TH-cam should have an academe awards thing each year, to recognize the best efforts of amateur cinematographers in different categories. Best sound is at the top of my list.
I am a long retired geologist living in Australia, originally from Sweden. I am enjoying your description of the terrain and geology , mineralogy of different rocks you find !!
Hold on, just wait a minute right here!!... So, you guys, ★BOTH★ just actually admitted to being LEGITIMATE, PROFESSIONAL-GEOLOGISTS?!?!?... Now, in my personal opinion, the fact that both of you gentlemen are now retired from the trade does not matter very much here, considering that in your chosen proffesions not much (if anything at all for that matter!) has probably changed at all, as far as the (let the Geolgy puns BEGIN! 😂) "CONCRETE" FACTS within the basic Science of Geology, such as specific terminology, Geographical/Geological locations/settings where certain elements,minerals,rocks,etc. could & should be found, or located, I.E: Almost as if those types of things were dare I say: "WRITTEN IN STONE" essentially!! And the fact that you are both retired also means that you have had ENTIRE EXPANSIVE CAREERS WITHIN THE FIELD, which ultimately makes you both more like authorities on the subject matter. As in IF THERE WERE ANYONE IN THE WHOLE WORLD THAT COULD POSSIBLY GIVE SOME DEFINITIVE, EDUCATED, UN-BIASED, AND MOST IMPORTANTLY, CORRECT ANSWERS TO THE SERIES OF RATHER TECHNICAL QUESTIONS THAT "MBMMLLC" ASKED THROUGHOUT THE ENTIRE VIDEO, IN HOPES TO RECEIVE FEEDBACK FROM SOME ACTUAL PROFESIONALS LIKE YOURSELVES, AND YET, YOU BOTH FAILED TO PROVIDE ANY KIND OF ANSWERS OR SHARE ANY TYPE OF KNOWLEDGE IN REGARDS TO ANY OF "MBMMLLC's" SPECIFIC QUESTIONS WHATSOEVER?!?!... 🙋🏼♂️💁🏼♂️🙆🏼♂️🤷🏼♂️🙇🏼♂️🙍🏼♂️🙎🏼♂️.... You didn't have anything negative to say either however, and you both did, in fact, compliment his video, but regardless I think at least a few answers to some of his questions would be far more helpful, they would also be helpful to people like myself, that know ABSOLUTELY ZERO about Geology, at all, and would ABSOLUTELY LOVE TO HEAR (Well, in this particular instance technically, it would be reading! 😅) WHAT ALL OF THESE ABSOLUTELY BREATHTAKINGLY, BEAUTIFUL, AND PRISTINE LOOKING EXAMPLES OF THE MOST UNIQUE GEOLOGICAL-FINDS, OR ROCKS/MINERALS, OR WHATEVER THESE ACTUALLY MAY BE, ARE ACTUALLY CALLED/NAMED, WHAT THEY ARE COMPOSED OR MADE-UP OF, AND THE ALSO MAYBE THE RARITY OF SUCH FINDINGS WITHIN THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST, OR MORE SPECIFICALLY WITHIN THE CASCADES MOUNTAIN RANGE!!! As all of the information shown here on this video has me SUPER-INTIGUED, & WANTING TO LEARN/KNOW MORE about those specifics, as I just so happen to be a 4th Generation resident of Clackamas County, OR, more specifically, in Oregon City, AKA "The End of the Oregon Trail", which is less than an hours drive away from Mt. Hood!!! This area that he is exploring in looks extremely similar to what I would find around me after just a short drive after all!!!
@@tgabe6163 The greenish-blue gold-bearing mineral appears to be Mariposite, named after the County of Mariposa, California. This was one of the associated rock types that contributed to successful hard-rock gold mining in the early days after the so-called gold rush. Not all Mariposite contains gold, however. Many lapidary artists use the rock for making attractive jewelry pieces for both men and women.
Hey Jason amazing video. I'm a Physical Therapist down in Sonoma Co. CA and a beginner rockhound. I suspect your popping knee issue could be something called your iliotibial band - the terrain you're on in this video puts a huge amount of load through it. There are a lot of biomechanical factors that can contribute to issues of that sort, and I think you could probably benefit from getting it properly diagnosed and treated. Killer video!
Never once ever have I ever been so very intrigued by a solitary hike up a mountain. The natural beauty, the exposed track of the glacier and traces leading up to the outcrop above the clouds and the foot of the glacier itself, make for so much interest that the prospect of gold ‘almost’ fades from consideration. Glad you made it back safely with so much weight and distraction. Safety first!
Jason , you are one of the men that traveled the world, hopped in a ship after you built it by hand and then started one of the trading empires because why not? Then you built the railways after assaying the lands yourself. Lol, that's your spirit brother! Gorgeous specimens today and gorgeous scenery of our Great PNW wilderness. Thank you brother
For testing to see if it is Jade or Serpentine, you can use a Mohs Hardness test kit. You scratch the stone with something just under the hardness of Jade (about 6.5-7 on the Mohs Scale) and if it doesn't scratch you have Jade. Great stuff Jason it is always fun and educational watching your videos.
Color, hardness, smoothness, spec gravity. Also UV test. That 80 lb piece of jade is worth a crapton if no real inclusions inside. Check prices on Chinese and Asian markets. You'll know for sure if next time you get there, the area is flooded with Chinese and your find is gone.
Jason, A wonderful rockhound prospecting video! I am glad that you made it off the mountain unhurt. I will return to it often to see the sights and the rock specimens observed. Thank you for recording what you saw to share with others across the World. Very kind of you. Your most valuable integrity is always on display, and so much appreciated here. : )
Poppin joints is from little air bubbles forming and popping again inside the knee. Can be from dehydration or pressure changes. You likely had both going on. Jade will not scratch while pretty much everything else will scratch. Translucent to light and passes the scratch test, and you got Jade. THAT is BEAUTIFUL!
As Dan always says, “ I hope I’ve earned your subscription today “, well, you most certainly have earned mine today! Beautifully cinematic filming of the Cascades, Jason. So happy you were safe on the ascent and descent of these gorgeous mountains. ❤ ( a geologist would love to view your video about this region ). ☺️ Gorgeous rock samples ( that you risked your life for ), by the way. BLUE-TIGER STRIPE, so PRETTY and the jade is unbelievable!
He earned mine. Wow lispintine or listinitght? You're making me want to build stuff with it. Awsome work man I bet that hike took it out of you. I'd love to know where in the cascades this is. I live in the PNW as well.
Reminds me of Ellensberg Blue" agate or Mt."Bakers blue" agate, both only found in the Cascades. It's therorized that high concentrations of Oxygen present in the ancient hot mineral water that infused the host rock then cooled and solidified into the blue colored crystals that you see today. Idk sounds good anyways
@@guerillanewsfare267I am wondering the same thing too!!! I live in Clackamas County, OR myself, fairly close to Mt. Hood. I have a sneaking suspicion this was filmed somewhere in the more Northern Cascades in Washington somewhere, like maybe around Mt. Baker, or Mt. Adams areas, but he seems to smart to be an Oregonian like myself!! Bwahahahahaha!!! After-all, there are not very many good things about Oregons Public Education system, I can vouch for that as being a product (or victim!?) of it myself!!! 😂
Another great presentation of geology and the beauty of the mountains. I highly recommend getting a pair of trecking poles. They make a huge difference adding stability in the mountains
I’d say there’s some serious value in just the jade carving market if you could get big boulders and slabs off that mountain. The minerals would be a bonus.
Amazing video and geology. I'd suggest eventually taking a sensitive metal detector like a gold bug 2 up there, of course packed away until you're amidst all the green stuff. Often the more coarse the gold, the smaller the veins and more calm 'backwaters' of the perculating ore rich fluids. Larger seams often have lots of mixing and a turbulent environment which often doesn't allow for more extended cooling to form larger concentrations (such as gold crystals), but perhaps you knew all that. -With some more alteration (metamorphism), you could have had some nephrite jade up there too...Oh, I spoke too soon, there's the jade, 26 min in. The jade can be worth a lot to Chinese buyers (big bucks on the level of gold.) Need to tap off a piece (easier said than done), slab it and look at the color and cracks...I always use elastic compression bands around the knees for off trail hiking, it saves them big time. Sorry for such a ridiculously long message...Of course, say hello to the NW sasquatches :) Just subbed to the channel.
I love the wilderness shots. I miss being in a remote location. I almost want to see you organize a fan trip to the site to go through the tailings. I also appreciate your use of inserts when talking to us, while continuing to display your surroundings in the middle.
Hi Jason, You might try contacting one of the big universities geology departments. See if they can recommend a mineralogist in your area to help ID some of your goodies. Your green rock is a beautiful piece of good quality nephrite jade! Great video - your diamond saws are doing a wonderful job!! Thumbs up! Stay safe. Jim
Cut a slab and donate for educational use, they will love you. Future requests for assistance to identify, will go easily, you have already broken the ice. Some government agency people can be of use, simply enquire who to connect to.
@@williambenedetto7900 Jade PURITY and color is what determines price. (just like with most other precious and semi-precious stones/minerals) For example, if you have a dark green jade with lots of inclusions and motley swirls , it will not bring nearly the price that a perfect apple green with minimal inclusions chunk would do. Also consider that, contrary to what you might think, different parts of the world and market prefer DIFFERENT colors, i thought that bright green is the MOST desirable, but have come to find out that in China the traditional preference is for white or pale jade, or even lavender jade with green jade being secondary.
I enjoyed the replay almost as much the second time, thanks Jason. The outcome was cool too. ⛏⚒⛏ If you think it is bad pushing 40 yrs old, .... wait, I'm pushing 70, If I had a dime for all my creeks and cracks! ..... Thanks' for taking me along a second time on this adventure. I miss those kinds of adventures myself, .... The mind says yes you can, but the body says you better not! .....Do it all while you can, time and age are a roadblock.🍻Cheers Jason.
@@OGRocker1 I was thinking about using my vast influence on younger harder assistants to do the heavy lifting I’ve carried my grandchildren out of canyons enough times to call in a few chips I’m sure Jason will bring it out 😂
@@boriscook6817 one of the curses of not being blessed with children, no Grandkids to cash in chips with... lol. But when you finish ......can I borrow them, lmao! Take care and stay Safe.
That big boulder you found that is a dark green in color is most certainly Serpentine and although it isn't Jade itself, Serpentine is certainly still valuable and is considered part of the Noble and precious minerals that are part of the jewelry and ornamental industries. So if you were to return to that location and bring down that huge rock and slab it up, I'm almost certain you could sell it and the amount of money you get will be dependent upon the purity of that rock and if there are any inclusions in it.
I dont think its jade or serpentine, listwanite is the type of rock being searched for in this video wich is ultra-mafic. Im thinking anything super dark green is amphibolite and meta-peridotite with epidote alterations.
It's "safety 2nd" Risk taking is good. Doing dangerous things carefully is an important lesson to learn than always being safe. Safety shouldn't always be the determining factor in determining participation.
@@jimwednt1229 Prospecting gets a little hard if a flying rock chip takes your eye out or a falling rock cracks your skull. Mining, prospecting and rock handling is so dangerous that safety is very important.
That stuff really looks like a close cousin to the ocean picture stone. I'd bet it would have the same appearance if cut just right. That blue is just magnificent.
For me, this is your best video. A hike like this would be the trip of my life. I don't have the means to do this. I can not afford to break away from my life. Anybody in their 20s & 30s right now, hear my words. Take such trips now. I'm older & jammed up in life. I don't desire to loose my life here, just trying to better it. So, I can't afford a single vacation. I've loved geology of precious materials from gaming with characters as gatherers, hunters, & harvesters. To challenge my GMs I've educated myself on gemstones at their sorce & precious metals too. I'm no match for a bear without the correct gun. I'm glad none where along your route. You don't seem much interested in sooting a bear. What prospector ever is. But all that hiking puts humans at a disadvantage, as the bear is not tired, unless sleeping. This brown mineral with bright green is so intreguing ( spell check ) And thanks so much for passing on these clues. Such knowledge for me is very helpful in grasping all this. Why bother when I don't prospect? Well, because my mind won't let it go. My curiousity here is absolutely peaked. Glaciers however, are supposed too be super unstable to traverse. I would never do that. But know thy self. You sir are very healthy at your age & confident in your abilities in the wilds. Not just anybody can hump 80 to 100 pounds of stone out on their back. This takes experience. In my 20s I packed 80lbs. With my back now, I doubt I could stably succeed in such a venture.
Thank you for sharing your expertise on rocks and minerals! Sending warm regards from Canada. I truly appreciate your insights on mineral exploration and extraction. Wishing your knee a speedy recovery. P.S. Apologies for the exchange rate, otherwise this would've been more. Cheers
Fantastic video. I studied geology and this took me back. I love it. So good. I walked through the outback of Australia looking at outcrops as an undergraduate. So different but still so interesting. I never went on with geology but i still have an interest in it.
If I recall my terminology, "Imperial Jade" is Jadeite. I don't believe there is much of it in North America. However, the Cascade Range and other areas in the US have massive quantities of very high quality Nephrite. It is good enough that Chinese wholesale buyers will fly over and even charter helicopters to get to some of the mine sites.
Hey Jason, I was a foreman for a core cutting shack in british columbia. Don't be so quick to think that a diamond blade won't cut you. I had one of my best cutters almost lost his finger this year. The blades will jump from time to time and in his situation his saw grabbed the core, jumped, and his finger went under the blade. Trust me you don't want to have that happen.
@Domarnett is correct. One type of hardness test is scrapping a knife across your polished side of the sample and see if it scratches. If it does, it's probably serpentine or chrysolite instead.
Jason, we discovered a few spots here in British Columbia but one that helped the most is a mid-level drone. A decent choice at this point is a DJI Mini 2 SE, I think Costco still has them with an extra battery for like $350, 30min flight per battery. It can help with surveying ahead.
Hi Jason, Not sure if anybody answered your question about the knee popping. If not I wanted to let you know it’s a bone spur. The knee tendon catches on the spur and causes the pop. Nothing serious but you should have it resolved since it will only get worse.
Jason really enjoyed this whole adventure of yours and so thanks for letting us tag-a-long. Oh, and the popping.. Could be a few things, but I would bet money that it is your Meniscus, which is a C-shaped piece of cartilage that acts as a cushion between the shinbone (tibia) and thighbone (femur). I know the popping and the tear eventually gets worse. Any Sports Medicine Doctor can share the pros/cons with you. Mine ended up getting tucked underneath creating so much pain that I couldn't put any weight on it at all. Fortunately, the surgery is an in and out one hour thingy and you can walk almost within hours with no more pain.
Your "tiger stripe" looks a lot like the Pinolite that Dan's been talking about lately. Instead of white and black, you got orange and blue.... but the crystal structure really looks similar. I love the blues you have.
The knee thing is likely your IT band. Be sure to roll it out and stretch it. Roll the outside and inside of your leg to help. The cold also likely did not help. Had the same issue on long long distance runs and when hiking in Maine.
That is definately Jade and a beautiful sample. The way you tell is exactly the way you did it by shining the light into it. That one rock you found could be worth thousands to a Chinese buyer
Just because geologists love to be pedantic: to clarify for your viewers, the ice of a glacier drags other rocks and sediment with it, which is what scrapes the rocks beneath. The ice isn't strong enough to gouge rock on it's own.
Living vicariously thu you lol... keep the videos coming love them. I also torn my meniscus wondering around prospecting high above Baker lake. That ended my prospecting career. Now just watching your videos thank you.
Jason, Ordered some of your mine material…. Will be making a video on what I find…. I only have the capability to extract free gold…. Fingers Crossed…. Chris ECP
Great video! A lot of fun to watch - wish I could do that too. Maybe you should carry some Paracord so you can tie it around your pack and lower the pack down independently off of those steep inclines.
The first part of the vid, watching you going up and down that incline reminds me of the Reconnaissance training I did in the Bavarian Alps. I feel the pain.
Great job! Thanks for sharing the beauty along the way! Man that is beautiful stuff! I really want a piece of that jade rock. That is sweet! Thank you for taking me along!!
Love this adventure Jason! So awesome, really fun to watch. Thanks for bringing us along with you! +1 for more of these types of geology / exploration / off-trail adventure hikes. I would gladly watch hours of you doing this, so cool.
Note time 1:49. The bent cedar trees indicate that there is a slow slip landslide occurring at this location. Whenever you note trees with this curvature at the base, It indicates that the land has moved from its original location where the tree started to grow.
Snow typically bends mountain hemlock tops into a candy cane shape, not the trunks. likewise snow-bent trees trees would typically bend downslope, not up slope.
The whole region is covered in a variety of landides, the roads have to frequently be re-engineered. This is not far from a massive landslide that killed many people in a rural housing development. Rainforest conditions above riding on slimy layers of volcanic ash sediment below.
@smilingcloud8 yeah it's nearly criminal negligence because even the most basic visual soil-core samples (seismic, stability, etc.) would have revealed clearly dangerous ash strata from the last time
Jade has a hardness of 6.5 - 7 on the Moh scale. Also when you cut it if the dust turns white that is an indicator. From looking at what you found, that 100 pound boulder is worth a couple grand...good find.
Oh Jason! Gorgeous specimens after you slabbed them! And, I wonder if this is similar to Dan's Ocean Picture Stone? Don't know much about specifics on figuring out what is what, all melded together. The last question you had was the huge blackish-green rock. From Dan's GLOTDs, my money is on some expensive jade. Your light penetrated all the way through except for a small area in the middle. If you tap it, it should ping instead of a rock sound. Weight is also a clue. I would look at other sites selling jade, before you give away such a highly prized specimen. As always, thank you for sharing this with us! I'm happy about how everything turned out! Blessings from Alabama ❤️
Definitely check for value before giving it away for a buck. If you find more up there if you go back. Consider a claim for the Jade. Possibility is more valuable than gold.
I wish I could afford to get one of the small ones on eBay but 25 starting bid and 20 shipping is out of my range. And I totally get the price given all the work you put in. I hope in the future you find an easier/economical way to bring some of this down the mountain and to market.
10:38 - "I'm Jason from Mount Baker Metals and we're prospecting for gold in the Emyn Muil. Normally this is an impassable labyrinth of razor-sharp rock that keeps people out of Mordor but I've got some Elven rope and a bag of Lembas and we're gonna see what we can find. Hey, it's one of those giant flying lizards again? I wonder what they're always looking for."
Jason, you do so many great adventures, I'm so glad you video so much & post it so we can see it all, I'm 58 going into a hip replacement next week, through your videos with all you share with us , ... not only do I get to feel like I'm not missing out so much 😊 I feel like I'm right there with you.!! Lol 😅 I Love your gold mine rehabilitation you doing , Keep up the great videos !! R/Steve GhostofACDC
When your knee starts poppin , give your foot and boot several loose forward kicks occasionally as though you're trying to free up your knee and that whole leg . And change your style of walking at that time in subtle ways...foot angle ,pressure,etc .A good 5 ft walking staff will help you up hill and down or crossing creeks ,and scaring bears. Here in the Lower Mainland of BC, Mt Baker is beautiful reference sight heading east out of Vancouver .
Wow, what an adventure. I would have gone with you 50 years ago. You should take someone with you on a trip like this. Educational and fun, but sooo. much work.
Specific gravity of the possible jade might be the most helpful metric. Easy to measure with your cutoff and it should come in at about 3.0 (check me on that). Impurities/inclusions introduce some variability. If you’re going to chase jade in WA, you should pick up Lanny Ream’s “Nephrite Jade of Washington.”
Brilliant prospecting Jason, with all my favourite stuff combined, hike and climb and mountains and rivers and lots of rock and best of geology. Nice!!
I was really impressed with the skewed trees in that grove. You think there was a landslide or avalanche that pushed them over, or maybe a really heavy snow that pressed them down at some point?
Commonly called "pistol butt" in areas of heavy winter snow. The weight of the snow slowly pushing downhill due to gravity and the tree trunk curves to compensate and try to grow vertically. You can see it all over Western Washington in the higher altitudes with heavy winter snow.
About your knee popping... If its like mine... I scramble a lot and when I do alot of terrain, my knees will get painful and if too much will pop a bit. I can still go just slower. My old chiropractor who was avid in mountain hiking told me that going uphill really works a particular group of muscles, tending to fatique alot, then going downhill the other set of muscles that wasnt used as much going up, pulls your leg and knee out of alignment, hence the popping. He said to alleviate this, was to work out that other group on the way up, so when coming downhill the both muscle groups pull evenly, keeping better alignment. Sitting down and doing leg extensions or leg lifts, bringing your foot upwards to knee height...ish, while having a break is supposed to be a good way to alleviate it.
Thank You for the walk and SO MUCH for Teaching! Find yourself a good, live hard wood branch, and cut it to just above your shoulder. Trim the bottom to a 1"-1-1/2" flattened point. It makes going up hill, down hill, and crossing water much easier and more safe with your 3rd point and will save your knees. Mine are better because of a stick. 🙏🚂🎼🌹🎵🎶🛠 ~C< 3)>>-Z->}
It's black jade I think and from what I can tell the piece is extremely clear. A lot of it has veins running. Yours is probably worth a lot more because it's so clear. Good luck!
Awesome stuff. I've fallen in love with your channel after coming here from Dan's though some of your co-ops. Never less than thrilled to see your results.
Something that would have been under ice a hundred years ago seems like the best chance of anyone to beat out the hordes of old prospectors. Neat site!
That sample at 0:40 looked like it had some silver crystals. At age 43, I had my first knee surgery, for a Meniscus tear. A tear on left or right side of knee causes popping as it (sometimes a small tear) gets between the joint then pops out. That was my left knee. Then the right knee at age 48. I'm 66 now and doing well except for intermittent authritis. To diagnose it, it requires a doctors referrel for an MRI scan. Then microsurgery for the repair. That blue mineral reminds me of Dan's Blue Ocean stone.
Definitely looks like a really nice high quality thumping sample of Nephrite Jade - I'd like to see you carrying that beast out but be careful of your knee issues if you do!!! If it was me I'd bury it in a spot that you can get back to it at a later time??? What a magnificent beautiful area to stroll through and what fabulous geology to boot - wish we had similar fresh mountains and valleys in Ozz!!! [[PS: just today (6th Jan, 2024) sent you an email regarding my XRF etc]] Cheers, Ian
JASON. ABOUT YOUR KNEES. When you’re climbing around and up and down, you’re relieving pressure from the joint. Then you put pressure back on it again. You’re actually pulling air into the joint. When you put pressure on it In just the right position, the air moves within the joint. Kind of feels weird almost like a tickle. Take glucosamine and vitamin E. Like your channel a lot! TC
Construction worker since 1987 I'm surprised hasn't happened earlier to ya. The snaps will hurt later on I'm 54. Ya start feeling them at 50. Old age my man.
Maybe you should get a pair of trecking sticks. That would take some stress away from your knees. And it helps to walk much more stable, especially on difficult ground whilst going down hill. I found that extremely helpful at times, especially with heavy luggage in the mountains.
I'm not a prospector, but I've had a bad back for decades. My way of handling the descent would be make a folding piece of plastic that acts as a pack frame, then I would carry some lightweight line and pulley to use that the plastic as a sled to lower it down grades. That, or I would just throw my whole backpack down the hill haha.
Jason if you want some help helicoptering a few tons of that stuff next year let me know! All I ask for payment wise is a couple pieces of that gorgeous ore, your knowledge, and being in that valley. I could feel my soul healing through the computer screen, dang it's pretty up there.
Absolutely stunning rocks from an even more stunning location! Determining mineralogy from footage is quite hard. But one thing is for sure, you cannot determine a metal from the mineral colour! The blue/green/... doesn't tell you anything about chrome/nickel/... . There are thousands of minerals with various colours. Eg copper minerals can be green (malachite, blue (azurite), yellow (chalcopyrite), grey (chalcocite), or even multicoloured (bornite). And there are obviously plenty of other green, blue, yellow and grey minerals. Especially in those metamorphic ultramafics you can get quite special mineralogy. The blue stuff might be blue lawsonite, but I'm definitely not sure.
Awesome stuff! I cracked up laughing when I saw your pack all ripped up. My day hike pack has reached the point where I have different rips that I can access by reaching over my shoulder and dropping rocks in without having to take off my pack. Everyone tells me I need a new one but dang, it works slick! 🤣
Your “Jade” slice has the right translucent green. Check and see if you can cut glass with it. If you can then it may be jade. Glass can not cut jade. Also jade is super hard which you noticed as it was real hard to break off a piece in the field. Hope you kept gps coordinates for it. Love ❤ your videos.
The indicator I first look for in Jade, is fibers. Get a light behind it, get a high mag loop on it, and see if you see fibers in the matrix. the next thing I would check is it's hardness. Jadeite shoud be 6.5 - 7 and Nephrite should be 6 - 6.5 on the Mohs scale respectively. Lastly, just to do your due diligence you could check specific gravity.
That snapping thing in your knee is probly Creptius or Runner's knee, best to go to the doctor and have them do an x-ray and identify the problem. In my case i hadd same thing with popping/cracking sounds on my left knee aswell, it got worse overtime and it got really swollen around the kneecap, i went to the hospital and took an x-ray and the doctor told me i needed an Knee replacement surgery to replace parts of the injured or worn-out knee joints. He got really angry at me and asked what i have done, probly becus i was only 21. I do not do sports or enything like that, but i worked alot on my knees "screwed cars on cement floor", so it might have something todo with that. I guess if i hadd used Knee protection it could have helped, but my father grandfather and great grandfather all hadd similar knee problems including cousins, so im guessing in my case its an genetic related problem. Im 34 now and still using my old kneecap, shoots pain to my brain if i try to bend the left leg, but otherwise it's ok, still removes alot of things what i can do sadly, can't afford an knee replacement so that's why.
Hey, Jason! You're like me (or vice versa) a prospector who likes to get out and get out hands dirty. I am retired now but worked for a Canadian mining exploration company as a consultant. I enjoy your channel because it reminds me of the good old days. Keep it up!
Next time you go, bring a Metal Detector and run it over your Targets. I've had hits on similar looking stuff in Vermont. What I was finding had Brown on the outside and Serpentine Green on the inside. Only down side about the stuff I found is that it is super tough to break up. Slabbing it is probably the way to go.
Having just been the recipient of dual knee replacements I can tell you with a degree of authority that knee popping is your body’s way of telling you your packing too many rocks in that ruck. Go see an orthopedic if you can and discount a torn meniscus or a ligament issue starting. My knees fell victim to 52 years of dirt bike riding and racing, I’m 64 now and the new knees are in a word, AWESOME!
Jason there are plenty of gold prospecting channels but you've really excelled in terms of creating original, educational content. Well done mate
TH-cam should have an academe awards thing each year, to recognize the best efforts of amateur cinematographers in different categories. Best sound is at the top of my list.
This channel is easily in the top 10!
I agree, he has changed the way I have been watching channels. He has me hooked.
God bless you. That's a rough trek.
He is awesome, like his Videos.
Greetings from Germany
I am a long retired geologist living in Australia, originally from Sweden.
I am enjoying your description of the terrain and geology , mineralogy of different rocks you find !!
I am also a retired geologist. This video reminded me of many of my life's experiences. I was mesmerized through the entire video.
Hold on, just wait a minute right here!!... So, you guys, ★BOTH★ just actually admitted to being LEGITIMATE, PROFESSIONAL-GEOLOGISTS?!?!?... Now, in my personal opinion, the fact that both of you gentlemen are now retired from the trade does not matter very much here, considering that in your chosen proffesions not much (if anything at all for that matter!) has probably changed at all, as far as the (let the Geolgy puns BEGIN! 😂) "CONCRETE" FACTS within the basic Science of Geology, such as specific terminology, Geographical/Geological locations/settings where certain elements,minerals,rocks,etc. could & should be found, or located, I.E: Almost as if those types of things were dare I say: "WRITTEN IN STONE" essentially!! And the fact that you are both retired also means that you have had ENTIRE EXPANSIVE CAREERS WITHIN THE FIELD, which ultimately makes you both more like authorities on the subject matter. As in IF THERE WERE ANYONE IN THE WHOLE WORLD THAT COULD POSSIBLY GIVE SOME DEFINITIVE, EDUCATED, UN-BIASED, AND MOST IMPORTANTLY, CORRECT ANSWERS TO THE SERIES OF RATHER TECHNICAL QUESTIONS THAT "MBMMLLC" ASKED THROUGHOUT THE ENTIRE VIDEO, IN HOPES TO RECEIVE FEEDBACK FROM SOME ACTUAL PROFESIONALS LIKE YOURSELVES, AND YET, YOU BOTH FAILED TO PROVIDE ANY KIND OF ANSWERS OR SHARE ANY TYPE OF KNOWLEDGE IN REGARDS TO ANY OF "MBMMLLC's" SPECIFIC QUESTIONS WHATSOEVER?!?!... 🙋🏼♂️💁🏼♂️🙆🏼♂️🤷🏼♂️🙇🏼♂️🙍🏼♂️🙎🏼♂️.... You didn't have anything negative to say either however, and you both did, in fact, compliment his video, but regardless I think at least a few answers to some of his questions would be far more helpful, they would also be helpful to people like myself, that know ABSOLUTELY ZERO about Geology, at all, and would ABSOLUTELY LOVE TO HEAR (Well, in this particular instance technically, it would be reading! 😅) WHAT ALL OF THESE ABSOLUTELY BREATHTAKINGLY, BEAUTIFUL, AND PRISTINE LOOKING EXAMPLES OF THE MOST UNIQUE GEOLOGICAL-FINDS, OR ROCKS/MINERALS, OR WHATEVER THESE ACTUALLY MAY BE, ARE ACTUALLY CALLED/NAMED, WHAT THEY ARE COMPOSED OR MADE-UP OF, AND THE ALSO MAYBE THE RARITY OF SUCH FINDINGS WITHIN THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST, OR MORE SPECIFICALLY WITHIN THE CASCADES MOUNTAIN RANGE!!! As all of the information shown here on this video has me SUPER-INTIGUED, & WANTING TO LEARN/KNOW MORE about those specifics, as I just so happen to be a 4th Generation resident of Clackamas County, OR, more specifically, in Oregon City, AKA "The End of the Oregon Trail", which is less than an hours drive away from Mt. Hood!!! This area that he is exploring in looks extremely similar to what I would find around me after just a short drive after all!!!
@@tgabe6163 The greenish-blue gold-bearing mineral appears to be Mariposite, named after the County of Mariposa, California. This was one of the associated rock types that contributed to successful hard-rock gold mining in the early days after the so-called gold rush. Not all Mariposite contains gold, however. Many lapidary artists use the rock for making attractive jewelry pieces for both men and women.
There are acids and other chemicals that are used specifically to identify those minerals might make it worth your while to investigate that
@tgabe6163 Wow. You like to talk (or at least write). Maybe a bit too much.;-)
Hey Jason amazing video. I'm a Physical Therapist down in Sonoma Co. CA and a beginner rockhound. I suspect your popping knee issue could be something called your iliotibial band - the terrain you're on in this video puts a huge amount of load through it. There are a lot of biomechanical factors that can contribute to issues of that sort, and I think you could probably benefit from getting it properly diagnosed and treated. Killer video!
Those MEGACLASTS or (pods) would they happen to be on the south facing slope? I bet they are and I know why
Why is that? @@davedavis5809
Never once ever have I ever been so very intrigued by a solitary hike up a mountain. The natural beauty, the exposed track of the glacier and traces leading up to the outcrop above the clouds and the foot of the glacier itself, make for so much interest that the prospect of gold ‘almost’ fades from consideration. Glad you made it back safely with so much weight and distraction. Safety first!
Jason , you are one of the men that traveled the world, hopped in a ship after you built it by hand and then started one of the trading empires because why not? Then you built the railways after assaying the lands yourself.
Lol, that's your spirit brother!
Gorgeous specimens today and gorgeous scenery of our Great PNW wilderness.
Thank you brother
For testing to see if it is Jade or Serpentine, you can use a Mohs Hardness test kit. You scratch the stone with something just under the hardness of Jade (about 6.5-7 on the Mohs Scale) and if it doesn't scratch you have Jade. Great stuff Jason it is always fun and educational watching your videos.
Both a hardness test and specific gravity.
Color, hardness, smoothness, spec gravity. Also UV test.
That 80 lb piece of jade is worth a crapton if no real inclusions inside.
Check prices on Chinese and Asian markets.
You'll know for sure if next time you get there, the area is flooded with Chinese and your find is gone.
The boulder he took the piece from had been scratched by the glacier - is it rocks in the ice or the ice itself that marks the striations?
Jason, A wonderful rockhound prospecting video! I am glad that you made it off the mountain unhurt. I will return to it often to see the sights and the rock specimens observed. Thank you for recording what you saw to share with others across the World. Very kind of you. Your most valuable integrity is always on display, and so much appreciated here. : )
Poppin joints is from little air bubbles forming and popping again inside the knee. Can be from dehydration or pressure changes. You likely had both going on. Jade will not scratch while pretty much everything else will scratch. Translucent to light and passes the scratch test, and you got Jade. THAT is BEAUTIFUL!
I love living in the cascade mountain range. The beauty is unparalleled in my opinion. Love the video Jason!
This is the greatest show on earth!! A real treat to see this. Thank you Jason!
As Dan always says, “ I hope I’ve earned your subscription today “, well, you most certainly have earned mine today! Beautifully cinematic filming of the Cascades, Jason. So happy you were safe on the ascent and descent of these gorgeous mountains. ❤ ( a geologist would love to view your video about this region ). ☺️ Gorgeous rock samples ( that you risked your life for ), by the way. BLUE-TIGER STRIPE, so PRETTY and the jade is unbelievable!
He earned mine. Wow lispintine or listinitght? You're making me want to build stuff with it. Awsome work man I bet that hike took it out of you. I'd love to know where in the cascades this is. I live in the PNW as well.
Reminds me of Ellensberg Blue" agate or Mt."Bakers blue" agate, both only found in the Cascades. It's therorized that high concentrations of Oxygen present in the ancient hot mineral water that infused the host rock then cooled and solidified into the blue colored crystals that you see today. Idk sounds good anyways
Hello, you earned my subscription today.
@@guerillanewsfare267I am wondering the same thing too!!! I live in Clackamas County, OR myself, fairly close to Mt. Hood. I have a sneaking suspicion this was filmed somewhere in the more Northern Cascades in Washington somewhere, like maybe around Mt. Baker, or Mt. Adams areas, but he seems to smart to be an Oregonian like myself!! Bwahahahahaha!!! After-all, there are not very many good things about Oregons Public Education system, I can vouch for that as being a product (or victim!?) of it myself!!! 😂
AWESOME WORK OF ART ...That journey up the cascades mountain range was fantastic . The sheer beauty seldom seen by most of us. Thank you !
Another great presentation of geology and the beauty of the mountains.
I highly recommend getting a pair of trecking poles. They make a huge difference adding stability in the mountains
I’d say there’s some serious value in just the jade carving market if you could get big boulders and slabs off that mountain. The minerals would be a bonus.
Amazing video and geology. I'd suggest eventually taking a sensitive metal detector like a gold bug 2 up there, of course packed away until you're amidst all the green stuff. Often the more coarse the gold, the smaller the veins and more calm 'backwaters' of the perculating ore rich fluids. Larger seams often have lots of mixing and a turbulent environment which often doesn't allow for more extended cooling to form larger concentrations (such as gold crystals), but perhaps you knew all that. -With some more alteration (metamorphism), you could have had some nephrite jade up there too...Oh, I spoke too soon, there's the jade, 26 min in. The jade can be worth a lot to Chinese buyers (big bucks on the level of gold.) Need to tap off a piece (easier said than done), slab it and look at the color and cracks...I always use elastic compression bands around the knees for off trail hiking, it saves them big time. Sorry for such a ridiculously long message...Of course, say hello to the NW sasquatches :) Just subbed to the channel.
It’s worth even more when you find jade that weighs exactly 8.8888 grams/lbs or carats 😂
I love the wilderness shots. I miss being in a remote location. I almost want to see you organize a fan trip to the site to go through the tailings. I also appreciate your use of inserts when talking to us, while continuing to display your surroundings in the middle.
You could do a hardness test. Dan Hurd is more of the expert on jade so you could give him call. Awesome rocks.
Hi Jason, You might try contacting one of the big universities geology departments. See if they can recommend a mineralogist in your area to help ID some of your goodies. Your green rock is a beautiful piece of good quality nephrite jade! Great video - your diamond saws are doing a wonderful job!! Thumbs up! Stay safe. Jim
Cut a slab and donate for educational use, they will love you. Future requests for assistance to identify, will go easily, you have already broken the ice. Some government agency people can be of use, simply enquire who to connect to.
Thanks Jim!
Nephrite jade? What pray tell is the difference, VALUE?
@@williambenedetto7900 Jade PURITY and color is what determines price. (just like with most other precious and semi-precious stones/minerals)
For example, if you have a dark green jade with lots of inclusions and motley swirls , it will not bring nearly the price that a perfect apple green with minimal inclusions chunk would do.
Also consider that, contrary to what you might think, different parts of the world and market prefer DIFFERENT colors, i thought that bright green is the MOST desirable, but have come to find out that in China the traditional preference is for white or pale jade, or even lavender jade with green jade being secondary.
He who ventures deep is often rewarded
All those different patterns and hues of blue are truly amazing and very beautiful 💙
I enjoyed the replay almost as much the second time, thanks Jason. The outcome was cool too. ⛏⚒⛏ If you think it is bad pushing 40 yrs old, .... wait, I'm pushing 70, If I had a dime for all my creeks and cracks! ..... Thanks' for taking me along a second time on this adventure. I miss those kinds of adventures myself, .... The mind says yes you can, but the body says you better not! .....Do it all while you can, time and age are a roadblock.🍻Cheers Jason.
I second al the above, and I'm only pushing 60 by 3 years lol.
If I knew where that black rock was
Even at 76
I’d find a way to get it down 😅
@@boriscook6817 getting down would be the easy part, getting up, ehh, not so easy even at 40!
@@OGRocker1 I was thinking about using my vast influence on younger harder assistants to do the heavy lifting
I’ve carried my grandchildren out of canyons enough times to call in a few chips
I’m sure Jason will bring it out 😂
@@boriscook6817 one of the curses of not being blessed with children, no Grandkids to cash in chips with... lol.
But when you finish ......can I borrow them, lmao! Take care and stay Safe.
That big boulder you found that is a dark green in color is most certainly Serpentine and although it isn't Jade itself, Serpentine is certainly still valuable and is considered part of the Noble and precious minerals that are part of the jewelry and ornamental industries. So if you were to return to that location and bring down that huge rock and slab it up, I'm almost certain you could sell it and the amount of money you get will be dependent upon the purity of that rock and if there are any inclusions in it.
I would go with nephrite. I've never seen that color in serpentine. If it can't be scratched with a good knife. Jade.
I dont think its jade or serpentine, listwanite is the type of rock being searched for in this video wich is ultra-mafic. Im thinking anything super dark green is amphibolite and meta-peridotite with epidote alterations.
Yep, no one is finding an unknown jade deposit by picking up a rock in thw US.
It looks like nephrite to me, which is an amphibole. We have it all over the place here in Washington
And nephrite is one of the two forms of jade, with jadeite being the other. Dan Hurd had a good video from January 2023 talking about this.
Highly approve of you taking the impact protective glasses up all the way to your "death march". Safety first. Excellent work.
It's "safety 2nd"
Risk taking is good.
Doing dangerous things carefully is an important lesson to learn than always being safe.
Safety shouldn't always be the determining factor in determining participation.
@@jimwednt1229 Prospecting gets a little hard if a flying rock chip takes your eye out or a falling rock cracks your skull. Mining, prospecting and rock handling is so dangerous that safety is very important.
@wombatillo
❤❤❤now you understand why so many die in caves an on everest
That stuff really looks like a close cousin to the ocean picture stone. I'd bet it would have the same appearance if cut just right. That blue is just magnificent.
Thank you for taking us to amazing places most are unable to access.
Beautiful hike. Thanks for taking us.
Looks like jade might have left the the most valuable rock on the hill. I hope you moved it next to a tree you can find again.
its not jade
@alexdrockhound9497 well since it's in Washington it would be neferite.
Too bad he didn't put his flashlight on it lol.
@@metatechnologist serpentine is translucent too and much more common
For me, this is your best video.
A hike like this would be the trip of my life. I don't have the means to do this. I can not afford to break away from my life. Anybody in their 20s & 30s right now, hear my words. Take such trips now. I'm older & jammed up in life. I don't desire to loose my life here, just trying to better it. So, I can't afford a single vacation.
I've loved geology of precious materials from gaming with characters as gatherers, hunters, & harvesters.
To challenge my GMs I've educated myself on gemstones at their sorce & precious metals too.
I'm no match for a bear without the correct gun. I'm glad none where along your route. You don't seem much interested in sooting a bear. What prospector ever is. But all that hiking puts humans at a disadvantage, as the bear is not tired, unless sleeping.
This brown mineral with bright green is so intreguing ( spell check )
And thanks so much for passing on these clues. Such knowledge for me is very helpful in grasping all this. Why bother when I don't prospect? Well, because my mind won't let it go. My curiousity here is absolutely peaked.
Glaciers however, are supposed too be super unstable to traverse.
I would never do that.
But know thy self.
You sir are very healthy at your age & confident in your abilities in the wilds. Not just anybody can hump 80 to 100 pounds of stone out on their back. This takes experience.
In my 20s I packed 80lbs.
With my back now, I doubt I could stably succeed in such a venture.
Thank you for sharing your expertise on rocks and minerals! Sending warm regards from Canada. I truly appreciate your insights on mineral exploration and extraction. Wishing your knee a speedy recovery. P.S. Apologies for the exchange rate, otherwise this would've been more. Cheers
So nice of you
Fantastic video.
I studied geology and this took me back. I love it. So good. I walked through the outback of Australia looking at outcrops as an undergraduate. So different but still so interesting. I never went on with geology but i still have an interest in it.
That is Jade and imperial Jade at that!! That one large lump of Jade you found is probably a 20 to 30k stone if the entire stone looks that quality!
I am pretty sure that is a good quality Jade, possibly very valuable $$$
I think Jade is a waxy feeling texture
I doubt that's imperial Jade just a good green quality of nephrite
Yeah Imperial jade isn't that dark...
If I recall my terminology, "Imperial Jade" is Jadeite. I don't believe there is much of it in North America. However, the Cascade Range and other areas in the US have massive quantities of very high quality Nephrite. It is good enough that Chinese wholesale buyers will fly over and even charter helicopters to get to some of the mine sites.
Hey Jason, I was a foreman for a core cutting shack in british columbia. Don't be so quick to think that a diamond blade won't cut you. I had one of my best cutters almost lost his finger this year. The blades will jump from time to time and in his situation his saw grabbed the core, jumped, and his finger went under the blade. Trust me you don't want to have that happen.
For the Jade, you can test the hardness. Dan can help you out with it. Looks like Nephrite Jade to me though, and that’s pretty common in our area.
If/When all else fails:
_Ancient Chinese Hair Burning Method_
Northern Washington in Jason's area has lots of gemmy jade
@Domarnett is correct. One type of hardness test is scrapping a knife across your polished side of the sample and see if it scratches. If it does, it's probably serpentine or chrysolite instead.
@@Chaphillionaire You doubt the _Ancient Chinese Hair Burning Method?_
@@Chaphillionaire It was a joke.
Jason, we discovered a few spots here in British Columbia but one that helped the most is a mid-level drone. A decent choice at this point is a DJI Mini 2 SE, I think Costco still has them with an extra battery for like $350, 30min flight per battery. It can help with surveying ahead.
Hi Jason,
Not sure if anybody answered your question about the knee popping. If not I wanted to let you know it’s a bone spur. The knee tendon catches on the spur and causes the pop.
Nothing serious but you should have it resolved since it will only get worse.
Ya arthritis is definetly sounds like osteoarthritis. I have the pappine and thats what im diagnosed with.
The only thing for that disease is to not over do anything. No cure for osteoarthritis
Jason really enjoyed this whole adventure of yours and so thanks for letting us tag-a-long. Oh, and the popping.. Could be a few things, but I would bet money that it is your Meniscus, which is a C-shaped piece of cartilage that acts as a cushion between the shinbone (tibia) and thighbone (femur). I know the popping and the tear eventually gets worse. Any Sports Medicine Doctor can share the pros/cons with you. Mine ended up getting tucked underneath creating so much pain that I couldn't put any weight on it at all. Fortunately, the surgery is an in and out one hour thingy and you can walk almost within hours with no more pain.
Your "tiger stripe" looks a lot like the Pinolite that Dan's been talking about lately. Instead of white and black, you got orange and blue.... but the crystal structure really looks similar. I love the blues you have.
The pinolite crystals look a lot more like snow flake crystals though, sharper edges and more defined.
The knee thing is likely your IT band. Be sure to roll it out and stretch it. Roll the outside and inside of your leg to help. The cold also likely did not help. Had the same issue on long long distance runs and when hiking in Maine.
That is definately Jade and a beautiful sample. The way you tell is exactly the way you did it by shining the light into it. That one rock you found could be worth thousands to a Chinese buyer
Just because geologists love to be pedantic: to clarify for your viewers, the ice of a glacier drags other rocks and sediment with it, which is what scrapes the rocks beneath. The ice isn't strong enough to gouge rock on it's own.
Living vicariously thu you lol... keep the videos coming love them. I also torn my meniscus wondering around prospecting high above Baker lake. That ended my prospecting career. Now just watching your videos thank you.
Dude good for you man most people would have given up and come back when it wasn't raining or anything so kudos to you sir
Hey Jason…..🤫🤫🤫🤫🤫shusssh. Tge Cascades are incredible. Don’t let the word get out.
Jason,
Ordered some of your mine material…. Will be making a video on what I find…. I only have the capability to extract free gold…. Fingers Crossed…. Chris ECP
Thanks for taking us on your grueling hike jason that was cool ,, beautiful rocks!
Great video! A lot of fun to watch - wish I could do that too. Maybe you should carry some Paracord so you can tie it around your pack and lower the pack down independently off of those steep inclines.
The first part of the vid, watching you going up and down that incline reminds me of the Reconnaissance training I did in the Bavarian Alps. I feel the pain.
When the camera is with you it is like you are not alone. Good lesson. I am too old to play those games but it is awesome to hike with you
Please send some of this stuff to a dice maker. There's some really talented cutters out there that would love the patterns here.
Yes! Dice cutters could make some awesome Adventure dice. For DnD and other RPG di
Spectacular cuts. Beautiful!
Great job! Thanks for sharing the beauty along the way! Man that is beautiful stuff! I really want a piece of that jade rock. That is sweet!
Thank you for taking me along!!
Love this adventure Jason! So awesome, really fun to watch. Thanks for bringing us along with you! +1 for more of these types of geology / exploration / off-trail adventure hikes. I would gladly watch hours of you doing this, so cool.
Note time 1:49.
The bent cedar trees indicate that there is a slow slip landslide occurring at this location.
Whenever you note trees with this curvature at the base, It indicates that the land has moved from its original location where the tree started to grow.
Interesting! Could snow load on seedlings cause that also?
@@magicone9327 Google search: "bent tree landslide".
Snow typically bends mountain hemlock tops into a candy cane shape, not the trunks. likewise snow-bent trees trees would typically bend downslope, not up slope.
The whole region is covered in a variety of landides, the roads have to frequently be re-engineered. This is not far from a massive landslide that killed many people in a rural housing development. Rainforest conditions above riding on slimy layers of volcanic ash sediment below.
@smilingcloud8 yeah it's nearly criminal negligence because even the most basic visual soil-core samples (seismic, stability, etc.) would have revealed clearly dangerous ash strata from the last time
Jade has a hardness of 6.5 - 7 on the Moh scale. Also when you cut it if the dust turns white that is an indicator. From looking at what you found, that 100 pound boulder is worth a couple grand...good find.
Absolutely stunning stuff
And what an adventure.
Thanks for sharing
🙏❤️🌲
Absolutely beautiful specimens! Wow! Glad you were safe going up and coming down! Excellent work 😊😊😊
Oh Jason! Gorgeous specimens after you slabbed them! And, I wonder if this is similar to Dan's Ocean Picture Stone? Don't know much about specifics on figuring out what is what, all melded together. The last question you had was the huge blackish-green rock. From Dan's GLOTDs, my money is on some expensive jade. Your light penetrated all the way through except for a small area in the middle. If you tap it, it should ping instead of a rock sound. Weight is also a clue. I would look at other sites selling jade, before you give away such a highly prized specimen.
As always, thank you for sharing this with us! I'm happy about how everything turned out! Blessings from Alabama ❤️
Definitely check for value before giving it away for a buck. If you find more up there if you go back. Consider a claim for the Jade. Possibility is more valuable than gold.
I wish I could afford to get one of the small ones on eBay but 25 starting bid and 20 shipping is out of my range. And I totally get the price given all the work you put in. I hope in the future you find an easier/economical way to bring some of this down the mountain and to market.
That big blue is super neat. Looks like a rock brisket!
Great to get the practical geology lesson
10:38 - "I'm Jason from Mount Baker Metals and we're prospecting for gold in the Emyn Muil. Normally this is an impassable labyrinth of razor-sharp rock that keeps people out of Mordor but I've got some Elven rope and a bag of Lembas and we're gonna see what we can find. Hey, it's one of those giant flying lizards again? I wonder what they're always looking for."
How cool would it be to make spheres out of it
Very inspiring!
Living the dream!
I’m working on it, i have to get there.
On a computer screen, that blue doesn't look to be from copper, I would guess chrome. The green stone looks to be nephrite jade.
I ditched watching Gold Rush and now I enjoy watching your channel.
Jason, you do so many great adventures, I'm so glad you video so much & post it so we can see it all, I'm 58 going into a hip replacement next week, through your videos with all you share with us , ... not only do I get to feel like I'm not missing out so much 😊 I feel like I'm right there with you.!!
Lol 😅
I Love your gold mine rehabilitation you doing ,
Keep up the great videos !!
R/Steve GhostofACDC
When your knee starts poppin , give your foot and boot several loose forward kicks occasionally as though you're trying to free up your knee and that whole leg . And change your style of walking at that time in subtle ways...foot angle ,pressure,etc .A good 5 ft walking staff will help you up hill and down or crossing creeks ,and scaring bears. Here in the Lower Mainland of BC, Mt Baker is beautiful reference sight heading east out of Vancouver .
Thanks for sharing your adventures! Wish my 70 year old body could go up there with you.
Wow, what an adventure. I would have gone with you 50 years ago. You should take someone with you on a trip like this. Educational and fun, but sooo. much work.
Specific gravity of the possible jade might be the most helpful metric. Easy to measure with your cutoff and it should come in at about 3.0 (check me on that). Impurities/inclusions introduce some variability.
If you’re going to chase jade in WA, you should pick up Lanny Ream’s “Nephrite Jade of Washington.”
test for hardness dan hurd said
Brilliant prospecting Jason, with all my favourite stuff combined, hike and climb and mountains and rivers and lots of rock and best of geology. Nice!!
I was really impressed with the skewed trees in that grove. You think there was a landslide or avalanche that pushed them over, or maybe a really heavy snow that pressed them down at some point?
Landslide. There is a Missouri geology professor on u tube that talks about geologic engineering and signs of unstable ground
Commonly called "pistol butt" in areas of heavy winter snow. The weight of the snow slowly pushing downhill due to gravity and the tree trunk curves to compensate and try to grow vertically. You can see it all over Western Washington in the higher altitudes with heavy winter snow.
About your knee popping...
If its like mine... I scramble a lot and when I do alot of terrain, my knees will get painful and if too much will pop a bit. I can still go just slower. My old chiropractor who was avid in mountain hiking told me that going uphill really works a particular group of muscles, tending to fatique alot, then going downhill the other set of muscles that wasnt used as much going up, pulls your leg and knee out of alignment, hence the popping. He said to alleviate this, was to work out that other group on the way up, so when coming downhill the both muscle groups pull evenly, keeping better alignment. Sitting down and doing leg extensions or leg lifts, bringing your foot upwards to knee height...ish, while having a break is supposed to be a good way to alleviate it.
Thank You for the walk and SO MUCH for Teaching! Find yourself a good, live hard wood branch, and cut it to just above your shoulder. Trim the bottom to a 1"-1-1/2" flattened point. It makes going up hill, down hill, and crossing water much easier and more safe with your 3rd point and will save your knees. Mine are better because of a stick. 🙏🚂🎼🌹🎵🎶🛠 ~C< 3)>>-Z->}
If those samples sell well, I think you might have to go back up the mountain! Crazy beautiful stuff.
The Jade is what we call Greenstone in New Zealand,
WOW-greenstone ya say,a lot of effort gone into naming it,I heard nz did well in the America's cup??
It's black jade I think and from what I can tell the piece is extremely clear. A lot of it has veins running. Yours is probably worth a lot more because it's so clear. Good luck!
Awesome stuff. I've fallen in love with your channel after coming here from Dan's though some of your co-ops. Never less than thrilled to see your results.
I really enjoyed that trip up to the glacier. Just beauty on all sides. The rocks are insane. Thank you. Mind blowing episode.
P.j. California.
So cool ⚓️🧲👍
Maybe you could get a small portable sled that you could put your jade on and drag it down.
Something that would have been under ice a hundred years ago seems like the best chance of anyone to beat out the hordes of old prospectors. Neat site!
Jason, I enjoyed every second of this video. Thank you for the virtual tour of glacial cascade mountains!!!
That sample at 0:40 looked like it had some silver crystals. At age 43, I had my first knee surgery, for a Meniscus tear. A tear on left or right side of knee causes popping as it (sometimes a small tear) gets between the joint then pops out.
That was my left knee. Then the right knee at age 48. I'm 66 now and doing well except for intermittent authritis. To diagnose it, it requires a doctors referrel for an MRI scan. Then microsurgery for the repair. That blue mineral reminds me of Dan's Blue Ocean stone.
Definitely looks like a really nice high quality thumping sample of Nephrite Jade - I'd like to see you carrying that beast out but be careful of your knee issues if you do!!! If it was me I'd bury it in a spot that you can get back to it at a later time??? What a magnificent beautiful area to stroll through and what fabulous geology to boot - wish we had similar fresh mountains and valleys in Ozz!!! [[PS: just today (6th Jan, 2024) sent you an email regarding my XRF etc]] Cheers, Ian
JASON. ABOUT YOUR KNEES. When you’re climbing around and up and down, you’re relieving pressure from the joint. Then you put pressure back on it again.
You’re actually pulling air into the joint. When you put pressure on it In just the right position, the air moves within the joint. Kind of feels weird almost like a tickle.
Take glucosamine and vitamin E.
Like your channel a lot! TC
Construction worker since 1987 I'm surprised hasn't happened earlier to ya. The snaps will hurt later on I'm 54. Ya start feeling them at 50. Old age my man.
Maybe you should get a pair of trecking sticks. That would take some stress away from your knees. And it helps to walk much more stable, especially on difficult ground whilst going down hill. I found that extremely helpful at times, especially with heavy luggage in the mountains.
I'm not a prospector, but I've had a bad back for decades. My way of handling the descent would be make a folding piece of plastic that acts as a pack frame, then I would carry some lightweight line and pulley to use that the plastic as a sled to lower it down grades. That, or I would just throw my whole backpack down the hill haha.
Jason if you want some help helicoptering a few tons of that stuff next year let me know! All I ask for payment wise is a couple pieces of that gorgeous ore, your knowledge, and being in that valley. I could feel my soul healing through the computer screen, dang it's pretty up there.
Absolutely stunning rocks from an even more stunning location! Determining mineralogy from footage is quite hard. But one thing is for sure, you cannot determine a metal from the mineral colour! The blue/green/... doesn't tell you anything about chrome/nickel/... . There are thousands of minerals with various colours. Eg copper minerals can be green (malachite, blue (azurite), yellow (chalcopyrite), grey (chalcocite), or even multicoloured (bornite). And there are obviously plenty of other green, blue, yellow and grey minerals. Especially in those metamorphic ultramafics you can get quite special mineralogy. The blue stuff might be blue lawsonite, but I'm definitely not sure.
Hey Jason ! I'm thinking "Hells Ridge Picture Stone".
Some of it looks as good as the BC Picture Stone.
Awesome stuff!
I cracked up laughing when I saw your pack all ripped up. My day hike pack has reached the point where I have different rips that I can access by reaching over my shoulder and dropping rocks in without having to take off my pack. Everyone tells me I need a new one but dang, it works slick! 🤣
Your “Jade” slice has the right translucent green. Check and see if you can cut glass with it. If you can then it may be jade. Glass can not cut jade. Also jade is super hard which you noticed as it was real hard to break off a piece in the field. Hope you kept gps coordinates for it. Love ❤ your videos.
The indicator I first look for in Jade, is fibers. Get a light behind it, get a high mag loop on it, and see if you see fibers in the matrix. the next thing I would check is it's hardness. Jadeite shoud be 6.5 - 7 and Nephrite should be 6 - 6.5 on the Mohs scale respectively. Lastly, just to do your due diligence you could check specific gravity.
That snapping thing in your knee is probly Creptius or Runner's knee, best to go to the doctor and have them do an x-ray and identify the problem.
In my case i hadd same thing with popping/cracking sounds on my left knee aswell, it got worse overtime and it got really swollen around the kneecap, i went to the hospital and took an x-ray and the doctor told me i needed an Knee replacement surgery to replace parts of the injured or worn-out knee joints.
He got really angry at me and asked what i have done, probly becus i was only 21.
I do not do sports or enything like that, but i worked alot on my knees "screwed cars on cement floor", so it might have something todo with that. I guess if i hadd used Knee protection it could have helped, but my father grandfather and great grandfather all hadd similar knee problems including cousins, so im guessing in my case its an genetic related problem.
Im 34 now and still using my old kneecap, shoots pain to my brain if i try to bend the left leg, but otherwise it's ok, still removes alot of things what i can do sadly, can't afford an knee replacement so that's why.
Hey, Jason! You're like me (or vice versa) a prospector who likes to get out and get out hands dirty. I am retired now but worked for a Canadian mining exploration company as a consultant. I enjoy your channel because it reminds me of the good old days. Keep it up!
Next time you go, bring a Metal Detector and run it over your Targets. I've had hits on similar looking stuff in Vermont. What I was finding had Brown on the outside and Serpentine Green on the inside. Only down side about the stuff I found is that it is super tough to break up. Slabbing it is probably the way to go.
What I think is you need to buy a framed backpack and go back and get that big piece of "jade"!
Having just been the recipient of dual knee replacements I can tell you with a degree of authority that knee popping is your body’s way of telling you your packing too many rocks in that ruck. Go see an orthopedic if you can and discount a torn meniscus or a ligament issue starting. My knees fell victim to 52 years of dirt bike riding and racing, I’m 64 now and the new knees are in a word, AWESOME!