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Digging Up a Grave One Year After Burial

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  • Опубликовано: 18 авг 2024
  • This is me opening a rather fresh, 1 year old grave. The plot allows for burial up to two caskets, one on top of the other. The family decided to hire our funeral home to bury their loved one again, which is always a nice thing, because it shows trust put in our services. This is very important to me as I try to be as professional as I can and I pride myself in that.
    The previous hole is marked in the ground as an indentation in the legs area.
    I needed to get to the last year's casket, leave a layer of soil on it and even everything out.
    What I forgot to mention in the video is, that there was no smell coming out of the casket and that it has collapsed in the legs, from the weight of the soil (hence the indentation on the ground level).
    I took me a little over an hour, the mosquitos were merciless and the walls kept collapsing.
    The next day, the husband joined his wife in the grave, with her casket being untouched and covered with a layer of soil and his casket placed on top of her. After 20 years passes and if the family wishes to do so, we can rebury both of them much deeper and the plot will allow for up to two new caskets on top of each other. It's a common practice in Poland, due to the lack of space and I myself have four members of my family lying in one grave like that, with the oldest one dead since 1988.
    I wanted to dig this quick and I lifted shovels a bit too full, which resulted in my back being strained a bit. The pain went away in two days but I need to be more reasonable in the future. Back injury is the most common injury among the undertakers and I threw mine in the last year already.
    CHAPTERS
    0:00 Dismantling the grave
    0:20 Explanation
    0:52 Securing other graves
    1:03 Initial digging
    1:56 The wall starts cracking
    2:23 Dragging the soil around and digging deeper
    3:09 Reaching the last's year coffin
    3:36 Describing the casket
    3:53 Preparing the spot for the next coffin
    4:40 The wall collapsing
    4:45 Final touches
    4:55 The Dead Man's View
    5:16 Cleaning myself after work
    5:33 Final look at the grave
    Get to know me better here: / mentalmartin
    Check out my place about Death: / funeralparadise

Комментарии • 913

  • @kingarthur666.6
    @kingarthur666.6 Год назад +157

    I watch these videos of Martin because he is a real character this guy is one of a kind and caring very serious about his work Thanks Martin stay safe Godspeed

    • @MartinsGraveyard
      @MartinsGraveyard  Год назад +13

      Thank you your majesty 🙂

    • @Nccr3-ht8gm
      @Nccr3-ht8gm Год назад +5

      I agree caring for
      The dead is a sacred
      Occupation and calling
      I wish I would have had
      Someone like Martin
      When my little s
      Disabled brother passed away
      17 years ago the funeral home
      Showed so little respect
      For him as we did not
      Have a lot of money

    • @sandee3073
      @sandee3073 8 месяцев назад +3

      @@Nccr3-ht8gmI’m really sorry that happened and that you have to deal with those memories. ❤

    • @Emilywoodman
      @Emilywoodman 7 месяцев назад

      Bro why is this on RUclips

    • @Emilywoodman
      @Emilywoodman 7 месяцев назад

      Don’t like how he says, ‘looks fresh’

  • @marklawrencegamil9462
    @marklawrencegamil9462 Год назад +237

    what amazes me is how you were able to dig it up all by yourself without an excavator. It took me an hour just to dig up a knee-deep grave for my dead dog.

    • @TheoneGodfather
      @TheoneGodfather Год назад +15

      Looks like really soft dirt.

    • @MartinsGraveyard
      @MartinsGraveyard  Год назад +44

      The soil was very soft and easy to dig in. I wasn't my first time digging either.

    • @twobarrells
      @twobarrells Год назад +16

      Thats just not deep enough, hes gonna come after you.

    • @ShintyShinto
      @ShintyShinto Год назад +6

      Same for my cat. The dirt was hard and dry in the summer heat, not to mention we were digging through roots. Arms were black by the end.
      Been almost 3 years and despite being buried in a cardboard box the grave hasn't caved in or been dug up by a dog (live in the city so had to drive out to a forest). You'd never know it was there. The forest is undergoing reforestation though, all the non-native plantation conifers will be gradually removed and replaced by native oak, birch, rowan and ash trees over the next century, restoring the natural habitat. So he'll be dug up eventually but that's life. Burn me and chuck me wherever.

    • @earnold1896
      @earnold1896 Год назад +14

      ​@@ShintyShinto we have 13 cats buried on our property (all our babies died of old age). I'd hate for them to be dug up.

  • @Dexox2009
    @Dexox2009 Год назад +101

    Every breath we take we're closer to this moment.

    • @cubanpete9030
      @cubanpete9030 Год назад

      The moment of birth you start dying

    • @fjb3544
      @fjb3544 Год назад +8

      Wow that’s deep 👎🏻

    • @septemberquest6393
      @septemberquest6393 Год назад +6

      Exactly, Lucas,every day we get up ,is one day closer to our demise..wether we realize it or not.

    • @adipocere1066
      @adipocere1066 Год назад +2

      He didn’t video the icky part at the end. One year and the remains would still be mostly whole, gooey and very stinky.

    • @vicvega3614
      @vicvega3614 9 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@larryhullinger4141aww new neighbors, "ur blocking the sunlight again Barbara" 😡

  • @TheStoneWhisperer
    @TheStoneWhisperer 28 дней назад +8

    I love how Martin practices at least once the view from the lying position! How many people can say they understand what the view will be like in their grave? 🤣🥰

  • @imjabroni1
    @imjabroni1 Год назад +225

    When my aunt passed on in 2014, she was buried next to her father, who had passed in 1963. At the grave service, you could clearly see the side of his metal coffin beside where hers would go. It held up remarkably well.

    • @janet20257
      @janet20257 Год назад +20

      You saw the vault. The bare coffin does not go into the ground, it's inside the vault.

    • @337caprice
      @337caprice Год назад

      @@janet20257 you know everything.. sometimes things aren't the same.. open your mind and shut your mouth.. respect different cultures

    • @janet20257
      @janet20257 Год назад

      @@337caprice you shut your mouth. It's NOT a matter of culture. It's of burial regulations, dumbass

    • @RADIUMGLASS
      @RADIUMGLASS Год назад +19

      It's possible that it was a metal Clark Grave vault. In the 60s when her father passed the metal Clark vaults were fairly common and they are shaped like a casket. Most of the Clark vaults are made of galvanized steel and hold up very well.

    • @janet20257
      @janet20257 Год назад +6

      @@RADIUMGLASS thanks for that info

  • @mrnm6482
    @mrnm6482 Год назад +57

    Grave digger in The Netherlands. Here we use an excavator. On older cemeteries with narrow paths we do have to dig by hand. 3 coffins max in each grave. The first one at around 2.8m, second at 1.8m, and last at 1.1m. we always use metal boards to prevent the walls caving in. We wouldn't want the neighbor to come for a visit during the actual funeral. Really loving your channel. Keep up the good work!

    • @MartinsGraveyard
      @MartinsGraveyard  Год назад +15

      Thanks for sharing! We dig up to a 2,5m the deepest with wooden reinforcements if the soil is loose. We can stack two coffins on top of each other but then we can rebury after 20 years so there can be many persons in one spot. My grandma lies with three other people (family also).

    • @charliegirlize
      @charliegirlize Год назад +1

      @@MartinsGraveyard I have a question. Someone I knows siblings died in a house fire. There were 5 that died. Between the ages of 18months and 12 years of age. All in the same plot. How would they all of fitted in one plot? It happened in 1997.
      Thanks.

    • @MartinsGraveyard
      @MartinsGraveyard  Год назад +3

      @@charliegirlize Well, it depends on how much was left of them. Sometimes children can end up with a parent in one casket. Sometimes there are just pieces left like from train or airplane accidents. They take up little space.

    • @charliegirlize
      @charliegirlize Год назад

      @@MartinsGraveyard they would of been full bodies. It was the smoke that got them 😔. Can you put 5 coffins in one grave?

    • @MartinsGraveyard
      @MartinsGraveyard  Год назад +7

      @@charliegirlize You can put 4 in a double family grave (2 times wider than normal) but I can only speak about how we do it in Poland. I don't know how it is done in your neck of the woods.

  • @buck9739
    @buck9739 Год назад +40

    I work in cemeteries. So in saying so I certainly can appreciate what a hard worker you are.

    • @buck9739
      @buck9739 9 месяцев назад

      @@60toodles oh no I’m a contractor who cares for many cemeteries. I sure enjoy watching your content though. Thx

    • @kevinmacdonald6143
      @kevinmacdonald6143 8 месяцев назад

      Utterly rubbish, its only about 3 ft, I'm a gravedigger for 22 years 12 of them digging by hand some I dug myself to 6 n half feet, about 3 or 4 times a week, hard ground new ground, that's soft digging what we call a reopen, ie been dug before so nothing physical it's all loose, you don't know what your talking about

  • @frankward423
    @frankward423 Год назад +60

    This was a surprise from the You Tube algorithm. Great job and video. Keep up the good work. I'm a gravedigger in the US.

    • @MartinsGraveyard
      @MartinsGraveyard  Год назад +13

      Thank you! Greetings from Poland, fellow gravedigger.

    • @sheliametcalfe-farmer8998
      @sheliametcalfe-farmer8998 Год назад +3

      Thank you for what you do, it takes a special kind of person to do this type work

    • @sego6277
      @sego6277 Год назад +2

      I wanted to be gravedigger when I was 7

  • @GeorgeinScotland
    @GeorgeinScotland 9 месяцев назад +10

    Martin, I have no doubts we will see you in a Chiropractor video in the future with back ache, great man indeed much respect sir

  • @mikebledig7208
    @mikebledig7208 Год назад +37

    I have the upmost respect for undertakers and anyone that must deal with the dead. If it wern't for them, things would be in a big mess. Someone has to do it. I take my hat off to you Martin.

    • @MartinsGraveyard
      @MartinsGraveyard  Год назад +4

      Thank you Mike.

    • @RS-rj5sh
      @RS-rj5sh 9 месяцев назад

      It's a job most of us wouldnt do for any amount of money, so hats off to Martin and his grave digging compatriots

    • @jamie-r2034
      @jamie-r2034 8 месяцев назад +1

      I'm in the US and my best friend & his family lived above a funeral home (they owned a few of them). It was so weird to have dead bodies on the floor below us while we would all hang out. lol His mom & dad ended up hiring me and their son to pick up bodies. I've seen some stuff that would blow your mind. Suicides & fire victims were always rough. It takes a special person to deal with death & grief every single day.

  • @noahholliday9761
    @noahholliday9761 Год назад +13

    I find myself fascinated by the easy digging in Polish soil. A flat shovel would get you nowhere deeper than the grass where I live. I spent over 20 years digging with a madax and round shovel and my hands, shoulders, and elbows are destroyed from it. This looks like heaven to me. I could dig in that softness for fun.

    • @MartinsGraveyard
      @MartinsGraveyard  Год назад +1

      Check out my other video with, that's right, even better soil. Perfect conditions gravedigging is the name.

    • @noahholliday9761
      @noahholliday9761 Год назад +1

      @@MartinsGraveyard I honestly never thought I'd find a video about digging that relaxed me, but this works somehow. Love from the US to Poland brother.

    • @Yumbutteredsausage
      @Yumbutteredsausage Год назад

      Worms have lots to feed on makes the soil rich 😮

    • @wolfman515
      @wolfman515 5 месяцев назад

      That's easy digging, but cave in is a near certainty. We have rock and clay with occasional tree roots that's tough digging, but it never caves. You wouldn't want to try rock and clay with that sandbox shovel though, best to get a backhoe.

  • @SebSea5319
    @SebSea5319 Год назад +7

    Fair play to that guy for having a sense of humour. Pity he couldn't have the use if a mini excavator to ease those back pains. What facinating work!

  • @TshepisoMagomane
    @TshepisoMagomane 5 месяцев назад +5

    I love your job. We must not be scared of the dead or death. It's part of us.
    Exciting 😮

    • @monamuller8969
      @monamuller8969 2 месяца назад

      I would disagree here. I think it's wise to be scared of death if you don't know where your soul goes.

    • @TshepisoMagomane
      @TshepisoMagomane 2 месяца назад +1

      @@monamuller8969 I know, believe me.

  • @karenweaver134
    @karenweaver134 5 месяцев назад +3

    Martin has some serious muscle in his arms! Amazing that he does this by himself!

  • @ucitymetalhead
    @ucitymetalhead Год назад +8

    Imagine if you laid down and heard a knocking and heard "hey get your own grave and cut out that racket I'm trying to rest in PEACE!"

    • @Yumbutteredsausage
      @Yumbutteredsausage Год назад +1

      He'd have filled the hole back in quicker than he dug it while poo would shoot out 😮

    • @ucitymetalhead
      @ucitymetalhead Год назад

      @@Yumbutteredsausage he'd have been a human rocket.

    • @RS-rj5sh
      @RS-rj5sh 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@Yumbutteredsausage I think he would of just told them to "relax, it won't be long until I'm finished", he seems that kind of relaxed type of guy.

  • @pogmothoin1342
    @pogmothoin1342 Год назад +345

    And this is why I'm being cremated.

    • @twinsonic
      @twinsonic Год назад +14

      Yep..same here. And scattered on my favourite beach

    • @janeblake5083
      @janeblake5083 Год назад +20

      Same here! When my dad died, we took his cremated remains to a beach where he and his friends had explored as children, overlooked by the clay banks they used to climb. He had asked me to do this beforehand. Full circle so to speak.

    • @jacquelinelayne7702
      @jacquelinelayne7702 Год назад +7

      Amen, just make sure they don't sell pieces of you for thousands of dollars

    • @pogmothoin1342
      @pogmothoin1342 Год назад

      @@jacquelinelayne7702 My body will be donated to Science Care, although because of the extent of My health i can't donate organs my cadaver will be used by medical students, they pick you up and when finished cremate you , give you back to the person you designate, total cost 0, hopefully someone will live because a Dr learned an invaluable lesson

    • @johnbrown9092
      @johnbrown9092 Год назад +1

      Exactly!

  • @lamarrharding4776
    @lamarrharding4776 Год назад +17

    I grew up with morticians on the block, one mortuary, and two retired gents. My grandparents, parents, and sister all have consecutive graves in a cemetery that were bought when the cemetery was first developed. My wife's family are generally buried in another cemetery with Graves bought together, but they were running out of land, and my wife didn't want to be buriedext, so, she owns a space in the above ground mosoleum, overlooking her family.
    My son died, and I had a plot and headstone in an unmaintde rustic hill side cemetery, but when they tried to dig his grave, they hit solid rock one foot down. He is in a satin lined steel casket in a concrete vault. I just want to be buried in a shroud next to him, many years from now.

  • @joannairall2775
    @joannairall2775 Год назад +11

    I just can't stop watching them all night I would never lie down in a grave knowing that there is a casket below hell no

    • @m.o.b.5011
      @m.o.b.5011 Год назад

      Especially when it still looks that fresh. Very scary.

    • @j.cheese34
      @j.cheese34 Год назад +1

      @@m.o.b.5011 I’d be worried that if I was at the bottom I couldn’t get out if turned to a zombie 😂

    • @m.o.b.5011
      @m.o.b.5011 Год назад +1

      @@j.cheese34 you can say that again. There's reasons why it was said, respect the dead 😂😂

    • @j.cheese34
      @j.cheese34 Год назад

      @@m.o.b.5011 😂😂😂

    • @Yumbutteredsausage
      @Yumbutteredsausage Год назад

      Yeah, a hand might come up & make a grab for he testicles 😮

  • @John-nl4lt
    @John-nl4lt Год назад +12

    In Australia the graves are six foot deep you’ll need your ladder. Thanks for the content. Cheers John from Wollongong Australia 🇦🇺

  • @matthewturnbull9547
    @matthewturnbull9547 9 месяцев назад +9

    Think the “poverty” coffin is my favourite too, I mean each to their own but to spend the amount of money on a box to rot your body in, underground seems absurd to me, spend your money in life and not on and extravagant funeral. You can gave a lovely respectful and caring funeral without having to spend.

    • @MartinsGraveyard
      @MartinsGraveyard  9 месяцев назад +3

      Exactly my thoughts. It all turns into dust anyway.

    • @bensafi9665
      @bensafi9665 2 месяца назад

      Beautiful

  • @EricAsselin
    @EricAsselin Год назад +9

    I know why I watch these vids. It makes me reflect on my own death which will absolutely come at some point in the future. They are therepeutical for me: it helps me deal with it. So thanks for your vids. I appreciate the effort.

    • @BeeRocket2010
      @BeeRocket2010 Год назад

      Hi, what's going on exactly? Are you worried or preoccupied about dying? Something from childhood?

    • @EricAsselin
      @EricAsselin Год назад

      @@BeeRocket2010 Just survival instinct.

    • @BeeRocket2010
      @BeeRocket2010 Год назад

      @@EricAsselin Do you think we part from our bodies and go anywhere when we die or just black nothing like it was before our birth?

    • @EricAsselin
      @EricAsselin Год назад

      @@BeeRocket2010 Yes and no. I believe that the Universe is cyclic: it goes endlessly from a Big Bang to a Big Crunch and through a Big Bang again etc. I also believe that everytime the Universe cycles, it's exactly as it was before. So we live the same lives over and over again, but since the incarnation of the previous Universe has been totally recycled, there is no connection left to it, so you can't lets say remember your previous life. From our point of view, we are born and we die, so we are mortals. From the cosmic point of view, we are eternal because when we die time cease to flow for us. We flash back into consciousness instantaneously in the next birth from the same mother all over again. When we live, we make choices, so everything is really random. In the grand cosmic scheme, nothing is random since the same choices were made in all the incarnations of the previous Universes. There is no god(s) and the Universe is amoral
      The only justice is that of men.

    • @EricAsselin
      @EricAsselin Год назад

      So since you will repeat this experience eternally, make it the best experience for you and those around you.

  • @rocknrolljesus3197
    @rocknrolljesus3197 Год назад +73

    no doubt at all that excavating solely with a shovel is one of the most strenuous jobs there is. my hats off to you dude.

  • @fred463
    @fred463 Год назад +74

    Please do not lie in the bottom when you are finished digging. If the hole were to collapse in you would smother before you could get out. A person I knew died in just such a manner. I like watching your content.

    • @337caprice
      @337caprice Год назад

      Shut up Flintstone ass dork

    • @benwilletts6862
      @benwilletts6862 Год назад +15

      Also a sign of respect

    • @MrBobm001
      @MrBobm001 Год назад +2

      ....... but if that happen, it would be his last video "Grave digger buried himself" his channel may receive millions of views unless someone just keeps the camera and its never posted!

    • @user-rg1tu8qz9s
      @user-rg1tu8qz9s 7 месяцев назад +2

      A mi me parece muy irrespetuosa la forma de acostarse en el sitio sagrado eterno de un cuerpo.

  • @TM-0813
    @TM-0813 4 месяца назад +1

    After reading the description i get it now. That's a sweet idea to lay your spouse or loved ones on top of each other. ❤

    • @katzee1648
      @katzee1648 15 дней назад

      @@TM-0813 my parents are buried on top of eachother.

  • @kathydishner7691
    @kathydishner7691 Год назад +11

    Such respect given. 🙏 You've well earned your trust to these famies.

  • @Happyheart146
    @Happyheart146 Год назад +17

    That must be really frustrating when it keeps collapsing in you like that. A noble trade sir, but please look after your back!

    • @MartinsGraveyard
      @MartinsGraveyard  Год назад +7

      Sometimes it collapses right before the funeral and you need to jump in in the suit and take the dirt out as fast as possible. It's a crazy job, but very rewarding and I love it. Thanks!

    • @Happyheart146
      @Happyheart146 Год назад +1

      @@MartinsGraveyard I wish I could do it. I wanted to do reconstructive work, embalming and such but I'm almost 50 now and the time has passed.
      Credit to you.

    • @thomasnewton4040
      @thomasnewton4040 Год назад +2

      I am 75 1/2 yrs. Old. My back now feels like I dug graves all of my life. 😑

    • @Happyheart146
      @Happyheart146 Год назад

      @@thomasnewton4040 lol, try and lie flat on the floor - just be sure u can get back up first!
      Seriously, I get it, I'm only 50 but feeling worse every year. Guess it gives us an excuse to booze as much as we like tho!!

  • @trina415
    @trina415 Месяц назад +2

    Beautifully done martin

  • @KCCardCo
    @KCCardCo 8 месяцев назад +2

    It reminds me of the graveyard I visited in Bielsko Biala during the summer of 1998. They had family monuments for underground burial which were tombs with shelves. Large family tombs were built with a thick granite slab covering the entrance, could fit 4 to 6. When it was removed you would see the caskets on shelves. I remember visiting the cemetery and seeing one of the old monuments ready to cave in. Going back one week later the entire tomb crashed in and you could see pre-war coffins on shelves. One was very ornate and made of copper, possibly pre 1900.
    The cemetery I worked at had the hardest clay soil and was a b*tch to dig even with a backhoe during a drought. We would have to saturate the ground to make it easier and that barely helped.

  • @sarahathersuch303
    @sarahathersuch303 Год назад +4

    Oh my goodness you are amazing you cover all aspects of the process im 8n awe of you xx

  • @ayajparahinog9168
    @ayajparahinog9168 Год назад +13

    The truth is, I am just amazed watching a man digging into a grave. It gives me a view on how does it feels to be buried when time has come.
    Funny thing is, imagine going to university studying difficult a
    Algebra, calculus, sciences, etc for 4 years and you end up a job digging a grave. Well, i bet this guy is being paid for a reasonable wage!
    And I salute!

  • @bigmort6916
    @bigmort6916 3 месяца назад +2

    That's a beautiful view ❤

  • @philmckrackin8303
    @philmckrackin8303 Месяц назад +3

    I just sub'd. I think his job is interesting, but his work is top notch.

  • @ozgurcatal95
    @ozgurcatal95 8 месяцев назад +3

    I wondered about the person in the coffin, what does she look like a year after death?

  • @jacquelinelayne7702
    @jacquelinelayne7702 Год назад +12

    Thank you for your video, I really don't know which country you are in, and I know in some family cemeteries they have chosen to do this dig up one relative to place another one in there but that's why I believe in cremation. Once your soul has left your body that's just the vehicle that it used to do physical things. Thank you again for your videos and I'm very impressed with your physical stamina. God bless you and yours

  • @danielkinney6325
    @danielkinney6325 5 дней назад

    You should have done helpers do 5 gallon buckets of dirt lift up with ropes so you don’t injure your back. You won’t realize it until it’s to late but you can really rupture dusk and do all kinds of damage to your body doing that kind of work. Gods bless you for doing this work

  • @EV-wp1fj
    @EV-wp1fj 2 дня назад

    (1) I thought my limit with weird RUclips rabbit holes was all the zit popping and here I am watching multiple videos of exhumations. It's an education, and I salute you. (2) If this is a common situation in Europe why don't they bury the spouse deeper knowing that the surviving spouse might eventually join?

  • @HypocriticYT
    @HypocriticYT Год назад +4

    Our graveyards in Canada have lots of room to use backhoes for digging 😊

  • @sammyday3341
    @sammyday3341 Год назад +3

    It’s a boneheaded move to lie down in any grave, and particularly that grave. The soil is so loose. Loose soil weights around 85-90 lbs per foot of depth. Three feet of it is enough to make him a Darwin Award winner.

  • @sheliametcalfe-farmer8998
    @sheliametcalfe-farmer8998 Год назад +8

    Thank you for what you do, it takes a very special person to do this kind work, I use to be a donkey( get it)wiper

  • @tondalayaburgess9560
    @tondalayaburgess9560 Год назад +2

    I ask myself the same question.Why do I watch these videos.Somehow in a weird kind of ,way I find these videos fascinating.

  • @allenhelverson4083
    @allenhelverson4083 Год назад +18

    I'm just impressed by the condition of the box that was put in the previous year. Hard to believe that it looks that good being in direct contact with the ground. I don't know the laws here in the states, I sure they vary by state but I think at a minimum a grave liner is required. Keep up the good work, I know that's a job I couldn't do

    • @roxieeyeleers4465
      @roxieeyeleers4465 Год назад +4

      I live in California, and in this state, if a burial in the ground is wanted, one must agree to a cement "vault" which is placed in the ground before a burial. Some people pay for the vault years before they need it!

    • @cliffclark6441
      @cliffclark6441 Год назад +2

      In TN you can be buried any way you want even with out a coffin. In other states if your belief forbids being buried in a casket you can be buried with out one.

    • @roxieeyeleers4465
      @roxieeyeleers4465 Год назад

      @@cliffclark6441 I think that is a good idea!

    • @roxieeyeleers4465
      @roxieeyeleers4465 Год назад +1

      @@cliffclark6441 Because Lisa Marie Presley just died, people were asking about Elvis' identical brother, Jesse. He was the first baby, butstillborn, and they put him in a shoebox because they didn't have money, and he is buried in the ground in Mississippi. They never moved him, but there is a cenotaph for him in Graceland.

    • @roxieeyeleers4465
      @roxieeyeleers4465 Год назад

      @@cliffclark6441 That sounds very good!

  • @vibraloop
    @vibraloop Год назад +9

    laying down on a coffin with just 30cm dirt on it, is a little morbid o.0
    i guess it takes a special kind of man to do this job.

  • @stick_tectonic
    @stick_tectonic 5 месяцев назад

    Great video cut job.
    I really respect and appreciate his daily work..Lot of news...need to take a closer look

  • @NurseKathyAndTheLaw
    @NurseKathyAndTheLaw Год назад +1

    We live in the US in a large southern state. My daughters husband worked for a funeral home while he was in college. Then after his first marriage ended in divorce, (as a second job for extra money as they provided an apartment as part of reimbursement).
    Here the space between rows is quite wide and allows for machinery to dig the graves. Which is done by cemetery personnel rather than funeral home personnel.
    That said cemeteries do allow for burying loved ones two deep. If two caskets I’m sure they would allow cremains to be added perhaps. But I seriously doubt any allow for many than two deep per plot in most states.

    • @swabybaby3523
      @swabybaby3523 Год назад

      I live in Arkansas and I have never heard of burying 2 deep. My dad bought 5 plots and my parents are beside each other. The remaining plots are for me and any of my children or grandchildren.

    • @freespirit1975
      @freespirit1975 Год назад +1

      @@swabybaby3523 A few years ago my aunt and uncle were buried stacked like that here in the US. That was the first I had ever heard of it and as far as I know no one else in my family ever did that. They were always VERY frugal with their money, so maybe that's why. On the other hand, the large cemetery they are in is in the city center, is old and very crowded so maybe they could only get one plot. I don't know.

  • @pequittalyons2202
    @pequittalyons2202 Год назад +2

    It's okay you are not alone 😊

  • @standingvertical3048
    @standingvertical3048 Год назад +3

    I'm impressed with your Shovel skillzzz. That casket was down there a ways.

  • @MeMe-cz6pk
    @MeMe-cz6pk 6 месяцев назад

    You explained how people are buried on top of eachother in graves in Poland. I guess North Americans are shocked by this.
    My Grandfather is buried in a dual plot in Europe. He was actually put in on top of his Uncle and Aunt. Its been decades since we've seen the grave.
    Recently someone in the area took a picture of the grave. On the grave is a quite tall obelisk. My Grandfather's name is on it along with his relatives. But others ( strangers) have been buried on top of my relatives. Their names have been added to the obelisk.
    My Dad lost a brother in infancy. We tried to locate his grave. Its simply not there anymore.
    If care isnt paid for, the grave is reused for someone else.

  • @hugoagogo4324
    @hugoagogo4324 Год назад +2

    Every heartbeat seperates man from eternity

  • @heosomeheosome6752
    @heosomeheosome6752 2 года назад +6

    Your definitely a hard worker.

  • @kongvang2390
    @kongvang2390 Год назад +4

    Look's like he really enjoys his job..

  • @DandyDon1
    @DandyDon1 11 месяцев назад +1

    So these do not include vaults? What happens when the caskets breakdown, collapse and the ground above with it?

  • @zepplin839
    @zepplin839 5 месяцев назад +2

    Am i the only one who finds all the outrage strange in these videos. Theres clear respect for the bodies. When you're dead you're dead. Being moved a few meters isnt going go wake you up from being dead...

    • @MartinsGraveyard
      @MartinsGraveyard  5 месяцев назад +1

      They're not moved anywhere in this one, just husband joins wife and yet some people are outraged not even knowing what exactly they are outraged about. I find it frustrating and fascinating.

    • @zepplin839
      @zepplin839 5 месяцев назад

      Ah. When I made that comment I was referencing your other videos as well, when you make space for the new grave. Where you kept track of what you found and buried it just under the new grave site.
      Thanks for your work and videos. They are really interesting

    • @SearTrip
      @SearTrip Месяц назад

      A lot of people have this weird idea that graves are forever. They have never studied the burial practices of most of the world, or studied much of anything, for that matter. They live in fear & ignorance, and their only tool is to lash out against what they don’t understand.

  • @JasonJames72
    @JasonJames72 Год назад +3

    Luv your work, and you have to I guess have a sense of humour, without being disrespectful. I luv how some people are always ready to go into a rage over a job that they certainly wouldn't do. I mean I could work in a morgue, does that mean I play with stiffs all day..... lol. No I'm just a hair mechanic, I fix hair. Peace n luv 2 everyone, from the land down under x

  • @ruthe71
    @ruthe71 Год назад +5

    Did anyone else think to themselves ‘I wonder whether he’s ever tempted to take a look inside’, or as an ex funeral worker was it just me?😂

    • @MartinsGraveyard
      @MartinsGraveyard  Год назад +2

      I was curious but didn't do it.

    • @Liksterr97
      @Liksterr97 Год назад +1

      @@MartinsGraveyard I wished you would’ve that’s why I was watching 😢lollll

    • @galaxy_caveman
      @galaxy_caveman Год назад

      ​@Martin the Maker yeah I was hoping you would open it up

    • @Yumbutteredsausage
      @Yumbutteredsausage Год назад +1

      Probably seen enough dead legs already to last a lifetime 😮

  • @Christian_Girl120
    @Christian_Girl120 10 месяцев назад +1

    That has to be a lot of work. I give you credit for doing this. I'm sure you have to be absolutely exhausted after all this!

    • @MartinsGraveyard
      @MartinsGraveyard  10 месяцев назад +1

      This one was easy but sometimes it takes a whole day.

  • @snydedon9636
    @snydedon9636 Год назад +1

    Hopefully the two people who are to be laid to rest that close together got along really good in life, or else,,,,,,

  • @donnalyndalisaymo7236
    @donnalyndalisaymo7236 Год назад +36

    I want to see my brother what he looks like after one year in grave. I miss him so much 😭

    • @Caolan114
      @Caolan114 Год назад +2

      Sorry for your loss

    • @Cactus270
      @Cactus270 Год назад +39

      You don’t wanna see that… just remember him for who he was my friend. He is with you always ❤

    • @jerrymatarese7822
      @jerrymatarese7822 Год назад +10

      Morbid curiosity

    • @Shiro_PL
      @Shiro_PL Год назад +4

      What the...

    • @jenseninterceptors
      @jenseninterceptors Год назад +2

      Probably like this 🧟

  • @Boogledigs
    @Boogledigs Год назад +8

    When my Grandmother died, my grandfather bought a double grave because he intended to be buried with her. This looks like a double grave and the person to be buried there would almost certainly be a family member.

    • @allenhelverson4083
      @allenhelverson4083 Год назад +7

      Looks like a single grave and someone is going to be stacked on top of them just like he said at first part of video

    • @Yumbutteredsausage
      @Yumbutteredsausage Год назад

      Na, they run outta space, just chucking anyone on top, doh 😮

  • @anthonykinrade8642
    @anthonykinrade8642 4 месяца назад +1

    How do you ensure the hole does not collapse in on you, very risky!

  • @BelleStarr72
    @BelleStarr72 8 месяцев назад +1

    Hi Im new to your channel as Ive stummbled onto your video...I'd like to say I wished grave diggers in my state was as compassionate as you are here. However they do not care as long as they get paid. My uncle had to care for his wife's grave because he couldnt get the cemetery caretakers to do so it was heart breaking to see him hauling dirt and sod to care for her grave.

  • @RADIUMGLASS
    @RADIUMGLASS Год назад +8

    The lid held up fairly well with all of that weight on it for a year. If this were a cemetery in the US that grave would have already caved in from the weight of the cemetery equipment such as the backhoe.

    • @thomasmint1761
      @thomasmint1761 Год назад +1

      In the US, they almost invariably require an outer concrete vault these days, which prevents exactly that from happening

    • @bayfield15
      @bayfield15 Год назад +2

      I think it also depends on the type of soil the coffin/casket is buried in and the type of material they're made of. I've exhumed coffins from sandy soil and they were in tact. Other exhumations, the coffin had deteriorated a great deal.

    • @MultiKamil97
      @MultiKamil97 Год назад +1

      ​​​@@thomasmint1761 In Poland it's also like that sometimes, well at least it was when I was a kid back in the early 2000s. I remember that my uncle was buried in a grave were the sides were made of concrete or bricks and they didn't put the dirt there. They just put his coffin at the bottom and then closed it with a lid. Now that I'm writing about this, I remember that when my grandfather died on 2013, I saw a bit of other coffins in the grave during his funeral, because he was buried alongside my aunt, my grandfather and two grandmothers. I think that this kind of graves are made if the priest/gravediggers or whoever is responsible for this, are informed that in the future more bodies will lay there.

  • @thomasmint1761
    @thomasmint1761 Год назад +3

    Not taking anything away from your tremendous effort, but it appears you have very nice soil to work with (I’m already discounting for the recent burial). In Virginia, we have red clay. It is like frozen iron to dig through, especially in the dry of summer

    • @ateufel5759
      @ateufel5759 Год назад

      I agree, the dirt looked nice. Where I lived there is a lot of clay and rock. First grave I dug was in the winter. Over a foot of frost to get through.

    • @MartinsGraveyard
      @MartinsGraveyard  Год назад +6

      Oh yes, it was a breeze to dig in that. This doesn't happen often. I also deal with clay and I have only a pickaxe to help me with that, so sometimes I'm chipping thin flakes of clay for hours. I once dug a grave for 10 hours. I hope to film such a case someday.

  • @bradfordwhite3650
    @bradfordwhite3650 9 месяцев назад +1

    My sincere appreciation for what you do. In high-school I had a summer job digging graves in Boston MA which was eye-opening and hard work but not as hard as yours.
    Question if I may; I the U.S. we use concrete vault liners to protect against soil collapse and surface depressions. I guess that is not common on Poland?
    We do have "green burials" which do use a concrete vault but one which is open on the bottom so the wood coffin rests on soil. Different customs. Thank you for sharing these!

    • @MartinsGraveyard
      @MartinsGraveyard  9 месяцев назад +1

      We seldom use vaults. Protecting the corpse from the environment is against nature and a waste of resources.

    • @PastaMakerCordy-qy4uz
      @PastaMakerCordy-qy4uz Месяц назад

      @@MartinsGraveyardamen

  • @discharge2331
    @discharge2331 Год назад +1

    Imagine if that coffin collapsed when you were lying on top of it ? OMG !

  • @ronrobertson59
    @ronrobertson59 Год назад +3

    Nice sandy soil easy to dig in. Come to Alabama and dig in our clay soil not so easy.

    • @MartinsGraveyard
      @MartinsGraveyard  Год назад +1

      We have all kinds of soil here too. Some is so hard that you struggle even with the pickaxe. This one was the rare easy ones.

  • @mr.cicada5792
    @mr.cicada5792 Год назад +14

    Hi Martin, do you ever accidentally nick or damage the bones of the original occupant of the grave with your shovel? That would always be on my mind and a concern if I had your job. Anyways, thanks for sharing your work day with us. Interesting stuff. Subscribed.

    • @MartinsGraveyard
      @MartinsGraveyard  Год назад +19

      Yes I do. You never know where the bones are exactly. They can appear anywhere, anytime.

    • @mr.cicada5792
      @mr.cicada5792 Год назад +8

      @G. Mule My mind is at rest. It's not about whether they feel it. It's about trying to be respectful of the deceased remains. There's no way to avoid hitting them occasionally, I get that.

    • @yvonnestaley3564
      @yvonnestaley3564 Год назад +1

      @@mr.cicada5792 smh

  • @davidjohnson3890
    @davidjohnson3890 Месяц назад

    My family have used the same burial plot in England for nearly 200 years since the parish churchyard became full. Previously they were buried in the crypt of the church or below the floor for several hundred years. The earliest I can find within the church is 1540 but I think the earlier pre-reformation memorials have just been lost when the protestants took over. The difference is that the current burial plot is brick-lined and has a capstone. It is getting rather full and I think the earliest burial was in 1879 with the most recent in 1999. There are several family burials elsewhere, for example in France where the deaths were the result of both wars and they merely have a stone plaque inside the church whilst one great uncle has his name on a stained/ coloured glass window together with others lost at sea when HMS Hood sank. I am wondering whether we should continue using wooden/ oak coffins or move towards the earlier method of using a simple wollen shroud. The Victorian coffins were made of elm wood and covered in black crepe or velvet decorated with brass upholstery nails but I think that is too overelabourate today. I don't like the American use of steel or iron caskets at all. They tend to turn the body within into wax mummies. We should talk about these issues with our children whilst we are still living. I have to say I am quite drawn to the idea of being buried in a simple woollen shroud.

  • @profewiase
    @profewiase 7 месяцев назад

    Day in and day out, our days are numbered and soon, each of us watching this sad moment will be in similar situation. Where our love ones will finally say goodbye, cover us with the earth and we will be forgotten years later. 😢😢😢

  • @anovemberstar
    @anovemberstar Год назад +3

    Also interested if embalming is routine / usual practice where you do this work? I know for embalmed bodies the body is preserved for years and years, relative to environmental conditions. Personally I think embalming is extremely over rated and is a money making scam in majority of cases. I've had relatives not embalmed, but kept in the cold, at funeral homes for days until burial and I've seen them to say goodbye 5 and 6 days after they died. You couldn't see or smell anything 'bad'. Yet the undertakers push for u to pay for embalming under the guise your loved one will rot away and be in bad condition / you won't be able to see rhem after a day ot two without bad memories. Not the case at all!!!

    • @sokaikat674
      @sokaikat674 9 месяцев назад

      Yes, I call shenanigans on embalming. We cremated my parents (they approved) and they wanted to embalm them for the viewing. Fill them up with 'natural' skin tones and formaldehyde. These chemicals return to the environment whether you are cremated or buried. Toxic.

    • @RS-rj5sh
      @RS-rj5sh 9 месяцев назад

      It's a scam, the funeral homes make big bucks from it. Maybe for some it's a religious thing. In the end the deceased will disappear, the embalming will just delay that inevitable process a bit.

  • @elapaszczynski495
    @elapaszczynski495 2 года назад +3

    Marcin to jest w Polsce?

  • @warrensosterman
    @warrensosterman 4 месяца назад +1

    Sir , you are Awesome

  • @davidholder-oe1oe
    @davidholder-oe1oe Месяц назад

    Hello Sir. I have not been watching your channel all that long. And I am only taking a guess. But are these graveyards in France? From what I understand graves are only rented in france. But I thought that they could have the grave at least more than 1 year. It is very interesting to see how much of the mighty decomposes in the ground. I am basically talking about bones. Could you tell me what is the last bone that will usually break down and turn to dust? Thank you very much, and I love your channel.

  • @JunkerDC
    @JunkerDC Год назад +5

    I dont get why they burry people wont they run out of room one day

    • @MartinsGraveyard
      @MartinsGraveyard  Год назад +1

      They are starting to already. Mandatory cremation incoming.

    • @marcelomoos
      @marcelomoos Год назад

      Yea it will by better if the bodys was use to file holes in the road rigth? 🤔

    • @MartinsGraveyard
      @MartinsGraveyard  Год назад

      @@marcelomoos They're to soft and unstable for that.

    • @JunkerDC
      @JunkerDC Год назад

      @@marcelomoos no they can burn them or just put them in a compost burial place

    • @marcelomoos
      @marcelomoos Год назад

      @@JunkerDC during human history people try yo made soap from dead bodys burn them throw them on rivers fide wile animals etc ect.. its more a moral dilema than a practical solusion... there is meny options to keep neture going on but some of them a gros 👍

  • @TheTaz1999
    @TheTaz1999 2 года назад +4

    You don't think laying on top a deceased child is anyway disrespectful by chance.. good worker though I'll give you that.

    • @MartinsGraveyard
      @MartinsGraveyard  2 года назад +6

      The grave is one year old, not the person buried in it. I think that standing on it is much more disrespectful than laying on it. What would sitting in it be? Can I stand in it but just move around the edges, where there are no remains underneath, to avoid being disrespectful? How to do it all respectfuly? I'm not being sarcastic, you presented a very Interesting problem. I think that it all varies very much and depends on the local culture. Thank you.

    • @TheTaz1999
      @TheTaz1999 2 года назад +1

      @@MartinsGraveyard I totally understand you need to stand above the body and move around whilst working,,it's the view looking up that's not necessary.(on that point I'll leave it there), like I said your a good worker.and I look forward to more videos...

    • @ValTheGal1960
      @ValTheGal1960 Год назад

      The GRAVE is a year old NOT a one year old BABY!!

  • @UnenthusedEnthusiast
    @UnenthusedEnthusiast Год назад +2

    So the caskets aren’t dropped inside anything there?

  • @karennogare2549
    @karennogare2549 11 месяцев назад +1

    Greetings from Australia 🇦🇺 Salute

  • @monaramsey2752
    @monaramsey2752 2 года назад +4

    Why do you have to bury someone on top of this poor baby

    • @MartinsGraveyard
      @MartinsGraveyard  2 года назад +3

      There is no baby. The grave is one year old not the body inside. I wrote it in the description and said it in the video.

    • @Yumbutteredsausage
      @Yumbutteredsausage Год назад

      To give the dead head some company,they say it gets lonely down there 😮

  • @Herceg_Novi
    @Herceg_Novi 2 года назад +3

    Is not funny

  • @Lex5576
    @Lex5576 Год назад +1

    They must not use vaults much over in Europe. Here in the US they're used as a means to keep a void or depression from forming above ground from a decaying casket. In some of the older graves, a mower will ride over it and fall in several inches if it's heavy enough to crush the casket down below.

    • @Bawsackable
      @Bawsackable Год назад

      In the UK we don't generally use vaults...the wooden coffins are directly buried in the soil at depths ranging from 6 feet to 3 feet from the surface.

    • @sokaikat674
      @sokaikat674 9 месяцев назад

      I have seen the depressions walking in the old graveyards. When vaults first began being used, the promoted them as preventing 'unsightly graves.'

  • @pyrettablaze0414
    @pyrettablaze0414 5 месяцев назад

    Gravedigger,
    When you dig
    my grave,
    Could you make
    shallow,
    So that I can feel
    The rain
    - Dave
    Matthews

  • @staying_spooky
    @staying_spooky Год назад +1

    4:56 literally nobody
    Martin: lets check out the view.

  • @jonsturgill8868
    @jonsturgill8868 9 месяцев назад +2

    I dont want anything left of me when I die. No body, no grave, no pictures. Nothing.

    • @sokaikat674
      @sokaikat674 9 месяцев назад

      You can have your cremains put under a tree, then the people that loved you can come and sit under it and remember you.

    • @tecklafurro2040
      @tecklafurro2040 3 месяца назад

      Lmao you're like "The economy is crazy, fck that i'll be fine" 🤣

  • @petratorrey1776
    @petratorrey1776 Год назад

    Imagine the walls just collapsing as you lie down that made my anxiety cry in the inside

  • @dscottsw1
    @dscottsw1 Год назад +2

    This was really interesting. I was curious as to how you got up out of there...

    • @MartinsGraveyard
      @MartinsGraveyard  Год назад +3

      I got out with the help of the shovel. I made a short video about it.

  • @inhibited44
    @inhibited44 4 дня назад

    why don't they give you the metal structures that OSHA requires to prevent the sides of the walls from collapsing?

  • @erickane7822
    @erickane7822 Год назад +2

    Lots of respect for all your hard work. My back hurts just from watching your video. What country are you in?

  • @amberjackrtw7322
    @amberjackrtw7322 11 месяцев назад +2

    New subscriber here! Really cool channel 👍

  • @shakes7333
    @shakes7333 Месяц назад +1

    So these people buried on top of each other, are these people related in any way or are they just random people?
    And how many people get put in the same grave?

  • @jmpet7134
    @jmpet7134 2 месяца назад

    As I watched you dig I thought man you must be in great shape and then you said your back hurt. I guess you are not a super hero after all LOL.

    • @MartinsGraveyard
      @MartinsGraveyard  2 месяца назад +1

      It was not long after an accident in which I threw my back out. When it happened, I jumped right back into the grave to finish digging, with disc bulging. Then, one week lying in bed.

  • @colleenwilson4579
    @colleenwilson4579 Год назад +1

    I ask myself the same thing…why do I watch things like this especially at night 😮

  • @saraoconnor6169
    @saraoconnor6169 Год назад +2

    I would be worried about smells coming up and leakage of body fluids.

    • @Yumbutteredsausage
      @Yumbutteredsausage Год назад

      Body fluids aren't gonna rise up are they & the only smell would be if digger farted 😮

  • @itomXEC
    @itomXEC 2 месяца назад

    Muszę przyznać że tafiłem na ten kanał przez totalny przypadek, ale przyznac musze że filmy przez Pana nagrywane są bardzo wciągające i przy okazji można zobaczyć pełen profesionalizm podczas wykonywania przez Pana wszystkich prac. Jednak mam takie pytanko. Czy była by szansa na zobaczenie jednego z materiałów jak te, ale w Języku Polskim? Oczywiście nie ze względu na to że Angielski u mnie leży bo nic z tych rzeczy, ale przyznam szczerze że Ciekawie by było posłuchac tego wszystkiego w naszym ojczystym języku :D Oczywiście jeśli nie ma takiej możliwości to nie szkodzi. Nie mniej jednak kawał bardzo dobrej roboty. Pozdrawiam serdecznie

    • @MartinsGraveyard
      @MartinsGraveyard  2 месяца назад +1

      Dziekuje za mile slowa. Moze w przyszlosci cos zrobie po polsku ale na razie nie mam tego w planach, no, moze poza czytaniem bajek dla dzieci. To juz niedlugo.

  • @alcom3101
    @alcom3101 11 месяцев назад +1

    Beau Travail comme d'habitude🎬🔬🍀💪Alex France🙏🌌😉

  • @philbarone4603
    @philbarone4603 5 месяцев назад +1

    I’m being composted, it’s better for the environment and my wife can plant flowers with me.

  • @videogeekin
    @videogeekin Год назад +1

    “ One thing about it is there must not be much competition for your job, and you get to work alone. But after dark you wouldn’t find me anywhere near a graveyard.”

    • @MartinsGraveyard
      @MartinsGraveyard  Год назад +2

      There's not. The further from a big city the more work for undertakers. Better pay also. I'm writing this answer from my local cemetery, which I often visit in the evening. I'm making rounds checking how the graves that I made funerals at are holding up. There's only me there right now. I feel calm and safe. There's far more danger on the other side of the fence. Graveyards are safe spaces that nobody knows about.

    • @videogeekin
      @videogeekin Год назад

      @@MartinsGraveyard “ I was traumatized by the 1968 film’ Night of the Living Dead’ as a child. So yes I am superstitious… also going alone to wax museums with no one around creeps me out. I am age 61.

    • @MartinsGraveyard
      @MartinsGraveyard  Год назад +4

      @@videogeekin I was scared shitless when I went alone to the Cane Hill hospital in Coulsdon, UK, to spend the night there. Lying on a bare floor with my backpack under my head, I was so scared in the middle of the night there, that I couldn't open my eyes, being almost sure that if I did, a former patient would appear right over me. I then went six more times. When I spent my first night in the forest alone, I remembered all of the scenes from the Blair Witch Project and wouldn't even dream of opening my tent. Today, I finished my workday at an anatomy lab, fetching a pair of lungs for a student that was absent peviously, and after work, I went to dress an old lady that has a funeral tommorow. I took her out of a fridge that had about 50 bodies inside. I ate dinner and played with my son. I write this from a cemetery way after dark. Trust me. There's really nothing to be afraid of. Don't waste your best years on being scared.

    • @RS-rj5sh
      @RS-rj5sh 9 месяцев назад

      @@MartinsGraveyard I recently saw a homeless guy living in a local cemetery. I asked him why he was living there, he said because "it's quiet, safe, and hardly anybody visits". It was a very old cemetery

  • @GESSO217
    @GESSO217 Год назад

    Good soil for burials. No rocks. Easy to dig through. My father dug many a grave in his life time and sometimes it had to be done more with a pick axe than a shovel.

    • @MartinsGraveyard
      @MartinsGraveyard  Год назад

      Sometimes it takes 30 minutes and sometimes 8 hours. We have a lot of different kinds of soil here. This one was a breeze.

  • @billhardy7870
    @billhardy7870 Год назад +2

    This is fascinating. I was wondering what country you are in. Poland I see. Some cemetaries here in the USA will not allow 2 bodies in one grave. Only if cremated can a husband and wife be in the same plot. And then of course, we have vaults made of concrete that the casket fit's into and a concrete cover placed on it. It is probably different in other parts of the US. There is a growing movement to have the dead buried directly into the ground to return to dust much faster than being double sealed and buried. The 'for profit' cemetaries don't allow this but there are more and more cemetaries specifically created for direct to earth burial. To me, it seems rather silly to be doubled sealed like a left over piece of the lamb one had for dinner. Decay will eventually take place no matter how 'leak proof" the metal casket is and how tight the seal is in the concrete vault. It just might take a few hundred years more to turn to dust.

    • @JayTsay
      @JayTsay Год назад +2

      In Islam, we do this type of burial. No casket.

    • @MultiKamil97
      @MultiKamil97 Год назад

      Well, I think the funeral services would suffer a lot financially if people just stopped buying coffins and put the dead bodies in a bag for example hah Not only coffins are traditions but also a huge financial boost for those funeral services as coffins in Poland are quite expensive for an average citizen.

    • @sokaikat674
      @sokaikat674 9 месяцев назад

      I was at a burial in Arizona where the mother was placed at maybe 12 feet, and her son directly above her. One plot.

  • @Jkk55
    @Jkk55 Год назад +1

    I don't know how you do it very hard work for one man!

  • @JohannEngebrecht-bn3ch
    @JohannEngebrecht-bn3ch Год назад

    Martin i love you channel and you are a really hard workers keep on with your nice work all the way from South Africa 🇿🇦🇿🇦🇿🇦🇿🇦

  • @00jekky00
    @00jekky00 5 дней назад

    How do you get out of grave after it’s dug? I don’t think I saw good view . Love your work !

    • @Ephemeral2023
      @Ephemeral2023 2 дня назад

      In another video, I saw him put the shovel across the sides of the grave and boost himself up and out on that.