Rock Art Ranch - Navajo County - Arizona

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Publicado 2013-04-16
Finding Lost Civilizations - An Educational Series - Additional Videos At: storiesbyalex.com/

Meet Brantly Baird a true rancher and cowboy who recounts finding fragments of the past on his ranch - a fantastic petroglyph journey.

Visit storiesbyalex.com/ for additional videos and stories.

Todos los comentarios (21)
  • @HP-fn4bo
    “Following a thread” is the most beautiful thing I’ve heard in awhile.
  • The years since you began the series are also the record of your own personal aging.... Fascinating 🕊️....
  • @ivydixon3506
    Wow, so interesting!! I may never get out to Rock Art Ranch but so glad I can visit it here. Thanks
  • @lydshome
    I live in Snowflake Az, and there is a canyon 6 miles from my house that is so much like this one. I have hundreds of pictures that I wish I could show you, however I don't have a scanner to add them to my computer. I'm almost 70, moved here when I was 45, and I'm still recovering from major back surgery. I used to visit that canyon a few times every year. Some of the petroglyph's are so old, and getting very faded, but still, I would see something new every time I went.
  • @storiesbyalex
    It was a pleasure to meet Mr. Baird and enjoy his hospitality - a genuine rancher and cowboy....alex
  • @brad45c
    Judy and I watched together in our home theater. Thanks for another wonderful experience, Alex.
  • I was absorbed by this video. I've always had an interest in Native Americans/ indigenous people, also a sadness. They were the keepers of the land. I respect them whole heartedly. Their stories on rock are priceless.
  • @dalelong8001
    Thank you for sharing such an awesome treasure of this location and folks.
  • @sbbjk_l4145
    Just visited today. Outstanding. Brantley and Clem are cool old Cowboys. Great to meet them.
  • @denaredford6701
    How lucky you get to find such beautiful ancient artifacts .
  • @YsabetJustYsabet
    I went there only a month ago, right at the end of September 2016; I can honestly say that I was awed nearly to the point of shock by the petroglyphs in that canyon and the feel of the place-- it didn't feel empty, and it felt wonderful.  Maybe it was the water; who knows?  But I think I could stay in that canyon for a week, look at and photograph the petroglyphs there every day of it and never see them all.  I loved it and plan on going back; it's truly a magical place in every sense of the word, and Mr. Baird and his granddaughter were both incredibly kind.
  • @harirao12345
    i was there during christmas break of 2016. great place! brantley and his family are genuinely warm and welcoming and what they charge is nothing compared to the unique experience! thanks for this video since i wanted to interview him myself!
  • @cacatr4495
    For the viewer's reference, the Rock Art Ranch subject content begins at 4:41. Also, the old moniker "Tonto Rim" (also used by author Zane Grey) is used in this video as a synonym for the Mogollon Rim (the southern edge of the Colorado Plateau), which is north of the town of Young, Arizona and the Tonto Basin, where more ancient ruins (around the town of Young), cliff dwellings, pottery remnants and tools are found, some in the Sierra Ancha Wilderness south of Young. ~ Considering that this is the best video I've seen on Rock Art Ranch so far, I'm sharing it with others via my large Arizona playlist, which is a video tour of much of the state. Thanks for posting it.
  • @WAGONJON
    Amazed at how you find these places and how they are connected to Monterey. Thanks again for the tour. Those petroglyphs are outstanding.
  • @greatbasinman
    What a pleasure to watch, most of the time holding my attention for more than a few minutes on a Utube vid is difficult. Honor to see Mr. Baird and hear his story, what a place!!!
  • @ShelleeGraham
    i'm very excited about Rock Art Ranch. Because of Alex Kerekes' wonderful video, I have reservations to see this place during mid-October.