Temperate Rainforests of Tasmania
Ғылым және технология
In the temperate rainforests of Tasmania we examine some Dicksonia tree fern groves, monster Eucalyptus regnans, get an Echidna's opinion on Germam Techno, and interview a Yellow-tailed Black Cockatoo.
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Пікірлер: 224
as Jeff Williams says "Better to be a Smart Fellar than a Fart Smeller"
@fluuufffffy1514
Жыл бұрын
Or, one could be both... 'Scuse me
“She said we didn’t look like botanists, I take that as a compliment” 😂 I’m done
@betula2137
Жыл бұрын
We need a botanist to document the petrified fossil you've become
Joey having a conversation about Germans, Techno and mdma with an Echidna is giving me life 🤣🤣
That spiny boy deserves a treat 🦔
Freakin beautiful. I'm really glad you stumbled on that echidna.
I live in Tasmania, and it was very nice to see my two favourite Tassie animals make an appearance here. Echidnas, with their little backwards feet and cute waddle have longer fur and have bouts of torpor over the winter down here (in some parts of the mainland, they're essentially nocturnal to escape the daytime heat - for an "ancient species," they sure seem adaptable). Nothing makes me happier than hanging out with one in the wild. I love the way that yellow tailed black cockatoos contrast against the character and behaviour of many of our other larger parrots. Sulphur crested cockatoos are known to be boisterous and destructive, constantly shrieking, and there's a reason that "pack of galahs" is an Aussie idiom. The yellow tailed black cockatoos though, seem shy and sound like a creaky barn door. It's very nice to sit and enjoy their quiet company. Thanks for showcasing some of our beautiful forests!
@betula2137
Жыл бұрын
Cute little schnozz can win over anyone
@Cheeseness
Жыл бұрын
@@betula2137 It's more than just a nose - there's a little mouth on the end as well :D
@betula2137
Жыл бұрын
@@Cheeseness When it's in the ground, the whole Earth is at the end of the schnozz. Such power the echidna wield
Watching these has made me realise how little I knew about Tasmanian flora. I'm a New Zealander and studied botany here. It amazes me how much similarity but also difference there is, but of course that makes total sense. The tree ferns and coprosmas are so familiar, but it feels weird to see them with eucalypts instead of just podocarps and beech.
@robmanueb.
Жыл бұрын
Hope he makes it to NZ!
@sebastianmarquez3014
Жыл бұрын
You should see all the Coprosma spp with arborescent lobelias here in Hawai'i!
So cool you got to bond with a local Echidna! I've only read that Tassie Echidnas love German house, so it's nice to get confirmation on that, getting into the deep convos down there, it's appreciated, thanks!
I love the conversations with the flowers and wildlife. ☺️
@ulalaFrugilega
Жыл бұрын
Me, too! Made me so happy, I stopped grinding coffee, and sat grinning and spellbound when he met the Echidna.
@sarahmehrtens4193
Жыл бұрын
Yes, he makes botany and ecology entertaining doesn't he.. Tends to give me a laugh too. 😄
My family holidayed in TAS back in 82. We spent a month traveling around the Island in a 78 Fairlane towing a caravan with three in the front, four in the back. My parents argued the whole time, it was great.
I live about an hour away from mount field, and it's so nice seeing your commentary on this area. Loved the echidna too! Keep up the good work. Also, the cockatoo you're hearing at the end of the video is a Yellow Tailed Black cockatoo, Anda funerea, relatively big for this area of the world, with a wing span of 2 feet.
@jessicathomas73
Жыл бұрын
Love those cockatoos, I have a few photos from around one of the many waterfalls in Tassie. They were tearing at the moss on the trees.
@Jack-mf5lw
Жыл бұрын
You're super lucky to live there! Nature in Tasmania seems pretty awesome I wish we had those kind of parks in my country, you're beyond blessed
@betula2137
Жыл бұрын
@@Jack-mf5lw We are so lucky. We need to take it a bit less for granted (and stop doing what we're currently doing: being the biggest deforestation hotspot for a developed country), and do a bit of therapeutic urbanism for good measure (for people to more experience our nature day-to-day, which reduces stress & increases productivity, etc)
@Jack-mf5lw
Жыл бұрын
@@betula2137 Absolutely, don't give up and keep on fighting deforestation in every possible way! Peaceful or not just make it work, I live in an antinatural hell hole where every valley is filled with concrete, we spend a lot of gov money just to keep what's left of our biodiversity intact. There is no such thing as a first-growth forest here and people go to other countries just to "see nature", you cannot afford to lose this battle!
@barrypoontang
Жыл бұрын
how the shit did you edit your comment a month ago in a video posted 2 days ago?
"I like ur shnoz, its like a gonzos shnoz".
So much of what I pick up on this channel(other than the casual profanity and social critique) is bits like "Worlds largest Angiosperm"(Eucalyptus Ragnans) or "Only Parasitic Conifer"(Parasitaxus) etc. Stuff that sticks in your head and makes you curious enough to go look it up later to see what's what. I know a tiny bit about an incredibly vast subject that gets more and more interesting as I snoop around. Curse you Tony! And your pal Al too! I was perfectly happy messin' around with Musclecars until you got me into this shit
I love when you're talking at an animal then the conversation turns introspective about how you think others perceive you.
I used to live in Australia and I've been to Tassie 3 times. It's a gorgeous area, and the plants are just amazing. The rainforest of the Tarkine, in the North West of the island, is just stunning. You may read that it's hard to go there, but a few areas are within walking distance of some pretty good dirt roads. If you like temperate rainforest, there is also the Otways near Melbourne (North of the Great Ocean Road) which has stunning flora. And since you like desert plants too, I really urge you to explore the Mallee country (if you're still in Australia at the time of this video being released), with national parks like Hattah Kulkyne, Murray Sunset, Little Desert, and for plants, especially Wyperfeld. Most of the land surface of these parks is only accessible with 4WD, but the 2WD accessible areas are still enough to have an amazing taste of these desert plants. The australian desert has no cacti, but they make up for it with the gorgeous mallee style eucalypts, and the amazing diversity of birdlife.
@betula2137
Жыл бұрын
The outback is so full of life. Also, the Tarkine is kind of under threat (currently being logged and mined and the money sent away from us too), even though it's worthy of being heritage listed (as the TWWHA is the highest-rated UNESCO site on Earth, and you only need 1 criterion to be listed)
So this is Tasmania. Read a bit of the history, it's original inhabitants and the arrival of the British. Sad story, we finally had our way. with an indigenous culture. Interesting plants and an amazing Cockatoo, as well as the Echidnae. Material culture-wise, I just got a new tv, and seeing your videos makes it even more worth-while, besides the video games I play on it.
@betula2137
Жыл бұрын
A slightly more heart-warming story, though it's a tiny light in a sea of ineffable tragedy, is when the D'Entrecasteaux expedition visited Recherche Bay twice in the 18th century. The members were moved by the natural beauty, as one would be, and planted a garden. The second time round they met the local Lyluequonny, who had documented and named the plants in the garden in a scientific manner; one of the reasons the French were there was to document stars for navigation (the first written experiment done in Australia, of course science had been done for 40k years on Tasmania), and discussed with the unrivalled local knowledge. So many interesting stories too, of course, most are lost, but even the ones which come from few sources provide a bit to the imagination beyond the sense of loss. In a way war memorials should hold strongly, we had Tarenorerer who united formerly-warring nations to defend this Land (and got the closest to winning militarily, though she died after exile during the genocide), or Tongerlongeter who led his nation to help protect the ancient alliances and trade routes in the south-east. Sadly we know least about the west except for the sturdy villages built to withstand difficult weather, and as people who had lived in isolation for longer than the east.
That mid-woodland critter convo was the bee's knees lol 4:40
love your videos , you should have popped over to New Zealand while you were close and looked at some of our ancient Kauri trees that are still standing . Keep doing what you do !!! bringing nature to the armchair
@k33k32
Жыл бұрын
I'd like to see our host talk to a Kakapo
@sarahmehrtens4193
Жыл бұрын
Yes, he would absolutely love New Zealand. The nature is absolutely amazing.
I love the mental transition from "some dude in the USA with the fast talk and the accent" ... "in Tasmania". Gives me a whole new way of looking at the country.
Loved Your previous video on Huon "Pines", I never knew it was a misnomer. Thanks for Your insight, You're a bloody legend, and from all My fellow Taswegians, I'm sure we appreciated having You here on the island, come back anytime :D
Happy New Years Joey... Saludos desde tuxtepec Oaxaca... Your knowledge is priceless and your humor/sarcasm is equally priceless...
Gonzo Schnoz. Most accurate description of the day!
You never fail to have me laughing and learning new things about our beautiful plant 🌍 thanks for high energy, realness and cute conversations with 'the only egg laying mammal' 🌟
dog woods huffing farts in the car parks
very little makes me happier than when tony calls me a prick for liking something.
The New England accent does need a BIT more practice, it's giving way more of a Connecticut transplant, Joey, coming from a Bostonian entomologist. 👍
@CrimePaysButBotanyDoesnt
Жыл бұрын
Sorry I was huffin fahts
@jamesdriscoll_tmp1515
Жыл бұрын
I was eatin chowdah
@walkerfeet8729
Жыл бұрын
I'm not too interested correcting spelling, but i'm having some meta-dissonance. Do you study bugs?
@Finnnicus
Жыл бұрын
@@walkerfeet8729 no they study bahgs
@espalier
Жыл бұрын
I’m entertained by the Australian D, that morphs into a D+J, or just a J.
Happy New Year Joey, looking forward to more of your entertaining and informative content.
I went there today! Great spot. In the morning I was at the Big Trees walk in the rainforest, then drove up to the alpine area and spent the arvo there. What an awesome national park!
What a fantastic episode, plus I got to see an Echidna and a Rosella!
Getting slammed here in the Bay Area with rain, LOVE IT WE NEED IT!. Sausal Creek is roaring in Dimond Park!!
Ahh yeah! Happy New Year, Joey! Love those tree ferns. Cheers, from Oregon.
HOW CUTE!!! man. what a wonderful professional hobby of yours. :)
thanks for doing that really long lecture I downloaded it to absorb over every train journey I love you for doing that
Me luuvs Tasmania's nature! Fantastic 🤩😍🥰
Light gathering of the camera is fine.
Thanks man…. Easily one of my favourite episodes….. saw it on patreon … had to watch again today!!!
Omg thank you for coming to tasmania!!!
i am SO happy that you got the opportunity to explore this island. well deserved and well done.
Oh man, I came back through Blue tier forest reserve after a trip to Bay of Fires when I visited Tasmania, and I gotta say it can't be understated how fucking cool it is to see a half Dozen Echidnas just chilling by the side of the road. Wish I spent more time there, but you can say that about just about any place in Tasmania!
Nice one!
I watched half, watched the rest a few days later, and watched the beginning again. Love the friendly echidna and cockatoo heckling, the giant eucalyptus, the orchids in the mass on the laaags....
Great video! Thanks
really cool to see this. thank you!
Gondawanan distribution rant had me laughing - “you could do that back then”
Lovely content! Cheers from Brazil!
best in the new year Joey
That looks badass good job keep the vids comin
Came here to say i love techno and house music and i love your channel.
Massive banger trees! Also, that echidna was adorable.
Guinea wind bag 😂😂 You’re vids are sweet dude👍
I slapped my knee like a Tennessee banjo savant when he hit that 'COLONIES!" How does he keep doing it...
Loving your reaction to echidnas :) we DO have the best monotremes
Welcome to Australia. Your reaction to our spikey friend the echidna is hilarious.
Cah pahk Regnans, Nice
I could listen all day
In the past week, I've been to SF Botanical Garden 2x, after never having gone before. Made me happy for you to reference a tree there that I (assume) I've seen.
You got me with the huffin' farts in the carpark, champagne comedy right there brother. The lesson was on point.✌🇦🇺
The new official Echidna Whisperer channel, nice.
The LIST Map is a handy resource by the way, with tasveg layers to spot some nice little spots, including the wet sclerophyll forest (with or without rainforest understorey), and temperate rainforest (Nothofagus or Atherosperma, or both). Some of the 'parklike' stands are at higher elevations, like near the Vale of Belvoir or the Rattler Range
The ketamine jokes made me laugh out loud for the first time in months. Thanks brother.
Happy New Year, ya Silly Bastids...
Happy new year. Upload more monotreme videos and no one gets hurt.
Alright, I said: Mr. Santoro, please restore my failing sympathy for humanity! Of course he did. And then we met an Echidna to boot! I feel fortified now, thanks.
This is the coolest place you've been yet!
Bird says: "hell yeah I can do this. Can do whatever I want here, Mr. Tourist from wherever, I am goddamn native, so... go fuck yourself, bye." And he does mean it in a friendly way❣️ Also, what Joey says about ppl not liking him after 15 minutes is the opposite of my impression from videos with guests. They almost all seem kind of shocked, certainly wary, and uncomfortable at first, then warm to him until they hate to see him go in the end. 😂
you and "callmekris" on a forest walk , potential for much hilarity. happy new year Tony
Aye. Ty. Keep goin for us ofbs.
@23:51 the mushroom you picked up looks to be from the family Russulaceae, but I'm not sure. I'm saying this based off of the fact that a lot of Russulas have similar gills, stems and characteristics. It has to be ectomycorrhizal as you said.
I really need to know how you seem to have all this amazing information ready to go. How are you so well-versed? I’m sure practical experience is essential, but do you have any reading/resource tricks or recommendations? That or I’m assuming you have a photographic memory haha
Nice
Have to tell you Tony, don't let an echidna climb into your car. Had to pick one up off a road up the hills near Melbourne once upon a time, which had an injury to its nose, a blood nose. Appeared healthy enough to release an hour or so later back near where I picked him/her up. No further bleeding and pretty feisty for an echidna, but I had to unbolt and remove the rear seat the SW Ford Cortina to get it out of the car after it had climbed under. Was maybe a junior, a little one, about 30cm or a foot from its arsehole to breakfast, and I have seen them much bigger. They're peaceful critters. Never met an angry echidna, which unlike the platypus male, do not have the venom spike on their rear ankle, which gives them a right to throw their weight around, so to speak. Not exactly like an angry moose or a hungry bear if you happen to be tied to a tree... Sometimes it is not a good idea to be a tree hugger protesting logging of habitat, because you may only tempt a hungry bear once. Or, so I am told by people with much more experience with large omnivores than I.
I wash down my Irish tacos with my Scottish mezcal.
English, Welsh, Irish & Scottish all contributed to the Aussie accent... that's fair dinkum.
@JesseValentine
Жыл бұрын
And beer!
Tasmania is definitely on the bucket list. They really could use a few tiger beetles, but still on the list. The birds and plants though, and can't argue with monotremes just waddling around
Genuine opinion of bass music
I love those tree ferns I've tried to have them and I think my place is too dry, they croaked :( you showed a lot of restraint not petting the echidna, I think I would've tried lol so cute!
😄"It's so funny what the British accent morphed into . . ." says the man with the very strong N.Y. accent! I cannot for the life of me figure out what you're saying about the carpark, even KZread subtitles are bamboozled. "A lot of people huffing fats in these car parks" is the first iteration, and "... huffed any fats in a cat pack" is the 2nd.🤣🤣🤣 Nevertheless, I love your videos. 🥰 (Disclaimer: my family moved from MI to AUS in 72. I've been in Tassie since 86.)
PLEASE tell me you went and saw the magnificent Dicksonia antarctica specimens at Russell Falls.
@betula2137
Жыл бұрын
Lots of fungi too
i got to get down to tasmania one of these days!
Do you know what thirsty cement is if not would be ok looking it up and letting people know in your next video how useful it can be. Ok so if cities used it will reduce sand mining and help ecosystems and reduce flooding and increase groundwater aquifer and soil levels in cities.
Hey mate, love your work. FYI you got your dogwood and your hazel mixed up in this one.
16:17 that is Chlorociboria aeruginascens, turquoise stain. I had to check its distribution to make sure. It is. Same stuff as in the states. The color is a compound called Xylandian. Used in medieval European inlay as "green oak". Not good for much, too punky. Stabilizes ok but a lot of color gets pulled-out in heat cure resins. Haven't tried alumilite and pressure yet.
stuck in khole :D man you're a legend
cool! your blue wood looks like a Chlorociboria sp.
Cockatoos are noisy bastards when there's a group arguing.
I also grow some stuff from South America because North America has kind of came in contact with it for a long time so it's not as bad and most are nightshades which potato beetles are great at controlling and they benefit native bumble bees but not the invasive honey bee
Hi great video also I was watching one of your other videos where you were planting trees in California illegally makes me happy can you do more of that?
LOL I think the Boston accent _does_ overlap with 'Strayan a bit. Both are non-rhotic, at any rate.
Thanks Tony, you do good work. (Gonna GFMS in your honour later, or in memo because these days it could kill me between collapsed lungs)
Cough syrup techno. Nice.
I was just in Baja and there was a tree with 3 cacti growing off it. It looked fake or something but the cacti were naturally growing originating as bird doodoo no doubt.
would have loved to see ur take on "macquaire island " a true beacon of light !!!!!!!!!!
nice
More content from Australia please.
Lmao , don't fight the Boston just go with it haha 👽👽.... So cute and so interesting!!!
@Convolutedtear
Жыл бұрын
Mmmmmm safrol now we re talking untz untz haha meow cough*
20:20 bird calls were corellas or cockatoos, not the rosies. Rosies are much quieter, more like chattering. (I also need to stop commenting before the end of the lesson 😇)
Low-brow biology is me in a nut shell 😂 god damn I love this
Holy shit, you were just up the road from my house!!!
I love how boston he is 😅 or maybe new York? But I think boston. It makes learning about plants soo great 😂
Joey, the last fungi you showed is a type of russula