how different tree species adapt to their environment.
@marilyncallan-cx7rkАй бұрын
Excited & 0leased to see your video. "Aspens are my favorite tree as a former backpacker & wilderness explorer & hiker (I'm 89). As I enter one of my small groves to eat breakfast, I always say, "Good morning, Aspen San." San being a Japanese honorific. You can point out too that in winter, aspen bark shows a slight greenish undertone. They''re continuing to photosynthesize, ever so slightly. Thanks so much
@keithbond9423Ай бұрын
From my experience that greenish undertone in the bark is present year round but is simply more noticeable in the winter because of the lack of green foliage. Also, aspens are greener when they are young and progressively become whiter as they age. Additionally, an unhealthy aspen will have a slightly amber or pinkish undertone instead of green.
@SweetpeaRieАй бұрын
I’m new to your channel, but I’m absolutely LOVING your videos! They are so well created with being informative but very engaging…. I just can’t get enough!
@cladiosanchez6865Ай бұрын
Me and my wife LOVE this place! We even spent 2 days of our honeymoon camping in it! fish lake national forest is really pretty and im happy i live in such an amazing state!
@janeroyce656821 күн бұрын
Thank you Stephen. Absolutely fascinating and beautiful.
@noggin6870Күн бұрын
I stumbled across this while driving down to Capitol Reef a few months ago. I had heard of Pando, but in my head I remembered it being in Australia or something. When I saw it on Google maps nearby, I instantly turned around and went out to go see it, it's truly mind blowing in person.
@davidcooper8390Ай бұрын
I camped not to far from Pando this summer. It is truly spectacular to see. Thanks for sharing some of Southern Utah's gems. Keep up the good work on these videos.
@christijacobs319925 күн бұрын
Thank you for the great video. Thank you even more for helping to preserve the amazing life on this planet.
@elenacaddell363921 күн бұрын
Beautiful so Awesome. That’s Good ! It Wont be Destroyed ! Hopefully. 💓
@AngelCatBabyАй бұрын
I love aspens, they have such a great fragrance especially in the fall when the leaves are turning yellowish and fall to the ground, if you like trees, there is nothing else like it….its one of my favorite plants/trees…👍❤️🙏🏼🇺🇸
@TravelwithJennifer-x1z14 күн бұрын
Every trip is a new adventure, a unique story waiting to be written and cherished forever.
@GK49245Ай бұрын
Rich content. Great review. Thanks for sharing.
@AhJodieАй бұрын
Wow, so beautiful and lovely! Thank you!
@mangographics22527 күн бұрын
Fascinating ... Love this 💕
@Iron-OutdoorАй бұрын
Great info, thanks for sharing
@sla421957Ай бұрын
I was just there Sept 30th. Stopped there on our way to Capitol Reef NP. Besutiful!
@Charyl.w.an.AАй бұрын
Love it! ❤ I needed this right now! Nature is fabulous and so are you!
@haileybischoff5943Ай бұрын
Aspens are my favorite tree. I think they are so stunning and I didn’t know any of that. So amazing!
@mitchellmysliwiecphotographyАй бұрын
Definitely love all the content you are producing. I never heard of GGG before watching your videos, now I'm a regular customer. thank you Steve
@tc2156Ай бұрын
Same. Steven was the first person I heard mention GGG and I am a customer because of him. Not because he was trying to “sell” me on the company, but because he made me aware of some neat, unique gear. I actually appreciate the sponsor partnership because of how it’s changed my backpack.
@dancingmeerkat207815 күн бұрын
Thank you to the KZbin algorithm for popping this video in my feed. This was really neat! 👍👏👏👏💕
@voxpopulitotheleftАй бұрын
Those barks are so beautiful. So it has rhizomatous roots. Fascinating!!!
@soy_lecheАй бұрын
I like this style. Helps me appreciate what I see even more.
@Sherry-v2r11 күн бұрын
Magnificent ground cover, what a discovery? I'm so glad I found this site. Thanks.
@kimsundermeyer3295Ай бұрын
Thanks so much for this video. I love backpacking, but I can no longer do it. I can remember many times the majestic, magical experience of walking through an aspen grove in the evening with the sunlight sparkling through the yellow leaves.
@Bill.PearsonАй бұрын
I didn't get to Pando this year when I went to Utah, but I did spend a few days among the huge, blindingly yellow aspen groves in the mountains south and west of Park City in late September/early October. That is a bucket-list item that will stay on my list for a revisit. One word--Awesome.