John confronting that Asian tour group who got too close to the bear is so accurate it hurts. Been to Yellowstone a few times and every time I’ve been there some Asian tourist either gets gored by a bison or killed by a grizzly
I've been a tourist many a time in many a place (though mostly in Europe, so no bears) but FFS, what's so hard at following basic courtesy and the safety advisory I *know* you get when you book a tour in any US national park with a reputable company?
@@trekaddict I think it just has to do with the varying degrees of cultural norms. They don’t have anything remotely close to Yellowstone anywhere else in the world. Especially in Asia.
I've been a tourist in Montana, those people are willing to allow you on their field if you ask them first and its under their supervision. They show hospitality to those who are willing to follow basic courtesy. Heck, I got to see them at their work and I can only say that being a rancher is a helluva lot of work.
I do a lot of car camping travel, and it's a very rare occasion someone doesn't give me permission to sleep on their land, reservations included. Been invited to dinner more than once. *When out West especially, look for 1. National Forest 2. BLM Land 3. Back dirt/gravel access to National Parks and you won't have to ask or pay.* The latter is technically illegal, but if you keep back from streams & make it obvious you're not making a mess (hang a trash bag) you'll be okay if a ranger comes presuming no campground is nearby.
@@philh1826 My point exactly. Thats why government services isn’t “free”. Just like how our freedom was paid for by the blood of those who died in wars to defend this country.
Not just national parks. I find trash thrown around campsites on my land from idiots that don't know a what a 6 strand fence means or too stupid to read a sign.
I speak decent mandarin, and it was pretty funny but my family was at Yellowstone a few years back and a group of Chinese tourists were standing in front of us waiting in front of us. My dad and I couldn't help but overhear some of what they were saying and the funniest thing we heard was a couple older middle aged 'aunties' grumbling about 'Just how many foreigners there were here'. I was very tempted to let them know that in the US they were the foreigners but thought it wasn't worth it. It does reflect the Chinese attitude which is rather like the American one that we are the center of the world and everything else revolves around us.
@@OneLastHitB4IGo yup, a group of Chinese nationals own a huge chunk of the Adirondack State Park and more in Texas. We are literally selling our country to the enemy.
well, in real life, someone with a pair of balls would have called Costner's bluff and said, NO, I AIN'T DIGGING...go ahead and shoot me!.........and they what would have happened?
@@trevorregay9283 In real life, in the middle of the night and in the middle of nowhere, you would get shot in the leg and forced to dig with pain and bleeding serving as an example to your pals.
best part of the scene is the psychology behind it. They lost their lives then, and it was only when they were done digging that they were given back their lives. That's the kind of shit that'd stick with somebody their whole life, the kind of shit that can scare someone straight.
This show is basically "King Lear" in Wyoming.... I totally get why he would want such a role... If you look at Empire, Dynasty, Yellowstone, and King of Texas...You see the same themes... A aging and powerful man trying to pass on his legacy without losing his legacy and his soul...
Kevin Costner makes a great western movie, and now TV. I don’t think he gets enough credit for his work on them. This is excellent TV and I can’t wait for next season.
I feel like no matter how mad you are at someone, coming back and setting their field on fire when it borders a universally loved national park with a high likelihood for the fire to spread to said national park is a great way to end up in federal prison. Really really stupid.
Anyone else besides me notice how John Dutton never loses his temper dealing with the bikers?? A calm, focused mind is the deadliest weapon and John Dutton is an absolute master!!
@@SixGunTiger24 With his family, he's stern, and loves them. He wants what's best for them. To thugs, he's cold and uncaring, giving off the impression that he's going to kill someone. Psychological warfare.
It would be fair to say that the message was heard loud and clear that the bikers were not welcome on his land after he calmly explained that they were warned that if they returned, they would be buried there. They are lucky not to have caught the long black train.
Gotta love how Rip asked the director if he had the budget to ram the bikes with the truck. He said go for it. Bikers didnt know about it, cast fighting didnt know about it, so the reaction from everyone was genuine.
I read in another youtube video that those bikes were not real, that the whole scene was done with pieces of bikes looking intant and then when he impacted them they are destroyed but it was not real.
Yeah, they did three takes on that after replacing the bikes each time. Rip asked what was wrong with the first take. The director said the soundman forgot to switch on the mic. On the second one, Rip missed hitting the first bike.
@@johnabbottphotography lol ask anyone who works in films what happens when they go over budget. Also, every industry I can think of "wastes" money in some way.
@@mrdark9916SEALs are trained to use irons, probably far more capable than most ppl are with ACOGs. When SEALs go civilian, optics are expensive when it’s coming out of pocket.
@@mrdark9916 I’ve known a fair share of SEALS and they usually have an Sig with irons and on occasion an eotech or red dot. It’s common for them not to use sights for their personal weapons. The same can’t be said for service weapons
I've been to yellowstone many times. People go right up to the animals thinking they're tame. Gamewardens told me a story of a family that told their son to go stand by a big 6x6 Bull Elk for a picture! They threw rocks at the big bull to get him to stand up. He did stand up and also gutted that little boy.
As someone who grew up in the country I'll say it's crazy how many people trespass. Living 40 minutes from town and having a gated driveway that has no trespassing signs yet people still drive down the god damn driveway.
Dude I lived on a property with goats and we had some baby ones and I came home to people in the corral trying to pet them and being chased by our billy. They wanted me to control him and I said he is doing his job protecting his girls and kids. They got mad at me for yelling at them. Fortunately they left when my neighbor that is a deputy came over asking what was going on. He got them to leave really quick.
@@michaelwilson7927jerks. Did you get angry w them? Just curious if you did and they still didn't leave. A lot of folks carry around a "friend" in case any strangers need any encouragement leaving. Doesn't have to be a firearm necessarily, but an axe, heck small sledgehammer, people can see those fairly easily and shouldn't get in your face.
I have trespassed some people’s land by accident when I first moved to America and didn’t know better, people came out and we had nice chat together, they didn’t even tell me that I was trespassing at the time, after living here for 2 years I finally learned and have great appreciation to people who treated me with kindness and respect which they are not obligated to do at all. ❤
Yes they are .What are you talking about?Tresspassing in the middle of nowhere is a crime?How would you know otherwise? Take a grip with your self bashing.
@@ermias75ermis2 learn English better before talking to me you low intelligence creature :) also take a trip to my private land and see what would happen to you 🤫
I'm British and visited Yellowstone about 15 years ago. Treated it with the same respect I do the National Parks we have here in the UK. Was appalled at how some folks were treating the place. Litter, fires and off road driving.
Americans as usual. I visited London and saw the royal guards of Buckingham Palace. I am so glad my parents taught me to respect them because I had no idea they were actual soldiers. Thought it was purely ceremonial.
the fly fisher was actually quite genius. he knows that once you are in the river youre safe no matter where you are as long as you enter and leave on public (or your own private) property. basically told the chick to go to hell as there was nothing she could do
@@vmarc4682 i looked up some laws. its largely state dependent. Some states allow the privacy to be retained by the owner. Some states don't and the riverways are retained by the state
62 years.I grew up with western-movies in the sixties ( John Wayne-Richard Widmark-James Stewart-and many more.......) Then in the seventies Clint Eastwood acting in these movies and did it very well till I saw Dances with Wolves in the nineties and was amazed about Kevin Costner... But these series ??? Overwelming....outregious.....Heavy....Every part lot of goosebumps..The best in all these years and hope for more seasons will be produced.
Speaking from experience in southern Indiana. Driving up to the house, and respectfully stating your business and asking an owner if you can fish with the mention of sharing your catch will almost always end up with a good experience. Sure they might ask you help with some work that day and the offer to fish there for life, but I have almost never had someone outright refuse unless they have been burned in the past a few too many times.
@Conservitarian 17 Quite a few big lakes are private here in Indiana. The public lakes are pretty fished regularly but you can still have a good bit of luck.
In Alabama, my grandparents had a pond in one of their cattle fields. I remember that they would let anyone fish the pond as long as they asked first; but if they caught you there without asking... they'd run you off and you weren't welcome back. Almost everyone asked, and my grandparent would let them sit on the porch, go fish, eat dinner. The works. There are good people in AL, but just like this clip, they don't tolerate trespassing.
@@fresco-23gaming8 it seems that you have grandparents that still live by the Golden rule! Sit on the porch, talk a spell, have dinner, actually supper, I miss those days! I miss the days when people were respectful, especially our children! I never in a million years thought that my son would end up laying hands on me especially since I didn't raise him that way. Maybe I should have whooped his ass once or twice! But this is what I get in return, a few broken ribs, bruises, hurt feelings and now I don't care whether my son shows his face ever again! All because I spoke the truth to him! I found out that he was leaving my 6-year-old grandson home alone all day, not just for a few minutes while we run to the store, BUT all day long while him and his so-called girlfriend are at work. Instead of bringing him to me. He said that it's too much of a hassle to wake him up in the morning and bring him here at 5:30 even though he drives right past here to go to work everyday! You know, I have no problems calling children and family services on whomever is doing something to my grandson. The last girl that lived with him had two children that were a couple years older than my grandson and they had been in the foster care system so they had seen and done a couple of things that they had no right to do or see and they sexually molested my grandson so I called them twice and reported them. And they took my grandson out of the house and had him stay with me it was like for 3 months because my son would not kick them out. And then my grandson would ask questions like, why are they in my bedroom, why are they playing with daddy, how come I'm not at home in my bed?
@@Wulfieman In some states what matters is if it is feed/attached by a river and even creek. Than it might count as national property. Really depends on the stats and the laws. Like in Missouri my uncle built a 6.5 acre lake that is spring feed and it's all his property. Has a Summer Church camp down there and does a AirBNB the rest of the year.
I used to live in Darby for years, I can recognize a lot of the filming spots around this show, they're RIGHT outside of town. Never would I have imagined a show being made in what I consider, the smallest town ive EVER seen. Maybe apart from Danville/malo in WA.
My sister and I were road-tripping across the US a few years ago and as we were exiting the Badlands in South Dakota we stayed in this small town called Wall. Probably not as small as the places you referenced but it still only had about 700 ppl in it. Then a few weeks later when we were at a motel in Wyoming I put on a random channel and there was an old movie on. I didn’t know the movie but I immediately recognized the place: Wall, SD. Lol 😂 I forget what movie it was but when I looked it up on my phone sitting there watching it I couldn’t believe how coincidental that was.
I’ll never understand these types of comments… why say this shit like people care about it? no one cares you lived close to some of the filming spots my guy what do want? A congratufuckinglations?
@@crypt0sFX anyone who thinks they "own" land is deluded. We are just here to borrow it for a while before we're gone. And property taxes and maintenance always have to be done.
I've lived as a barbed wire fence surrounding the actual Dutton Ranch for 200 yrs and I can say from experience that this is an accurate portrayal of barbed wire fences in and around Yellowstone for this time period
I love this series very much, What an excellent performance of all of them, cowboys life, ranch, horses, mountains and especially Background music is heart touching.
I was travelling in Yellowstone with my family about 35 years ago. There was a bus in front of us that was stopped due to a herd of bison on the road. The doors opened and a bunch of Japanese tourists got out and started wandering around taking photos of them. To say I was surprised by their lack of common sense would be an understatement. I can now see selfies of many people with potentially dangerous wild animals very close to them.
We have a windpowered corn/weatmill in the town I grew up in that's still operational. It was frequently visited by large busses packed with Chinese/Japanese tourists. I remember one time the bus stopped in front of our house while my dad was repainting the side of the house and when they all got out started taking pictures of my dad painting 😂😂
I used to live close to Yellowstone and have been there several times. Every time I drove through, I saw Asian tourists being idiots. The last time I was there, I came up on one of them sneaking up on a bison bull lying next to the road so his wife could take his picture next to it. Luckily for him, the bison decided to let him live. I can't believe more tourists aren't killed every year by the wildlife.
I live in the north, we had a cruise stop at a port near a town close to us. The tourists had 3 shore days and were spreading out from the port town. My brother and I were out in country and we saw a couple out for what looked like a hike. Nothing unusual, until we realized they were speaking Mandarin. We don't see many people that speak Mandarin as their primary language up here. By chance, we started moving in another direction at just the right time to hear them get excited. I don't speak Mandarin so I didn't know what they were saying, but the tone of their voices and rapid foot steps made us go back and check on them. They had run across an adolescent bull moose about 50-60 yards from them, and were pulling out their phones and moving toward it. This was mid rut, bull moose become extremely aggressive and unpredictable during the rut and have killed many people. Especially the younger ones. We tried calling out to them in English, but they didn't even realize that we were talking to them. As they got closer to the moose, it shifted to an aggressive posture. It lowered it's head and was almost certainly going to charge. Luckily my brother had a cow moose call on him, so we blew that a few times and the bull immediately forgot about the tourists and started coming toward us. We had about 80 yards when we saw it change direction, so we waited until it got away from the tourists, then slipped down the other side of the ridge. We called the game warden and told him that there were tourists from the boat roaming the forests with no knowledge about the moose or the rut, and that we saw two almost get killed. The warden had to approach the company running the cruises and inform them that they're passengers were not permitted in the wilderness areas of the county during the rut and would have to remain in town or on the ship. I don't think those two Chinese tourists ever realized that they were less than a minute from being maimed or dying in that brush. Do people that live out here a favor. If you don't bother to research the climate, weather, animals, terrain etc. before you set out, stay out of the forests. When you get into trouble, we're the ones that have to come in to get you. You're going to get yourself or someone trying to help you hurt or killed.
I fell in love with Yellowstone in the first episode. It's not just the nature, but the massive amounts of humor and attitude. I don't want it to end! I have only 2 regular characters I don't like because they seem to spend entire episodes whining or doing something stupid and selfish, often all 3 in one episode.
what season(s) are these clips coming from? this is the first thing i have randomly watched about yellowstone and am still in decision, but the playlist is greatness in drama lol
Watching tourists in Yellowstone National Park try to walk up to wild bison really cemented in my mind that growing up and living exclusively in cities really some strange things to the human brain.
Even that's not it, any person with half a brain knows that would animals are dangerous. It seems to mainly be arrogant poorly educated overseas tourists. The same ones who grab 6 full plates each from a buffet....
@@edwardfletcher7790 Well that's a lot of conclusions to jump to. I've seen plenty of American city folk doing dumb tourist shit so I'm going to stick to the theory that it's because they don't learn anything about the wilderness in cities.
You would be surprised the amount of country folk that come into the city and act dumber than a sack of bricks. Having to tell them multiple times you indeed can't go 25mph in a 50mph zone, because it's a "nice day"
@@waffelsrevenge Unfortunately, cities never post signs about how certain areas are very dangerous to visit because the indigenous wildlife tend to be armed and predatory. Visitors to Yellowstone do not have this excuse.
The line “this is America, we don’t share land” feels accurate to me; I personally don’t own land, but I am friends with someone who is and am very welcome to his property as long as I ask and treat the land as my own. I can see both perspectives of a poor person who would like his own house, to a man owning a square mile of land to just hunt on.
I had the pleasure of spending a week in Yellowstone on the Montana side in the middle of January, heart of a frozen dead winter. Absolutely gorgeous, but unforgiving country. Elk, bison, coyotes, bighorn, pronghorns, and wolves abound. I'm sure the pumas were out too, but they'd never show us their faces. It's awe inspiring to see at that time of year.
Too funny cause a few weeks back I got to channel my inner John Dutton. Caught folks stealing my chickens. Told them I ever see them again I’d make sure my chickens and all the other wildlife on my property would be dining on their carcasses and how grateful I was because poultry feed s expensive 😂 I love this show so much ❤
@@Eggy79 you clearly don’t grasp subtlety or sarcasm 😒 in reality it’s a felony in Virginia to steal or kill someone’s live stock. I merely warned them kindly but next time it will not be a good day for them.
@@Atomsplitter69Absolutely Badass! I know this sounds random but, What Advice would you give to a 17 year without friends and has a Love/hate relationship with Nature?
@@Imthesoulofthes get out and force yourself to survive. Go deep and experience your God given connections to nature. Grab a simple camping kit, fishing hunting gear, fire starting supplies and baptize yourself. I did when I was 20. Spent a whole week alone. The first 48 hours was rough, eventually you’ll change your vibe and feel the connection. Anyways just my opinion.
Costner`s response exactly mimics my own experience. In that the original trespassing doesn`t enrage him, but the verbal blow-off and the secondary refusal to comply does...
@@axelbaldwin3343 Truth be told, It was never the tourists or bartending. It was buying the land under a homeless camp. I made the critical error of thinking I could simply clean house once and be done with it. They should have shown the second bus pulling up just as Costner chases off the first one. THAT was my reality...
@karkokid idk those ppl seemed pretty nice and the grandad was right. One person shouldn’t own so much land while squishing the rest of us (without money) into tiny spaces.
i miss this show already, watched the first 4 seasons in like one and a half months. something about this started to feel like home. hard to explain, but it surely is one of the best shows i have watched. this is one the things i would not mind being 20 seasons long to have tons of material of it. the best thing about this is the fact that kevin costner seems to have found his perfect character yet. he deserves every dollar he makes with this.
Yeah, I seen a dumbass from New Jersey one time that thought, he'd "rescue" a wild turkey that he saw running down a fence line. I can't remember now if that poor crippled turkey broke the guys nose, or just bloodied it good, but that turkey did bust both of the guy's lips, blackened one eye and scratched the crap out both arms. When the guy from Jersey got back in the car, he had a whole new respect for wildlife and what us locals knew.
(possibly following onto the tour bus to get his lecture on wildlife management, respect for wildlife and habitat, and a coldly worded piece on the sorry state of city folk so disconnected from nature that they don't recognize the danger they could be or are in.)
I remember seeing a dude on youtube untangle a deer from something and it proceeded to try and beat the snot out of him with its hooves. The part that's most memorable was the fact he said he was throwing away 10 of vegetarianism due it being ungrateful for his help...talk about a Disney Princess mentality.🤦♀
As a person with Chinese in-laws I can attest this interaction is true. The wife would tell her relatives/friends sign that says, "Do Not' Touch" or "Stay On Boardwalk". They would tell her, "it's not written in Chinese". smh
God bless all those strong resilient wonderful horses who got us around and transported us for all those years before automobiles were invented. Im so truly thankful for those animals!!
Years ago, poor folk rode horses & the rich folk drove the new "automobile". Now, only the rich can afford horses & the poor drive "beater" automobiles!!
I love this show. Though, It will be hard to watch come November. It was a show my mother and I would watch together. It’s all she watched for the remaining 2 months of her life when her cancer came back. I’ll always think highly of Yellowstone and the importance it had in these moments of my life.
It’s quite painful the beautiful memories our loved ones leave behind. I also lost my mother due to cancer. I now fast every year on thanksgiving. I remember how hard she worked every year in that kitchen & how much she loved doing it. I refuse to participate in that holiday without her.
I’m so sorry. I lost my aunt to cancer years ago. It gets better, it won’t hurt as much over time, you won’t get the urge to cry every time you think about her. Doing things you used to do with her won’t hurt but will serve as a comfort and reminder. My condolences.
One other thing. John Dutton also cared about the bear. He didn't want to shoot it. He had his priorities in the right place. He knew he had to deal with these idiots first and hopefully get them out of the danger area and not have to shoot the bear. I call this event the Bambi syndrome!
John Dutton cared about the bear? No he didn't. John Dutton doesn't exist. He is a fictional character in a fictional TV series. His character is played by the actor Kevin Costner. The bear is a tame bear called Bart the Bear 2. His handler is Doug Seus. This is all fiction, friend.
12:52 was so badass. Old dude was calm, collected, and took control of the situation quick without breakin a sweat. Didn't know much about the show but I'm absolutely watching it now!
It's unfortunate but it appears this show espouses the wrong values. Property rights are important but sharing and cooperation should be valued as well.
This is so relatable, my grandpa had strangers trespass on his property ALL THE TIME! So did my aunt. People would hunt and fish like they owned the place, litter all over, once an a$Swhole left his whole tent on my grandpa's property and my aunt caught an entitled dickhead who claimed he could fish wherever he damn well pleased. Stubbornness runs in our family apparently because my aunt wasn't going to deal with that and she took her gun out and aimed at him and told him he could leave her property or she could escort him off it. Luckily for him his royal majesty took his leave. Not trespassing on someone else's property should be the bare minimum of decent respect. I'm glad my aunt had her gun with her, while riding her horse. Her ranch was in the middle of the woods. You never know what can happen.
I live in a town in Nebraska. We have problems with farmers and ranchers coming into it uninvited. They can't park between the lines to save their soul, they get confused by turning lanes, and leave mud and cow sh!t up and down the aisles of every store and shop they visit. JUST KIDDING! (But that's how it would sound if townsfolk had the same attitudes as most farmers and ranchers do with townsfolk) 🙂
@@MichaelJones-rn2pq Someone who trespasses on YOUR HOME and treats it like it's THIERS is NOT at all the same thing as your describing. That was a REALLY weak argument. 😑
@@horsewings3561 A field is NOT your home. I find people fishing many times out at our cabin. I don't act like this and if they are polite, I tell them to keep fishing after introductions. I own the land, it doesn't own me and it doesn't give me the excuse to be less of a human being.
@@MichaelJones-rn2pq a field that IS YOUR PROPERTY is your HOME. Let me guess, you went to public school, so due to extremely low education you can't grasp this concept....
@@horsewings3561 No, I didn't go to public school and I also don't sleep in a field or keep my belongings in it, so I don't consider it my home. My house is my home. I own a pickup, it is my property, but it is not my home. Try more thinking and less insulting and you might make sense. I am done with you.
I imagine digging your own grave gives you a bit of perspective, would give you time to think about the price of a fence. You probably figure it doesn't cost all that much, then you realize you're selling your life for the cost of a fence and some courtesy. Would probably be a lesson that would stick with you if you didn't help fill the hole you dug. Love that scene.
@@richardthomas1531 Yes, he's talking about what was said in the fictional show that represents real life. Next thing you'll tell us is that Costner isn't a cowboy or Robin Hood.
The characters is why I stay since the storylines are starting to get stale…..but that’s one of the reasons why I loved SoA too no matter how unrealistic it was cuz I loved all the characters
Rip killed him later on. He walked up to him with a pissed off rattlesnake in a cooler, opened the cooler and threw the snake on him. The rattler bit him in the face and Rip stood over him and watched him die.
I caught the biker scene in a separate TH-cam video and that influenced me to check Yellowstone out thinking I was discovering some new under the radar show. Turns out I was just way late to the party lol. I'm still on S1 but really enjoy it!
Me too found clips of it on Facebook about a week ago didn't take the name into account about 4days ago I decided to check it out here and I'm like oh.......late 🤦🏾♀️but love this show
Yeah, I too am late to the party BUT, I have watched the 5-1/2 seasons at least twice now! Awesome show for sure, and a great example of how this Country is SUPPOSED TO BE as far as taking responsibility for our actions, cause we just might have to back them up with our lives at some point ☝️
@@lumbangaolyulys you are very very Dim! Some knobhead cut the fence on my uncles farm and allowed 40 cattle to escape. He wasn’t laughing when he was arrested for trespassing, criminal damage and public endangerment
Everyone had to love rip riding up towards the lawyer for market equities when kayce turned his back just showing his dedication to the Dutton family .
I guess I am more enamored by "Lonesome Dove" character Woodrow T. Call, who famously said, "I hate rude behavior in a man. I won't tolerate it." I guess it depends on how one was reared, huh?
The amount of bad PSA and legal advice that this show comes with is actually good for the country. People with vast amounts of lands that only use a small portion of it will probably get locked up soon and lose the land thanks to this show
@@Bee-tj8gc I hope you’re trolling. If you think taking someone property because you don’t think “they use it enough” is a very dangerous and slippery slope.
I've been watching Yellowstone since the beginning and the first scene is one of my favorite in the entire series. It makes me laugh every time. " This is America, we don't share land here" haha!
@@danielfietkau733 don’t act like native americans peacefully coexisted with eachother and didn’t conquer each other before we got here, ur just mad we won and kept it
Nailed it, it happened in my hometown, a vast open field, beautiful view, and some idiot made it a tourist attraction. Months later i see that field littered with trash.
I bought about 25 acres and removed an entire trash dumpster of junk out of the fields and woods. Months later we are still removing trash from the people that lived here before me. It doesn't even have to be made public some people don't even care for the land that's theirs.
This is not true. In Norway it's national law that all land except gardens is accessible for everyone. Infarm fields can only be traversed in the winter, but alk other areas in the wild are open to everyone. The law also aay no tent can be put up more than 3 days and all trash must be taken and not left in the wild. This law works well in Norway and is very important to us.
I grew up in the country. People would stop and steal corn from the fields for corn roasts. Little did they know, it was FEED Corn for cattle. The SWEET Corn we grew for us, we kept closer to the house!
We've had people just like this trespassing on our land. They drove quads through our fields destroying everything we'd just planted. Others burned cars to get rid of evidence and more brought guns to hunt on our land. Some took down our signs and chains before trespassing.
Yeah I live in northwest Michigan's lower peninsula ihate snow mobile's I've had the ride right past my fifth wheel right through my driveway past my power washer past a small storage building and past my business trailer. And hear we didn't know this was private land then look behind them sayiing oh.
Stringing molecular wire across the path is a good trick. Make sure you bring a pick up truck to collect the bodies the next day and a strong bag to collect the heads in.
Visited Idaho with a buddy and he took me dirtbiking through the massive forests. We eventually came to a clearing in the woods and there were footpaths all around so we knew people frequented the area. We took a break in the clearing and started smoking a few bowls when we hear the sounds of sticks/leaves crunching behind us, we turned around and see two of the scariest and angriest dudes pointing their rifles at us. Turned out that clearing and those footpaths werent just coincidence and we were on someones property but the house was beyond the hill we were behind so we didnt see it. They didnt say one word they just motioned with there rifles to get the f*ck of their property. You could tell the son was a hot head and wanted to pull the trigger so bad. They slowly followed behind us for like 20 minutes with their rifles pointed right at us the whole time (we walked our dirtbikes since we really didnt want to piss these guys off any more than they were). I was never so scared for my life and was never so scared of another person as I was of these people. Turns out they had a huge weed growing operation going on there so it made a lot of sense later. After that I always look for no trespassing signs if around forested areas and if you see a fence, its there for a reason, dont jump it.
Dont forget - its not always about selfishness or sharing. If they were to get hurt on their property, they can sue the landowner. The lawsuits almost always exceed whatever insurance they have.
On the other hand the vast majority of visitors aren't going to try to sue the landowner because they tripped over a rock on land they were trespassing. It's one thing if they damage a fence, but if they don't damage anything and are just casually crossing through, who cares. Move on and let people be
@@Jomskylark Farms are working areas, you can't just have randoms wondering around leaving mess and gates open. As well as the aforementioned legal issues in case an accident happens which is all too common on farms.
@@Jomskylark No, Land is land. If a precedent is started, you are screwed now youve got thousands trespassing thru - the wild life will then go somewhere else. Fences exist for a reason. Now if there isnt a fence or sign, than that's the owners issue.
I just love the scene where Rip smashes the cycles with his Heavy-Duty Ram pick-up and proceeds to beat the hell out of the bikers with a ranch implement.
I remember watching that episode when it first came out because I remembered seeing it online somewhere that Kevin Costner acted on it, was a hard-core scene which made me buy all 4 seasons Also on the behind the scenes thing, Taylor Sheridan was going to let them all sit there but Cole Hauser I think gave him the idea of hitting into them and they went with it
In the Midwest if you take the time to approach the owner respectfully and ask to hunt or fish it's possible you may receive the privilege of doing so with a few restrictions or rules. If you trespass and hunt or fish without regard, your truck may get trashed, the law called, the land owner will press charges and it's likely your ass will get kicked but it might not happen in the order I listed. True thing.
We owned land on a river....I've never turned down anyone asking permission to fish or picnic.....but asked/told several to leave that didn't ask. Respect goes a long way.
Knew a guy who owned some river land and he let me fish it (catch and release). My favorite story from the owner was a guy he never saw before fishing the river, owner asked him if he had permission. The guy replied "he knew the owner and had permission".
amen brother. grew up in rural ohio. were nice folk. just ask permission and respect the ground rules and your more than welcome. thats why im proud to be from the midwest. some of the nicest people around. also go buckeyes.
I welcome hunters. As long as they don’t leave a footprint, they can hunt all they like. Don’t shoot my house, barns, or storage and we’re good as gold. As of 2022, the deer and coyote are out of control.
I lived in Paradise Valley, Montana, for 33 years, just south of Yellowstone. Montana has stream access laws. People can access streams and rivers to fish by means of rights of ways. The scene with the man fly fishing in the river is therefore not realistic. But the Chinese tourists? Yeah, they get too close to wildlife, and they run to the bus when you shoot at them.
I think he was saying anyone who owns a ranch would know federal. waterway access laws, especially a lawyer. Also Beth Dutton doesn't exist as this is a show and she is an actress.
I hope they do the next season soon. Yellowstone is the best tv drama ever made. The bikers acting tough until John throws shovels and makes them dig 🤣
The fishing part is fairly understandable, in some states (not certain of this one), if the waterway is accessible, it is free reign to the public, this is why I can take float trips during the summer down rivers back home.
I own some back country land that 4 wheelers crossed as if it was their own dirt track ... tore stuff up and left trash. I fenced the border and they cut the fence ... we went round and round with fence repair and fence wrecking. Finally, I identified a choke point inside the property that blocked their path and fenced it in a way they COULDN'T unfence ( unless they had tools and did a LOT of work). That stopped them. The moral of the story is: "It ain't really yours unless you can defend it."
Listen, I live in a suburban development and more than once I have had to chase dirt bike riders off of my property. They were wrecking some trees and tearing up the back slope.
@@mindymallette5935 That sounds a bit tougher call. If it is kids on bicycles ... they may not have many other options for strenuous exercise fun, especially if your place connects other places they can go to. Chasing them off risks turning into a cat and mouse game. One possibility is to give them a permitted route or boundaries of some sort, let them go Here but not There. But, maybe not, Maybe that won't work for you or for this place and then you need to consider stronger measures such as some kind of fence. The sheriff in my area told me there was nothing he could do because he couldn't chase those guys with what he had and it wasn't worth it anyway. So, best of luck! (And of course, I resisted the temptation to set some sort of booby trap that could hurt someone.)
@@persimmontea6383 nope. Motorized dirt bikes. And tearing paths into my lot. I talked to their parents and they disputed the property line. I chose this lot because of the slope and the tree line, but they are well out of their yard and happily wrecking mine. I put up a rail fence, and after a snow saw them using that to pull themselves back up after a sled run. As far as other play areas, yes that may be a fact. But they have also had the cops called on them for racing across nearby farm fields. There is a huge empty lot very close that belongs to the BOE. Seems like a better option.
I have the same exact rifle as Kevin Costner the Winchester 30. 30 I got it as a child at the age of 12 from my father as my rite of passage still have it, its never killed a thing.
So they were afraid of some Chinese tourist, business people and a few people on motor bikes standing on some land? What was going to happen to the land?
@@bradhienzachary People need to learn RESPECT. Just because you see some dose NOT give you the right to Walk on land you don't owen. Land owners look at it as someone comes on uninvited. Next gets hurt and lawyer's and law suits. Best people learn to RESPECT other people's property & STAY OUT and OFF. Some one wants to see something or use private land Knock on the door and ask Get a yes or NO answer and RESPECT it.
I grew up on a big piece of property and it was a block long. Sometimes before daddy fenced in the back field we would see people back there walking around, or driving their jeeps onto our land. Mom went back there and told them to get out, that it was private property. Their answer was "well, you're not using it". Can you imagine the logic of that? You're not using it. No, we enjoyed the land, cherished the wildlife and some parts were just a wooded field. But some people think every single square inch of land has to be developed. Rude and stupid, stupid and rude. So I can imagine what happens out West if you owned thousands of acres. People wouldn't leave you alone.
@@nils1471 it is not stupid; those big land owners raise cattle or food crops that not only feed your sorry ass but provide jobs to people not afraid to do tough jobs to feed city dwellers
@@nils1471 Nope ... you are stupid and weak and that's why you don't own land. Worthless trash like you doesn't deserve to breath let alone own land or use it for any reason other than feeding the birds. The best use of you and your family and friends is as fertilizer to feed the animals.
The scene where he made the bikers dig their own graves sent shivers down my spine. You want a man to think about his life choices, make them do that. Edit: I take my eyes off you guys for one week. Why does this have so many likes? *Edit* edit: The reply section to this thought I made has reached "Dumpster fire" status. Enter at your own risk.
The best series I have seen, it is unfortunate that we still do not have the continuation and it is even more unfortunate that it is said that Kevin Cosner will not be there, a regrettable error by the production, success is in the co.
I live in Northern Nevada. I learned from my dad to *NEVER* mess with a miner or a rancher. This is exactly what will happen... Respect and ettiquet go a loooong way in the West...
Up in South Dakota driving around in the back country in my 4x4 I got approached by a man upset that I was driving too fast on his road near where his children played. I used alot of "yes sirs" and "no sirs" and "I'm an idiot from the city and don't know anything sir". (I wasn't such a city boy that I was oblivious to why people have stocked gun racks in their trucks.) He explained what the various types of fences meant and why he was pissed off at me. When he was done I thanked him then he kicked me off his property and told me never to come back. Never forgot that lesson.
@@tiddybearkush not a city boy, but also not way out back country boy either. It was good lesson. People need to be aware that just because it's out the middle of nowhere doesn't automatically make it public land. There was plenty of public land in the Black Hills to play in just have to pay attention to those fences.
John confronting that Asian tour group who got too close to the bear is so accurate it hurts. Been to Yellowstone a few times and every time I’ve been there some Asian tourist either gets gored by a bison or killed by a grizzly
Worst part is they then sue the government for their own ignorance and often win. Meaning taxpayer's have to foot the bill of these foreign tourists.
I've been a tourist many a time in many a place (though mostly in Europe, so no bears) but FFS, what's so hard at following basic courtesy and the safety advisory I *know* you get when you book a tour in any US national park with a reputable company?
@@trekaddict I think it just has to do with the varying degrees of cultural norms. They don’t have anything remotely close to Yellowstone anywhere else in the world. Especially in Asia.
@@user-Ados-amerika 😂 so they can get close to the bison
That's utter bullshit. It's almost always some loud, cocky, obnoxious family from California. And I was born and raised near Yellowstone.
I've been a tourist in Montana, those people are willing to allow you on their field if you ask them first and its under their supervision. They show hospitality to those who are willing to follow basic courtesy. Heck, I got to see them at their work and I can only say that being a rancher is a helluva lot of work.
Respect goes a long way with anyone. If you give it, you tend to get it back.
I'd rather stay on I-90 and drive through Montana.
@@NotMykl you're missing out
I do a lot of car camping travel, and it's a very rare occasion someone doesn't give me permission to sleep on their land, reservations included. Been invited to dinner more than once. *When out West especially, look for 1. National Forest 2. BLM Land 3. Back dirt/gravel access to National Parks and you won't have to ask or pay.* The latter is technically illegal, but if you keep back from streams & make it obvious you're not making a mess (hang a trash bag) you'll be okay if a ranger comes presuming no campground is nearby.
@@NotMykl Montana as opposed to where? There are nicer places... but not that many of them in the States.
"This is America. We don't share land here." Most accurate line lol
How can one actually own land if property taxes exist?
@@philh1826 How can the government pay for free schools and roads if property tax don't exist lol.
@@seanl764 nothing is free
@@philh1826 My point exactly. Thats why government services isn’t “free”. Just like how our freedom was paid for by the blood of those who died in wars to defend this country.
coulda lost the land bit, and it would still be accurate
"I don't want you to leave. I want you to dig" was COLD
The flashlight in his eyes didn’t even faze him he’s a killer when he means it
The only bit of that scene that bothers me is, the lighting implies that his own guys are basically flagging him in the head.
I’ve worked in the national parks for 14 years. This is a totally accurate representation of the stupidity and selfishness of large tour groups.
The irony isnt lost on me that some chinese billionaires own obscene amounts of land...lol
@@alek9411 So do the Arabs. We are losing our country acre by acre.
Not just national parks. I find trash thrown around campsites on my land from idiots that don't know a what a 6 strand fence means or too stupid to read a sign.
I speak decent mandarin, and it was pretty funny but my family was at Yellowstone a few years back and a group of Chinese tourists were standing in front of us waiting in front of us. My dad and I couldn't help but overhear some of what they were saying and the funniest thing we heard was a couple older middle aged 'aunties' grumbling about 'Just how many foreigners there were here'. I was very tempted to let them know that in the US they were the foreigners but thought it wasn't worth it.
It does reflect the Chinese attitude which is rather like the American one that we are the center of the world and everything else revolves around us.
@@OneLastHitB4IGo yup, a group of Chinese nationals own a huge chunk of the Adirondack State Park and more in Texas. We are literally selling our country to the enemy.
"I don't want you to leave, I want you to dig", Kevin Costner's strong voice adds more intensity to this scene. Best intimidation scene!
you mean wyatt earp?
well, in real life, someone with a pair of balls would have called Costner's bluff and said, NO, I AIN'T DIGGING...go ahead and shoot me!.........and they what would have happened?
Nah bro elliott ness@@manonthem00n
@@trevorregay9283 In real life, in the middle of the night and in the middle of nowhere, you would get shot in the leg and forced to dig with pain and bleeding serving as an example to your pals.
best part of the scene is the psychology behind it. They lost their lives then, and it was only when they were done digging that they were given back their lives. That's the kind of shit that'd stick with somebody their whole life, the kind of shit that can scare someone straight.
I read where Costner said he's been waiting for a part like this for a long time. He's totally in this character. Plays it very well.
This show is basically "King Lear" in Wyoming.... I totally get why he would want such a role... If you look at Empire, Dynasty, Yellowstone, and King of Texas...You see the same themes... A aging and powerful man trying to pass on his legacy without losing his legacy and his soul...
Kevin Costner makes a great western movie, and now TV. I don’t think he gets enough credit for his work on them. This is excellent TV and I can’t wait for next season.
They all wait for their streaming part.
@@mattiasniska7199 All won't get a "streaming part".
Robin Hood was definitely his Worst!
The confrontation clip with the bikers is what got me into Yellowstone. I binged all the seasons after that.
Great show.
Few more useless then some
Biker
The FAFO is outstanding!
Did the exactly same thing 😂 Saw that clip somewhere and got hooked
I feel like no matter how mad you are at someone, coming back and setting their field on fire when it borders a universally loved national park with a high likelihood for the fire to spread to said national park is a great way to end up in federal prison. Really really stupid.
I mean, they are Harley riders after all.
You end up in that if that fire doesn't kill people, if it does federal prison is still better than a death sentence.
It iS a fictional show...just sayin"
They are from Commiefornia. So it makes sense for them to be that dumb.
You do understand this is just a TV show with actors right ?
None of these people are actually ranchers or cowboys...lol
Anyone else besides me notice how John Dutton never loses his temper dealing with the bikers?? A calm, focused mind is the deadliest weapon and John Dutton is an absolute master!!
I wouldn’t say he’s a master. He loses his cool constantly with his family lol
@@loganhouge maybe with his family, but against thugs, land grabbers, etc he is cold, calculating and very dangerous
@@SixGunTiger24 With his family, he's stern, and loves them. He wants what's best for them. To thugs, he's cold and uncaring, giving off the impression that he's going to kill someone. Psychological warfare.
@@DEFC0NZER0 On the money! Western justice; where your word is your bond and your gun backs up your word
It would be fair to say that the message was heard loud and clear that the bikers were not welcome on his land after he calmly explained that they were warned that if they returned, they would be buried there. They are lucky not to have caught the long black train.
Gotta love how Rip asked the director if he had the budget to ram the bikes with the truck. He said go for it. Bikers didnt know about it, cast fighting didnt know about it, so the reaction from everyone was genuine.
I read in another youtube video that those bikes were not real, that the whole scene was done with pieces of bikes looking intant and then when he impacted them they are destroyed but it was not real.
It’d be a waste of money to use real bikes where props could be used.
@@zachlewis9751 Yes.
Have you ever known Hollywood to not waste money?
Yeah, they did three takes on that after replacing the bikes each time. Rip asked what was wrong with the first take. The director said the soundman forgot to switch on the mic. On the second one, Rip missed hitting the first bike.
@@johnabbottphotography lol ask anyone who works in films what happens when they go over budget.
Also, every industry I can think of "wastes" money in some way.
I love how bro is sitting by the campfire with a simple Winchester one moment, and then has his VIP gaurd step out with the modern arms...
Yeah a Navy SEAL with no optic or sights on his rifle... Real realistic 😂
@@mrdark9916 It's just a TV show, Mr. Anal. You want reality? Join the Army.
@@mrdark9916SEALs are trained to use irons, probably far more capable than most ppl are with ACOGs. When SEALs go civilian, optics are expensive when it’s coming out of pocket.
@@Menuki you obviously can't read ... Or see .. 😂
@@mrdark9916 I’ve known a fair share of SEALS and they usually have an Sig with irons and on occasion an eotech or red dot. It’s common for them not to use sights for their personal weapons. The same can’t be said for service weapons
For some strange reason, no matter how many times I watch this clip, I always end up coming back to it.
It's just so good.
Agreed, the scene with the shovels was brilliant writing and acting.
Same!
Yeah😀
I can’t remember how many times I watched this
This is what actually got me hooked on the show
Never heard of this show before but man am I hooked. The whole biker incident was so satisfying to watch
What's this show/movie called
@@James-gn6jb Yellowstone
Ran all they shit over lol
Did the bikers ever come back?
@@CD-oq8em ya
I've been to yellowstone many times. People go right up to the animals thinking they're tame. Gamewardens told me a story of a family that told their son to go stand by a big 6x6 Bull Elk for a picture! They threw rocks at the big bull to get him to stand up. He did stand up and also gutted that little boy.
OMG. Horrible.
So it was a happy ending.
@@jondunmore4268 a child died you fucking sicko
@@sibit1 -- You mean an animal LIVED.
@@jondunmore4268 That's fairly F-'d up.
As someone who grew up in the country I'll say it's crazy how many people trespass. Living 40 minutes from town and having a gated driveway that has no trespassing signs yet people still drive down the god damn driveway.
the nerve!
Dude I lived on a property with goats and we had some baby ones and I came home to people in the corral trying to pet them and being chased by our billy. They wanted me to control him and I said he is doing his job protecting his girls and kids. They got mad at me for yelling at them. Fortunately they left when my neighbor that is a deputy came over asking what was going on. He got them to leave really quick.
@@michaelwilson7927jerks. Did you get angry w them? Just curious if you did and they still didn't leave. A lot of folks carry around a "friend" in case any strangers need any encouragement leaving. Doesn't have to be a firearm necessarily, but an axe, heck small sledgehammer, people can see those fairly easily and shouldn't get in your face.
It is wrong for one person to own so much land - totally right
@@RynaxAlienno its not moron
I have trespassed some people’s land by accident when I first moved to America and didn’t know better, people came out and we had nice chat together, they didn’t even tell me that I was trespassing at the time, after living here for 2 years I finally learned and have great appreciation to people who treated me with kindness and respect which they are not obligated to do at all. ❤
As long as you’re respectful most folks will treat you respectfully too.
@@sylaconnocalys8443 for sure
Be kind to them, and they're likely to be kind to you.
Even if you are tresspassing.
One of the greatest things about this country. ❤
Yes they are .What are you talking about?Tresspassing in the middle of nowhere is a crime?How would you know otherwise?
Take a grip with your self bashing.
@@ermias75ermis2 learn English better before talking to me you low intelligence creature :) also take a trip to my private land and see what would happen to you 🤫
I'm British and visited Yellowstone about 15 years ago. Treated it with the same respect I do the National Parks we have here in the UK. Was appalled at how some folks were treating the place. Litter, fires and off road driving.
Jon Smith lot of people have no respect. Especially in the US. Respect isn't valued much in this country.
That’s because you britts are a hair smarter then most Americans
@@donvandamnjohnsonlongfella1239 That's because US media makes everyone out to be the victim (except of course white males).
Nice, more than likely the off road driving was folks who had buisness there. Don't know about the rest.
Americans as usual. I visited London and saw the royal guards of Buckingham Palace. I am so glad my parents taught me to respect them because I had no idea they were actual soldiers. Thought it was purely ceremonial.
the fly fisher was actually quite genius. he knows that once you are in the river youre safe no matter where you are as long as you enter and leave on public (or your own private) property. basically told the chick to go to hell as there was nothing she could do
The River, the unknown super highway of America.
XD
I don't think so. If you're floating in a vessel it's ok, but the property owner owns the land under the water. You can't walk in the stream.
@Graham Swalling Thanks for the clarification.
@@vmarc4682 i looked up some laws. its largely state dependent. Some states allow the privacy to be retained by the owner. Some states don't and the riverways are retained by the state
@@absolutetuber Yep, thankyou.
62 years.I grew up with western-movies in the sixties ( John Wayne-Richard Widmark-James Stewart-and many more.......) Then in the seventies Clint Eastwood acting in these movies and did it very well till I saw Dances with Wolves in the nineties and was amazed about Kevin Costner... But these series ??? Overwelming....outregious.....Heavy....Every part lot of goosebumps..The best in all these years and hope for more seasons will be produced.
I lived on both sides of Glacier and the biggest threat to the safety of tourists is the utter stupidity of tourists.
That's the biggest threat to humanity in general. The increasing utter stupidity of humanity.
It's natural selection, just let things work out on their own. Plus the animals can use extra food in the winter.
Just let natural selection take place at that point
Speaking from experience in southern Indiana. Driving up to the house, and respectfully stating your business and asking an owner if you can fish with the mention of sharing your catch will almost always end up with a good experience. Sure they might ask you help with some work that day and the offer to fish there for life, but I have almost never had someone outright refuse unless they have been burned in the past a few too many times.
@Conservitarian 17 Quite a few big lakes are private here in Indiana. The public lakes are pretty fished regularly but you can still have a good bit of luck.
@Conservitarian 17 If you were to build an artificial lake/pond in the middle of your own private property would it become public property?
In Alabama, my grandparents had a pond in one of their cattle fields. I remember that they would let anyone fish the pond as long as they asked first; but if they caught you there without asking... they'd run you off and you weren't welcome back. Almost everyone asked, and my grandparent would let them sit on the porch, go fish, eat dinner. The works. There are good people in AL, but just like this clip, they don't tolerate trespassing.
@@fresco-23gaming8 it seems that you have grandparents that still live by the Golden rule! Sit on the porch, talk a spell, have dinner, actually supper, I miss those days! I miss the days when people were respectful, especially our children! I never in a million years thought that my son would end up laying hands on me especially since I didn't raise him that way. Maybe I should have whooped his ass once or twice! But this is what I get in return, a few broken ribs, bruises, hurt feelings and now I don't care whether my son shows his face ever again! All because I spoke the truth to him! I found out that he was leaving my 6-year-old grandson home alone all day, not just for a few minutes while we run to the store, BUT all day long while him and his so-called girlfriend are at work. Instead of bringing him to me. He said that it's too much of a hassle to wake him up in the morning and bring him here at 5:30 even though he drives right past here to go to work everyday! You know, I have no problems calling children and family services on whomever is doing something to my grandson. The last girl that lived with him had two children that were a couple years older than my grandson and they had been in the foster care system so they had seen and done a couple of things that they had no right to do or see and they sexually molested my grandson so I called them twice and reported them. And they took my grandson out of the house and had him stay with me it was like for 3 months because my son would not kick them out. And then my grandson would ask questions like, why are they in my bedroom, why are they playing with daddy, how come I'm not at home in my bed?
@@Wulfieman In some states what matters is if it is feed/attached by a river and even creek. Than it might count as national property. Really depends on the stats and the laws. Like in Missouri my uncle built a 6.5 acre lake that is spring feed and it's all his property. Has a Summer Church camp down there and does a AirBNB the rest of the year.
I used to live in Darby for years, I can recognize a lot of the filming spots around this show, they're RIGHT outside of town. Never would I have imagined a show being made in what I consider, the smallest town ive EVER seen. Maybe apart from Danville/malo in WA.
The Magruder corridor is just south of Darby in the Bitterroot Valley. We drove it to Elk City, ID last year. God's country!
My sister and I were road-tripping across the US a few years ago and as we were exiting the Badlands in South Dakota we stayed in this small town called Wall. Probably not as small as the places you referenced but it still only had about 700 ppl in it. Then a few weeks later when we were at a motel in Wyoming I put on a random channel and there was an old movie on. I didn’t know the movie but I immediately recognized the place: Wall, SD. Lol 😂 I forget what movie it was but when I looked it up on my phone sitting there watching it I couldn’t believe how coincidental that was.
I’ll never understand these types of comments… why say this shit like people care about it? no one cares you lived close to some of the filming spots my guy what do want? A congratufuckinglations?
Jfhc THANK YOU for actually providing a comment that shares info, provides new info, has meaning. Darby ftw!
You know too much,get your stuff packed I will drive you to the train station
"We don't share land here"
simple quote i never thought of. Absolutely brutal and badass
Weak thinking
@@kbanghart How?
@@crypt0sFX anyone who thinks they "own" land is deluded. We are just here to borrow it for a while before we're gone. And property taxes and maintenance always have to be done.
@@kbanghart 🙄
@@HuskyAim 🥋🌺🍟
I've lived as a barbed wire fence surrounding the actual Dutton Ranch for 200 yrs and I can say from experience that this is an accurate portrayal of barbed wire fences in and around Yellowstone for this time period
Too funny.
😂
Go back where you came from you barbarian! TH-cam is for peace loving picket fences only.
Hmmm an actual vampire 🤣
"I don't want you to leave, I want you to dig" - the way he delivered those lines...perfection..
I have never seen Yellowstone, but these clips are making me want to watch it even more
I love this series very much, What an excellent performance of all of them, cowboys life, ranch, horses, mountains and especially Background music is heart touching.
I was travelling in Yellowstone with my family about 35 years ago. There was a bus in front of us that was stopped due to a herd of bison on the road. The doors opened and a bunch of Japanese tourists got out and started wandering around taking photos of them. To say I was surprised by their lack of common sense would be an understatement. I can now see selfies of many people with potentially dangerous wild animals very close to them.
We have a windpowered corn/weatmill in the town I grew up in that's still operational. It was frequently visited by large busses packed with Chinese/Japanese tourists. I remember one time the bus stopped in front of our house while my dad was repainting the side of the house and when they all got out started taking pictures of my dad painting 😂😂
I got someone get launched by a cow herd lol ems got on scene
I used to live close to Yellowstone and have been there several times. Every time I drove through, I saw Asian tourists being idiots. The last time I was there, I came up on one of them sneaking up on a bison bull lying next to the road so his wife could take his picture next to it. Luckily for him, the bison decided to let him live. I can't believe more tourists aren't killed every year by the wildlife.
In the movie that group of tourists were Chinese LOL
I live in the north, we had a cruise stop at a port near a town close to us. The tourists had 3 shore days and were spreading out from the port town. My brother and I were out in country and we saw a couple out for what looked like a hike. Nothing unusual, until we realized they were speaking Mandarin. We don't see many people that speak Mandarin as their primary language up here. By chance, we started moving in another direction at just the right time to hear them get excited. I don't speak Mandarin so I didn't know what they were saying, but the tone of their voices and rapid foot steps made us go back and check on them. They had run across an adolescent bull moose about 50-60 yards from them, and were pulling out their phones and moving toward it. This was mid rut, bull moose become extremely aggressive and unpredictable during the rut and have killed many people. Especially the younger ones. We tried calling out to them in English, but they didn't even realize that we were talking to them. As they got closer to the moose, it shifted to an aggressive posture. It lowered it's head and was almost certainly going to charge. Luckily my brother had a cow moose call on him, so we blew that a few times and the bull immediately forgot about the tourists and started coming toward us. We had about 80 yards when we saw it change direction, so we waited until it got away from the tourists, then slipped down the other side of the ridge. We called the game warden and told him that there were tourists from the boat roaming the forests with no knowledge about the moose or the rut, and that we saw two almost get killed. The warden had to approach the company running the cruises and inform them that they're passengers were not permitted in the wilderness areas of the county during the rut and would have to remain in town or on the ship. I don't think those two Chinese tourists ever realized that they were less than a minute from being maimed or dying in that brush. Do people that live out here a favor. If you don't bother to research the climate, weather, animals, terrain etc. before you set out, stay out of the forests. When you get into trouble, we're the ones that have to come in to get you. You're going to get yourself or someone trying to help you hurt or killed.
I fell in love with Yellowstone in the first episode. It's not just the nature, but the massive amounts of humor and attitude. I don't want it to end! I have only 2 regular characters I don't like because they seem to spend entire episodes whining or doing something stupid and selfish, often all 3 in one episode.
It's probably Jamie and Beth, horrible character's.
I don’t like Beth and wouldn’t shed a single tear if she was killed off, too
@@locomojoboy2 Beth is fine just little crazy
what season(s) are these clips coming from? this is the first thing i have randomly watched about yellowstone and am still in decision, but the playlist is greatness in drama lol
@@myrcgirlfriend just watch the show its that good yes
Watching tourists in Yellowstone National Park try to walk up to wild bison really cemented in my mind that growing up and living exclusively in cities really some strange things to the human brain.
It's remarkable - a quick search on their phone would tell them everything they need to know about how dangerous they are, but they can't be bothered.
Even that's not it, any person with half a brain knows that would animals are dangerous.
It seems to mainly be arrogant poorly educated overseas tourists.
The same ones who grab 6 full plates each from a buffet....
@@edwardfletcher7790 Well that's a lot of conclusions to jump to. I've seen plenty of American city folk doing dumb tourist shit so I'm going to stick to the theory that it's because they don't learn anything about the wilderness in cities.
You would be surprised the amount of country folk that come into the city and act dumber than a sack of bricks. Having to tell them multiple times you indeed can't go 25mph in a 50mph zone, because it's a "nice day"
@@waffelsrevenge Unfortunately, cities never post signs about how certain areas are very dangerous to visit because the indigenous wildlife tend to be armed and predatory. Visitors to Yellowstone do not have this excuse.
The line “this is America, we don’t share land” feels accurate to me; I personally don’t own land, but I am friends with someone who is and am very welcome to his property as long as I ask and treat the land as my own. I can see both perspectives of a poor person who would like his own house, to a man owning a square mile of land to just hunt on.
translation: "This is ain't Commies land we Own 💩 and you Reds can f off "
I had the pleasure of spending a week in Yellowstone on the Montana side in the middle of January, heart of a frozen dead winter. Absolutely gorgeous, but unforgiving country. Elk, bison, coyotes, bighorn, pronghorns, and wolves abound. I'm sure the pumas were out too, but they'd never show us their faces. It's awe inspiring to see at that time of year.
That would be a dream come true for me.
Dam, I wanna visit Montana.
They killed all the wolves ?
I can tell for sure you're a visiting tourist. Born and raised locals never say "pronghorn" or "pumas" when taking about antelope or mountain lions.
@@Bewefau Hopefully!!
Too funny cause a few weeks back I got to channel my inner John Dutton. Caught folks stealing my chickens. Told them I ever see them again I’d make sure my chickens and all the other wildlife on my property would be dining on their carcasses and how grateful I was because poultry feed s expensive 😂 I love this show so much ❤
Totally non psychotic response
@@Eggy79 you clearly don’t grasp subtlety or sarcasm 😒 in reality it’s a felony in Virginia to steal or kill someone’s live stock. I merely warned them kindly but next time it will not be a good day for them.
@@Atomsplitter69 oh yeah sorry for missing the subtlety in the "I'll kill you and feed you to my chickens" response.
@@Atomsplitter69Absolutely Badass!
I know this sounds random but, What Advice would you give to a 17 year without friends and has a Love/hate relationship with Nature?
@@Imthesoulofthes get out and force yourself to survive. Go deep and experience your God given connections to nature. Grab a simple camping kit, fishing hunting gear, fire starting supplies and baptize yourself. I did when I was 20. Spent a whole week alone. The first 48 hours was rough, eventually you’ll change your vibe and feel the connection. Anyways just my opinion.
Costner`s response exactly mimics my own experience. In that the original trespassing doesn`t enrage him, but the verbal blow-off and the secondary refusal to comply does...
Someone called "KharkovKid" totally knows what its like to be a Montana Rancher ahaha..
@@axelbaldwin3343 I know how to be a San Antonio bartender, and except for how many hooves the animals have, it`s pretty much the same thing...
@Kharkovkid Hahaha, I guess so. Just a little less rifle toting to deter the most annoying of tourists??
@@axelbaldwin3343 Truth be told, It was never the tourists or bartending. It was buying the land under a homeless camp. I made the critical error of thinking I could simply clean house once and be done with it. They should have shown the second bus pulling up just as Costner chases off the first one. THAT was my reality...
@karkokid idk those ppl seemed pretty nice and the grandad was right. One person shouldn’t own so much land while squishing the rest of us (without money) into tiny spaces.
14:44 “True courage is about knowing not when to take a life, but when to spare one.” ― J.R.R. Tolkien
i miss this show already, watched the first 4 seasons in like one and a half months. something about this started to feel like home. hard to explain, but it surely is one of the best shows i have watched. this is one the things i would not mind being 20 seasons long to have tons of material of it. the best thing about this is the fact that kevin costner seems to have found his perfect character yet. he deserves every dollar he makes with this.
"It seems friendly." Famous last words.
I would love to pet a Bison, But, I am not an idiot. Beautiful animal. Very dangerous. A ton+ of meat and "Leave me alone!".
Yeah, I seen a dumbass from New Jersey one time that thought, he'd "rescue" a wild turkey that he saw running down a fence line.
I can't remember now if that poor crippled turkey broke the guys nose, or just bloodied it good, but that turkey did bust both of the guy's lips, blackened one eye and scratched the crap out both arms.
When the guy from Jersey got back in the car, he had a whole new respect for wildlife and what us locals knew.
(possibly following onto the tour bus to get his lecture on wildlife management, respect for wildlife and habitat, and a coldly worded piece on the sorry state of city folk so disconnected from nature that they don't recognize the danger they could be or are in.)
I remember seeing a dude on youtube untangle a deer from something and it proceeded to try and beat the snot out of him with its hooves.
The part that's most memorable was the fact he said he was throwing away 10 of vegetarianism due it being ungrateful for his help...talk about a Disney Princess mentality.🤦♀
@@rustyhowe3907 As far as I know, No animal wants to be eaten.
i thought yellowstone was a documentary about wildlife at yellowstone national park, narrated by kevin costner, had no clue it was a tv series 😂
That would be much more interesting.
Lol, they also have a documentary with Kevin Costner, just started November
What?😂 the show is doing wonders when it comes to ratings though. 12.1 million watched the season 5 premiere episode. It’s crazy.
..... when does he start dancing with wolves or somethin'...
Lies again? American Education Bus Driver
As a person with Chinese in-laws I can attest this interaction is true. The wife would tell her relatives/friends sign that says, "Do Not' Touch" or "Stay On Boardwalk". They would tell her, "it's not written in Chinese". smh
I’ve never understood why they insist on that stuff
"You leave now or you never leave."
That's a nice line.
Reminds me of Sonny in A Bronx Tale. "Now you's can't leave."
God bless all those strong resilient wonderful horses who got us around and transported us for all those years before automobiles were invented.
Im so truly thankful for those animals!!
Years ago, poor folk rode horses & the rich folk drove the new "automobile". Now, only the rich can afford horses & the poor drive "beater" automobiles!!
@@timpuckett5496makes you wonder everything else we have at the lowest level
I'm a grizzly bear. That was an accurate representation of bear- human encounters in the greater Yellowstone basin
Lol you win this one.
I’m a Gnu and I feel discriminated against by lack of representation in these trespassing narratives…👀🧐😎😜
Killing me MA !
Ma, the bear, Just a guess.... your porridge is too cold.
You mean you identify as a grizzly bear. That's accepted in today's society, so long as you truly believe that's what you are!
I love this show. Though, It will be hard to watch come November. It was a show my mother and I would watch together. It’s all she watched for the remaining 2 months of her life when her cancer came back. I’ll always think highly of Yellowstone and the importance it had in these moments of my life.
Sorry to hear that
F*** cancer
Sorry for your loss...Glad you have something else to add to your memories with her!
It’s quite painful the beautiful memories our loved ones leave behind. I also lost my mother due to cancer. I now fast every year on thanksgiving. I remember how hard she worked every year in that kitchen & how much she loved doing it. I refuse to participate in that holiday without her.
My condolences, may she rest in peace.
I’m so sorry. I lost my aunt to cancer years ago. It gets better, it won’t hurt as much over time, you won’t get the urge to cry every time you think about her. Doing things you used to do with her won’t hurt but will serve as a comfort and reminder. My condolences.
One other thing. John Dutton also cared about the bear. He didn't want to shoot it. He had his priorities in the right place. He knew he had to deal with these idiots first and hopefully get them out of the danger area and not have to shoot the bear. I call this event the Bambi syndrome!
you're so smart
@@nutsackmania naaahhh just an observer. Was rooting for the bear and the elimination of politically incorrect people.
He almost made them all "good" communists.
John Dutton cared about the bear? No he didn't. John Dutton doesn't exist. He is a fictional character in a fictional TV series. His character is played by the actor Kevin Costner. The bear is a tame bear called Bart the Bear 2. His handler is Doug Seus. This is all fiction, friend.
as a complite tourist, why is the bear dangerous, please explain
12:52 was so badass. Old dude was calm, collected, and took control of the situation quick without breakin a sweat. Didn't know much about the show but I'm absolutely watching it now!
I was about to cum when that happened. I watched it a few hours and I'm still bricked up. Gosh it feels good.
(edit: thanks for all the likes! )
Trust me, definitely worth watching
It's unfortunate but it appears this show espouses the wrong values. Property rights are important but sharing and cooperation should be valued as well.
@@morninglift1253 So what's yours is yours and what's mine is yours? Sounds kind of socialist, or is it marxist? Either way, idiot.
@@morninglift1253 Ownership and property rights are two of the most important things for a capitalist society. So the show espouses the right values.
Wow. This is SO satisfying... - I'm totally watching this series now.
This is so relatable, my grandpa had strangers trespass on his property ALL THE TIME! So did my aunt. People would hunt and fish like they owned the place, litter all over, once an a$Swhole left his whole tent on my grandpa's property and my aunt caught an entitled dickhead who claimed he could fish wherever he damn well pleased. Stubbornness runs in our family apparently because my aunt wasn't going to deal with that and she took her gun out and aimed at him and told him he could leave her property or she could escort him off it. Luckily for him his royal majesty took his leave. Not trespassing on someone else's property should be the bare minimum of decent respect. I'm glad my aunt had her gun with her, while riding her horse. Her ranch was in the middle of the woods. You never know what can happen.
I live in a town in Nebraska. We have problems with farmers and ranchers coming into it uninvited. They can't park between the lines to save their soul, they get confused by turning lanes, and leave mud and cow sh!t up and down the aisles of every store and shop they visit. JUST KIDDING! (But that's how it would sound if townsfolk had the same attitudes as most farmers and ranchers do with townsfolk) 🙂
@@MichaelJones-rn2pq Someone who trespasses on YOUR HOME and treats it like it's THIERS is NOT at all the same thing as your describing. That was a REALLY weak argument. 😑
@@horsewings3561 A field is NOT your home. I find people fishing many times out at our cabin. I don't act like this and if they are polite, I tell them to keep fishing after introductions. I own the land, it doesn't own me and it doesn't give me the excuse to be less of a human being.
@@MichaelJones-rn2pq a field that IS YOUR PROPERTY is your HOME. Let me guess, you went to public school, so due to extremely low education you can't grasp this concept....
@@horsewings3561 No, I didn't go to public school and I also don't sleep in a field or keep my belongings in it, so I don't consider it my home. My house is my home. I own a pickup, it is my property, but it is not my home. Try more thinking and less insulting and you might make sense. I am done with you.
I imagine digging your own grave gives you a bit of perspective, would give you time to think about the price of a fence. You probably figure it doesn't cost all that much, then you realize you're selling your life for the cost of a fence and some courtesy. Would probably be a lesson that would stick with you if you didn't help fill the hole you dug. Love that scene.
Thank you for liking my page , Support you showered on me, I hope you never stop watching and supporting..
Of im making a guy dig his own grave he's not getting out after
“Where’re you from?”
“California.”
“Figures.”
I felt a bam in the Force…
Just a TV Series. Costner lives in Calif and didn't vote Trump.
@@richardthomas1531 Yes, he's talking about what was said in the fictional show that represents real life. Next thing you'll tell us is that Costner isn't a cowboy or Robin Hood.
@@Laneous14 Next time you'll say I was referring to YOUR comments.
@@richardthomas1531 well your weren't but what you said was stupid so he commented on its stupidity.
@@Laneous14 what? Are you say he's not robin hood? surely you jest
Most of these lines are amazing.
Kevin Costner's best role ever!!!!
The whole cast of this series are amazing!!!!
Beth is such an awesome badass
,yeah ❗ but I think
Mr Brooks was his finest performance ever ,
The characters is why I stay since the storylines are starting to get stale…..but that’s one of the reasons why I loved SoA too no matter how unrealistic it was cuz I loved all the characters
I like Dutton. He's a get to the point kinda guy and quick to make his point clear!
I liked his speech to the animal protestors. How cute does an animal have to be before you care about it? Love Dutton!
He's a capitalist land owning prick. The land doesn't belong to him, His ancestors stole it and it should become public land.
They're aren't in Yosemite that's a ranch in Montana and those aren't real cowboys they are Hollywood actors🤣 Costner live in Malibu FFS.
@@tyson6819 Are you sure?
@@2Phast4Rocket Yep.
What an awesome scene. One of the greatest lines since Val Kilmer playing Doc Holliday in Tombstone. "Anybody tell you to get out? ..." of that grave?
"Why Johnny Ringo, you look like someone just walked over your grave." Great line!!
@Tom Murphy Unbelievable Val Kilmer didn't win an Oscar for his petformance - wasn't even nominated as Best Supporting Actor. "Isn't that a daisy?"
@@tomp8094 it’s a felony he didn’t get a nom at least.
It was nice to see Beth unable to bully that man. He actually stumped her with his logic
Rip killed him later on. He walked up to him with a pissed off rattlesnake in a cooler, opened the cooler and threw the snake on him. The rattler bit him in the face and Rip stood over him and watched him die.
I caught the biker scene in a separate TH-cam video and that influenced me to check Yellowstone out thinking I was discovering some new under the radar show. Turns out I was just way late to the party lol. I'm still on S1 but really enjoy it!
Me too man
Me too found clips of it on Facebook about a week ago didn't take the name into account about 4days ago I decided to check it out here and I'm like oh.......late 🤦🏾♀️but love this show
Yeah, I too am late to the party BUT, I have watched the 5-1/2 seasons at least twice now! Awesome show for sure, and a great example of how this Country is SUPPOSED TO BE as far as taking responsibility for our actions, cause we just might have to back them up with our lives at some point ☝️
same but from the first clip with chinese - you should check out tulsa king its also awesome
Same i saw Beth smash a bottle over a chicks head in TH-cam shorts and i had to find the show. I got halfway through season 1 in a day
Kevin Costner trigger control is terrifying in every scene he holds a gun.
One second it's straight, the next its wrapped around the trigger... even the continuity is bad
but he is a great actor
Actually his gun handling skills were great in The Bodyguard.
@@johnmohanmusic We aren't talking about 30 years ago.... we are talking about Yellowstone in this current Millennium......
What do ya expect from a Liberal, and he's also advocated for stricter gun laws.
I love how the biker has to cut a fence to get to where they are and still thinks it’s a public area.
Exactly! Fences mean something.
No people means nobody land
@@lumbangaolyulys you are very very Dim! Some knobhead cut the fence on my uncles farm and allowed 40 cattle to escape. He wasn’t laughing when he was arrested for trespassing, criminal damage and public endangerment
If there is a fence across an area a land it means stay the hell out!
You need special pliers to cut high tensile cattle fence. I like how he somehow has a pair
Everyone had to love rip riding up towards the lawyer for market equities when kayce turned his back just showing his dedication to the Dutton family .
I guess I am more enamored by "Lonesome Dove" character Woodrow T. Call, who famously said, "I hate rude behavior in a man. I won't tolerate it." I guess it depends on how one was reared, huh?
@@MichaelJones-rn2pq way to bring up something that has nothing to do with my comment.
Kayce is a effin' wimp - and a total simp too
The amount of bad PSA and legal advice that this show comes with is actually good for the country.
People with vast amounts of lands that only use a small portion of it will probably get locked up soon and lose the land thanks to this show
@@Bee-tj8gc I hope you’re trolling. If you think taking someone property because you don’t think “they use it enough” is a very dangerous and slippery slope.
I've been watching Yellowstone since the beginning and the first scene is one of my favorite in the entire series. It makes me laugh every time.
" This is America, we don't share land here" haha!
Yeah you stole it from the Native ppl at gun point, great accomplishment *sarcasm off*
@@meerderworter5771 And that's when "the right to bear arms" was made..
@@meerderworter5771 i believe the word you are looking for is conquered
@@billgoldberg4847 yup, just like all human civilization in the history of the world did. They and Mexico is welcome to try take it back from us…
@@meerderworter5771 Vae victis.
It's nice to know that there are still states in this wonderful country of ours that respect private property.
Are these states giving it back to those who owned it 500 years ago?
No, because they took it from the people who owned it 1000 years ago, let alone those who came even earlier. And so it goes...
@@SEO122 exactly
@@danielfietkau733 Bigger stick, buddy. The entire world is a victim of conquest. Get over yourself.
@@danielfietkau733 don’t act like native americans peacefully coexisted with eachother and didn’t conquer each other before we got here, ur just mad we won and kept it
Life lessons we should follow!! That’s why this series is so popular!! Yellowstone lives on
If you want a beautiful place ruined, open it up to the public.
Nailed it, it happened in my hometown, a vast open field, beautiful view, and some idiot made it a tourist attraction. Months later i see that field littered with trash.
Sad but true
I bought about 25 acres and removed an entire trash dumpster of junk out of the fields and woods. Months later we are still removing trash from the people that lived here before me. It doesn't even have to be made public some people don't even care for the land that's theirs.
The tragedy of the commons
This is not true. In Norway it's national law that all land except gardens is accessible for everyone. Infarm fields can only be traversed in the winter, but alk other areas in the wild are open to everyone. The law also aay no tent can be put up more than 3 days and all trash must be taken and not left in the wild. This law works well in Norway and is very important to us.
I grew up in the country. People would stop and steal corn from the fields for corn roasts. Little did they know, it was FEED Corn for cattle. The SWEET Corn we grew for us, we kept closer to the house!
LOL!
To be fair, people like that probably wouldn't be able to tell the difference
I (living in Germany) did this once. BLEGH!!!
@@meerkat7862 americans have no taste
@@TheEdawg77 YEAH, tough chew, hard on the old molars!😁
We've had people just like this trespassing on our land. They drove quads through our fields destroying everything we'd just planted. Others burned cars to get rid of evidence and more brought guns to hunt on our land. Some took down our signs and chains before trespassing.
Yeah I live in northwest Michigan's lower peninsula ihate snow mobile's I've had the ride right past my fifth wheel right through my driveway past my power washer past a small storage building and past my business trailer. And hear we didn't know this was private land then look behind them sayiing oh.
Stringing molecular wire across the path is a good trick. Make sure you bring a pick up truck to collect the bodies the next day and a strong bag to collect the heads in.
Visited Idaho with a buddy and he took me dirtbiking through the massive forests. We eventually came to a clearing in the woods and there were footpaths all around so we knew people frequented the area. We took a break in the clearing and started smoking a few bowls when we hear the sounds of sticks/leaves crunching behind us, we turned around and see two of the scariest and angriest dudes pointing their rifles at us. Turned out that clearing and those footpaths werent just coincidence and we were on someones property but the house was beyond the hill we were behind so we didnt see it. They didnt say one word they just motioned with there rifles to get the f*ck of their property. You could tell the son was a hot head and wanted to pull the trigger so bad. They slowly followed behind us for like 20 minutes with their rifles pointed right at us the whole time (we walked our dirtbikes since we really didnt want to piss these guys off any more than they were). I was never so scared for my life and was never so scared of another person as I was of these people. Turns out they had a huge weed growing operation going on there so it made a lot of sense later. After that I always look for no trespassing signs if around forested areas and if you see a fence, its there for a reason, dont jump it.
@@yancieb Well smoking bowls does dull the sense and make you dumb; though from the sound of it it made you dumber, didn't it?
@@yancieb You have to be careful when you're in the middle of nowhere. Cops can't get to you before someone can murder you and hide your body.
11:10 - “1 of The GREATEST BAD ASS Scenes in cinema … PERIOD.”
Dont forget - its not always about selfishness or sharing. If they were to get hurt on their property, they can sue the landowner. The lawsuits almost always exceed whatever insurance they have.
They should change the laws on that, esp if they were not initially invited
On the other hand the vast majority of visitors aren't going to try to sue the landowner because they tripped over a rock on land they were trespassing. It's one thing if they damage a fence, but if they don't damage anything and are just casually crossing through, who cares. Move on and let people be
@@Jomskylark Farms are working areas, you can't just have randoms wondering around leaving mess and gates open. As well as the aforementioned legal issues in case an accident happens which is all too common on farms.
@@Jomskylark No, Land is land. If a precedent is started, you are screwed now youve got thousands trespassing thru - the wild life will then go somewhere else. Fences exist for a reason. Now if there isnt a fence or sign, than that's the owners issue.
i love that bikers are almost universally despised these days. i call that human progress
I just love the scene where Rip smashes the cycles with his Heavy-Duty Ram pick-up and proceeds to beat the hell out of the bikers with a ranch implement.
If you look closer, you'll notice he actually bent the branding iron beating it over their backs
Rip doesn't tolerate any punk.💪
Looks like a motorcycle parts shop exploded!!
I remember watching that episode when it first came out because I remembered seeing it online somewhere that Kevin Costner acted on it, was a hard-core scene which made me buy all 4 seasons
Also on the behind the scenes thing, Taylor Sheridan was going to let them all sit there but Cole Hauser I think gave him the idea of hitting into them and they went with it
If Rip grabs the branding iron, someone is definitely catching a true ass whipping
In the Midwest if you take the time to approach the owner respectfully and ask to hunt or fish it's possible you may receive the privilege of doing so with a few restrictions or rules. If you trespass and hunt or fish without regard, your truck may get trashed, the law called, the land owner will press charges and it's likely your ass will get kicked but it might not happen in the order I listed. True thing.
We owned land on a river....I've never turned down anyone asking permission to fish or picnic.....but asked/told several to leave that didn't ask. Respect goes a long way.
Knew a guy who owned some river land and he let me fish it (catch and release). My favorite story from the owner was a guy he never saw before fishing the river, owner asked him if he had permission. The guy replied "he knew the owner and had permission".
And if you're lactose intolerant, they force feed you cheese
amen brother. grew up in rural ohio. were nice folk. just ask permission and respect the ground rules and your more than welcome. thats why im proud to be from the midwest. some of the nicest people around. also go buckeyes.
I welcome hunters. As long as they don’t leave a footprint, they can hunt all they like. Don’t shoot my house, barns, or storage and we’re good as gold.
As of 2022, the deer and coyote are out of control.
Never seen this show but after watching several trailers I purchased the dvd's. Looking forward to season 1, episode 1, and all.
This show is the best thing I have seen in years the spinoffs too. Wow ! #Yellowstone
110%. With today's PC culture totally unhinged, Yellowstone is a breath of fresh air.
@@mattb.4411 Your wet dreams about cavemen are something to write about, you should start a diary
A show where people own a bunch of land and 90% of the show is them just living 90% of their existence just telling people to fuq off.
So relatable.
Ehh the show is average at best
I think 1883 was the best show since The Wire.
The biker scene is probably one of the best in this series. Looking forward to the new season coming. Best show!
FYI, if you cut a barbed-wire fence you've messed up. It's there for a reason.
“It seems friendly” sounds like the response from someone who watched too much Winnie The Pooh 😂
"This is America. We don't share land here."
Excellent line!
Nope you guys don't. You guys just take it.
@@demetriotalavera13 We take what we want.
@@LordMalice6d9
Yes you do
@@demetriotalavera13 name a country that didnt take its land from another country or people. ill wait
@@guts4511 India
I lived in Paradise Valley, Montana, for 33 years, just south of Yellowstone. Montana has stream access laws. People can access streams and rivers to fish by means of rights of ways. The scene with the man fly fishing in the river is therefore not realistic. But the Chinese tourists? Yeah, they get too close to wildlife, and they run to the bus when you shoot at them.
Why is the scene not realistic?
Have you watched the show? Do you know Beth Dutton?
What is not realistic about the scene FFS?
I think he was saying anyone who owns a ranch would know federal. waterway access laws, especially a lawyer. Also Beth Dutton doesn't exist as this is a show and she is an actress.
@@michaelwhelan6065 he said the SCENE is not realistic.
I have watched every minute of Beth Dutton and I think the scene is VERY realistic.
This series is filmed in Utah!
LOL.
I've just finished the whole 4 seasons! I love it!! Can't wait for season 5
Me too. Finished all seasons in 2 wks. Now about to watch the old man
Great to see you again and again in the future and I hope you have a great
Never seen this show. But just from these clips alone makes me wanna start watching
Same here
These parts are good, the rest is some really dumb crap tbh
I hope they do the next season soon. Yellowstone is the best tv drama ever made.
The bikers acting tough until John throws shovels and makes them dig 🤣
The biker scene was OLD Testament stuff. Perhaps one of the best scenes on television ever
The fishing part is fairly understandable, in some states (not certain of this one), if the waterway is accessible, it is free reign to the public, this is why I can take float trips during the summer down rivers back home.
I own some back country land that 4 wheelers crossed as if it was their own dirt track ... tore stuff up and left trash. I fenced the border and they cut the fence ... we went round and round with fence repair and fence wrecking. Finally, I identified a choke point inside the property that blocked their path and fenced it in a way they COULDN'T unfence ( unless they had tools and did a LOT of work). That stopped them. The moral of the story is: "It ain't really yours unless you can defend it."
Listen, I live in a suburban development and more than once I have had to chase dirt bike riders off of my property. They were wrecking some trees and tearing up the back slope.
@@mindymallette5935 That sounds a bit tougher call. If it is kids on bicycles ... they may not have many other options for strenuous exercise fun, especially if your place connects other places they can go to. Chasing them off risks turning into a cat and mouse game. One possibility is to give them a permitted route or boundaries of some sort, let them go Here but not There. But, maybe not, Maybe that won't work for you or for this place and then you need to consider stronger measures such as some kind of fence. The sheriff in my area told me there was nothing he could do because he couldn't chase those guys with what he had and it wasn't worth it anyway. So, best of luck! (And of course, I resisted the temptation to set some sort of booby trap that could hurt someone.)
@@persimmontea6383 nope. Motorized dirt bikes. And tearing paths into my lot. I talked to their parents and they disputed the property line. I chose this lot because of the slope and the tree line, but they are well out of their yard and happily wrecking mine. I put up a rail fence, and after a snow saw them using that to pull themselves back up after a sled run.
As far as other play areas, yes that may be a fact. But they have also had the cops called on them for racing across nearby farm fields. There is a huge empty lot very close that belongs to the BOE. Seems like a better option.
Oh, and I have had the surveyor out to confirm the property line.
And it has calmed down a lot after I got a big tough looking dog. She is a marshmallow but looks like business.
"This is America, we don't share land here" one of the best lines ever!
Also a false line. Bigger government in the U.S. than most nations.
@@mbtbd and? What a stupid point
@@Tahoe756 No, I think you and many others are not aware how socialist the U.S. has become.
@@mbtbd Since you typed that, we have seen how theocracy is trying to take over.
@@cadn5955 Theocracy? In the US? Explain.
"It's seems friendly."
*"So does your government, and just like it, you won't know better until you're on the inside."*
Facts.👍
I have the same exact rifle as Kevin Costner the Winchester 30. 30 I got it as a child at the age of 12 from my father as my rite of passage still have it, its never killed a thing.
I Also Had A Winchester 30-30 But It Got Stolen Durning A Break In, They Caught The Punk's About 2 Week's Later, But I Never Got My Rifle Back...
What a waste.
Sad
This is America we Don't share land here.
More true words.
Taylor Sheldon makes amazing shows.
yeah but China and Bill Gates buying it all up ✅ (sux they have all the "money" right?)
So they were afraid of some Chinese tourist, business people and a few people on motor bikes standing on some land? What was going to happen to the land?
@@bradhienzachary
People need to learn RESPECT.
Just because you see some dose NOT give you the right to Walk on land you don't owen.
Land owners look at it as someone comes on uninvited.
Next gets hurt and lawyer's and law suits.
Best people learn to RESPECT other people's property & STAY OUT and OFF.
Some one wants to see something or use private land
Knock on the door and ask
Get a yes or NO answer and RESPECT it.
Yellowstone is trash. Keeps repeating the same bullshit with terrible characters.
@@bradhienzachary ...I wouldn't want people standing on my front lawn looking at my pit bull....but mostly my pit bull wouldn't like it either.
I grew up on a big piece of property and it was a block long. Sometimes before daddy fenced in the back field we would see people back there walking around, or driving their jeeps onto our land. Mom went back there and told them to get out, that it was private property. Their answer was "well, you're not using it". Can you imagine the logic of that? You're not using it. No, we enjoyed the land, cherished the wildlife and some parts were just a wooded field. But some people think every single square inch of land has to be developed. Rude and stupid, stupid and rude. So I can imagine what happens out West if you owned thousands of acres. People wouldn't leave you alone.
Nancy Desch yall should have killed the trespassers and buried their bodies. Hahahaha. Lands gotta eat too. :)
Well it is just stupid that someone can own a land that big.
@@nils1471 it is not stupid; those big land owners raise cattle or food crops that not only feed your sorry ass but provide jobs to people not afraid to do tough jobs to feed city dwellers
@@nils1471 Nope ... you are stupid and weak and that's why you don't own land. Worthless trash like you doesn't deserve to breath let alone own land or use it for any reason other than feeding the birds. The best use of you and your family and friends is as fertilizer to feed the animals.
@@donvandamnjohnsonlongfella1239 alrighty 😂
The digging scene has to be one of the best I’ve seen yet
Rip didn’t say one word. But his presence and facial expressions says it all. He’s a BEAST!!!!
The scene where he made the bikers dig their own graves sent shivers down my spine. You want a man to think about his life choices, make them do that.
Edit: I take my eyes off you guys for one week. Why does this have so many likes?
*Edit* edit: The reply section to this thought I made has reached "Dumpster fire" status. Enter at your own risk.
Native Americans should have acted the same towards white settlers
@@YAYA.30 Maybe they should've fought harder
Loved the part when they ran over the bikes. 🤣😆
@@YAYA.30 the weak get conquered.
@@CarRimRod so why is it the whites cry so much when people
Of color fight back? Shameful
"you see that fence thats mine" made me binge watch this show and its amazing
The best series I have seen, it is unfortunate that we still do not have the continuation and it is even more unfortunate that it is said that Kevin Cosner will not be there, a regrettable error by the production, success is in the co.
1:41 So scared he climbed through the fence instead of walking out the open gate he was right next to lol
My grandfather ran the Van Douzain ranch out of Elgin Idaho for the Little family for years. Hardest working man I ever met.
I live in Northern Nevada.
I learned from my dad to *NEVER* mess with a miner or a rancher. This is exactly what will happen...
Respect and ettiquet go a loooong way in the West...
So does proper spelling" 'etiquette."
@@mja91352 Out West they cant spell properly too, so expect correct spelling to go a shoooort way.
I live in Lamoille Nevada Elko county.
Thank you for liking my page , Support you showered on me, I hope you never stop watching and supporting..
VIOLENT AND IDIOT PEOPLE THAT THE RESULT , they are most dangerous than the biker in y opinion i hope they will lost their land
God Bless America!! 🇺🇸
"Its a fucking cow police" lol
I never laughed so hard in my life. lol
Up in South Dakota driving around in the back country in my 4x4 I got approached by a man upset that I was driving too fast on his road near where his children played. I used alot of "yes sirs" and "no sirs" and "I'm an idiot from the city and don't know anything sir". (I wasn't such a city boy that I was oblivious to why people have stocked gun racks in their trucks.) He explained what the various types of fences meant and why he was pissed off at me. When he was done I thanked him then he kicked me off his property and told me never to come back. Never forgot that lesson.
You should stay in your city. The great outdoors is for the people who own it.
@@tiddybearkush not a city boy, but also not way out back country boy either. It was good lesson. People need to be aware that just because it's out the middle of nowhere doesn't automatically make it public land. There was plenty of public land in the Black Hills to play in just have to pay attention to those fences.
@@GeoFry3 people should respect the land even if it's public.
You need allemansrätt.
@@tiddybearkush relax hick stop the LARP on youtube
@@tiddybearkush We don't need or want your commie gibberish policies.
Yellowstone is my all-time favorite show. I’m 74 years old and this is the best
Hello Susan how are you doing with the weather conditions over there?