What was the cost for all the material you searched compared to the cut value of the stones. An estimate is fine I'm not trying to pry into your personal business. Just wondering if it was worth a trip from NJ. Thank you in advance brother ✌️
You are one of the most honest and transparent people on TH-cam. If your family were to go to either of these mines and find nothing after paying the bucket fee what would the miners say? Is it a sure thing to find something or would you just be out of luck unless you pay for more buckets?
he linked the website in the description. from the website: "The $40 Gravel Bucket is 2 gallons, approximately 25 pounds of 100% natural sapphire gravel and will fill the screening tool 3 or 4 times. " if he went through 12 screens, that makes it $120-160.
We went here for the first time last year and we are going back again this year we had them heat treat and cut ours. It takes about a year to get them back we should be getting ours back by the end of this week can't wait to see what they look like
Money spent. Usually $40-$60 per bucket. Sapphires sell in rough $25-$100 per carat from Gem Mountain. They all need heat treatment and are small. El Dorado Bar is a great place. Clear, large stones. Rarely in need of heat treatment. Rough sells for $50-$1000 per carat. Gem Mountain is our tourist area. More meant for fun.
This video is great! My family and I are heading off to Inverell (Australia) to fossick for sapphires in a few weeks. It was so helpful seeing your techniques. Thanks! 🙂👍
Very cool stuff. I wish we had these kinds of places in the UK. We have semi-precious stone but I don't think we have any truly precious stone mines open to the public
Hey I am from the uk to, you can find sapphires in the Cairngorms and the Isle of Harris, we also can find beryl in the Cairngorms, I am Scottish I have connections to miners worldwide and i am opening an online shop soon with precious and semi precious rough I will be VERY affordable. I am doing this because I see so many rough shops that are very expensive
Awesome video. I'm currently saving for my faceting machine. I'd love to see a video of you cutting one of the sapphires you got. I'm looking forward to planning some trips like yours and getting my own stones to cut as well.
Thanks! I have started on a film of a sapphire someone else found up there that was a little bigger than the ones I found. They found a 10 carat piece of Montana Sapphire rough.
Just to clarify, at Gem Mountain you guys went through 21 buckets (3 x 7 bucket rounds), and at Montana Blue Jewel Mine you went through about 12 buckets? It looks like the odds of getting bigger and more classic blue sapphires are better at Blue Jewel, but at Gem Mountain you can get more exotic colors.
We spent 2 days at Blue Jewel and went through a total of 12 sets of buckets. Each set is 6 full buckets before running them through the jig. So that is actually 72 buckets of grave from there. You definitely have better odds of finding larger and naturally bluer stones there(not the real nice blue that everyone wants, but bluer), but it does take a lot longer to find sapphires, and you wont find as many. And yes, you are not likely to get very exotic colors from there either. Though the sapphires tend to be larger, they also have a higher tendency to be fractured. The Gem Mountain deposit is very dense with little sapphires, so you will find a lot of sapphires and faster being a lot less labor intensive. There set up is a lot more tourist friendly, but a lot of the sapphires that I find from there fall below the sizes that would be beneficial for me to cut.
The Gem Mountain mine has a service for cutting and heat treating; you can read about it on their website. It's relatively inexpensive if you have a large enough parcel. If you do a lucky 7, you'll have enough to make it worth your while.
That was a beautiful pink sapphire @8:43 you showed. I had to look it up online because I thought a pink sapphire was the same thing as a ruby. It appears that a ruby had to be darker red. I'm sure someone will correct me if I'm wrong.
Buying a set of ASR classifier screens .one can then easily separate out large stones, from grit falling down, down, down into the smallest of screens. One then easily processes the larger meshes and disposes of them, and be able to look at homogenous sized sized rockettes, and make the whole procees much easier, faster, and no rocking or overturn and working thorugh a mess of sizes.
One can then have one's clear fishing tackle box with little compartments and you can keep all the same-sized stones all classified, and which one will be cut, while others will be heat treated etc.
ASR meshes - 1/2 inch, 1/4 inch, 1/8 inch, 1/12 inch, 1/20 inch (20 mesh), 1/30 inch (30 mesh), 1/50 inch (50 mesh), 1/70 (70 mesh), and 1/100 inch (100 mesh). Albeit these are gold panning classifiers, you can have less number of smaller mesh classifiers. 2 9520 micron toss 4 4760 micron ****** 8 2380 micron ****** 12 1680 micron ****** 20 841 micron ?????? 30 595 micron too small 50 297 micron too small 70 210 micron too small 100 149 micron too small Using these 4-5 classifiers as dry or wet meshes, you then don't have to handle and transport (21 !) massive bucket loads of STONE (!) to the inspection table looking for your shinies and twinklies. You can process out all of the higher debris at the classifier area. Then take the smaller bucket load of classified material as the real treasure tailings.
You should get tweezers that they use with pearls. They have a round scoop instead of a point. If you grab the stone, or if it is very round, too hard they can shoot out of the pointy tweezers
i get irked by the reluctance of many folks to disclose prices per bucket or whatever rate is used at this type of operation. as a guy who hounds cab quality stones and "hand cuts" and sets or wraps them i had a few oooh oooh oooh...danggg moments watching you pass by some stunners in the 5-20 mm range. i didnt see any obvious star material but thats not surprising considering the lighting conditions and my cheapo phone. personally id prefer to just take ALL the material back home minus the big culls and spend a lot more time evaluating the stuff. regardless, im jelly as heck my dude. awesome memories made for all no doubt.
We went on a trip to Gem Mountain from Colorado and I have several bags of Sapphire Rough. It was fun and not too hot as it is in the hills. My son enjoyed it also, even though he enjoys panning for gold more, back home.
Also be on the lookout for red garnets when you visit the Blue Jewel. I took home 7 garnets from my 3 trips to the Jewel ranging from 1.8 to 4.3 carets. The biggest sapphires I found were a 7.3 conical shaped and a 9.6 plate that were both flawed and not cuttable.
That looks a lot more satisfying than trying to find diamonds in the Crater of Diamonds state park. If you heat treated a pink sapphire what would it look like?
I think that the color could vary from stone to stone. It could make the color more rich or possibly even dull the color. The color would also depend on the way it is heated. I know at Gem Mountain, they do two different heating burns. One is at lower heat to try and bring out fancy colors, and then there is a higher heat burn that will more likely turn the stones a bluer color.
I wish we had mines like that in Alberta Canada too tbh because I am a big fan of gems and fossil and other stuff like that and I love the hunt for them my dream is to get to the diamond state park in Arkansas before I die
Gracias por compartir, pude corroborar con tus imágenes qu el que creí q era un zafiro amarillo que encontré en la playa en efecto si lo es. Ahora estaría genial saber si encuentro mas donde los podría vender😊🤗
Got a question. If you were to heat treat that beautiful pink stone, do you have any idea what color you would get? Is it even able to heat treat? I would assume it doesn't work for every stone. Its crazy what kind of color changes you can get with just heat.
@@Damonnanashi There's a good video by the GIA about heat treatment of Montana Sapphires, actually at Gem Mountain. th-cam.com/video/f1n1FvWBQEg/w-d-xo.html
have you thought about putting a thin layer of wet gravel on a screen and holding it up to look through and pick out crystals with the sun shining through them
I've tried that a little bit. Though, shaking and flipping the pans works well for going through lots of material quickly if you are able to get down the method right since it brings that sapphires to the center and top of the gravel after the flip.
Great video! The first place looked like you got paid. The second place looked like you were on the payroll😂 They should have it screened for you if the price is comparable.
I've only had sapphires heated from Gem Mountain. Here is a link to there webpage about heating. You can contact them if you want them to heat anything for you. gemmountainmt.com/heat-treating-faceting/heat-treating#:~:text=The%20cost%20of%20heat%20treating,price%20breaks%20for%20larger%20quantities.
I've cut two pink ones from that trip, but not that nicest one yet. maxfieldlapidary.etsy.com/listing/1613660829 maxfieldlapidary.etsy.com/listing/1582027392
great video! however, some critiques: some of the camera work is really shaky and unfocused in this video, and doesn't do these beautiful gems justice! i would recommend setting the camera down/using tripods for most of the shots and making sure it's focused. you also have a habit of repeating yourself a little bit and i feel like around 5-10mins of the video could have been cut, making a shorter, more widely palatable video your channel is super underrated, and i'm looking forward to seeing some of these gems being cut :D keep it up!
If you watch the end of the video where everything is laid out on the table, I talk about what I found at each location and how much material I went through to find it. Between the jugs I purchased at Gem Mountain and the 21 buckets we went trough, we managed around 235 stones I would consider cuttable, but a lot of those fall under a carat rough weight. We did 12 sets of buckets at Blue Jewel and came home with about 115 pieces that I would consider cuttable. Between both places, there were 350 stones of which only about 150 were even over 1 carat and not very many over 2 carats. I'll be cutting mostly from the 1 carat and up stones. So there may be between 125-175 stones that I will actually cut from the trip. Most of those will only yield stone around the half carat range.
I’m surprised that you heat treat the green ones; I rarely see green sapphire gems and would think an untreated green is more valuable since it’s so hard to come across them even in specialty shops
Most Montana sapphires are some shade of green; it's the most common color by far. They don't really come in bright emerald green; it's usually a pale green, olive green, or yellowish green. You probably see less for sale because they're less popular in that color and most will be heat treated to increase their value. Trust me, if you get some Montana sapphire gravel, you'll have your fill of green ones.
I did go through about a couple thousand dollars worth of gravel in this video. But mail order gravel may be decent or not depending where it comes from. Some places take gravel like before it was screened and condensed at the Montana Blue Jewel Mine and plant some sapphires in it so that you can actually find some as there is no guarantee to even find a sapphire in the amount of raw gravel they send. But gravel from the area of Gem Mountain is pretty rich in small sapphires, so going though mail gravel from there is the same as if you went through it at the mine.
@@MattsCornerofGemCutting not so much as rich in what you order.definitely don’t find as much last few orders haven’t netted more then 10 karats if that of extremely small and uncuttable stones.
Olá jair Monteiro, boa tarde! Meu nome é Deni , admiro seu canal tem coisas incríveis. Gosto muito do que você nos apresenta, é surpreendente. Quero falar com você,Tenho muito interesse em falar a esse respeito se for possível , agradeço desde já .
I had a fun trip to the sapphire mines in Montana this year! I got a lot of sapphires for cutting!
Very cool I'm going to order some gravel.
What was the cost for all the material you searched compared to the cut value of the stones. An estimate is fine I'm not trying to pry into your personal business. Just wondering if it was worth a trip from NJ. Thank you in advance brother ✌️
You are one of the most honest and transparent people on TH-cam. If your family were to go to either of these mines and find nothing after paying the bucket fee what would the miners say? Is it a sure thing to find something or would you just be out of luck unless you pay for more buckets?
Good question!
Do all buckets guarantee sapphires?
Have you any videos on treating
I wish you talked about the amount of money you spent and the possible value of of stones before and after cutting.
he linked the website in the description. from the website:
"The $40 Gravel Bucket is 2 gallons, approximately 25 pounds of 100% natural sapphire gravel and will fill the screening tool 3 or 4 times. "
if he went through 12 screens, that makes it $120-160.
Thanks!! I was wondering too
We went here for the first time last year and we are going back again this year we had them heat treat and cut ours. It takes about a year to get them back we should be getting ours back by the end of this week can't wait to see what they look like
I mean he’s in immediate profit probably after 5-6 stones. Assuming they cut under 1ct finished
Money spent. Usually $40-$60 per bucket. Sapphires sell in rough $25-$100 per carat from Gem Mountain. They all need heat treatment and are small. El Dorado Bar is a great place. Clear, large stones. Rarely in need of heat treatment. Rough sells for $50-$1000 per carat. Gem Mountain is our tourist area. More meant for fun.
This video is great! My family and I are heading off to Inverell (Australia) to fossick for sapphires in a few weeks. It was so helpful seeing your techniques. Thanks! 🙂👍
Having a uv flashlight may help to see the beaties. Awesome adventure.
objectively the coolest way to gamble
You basically are more likely to get rich doing anything but gambling
And it seems like a decent workout!
@@deskmat9874Unless you're the casino. :D
That pink sapphire was gorgeous!
Aka a ruby?
@@deantucker57 sapphires can be pink
@@paparunji2222 No they can't. If it's pink, it's called a ruby. All the pinkish to reddish hues are called ruby.
It's a ruby. And it's not a good color for a ruby, you want deep red.
@@DarthChrisBim sorry, but sapphires CAN indeed be pink. But so can rubies. Google it.
Gem Mountain will also ship pay gravel to you if. We had a great time in 2021 when we visited.
I used to live in Montana and found a lot of garnets and rubies mixed into the sapphires
I never found a ruby, only garnets.
Very cool stuff. I wish we had these kinds of places in the UK. We have semi-precious stone but I don't think we have any truly precious stone mines open to the public
Yeah, I really appreciate the mines allowing the public to come look for sapphires! It is a great experience and I really enjoy doing it!
Looks fun! If I lived in MT I’d be washing gravel every weekend!
There actually is a sapphire deposit in Scotland you may have some luck at
I live right next to Montana😂
Hey I am from the uk to, you can find sapphires in the Cairngorms and the Isle of Harris, we also can find beryl in the Cairngorms, I am Scottish I have connections to miners worldwide and i am opening an online shop soon with precious and semi precious rough I will be VERY affordable. I am doing this because I see so many rough shops that are very expensive
Awesome video. I'm currently saving for my faceting machine. I'd love to see a video of you cutting one of the sapphires you got. I'm looking forward to planning some trips like yours and getting my own stones to cut as well.
Thanks! I have started on a film of a sapphire someone else found up there that was a little bigger than the ones I found. They found a 10 carat piece of Montana Sapphire rough.
Just to clarify, at Gem Mountain you guys went through 21 buckets (3 x 7 bucket rounds), and at Montana Blue Jewel Mine you went through about 12 buckets? It looks like the odds of getting bigger and more classic blue sapphires are better at Blue Jewel, but at Gem Mountain you can get more exotic colors.
We spent 2 days at Blue Jewel and went through a total of 12 sets of buckets. Each set is 6 full buckets before running them through the jig. So that is actually 72 buckets of grave from there. You definitely have better odds of finding larger and naturally bluer stones there(not the real nice blue that everyone wants, but bluer), but it does take a lot longer to find sapphires, and you wont find as many. And yes, you are not likely to get very exotic colors from there either. Though the sapphires tend to be larger, they also have a higher tendency to be fractured.
The Gem Mountain deposit is very dense with little sapphires, so you will find a lot of sapphires and faster being a lot less labor intensive. There set up is a lot more tourist friendly, but a lot of the sapphires that I find from there fall below the sizes that would be beneficial for me to cut.
It feels like I would enjoy finding some my self. But then, who will cut them ? Thank You Math for taking me to watch you find Saphires!
The Gem Mountain mine has a service for cutting and heat treating; you can read about it on their website. It's relatively inexpensive if you have a large enough parcel. If you do a lucky 7, you'll have enough to make it worth your while.
thank you @@fwiffo for taking the time to explain ; )
That was a beautiful pink sapphire @8:43 you showed. I had to look it up online because I thought a pink sapphire was the same thing as a ruby. It appears that a ruby had to be darker red. I'm sure someone will correct me if I'm wrong.
Nope, you are right.
@@lordeverybody872 Thank you.
Very Nice video! Wonderfull precious stone!😊
Buying a set of ASR classifier screens .one can then easily separate out large stones, from grit falling down, down, down into the smallest of screens. One then easily processes the larger meshes and disposes of them, and be able to look at homogenous sized sized rockettes, and make the whole procees much easier, faster, and no rocking or overturn and working thorugh a mess of sizes.
One can then have one's clear fishing tackle box with little compartments and you can keep all the same-sized stones all classified, and which one will be cut, while others will be heat treated etc.
ASR meshes - 1/2 inch, 1/4 inch, 1/8 inch, 1/12 inch, 1/20 inch (20 mesh), 1/30 inch (30 mesh), 1/50 inch (50 mesh), 1/70 (70 mesh), and 1/100 inch (100 mesh). Albeit these are gold panning classifiers, you can have less number of smaller mesh classifiers.
2 9520 micron toss
4 4760 micron ******
8 2380 micron ******
12 1680 micron ******
20 841 micron ??????
30 595 micron too small
50 297 micron too small
70 210 micron too small
100 149 micron too small
Using these 4-5 classifiers as dry or wet meshes, you then don't have to handle and transport (21 !) massive bucket loads of STONE (!) to the inspection table looking for your shinies and twinklies. You can process out all of the higher debris at the classifier area. Then take the smaller bucket load of classified material as the real treasure tailings.
You should get tweezers that they use with pearls. They have a round scoop instead of a point. If you grab the stone, or if it is very round, too hard they can shoot out of the pointy tweezers
i get irked by the reluctance of many folks to disclose prices per bucket or whatever rate is used at this type of operation. as a guy who hounds cab quality stones and "hand cuts" and sets or wraps them i had a few oooh oooh oooh...danggg moments watching you pass by some stunners in the 5-20 mm range. i didnt see any obvious star material but thats not surprising considering the lighting conditions and my cheapo phone. personally id prefer to just take ALL the material back home minus the big culls and spend a lot more time evaluating the stuff. regardless, im jelly as heck my dude. awesome memories made for all no doubt.
We went on a trip to Gem Mountain from Colorado and I have several bags of Sapphire Rough. It was fun and not too hot as it is in the hills. My son enjoyed it also, even though he enjoys panning for gold more, back home.
How much is it? I’m just a geology enthusiast and would love to go for fun.
You get to process the stuff that's been screened to "remove all the larger rocks & boulders (and the really big sapphires)".
If you want a fancier word for "shaking" Aggitation works :)
Thanks for a good vid!
Also be on the lookout for red garnets when you visit the Blue Jewel. I took home 7 garnets from my 3 trips to the Jewel ranging from 1.8 to 4.3 carets. The biggest sapphires I found were a 7.3 conical shaped and a 9.6 plate that were both flawed and not cuttable.
That looks a lot more satisfying than trying to find diamonds in the Crater of Diamonds state park.
If you heat treated a pink sapphire what would it look like?
I think that the color could vary from stone to stone. It could make the color more rich or possibly even dull the color. The color would also depend on the way it is heated. I know at Gem Mountain, they do two different heating burns. One is at lower heat to try and bring out fancy colors, and then there is a higher heat burn that will more likely turn the stones a bluer color.
@@MattsCornerofGemCutting thank you for the reply!
I wish we had mines like that in Alberta Canada too tbh because I am a big fan of gems and fossil and other stuff like that and I love the hunt for them my dream is to get to the diamond state park in Arkansas before I die
Dan Herd has a sapphire mine in Alberta
Gracias por compartir, pude corroborar con tus imágenes qu el que creí q era un zafiro amarillo que encontré en la playa en efecto si lo es. Ahora estaría genial saber si encuentro mas donde los podría vender😊🤗
Im totally fascinated!!
I see the large piles of material in the background, is that where the buckets come from?
nice stones man
Got a question. If you were to heat treat that beautiful pink stone, do you have any idea what color you would get? Is it even able to heat treat? I would assume it doesn't work for every stone. Its crazy what kind of color changes you can get with just heat.
Pinks usually stay pink but might get better clarity. It's an unpredictable process though, so it could do something else.
@@fwiffo I remember seeing in another video how a bunch that looked similar before heat treating all turned out different, so that makes sense.
@@Damonnanashi There's a good video by the GIA about heat treatment of Montana Sapphires, actually at Gem Mountain. th-cam.com/video/f1n1FvWBQEg/w-d-xo.html
have you thought about putting a thin layer of wet gravel on a screen and holding it up to look through and pick out crystals with the sun shining through them
I've tried that a little bit. Though, shaking and flipping the pans works well for going through lots of material quickly if you are able to get down the method right since it brings that sapphires to the center and top of the gravel after the flip.
Great video! The first place looked like you got paid. The second place looked like you were on the payroll😂 They should have it screened for you if the price is comparable.
I was wondering if you could point me in the right direction where I can get my rubies and sapphires heated and also how much it costs thanks Matt
I've only had sapphires heated from Gem Mountain. Here is a link to there webpage about heating. You can contact them if you want them to heat anything for you. gemmountainmt.com/heat-treating-faceting/heat-treating#:~:text=The%20cost%20of%20heat%20treating,price%20breaks%20for%20larger%20quantities.
840$ of buckets. The pink one is paparadasa. They are pricey. Orange is the rare one too.
Yeah, it is an investment for sure! But I get my return off the sapphires I cut.
@@MattsCornerofGemCutting do you charge to cut for others
I think they screen them so they get all the big honkers lol
Where are thise plastic tubes with the push through caps? I can't find them.
I do like the red/pink colors. Aren't the red sapphires rubies?
Do the mines supply all of the screening equipment, or do you need to supply any of it yourself?
How do you identify the gemstones as sapphires? especially if they have different colors
I like it!👍By the way, where is a located the place? I want to have some experience.
You can find the addresses on their websites in the description. One mine is near Philipsburg, Montana. The other is near Helena, Montana.
@@MattsCornerofGemCutting thanks
So my question is >> How Much did you have to PAY to find all these Sapphires ?
do you heat treat the pretty pink ones or do they lose color during the heat treat?
Have you cut any of the pink ones?
I've cut two pink ones from that trip, but not that nicest one yet.
maxfieldlapidary.etsy.com/listing/1613660829
maxfieldlapidary.etsy.com/listing/1582027392
I wonder how many satires are at the bottom of that mud pond
Me, too.
LOOKS LIKE FUN BUT HARD WORK!
احسنت صديقي اتمنى ان تبهرنا بي ابداعك عمل موفق
great video!
however, some critiques:
some of the camera work is really shaky and unfocused in this video, and doesn't do these beautiful gems justice! i would recommend setting the camera down/using tripods for most of the shots and making sure it's focused.
you also have a habit of repeating yourself a little bit and i feel like around 5-10mins of the video could have been cut, making a shorter, more widely palatable video
your channel is super underrated, and i'm looking forward to seeing some of these gems being cut :D
keep it up!
Thanks for your input!
What does heat treating do for them?
Nice!
Can you heat them at home?
Bro you missed a big one at the middlish top of the screen😢 8:21
Thank you!😅
How many did you find the were quality and each location 🤔
If you watch the end of the video where everything is laid out on the table, I talk about what I found at each location and how much material I went through to find it. Between the jugs I purchased at Gem Mountain and the 21 buckets we went trough, we managed around 235 stones I would consider cuttable, but a lot of those fall under a carat rough weight. We did 12 sets of buckets at Blue Jewel and came home with about 115 pieces that I would consider cuttable. Between both places, there were 350 stones of which only about 150 were even over 1 carat and not very many over 2 carats. I'll be cutting mostly from the 1 carat and up stones. So there may be between 125-175 stones that I will actually cut from the trip. Most of those will only yield stone around the half carat range.
You should take a uv flashlight with you.
did he say he went through 21 buckets?
Yes, 3 lucky 7s.
Gem mountain has more colors but tend to be smaller, El Dorado area is paler in color and will tend to be bigger.
Yep
Where is El Dorado Bar?
Sorry. What is the address? I've been to Gem Mtn and Spokane Bar. I'm not online.
I’m surprised that you heat treat the green ones; I rarely see green sapphire gems and would think an untreated green is more valuable since it’s so hard to come across them even in specialty shops
Most Montana sapphires are some shade of green; it's the most common color by far. They don't really come in bright emerald green; it's usually a pale green, olive green, or yellowish green. You probably see less for sale because they're less popular in that color and most will be heat treated to increase their value. Trust me, if you get some Montana sapphire gravel, you'll have your fill of green ones.
We only have sand here so we have to buy the waste stones you wiped off the table.
I always thought sapphire was blue?
Sapphires come in many colors, including many shades within the color ranges as well.
Aren't satires blue 💙
I’ve noticed the amount of sapphires in the mail ordered gravel is far less than what I see people find in these videos.
I did go through about a couple thousand dollars worth of gravel in this video. But mail order gravel may be decent or not depending where it comes from. Some places take gravel like before it was screened and condensed at the Montana Blue Jewel Mine and plant some sapphires in it so that you can actually find some as there is no guarantee to even find a sapphire in the amount of raw gravel they send. But gravel from the area of Gem Mountain is pretty rich in small sapphires, so going though mail gravel from there is the same as if you went through it at the mine.
@@MattsCornerofGemCutting not so much as rich in what you order.definitely don’t find as much last few orders haven’t netted more then 10 karats if that of extremely small and uncuttable stones.
Tremendo muito é muita cachaça 😂😂😂😂
Who is in 2024
👇
Olá jair Monteiro, boa tarde! Meu nome é Deni , admiro seu canal tem coisas incríveis. Gosto muito do que você nos apresenta, é surpreendente. Quero falar com você,Tenho muito interesse em falar a esse respeito se for possível , agradeço desde já .
Video needs some banjo music in the background.
Send me to indonesia 😢
खुप छान
People in the 3rd world countries working in the mines are watching this like 😮!!!!!!!
𝓱𝓸𝔀 𝓶𝓾𝓬𝓱 𝓭𝓸 𝔂𝓸𝓾 𝔀𝓪𝓷𝓽 𝓯𝓸𝓻 𝓽𝓱𝓮 𝓾𝓷𝓾𝓼𝓪𝓫𝓵𝓮 𝓹𝓪𝓬𝓴𝓮𝓽 𝓼𝓪𝓹𝓹𝓱𝓲𝓻𝓮𝓼? 3 1/2 𝓹𝓪𝓬𝓴𝓮𝓽𝓼
Im totally fascinated!!
I see the large piles of material in the background, is that where the buckets of gravel come from?