Old Growth Redwoods of Northern California

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 21. 08. 2024
  • Another too-long video filled with crass jokes, lewd and misanthropic commentary and tons of botanical insight. From 2,000 year old trees, to sea lions, to plants that parasitize fungi, this video is packed with the flora and fauna of Humboldt County. Has anybody ever sexually harassed a Roosevelt Elk before, or seen a sea lion exhibitionist sashay before their eyes?
    note : the flowers of Salmonberry (Rubus spectabilis) are not pictured, but rather the flowers of thimbleberry, Rubus parviflorus, are used for illustration of the distinct carpels (which mature into tiny yellow drupes on the aggregate fruit of members of the genus Rubus).
    #Hemitomes congestum, #Erythranthe dentata, #Sequoia sempervirens
    Your contributions support this content. It sounds clichéd, but it's true. Whether it's travel expenses, vehicle repair, or medical costs for urushiol poisoning (or rockfalls, beestings, hand slices, toxic sap, etc), your financial support allows this content to continue so the beauty of Earth's flora can be made accessible to the rest of us in the degenerate public. At a time when so much is disappearing beneath the human footprint, CPBBD is willing to do whatever it takes to document these plant species and the ecological communities they are a part of before they're gone for good.
    Plants make people feel good. Plants quell homicidal (and suicidal!) thoughts. To support Crime Pays But Botany Doesn't, consider donating a few bucks to the venmo account "societyishell" or the PayPal account email crimepaysbutbotanydoesnt@gmail.com...
    Or consider becoming a patreon supporter @ :
    / crimepaysbutbotanydoesnt
    Buy some CPBBD merch (shirts, hats, hoodies n' what the shit) available for sale at :
    www.bonfire.co...
    To purchase stickers, venmo twelve bucks to "societyishell" and leave your address in the comments.
    Plants ID questions or reading list suggestions can be sent to crimepaysbutbotanydoesnt@gmail.com
    Thanks, GFY.

Komentáře • 866

  • @ornokur6315
    @ornokur6315 Před 3 lety +607

    That millipede (Harpaphe haydeniana) is actually really interesting, and important. It's one of the only members in the pacific northwestern wet coniferous ecosystems that can eat dry needles on the forest's floor including needles from cupresidae species. They help in recycling the nutrients within the forest.

    • @snowstrobe
      @snowstrobe Před 3 lety +16

      Cool.

    • @etsywitch
      @etsywitch Před 3 lety +5

      czcams.com/video/09FuGBoDdz8/video.html

    • @tomjones6944
      @tomjones6944 Před 3 lety +8

      @@etsywitch I'm glad I clicked, thank you for doing these (I think)

    • @davidbarts6144
      @davidbarts6144 Před 3 lety +30

      They also secrete cyanide to deter predators. The dramatic yellow-and-black coloration serves as a warning that they are toxic.

    • @etsywitch
      @etsywitch Před 3 lety +4

      @@tomjones6944 My pleasure. It’s a start, someone else could do a much better job-but it needed to be done. All in love, of course. A dago kind of love.

  • @1OutOf8Billion
    @1OutOf8Billion Před 3 lety +132

    Your indirect insults in the form of euphemisms got me cracking.

    • @MASoldier4221
      @MASoldier4221 Před 3 lety +6

      Started following him years ago for exactly that, stayed for the knowledge

    • @Idrinklight44
      @Idrinklight44 Před 12 dny

      He's pretty good at that!!!

  • @whozitwat1939
    @whozitwat1939 Před 3 lety +187

    "It's a sociopathic mental illness." That whole rant was perfect.

    • @musicisart2
      @musicisart2 Před 3 lety +8

      20:03

    • @entyropy3262
      @entyropy3262 Před 3 lety +2

      I love it. 😅👍

    • @geelee1977
      @geelee1977 Před 3 lety +6

      A massive cultural mental illness....also known as religion....also known as mass delusion

    • @bruciferburton5246
      @bruciferburton5246 Před 3 lety +3

      Consumerism.

    • @danpinnell7502
      @danpinnell7502 Před 3 lety +3

      Says the dude wearing boots made from dead cows and petrolium while ranting to himself on a device constructed from even more petrolium products and rare earth metals. Dont get me started on the batteries made from child labor and strip mining. But cutting down a tree that can be replanted is evil..... "I support loggers".

  • @drooplug
    @drooplug Před 3 lety +164

    When the giant sequoias were felled,they often shattered under their own weight. Because of that, the wood was mostly used for shingles.

    • @katrinakollmann5265
      @katrinakollmann5265 Před 3 lety +35

      Sob..

    • @thomasbarlow4223
      @thomasbarlow4223 Před 3 lety +12

      Makes me sad

    • @leahcooper5831
      @leahcooper5831 Před 3 lety +60

      Omg I was just saying that-- my dad built log homes for 20 years, we're from Oregon. He knows lumber like few people on earth. He says the company that took 80% or so of the Sequoias actually LOST MONEY doing it.
      This is how I became quite familiar with the sheer destructive scale of human stupidity, at a very young age.

    • @NoTengoIdeaGuey
      @NoTengoIdeaGuey Před rokem

      Humans are so stupid

    • @lotwizzard1748
      @lotwizzard1748 Před rokem +2

      shameful

  • @Nilessterner
    @Nilessterner Před 3 lety +199

    Having grown up in California, gone to school in Santa Cruz, and vacationed in northern California my whole life. It pains me to see these giants felled. They are older than humanity itself. Yet the arrogance of man tells us that these are better used for a homes hard wood floors. These trees speak to you when you walk amongst them. They are giants with living souls. I am no hippy, but we must protect them at all costs. Future generations needs to be able to experience their majesty.

    • @brontsmoth671
      @brontsmoth671 Před 3 lety +14

      I'm being like, real pedantic here I suppose. But none of those trees are "actually" older than humanity... they aren't even older than some of the earliest civilizations. Mesopotamia was like.... 15,000 years ago or more. The oldest trees (Bristlecone pines) are only hitting 5000 or so years, currently.

    • @leahcooper5831
      @leahcooper5831 Před 3 lety +15

      Worth more standing.

    • @danpinnell7502
      @danpinnell7502 Před 3 lety +5

      And. Cedar is not used for "hardwood flooring"... Cedar is used for things exposed to the weather. Decking. Fences. Siding and roofing. Also. Trees. No matter how old. Are a renewable resource. For every tree fallen. 3 must be planted....

    • @chevychase3103
      @chevychase3103 Před 2 lety +3

      Well said!

    • @chevychase3103
      @chevychase3103 Před 2 lety +2

      @@brontsmoth671 yeah they would make good firewood or charcoal hell we can use it for toothpicks why not!

  • @davidbarts6144
    @davidbarts6144 Před 3 lety +229

    All righty, you’re getting into the coastal forests, my home ecosystem, so prepare to have your information corrected/amended!
    1. Lysimachia latifolia has a variable number of petals, typically 6 to 8. There is one with 7 visible in passing shortly after the one with 6 is shown.
    2. That is not a salmonberry flower! It is a thimbleberry (Rubus nutkanus) flower. Notice how the leaves are not compound, and the plant is entirely thornless. Salmonberry flowers are also a different color (pink to magenta, depending on individual, almost never white).
    3. That “beautiful bird call” is a varied thrush.
    4. The millepede is Harpaphe haydeniana, a common coastal forest species.
    5. Picea sitchensis goes further north than BC; it ranges all the way to Alaska (as the name applies; Sitka is a town and island in coastal Alaska).
    6. The coastal polypodium is P. scouleri, the leather fern. It is strictly limited to the immediate coast.
    7. California condors were once found at least as far north as Oregon and Washington.

    • @galaxycat5834
      @galaxycat5834 Před 3 lety +35

      Hot

    • @zackcohn
      @zackcohn Před 3 lety +18

      Love seeing this sort of stuff :)

    • @onealjones9039
      @onealjones9039 Před 3 lety +9

      Damn right.

    • @tobynewman5450
      @tobynewman5450 Před 3 lety +31

      Learning is fun, what a kick ass community this is.

    • @leannacarson-hansen7041
      @leannacarson-hansen7041 Před 3 lety +30

      The Yurok Tribe is reestablishing California condors within their tribal lands according to recent media releases in Eureka.

  • @seanschmidt0682
    @seanschmidt0682 Před 3 lety +80

    "has anyone ever sexually harassed an elk before?" goddamn bro all the speech around this redwood forest is pure gold. Gold that you can't mine. Wisdom. If I had the gift of speech that you have I'd go places.

    • @rap5374
      @rap5374 Před 3 lety +4

      If you put the work in. Your dreams will come in time.

    • @meeushsgskhfg
      @meeushsgskhfg Před 3 lety +4

      His one liners are incredible

    • @jamesdriscoll_tmp1515
      @jamesdriscoll_tmp1515 Před 3 lety +4

      Be careful, they kick.

    • @snowstrobe
      @snowstrobe Před 3 lety +4

      @@jamesdriscoll_tmp1515 Tony would have ended that line with 'ya prick'...

    • @BubblewrapHighway
      @BubblewrapHighway Před 3 lety +4

      No fucking way. 47 mins of video and I scroll over this RIGHT as he says it.

  • @JakesOnline
    @JakesOnline Před 3 lety +177

    Hey Tony, a Sequoia episode would be cool. 3000 year old trees.

    • @Zack-
      @Zack- Před 3 lety +6

      Yes

    • @ionicdog5860
      @ionicdog5860 Před 3 lety +5

      Agreed^^

    • @JakesOnline
      @JakesOnline Před 3 lety +15

      Largest living thing on the planet (besides fungi) is there. General Sherman tree. Maybe he'll talk shit about how the trees are named after government and military figures.

    • @kevinnistor1954
      @kevinnistor1954 Před 3 lety +1

      Yes

    • @categorille8330
      @categorille8330 Před 3 lety +2

      these are sequoia aren't they

  • @Baffi_
    @Baffi_ Před 3 lety +47

    I wish I could have seen the west coast before people started industrial logging.

    • @okantichrist
      @okantichrist Před 3 lety +4

      Get in touch when my time machine is finished 🤓

  • @doodoodoodle
    @doodoodoodle Před 3 lety +32

    I love the ruler finger tattoo (I think that's what it is)!!
    As an artsy fartsy I really want that on my hand, that's brilliant 😂

  • @ralfish2008
    @ralfish2008 Před 3 lety +21

    I'm feeling far less homicidal after viewing this. thanks so much, its been a brutal stretch..

  • @plant.more.trees.
    @plant.more.trees. Před 3 lety +26

    I pause the video, ask a question and when I press play you answer the question. You are really well tuned with your viewers.

    • @boa9535
      @boa9535 Před 3 lety +2

      Plant, That is so funny!

  • @br0k3nl0g4n
    @br0k3nl0g4n Před 3 lety +13

    TONY, I LIVE RIGHT HERE !!! I met my gf in Klamath and I was born in Eureka 🥺 I've been waiting for you to make a video on our ecosystem FOREVER 😵 you're my botanist hero 🙏🙏🙏

  • @VoMFilms
    @VoMFilms Před 3 lety +57

    Was having an anxiety attack, this is really helping to calm me down

    • @beckymcdonald9529
      @beckymcdonald9529 Před 3 lety +11

      Anxiety attacks are terrible. I hope you are feeling better

    • @Davidnumber23
      @Davidnumber23 Před 3 lety +1

      catch your breathe with a laugh ✌

    • @leahcooper5831
      @leahcooper5831 Před 3 lety +3

      Isn't he soothing?!

    • @Davidnumber23
      @Davidnumber23 Před 3 lety +1

      @@leahcooper5831 yeahh, as much as everyone loves his accent its the topic of nature that soothes humans who often become disconnected

  • @misskuni
    @misskuni Před 3 lety +70

    Yes, the old hippie tweaker is very real.

    • @kaiganardea9275
      @kaiganardea9275 Před 3 lety +3

      can confirm. my uncle looks like overweight charles manson

    • @TonyisToking
      @TonyisToking Před 3 lety +6

      Smoking a strain called Hippy Crippler right now, lol.

    • @Matt-ne6de
      @Matt-ne6de Před 3 lety +7

      there aren't that many hippy tweakers in Arcata, that's where rich people move to escape them. The highest density of hippy tweakers in the county surely is in Eureka, possibly between between the jail and the Somoa bridge. Sometimes they throw rocks at you as you drive past.

    • @whitewolfjunkie
      @whitewolfjunkie Před 3 lety +1

      @@Matt-ne6de You forgot Valley West....

    • @dengueberries
      @dengueberries Před 3 měsíci

      @@Matt-ne6de where do the normal nature loving people live?

  • @an.opossum
    @an.opossum Před 3 lety +53

    I've been waiting a year for a PNW episode to drop. We haven't got the most spectacular flora, but it's noteworthy. So glad you're finally covering it.

    • @leahcooper5831
      @leahcooper5831 Před 3 lety +4

      One of the most beautiful places on earth. When I grew up there and then traveled to southern California and New Mexico, the realization of how much BARREN BORINGNESS is in the rest of the world was honestly kinda traumatizing. I had hoped those forests went on forever.

    • @theladyfingers___
      @theladyfingers___ Před 2 lety +6

      How do giant redwoods not qualify as the most spectacular flora?

  • @kitdavenport1916
    @kitdavenport1916 Před 3 lety +34

    Salmonberry flowers are gorgeous rose/ purple red (one of the earliest spring flowers) --- looks like you've got thimbleberry, Rubus parviflorus --- the white flower--- So glad to see you in our home territory--- thank you!

    • @humandoodad
      @humandoodad Před 3 lety +4

      When he gets up into Northern CA, I start to get so homesick. I could definitely go for a salmonberry right now.

    • @forresthsu582
      @forresthsu582 Před 3 lety +4

      The leaves are also totally different. The salmon berries have a compound leaf where the lateral leaves look like a butterfly if you ignore the terminal leaflet, while the thimbleberry leaves have incredibly soft and velvety leaves that are kinda maple shaped.

    • @leahcooper5831
      @leahcooper5831 Před 3 lety +1

      I was munching salmonberries at silver creek falls one field trip in 4th grade and the other kids were aghast, looking at me like I might drop dead any second. More for me!

  • @aridian6988
    @aridian6988 Před 3 lety +74

    i would pay to attend a tour led by tony through the forest

    • @sriv9045
      @sriv9045 Před rokem

      Heck me too. If I can control, my non stop laughter. I would love it. 😂

  • @robotxul
    @robotxul Před 3 lety +74

    I've recently discovered Crime Pays and for sure this friggin guy over here over there has become my favorite thing on youtube, thanks for the entertaining knowledge about the world we are all so blind to because we're too damn lazy or dumb to do the research, I'm fascinated sir

  • @troygoss6400
    @troygoss6400 Před 3 lety +55

    as always, informative, interesting and sprinkled with humor, doesn't get any better.

    • @brianrodman1033
      @brianrodman1033 Před 11 měsíci

      it blows me away that we get to enjoy these awesome videos. reminds me of a bio class I took in college where we did nature walks each week and the professor would identify all of the plant and animal life we would see.

  • @treering8228
    @treering8228 Před 3 lety +23

    Spot on in regards to your Arcadia statement. Had my purse stolen from a locked car while I was rock climbing on the coast. They threw a rock through the window... And that was close to 30 ya

    • @amber1924
      @amber1924 Před 3 lety +2

      Especially at Strawberry Rock!

  • @durere
    @durere Před 3 lety +14

    Ah, just perusing an ol' redwood forest, yelling at elk. That is the life.

    • @commiedoge747
      @commiedoge747 Před 3 lety +1

      Nice ass doe

    • @durere
      @durere Před 3 lety +1

      You can take the guy out of the city ...

    • @leahcooper5831
      @leahcooper5831 Před 3 lety +2

      My favorite part is how the elk give entirely zero fucks. They barely look at him while he strolls by yammering at them.

  • @Cloveis
    @Cloveis Před 3 lety +9

    I love this channel. “Mindless apes, mindless apes”. Perfect. Great job tony, I love what you are doing

    • @artmosley3337
      @artmosley3337 Před 2 měsíci

      He is correct.. we have been lied to about our world history… if you look closely, the history timeline doesn’t make sense, … google the TARTARIANS!!! It’s explained in the unbelievable buildings… made by people living in wood huts????

  • @colegaerber3894
    @colegaerber3894 Před 3 lety +19

    The bird at 24:53 is a Varied Thrush.

  • @dangayle
    @dangayle Před 3 lety +8

    I’m glad I’m not the only one who talks to the wildlife

  • @AardBewoner
    @AardBewoner Před 3 lety +12

    Thanks for this, some people have never, and will never, visit these forests but are nonetheless fascinated by ecology and botany, this is pure gold.

  • @lindashankland5056
    @lindashankland5056 Před 3 lety +23

    The next best thing to actually being up on the north coast, is watching this video. A superb nature moment in my book. Love the redwood forests. 😌🌲👍

  • @aepage3165
    @aepage3165 Před 3 lety +35

    Fascinating how the sorrel leaves fold down in the sunlight like that.

    • @mattmccallum2007
      @mattmccallum2007 Před 3 lety +4

      It actually happens so fast it’s almost observable.

    • @js-wv6fj
      @js-wv6fj Před 3 lety +1

      All thanks to the pulvini!

    • @KozmykJ
      @KozmykJ Před rokem

      To protect itself from too much light, to which it is particularly sensitive, apparently.

  • @cease4555
    @cease4555 Před 3 lety +3

    The beautiful bird call in the background that he comments on around 24:57 is a Varied Thrush. They sing absolutely gorgeous songs. I love this video, I love the PNW.

  • @ryansmiley5495
    @ryansmiley5495 Před 3 lety +18

    Hard for me to understand the size until I saw the deer. It's always amazed me to see it in photos. This is sooo much better. Thank you!

    • @ronsmith1364
      @ronsmith1364 Před 3 lety +4

      Elk, a lot bigger than deer..

    • @rdizzy1
      @rdizzy1 Před 3 lety +1

      @@ronsmith1364 Yeah, even in this area you can find some every now and then over 600-800 lbs, even average ones are massive.

    • @ryansmiley5495
      @ryansmiley5495 Před 3 lety +2

      I missed that. Wow even more impressive!

    • @leahcooper5831
      @leahcooper5831 Před 3 lety +2

      They're like in between a deer and a moose. Basically a very, very tall cow.

    • @The_Crucible714
      @The_Crucible714 Před 28 dny

      22:40 *You got a nice @zz!*
      “No one ever tells me I got a nice @zz… and I’m Eye-talian, we got nice @zzes!” 😂

  • @allisonhamilton4090
    @allisonhamilton4090 Před 3 lety +90

    Hi Tony, I think there’s an error in this one. At minute 6.23 you’re talking about the salmon berry, but then at minute 6.54 you show the flower of the thimbleberry. I live in the Pacific NW and have both plants growing rampantly on my land. Salmonberry doesn’t taste that good (but it has a beautiful pinkish/coral flower) but thimbleberry - the white flower - is quite tasty although messy and falls apart once you pick it.
    Thanks for your wonderful and instructing videos.

    • @kjenkins8241
      @kjenkins8241 Před 3 lety +6

      Hmm I've eaten thimble berry since I was 3 feet tall. Tastes good to me, (texture is tiny seeds with sweet and watery fruit) guess it's an acquired taste. The natives mix it with salmon berries, strawberries or soapberry and make a fruit leather or drink.

    • @stevenmooney2197
      @stevenmooney2197 Před 3 lety +1

      I bet he knew that, trying to get an indignant response probably.

    • @valentinbergmann676
      @valentinbergmann676 Před 3 lety +2

      @@stevenmooney2197 Well he did point it out in the video description so yeah, probably

    • @LukeMcGuireoides
      @LukeMcGuireoides Před 2 lety +3

      I was enjoying imagining how delicious that yellow berry would be. It's kinda nice to know it isnt tasty. No fomo

    • @generalsmedleybutler340
      @generalsmedleybutler340 Před 2 lety +3

      I like thimbleberry also. I think it tastes like a sour candy. I've tried salmonberry and trailing blackberry also. I think the salmonberry tastes like a slightly less sweet trailing blackberry. You can find all these near the Bay Area.

  • @andrearepetto217
    @andrearepetto217 Před 2 lety +37

    I'm brand-new to this channel and am already a huge fan. "Massive cultural mental illness." Yes thank you!! My heart breaks to think about the forests that have been cut down for capitalism!

    • @2004FordRangerXLT
      @2004FordRangerXLT Před rokem +4

      I mostly agree but trees get cut down capitalism or not. I wouldn't blame deforestation solely on capitalism when all forms of economy perform it.

  • @mooing7326
    @mooing7326 Před 3 lety +20

    This channel is really interesting. I studied horticulture for 5 years and I love going walks and identifying plants, im also a gardener so I see a lot of weird ones but your knowledge is clearly on another level, very impressive and with the geological knowledge as well. If you're ever planning to visit the UK, I would highly suggest Scotland, the highlands and galloway forest park. Also, around april-june we have insane numbers of bluebells (Hyacinthoides non-scripta) in woodlands. Would be great for a video.

    • @lukthere2
      @lukthere2 Před rokem +1

      Finally went to Scotland last year in May. One of the most beautiful places ever. I could just stay in those forests forever.. or in Morar, that place is just crazy. And the "mountains" in the north-west are so majestic. I have to come back one day to do a more hiking/treking style trip.

  • @kosycat1
    @kosycat1 Před 3 lety +2

    I got lost in that RW forrest at night alone near Orick. Never thought Bigfoot was goanna get me more in my life lol.

  • @seanobrien4874
    @seanobrien4874 Před 3 lety +18

    Dang I just spent the last week there, thinking the whole time I wish you had a video of this place. Now here it is! Much love, and thank you for your work.

  • @jmaccloskey
    @jmaccloskey Před 3 lety +8

    Near Fulton (Santa Rosa) you will see redwoods scarred by fire in 2017 which are now looking like pipe cleaners with masses of stubby recovery shoots coming out all along the length of the scarred trunk. Further up Mark West Springs Road approaching Petrified Forest (worth the $12 entrance for your better than normal roadside attraction) you will see clumps of pipe cleaner redwoods on top of the ridgeline. Check it out a mixed evergreen forest in recovery.

  • @s92dx
    @s92dx Před 3 lety +3

    "he's like one of them decoys they got in Cabela's. You know, when you go in to shop lift..."

  • @MrSharps02
    @MrSharps02 Před 3 lety +10

    tom of finland, nice. when one of my friends fell off the wagon he showed up at my house one evening totally bug eyed and carrying an enormous tom of finland art book. thing is a good four inches thick and still occupies a place of honor on my coffee table

    • @Emiliapocalypse
      @Emiliapocalypse Před 3 lety

      Dangit, was kinda scrolling through the video for time reasons, but now I gotta watch every last second to catch that Tom of Finland reference. Thanks for your comment! 😅

    • @The_Crucible714
      @The_Crucible714 Před 28 dny

      8:25 *Tom of Finland rant*

  • @larrybuzbee7344
    @larrybuzbee7344 Před 3 lety +14

    "Tree hundred feet" 🤣 I lived in Mendocino for twelve years, headed back for a visit in a month. I highly reccomend you check out Leonard Lake Reserve, the place, not the mass murderer. If you do you will never forget it. Stunning never harvested redwood forest. Breathtaking.

    • @mesasavage
      @mesasavage Před rokem

      There is a mass murderer named "Leonard Lake Reserve"?

  • @TheRealDrAgony
    @TheRealDrAgony Před 3 lety +8

    As someone who works on the Plaza in Arcata, I can certify the 100% accuracy of the first taxon.

  • @robertforrest7956
    @robertforrest7956 Před 3 lety +4

    Grew up in this area in the 60s. 👍👍The hills in background at the mouth of the Klamath River is actually where we lived in Requa. Just to the left above river mouth is Squaw Rock of which I have a painting done by a native there.
    Thanks for the memories!!!! 💋

    • @gaywizard2000
      @gaywizard2000 Před 2 lety

      In Canada we are renaming things with "squaw" as we know it's offensive now.

  • @leahcooper5831
    @leahcooper5831 Před 3 lety +4

    That bird sounds like it could be a varied thrush! One of my favorites, so ethereal in the foggy early AM when they call and reply to each other like long echoes with different notes.

    • @glongoable
      @glongoable Před 2 lety +1

      Nice call, varied thrush for sure at 24:53

  • @sapphirestrm
    @sapphirestrm Před 3 lety +6

    "Isn't Nature wonderful? I think so." Joey's videos make me so happy!

  • @airickp
    @airickp Před 3 lety +6

    Thank you Tony for education and hopefully encouraging of us boneheads of appreciation and conservation of what we have left of our flora

  • @Jordan__Sloan
    @Jordan__Sloan Před 3 lety +4

    Loved the redwoods around Santa Cruz, those have been hit with lots of fires, so much so a kid in our group could crawl under a giant live tree!

  • @MrYuk-xp4bl
    @MrYuk-xp4bl Před 3 lety +2

    I had to come back to this video and comment. Now every time I see an old redwood when I hike (San Mateo County) I say, "Look at that big old bastard!"
    I am so glad I found your videos, so much entertainment and knowledge.
    Please visit some of the preserves in San Mateo, La Honda would be cool, you can take the dogs.

  • @webbess1
    @webbess1 Před 3 lety +7

    OMG you chatting with those elk was the best part!

  • @rae4837
    @rae4837 Před 3 lety +9

    love seeing videos on old growth trees, there's so much logging going on not only in Cali but also in places like British Columbia in Canada. its really sad that vids like these one day will be the only record of forests like these ever existing if things keep up at its current rate

  • @lashadi1445
    @lashadi1445 Před 6 měsíci +9

    "Your god told you to cut it down? God told me to skin you alive." I want that on a t-shirt 😂 fr

  • @katiekane5247
    @katiekane5247 Před 3 lety +5

    I've been fortunate 😔 to attend a sanctioned plant rescue in my county. Biggest Aesculus I've ever seen on the site. I hope terrain & creek boundaries preserve some crumbs here too. The ultimate in ironic tragedy are the names of streets in the expanding subdivision; Trillium Ridge, Mayapple Way etc. Should have called it Eustabe Woods
    😠
    Did find some Scutellaria elliptica near my house today, pleasant surprise.
    Thanks for bringing us along, wonderful as always.

  • @cbaylor0369
    @cbaylor0369 Před 3 lety +10

    Always look forward to you’re work, we appreciate every second!

  • @fieldofsky3632
    @fieldofsky3632 Před 3 lety +4

    such a real and humorous way to see and know your country; thank you from the UK

  • @justinmartin7188
    @justinmartin7188 Před 3 lety +18

    Met my girlfriend in Humboldt, so we stay in Eureka multiple times a year. It’s a beautiful, wondrous place

  • @gabijones2445
    @gabijones2445 Před 3 lety +1

    Thanks Tony. It was a long day; I really needed to hear you rant and needed to see Life. Stay well.

  • @noahjuanjuneau9598
    @noahjuanjuneau9598 Před 2 lety +3

    Thank you man! Both informative and amusing simultaneously. And one of my favorite geographic areas…
    Thank youz.

  • @timhaywood1100
    @timhaywood1100 Před 3 lety +9

    Thanks for this awesome episode Tony! I live very close the where this was filmed, on a nature preserve in Trinidad called Seawood Cape Preserve. We have every thing featured in the video except for elk, which are a little further north at Big Lagoon and Stone Lagoon. The info in this video will help me feel like less of a dumbass when we do an upcoming field trip with members of the California Native Plant Society here at the preserve next week.

    • @joefrancis759
      @joefrancis759 Před 3 lety +2

      I lived at the fire station down the road back in the 90's, that area holds a special place in my heart

    • @brianrodman1033
      @brianrodman1033 Před 11 měsíci

      Trinidad is beautiful, brings back memories …. I miss it up there.

  • @snowstrobe
    @snowstrobe Před 3 lety +10

    Lots of laugh-out-loud moments in this one, thanks Tony. It's true, Itai's do generally have nice arses.
    That excellent point about the houses made of the Redwoods they had cut down all being gone, whilst the trees they left are still there is a great argument against those who argue that our over-population isn't a problem (most of them secret Catholics). Even things we now consider normal to have, like houses and cultivated food, is inherently destructive in nature and over-uses finite natural resources. There simply is too many of us at the moment and we need to drastically change our behaviour until our numbers drop back down.

    • @leahcooper5831
      @leahcooper5831 Před 3 lety +4

      The waste is staggering.
      A properly built home should last for CENTURIES. Not 30 years.

    • @akaku9
      @akaku9 Před 2 lety

      The entire human population can fit into 8 by 8 cells in Central Indiana.
      Complain about shitty engineering and lack of civil engineer input for developing.
      The only reason you think we suffer from overpopulation currently is because you can't comprehend the total available livable/development area we could put farms on 50% of the available landmass and not break a single brick

  • @youraveragefishkeeper
    @youraveragefishkeeper Před 3 lety +4

    The secret history living in your aquarium introduced me to your channel. And I’m hooked.

  • @anon6056
    @anon6056 Před 2 lety +1

    This kind of logging is a pain that doesn't heal. But it's such a beautiful forest. Thanks for letting us appreciate it with you

  • @rainrunner8893
    @rainrunner8893 Před 3 lety +7

    Lol 😂 A bit longer drive north will grant you the upgraded tweaker experience in Del Norte/Crescent City

  • @ShakespeareCafe
    @ShakespeareCafe Před 11 měsíci

    I open a bottle of wine and watch these botanical excursions. I love the flora and fauna of California but your encyclopedic knowledge of plants inspires me to learn and enjoy all the natural world has to offer

  • @theboatyboat
    @theboatyboat Před 3 lety +3

    You were so close to the Kalmiopsis herein Southern Oregon. Best time of year is right now, weather's been fine. Ran around the woods yesterday, a good portion around Hwy 96 (Klamath River) around Seiad Valley, everything is in bloom. Lots of succulents clinging on the rock up high. Beautiful stuff.

  • @aronahlback7903
    @aronahlback7903 Před 2 lety +2

    Thanks for this channel. I stumbled upon some clorophyll-less parasitic flowers in my area earlier this year and i appreciate that this channel helped me understand and appreciate what i was looking at!

  • @boredguy52
    @boredguy52 Před 3 lety +4

    This was a fantastic episode. Your jokes had me in stitches, you showed us some cool ass plants, there was gorgeous scenery, and the always perplexing yet amusing interactions with wildlife.
    10 out of fuckin 10 dude

  • @steveberkson3873
    @steveberkson3873 Před rokem

    One of my favorite environments. I have to hang out in the redwoods every few years. Majestic,magic. Thanks man

  • @joefrancis759
    @joefrancis759 Před 3 lety +6

    the nostalgia in this is overwhelming. I walked 20+ miles in a day touring headwaters grove before it became a preserve. You even found a trillium that the hippies hadn't picked. No place like Humboldt.

  • @Wonderhussy
    @Wonderhussy Před rokem

    I'm new to this channel, and I just want to say I love the fact that you found success while staying authentic to your true self (presumably). I used to cuss like you in my early videos, but people complained so much that I sold out and changed the way I talk. Now I just cuss vicariously through your videos 😜

  • @stephenross4333
    @stephenross4333 Před 3 lety +1

    Nice job with MassiveOldBastardsXXX ! I planted a Blue Sequoia at the house in Edmonds, along with a Blue Spanish Fir, Quercas Dentata (wonderful !), Magnolia Glandiforas, several other Magnolias and then added a bunch more. A giant Gunnera right by the hose bib, rhodies of course and a I can't believe I forgot the name, a rhodie from china with 3' leaves, and you wouldn't believe the 15' Witch Hazel Tree in bloom in Dec/January. I can't believe we sold that place for a house in San Rafael.

  • @BaronVonSTFU
    @BaronVonSTFU Před 3 lety +1

    I went to Yakushima in Japan which is the island that had the forest the inspired the Princess Mononoke movie. They used to have giant millennia old trees. A huge forest of them. Now so few of them remain that they've named them and you can hike out to look at the last remaining handful. They look fucking beautiful but it's very sad at the same time to think they cut all that irreplaceable forest down for shit that probably ended up burned as you mentioned in this video.

  • @juliettedemaso7588
    @juliettedemaso7588 Před rokem

    Oh that Gnome plant! (Hematomes Congestum) What a treat, what a beautiful strange cool plant, thank you for featuring them.

  • @fiftycentfridays
    @fiftycentfridays Před 3 lety +2

    I’ve been waiting for so long for this video!!! I’ve been living in the area and I’ve been doing my best to supplement this information, but nothing teaches like a walk through the forest.

  • @shereetompkins3358
    @shereetompkins3358 Před 2 lety +3

    When I lived in Willits in the early 80's (Mendocino county) I worked at a redwood lawn furniture company. I often wondered where they were harvesting trees from and how long the forest would be able to provide. Redwoods are slow growing trees. Now I wonder if the company still exists since I never see redwood lawn furniture anymore.

  • @mattclark7724
    @mattclark7724 Před 3 lety +5

    Nice to see some California episodes again. I was just in Pinnacles on Thursday. There was still a surprising amount of stuff going off. I would love to see you do an episode from there sometime. Lots of badass geological things going on there as well. Plus condors!

    • @brianrodman1033
      @brianrodman1033 Před 11 měsíci

      the condors are amazing. ive seen them over on the coast near Big Sur. biggest wing span ive ever seen, amazing birds.

  • @iamroberty
    @iamroberty Před 3 lety +2

    I love you dude. Your videos crack me up. You gotta get up to Quinault, Washington sometime. The flora in the rain forest there is wild.

  • @hashkeeper
    @hashkeeper Před 3 lety +1

    this channel is seriously a genius idea

  • @gerryakamaya
    @gerryakamaya Před 3 lety +2

    Thanks for the botany lesson! One of my favorite subjects, so fascinating.

  • @mezmarionybarra
    @mezmarionybarra Před 3 lety +3

    Love love love this one❣ Man I would have actually paid attention in school if teachers taught like you do you do. I just found out you're doing a 4 part course, hopefully catch the next one❣ Thank You❣

  • @jacksonmilinovich1533
    @jacksonmilinovich1533 Před 3 lety +6

    Bro i went here and it was and still is my favorite place in the whole world.

  • @lauriestrong9972
    @lauriestrong9972 Před 3 lety +6

    😂😂😂. I recently moved to Arcata after 35 years in west Sonoma county. You nailed it! Also some intense political divisions 🙄
    I love it so far though. So much access to nature. It’ll be fine for a few years.
    Love your channel, I learn so much

    • @nickbono8
      @nickbono8 Před 3 lety +1

      Yes, that area can be very left, yet simultaneously very right. Beautiful though.

  • @kalianaserene2207
    @kalianaserene2207 Před 3 lety +3

    Glad to see an episode of where I live! I was just there at fern canyon last week. :^) love your videos.♡ Hope to catch you next time you're around.

  • @kristopherkerr4128
    @kristopherkerr4128 Před 3 lety +1

    I had the pleasure of growing up in those very forests. Thanks for the video; makes me homesick.

  • @miamianz
    @miamianz Před 3 lety

    I was just at Mt. Rainier 2 weeks ago i had to see the northwestern forests never seen them until now. loved it.

  • @artmosley3337
    @artmosley3337 Před 2 měsíci

    Keep up the great work!!! You are a wealth of information and knowledge!!! I have seen many people on CZcams growing seedlings of Red Wood trees.. even in England..

  • @mc12358
    @mc12358 Před 3 lety +4

    With respect to rapid growth and urbanization of our natural resources, the same thing is happening on the east coast. I live near a national forest that is 150,000+ acres of diverse habitat, including longleaf pine savanna. It is surrounded by privately held land that used to be for timber harvests and game lands. Now they're clear cutting every damn where and putting up massive houses so rich people from out of state can move in and live close to the beach (I never understood the attraction of staring at a bunch of sand and water while slowly roasting in the hot sun, but I digress). Not to mention the mind-boggling amounts of trash and toxic waste that are illegally dumped along the forest service roads by the local rednecks. The forest may be a federally protected area (for now), but the fragmentation of the forest ecosystem is going to have some serious negative consequences in the long run.
    Enjoy the beauty while you can, folks.

  • @2.7petabytes
    @2.7petabytes Před 3 lety +4

    Jello Biafra also said “God told me to skin you alive”… the beginning of a Dead Kennedy’s tune

  • @amasterofone
    @amasterofone Před 11 měsíci

    Growing up in the bay, my Mom and i would take road trips up to the Redwoods and coast. Thank you for giving me context to all my wonderful memories.

    • @CatharticCurios
      @CatharticCurios Před 6 měsíci

      Yo I was just thinking the same. I used to play hookie from Catholic school to go mess around in the redwoods. Thank you🤘

  • @SpIattercaster
    @SpIattercaster Před 3 lety +12

    I am right there with you there about the logging.. it's unfathomable. I slept at a campsite with a 5-ft diameter trunk laying next to its stump... too big to drag out in the 1800's. Collective mental illness.

    • @chuxmix65
      @chuxmix65 Před 3 lety +2

      In the late 1800s they were dragging out 30' diameter logs. Either with steam power or mules or immigrants. Sad but true. Didn't matter much if a laborer or two got squashed.

    • @SpIattercaster
      @SpIattercaster Před 3 lety

      @@chuxmix65 Yeah, you'd think that was small potatoes, apparently its particular location was deemed not worth the trouble.

    • @loveandhate6854
      @loveandhate6854 Před 3 lety +1

      @@SpIattercaster The Bald Hill Wars that killed all the indigenous people only for that land to be abandoned and be called the "Lost Coast" lol

    • @Crowborn
      @Crowborn Před 3 lety +1

      I want to believe at least our mindset is a little better now. Back then, it was ridiculous, no one even had a single thought about *not* fucking up everything that moves. Now, things are still going to shit, but many people do care, and who knows. Maybe some of those people are the ones that raise the next ones, and so on.

  • @ericbulbosa6199
    @ericbulbosa6199 Před 3 lety +1

    hey Tony, I grew up out there! If you are still in humboldt county, there is a really great spot for orchids in Blue Lake off of highway 299. There is a population of Goodyera Oblongifolia, Calypso Bulbosa, Coralroot Orchids and Scoliopis Biglovii lilies.

  • @solardisk3
    @solardisk3 Před 3 lety +8

    I like many others in the 80's were introduced to the majestic redwoods by watching Return of the Jedi. Many of those beautiful trees are long gone. Scenes requiring explosions were shot on private logging company land because the trees were scheduled to be logged and the State Parks, where other scenes were filmed, would not allow damage to their trees. So, explosion shot = clearcut very shortly after.

    • @leahcooper5831
      @leahcooper5831 Před 3 lety +2

      That hurts.

    • @allenthomas9912
      @allenthomas9912 Před 2 lety

      And all of it has grown back. Redwoods grow pretty fast for the first hundred years, at least.

    • @itookallthenames
      @itookallthenames Před rokem

      @@allenthomas9912 sure, but they’ll be cut down again before they mature

    • @allenthomas9912
      @allenthomas9912 Před rokem

      @@itookallthenames boo hoo. Redwoods are mature between 800-1500 years. No one has time for that.

    • @itookallthenames
      @itookallthenames Před rokem

      @@allenthomas9912 owls do

  • @origamibulldoser1618
    @origamibulldoser1618 Před 2 lety

    Thanks for explaining the connection "pine needles => acidic ground => blueberry plants thrive in acidic substrate"!
    There's a shit ton of blueberry plants around where I live. And a shit tone of coniferous trees. Fascinating.

  • @billpavloff7799
    @billpavloff7799 Před 3 lety +6

    I've lived in Humboldt since my early teens and never knew those were Sorel! I always thought they were just clover. Check out Fern Canyon if you get the chance

  • @mikejenn3589
    @mikejenn3589 Před 3 lety +7

    Could you do an episode on ancient bristle cone pines? Loved this episode btw, coastal redwoods are my favorite trees

    • @gaywizard2000
      @gaywizard2000 Před 2 lety +1

      I love the Bristlecone pine, it is used as an accent tree where I live in Calgary Alberta!

  • @dancreed3186
    @dancreed3186 Před 3 lety +9

    Tony, you crack me up ! It's so nice to co-miserate with ya! "Mindless apes" yep

  • @pj-light-glass
    @pj-light-glass Před 2 lety

    Coming away from FaceBk to CZcams, specifically to visit your videos. Plants and trees I've been appreciating for decades, now actually know what they are and what to look for...at least somewhat more.

  • @krrowthemyuii
    @krrowthemyuii Před 4 měsíci

    Dang, I just missed you. I was still living in Humboldt County until the end of last year and kept hoping you'd do some videos of the area before we moved. Oh well. Anyway . . . I love redwoods and ferns! Thanks for making this video. I look forward to seeing what you post next.

  • @beantownorganics
    @beantownorganics Před rokem

    The absolute swaths of knowledge paired with the east coast swag, prison tats and humor. Respect brother

  • @quillclock
    @quillclock Před 3 lety +3

    shout outs to Tom of Finland

  • @dizzious
    @dizzious Před 3 lety +2

    I've been to Sequoia, haven't seen the redwoods yet though. Those lillies are some real bangers!

  • @Fizzgig
    @Fizzgig Před 3 lety +8

    @ 20:04 - Look at that!

  • @taleandclawrock2606
    @taleandclawrock2606 Před 10 měsíci

    The little segeway into homoerotic art was an unexpected bonus, love your comprehensive discussion of this areas plant ecology.