@@GhostTownLiving Brent with this video you got gold in your hands my friend i love it and your vids greetings from the Netherlands Chiel have a nice sunday ☕🍷🍺🥃🌹😍❤
@@GhostTownLiving this is one of the most interesting videos you’ve put out, and I’m not really a big movie buff. I like The Grimlife Collective TH-cam channel, and they’re in LA, so a callab, or letting them up to film ‘ghosts’ or whatever, would be great. They’re into horror films, mainly, and go to movie sites, staying at the Overlook Hotel (The Shining) etc) and going to gravesites of stars of great movies, mainly, but not exclusively horror. That’s The Grimlife Collective. They have a good size channel here on TH-cam, so should be easy to communicate with them. They’re goths, but cool. Bit kooky, but each to their own. They love what they do, and that’s what draws me in, just like you have. There’s just something magnetic, magic even, about watching people do what they love.
So many channels do movie locations, and when they go to the trouble of getting the same shot, down to the type of lens and focal length, it makes me smile. As a retired photographer, I know the difficulty of that process and it is much appreciated!
Brent, your video on Cerro Gordo is hands down the most captivating piece of content I’ve come across in 2024. It brilliantly balances historical depth with heartfelt storytelling while staying undeniably entertaining. This isn’t just a TH-cam video-it’s a masterclass in breathing life into the forgotten corners of our past. For Southern California residents-off-roaders, campers, explorers, and daydreamers-this video is an absolute gem. The Death Valley region has always been a canvas for our imaginations, and your work only amplifies its magic. Thank you!!
Hey everyone! Thank you for checking out the video. If you are interested in visiting any of these locations, I have assembled the GPS coordinates for each shot below. Some weren't easy to find, so I hope you enjoy! Waterhole #2: 36.5377516, -117.7947959 Nevada Smith: 36.5219981, -117.8144139 Ironman Cave: 36.5165000, -117.8263333 Ironman Dunes: 36.2900558, -117.9759456 Ironman Rocket Launch: 36.6305000, -118.1219167 Tremors ‘Paradise’ Townsite: 36.2443611, -117.9734167 Tremors Road Scene: 36.5810812, -118.0855165 Tremors Boulders: 36.6097700, -118.1263300 Django Unchained: 36.6040000, -118.1170833 Lone Ranger Shootout: 36.6039167, -118.1187500 Gladiator: 36.6004700, -118.1227000
Don't forget to put up the obligatory warnings about how brutal the surrounding area can be. I've lived in Arizona my whole life, and have first hand seen just how beautiful the deserts can be. But all it takes is a flat tire or to forget to bring extra water and you can be in for a rough time. I mean, even though I rarely leave town at my age I still keep a gallon of water in my truck, just in case. A sprained ankle at home sucks, but out here it's going to give search and rescue teams a real life drill to brush up their technical rescue skills. And that's if it is a rescue. There are also many times things become recoveries, and in a YT friendly way, that's when you don't get to go home. I say this for two reasons. I love what you do so I'd hate for someone to try a bogus liability litigation. So I'd definitely put up reminders on any printed material. But also, even on videos like this a quick 15 second reminder may go a long way to preventing unnecessary headaches. For the people who just wouldn't know better, mainly. But also for you too.
You are Living the Best Life, I’m not thinking i’ll ever make it that far west in this lifetime I do live vicariously through you and your videos. I appreciate all the effort you put into your Edit’s That for second to non-in my opinion, I’ll catch you on the next one should the Good Lord be Willing. I look forward to the production, inevitably you will undertake and you would make a smash hit, no doubt about it, in the meantime Please You just Keep it Safe out there Brent.
I'm a California boy who also works in the business and Lone Pine/Alabama Hills and Death Valley (including CG) in general are my favorite places to go. To anyone visiting these vast and beautiful places.. please keep them pristine and free of human litter. This is a treasured area and deserves respect. It's only with this respect that we truly get to take in it's entire beauty and timelessness. TLDR; thanks.
Death Valley was my father's favorite place to go. But not in the summertime. He and my mother would go camping at Stove Pipe Wells every Thanksgiving and throughout Spring, Autumn and Winter. It's where my dad was happy. It was his go to place to get away from the daily grind of life in general. They loved to take the grandkids, too. They ultimately wound up settling in Inyokern in their golden years and stayed there until my father passed away. It's right outside Ridgecrest, the Gateway to Death Valley. They lived on 5 acres in the middle of nowhere in the desert where the quiet is so loud it screams. Only one FedEx or UPS plane would fly in the area at 10 am. Other than that, there was no air traffic to upset the silence. Their property had so many trees on it you couldn't see thru them all to see the property line. A very serene place, it was.
Hello, I'm not very outdoorsy, so I'm not super familiar with some of the rules for these places. Are these areas open for anyone to visit? I know the guy owns the Cerro Gordo area, so does that mean we can still visit, or does he only own the houses and mines? Do we need any special permission to explore, or are they accessible to the public, aka public land? Thanks for any info in advance!
When I visited the film museum, I got there before it opened. There was a guy also waiting for the museum to open. He was wearing cowboy boots and a cowboy hat. He was from the town of Gene Autry, Oklahoma, and he knew everything there was to know about Roy Rogers, Hopalong Cassidy, and all the old western movies. He had come all the way from Oklahoma just to see the museum, and he was thrilled to be there. 😀
I used to laugh at people like that, but now, I’m jealous of them. To be so into something to the point of obsession must be really cool. I was an hedonist, took almost every drug, drank a lot, and slept around. Fun as a late teen early twenties, but carry on and it starts to eat into your learning years, cos you can’t ‘burn the candles at both ends’ (stay up late, up early for lectures, work etc) the later into your 20’s you get. 25 is a good age for the latest cut off to be able to make a good career and have a hedonistic lifestyle til then. After that, it just gets sadder and sadder, and takes away any enjoyment in anything else, you just wanna go to the pub, get high etc. so healthy obsessions are impossible, ruining the rest of your life. That’s why so many become full blown addicts and never get out. They have nothing else. I’m kinda half way. Not reached my potential, as a college dropout (but the course was boring, and strangely too easy, but I found out why years later. I was underestimated cognitively by my teachers, mainly cos I was drunk and/or high the night before, and wasn’t interested, just doing the minimum to get into the next institution, til I needed money to party, so dropped out, and had fun, sure, but at the expense of my future. And now I’ve lived a good chunk of that future, I’m a bit regretful, but not massively. I travelled a lot, and my life is pretty dood, as long as I have enough money for the basics, nice clothes, small but decent place to live, enjoyable source of income, but not what I could make being miserable doing it, it’s fine. But I know a lot who aren’t. Depressed ‘pay day junkies’ I call them. I’m 47, some of these are mid to late 50’s. It’s sad, but some may think my life is, but I just don’t have that ambition, probably cos, as I said, I travelled, a lot. 40-50 countries, all over mainly Europe and Asia South-East and East (Japan is amazing, but super expensive, like makes London seem cheap. Not just Tokyo, either. Osaka and Kyoto. Well, maybe the former are similar to central London. I loved Scotland, too. Dunoon, where my friend renovated a bank reclaim, then died of a heart attack just months after he finished. And Cornwall. St Ives especially, is amazing. But Patong, Phuket, Thailand, Bali, Indonesia and Manila the best. Lived and worked in Ipoh, Malaysia, so very central to all these places, and very conservative, so didn’t interfere too much with my work. If I was based in Phuket, or Bali, I wouldn’t have lasted a year, when I look back. I’m back in England, for the past nearly 10 years, and of America is the same, I’m not surprised they’ve got Trump in. We are declining, everything is worse, except new tech that everyone has, I mean roads, people are sadder and less open, people feel like outsiders in the country of their grandparents. If this was anywhere else, especially the ‘Global South’, there would be outrage, but it’s ok to be raysist against whites, especially, straight male ones. But women, too, and if a gay one is conservative, they’re ostracized, like if a Pakistani or black person is actually conservative, not these token ones to ‘change the Party, they’re ostracized. My personality type is very liberal, but the left have let us down, really badly. Made the majority feel like extremists, when they are, by definition, the extremists, and have all the power, institutions ext, and all agree on everything together. One of the most common voting records is ‘12 Obama, ‘16 Primary Sander ‘16 election (or ‘20, and especially’24) Trump. It’s not left right, it’s taking care of your own citizens, doing your darn jobs, properly and efficiently, not existing to give you a job, but to take care of a problem, like these non profits who take billions, and yet only make it worse. It’s evil, actually, if it’s consciously done. But 95% of them, I don’t think it is. It’s just the leadership, mainly, who use it as a way to make a lot of money, and get put on a moral pedestal. Trump’s just been the great revealer. LBJ was way more objectionable than Trump, JFK and Clinton worse with treating the ladies badly etc, etc. It’s cos he was on ‘their team’ and thought he’d be a McCain or especially Romney, but he went populist,mwhich is not normally a good idea, but when a self governing nation, which a Democratic Republic is, the elite are a part of the people. They can’t be out of touch, like the Republicans, in their country clubs were, up until the last big change in the 60’s, which started the change of the establishment being conservative, to them now being liberal. And like the 60’s, the establishment have been in the country clubs aka echo chambers, forgetting, even despising the very people they exist to serve. And now they’re paying the price.
That is so awesome to hear. People really have a connection with these movies and you can tell that the locations and the themes of the movies really give a lasting effect. ❤
The recreation of the shots is a masterpiece, did not think Cero Gordo could get any cooler, been watching for years and you never cease to amaze me Brent!
What's even cooler is the scenes haven't changed throughout the periods between filming the movies and Brent's video here. It's crazy the same plants are basically still there in a lot of those areas. That's really cool.
Yes what struck me was how slowly time moves for the geology of a place. Our technology moves incredibly fast comparatively. The land looks the same when we were filming with, well, film. Shooting old time western flicks. And it looks the same now in 4k.
When I watch movies, especially Westerns, I often try to figure out where it was filmed, and then look up the production locations. So very much appreciate this video. Thank you.
Brent, you are a breath of fresh air. Who else puts the GPS coordinates to where they live and sleep right on the internet. It shows your generous, pure heart, and that you see all of us that way too. God bless ya!!
The actual coordinates shouldn't really matter to anyone. If Brent was concerned I'm sure he wouldn't do that. The natural geographic location is not an easy get to.
It is not exactly a secret, that he lives in Cerro Gordo. Nor is the location of said place a secret. If for some peculiar reason, anyone should want to find and harm him, they would not have a hard time anyways...... But why would anyone do him harm? Brent is a nice guy.
He’s in business. All businesses do it, pretty much. But I bet it, he’s out alone, up in the mountains, gar from help. But it’s some strange criminal who has the capacity to get there, just to rob, what? A few thousand, at most. And I’m sure Brent’s ‘ready’ for them, but can’t advertise that, since it’s California. You don’t get many places like this in the UK, as we)p’re a small island, so finding people secluded is hard, and they’ll have shotguns, still, but then they can’t escape, which is mainly why guns aren’t important. We don’t have wolves etc, in the wild, which makes it almost mandatory to have a weapon. We wiped all ours our, which is seen as more moral than keeping them, but having legal gun ownership. But America, it’s so big, plus you have a huge border to escape over, it’s obvious why they’re popular. They’re really important to have. Plus, the rural folk are more self sufficient aka adult than us. We’re protected by the government all the way, but are subject to their whims, like winter fuel allowance. They make fuel expensive, give subsidies to the old and less wealthy, then take it away. That’s why (one reason of many) I’m not a left leaning statist, despite being temperamentally on the left.
Having worked in HOLLYWOOD for some 40-years, and having been a writer and studio historian for Universal City Studios and later and longer for 20th Century-Fox, I congratulate you on a fine presentation... Over the years I gave so many movie location tours with some even up at Lone Pine... in fact, so many westerns and others would shoot Lone Pine and mix the rocky locales with those at the legendary IVERSONs Movie Ranch in Chatsworth. The Lone Pine Museum is a treasure in itself that is sadly overlooked by so many tourists busy heading for Bishop and beyond.
Too Cool!! My 2nd cousin's grandfather, Johnny Berkes was a guest in one of the Lone Ranger episodes. Episode 10 "High Heels". Johnny played "Hank" the hired hand. He played several supporting roles in a few movies. Ace in the Hole, Bowery at Midnight and several others. His wife was a dancer and was Rita Hayworth's stunt double for some of her dance scenes.
At 2:34 I think those are the actual snowshoes hanging from the porch in the movie hung up next to your door, it'd make sense if they had been held on to and kept there as a souvenir.
DUDE!! YOURE JUST TELLING US THIS NOW? Some of my favourite movies right there and I never knew! Tremors? Really? Iron Man? This is awesome man thanks for this video
Absolutely loved this history of the areas. I'm 80 yrs old and grew up with the westerns you mentioned. Was great to see where they were filmed. This had to have taken you a lot of time and research to create. Thanks for your time and effort. Great job.
This is awesome! Would make a great addition to the museum too. A whole section dedicated to cerro gordo film locations 😮 Could even make a kinda hollywood hike trek map for tourists
@@GhostTownLiving just be sure to put up the obligatory warnings about how brutal the surrounding area can be. I've lived in Arizona my whole life, and have first hand seen just how beautiful the deserts can be. But all it takes is a flat tire. To forget to bring extra water. I mean, even though I rarely leave town at my age I still keep a gallon of water in my truck, just in case. A sprained ankle at home sucks, but out here it's going to give search and rescue teams a real life drill to brush up their technical rescue skills. I love what you do so I'd hate for someone to try a bogus liability litigation. So I'd definitely put up reminders on any printed material. But even on videos like this a quick 15 second reminder may go a long way to preventing unnecessary headaches. For the people who just wouldn't know better, mainly. But for you too.
I've been watching your Cerro Gordo videos since the first one. This is probably my favorite. Really makes the whole place come to life. I love how you recreated many of the scenes, even to the same focal length. It's also interesting how many of those places are still recognizable, even though the movie they filmed there was so long ago. Thank you so much for bringing history to life in an area near where I grew up.
I agree. I like all of Brent's videos. This one is definitely my favorite. The time and production quality and the amazing scenery he puts into his videos make them more like short movies with a history lesson.
having watched since i think the 2nd or third video up there i had wondered why people would really go to stay there, i mean its beautiful and sure some people geek out over mines i guess, but now seeing all this stuff around it makes much more sense. going to stay up in an old mining town is cool if your a history nerd or a caver, but to get to go pose in all these photo locations and such its worth the trip for a lot more people.
Wow, Tremors is one of my favorite movies. I have seen it maybe 100 times easy. The VHS would just live in the player back in the day. The Cerro Gordo lore gets better every video! EDIT: Django as well! Hot damn! Another favorite of more recent times.
Videos like this are what is a part of breathing life back into Cerro Gordo. The more you connect the area to your Ghost Town, the more avenues of interests connecting people from around the world. Fantastic job!
Best video ever to pay homage to such great legends and films , Cerro Gordo will live forever thanks to your dedication and help from people such as Dave Sparks and entire crew, the tradesmen who helped rebuild, and all the people who have help bring period pieces like the bar and piano to Cerro Gordo
As a canadian, i appreciate the scenery with the association between place, time and scene. As a very very young child one of my last and only memory's of my father who past away in 1973, is of sitting on a sunday night watching Bonanza wiiith him. In 2008 my only trip to the USA, I had the pleasure and honor to take a rusty oil smoking tour bus to Lake Tahoe where i saw the meadow and the set where Bonaza was filmed. My heart burst with love and memories. To see the plain undisturbed rocks of the iconic movies is a walk down memory lane for me. Thank you, it is so powerful to associate a scene with a rock that has not changed in our dustuctive fast pace life time. THANK YOU!
Im so glad you did a video about all of the filming around there. I had recently just discovered all of the films shot in the area. I had watched a youtuberer who mentioned that Blazing Saddles had been shot around a town called Lone Pine and I immediately shouted, "Cerro Gordo!" And that is how I went down a rabbit hole on the filming history there.
My daily commute to work used to be the desert road that Mad Max was filmed on. It’s crazy-cool when mundane daily life meets Hollywood. I’ve been a fan of this channel for almost as long as you’ve been up there, Brent. I hope this awesome modern history take reaches even more people for you, man. I thoroughly enjoyed it!
As a massive film buff I found this fascinating! The depth and breadth of Cerro Gordo's history stands on it's own. It's why we're all here. Well, that and Brent's determination and curiosity of course. Discovering the area is saturated with filming locations is pure icing on the cake! So much fun when one thing you love just so happens to intersect with another!
Im watching this at Canvey, England, nine thirty Saturday evening , I spotted it just before I switched off , excellent very interesting, more history is always welcome.
That place is damn gorgeous. I didn't realise how many times I've seen Cerro Gordo before your channel, you actually brought back an awesome childhood memory I had with my Grandpa who told me all he knew of the place while we watched his favourite westerns. A bucket list visit to be sure
2:22 You got the wrong snowshoes. The ones in the movie are not the ones you picked up from the ground. Try and check the ones hanging on the wall next to your door. Love the video. Cheers, D.
i like this kinda video. it's different from the usual kind on this channel and it feels kinda refreshing but also its the very essence of this channel, its filled with history and great stories of the town and its surroundings
Love this idea for a new type of content, i don't expect it to be a frequent thing. But a cool one off every once in a while and neat to see some locations nearby you that are so iconic, even your home itself.
This lifelong film history and movie buff, living a stone-throw away from the former Chaplin Studios in Hollywood, truly loves and appreciates your awesome filming location tour 🎬🎥🎞️🌟 ❤️
Cerro Gordo is definitely a great place to film movies and television shows on location at and it is an amazing looking place for indie films to be filmed have a great weekend and Thank You.📽🇺🇲🎥
Wow! Your approach to explaining the history of every scene and getting the camera sets this video appart from others I've watched. Many get close to the actual camera location but never match the actual film as you have. Thank you for this awesome video!!
Whoa!!! This is amazing! I had no idea how many movies have been filmed around your neighborhood. Thank you for the expose, Brent. I definitely watching Tremors now! Just thinking about the legends who walked/rode through the scenes...it blows my mind. Seeing the actual scenes, in split screen...I really enjoyed that. As always, you take us along each journey, telling the stories of Hollywood in the wilderness. The editing is flawless, and I will be watching this again! It feels like there was so much detail and so much information. It is clear you always have fun editing your videos, but this one was special! ❤
My grandfather was a carpenter who lived in the Lone Pine area in the 30's. He worked on all kinds of films being shot in the area, including Gunga Din.
Im really impressed with all the work you are doing, every time one of your videos pops up its clear how much work you put into it all and especially to historica accuracy.
I had no idea so many films and scenes were shot right there in Cerro Gordo. This is one of my favourite videos so far! Weird to think I was watching footage of cerro gordo decades ago without realising, only to see it again in proper context here years later
I used to live on Martha’s Vineyard and when I watch Jaws I can piece together the different film locations. I love to watch the changes of weather and water texture all in one scene. It helped me understand the piecemeal film technique. As ever, I love your videos and your endeavors!
Absolutely fascinating. I had no idea Cerro Gordo even existed until I started watching your channel all those years ago but now it has a whole new identity, brilliant. ❤ Take care,keep safe. Dorset, UK
Man! Brent! You've just struck the motherlode with this video. Your good fortune just took a turn for the better. So many possibilities there. Including the Lone Pine Western Film Museum segment is first class collaboration with Jesse Steele. Brilliant example of working with others in the area.
This is one of the coolest videos yet. I love the 'old' history of cerro gordo proper and keeler, and lone pine. But this 'modern' hollywood history adds so much to my overall mental idea of the area.
Awesome episode! Always loved watching these video's of famous movie and tv show film locations and what they look like now. I've been watching your channel for a couple of years now, and didn't realize Cerro Gordo was so close to Lone Pine. I'm from Reno and drive down 395 all the time when going to SoCal. That museum is great, took my kids there years ago, right after they filmed Iron Man there, they were big fans of Tremors so it was a great trip seeing the museum and driving around the Alabama Hills.
I'm glad you are so committed to keeping Cerro Gordo alive! This was a fun video and very well done. Excellent picture quality and audio! Once again, great job!
Your videos keep topping your previous ones. The latest one is always the best. Sure do look forward to the point where the hotel is protected enough from winter where contractors can work through the winter months inside.
0:11 Right when you say “not shot in Hollywood” you happen to then show the Fuller lodge in Los Alamos, New Mexico, which happens to be the real location! Guessing that was behind the scenes from Oppenheimer. Great video though!
Really enjoyed this episode. I was fortunate to work overseas for 6 years and while there my wife and I visited 18 different countries. Now when we watch movies or TV shows we would see places and sites we have been. I can relate to your excitement when visiting places where movies or TV shows have been filmed. Thanks for sharing.
Wow Brent, what an epic episode! I am so grateful for your passion on this subject. Please continue to explore the almost limitless stories of the Alabama Hills.
Oh my god, you're kidding. That intro scene with RDJ in Iron Man was iconic, I had no idea it was even filmed in the US. Makes sense, lot easier than going overseas, and with some vfx it looks similar enough.
I’ve driven through Lone Pine & Bishop on my way to Mammoth Lakes and never once stopped to explore this area even though I have known several of my favorite movies were filmed there and alone Pine has a movie festival every early October. So thank you for this tour! One could spend a year exploring the movie sights & make videos & still not have a complete video of every movie sight! Thank you again!!
Brent you have outdone yourself with this video. Not only is it a fascinating part of your areas history, but you delivered a beautifully put together video. The matching shots must have taken ages!
NICE FINALE!
Glad you stuck around for it!
@@GhostTownLiving Brent with this video you got gold in your hands my friend i love it and your vids greetings from the Netherlands Chiel have a nice sunday ☕🍷🍺🥃🌹😍❤
Cerra Gordo happens to be just over 10 hours ride from my door on my trusty KLR. New item added to Things To Do.
I like Brent way more than any Hollywood story teller.
@@GhostTownLiving this is one of the most interesting videos you’ve put out, and I’m not really a big movie buff. I like The Grimlife Collective TH-cam channel, and they’re in LA, so a callab, or letting them up to film ‘ghosts’ or whatever, would be great.
They’re into horror films, mainly, and go to movie sites, staying at the Overlook Hotel (The Shining) etc) and going to gravesites of stars of great movies, mainly, but not exclusively horror.
That’s The Grimlife Collective. They have a good size channel here on TH-cam, so should be easy to communicate with them. They’re goths, but cool. Bit kooky, but each to their own. They love what they do, and that’s what draws me in, just like you have. There’s just something magnetic, magic even, about watching people do what they love.
Extremely cool not only to the exact same shot but to get the same focal length. This took an enormous amount of time to put together. Impressive
Thank you for noticing! It wasn't super easy haha
Agreed!
So many channels do movie locations, and when they go to the trouble of getting the same shot, down to the type of lens and focal length, it makes me smile. As a retired photographer, I know the difficulty of that process and it is much appreciated!
Not all of them. 9:32 I know they had cranes probably for many of the shots but not same focal length. Not faulting Brent, just telling you how it is.
@@avidadolaresthat was definitely not filmed by a crane
Brent, your video on Cerro Gordo is hands down the most captivating piece of content I’ve come across in 2024. It brilliantly balances historical depth with heartfelt storytelling while staying undeniably entertaining. This isn’t just a TH-cam video-it’s a masterclass in breathing life into the forgotten corners of our past.
For Southern California residents-off-roaders, campers, explorers, and daydreamers-this video is an absolute gem. The Death Valley region has always been a canvas for our imaginations, and your work only amplifies its magic. Thank you!!
Hey everyone! Thank you for checking out the video. If you are interested in visiting any of these locations, I have assembled the GPS coordinates for each shot below. Some weren't easy to find, so I hope you enjoy!
Waterhole #2: 36.5377516, -117.7947959
Nevada Smith: 36.5219981, -117.8144139
Ironman Cave: 36.5165000, -117.8263333
Ironman Dunes: 36.2900558, -117.9759456
Ironman Rocket Launch: 36.6305000, -118.1219167
Tremors ‘Paradise’ Townsite: 36.2443611, -117.9734167
Tremors Road Scene: 36.5810812, -118.0855165
Tremors Boulders: 36.6097700, -118.1263300
Django Unchained: 36.6040000, -118.1170833
Lone Ranger Shootout: 36.6039167, -118.1187500
Gladiator: 36.6004700, -118.1227000
Very cool!
Amazing video! So glad you took the time to add another layer to the Cerro Gordo video history you're compiling. Great job!
Don't forget to put up the obligatory warnings about how brutal the surrounding area can be. I've lived in Arizona my whole life, and have first hand seen just how beautiful the deserts can be.
But all it takes is a flat tire or to forget to bring extra water and you can be in for a rough time. I mean, even though I rarely leave town at my age I still keep a gallon of water in my truck, just in case. A sprained ankle at home sucks, but out here it's going to give search and rescue teams a real life drill to brush up their technical rescue skills. And that's if it is a rescue. There are also many times things become recoveries, and in a YT friendly way, that's when you don't get to go home.
I say this for two reasons. I love what you do so I'd hate for someone to try a bogus liability litigation. So I'd definitely put up reminders on any printed material. But also, even on videos like this a quick 15 second reminder may go a long way to preventing unnecessary headaches. For the people who just wouldn't know better, mainly. But also for you too.
You are Living the Best Life, I’m not thinking i’ll ever make it that far west in this lifetime I do live vicariously through you and your videos. I appreciate all the effort you put into your Edit’s That for second to non-in my opinion, I’ll catch you on the next one should the Good Lord be Willing. I look forward to the production, inevitably you will undertake and you would make a smash hit, no doubt about it, in the meantime Please You just Keep it Safe out there Brent.
Awesome thanks so much!
I'm a California boy who also works in the business and Lone Pine/Alabama Hills and Death Valley (including CG) in general are my favorite places to go. To anyone visiting these vast and beautiful places.. please keep them pristine and free of human litter. This is a treasured area and deserves respect. It's only with this respect that we truly get to take in it's entire beauty and timelessness. TLDR; thanks.
Death Valley was my father's favorite place to go. But not in the summertime. He and my mother would go camping at Stove Pipe Wells every Thanksgiving and throughout Spring, Autumn and Winter. It's where my dad was happy. It was his go to place to get away from the daily grind of life in general. They loved to take the grandkids, too. They ultimately wound up settling in Inyokern in their golden years and stayed there until my father passed away. It's right outside Ridgecrest, the Gateway to Death Valley. They lived on 5 acres in the middle of nowhere in the desert where the quiet is so loud it screams. Only one FedEx or UPS plane would fly in the area at 10 am. Other than that, there was no air traffic to upset the silence. Their property had so many trees on it you couldn't see thru them all to see the property line. A very serene place, it was.
What you said, and that goes for all of the outdoors!
Hello, I'm not very outdoorsy, so I'm not super familiar with some of the rules for these places. Are these areas open for anyone to visit? I know the guy owns the Cerro Gordo area, so does that mean we can still visit, or does he only own the houses and mines? Do we need any special permission to explore, or are they accessible to the public, aka public land? Thanks for any info in advance!
@@chas4life and bring survivalist supplies... Water etc..its a harsh environment as well not to be taken lightly...
11/10 comment. Thank you for caring.
When I visited the film museum, I got there before it opened. There was a guy also waiting for the museum to open. He was wearing cowboy boots and a cowboy hat. He was from the town of Gene Autry, Oklahoma, and he knew everything there was to know about Roy Rogers, Hopalong Cassidy, and all the old western movies. He had come all the way from Oklahoma just to see the museum, and he was thrilled to be there. 😀
I'm going to be that guy one day. I too am from Oklahoma but I don't own cowboy gear or know a lot about the old westerns lol but love museums.
Its a wonderful museum!
I used to laugh at people like that, but now, I’m jealous of them. To be so into something to the point of obsession must be really cool. I was an hedonist, took almost every drug, drank a lot, and slept around. Fun as a late teen early twenties, but carry on and it starts to eat into your learning years, cos you can’t ‘burn the candles at both ends’ (stay up late, up early for lectures, work etc) the later into your 20’s you get. 25 is a good age for the latest cut off to be able to make a good career and have a hedonistic lifestyle til then.
After that, it just gets sadder and sadder, and takes away any enjoyment in anything else, you just wanna go to the pub, get high etc. so healthy obsessions are impossible, ruining the rest of your life. That’s why so many become full blown addicts and never get out.
They have nothing else. I’m kinda half way. Not reached my potential, as a college dropout (but the course was boring, and strangely too easy, but I found out why years later. I was underestimated cognitively by my teachers, mainly cos I was drunk and/or high the night before, and wasn’t interested, just doing the minimum to get into the next institution, til I needed money to party, so dropped out, and had fun, sure, but at the expense of my future.
And now I’ve lived a good chunk of that future, I’m a bit regretful, but not massively. I travelled a lot, and my life is pretty dood, as long as I have enough money for the basics, nice clothes, small but decent place to live, enjoyable source of income, but not what I could make being miserable doing it, it’s fine. But I know a lot who aren’t.
Depressed ‘pay day junkies’ I call them. I’m 47, some of these are mid to late 50’s. It’s sad, but some may think my life is, but I just don’t have that ambition, probably cos, as I said, I travelled, a lot. 40-50 countries, all over mainly Europe and Asia South-East and East (Japan is amazing, but super expensive, like makes London seem cheap. Not just Tokyo, either. Osaka and Kyoto. Well, maybe the former are similar to central London.
I loved Scotland, too. Dunoon, where my friend renovated a bank reclaim, then died of a heart attack just months after he finished. And Cornwall. St Ives especially, is amazing. But Patong, Phuket, Thailand, Bali, Indonesia and Manila the best. Lived and worked in Ipoh, Malaysia, so very central to all these places, and very conservative, so didn’t interfere too much with my work. If I was based in Phuket, or Bali, I wouldn’t have lasted a year, when I look back.
I’m back in England, for the past nearly 10 years, and of America is the same, I’m not surprised they’ve got Trump in. We are declining, everything is worse, except new tech that everyone has, I mean roads, people are sadder and less open, people feel like outsiders in the country of their grandparents.
If this was anywhere else, especially the ‘Global South’, there would be outrage, but it’s ok to be raysist against whites, especially, straight male ones. But women, too, and if a gay one is conservative, they’re ostracized, like if a Pakistani or black person is actually conservative, not these token ones to ‘change the Party, they’re ostracized.
My personality type is very liberal, but the left have let us down, really badly. Made the majority feel like extremists, when they are, by definition, the extremists, and have all the power, institutions ext, and all agree on everything together. One of the most common voting records is ‘12 Obama, ‘16 Primary Sander ‘16 election (or ‘20, and especially’24) Trump.
It’s not left right, it’s taking care of your own citizens, doing your darn jobs, properly and efficiently, not existing to give you a job, but to take care of a problem, like these non profits who take billions, and yet only make it worse. It’s evil, actually, if it’s consciously done. But 95% of them, I don’t think it is. It’s just the leadership, mainly, who use it as a way to make a lot of money, and get put on a moral pedestal.
Trump’s just been the great revealer. LBJ was way more objectionable than Trump, JFK and Clinton worse with treating the ladies badly etc, etc. It’s cos he was on ‘their team’ and thought he’d be a McCain or especially Romney, but he went populist,mwhich is not normally a good idea, but when a self governing nation, which a Democratic Republic is, the elite are a part of the people.
They can’t be out of touch, like the Republicans, in their country clubs were, up until the last big change in the 60’s, which started the change of the establishment being conservative, to them now being liberal. And like the 60’s, the establishment have been in the country clubs aka echo chambers, forgetting, even despising the very people they exist to serve.
And now they’re paying the price.
@@Dude0000 Not a bad rant lol. I wish I had some clout, I'd put up an honest man like yourself to help advise the Trump team.
That is so awesome to hear. People really have a connection with these movies and you can tell that the locations and the themes of the movies really give a lasting effect. ❤
The recreation of the shots is a masterpiece, did not think Cero Gordo could get any cooler, been watching for years and you never cease to amaze me Brent!
Cerro Gordo, not Cero Gordo
What's cool is actually having historical footage of how it used to look back then to what it does now that is in itself Is amazing
What's even cooler is the scenes haven't changed throughout the periods between filming the movies and Brent's video here. It's crazy the same plants are basically still there in a lot of those areas. That's really cool.
What's even cooler is how little has changed from the historical footage to now.
Yes what struck me was how slowly time moves for the geology of a place. Our technology moves incredibly fast comparatively. The land looks the same when we were filming with, well, film. Shooting old time western flicks. And it looks the same now in 4k.
When I watch movies, especially Westerns, I often try to figure out where it was filmed, and then look up the production locations. So very much appreciate this video. Thank you.
Brent, you are a breath of fresh air. Who else puts the GPS coordinates to where they live and sleep right on the internet. It shows your generous, pure heart, and that you see all of us that way too. God bless ya!!
Yeah that's worrying though and he has security in place so anyone thinking anything should definitely rethink
The actual coordinates shouldn't really matter to anyone. If Brent was concerned I'm sure he wouldn't do that. The natural geographic location is not an easy get to.
Do you know about google maps?
It is not exactly a secret, that he lives in Cerro Gordo. Nor is the location of said place a secret. If for some peculiar reason, anyone should want to find and harm him, they would not have a hard time anyways......
But why would anyone do him harm? Brent is a nice guy.
He’s in business. All businesses do it, pretty much. But I bet it, he’s out alone, up in the mountains, gar from help. But it’s some strange criminal who has the capacity to get there, just to rob, what? A few thousand, at most.
And I’m sure Brent’s ‘ready’ for them, but can’t advertise that, since it’s California. You don’t get many places like this in the UK, as we)p’re a small island, so finding people secluded is hard, and they’ll have shotguns, still, but then they can’t escape, which is mainly why guns aren’t important. We don’t have wolves etc, in the wild, which makes it almost mandatory to have a weapon. We wiped all ours our, which is seen as more moral than keeping them, but having legal gun ownership.
But America, it’s so big, plus you have a huge border to escape over, it’s obvious why they’re popular. They’re really important to have. Plus, the rural folk are more self sufficient aka adult than us. We’re protected by the government all the way, but are subject to their whims, like winter fuel allowance. They make fuel expensive, give subsidies to the old and less wealthy, then take it away. That’s why (one reason of many) I’m not a left leaning statist, despite being temperamentally on the left.
Having worked in HOLLYWOOD for some 40-years, and having been a writer and studio historian for Universal City Studios and later and longer for 20th Century-Fox, I congratulate you on a fine presentation...
Over the years I gave so many movie location tours with some even up at Lone Pine... in fact, so many westerns and others would shoot Lone Pine and mix the rocky locales with those at the legendary IVERSONs Movie Ranch in Chatsworth.
The Lone Pine Museum is a treasure in itself that is sadly overlooked by so many tourists busy heading for Bishop and beyond.
How did you get into the industry? I’d love a job like that haha
Wow. Brent is constantly finding new ways to bring more life and history to this small town in the middle of pretty much no where.
Too Cool!! My 2nd cousin's grandfather, Johnny Berkes was a guest in one of the Lone Ranger episodes. Episode 10 "High Heels". Johnny played "Hank" the hired hand. He played several supporting roles in a few movies. Ace in the Hole, Bowery at Midnight and several others. His wife was a dancer and was Rita Hayworth's stunt double for some of her dance scenes.
TREMORS IS ONE OF THE BEST MOVIES!!!!! So cool that you shared this!
Definitely!
Aaahahhhhh!! AAAAAAHHHHHHhhhhh!!
What?! What is it???
Goddamn gopher hole!
Those sonsabitches!
@@mrflippant "Can you fly, motherf****?!"
🤓Actually he said prairie dog
Yeah, I agree 💯 percent!!!
At 2:34 I think those are the actual snowshoes hanging from the porch in the movie hung up next to your door, it'd make sense if they had been held on to and kept there as a souvenir.
DUDE!! YOURE JUST TELLING US THIS NOW? Some of my favourite movies right there and I never knew! Tremors? Really? Iron Man? This is awesome man thanks for this video
hahah, there is a lot more in the Alabama Hills that you've probably seen too then! Could only get to so many in this trip
Trial and Error, movie filmed there also (lone pine, Cal. 1996/997)
@GhostTownLiving This is mind blowing for me
@@GhostTownLiving Please make it out to Mono Lake the Town in High Plains Drifter with Clint Eastwood was Filmed Next to that Lake .
@@GhostTownLiving you're a legend man!
Thank you for a great video about the area! 🎉
Thank you so much! I appreciate that a ton
WHAT?! WHAT!!! Wow! All this time, almost 5 years and you finally found this. Your own house! Excellent video. Thanks for sharing!
Absolutely loved this history of the areas. I'm 80 yrs old and grew up with the westerns you mentioned. Was great to see where they were filmed. This had to have taken you a lot of time and research to create. Thanks for your time and effort. Great job.
This is awesome! Would make a great addition to the museum too.
A whole section dedicated to cerro gordo film locations 😮
Could even make a kinda hollywood hike trek map for tourists
5th like
Good idea! I put all the GPS coordinates of the locations in the description of this video
@@GhostTownLiving Thanks Brent, you're the next Legend of Cerro Gordo. Gonna add those spots to my tour for when I someday visit!
@@GhostTownLiving just be sure to put up the obligatory warnings about how brutal the surrounding area can be. I've lived in Arizona my whole life, and have first hand seen just how beautiful the deserts can be.
But all it takes is a flat tire. To forget to bring extra water. I mean, even though I rarely leave town at my age I still keep a gallon of water in my truck, just in case. A sprained ankle at home sucks, but out here it's going to give search and rescue teams a real life drill to brush up their technical rescue skills.
I love what you do so I'd hate for someone to try a bogus liability litigation. So I'd definitely put up reminders on any printed material. But even on videos like this a quick 15 second reminder may go a long way to preventing unnecessary headaches. For the people who just wouldn't know better, mainly. But for you too.
Scavenger photo hunt!
I've been watching your Cerro Gordo videos since the first one. This is probably my favorite. Really makes the whole place come to life. I love how you recreated many of the scenes, even to the same focal length. It's also interesting how many of those places are still recognizable, even though the movie they filmed there was so long ago. Thank you so much for bringing history to life in an area near where I grew up.
I agree. I like all of Brent's videos. This one is definitely my favorite. The time and production quality and the amazing scenery he puts into his videos make them more like short movies with a history lesson.
When you get the hotel open, you should do movie set tours!
having watched since i think the 2nd or third video up there i had wondered why people would really go to stay there, i mean its beautiful and sure some people geek out over mines i guess, but now seeing all this stuff around it makes much more sense. going to stay up in an old mining town is cool if your a history nerd or a caver, but to get to go pose in all these photo locations and such its worth the trip for a lot more people.
@@NogrimStoneson A movie tour attraction would definitely add a ton of value to a trip to Cerro Gordo, especially for film historians and cinophiles.
@@NogrimStoneson I'd love to stay up there in a canvas tent and teach living history!
I have to admit this is a good idea.
Tours before or after watching the movies
I’m a 70s kid and grew up in front of the TV, thanks for showing this. It’s like taking me back to my childhood.
Wow, Tremors is one of my favorite movies. I have seen it maybe 100 times easy. The VHS would just live in the player back in the day. The Cerro Gordo lore gets better every video! EDIT: Django as well! Hot damn! Another favorite of more recent times.
Agree easily one of my favorites
Videos like this are what is a part of breathing life back into Cerro Gordo. The more you connect the area to your Ghost Town, the more avenues of interests connecting people from around the world. Fantastic job!
Best video ever to pay homage to such great legends and films , Cerro Gordo will live forever thanks to your dedication and help from people such as Dave Sparks and entire crew, the tradesmen who helped rebuild, and all the people who have help bring period pieces like the bar and piano to Cerro Gordo
This land’s history seriously just gets cooler and cooler!
As a canadian, i appreciate the scenery with the association between place, time and scene.
As a very very young child one of my last and only memory's of my father who past away in 1973, is of sitting on a sunday night watching Bonanza wiiith him.
In 2008 my only trip to the USA, I had the pleasure and honor to take a rusty oil smoking tour bus to Lake Tahoe where i saw the meadow and the set where Bonaza was filmed. My heart burst with love and memories.
To see the plain undisturbed rocks of the iconic movies is a walk down memory lane for me. Thank you, it is so powerful to associate a scene with a rock that has not changed in our dustuctive fast pace life time. THANK YOU!
Yes! Love that Bonanza set at Lake Tahoe 😃
Im so glad you did a video about all of the filming around there. I had recently just discovered all of the films shot in the area. I had watched a youtuberer who mentioned that Blazing Saddles had been shot around a town called Lone Pine and I immediately shouted, "Cerro Gordo!" And that is how I went down a rabbit hole on the filming history there.
Oh WoW! You are so lucky to live among all these these legends. You are becoming a legend yourself.
thanks
My daily commute to work used to be the desert road that Mad Max was filmed on. It’s crazy-cool when mundane daily life meets Hollywood.
I’ve been a fan of this channel for almost as long as you’ve been up there, Brent. I hope this awesome modern history take reaches even more people for you, man. I thoroughly enjoyed it!
As a massive film buff I found this fascinating! The depth and breadth of Cerro Gordo's history stands on it's own. It's why we're all here. Well, that and Brent's determination and curiosity of course. Discovering the area is saturated with filming locations is pure icing on the cake! So much fun when one thing you love just so happens to intersect with another!
Thanks! I had a lot of fun filming this one!
Seeing the shots side by side/after one another is actually incredible
Im watching this at Canvey, England, nine thirty Saturday evening , I spotted it just before I switched off , excellent very interesting, more history is always welcome.
That place is damn gorgeous. I didn't realise how many times I've seen Cerro Gordo before your channel, you actually brought back an awesome childhood memory I had with my Grandpa who told me all he knew of the place while we watched his favourite westerns. A bucket list visit to be sure
Yes! This is going to be so much fun to see. And I'm sure, many more movies will be filmed here in the future 🙌
I hope so! It's an area with some many different landscapes available
Once the American Hotel is up and running, it can accommodate the whole filming crew ^_^
I can see thousands of tourists and film watchers wanting to visit these scenes Brent, so prepare for and onslaught of visitors. Great work!!!!.
2:22 You got the wrong snowshoes. The ones in the movie are not the ones you picked up from the ground. Try and check the ones hanging on the wall next to your door. Love the video. Cheers, D.
This is one of my favorite videos you put out! This was super fun and well researched. I loved the cuts of the movie vs real life.
Thanks! I had a lot of fun making the video
This was very interesting! Thank you! I’m a 70 year old woman & I LOVED The Lone Ranger!! I would love to visit that museum!
i like this kinda video. it's different from the usual kind on this channel and it feels kinda refreshing but also its the very essence of this channel, its filled with history and great stories of the town and its surroundings
Very well done! Nice job Brent
Thanks! I appreciate it!
Love this idea for a new type of content, i don't expect it to be a frequent thing. But a cool one off every once in a while and neat to see some locations nearby you that are so iconic, even your home itself.
What a fantastic area! Easy to see why so many movies were filmed there. Simply stunning!
Wow I didn't know that 😳 unbelievable. And you could add that information to the tours . Best wishes from Ireland.
This lifelong film history and movie buff, living a stone-throw away from the former Chaplin Studios in Hollywood, truly loves and appreciates your awesome filming location tour 🎬🎥🎞️🌟 ❤️
I'm so very proud of you. It's been really fun watching your little town grow!!
Thank you!
Lone Ranger ! There you are being one. Are we powerless to the glorious magnetic force of our lovely rock?
Thank you. You were glowing in this one.
Cerro Gordo is definitely a great place to film movies and television shows
on location at and it is an amazing looking place for indie films to be filmed
have a great weekend and Thank You.📽🇺🇲🎥
Wow! Your approach to explaining the history of every scene and getting the camera sets this video appart from others I've watched. Many get close to the actual camera location but never match the actual film as you have. Thank you for this awesome video!!
Fantastic! You are outdoing yourself. Wonderful production. Thank you!
Whoa!!! This is amazing! I had no idea how many movies have been filmed around your neighborhood. Thank you for the expose, Brent. I definitely watching Tremors now! Just thinking about the legends who walked/rode through the scenes...it blows my mind. Seeing the actual scenes, in split screen...I really enjoyed that. As always, you take us along each journey, telling the stories of Hollywood in the wilderness. The editing is flawless, and I will be watching this again! It feels like there was so much detail and so much information. It is clear you always have fun editing your videos, but this one was special! ❤
My grandfather was a carpenter who lived in the Lone Pine area in the 30's. He worked on all kinds of films being shot in the area, including Gunga Din.
So much history and atmosphere in one place, you are the luckiest man!
Amazing to see all these locations with the movie scenes included. Excellent!
Great history of filming of Hollywood on your property or in your area outside of your property. Aloha ke akua!!!!
Different snowshoe but VERY cool. The one in the shot was wood an sinew.
I betcha it could have been one of the ones hanging on your wall to the left of the door.
Im really impressed with all the work you are doing, every time one of your videos pops up its clear how much work you put into it all and especially to historica accuracy.
I was at the Movie museum 2 weeks ago and never heard the version the way you brought it to life, thank you.
Wow! I never knew Cerro Gordo even had this kind of history! Great video, dude!
I had no idea so many films and scenes were shot right there in Cerro Gordo. This is one of my favourite videos so far! Weird to think I was watching footage of cerro gordo decades ago without realising, only to see it again in proper context here years later
Sir you are a living breathing Legend yourself. Thank you for blessing us all with your knowledge, fortitude drive and inspiration.
You are a true dreamer. Thank you for the inspiration.
I used to live on Martha’s Vineyard and when I watch Jaws I can piece together the different film locations. I love to watch the changes of weather and water texture all in one scene. It helped me understand the piecemeal film technique. As ever, I love your videos and your endeavors!
As a kid in the late 40’s I spent a lot of time amping in the Alabama hills and redrockc. Canyon. Empty 45 casings everywhere.
Absolutely fascinating. I had no idea Cerro Gordo even existed until I started watching your channel all those years ago but now it has a whole new identity, brilliant. ❤ Take care,keep safe. Dorset, UK
Very cool! Thank you for sharing these great stories!
Thanks for checking out the video!
Man! Brent! You've just struck the motherlode with this video. Your good fortune just took a turn for the better. So many possibilities there. Including the Lone Pine Western Film Museum segment is first class collaboration with Jesse Steele. Brilliant example of working with others in the area.
You need a tiny movie theatre that only shows these movies.
Cerro Gordo just keeps getting better and better. Add movie set to your list of accolades Brent!
Love the "Bama Hills" one of our favorite places to camp!
This is one of the coolest videos yet. I love the 'old' history of cerro gordo proper and keeler, and lone pine. But this 'modern' hollywood history adds so much to my overall mental idea of the area.
That was so freakin' cool!! I love it!!
Awesome episode! Always loved watching these video's of famous movie and tv show film locations and what they look like now. I've been watching your channel for a couple of years now, and didn't realize Cerro Gordo was so close to Lone Pine. I'm from Reno and drive down 395 all the time when going to SoCal. That museum is great, took my kids there years ago, right after they filmed Iron Man there, they were big fans of Tremors so it was a great trip seeing the museum and driving around the Alabama Hills.
One of your best!!
I agree
WILD! Brent really has a priceless investment there, unbelievable!
Thanks for taking us on this ride with you today can’t wait to see what’s next ?
I'm glad you are so committed to keeping Cerro Gordo alive! This was a fun video and very well done. Excellent picture quality and audio! Once again, great job!
So interesting and What an absolute amazing,stellar job you have done and continue to do in keeping this beautiful ghost town alive 🎉❤🫶🏻
Wow, never knew so many films i love had shots here !
This must be the most fun episode of this channel!
I think you struck a good nerve here Brent.
Your videos keep topping your previous ones. The latest one is always the best. Sure do look forward to the point where the hotel is protected enough from winter where contractors can work through the winter months inside.
Thank You Brent what a wonderful video. History is where you find it.
Glad you enjoyed it!
Indeed I did.
I really enjoyed this, not least for the reminisce about Tremors! Great video, well put together, spectacular editing - bravo!
0:11 Right when you say “not shot in Hollywood” you happen to then show the Fuller lodge in Los Alamos, New Mexico, which happens to be the real location! Guessing that was behind the scenes from Oppenheimer. Great video though!
Dawg it’s not that deep
Thank you for sharing this adventure!
For the algorithms!! 🎉 It's good to see you back....❤
Yes! Thank you!
Really enjoyed this episode. I was fortunate to work overseas for 6 years and while there my wife and I visited 18 different countries. Now when we watch movies or TV shows we would see places and sites we have been. I can relate to your excitement when visiting places where movies or TV shows have been filmed. Thanks for sharing.
That ending shot was epic!
Wow Brent, what an epic episode! I am so grateful for your passion on this subject. Please continue to explore the almost limitless stories of the Alabama Hills.
0:51 I didnt know you were german
😅lmao
See that's funny. People shouldn't b sensitive to general speaking jokes. Like they are now days. Haha
tremors is one of my all time favorite movies, to find out alot fo the scenes where shot at cerro gordo makes me so happy
I'm 69 years old and because of you I learned why he was called the lone ranger 😮
Great work Brent. ✌️
Oh my god, you're kidding. That intro scene with RDJ in Iron Man was iconic, I had no idea it was even filmed in the US. Makes sense, lot easier than going overseas, and with some vfx it looks similar enough.
I’ve driven through Lone Pine & Bishop on my way to Mammoth Lakes and never once stopped to explore this area even though I have known several of my favorite movies were filmed there and alone Pine has a movie festival every early October. So thank you for this tour! One could spend a year exploring the movie sights & make videos & still not have a complete video of every movie sight! Thank you again!!
3:04 looks like the snowshoe is on the wall next to the door
Brent you have outdone yourself with this video. Not only is it a fascinating part of your areas history, but you delivered a beautifully put together video. The matching shots must have taken ages!
Minor issue but the 1st photo at 8:57 is from me!
This was amazing!! Well done too! THANK YOU!
Your videos make me want to move there.
It's a beautiful area out here