3:16 California botanist here. I traveled through the Madrean chaparral for the first time while collecting for my PhD, and I knew ahead of time that there was this "interior chaparral" out there, but boy howdy I wasn't really prepared for how chaparraly it actually is. I about lost it when I ran into a sugar bush, _Rhus ovata_ ... It is so weird to drive through hours and hours of desert and then run into a plant that is so emblematic of coastal California. Mind blown.
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
Topography and geography can do crazy things! Thanks for sharing
@lynnjacobs98858 ай бұрын
I'm from S CA and totally love the chaparral there. Been in Tucson for 40 years. Some fabulous chaparral in the Catalinas and Santa Ritas here, if you ever get the chance.
@brkaz58649 ай бұрын
Thank you for your video. 74 year old Tucson native here and we love our Sky Islands. They make summers liveable. My great grandfather and great uncles worked the Lavender Pit in Bisbee, grandmother went to school in Bisbee in early 1920s. Have traveled world wide, and lived in many other beautiful locations around the world, but Arizona lives in your soul and we always come home.
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
that's extraordinary! I spent some time in Bisbee, love the area. Mount Lemmon is truly a life saver on those scorching days!
@ryanreedgibson9 ай бұрын
I'm a 40 native to Gilbert. I have lived other places too such as Snoqualmie Pass in Washington. I always make it back here.
@joemcconnell30089 ай бұрын
I live near the santa catalinas which are a sky island. For those who dont know if you start at the bottom of the mountain and travel to the top,its like driving from mexico to canada with regards to climate and fauna.
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
Yeah I love that drive up to Summerhaven; a shame about the bighorn fire shutting down alot of the hikes ):
@Ddax-td7qy9 ай бұрын
Great comparison!
@jayflo7149 ай бұрын
Mexico is highly mountainous and has desert, jungle, snow/forest.....fyi
@carenfarmer47949 ай бұрын
It's a wonderful drive up to Summerhaven.
@danieldaniels75718 ай бұрын
@@carenfarmer4794was one of the best things about living in Tucson
@AlbertWillHelmWestings26185 ай бұрын
White Mountain Apache Tribal member here just chillin on the rez in Whiteriver AZ enjoying a vid on my local area, is good to see my home land on youtube, a lot of places in the images iv drove through or walked through just recently if not day before or after posting this comment, thank you for showing our great state of arizona and its natural beauty!
@Trav-u2u9 ай бұрын
One of the best sky islands in Southeast Arizona is Mt. Graham, literally you go from 2,000ft. to 11000 ft in 20 miles. There's a paved road that goes all the way to the top. At the top you feel like you're standing on a commercial airliner in flight. You can see all the mountains this guy describes from the top of Mt Graham.
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
i've been to the top of Mount Graham after visiting the hot springs in Safford; lovely mountain! Even has its own endemic species of squirrel!
@johnperic68609 ай бұрын
it's even possible to see Mount Baldy from Mt Graham on a good day.
@harrybenson99839 ай бұрын
These "islands" were the favorite dwelling place of the Apache. They moved from island to island raiding the basins and the people who lived there.
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
The topography provides a great opportunity for stealth and retreat; I can see why that might've been there tactic!
@jeffreyburnette62619 ай бұрын
@@thenaturalexperience2140😅
@todaav9 ай бұрын
That can’t be true Native Peoples were a peaceful nation of basket weavers!
@AN_APPEAL_2_HEAVEN8 ай бұрын
@@todaav lmfao yeah definitely
@JordanO3178 ай бұрын
Raiding? 🤣 Try again… wrong people
@aaronfogelsanger25509 ай бұрын
Dude... I live in a cave on the Colorado River every winter just South of Erinsburg. What no one ever talks about is all the evidence of ancient flooding their. The debris piles are hundreds of feet tall, full of petrified wood, dinosaur bones and fossilized coral everywhere. Pretty Cool stuff, thanks for the video
@his_tory_debunk53389 ай бұрын
He said DINOSAURS 🤣🤣🤣🤣
@Otis-Tank9 ай бұрын
Imagine dinosaurs being real. Plus only famous archaeologists and museums find bones😅😅 and not in America..@@his_tory_debunk5338
@alecro21129 ай бұрын
You should post a video of that, I know I’d love to see it!
@ryanreedgibson9 ай бұрын
@@alecro2112 Yes, post a video. I'd love to see how your cave internet service provider patched the twisted pair or coax cable through your wall.
@starman12949 ай бұрын
Do you mean Ehrenberg? Where is Erinsburg?
@sagetmaster49 ай бұрын
I had the privilege of hiking across many parts of two hemispheres for my geology education...I'm now in Tucson and hike the sky islands every weekend. This is the finest hiking and birdwatching I've ever experienced
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
the amount of landscapes and ecosystems backed into these mountains is enchanting
@1237barca8 ай бұрын
@@thenaturalexperience2140the most condensed hike for micro biomes is Ventura canyon.
@winslow87799 ай бұрын
I love this, thank you for such an expansive exploration of the geography of AZ; I live here and am obsessed with the strangeness of the landscape and the weather it creates.
@pauldaystar9 ай бұрын
Lived on many Arizona islands camping, since 1970's The many Natve Res, Thankyou for the Memories
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
interesting! thanks for sharing!
@lorenkelley15689 ай бұрын
The sky Islands area is on my list of places to visit. This was an excellent introduction. Thank you.
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
Definitely check it out! Mount Lemmon, Mount Wrightson, Miller Peak, Bisbee, Chiricahua National Monument, Portal, and Cochise are all areas I recommend!
@4thebees9 ай бұрын
I’m from Arizona and I’m learning something just from this video so I subscribed thank you
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
I used to live there! Miss it everyday! Thanks for the sub!
@4thebees9 ай бұрын
@@thenaturalexperience2140 I live in Prescott ,grew up here amazing place to be. I can’t wait to check out more of your videos. I am getting ready to do quartzite and tortilla flats. Kind of a little east west travel lol one place I haven’t done anything in my own backyard is granite mountain, I don’t know why, but have you got any videos on it?
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
sadly no, but I have hiked there! Beautiful place; the reservoir at the bottom contrasts well with the bold beige rocks that are littered all around the mountain. I highly recommend hiking to the trails end, sadly it doesn't take you all the way to the top but you see quite a bit! If you're going to quartzite; check out my King of Arizona video, it shows off a cool wilderness area nearby to there 👍🏻
@4thebees9 ай бұрын
@@thenaturalexperience2140 yes granite basin is one of my fav spots around here! I will for sure thank you and take care God bless 🐝💛
@jacobgarland32579 ай бұрын
Such an awe-inspiring mountain range to explore. Great photography and video. Thanks for bringing us along.
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
thanks for your comment! i'll try to keep it up!
@sarahblue19149 ай бұрын
I really enjoyed your video. Thank you for sharing your pictures and information. Am subscribing and sharing with my elderly father, he can't get out and around anymore but videos like this interest him and give a lot of visual, I think he will enjoy them.
@doznt129 ай бұрын
One of the best travelogues I've seen so far. Well done Zonie.
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
thank you so much for this comment! I'm gonna keep making content similar to this so stay tuned!
@aaronfogelsanger25509 ай бұрын
I also found a huge native American agricultural site just off the Colorado River with thousands of morter and pestiles. Every overhang had ancient bee hives under them. A local farmer said his grandfather reused an old canal he found for his fields. What was interesting was after finding thousands of agricultural tools, I didn't find one arrow head. I assume they were nomadic farmers.
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
What an amazing find; i'd ask you to disclose the location but it's best kept a close secret! A good chunk of native cultures weren't hunters and largely relied on the land for their resources, the colorado river area along the arizona cali border had many Yumen speaking tribes who farmed along its banked since it stayed above freezing in the area essentially year round! Thanks again for sharing!
@got2kittys9 ай бұрын
Honeybees are from Europe. Non native. In the West those will seldom be more than 200 years old. The Spanish might have brought them.
@aaronfogelsanger25509 ай бұрын
@@got2kittys interesting, I didn't know that but the hives were very old and I've never seen a bee in that area before, I wonder where they went? Seems like prime area for them
@IWillSmurfYou8 ай бұрын
@got2kittys honey bees introduced to south America 16th century and north america 17th century
@lynnjacobs98858 ай бұрын
Thanks for this synopsis of the sky islands -- a wonderful region, which we've been enjoying for about 40 years.
@canvasjockey46289 ай бұрын
Lots of good information, a lot of which was new to me! Living in Tucson we spend so much time visiting that SE part of the state, the variety in landscape always amazes me. It's our happy place, we can't get enough of it!
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
it's a beautiful place to live! I'm jealous
@drmichaelshea9 ай бұрын
I love Arizona and I’m glad I live here.❤❤❤
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
I miss it every single day!
@tomduncan24009 ай бұрын
I’ve only been to mount lemmon but it was gorgeous and so interesting to see the change in biomes as you go up the mountain. Arizona is a beautiful place
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
Summerhaven up at the top of mount lemmon is such an enjoyable little community; but I highly recommend you check out some of the other mountains when you get the chance; they all have a little something different to offer 🙌🏻
@Ddax-td7qy9 ай бұрын
A top memory for me is my visit to the Chiricahuas. The first views of Cave Creek Canyon are as dramatic as any landscape anywhere. Then you loop around to the other side and get the National Monument hoodoos. Both things not able to be captured in pictures, but thanks for your great piece!
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
Portal is such a cool area! I'm so sad that I only drove through it; i'm actually planning on getting out there to hike at the end of April!
@dalkonshieldАй бұрын
I really enjoy these well-researched videos and the fact that you talk like a normal person instead of doing the "KZbin voice"
@jevinday8 ай бұрын
Amazing! I'm born and raised here in Arizona and I've never explored much of southern Arizona. We really have such an immensely enormous state with so many beautiful places
@FL0ra_favvn8 ай бұрын
We really do!
@JasonDarbee8 ай бұрын
I myself have always go to payson area for mountain hiking but I am INSPIRED to check out these southeast Sky Islands
@althechicken95978 ай бұрын
I love driving up the arizona mountains. It's definitely my favorite part of arizona
@thenaturalexperience21408 ай бұрын
it's always a magical journey
@bellicose20379 ай бұрын
I've been to a good few regions of the US, every morning I have the Sawtooths in all their majesty to look at, but there's something about my home in the desert that keeps me coming back. I climbed Mt lemmon base to peak during springtime and it is.still my favorite hike. The amount you see in about 20 Miles is actually insane.
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
that desert always beckons me back as well; such a magnificent biodiverse place
@lynnjacobs98858 ай бұрын
My passion for many years was off-trail hiking in the Catalinas. I consider one of the best parts of my life. Getting a little too old now for the big hikes anymore.
@sherristell47477 ай бұрын
Retired from USGS, your video is nice, very informative
@douglasvamateurradioandmore9 ай бұрын
Im amazed at the desert. I need to get out hiking again.
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
yeah the desert is beautiful, I think i'll always live in one
@lynnjacobs98858 ай бұрын
Good advice to yourself. Nothing better than being in nature.
@dustingd19 ай бұрын
This is fascinating . Great work and explanation!
@An-kw3ec9 ай бұрын
We have a lot of these in mexico too, basically all the Sierra madres are green temperate oasis surrounded by barren deserts.
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
Y'all got some spectacular hiking down in Mexico; I can't wait to explore some of it someday!
@justyouraveragejoe73598 ай бұрын
Really enjoyed watching this video. Have always found this part of the US fascinating. Plan on doing some backroads exploring in the next year. Thanks for the heads-up on the Chiricahua National Mon. what a spectacular looking place. Thanks for sharing.
@TheNimaid8 ай бұрын
I live in Tucson and I love to go to our so-called "Sky Island" (it says so on all the signs) Mt. Lemmon as often as possible. In the winter at the top (near a town called Summerhaven), they even have ski slopes equipped with ski lifts and everything! The difference as you go up really is stunning, you really feel like you're gradually being transported to a different ecosystem than the desert we're all used to living in. Evergreens, lush cabbage-like plats, lakes with fish, streams, and the most stunning views of the Sonoran desert gradually fading into this foreign landscape. And the sunsets... I don't think I will ever get used to how obscenely beautiful the sunsets are out here, especially with a view like that. The sounds at night on the mountain are so otherworldly, so clearly different than the desert life, but also so clearly still influenced by the low rainfall and generally harsher climate. It's a remarkable place that I will always hold dear in my heart.
@willoughby18889 ай бұрын
Thanks for taking me along for the adventure. "Maine" says "hello".
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
I love Maine! beautiful fall colors
@willoughby18889 ай бұрын
I fell right in love with those Fall colors as soon as I crossed the Maine border in 1994.@@thenaturalexperience2140
@seanjazzguitar9 ай бұрын
Wow, this is shockingly similar to Madrid! The chaparral and oak grassland/woodland is what we have surrounding the city and as you go up into the mountains it’s very similar pine forest to the photos shown here. Awesome video, hope to visit Arizona someday.
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
I lived in Spain for 3 months one summer, I totally get where you're coming from, it is quite similar
@andresmithjr97639 ай бұрын
Awesome, very well put together. I look forward to taking a trip out in that part of Arizona.
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
you definitely should! Thanks for the comment
@missy1839 ай бұрын
Thanks for Sharing this wonderful video. God bless. ❤❤
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
thank you so much for watching!
@TuishimiАй бұрын
Your videos are very clear and understandable by lay-people like myself. I follow other geologists whose explanations, while very interesting, often fly right over my head.
@TuishimiАй бұрын
...and I live up in the valley (North of Phoenix proper) but I love how the climate changes around Tucson. Since it is closer, we (wife, dogs and I) tend to gravitate toward the plateau for our climate changes and seasons. :)
@JHixon-bi8ok9 ай бұрын
Very interesting. I especially appreciate your presentation of the geologic forces which created these sky islands. 👍
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
geology is my specialty! thanks for watching
@williamlloyd37699 ай бұрын
Well done video. Appreciate the effort you put into researching and creating this video.
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
I appreciate you for saying that!
@JoandtheHoGottaGo9 ай бұрын
Patagonia is a beautiful area. We drive it often
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
during monsoon season I think it's the best place to be! so many flowers
@777dexx9 ай бұрын
Cool , i moved from Tucson to Rio Rico just the other side of the mountain from there, big house around 4000 feet love it, moved here when the virus broke out.👍💯
@ClotheFern8 ай бұрын
Wow you’re videos are amazing, keep going brotha
@keeparizonawild1566 ай бұрын
The sky islands are the absolute gem of Arizona. The most bio diversity in all of North America. Treasure troves of ecology. Great job once again on this one, brother. You’re doing the Lord’s work. 🌵🏜️🌲🌎
@jaddcorreia52568 ай бұрын
Amazing video. Just stumbled upon your channel and I am hooked
@thegatesofdawn...13868 ай бұрын
Interesting video, thank you.
@gtrfreak9 ай бұрын
Reminds me of growing up by Ramsey Canyon Preserve-Nature Conservancy, it’s a joy! You captured that joy on this video
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
Thanks so much for saying that; I got a lot of good memories near and around Sierra Vista myself, it's a wonderful place
@HumanBean5209 ай бұрын
I never realized how beautiful the diversity of wildfire was in Tucson until I was older. Now I’ve come to appreciate the desert and AZ. Awesome video man!
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
thanks! Tucson is a great city with some fantastic hiking
@jeffreyrule81439 ай бұрын
Thanks for taking us along.
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
thanks for watching
@outwest100azАй бұрын
My wife and I spent years discovering southern Arizona from Tucson to the border rockhounding our way to every site we could find, out in nature how can you beat that and with my boy who learned there is more to life than a screen. Maybe s segment on the Texas Canyon area another of nature at work and a place to explore and see the wonder of SAZ.
@keeparizonawild1566 ай бұрын
This is your vital moment bro. Ride the wave 🌊 🏄🏻
@permculture9 ай бұрын
makes me homesick
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
used to live in Flagstaff for several years; I think about Arizona everyday! I totally get where you are coming from
@hiroshitakama9 ай бұрын
Thank you for the great information.
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
I appreciate the comment (:
@RichardMills-s3y8 ай бұрын
Great video brother 👍👍
@Schmittywerben9 ай бұрын
My favorite animals of the madrean sky islands are coues deer. I love the adaptability and changes that whitetail have made to live in these areas.
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
they are adorable! but I must say coatimundis have my heart
@danpost47559 ай бұрын
Nice video. Well done! I live just a few miles from Saguaro NF East. I drive the loop often and hike as health permits. I also enjoy the Parker Canyon Lake area as well.
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
It's a beautiful area to be at! I miss AZ everyday
@manimalcrackers40659 ай бұрын
The view of Mount Graham, the highest prominence mountain in Arizona, from Saint Paisius monastery near Safford is incredible. Visit sometime.
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
mount Graham is such a stunning place; going up the road through all the life zones is incredible!
@Nymphadora45uvyu9 ай бұрын
I have no idea how you popped up in my recommended but hey! I live in Sierra Vista and most of these mountains are my back yard! Neat. Subbed.
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
That's amazing; i'm jealous! Love the whole Bisbee, Tombstone, Sierra Vista area; super neat
@tatevancleve18029 ай бұрын
Wow ive been to so many different places in this state & thought i had seen it all. But you covered several in one video that ive never been to. Awesome job. I try to tell ppl about the sky islands whenever i hear someone talking disparagingly about a
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
the sky islands are magnificent, and single handily make south arizona very livable
@Fil-AmExploresUSA8 ай бұрын
Very interesting content It’s full of information Thank you for sharing New subscriber here
@phreakmode9 ай бұрын
Being in the areas shown in this video, you get a sense that it is not about "you" and the human condition of self just goes away. Been around all of these locations, when my health was better I was able to enjoy them first hand.
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
That what natures all about, it heals the soul and brings you outside of yourself. Thank you for sharing!
@CaptainJackScrapper9 ай бұрын
This is my 1st time exploring the Arizona Dessert Areas and I've been to Bisbee and Sierra Vista and surrounds/ Your video and narration here is excellent. I'll be back in the fall.
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
Fall is a great time to be there; lots of good color change
@jfrank4799 ай бұрын
Great video ! very informative well done, Thank you!
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
thanks a ton, more coming soon!
@Katness079 ай бұрын
This would have been a perfect video to show my father, he was sure that all of Arizona was low desert scrub and that there was no biodiversity here. When I was little, he taught me all the scientific names for all the trees in NW MT, where I was born & raised. He would have been surprised to hear that we have Doug Fir. I tried to tell him about the Sky Islands, but he never saw them before he passed. He'd spent 26 years working for the USFS, and wrote a lot of contracts for thinning and clearcutting sections of forest before environmental groups started suing every proposed contract. 😢 He knew and loved the forests more than he liked most people.
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
thanks so much for sharing, I relate a lot to this, so many folks think AZ is just scrubs and cactus and I am hoping videos like this will change peoples opinions on that
@claraallen129 ай бұрын
Thanks for the video. Is there a variety of oak called Madrean? at 3:15 you mention all the other oaks and Madrean Oak. Can't find that variety on a search, please help with this identification. Thanks !
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
I was using it as a general term to refer to the huge number of evergreen oak in the woodlands; some of these mountains contain around 1/4 of the entire worlds species of Oak trees!
@claraallen129 ай бұрын
@@thenaturalexperience2140 ok thanks!! and I loved the presentation video!
@glenmorrison80809 ай бұрын
11:06 Another good example of this is Navajo Mountain, in Navajo Nation. Not easy to get to, but the thing is just one giant hunk of mountain all by itself. Really makes it clear the effect that the topography has on the vegetation/ecology.
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
I used to live in Flagstaff! I know the area well, the rainbow bridge at its base is an epic hike!
@robertgoodrich8953Ай бұрын
I live in Western AZ. We can drive from the desert to the 7800 ft Hualapais in an hour and a half. Used to have a small place there. Very sorry I sold it. We went there in the summers and went from 120 degrees to 90 degrees!
@silencenewberry6 ай бұрын
Islands of Arizona...that's cool title for a video, but that's exactly what islands are...mountains in the ocean.
@jacquelinezozaya58039 ай бұрын
Amazing video! I’m from Tucson and most of them are my favorite places to visit 💛
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
that's amazing, I am jealous!!
@9HighFlyer99 ай бұрын
Crown King is a sky island. Obviously not part of the group discussed here but a sky island none the less. At the base is pretty dry desert and its almost shocking the first time you reach the top.
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
I've been up to Crown King! The little diner next to the general store up there has surprisingly good wings! Another great sky island in Arizona is Hualapai near Kingman; definitely worth the trip if you get the chance (:
@martinjdesmond9 ай бұрын
Nice video presentation. Good job.
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
thank you very much
@woosa62535 ай бұрын
Loved the video.
@RIPFemaleDoggy9 ай бұрын
Hearing about the tribes that occupied these places and eventually removed from them is sad when you realize that nobody else really lives there today. Why tf did anyone ever need to bother them???
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
western expansion is a hard topic to cover; a lot of it doesn't make sense, in some cases they took the land just because they could... very sad indeed
@Chatsworth19798 ай бұрын
Lovely. Thank you.
@OYisit8 ай бұрын
Great job and presentation. It made me feel a little guilty for not getting out to see more of the state I live in. 😮
@thenaturalexperience21408 ай бұрын
it's never too late (:
@tlister679 ай бұрын
Headed to AZ in a week, great information!
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
You gotta do some hiking!!! Check out my video on South AZ hikes; or if you'd like some additional info just lmk (:
@keeparizonawild1566 ай бұрын
The Chiricahua Mountains are my favorite spot in Arizona.
@deserteagles59118 ай бұрын
There are places in the high desert where there is sand as fine as anywhere in the world. Sea shells all the way up near flagstaff. You can see the stages and watermarks way up in the mountains.
@pimacanyon62089 ай бұрын
where I live (near Tucson), grasslands are 4 to 5k above sea level, and oak juniper woodlands are at 5 to 7k
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
it does widely vary, sometimes you will see entire juniper forests below 4,000; the scale I used was a general ecology scale for the region. Thanks for sharing
@macnayeri51419 ай бұрын
Very helpful video… Do you know what regions in Arizona would be considered part of the mixed conifer area you mentioned? For example, are there any cities nearby any mixed conifer areas? I ask because I am looking for land and I thought it very interesting you described the mixed conifer areas as having the most rain water. Thank you
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
Yes! So the only city I know of that is super close to the mixed conifer zone in Arizona is Flagstaff! It's 7,000ft above sea level and gets nearly 100 inches of snow annually. If you're looking for a place in Southern AZ; try Summerhaven it's a small community located in the sky island mountains outside of Tucson. 👍🏻
@emmahardesty43309 ай бұрын
Tucson less than an hour away from mixed conifer in the Catalina Mtns. Mt Wrightson to the south is close to Sonoita & Green Valley; north of Phoenix is Prescott. and its mountains. In fact, all over AZ there are dynamic cities and towns near forest, every area of the state, with skiing in at least three mountain ranges. Many of the images in this video are near Tucson.
@macnayeri51419 ай бұрын
thank you @@thenaturalexperience2140
@macnayeri51419 ай бұрын
thank you@@emmahardesty4330
@Nymphadora45uvyu9 ай бұрын
The foot hills of Sierra vista get pretty close too
@HikingEngineer9 ай бұрын
if you need hiking ideas I got a lot on my channel! seems you hike too! I gotta bag Miller/Carr Peaks at some point
@TheSenorChavez9 ай бұрын
The massacre you spoke of was one my uncle told me at a young age, he believed they were killed and thrown into a sink hole in the area you described.
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
Yeah... sadly that is just one of several tragic events that happened to native peoples in the region. History is always fun to learn about but some parts of it are just straight up sad ):
@Ddax-td7qy9 ай бұрын
So important to witness and remember. I did not previously know about this one, but it reminded me of the Grattan massacre: stolen cow, peacefully camped Native Am's wave white flag, oh well.... Sand Creek was also predominantly women and children. We need to be aware that non-combatants are fair game if your brain is full of racist hate, or religious hate.
@prototropo9 ай бұрын
That massacre is godawful to hear about. Sounds almost as barbaric as the Sand Creek episode. The sky islands are indeed amazing--like so much of the Colorado Plateau and adjacent regions. America is so endowed--if we conserve it.
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
the actions against Native peoples in America's past and even in some regard today; is extremely frustrating and sad, i'm hoping to shed some light on that. I'm glad you enjoyed the video!
@raylivengood80409 ай бұрын
Mount Lemmon above Tucson was my first introduction to this topic. The ecology from bottom to top in elevation was pretty cool. My brother lives there, I do not 😉.
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
Tucson is gorgeous, the desert in AZ in general has so many captivating facets!
@alecdsm9 ай бұрын
how do you only have 500 subs?! and 43k in views? i was just driving through a canyon from the 83 to green valley looking for gold mines lol, i loved this video!
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
I recently started getting my little bit of notoriety! that's a beautiful drive! Best of luck to you on your searches.
@douglasvamateurradioandmore9 ай бұрын
I've seen coatimundi on a ranch in texas. I've only seem two there.
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
wow! what a cool spotting; i've never seen one );
@douglasvamateurradioandmore9 ай бұрын
@thenaturalexperience2140 my dad and I weren't even trying. We were just out on the ranch. There may have been only one. I never saw them together.
@outbacklife20258 ай бұрын
Is that north az
@brucewalsh67848 ай бұрын
Best "unknown" awesome spot in SE Arizona? Long Park in the Chiricahuas. Higher than Rustler or Barfoot, yet largely unknown.
@NunyaBusiness2519 ай бұрын
I'm in the White Mountains, Ponderosa Pine is dominant, even after the massive fires 🔥
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
I love the white mountains; pinetop is such a nice little down, and all the little reservoirs in the region (like big lake) are such peaceful places to be
@JshockSubmariner7359 ай бұрын
We need to plant more trees on the sky islands around the valley. I believe it would create a microclimate that could give us a break in the summer!
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
More trees has been proven to reduce immediate ground temperatures by as much as 10 degrees! I agree
@PreserveSakartvelo9 ай бұрын
Fantastic channel and narration. Look up JonLevi he does videos about old world architecture and in depth analysis of it. You sound so calming like him it's great man keep it up.
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
thank you so much! it means a lot to hear that; i'll check that Jon fella out
@coolbreeze61989 ай бұрын
Cool 👍
@AmziAsher9 ай бұрын
New sub yay! ❤
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
thank you very much
@HikingEngineer9 ай бұрын
damn dude how did you get so many views with so little subs!
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
I've gotten about 400 in the past 11 days! it's been wild and i'm absolutely grateful. I checked out your channel; some absolutely wicked hikes! I'm jealous of your summit of Baboquivari!
@HikingEngineer9 ай бұрын
@@thenaturalexperience2140 you can do it too! It was fun. I'm trying to start bagging more obscure peaks within a couple hours of Phoenix
@nods91869 ай бұрын
Beautiful video...but geronimo is a apache native.
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
'Native Hope' is the source I used; if you watch the video I reference the apache right before I mention geronimo and state that he was "one of their warrior leaders"
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
6:24
@FredButters-vb8rd6 ай бұрын
I sometimes can’t believe millions of people live here in a place that reaches 122 degrees. It’s those islands that people had to live in before AC.
@mswarrior9329 ай бұрын
Excuse me but I live there for 7 years!! The Sonoran desert runs up to 5,000 ft which is where you start seeing trees, deciduous and Pine!! 😂🤣😂🤣🤣
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
my friend; the graph I showed was a simple generalized breakdown of ecology of the Sky Islands; im sure it differs; and I personally have seen the elevation numbers vary. But stats are stats, and from experience I can say the diagram is pretty close to truth 🙏🏻
@mswarrior9329 ай бұрын
@@thenaturalexperience2140 LOL !! I would love to check out that area!! Arizona rocks!!!🌵🌳🌲 😎👍
@conniewolf73008 ай бұрын
sky islands!!!
@or60608 ай бұрын
8:10 that's the part they always leave out of the history books. usually they say itwas a mob of white guys
@thenaturalexperience21408 ай бұрын
history is never that black and white
@onerider8089 ай бұрын
Interesting; sub
@thenaturalexperience21409 ай бұрын
Thanks for the sub!
@drillsergeant623Ай бұрын
Love the way you click bait
@tolt17769 ай бұрын
All mountain were islands during the flood. Good point.