It's fun watching you having fun in that creek. Seems round the next bend you'll find Dr. Livingston! And thank you for collecting that trash! I know it stinks awfully. Be carefull and keep your spirit!
@steverusie69863 жыл бұрын
I don’t know how I missed this one. Great work as always!saving the streams on blockage at a time and one piece of litter at a time!
@avidviewer13 жыл бұрын
Really interesting. Thanks (again)!
@mickcrill3 жыл бұрын
Hi PSN, another great vblog, u do worry me doing all this alone. Looking at the footage there seems to be lot of illegal dumping, have you contacted the local MP. Keep up the good work, body cam, fishing wellies and people😎
@Bobal273 жыл бұрын
Excellent video, as always. Also as always, I wish you’d gone just a bit further, give us a look at the connection point from almost above it, but I understand the decision to be safe, and not risk falling into the bigger river. Could you give us a view from a different angle on that watery intersection sometime? Something that shows the size of the River Amber, and this pathways’ flow into it, or if that’s not possible, at least a view from a bridge, over the river, for scale. I only ask because the three “river forks” that join up in my town are at least 15 meters wide, each. I haven’t actually seen the outflow edge, yet, I haven’t looked for it, but I will, and already know the perfect vantage points to show the scale of two of the three forks. The reservoir one of them feeds into, and flows out of, and some of it becomes drinking water, is almost 3/4ths of a square kilometer, .72 km^2, or 177 acres of water surface. Studying our local waterways has given me a unique perspective on our town’s “missing segments,” why our streets in town always dead end in one direction or another, and fill in the missing information between opposing dead ends. Our waterways are larger than I ever thought. I’m used to the creeks the size of the one you walked from when I lived in the country, north of here. We’re apparently far downstream from many, many, many, many of those. I see now why post 10 waits for flooding to point out problem areas. I’m still going to grab any tires or plastics I see, but glass and metal will have to environmentally reintegrate, because even visually inspecting everything upstream of my nearest river would take a vast majority of the rest of my life. One fork is apparently a canoeing favorite in our state. It’s responsible for the accumulated drainage of almost 1600 square kilometers of land. That’s a lot of creeks. Also, I was going to show up earlier, but I was doing other research, and ended up writing a chapter for my memoirs. Sorry for the delay, this is the second video I’ve clicked on since I finished writing. Post got one released before yours, but waterways are always my first clicks :)
@colinireson93393 жыл бұрын
A really enjoyable vid. You are doing a great job with this little brook. Just one thing, please wear thick rubber gloves to protect yourself from any 'nasties' in the water. Stay safe.
@PlanetSavingNovice3 жыл бұрын
Thanks you Colin 😃 Yes, I am on the hunt for some rubber gloves at the minute. Thank you for watching and your support. Tina