Pacific Grove's Oldest And Least Known Landmark - California

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  • čas přidán 6. 09. 2024
  • Finding Lost Civilization - storiesbyalex.com/ - An Educational Series.
    Visit Pacific Grove - California, and see it's oldest and least known ancient landmark which existed prior to the arrival of Europeans to the Americas.

Komentáře • 110

  • @storiesbyalex
    @storiesbyalex  Před 12 lety +10

    Thanks for the kind words. This video was my first show produced for the local public access television station in the Monterey Penninsula. I have upgraded to a Panasonic TM-900 video camera and a new computer with a Core i7 processor and an upgraded grahics card.

    • @urieladen8242
      @urieladen8242 Před 3 lety

      dunno if anyone gives a shit but if you're bored like me during the covid times you can watch pretty much all the new movies and series on Instaflixxer. I've been watching with my brother these days =)

    • @jessebentlee9501
      @jessebentlee9501 Před 3 lety

      @Uriel Aden yea, been using Instaflixxer for months myself =)

  • @drunkbuzzard3237
    @drunkbuzzard3237 Před 3 lety +4

    I grew up in PG in the 60s and 70s about 3 blocks from there. It was still a quiet small hometown type place. Hope you stopped by the museum. Still had the swan glass bottom boats at lovers point back then.

  • @cratturyoura
    @cratturyoura Před 6 lety +7

    your talents for discovery have swept me out to sea

  • @coolbreeze4066
    @coolbreeze4066 Před 7 lety +27

    I enjoyed the video, but with all do respect the natives of the are Esselen not Rumsen. I know this because I am Esselen. Rumsen was a language that was used by some native tribes in area. We are know as OCEN (Ohlone Coastanoan Esselen Nation). As someone stated here the property was sold and the new owners are planing on bulling a very large home on the site. We are doing all we can to work with the new owners and the city to preserve the site but they have a bigger bank roll than we do. The site is very important to us and we want nothing more than to have no construction or possible destruction of our sacred site. If you feel as strong about preserving history as we do please feel free to contact the City of Pacific Grove Planning Department and let them know how you feel. Thank you

    • @2wheeledaddiction86
      @2wheeledaddiction86 Před 6 lety +1

      Cool Breeze what is the current status of the site?

    • @bohemian46
      @bohemian46 Před 6 lety +5

      I am what is commonly known as an old white guy.I lived in Pacific Grove for over 40 years. My mother, father and brother are buried there. One brother still lives in Pacific Grove very near your exposed site. I am against any intrusion into the lives, present or past, of the legitimate residents of the area. Which is to say, show some respect for the true peoples of this area. Specifically, what bare ground is left, leave it bare. Go somewhere else. Spend your wealth elsewhere where is does no harm. Also stop brining attention to this which will do more harm than good. You as an outsider have no right either to intrude, expose or invite others since this is not your home.

    • @janjohannessmith7033
      @janjohannessmith7033 Před 3 lety +1

      I am impressed by your coming and support it thank

    • @marlenemcgovern1045
      @marlenemcgovern1045 Před 3 lety +2

      I became less interested during his standing on sacred stone pressing the lichen. Still Iam pleased more attention is given to Native Tribes than those who conquered them and brainwashing Natives.

    • @coolbreeze4066
      @coolbreeze4066 Před 3 lety +8

      We won the court battle and the owners of the property sold and moved. As of now there’s no one occupying the land ✊🏽

  • @AnotherAmateur
    @AnotherAmateur Před 11 lety +4

    Very nice. I am a local historian, too. Keeping history alive is a passion.

  • @willwinningham5096
    @willwinningham5096 Před 10 lety +4

    Thank you so very much for producing this series. As a former, and hopefully, future resident of the area, it was nice to discover something that had eluded me all those years...while rediscovering one of my favorite places on earth through your excellent work!

    • @storiesbyalex
      @storiesbyalex  Před 10 lety

      Will, thanks for watching and the kind words.......alex

  • @edwardberwick5109
    @edwardberwick5109 Před 7 lety +5

    Thank you. It was serendipity for me to find and watch your video. I wasn't searching for it. My great grandfather was the first mayor of PG back in the days. I have never heard of this artifact. Your video was most enlightening.

    • @storiesbyalex
      @storiesbyalex  Před 7 lety

      Edward, thanks for watching and your comments......alex

  • @aarontollman
    @aarontollman Před 10 lety +2

    Love when locals do these kind of things, I hope it brings many visitors to our beautiful bay. Thank you for doing these Alex.

  • @upacksawallop2300
    @upacksawallop2300 Před 6 lety +8

    all your work is spectacular but this is the big leagues ALEX

  • @doctorofart
    @doctorofart Před 3 lety +1

    Alex, very cool find. It must be amazing to get to go to work. When I was a boy in school and started learning about the explorers it sounded so exciting. I remember the teacher telling me that everything had already been explored/discovered. Oh how wrong they were, but they fooled me for a long time. You are an explorer of the past. My Dream is to be able to continue to explore these lost civilizations around the world too, especially the ones at my own doorstep.
    At 20 min in you discuss the Mesa, mortar, and the pestle that you found. It looks absolutely right on. I wonder if microscopic particles in the table bespeaks of what they ground up and poured off/ grapes? Olives? What mostly caught my attention and gave me a great aha, was when you held up the pestle and discussed how it was broken and worn. That is something I see completely missing from modern geology. They do not take the discussion of broken rocks anywhere other than to say that ALL rocks break off mountains and tumble, rock against rock and roll in water to get their current shapes and position. And yet you pick up a rock and say it is broken and worn with ease and authority. It started as a normal rock and was worked into a tool by man. And then it was used and worn and broken even more by usage, time and maybe an accident or a catastrophe. But the burning question is, how did you know it was broken and worn if all rocks are broken and worn.
    Because rocks are not broken and worn by erosion and when one is broken and worn it is obviously broken because the rock will be chipped, scratched, scraped etc. Sharp broken edges, whitish marks of scratched glass (of which rock is basically glass, silicas) worm off surface crust or encapsulation are the dead giveaways. But that belies all accepted geological conclusions regarding rock formation. They are wrong. Every single rock is an individual rock with its own igneous impact related airborne formation process, like tektites and volcanic bombs. I have so much evidence it hurts no one sees it or believes it. But I found a pattern in every rock. They all twist. A rock will not sit flat but always tip. Many factors like placement, shape, location, mineral content, hardness, show off rocks incredibly organized manner. I also discovered a pattern in every rock, despite size, shape, color, content , or locale. Of course true sedimentary rocks do exist, but far less than suspected.
    Thank you for the truth spoken from a true man of science. I hope to utilize this in my research if you have no objections.

    • @storiesbyalex
      @storiesbyalex  Před 3 lety +1

      Hello John, thanks for watching the video and your comments. I have encountered hundreds of pestles and manos under many diverse circumstance and so it is sometimes very easy to describe and identity these man made utilitarian stone objects shaped by man. The fun ones are when you find two broken pestle pieces that fit together. My regards...........................alex

  • @cavmuns
    @cavmuns Před 3 lety +1

    Your amazing, thank you for your time. I cannot stop learning from you.

  • @thetawaves48
    @thetawaves48 Před 8 lety +4

    The late great Huell Howser would approve! Thanks so much for this great video! I hope you don't mind if I share it with MBPAPA.

    • @storiesbyalex
      @storiesbyalex  Před 8 lety

      +marte thompson Marte, thanks for watching and feel free to share any of my treks........alex

  • @storiesbyalex
    @storiesbyalex  Před 11 lety +3

    Thanks for the kind words. Monterey has a similiar landmark which is documented in my CZcams video titled, "Mysteries of Monterey".

  • @TheSynthZone
    @TheSynthZone Před 8 lety +1

    Geocaching is a game where people hide objects and players locate them using GPS, the ancients left the grinding stone for others to use and leave behind! Trust is an amazing thing and valuable to possess.

  • @capitalletters13
    @capitalletters13 Před 11 lety +2

    I go to pacific grove and Monterey every year!! I just love it there!

  • @touchnova
    @touchnova Před 12 lety +1

    Another fantastic look at the regional history Alex, well done. Sure love the upgrade on your video quality as well! Pretty neat finding that letter geocache! Thanks for taking us along and keep it up....merry adventures to you!

  • @acewild9689
    @acewild9689 Před 5 lety +1

    First video I’ve watched after I stumbled upon your channel thru watching a huell howsner eps... you have such a great channel, I can’t believe this one is from 2012. Keep up the great and hard work.

    • @storiesbyalex
      @storiesbyalex  Před 5 lety

      Ace, thanks for watching and your kind words........................alex

    • @calisdad3
      @calisdad3 Před 3 lety

      That's A-MAY-zing.

  • @trevorlindsey580
    @trevorlindsey580 Před 2 lety +1

    So sad that the Oak grove that was there at one time has been replaced by iceplant. I am glad you respect the cultural remains, and like to educate, but please do your best to keep locales safe. I would love to share some amazing sites with you if you ever are in So Cal.

  • @2phyllie
    @2phyllie Před 4 lety +1

    Thank you Alex. Like the Rumsen Indians who lived here you are “friendly and generous” with your knoeledge

    • @2phyllie
      @2phyllie Před 4 lety

      Knowledge

    • @storiesbyalex
      @storiesbyalex  Před 4 lety

      Phyllis, thanks for watching and your kind words...........................alex

  • @andriesscheper2022
    @andriesscheper2022 Před 3 lety +1

    I've seen such 'landmarks' in fast streaming brooks in South Norway, complete with the round boulders that made the marks in time, so they could be natural.

    • @Kalithrasis
      @Kalithrasis Před 3 lety

      Absolutely and completely wrong. There is no stream anywhere near Pacific Grove that could create anything like that and our granite doesn't erode with pits at all.

  • @jcee2259
    @jcee2259 Před 2 lety

    Beg to differ. I found a shipwreck in 12 feet of seawater.
    Using a photograph I found hung within a Pacific Grove
    tavern. Which thousands of citizens had also seen
    from bar stools and on lavatory visits. A steamship on
    the harbor bottom. With 2 cargo's aboard. Furniture
    from the Mission of Santa Cruz being returned and
    wood cases filled with bottled beer. The latter was
    salvaged by off-duty Fort Ord soldiers and whoever
    else in Pacific Grove who wanted free bottled beer.
    After word got out of my discovery within 2 weeks
    the only thing not hauled away by scuba divers was
    the steam engine boiler and fitted pipes.

  • @pianorama
    @pianorama Před 11 lety +2

    Beautiful and interesting place.

  • @storiesbyalex
    @storiesbyalex  Před 11 lety +1

    Thanks for watching....alex

  • @tamiz8895
    @tamiz8895 Před rokem

    That’s a rotational ambigram “WATER”, it reads the same when turned upside down. I am curious to know about this site. Will look for it.

  • @izabelabhering7041
    @izabelabhering7041 Před 3 lety +1

    Great video!

  • @GustyMidwest
    @GustyMidwest Před rokem

    Wonderful work. I'll Subscribe!

  • @deborah5568
    @deborah5568 Před 6 lety +1

    Wow thank you so much for sharing!

    • @storiesbyalex
      @storiesbyalex  Před 6 lety

      Deborah, thanks for watching - Pacific Groves is a wonderful place........alex

  • @thomasbradleyrealestateage9208

    Awesome, calming video. Fun to watch. Cool treasure!

    • @storiesbyalex
      @storiesbyalex  Před 3 lety

      Thomas, thanks for watching........................alex

  • @jvkemps
    @jvkemps Před 8 lety +1

    Very well done and informative.

    • @storiesbyalex
      @storiesbyalex  Před 8 lety

      +joel kemps Thanks for the kind words.......alex

  • @sheriwhispers
    @sheriwhispers Před 7 lety +1

    Ya I lived in Temecula in a place called Indian oaks that has a natural creek . Theres huge boulders that they used for bathing they are flat an smooth an the water pools between the flat rocks. I might add the cougars an mountain lions bring their cubs during the summer months to drink from the water.
    My only thing about Cali at this point is look what they have done to it.....................

    • @storiesbyalex
      @storiesbyalex  Před 7 lety

      Sheriwhispers, Thankf for watching and your comments......alex

  • @kouh-weihliao679
    @kouh-weihliao679 Před 9 lety

    we are going to play this course in April 18.

  • @pamelaattrux336
    @pamelaattrux336 Před 2 lety

    Well then I think that rock used as a kitchen counter for preparing should be in a museum

  • @bethbartlett5692
    @bethbartlett5692 Před 3 lety

    Truly fun modern game with ancient sites. ❤

  • @denysefrischmuth2805
    @denysefrischmuth2805 Před 9 lety

    This is a fantastic story that I would have enjoyed more if the music was not so loud. There are portions of your presentation that are hardly audible, all drowned out in music. I suggest that the music be made only as background music.

    • @storiesbyalex
      @storiesbyalex  Před 9 lety

      Denyse, thanks for watching and the comments.....alex

  • @BobHamiltonnewradio
    @BobHamiltonnewradio Před 3 lety

    Wonderful...thanks for sharing this...Where is this exactly so we can go see it..?

  • @davidfromcolorado5295
    @davidfromcolorado5295 Před 4 lety +1

    Great vid love it

  • @tylershilstone345
    @tylershilstone345 Před 11 lety +2

    Where in Pacific Grove is this?

  • @thetawaves48
    @thetawaves48 Před 8 lety

    I hope that you do a video on the PG Carnegie Library - circa 1908!

  • @therake1046
    @therake1046 Před 4 lety +1

    I miss PG - my old town

  • @storiesbyalex
    @storiesbyalex  Před 11 lety

    Bette, Pacific Grove is located along the California coast at Monterey Bay and is approximately 120 miles south of the city of San Francisco.......alex

  • @Magnolia111
    @Magnolia111 Před 5 lety

    You found a “letter boxing” box.... fun activity for kids where they follow clues to find the box and add their own stamp. 😊

    • @storiesbyalex
      @storiesbyalex  Před 5 lety

      Elizabeth, thanks for watching and your comment..............alex

  • @kristofthibaud8491
    @kristofthibaud8491 Před 3 lety +1

    Less of your Head in Bushes and more Scenery.

  • @ilenecashman7905
    @ilenecashman7905 Před 10 lety

    Would like a site/pg, I could "like" to get updates! Live on the Mtry Peninsula, plus love history! How do I get updates on the areas you go too w/o going to CZcams? Thanks for the beautiful work you do ♥

    • @storiesbyalex
      @storiesbyalex  Před 10 lety

      Hello Ilene, thanks for watching. I have a web page at storiesbyalex.com/ where I post my videos. However, they are all linked to CZcams. Regards, Alex.........

    • @ilenecashman7905
      @ilenecashman7905 Před 10 lety

      storiesbyalex Thank you! Hope you change that soon so we that love history of different areas can enjoy your post ♥

  • @willwinningham5096
    @willwinningham5096 Před 9 lety +1

    Alex, Could you please give me specific directions to the location in question, as I am returning to the Monterey Peninsula in the coming months and would love to visit the site you so artfully featured in your video? Thank you in advance. Will

    • @storiesbyalex
      @storiesbyalex  Před 9 lety +1

      Will, the site is located in a vacant lot adjacent to the NOAA at this link ( swfsc.noaa.gov/PG-Mural.aspx ).
      Also, try to visit the sites identified in this video of Monterey ( czcams.com/video/Tb9G_FNr9fk/video.html ).......alex

    • @willwinningham5096
      @willwinningham5096 Před 9 lety +1

      storiesbyalex Alex, I am a 4-time honor grad from DLI, so I an quite familiar with the boulders just below the Presidio. BTW, thanks for the info...and keep these terrific videos coming!!!

    • @willwinningham5096
      @willwinningham5096 Před 9 lety +2

      AWESOME...the boulder can actually be seen on google maps!

    • @storiesbyalex
      @storiesbyalex  Před 9 lety +4

      Will Winningham
      I have not been there for some time and I hope that people have valued the historical nature of that site. If you go out to the the end of the street towards the ocean and take a left onto Ocean View Blvd and then park your car near the Gazebo along the ocean, and take a path which leads you directly under the Gazebo, you will face an ancient shell midden site. Last time I was there there were numerous abalone shells sticking out from the slope. FYI, this is a protected archaeological site, but well worth seeing when the erosion conditions are right....alex

    • @susanfriesen4053
      @susanfriesen4053 Před 6 lety

      @@storiesbyalex I greatly enjoyed your video. Such sites should be preserved

  • @troy19100
    @troy19100 Před 5 lety

    Really enjoyed this

    • @storiesbyalex
      @storiesbyalex  Před 5 lety

      troy, this was one of my first shows that was aired on Monterey's public access television station. It was a fun project..........alex

  • @zeynelocak9557
    @zeynelocak9557 Před rokem

    Tesekkurler

  • @steveeidmann
    @steveeidmann Před 3 lety

    Location of stones?

  • @storiesbyalex
    @storiesbyalex  Před 11 lety

    Thanks.....I became hungry watching your beef stew video......alex

  • @lou_dabs
    @lou_dabs Před 5 lety

    Dope video bro

  • @tumanuvaomeaole9458
    @tumanuvaomeaole9458 Před 3 lety

    14:10 the natives were playing international treasure hunt

  • @alicebjorgtryggvason6833

    💐💝💐💝. yes i'm so thrild to hear and lurn , thank you for all💐💝💐💝 from DK💝💐💝💐💝👍

  • @redtailhawkoz
    @redtailhawkoz Před 3 lety

    What has happened to this story, anyone know ?

  • @daieast6305
    @daieast6305 Před 3 lety

    dude broke tradition and did not write a message in the book before replacing it...besides that somebody should inform him that people from other places were in north america way before those he knows as 'native american' tribes

  • @Kahweekah2o2f
    @Kahweekah2o2f Před 3 lety

    California gold

  • @DebbyShoemaker
    @DebbyShoemaker Před 3 měsíci

    It's called "Geocaching".

  • @cwb0051
    @cwb0051 Před 5 lety

    Why didnt You put Your name in the little notebook? With the date?

    • @storiesbyalex
      @storiesbyalex  Před 5 lety

      cwboo51, thanks for watching. I just did not think of it at the time..............................alex

  • @HAPPYHAPPY2435
    @HAPPYHAPPY2435 Před 11 lety

    Where In PG is this???

  • @bettelittle5958
    @bettelittle5958 Před 11 lety

    QUESTION WHERE IS PACIFIC GROVE?????

  • @bohemian46
    @bohemian46 Před 6 lety +4

    As a 5 decade plus resident of Pacific Grove I would have preferred that you not have made this location public. Did you ask Rudy Rozales for permission to invade his family's past and property?Vis(z)cano did not encounter "Indians".... They were indigenous peoples. There is a T in the word Monterey. FYI my mother wrote 5 books on the history of Monterey, Pacific Grove, Carmel and Big Sur. RE: Edward Berwick.. There is a Park in Pacific Grove called Berwick Park. This was a former indigenous peoples village. Also were you aware that the Spaniards, specifically the religious zealots of the Catholic church, imprisoned and wiped out roughly 40, 000 indigenous inhabitants in a 50 year period between Carmel Valley and Monterey/Pacific Grove.

    • @storiesbyalex
      @storiesbyalex  Před 6 lety

      Thanks for watching and your comments........................alex

    • @metalmonkey6262
      @metalmonkey6262 Před 4 lety +1

      In fact they burnt everything outside the mission walls. Can't even imagine how these "holy men" could be filled with such cruel intentions and people today still revere these psychopath murdering perverts

    • @gregmucha1402
      @gregmucha1402 Před rokem

      Relax, peeps. I spent my first 35 years in the area and hated to have to leave it behind because of capitalist economic reality. Once the Thwaites Glacier slides into the Antarctic Sea, it will all be underwater. Along with John Denver's missing body parts.

    • @steveearnshaw2216
      @steveearnshaw2216 Před rokem

      Saint Junipero Serra?

  • @storiesbyalex
    @storiesbyalex  Před 11 lety

    Hello Loretta, I would enjoy seeing them and will send an email to set-up a meeting.......alex

  • @StarFlower99654
    @StarFlower99654 Před 6 lety

    Looks like you found a geocache.

  • @LaughingblueSu
    @LaughingblueSu Před 3 lety

    9:00 ancient cooking table or human sacrifice tabe?
    Yikes!

  • @babawawasrk
    @babawawasrk Před 8 lety

    opinions not facts al

  • @nakoawarrior3186
    @nakoawarrior3186 Před 5 lety

    And you can add many time's we are like minded about your discoveries.
    Except your cluelessness about museums who have the agenda to hide the truth.
    Because all people would all ready know about the things that you find if museums were doing their job's.

  • @cavmuns
    @cavmuns Před 3 lety

    Boo on the treasurer hunt.