Hell yeah! Awesome video. Thanks for featuring one of my favorite places! What an honor for being able to make an appearance in CRIME PAYS BUT BOTANY DOESN'T! P.D. I said coastal live pine instead of Coast live oak (Quercus agrifolia) my mistake, the nerves kicked in! Jajajajaja
Kills me to think that 10 years from now this might be the best reference for this locality. It shouldn’t be allowed to clear cut native habitat for economic gain.
that gneiss ain't this nice! haha super cool seeing these rare Cyprus. i know i hear "fire dependent" a lot on this channel, but to see the seed and how its covered in a wax, so cool to learn just how adapted the are, truly. thanks Joey!
Baja is so beautiful, I wish I’d spent more time there when I lived in Oceanside. Most of the time I spent south of the border was for nefarious purposes. Glad those days are past me, I’m lucky I lived through them, most folks don’t. Cheers to our lost homies.
Enjoy that lovely road for what it is now, there's time yet for the world to stop self mutilating and start healing. Remote as it seems, remember continuity is an illusion.
I really love your videos and all the botany info I've learned from you over the years. I'm into aquariums and I would love to see a video on aquatic plant phylogeny, and I'd love to hear your perspective on them in terms of evolution. Hope you keep making amazing videos, I also love the geology I learn from your videos being a rockhound
So much wonderful stuff in this video, really enjoyed it…so nice to see Alan and friends again too. Again, an area that looking at casually seems uninteresting, upon seeing thru Joey’s eyes is bursting from soil to sky with goodies. Thanks! 🌿🍄🪨
I think some of that mafic rock is pebble lava, given the doming on the rocks that carved off the face and the patterns in the top of the cut's rock face. While he crumbly stuff might be A'a lava given the structure of it + the high iron content. So the gabbro would be from dikes and sills.
Genuine curiosity, is there a chance that wood sorrel was oxalis albicans instead? They look similar to me and I couldn’t say how to differentiate them
Hey Joey, I recently saw you utilising glyphosate to treat Bermuda grass on your Instagram story. You were careful not to spray it outside of the treatment area, but my question is, why use glyphosate at all? Is the controversial chemical, which is banned in multiple countries and heavily restricted in others, really worth it to kill the Bermuda grass?
@@CrimePaysButBotanyDoesnt thanks. If they made a sage brush cologne I would probably start wearing cologne. Watching your videos makes me want to go back to the desert. Thanks for the education
What if you collected the leaves of things that smelled good and made oils or tinctures or something out of them? If they aren't poisonous or dangerous in some way. Idk is that possible? Maybe collect some of the smells. Lol
One of the best TH-cam channels
I just subscribed
Here here
1:14 - The striking black manganese oxide dendrites deserved a closeup, plant boy.
I thought they were pretty fossils, my bad 🪨 Plant boy was too excited to note them so thank you! 🤣
I was wondering what those fractals patterns were. I was surprised he didnt point them out
@@LukeMcGuireoides probably just finished his fourth cup of coffee too🤣
That stone was pretty enough to cut.
@@grannyplants1764youre not the only one. Dendrites are commonly mistaken or even sold as fossils.
Hell yeah! Awesome video. Thanks for featuring one of my favorite places!
What an honor for being able to make an appearance in CRIME PAYS BUT BOTANY DOESN'T!
P.D. I said coastal live pine instead of Coast live oak (Quercus agrifolia) my mistake, the nerves kicked in! Jajajajaja
"Here's a genus whose taxonomy is also a clusterfuck" is my kind of intro to any discussion. Keep doing what you're doing.
You’re a fucking gift to humanity, the antigen to Americana and our cultural insatiable growth/chase of definitions. Keep on brother.
Kills me to think that 10 years from now this might be the best reference for this locality. It shouldn’t be allowed to clear cut native habitat for economic gain.
Well, then, humans wouldn't consider that "progress"
Hey, pal. You're doin' us a real nice service over here. 🧑🌾
that gneiss ain't this nice! haha super cool seeing these rare Cyprus. i know i hear "fire dependent" a lot on this channel, but to see the seed and how its covered in a wax, so cool to learn just how adapted the are, truly. thanks Joey!
Chaparral is always one of the nicest habitats to hike and look at plants
Baja is so beautiful, I wish I’d spent more time there when I lived in Oceanside. Most of the time I spent south of the border was for nefarious purposes. Glad those days are past me, I’m lucky I lived through them, most folks don’t. Cheers to our lost homies.
Hi Alan!! You two are quite the combo 😊
The fruits on the tecate are great for throwing games like "Rock Fight."
Good times.
Poking the algo. Great stuff. Love the longer videos, the deep dives. 🎉
Hope this helps too, keep enjoying!
I really like seeing the mycology as well, gives some variety to the video, change in color scheme.
The brain trust in Baja, nice!
That was the wildest colored mushroom I've ever see
Colors and mushrooms are always interconnected:
Out from under the eyelids, or behind them😍
Enjoy that lovely road for what it is now, there's time yet for the world to stop self mutilating and start healing. Remote as it seems, remember continuity is an illusion.
Mexican police hot on the trail of plant growers. If you get my drift. Found some gneiss rocks and awesome shrooms!
Love your channel man!
Gabbro soils and the Hearthians that love them
I live on the northern coast of Humboldt County, CA and the places I hike have lots of blue ceanothus, it smells so good
I really love your videos and all the botany info I've learned from you over the years. I'm into aquariums and I would love to see a video on aquatic plant phylogeny, and I'd love to hear your perspective on them in terms of evolution. Hope you keep making amazing videos, I also love the geology I learn from your videos being a rockhound
So much wonderful stuff in this video, really enjoyed it…so nice to see Alan and friends again too. Again, an area that looking at casually seems uninteresting, upon seeing thru Joey’s eyes is bursting from soil to sky with goodies. Thanks! 🌿🍄🪨
My dude! Always looking for Fremontodendron Mexicanum 🤙. Big fire lovers around the tecate, that whole Baja South SD plant community is too cool.
Nice some Gneiss
& some ultramafics too!
beautiful stuff.
That site is gorgeous❣️
Nice
Well done brother another brilliant video ❤❤ 🎉🎉
Oxalis is fabulous!
Yeah, i don t like to see that road there😖
Love exploring with you guys! Hope the tick survived! Justice for the tick 😅
I’m officially playing around with growing mushrooms, food grade mushrooms. I’ve got a nice jar of mycelium in production.
Absolute legends of youtube.
The juxtaposition of pure intelligence with the pure beligerence of the east coast townie, is pure🤌.
more gold from the champ!
Extremotolerant fungi are awesome.
Cool Bike Sergio.
I'm sorry, what bike?
I love how the ending made us all feel like we were trippin’
I think some of that mafic rock is pebble lava, given the doming on the rocks that carved off the face and the patterns in the top of the cut's rock face. While he crumbly stuff might be A'a lava given the structure of it + the high iron content. So the gabbro would be from dikes and sills.
Man, I would so love to hear what you think about Australian plants and soils.
Genuine curiosity, is there a chance that wood sorrel was oxalis albicans instead? They look similar to me and I couldn’t say how to differentiate them
Dude every time you say Cypress I wanna drink some OUZO
Were those manganese dendrites I spotted at 1:14?
I’m smoking a fat bowl listening to this rn.
CYPRESSES!!!!!! ❤❤❤❤
staped by the caps
Hey Joey, I recently saw you utilising glyphosate to treat Bermuda grass on your Instagram story. You were careful not to spray it outside of the treatment area, but my question is, why use glyphosate at all? Is the controversial chemical, which is banned in multiple countries and heavily restricted in others, really worth it to kill the Bermuda grass?
You can’t get a healthy garden of native plants with invasives that should everything out. Bermuda grass can choke.
Why do so many plants from arid and semi arid areas smell so good?
What smells good to us tastes terrible to insects and ungulates
@@CrimePaysButBotanyDoesnt thanks. If they made a sage brush cologne I would probably start wearing cologne. Watching your videos makes me want to go back to the desert. Thanks for the education
Commenting for the omnipresent omnipotent algorithms. Noice
Gnoiss.
These two need a Netflix special!
contact metamorphism gneiss nice
i wanna be you when i grow up
Neeeerds
Stop da yabba and grab yo gabbro
That's dendritic rhyolite.
Not at all lol
Da Bay !?! Not da ocean
What if you collected the leaves of things that smelled good and made oils or tinctures or something out of them? If they aren't poisonous or dangerous in some way. Idk is that possible? Maybe collect some of the smells. Lol
Gabbro sounds like a long lost Marx brother
That’s schist
yesss best way to enjoy my blunt 🫡
Lsd 🪟ing approved