He is hilarious! I love listening to him with his even match of intelligence and I don't give a shit attitude! He is that kind of person that everyone wants to have as a best friend! 🤣😂
@@cricketj15 so funny, guy has a satirical bumper sticker that I don't agree with so I make a satirical statement and still people are uptight.... Ha ha ha
The chemotherapy drug you're thinking of is taxol (generic name paclitaxel). It inhibits cell division, which is a good thing if you're trying to keep cancer growths from spreading. Nowadays, it's made from the leaves of the European yew (which contains a compound which is 3 steps from paclitaxel itself) or in a bioreactor by culturing Pacific yew plant cells.
Yes, paclitaxel (and docetaxel) is a mitotic spindle inhibitor, similar to other plant-based anticancer drugs called 'Vinca alkaloids' made from Catharanthus roseus.
I'm so glad you talked about low-intensity controlled fires in order to help the ecosystem thrive. Really interesting stuff as always, thanks for sharing :D
I watch your videos because I'm a farmer and I never received a suitable botany education, so your stuff keeps me engaged and learning more. I love em, they're great. That lizard was a cutie. I'll throw you some cash once end of summer harvest is up and we're rollin in dough.
In response to the question at 12:21 the answer is in the affirmative for both. I am in fact learning while simultaneously being amused by your accent. AvE suggested your channel and I've watched every video you've released since then. My Aunt C. Lynn Raulerson was a biologist/botanist and professor at the University of Guam and littlerally wrote the book on the Trees and Shrubs of the Mariana Islands. When I watch your videos I feel like I'm a little closer to her. That, and your jokes make me laugh.
Hey man, I love your vids! I’m a forester and your spiel against fire suppression warmed my heart. Do you think you could do a video on the basic trees of the Sierran Mixed Conifer Forest? I think it would be great for some students to see!
Yes, I’m learning a crapton. Thank you for adding the Latin names and definitions with captions. It helps a lot. I also appreciate your descriptions of the geology you encounter. I come from a family of geologists and remember as a child stopping on the side of the road to look at specific geological features on road trips. I’d like to donate, but I don’t use Venmo.
I'm an amateur botanist and herpetologist here in southern California and I've got to say that the 'skeptical looking' Alligator lizard you found was just incredible! I've seen a lot of them (I'm 66 yrs. old) over the years but never a blue morph like the one you found. Good thing you didn't reach out and try to catch that dude with your hands, these guys are 100% guaranteed to bite and not let go. The pitbulls of the lizard family! Also, thanks for the update on their Latin name from Gerrhonotus to Elgaria. I can't keep up with these fuckin' taxonomists changing the Latin names on everything all the time! So, thanks for that too.
So much information.. Over load!!! I'll have to watch this a few more times. Would have loved to have had you as a teacher in school. Spend all day out on the land and getting up close to the plants. The learning and information. Can't forget the teacher, excellent descriptions. You're fun!! And would make class enjoyable. Your family must love having you around. You are definitely easy to listen to. Up beat. Funny. Thank you for catching my attention. Really wish I had a teacher like you when I was in school. You would have been the pie piper botanist for students. "Did some one say field trip?!"
I'm going to pick an easier safe word to remember next time I'm in an orchid dungeon. lmao. That's a good way to get your stamen damaged. Them orchids take kinky to a whole new level.
The Natives maintained the forest by setting low burning fires, much could be learned from them. When there are too many trees too close together, they become stressed, and that is when they are vulnerable to disease and insects. But then I'm preaching to the choir! You help a lot with the pronunciations. I know many of the botanical names from reading them so many times, but can't pronounce them worth a shit!
The Hawaiian Silver Sword is a fantastically cool plant, it's one of those things that you would expect to see in a sci-fi movie about different planets. They look like big sea anemone when they are little and then turn into towers of flowers 8'+ tall... Just amazing plants. Look 'em up if you are interested, you won't be disappointed.
I kinda recently subed this channel but I love it already. I am myself an amateur botanist and this is entertaining me alot. I am from Sweden so probably miss out alot of the fun stuff this man saying but waht I can translate and decipher gives me so much. Wish I had his talent of flowing speech and talk and I would like to do something similar from my country. Take care out there and you should all try go out and discover what you can find in neighbourhood and outdoors sometimes. Peace!
The video where you're talking to a plant growing on a barren cliff-side, asking it how the hell it lives there was something I felt I could really relate to. So it's not so much your accent as your passion that I think is cool.
Those alligator lizards do seem a bit bolder than say a fence lizards. I can pretty much walk right up to some of them in my yard and they'll just look at me like I'm bothering them. I wish there were more of them here in Southern California. I don't see them that often.
Just loving your channel! Learning so much about plants and the earth in general. Also, a good belly laugh, from time to time, is so good for the soul! Thanks man. 😉
I dunno if anybody else has said it, because I'm not scrolling through all the comments. But those two crab spiders were arguing over territory. Spiders raise their front legs as a sort of pre-fight posturing, like a frat boy when he yells 'come at me bro'. The spider on the right is also raising up to make herself look larger. Oh, and they're both ladies.
Two of your videos ("Lophophora williamsii (Peyote) in Mexico and redundant facts" & "Public Service Announcement from Jake Wozcak and Crotalus Oreganus" ) got posted on Reddit recently. You're my new favorite channel, and I'm stunned at how often you post new videos. 6:14 . I spit coffee laughing. :>
I can relate. " Hey that's fuckin poison ivy don't touch it". Of course I touched it, broke out later.. Dad busted my balls later I bet you don't do that again he says I told you not to touch it lol...
This channel makes me happy. On the subject of the yew, if it is like taxus baccata, the aril is the only bit that isn't toxic. All parts of the tree are loaded with taxine including the seeds and roots+ all except the scary red "berry"...
Awesome walk through the woods.TY. The spiders looks like female Misumena vatia, and it has a bee fly (Bombyliidae)? The males are dark and half the size. Oospores, look up how to pronounce it, and apply it to zoospores if you didn't know.
It's snotty and vaguely sweet. Also sometimes the poison gets into the aril by mutation or whatnot. One bush always has dead birds around here. Would not eat from dat one.
5:30-I don’t think this is Himalayan Blackberry (which I don’t know anything about). This is Aralia Californica, a native, common name Spikenard (or Elk Clover, although it is not a clover at all). It can be used like the Rocky Mountain species, Aralia Racemosa, which is a moderately useful herbal medicine. The native Americans of the Mountain West would use this for “winter chest.” Our family keeps some of the root and some honey extract. We’ve taken both species for personal use. Racemosa might be better medicine. The Rocky Mountain variant is harder to find and pretty much only inhabits stream bottoms from 5000 to 8000 feet.
Aralia californica is from a completely unrelated family and doesn't have thorns on the stem. This is Himalayan blackberry, from the rose family. Aralia is in Araliaceae. It produces flowers in an umbel that look uniquely different.
My cats are mostly indoors, but when they do go outside they are supervised. Though, it's mostly because of the stray cats that are in the green belt behind the house.
YES i enjoyed this video and YES my girlfriend and I are going to look into joining a botanical garden, now. We live near Chapel Hill NC so there is something called Duke Gardens in our area. Thank you Joey.
We call one of the genus Leylandii (spelling) everyone hates it because it grows so fast, but it makes nice thick hedge if you maintain it. I read that vikings used it as evergreen hedge to protect their animals against freezing wind.
Someone always falls for the idiot wanting to plant trees in a hole on a sidewalk. Apparently they rarely walk them. They're baked and scorched and rarely trimmed or otherwise protected.
I just found your channel, and I'm thoroughly enraptured with your depth and breadth of knowledge on kingdom plantae. Thank you for sharing, and keep making videos. I'll keep watching. PS: any chance you'll come down to Florida and do a few bits of commentary on our wetlands? I'm sure we can get you an honorary Florida Man certification.
I got some of them crab spiders on my mum's pineapple sage, real ninjas. I spent an afternoon watching one sit inside the flowers and spring death on Chlosyne nycteis one after the other.
Rubus armeniacus. It is reported that Oregon has one .... its root system covers the entire state. Took a chain saw and a year to chop enough out to plant grass. 8’ high intertwined mess. 6’ of new growth after a rainstorm. 1”+ stalks. When the stalks die, they are like barbed iron. Fantastic berries! The best. Hang like and quantity like grapes. Bowl full in less than 60 seconds.
Sure does look like it. You mean the little black bump between his ear hole and his front leg, right? Sharp eyes ya got there! I had to rewind and take another look as I hadn't noticed it first time round.
The plant that is a parasite to fungi and has no chlorophyll,.. is that the same as "Indian pipe" or "ghost pipe" also known as the "corpse plant"? We have a lot of them here in Pa., But the ones here have a bell shaped flower that bends downward twords the ground, and when picked looks like an old time pipe.
The crazy shit that comes out of your mouth followed by perfect pronunciation of plant names and the state of said plants with occasional up close shots of animals is the shit
To answer your question for the viewers: I learned that plants are sketchy as hell. They are always trying to pull a fast one on the insects and animals.
The cancer drug made from Pacific Yew is called Taxol, by the way. A professor at Florida State University figured out how to synthesize the drug artificially. I'm from Tallahassee, it's kinda local lore around the academic circles there
Mono trips uniflora, is also mychohetrotrophic. Ur so brilliant when it comes to Brittany. Monotropa uniflora, also known as ghost plant (or ghost pipe), Indian pipe or corpse plant, is an herbaceous perennial plant native to temperate regions of Udmurtiya in European Russia, Asia, North America and northern South America, but with large gaps between areas.[1][2] It was formerly classified in the family Monotropaceae, but is now included within the Ericaceae. It is of ephemeraloccurrence, depending on the right conditions (moisture after a dry period) to appear full grown within a couple of days.
A wonderful fuckin' plant. Do you provide backyard consultations? I don't own land yet, but when I do, I'd like to have someone's number in my back pocket for some good advice for native species and fire suppression.
For awhile you would see the many dead oaks and tan oaks all over Niles Canyons lush growth..well,above where the hobos tromp everything down. I think it's slowed down. Nature can be resilient. If you want to take the chance... I don't, if you catch my drift..
Alligator lizards are some tough bastards, they will bite and they will not let go. He's probably just asking you to touch him so he can give you what for lol
Not gonna lie, it’s 50% accent, 50% learning.
And 50% hilarious
Kenny Setzer 💯 % learning
😂🙋
@@athens26 Haha, it's the ManBearPig of great TH-cam channels.
eric moss did you just Al Gore him
"hopefully he'll flip his truck and die" Funniest thing I've heard all day, thank you sir!
@Christina Penner He was annoyed and disgusted by the guy's bumper sticker joke about destroying earth and then moving on to other planets.
He is hilarious! I love listening to him with his even match of intelligence and I don't give a shit attitude! He is that kind of person that everyone wants to have as a best friend! 🤣😂
i laughed so hard i couldn’t BREATHE
from tony's mouth to god's ears
@@cricketj15 so funny, guy has a satirical bumper sticker that I don't agree with so I make a satirical statement and still people are uptight.... Ha ha ha
You should open up a patreon, you're cheaper than a professor for a hell of a lot more information
Patreon is www.patreon.com/crimepaysbutbotanydoesnt
@@CrimePaysButBotanyDoesnt Well hot damn, you remembered!
When someone is offering free money, you remember...
"That's the safe word you use in an orchid dungeon". LOL. Beautiful little video, very informative as always. Thank you for the frequent uploads.
The chemotherapy drug you're thinking of is taxol (generic name paclitaxel). It inhibits cell division, which is a good thing if you're trying to keep cancer growths from spreading. Nowadays, it's made from the leaves of the European yew (which contains a compound which is 3 steps from paclitaxel itself) or in a bioreactor by culturing Pacific yew plant cells.
Interesting, Thanks!
Bill Smathers The More Yew Know 🌈 💫
Yes, paclitaxel (and docetaxel) is a mitotic spindle inhibitor, similar to other plant-based anticancer drugs called 'Vinca alkaloids' made from Catharanthus roseus.
I'm so glad you talked about low-intensity controlled fires in order to help the ecosystem thrive. Really interesting stuff as always, thanks for sharing :D
well, controlled is the wrong word. ideally the would happen often enough that we wouldnt have to control them, which we shouldnt anyway.
This is 2019 Car Talk and it's beautiful. Praise.
Oh god the memories. I think I still have the CD of that talk show hidden somewhere.
I watch your videos because I'm a farmer and I never received a suitable botany education, so your stuff keeps me engaged and learning more. I love em, they're great. That lizard was a cutie. I'll throw you some cash once end of summer harvest is up and we're rollin in dough.
"you sly bastard..thats what they do!" friggin hilarious bud
That type of spider is called a crab spider. They come in many bright colors and live in a similar colored flower.
I'd love to go hikin with this guy.
Takes 3 hours per mile apparently, I'd say you get your own personal David Attenborough guide. I'd pay good money for that.
You kinda are, in the friend simulator 😂
he talks too much...
Bob S that’s the point of the video, you can always turn down the volume it’s not like your listening 👂 to the background music
@@bobs5596 I mean... it IS an educational video.
In response to the question at 12:21 the answer is in the affirmative for both. I am in fact learning while simultaneously being amused by your accent.
AvE suggested your channel and I've watched every video you've released since then. My Aunt C. Lynn Raulerson was a biologist/botanist and professor at the University of Guam and littlerally wrote the book on the Trees and Shrubs of the Mariana Islands. When I watch your videos I feel like I'm a little closer to her. That, and your jokes make me laugh.
Hey man, I love your vids! I’m a forester and your spiel against fire suppression warmed my heart. Do you think you could do a video on the basic trees of the Sierran Mixed Conifer Forest? I think it would be great for some students to see!
Yes, I’m learning a crapton. Thank you for adding the Latin names and definitions with captions. It helps a lot. I also appreciate your descriptions of the geology you encounter. I come from a family of geologists and remember as a child stopping on the side of the road to look at specific geological features on road trips.
I’d like to donate, but I don’t use Venmo.
He created a patreon since you commented, I'm not sure if you know but either way here it is www.patreon.com/CrimePaysButBotanyDoesnt
man I love this channel, I hope you blow up. you're very charismatic and knowledgeable, you make plants fun
This is soooooo relaxing. I'm loving getting a closer view to the plants near me.
I'm here to learn about that $5 burrito tree.
Botany doesn't pay but it might feed you!
I'm an amateur botanist and herpetologist here in southern California and I've got to say that the 'skeptical looking' Alligator lizard you found was just incredible! I've seen a lot of them (I'm 66 yrs. old) over the years but never a blue morph like the one you found. Good thing you didn't reach out and try to catch that dude with your hands, these guys are 100% guaranteed to bite and not let go. The pitbulls of the lizard family! Also, thanks for the update on their Latin name from Gerrhonotus to Elgaria. I can't keep up with these fuckin' taxonomists changing the Latin names on everything all the time! So, thanks for that too.
So much information.. Over load!!! I'll have to watch this a few more times.
Would have loved to have had you as a teacher in school. Spend all day out on the land and getting up close to the plants. The learning and information. Can't forget the teacher, excellent descriptions. You're fun!! And would make class enjoyable.
Your family must love having you around. You are definitely easy to listen to. Up beat. Funny. Thank you for catching my attention. Really wish I had a teacher like you when I was in school. You would have been the pie piper botanist for students.
"Did some one say field trip?!"
I'm going to pick an easier safe word to remember next time I'm in an orchid dungeon. lmao. That's a good way to get your stamen damaged. Them orchids take kinky to a whole new level.
You are a professor! I wish all my teachers were like you, I would know a lot more about everything.
the bumper sticker bit lol
this botanist never been up there, nice little tour, thanks!
The Natives maintained the forest by setting low burning fires, much could be learned from them. When there are too many trees too close together, they become stressed, and that is when they are vulnerable to disease and insects. But then I'm preaching to the choir! You help a lot with the pronunciations. I know many of the botanical names from reading them so many times, but can't pronounce them worth a shit!
He makes learning about plants really interesting. I could watch his videos all day
The Hawaiian Silver Sword is a fantastically cool plant, it's one of those things that you would expect to see in a sci-fi movie about different planets. They look like big sea anemone when they are little and then turn into towers of flowers 8'+ tall... Just amazing plants. Look 'em up if you are interested, you won't be disappointed.
That lizard was totally getting a hickey from that tick on it's neck.
I kinda recently subed this channel but I love it already. I am myself an amateur botanist and this is entertaining me alot. I am from Sweden so probably miss out alot of the fun stuff this man saying but waht I can translate and decipher gives me so much. Wish I had his talent of flowing speech and talk and I would like to do something similar from my country. Take care out there and you should all try go out and discover what you can find in neighbourhood and outdoors sometimes. Peace!
"hopefully he'll flip his truck and die" i fucking lost it
The video where you're talking to a plant growing on a barren cliff-side, asking it how the hell it lives there was something I felt I could really relate to. So it's not so much your accent as your passion that I think is cool.
The amount of knowledge this guy knows is incredible.
I have been trying to learn to i.d. plants for years and can't get any smarter on it.. congrats sir for learning so much about plants.
Those alligator lizards do seem a bit bolder than say a fence lizards. I can pretty much walk right up to some of them in my yard and they'll just look at me like I'm bothering them. I wish there were more of them here in Southern California. I don't see them that often.
Just loving your channel! Learning so much about plants and the earth in general. Also, a good belly laugh, from time to time, is so good for the soul! Thanks man. 😉
"Regular ass soil"is,in fact,a scientific term
I dunno if anybody else has said it, because I'm not scrolling through all the comments. But those two crab spiders were arguing over territory. Spiders raise their front legs as a sort of pre-fight posturing, like a frat boy when he yells 'come at me bro'. The spider on the right is also raising up to make herself look larger. Oh, and they're both ladies.
Thanks for the great plant tour and info!
😂 the Sly bastard spider and the garage story
Two of your videos ("Lophophora williamsii (Peyote) in Mexico and redundant facts" & "Public Service Announcement from Jake Wozcak and Crotalus Oreganus" ) got posted on Reddit recently.
You're my new favorite channel, and I'm stunned at how often you post new videos.
6:14 . I spit coffee laughing. :>
I found his coyote video on reddit. Can't leave.
This reminds me of my father dropping knowledge on hikes back in the day.
I can relate. " Hey that's fuckin poison ivy don't touch it". Of course I touched it, broke out later.. Dad busted my balls later I bet you don't do that again he says I told you not to touch it lol...
I understand every word you say.
Crab spiders, usually they go on the same coloured flowers. Get them here in the UK. Bigger in California.
I love plants and your discussion but I especially love when you talk to/about the animal kingdom alongside them.
9:28 "you got that lower lip, that labellum...that's the safe-word you use in the orchid dungeon" lol!
Back in the late 70's - early 80's you could find Alligator Lizards in the suburbs of L.A.
They have a skeptical look because they can't walk and breathe at the same time
there everywhere in Huntington beach
What kinda camera does this guy have?? That segment about the mountain looked amazing
Moe pretty sure it’s his phone. What brand, dunno.
This channel makes me happy. On the subject of the yew, if it is like taxus baccata, the aril is the only bit that isn't toxic. All parts of the tree are loaded with taxine including the seeds and roots+ all except the scary red "berry"...
That Lilium Pardalinum looks like what we call Tiger Lily in CT
Arnica yes, is traditionally used here in the UK, especially in the game of Cricket, well that's how I know its use.
Great educational channel.
This guy is gold.. I’m actually learning shit
that garage analogy followed by "its not really like that at all...", gods bless you
Awesome walk through the woods.TY. The spiders looks like female Misumena vatia, and it has a bee fly (Bombyliidae)? The males are dark and half the size. Oospores, look up how to pronounce it, and apply it to zoospores if you didn't know.
educationally entertaining. Botanical praxis against stupidity. I love it.
Quantity and Quality. Amazing.
Pure quality if you ask me, he just has so much of it.
@@butcheryandbroth You are right. Much better than i put it.
Yew arils are sweet and edibile. But the seeds they contain are deadly poisonous. Actually, any part of the yew *except* the aril is deadly poisonous.
It's snotty and vaguely sweet. Also sometimes the poison gets into the aril by mutation or whatnot. One bush always has dead birds around here. Would not eat from dat one.
Is that the Brewer, assistant to Whitney, in "Up and down California. The geological survey of 1864"? I think so. Great book!
“It’s the safe word you use in the orchid dungeon”
*wheeze*
5:30-I don’t think this is Himalayan Blackberry (which I don’t know anything about). This is Aralia Californica, a native, common name Spikenard (or Elk Clover, although it is not a clover at all). It can be used like the Rocky Mountain species, Aralia Racemosa, which is a moderately useful herbal medicine. The native Americans of the Mountain West would use this for “winter chest.” Our family keeps some of the root and some honey extract. We’ve taken both species for personal use. Racemosa might be better medicine. The Rocky Mountain variant is harder to find and pretty much only inhabits stream bottoms from 5000 to 8000 feet.
Aralia californica is from a completely unrelated family and doesn't have thorns on the stem. This is Himalayan blackberry, from the rose family. Aralia is in Araliaceae. It produces flowers in an umbel that look uniquely different.
That's the nicest most colorful Alligator lizard I've ever seen.
My cats are mostly indoors, but when they do go outside they are supervised. Though, it's mostly because of the stray cats that are in the green belt behind the house.
You never fail to deliver quality content.Your channel is my favorite.Great job and thank you for blessing us with your knowledge
Fantastic presentation!
YES i enjoyed this video and YES my girlfriend and I are going to look into joining a botanical garden, now. We live near Chapel Hill NC so there is something called Duke Gardens in our area. Thank you Joey.
13:00 - that's actually a Shasta Alligator Lizard!
"Hopefully he'll flip his truck and die." That's the kinda stuff I think about people sometimes. I love the trees though. Thanks for the videos.
We call one of the genus Leylandii (spelling) everyone hates it because it grows so fast, but it makes nice thick hedge if you maintain it. I read that vikings used it as evergreen hedge to protect their animals against freezing wind.
When I moved out here the alligator lizards were so prevalent now they are scarce and hard to come across in my area
Seriously dude, I love you. In a strictly platonic manner.. =) ... you fucking rock sir!
Someone always falls for the idiot wanting to plant trees in a hole on a sidewalk. Apparently they rarely walk them. They're baked and scorched and rarely trimmed or otherwise protected.
Regular ass soil, such as this
Your burrito is in the mail.
I just found your channel, and I'm thoroughly enraptured with your depth and breadth of knowledge on kingdom plantae. Thank you for sharing, and keep making videos. I'll keep watching.
PS: any chance you'll come down to Florida and do a few bits of commentary on our wetlands? I'm sure we can get you an honorary Florida Man certification.
we need these types in the botanist world
grand dini
We need these types in the world, period.
Yep I'm learning, the fact that you sound exactly like artie Lang with the colorful language of AvE is just a bonus.
crass unchecked intellect,,,,my kind of man,,,,,👍
Please come to Louisiana and let me listen to you talk about our flora and fauna!
I got some of them crab spiders on my mum's pineapple sage, real ninjas. I spent an afternoon watching one sit inside the flowers and spring death on Chlosyne nycteis one after the other.
Rubus armeniacus. It is reported that Oregon has one .... its root system covers the entire state. Took a chain saw and a year to chop enough out to plant grass. 8’ high intertwined mess. 6’ of new growth after a rainstorm. 1”+ stalks. When the stalks die, they are like barbed iron.
Fantastic berries! The best. Hang like and quantity like grapes. Bowl full in less than 60 seconds.
I love you. Please never stop making videos.
13:40 is that a tick on the lizard?
also, much love from the bay area. i'm enjoying these videos a lot
Sure does look like it. You mean the little black bump between his ear hole and his front leg, right?
Sharp eyes ya got there! I had to rewind and take another look as I hadn't noticed it first time round.
Wow, that is.
@@ShaglusZ
What? How so?
The plant that is a parasite to fungi and has no chlorophyll,.. is that the same as "Indian pipe" or "ghost pipe" also known as the "corpse plant"? We have a lot of them here in Pa., But the ones here have a bell shaped flower that bends downward twords the ground, and when picked looks like an old time pipe.
Monardela is the name for the Indian Pipes. Just found some rubrum (red) in N. Georgia this week.
Monotropa, pardon me, I've been out of the botony biz a while & I have CRS, cant remember shit!
The crazy shit that comes out of your mouth followed by perfect pronunciation of plant names and the state of said plants with occasional up close shots of animals is the shit
To answer your question for the viewers:
I learned that plants are sketchy as hell. They are always trying to pull a fast one on the insects and animals.
The cancer drug made from Pacific Yew is called Taxol, by the way. A professor at Florida State University figured out how to synthesize the drug artificially. I'm from Tallahassee, it's kinda local lore around the academic circles there
Mono trips uniflora, is also mychohetrotrophic. Ur so brilliant when it comes to Brittany. Monotropa uniflora, also known as ghost plant (or ghost pipe), Indian pipe or corpse plant, is an herbaceous perennial plant native to temperate regions of Udmurtiya in European Russia, Asia, North America and northern South America, but with large gaps between areas.[1][2] It was formerly classified in the family Monotropaceae, but is now included within the Ericaceae. It is of ephemeraloccurrence, depending on the right conditions (moisture after a dry period) to appear full grown within a couple of days.
Found a nice patch in N. Georgia USA last week. Exactly the weather circumstances you mentioned. These were red & quite beautiful!
I need friends like you in my life
A wonderful fuckin' plant.
Do you provide backyard consultations? I don't own land yet, but when I do, I'd like to have someone's number in my back pocket for some good advice for native species and fire suppression.
For awhile you would see the many dead oaks and tan oaks all over Niles Canyons lush growth..well,above where the hobos tromp everything down. I think it's slowed down. Nature can be resilient. If you want to take the chance... I don't, if you catch my drift..
That camera focus on the phyllaries was fuckin fantastic
Alligator lizards are some tough bastards, they will bite and they will not let go. He's probably just asking you to touch him so he can give you what for lol
Your channel keeps growing im so excited for you!!!
I'm pretty sure I found a skink on a log outside of SIU carbondale, south IL. It darted away unbelievably fast.
Oocysts!! what a great word!
the reason the lizard was stading still is for defence, they dont move and use their camoflauge
I love your videos, they're really valuable and interesting to me as someone who works in and studies environmental science
I can not like this video enough. Thank you.
"Fuckin mouth breather." HAHAHAHAHAHAHA
funny enough, the "silly accent" makes it actually easier to remember and digest all this info, so hell yeah
“Regular assed soil”..💕😊
The land of ooo .... spores 😆. Don't know why the outro to Adventure Time suddenly played in my head. 🦋🌼🐝
@17:00 , Chamerion angustifolium is native even here, as far east as S-Central NY. :0 :)
You should do guided tours.