That's a really cool old farm house. I like that big kitchen. I always imagine the smell of breakfast and coffee, people sitting at the table talking. The kitchen table is an important place for farmers haha. Thanks for another great video Paul.
wow loved this one, the yellow kitchen and beautiful stained glass around the door, I try to envision it as a functioning lived in home back in the day , must have been wonderful. Thanks Paul for the mid-week vid
Another awesome place Paul, this home has so many cracks through her and it wont be long till she falls to the ground. that kitchen wow massive you could probably entertain 50 people in there LOL. I wonder if the farmer who once lived there was a diesel mechanic at some point. Those sheds had so pretty cool things inside of them cool explore mate cheers for this one.
Mid to late 90’s would be about right as far as the last time the house was occupied. Lovely big place . Must have been a bitterly cold place in winter and quite dreary on rainy days. Nice collection of old Army Ammunition Boxes in the shed. Thanks for sharing this explore.
What a huge kitchen ! Lots of counter space. You could have a sit down meal for a bunch of people at one time. Love to know the back history on this home. Thanks for taking us along on the explore.👍🏻❤️
Hey Paul. Lovely old home. Love the brick work around the windows and on the corners of the house. The stonework to build these homes is good engineering. Stained glass in front door panels are very classy looking. Real craftsmanship. Glad to see the amount of people still interested in our amazing past. Thank you for the upload. 🇦🇺
Love the midweek explores. This is a classic 1800s house with 1960s updates for sure. The stained glass is beautiful!! Awesome size kitchen too. Gets me visualising how it Would have been 100 years ago😊 Thanks for the great explore. Looking forward to your next one on the weekend 😁
A nice old place so many cracks in those walls beyond 'Propper' repair, I'd say, unfortunately. It's still great to see it before it falls down. Thanks for sharing. Cheers, MM :)
Another great find Paul love going on your journeys into the past . With these old beautiful beautiful homes I can’t look but when you open doors full of cobwebs , and pick up tins , Gees your brave OOOOOOH you just saw a red back spider in the barrel, he should be outback in the DUNNY . THANKYOU SOSO MUCH PAUL I WILL NEVER FORGET MY MEMORIES OF REMEMBER WHEN WHILE YOU KEEP YOUR PASSION ALIVE .YOUARE A TRU BLUE AUSSIE ,😊😊 Dane 🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺👍👌😎😎😎✊ KEEP SAFE
Lots of cracks in this one, I believe it's seen it's days. That and I belive the man worked on his own farm equipment. Once again the outbuildings facinated me more. Thanks for the tour Paul! 👍🤠 An excerpt from the newspaper: "Clouds of dust rolled into Adelaide yesterday afternoon as floodwaters receded following the heaviest February rainfall for 22 years. Adelaide's humidity of 69 percent yesterday, was described by the Bureau of Meterology as "very high," and the temperature of 93.6 was the city's eighth consecutive day with highs above 90 degrees. Relief, however, is on track for the agency's forecast tonight that a cooler, southwesterly change would come overnight. It swept through Caduna at 4.30am, the temperature dropped to 75 after a high of 106."
Hi paul, what a grand old girl. Love the stained glass windows. Good to be able to find news papers that is that old. Bring back the lining out the cubourd. Sad to see so many cracks in the walls . Keep up your good work .cheers Deb
You really find the best old abandoned farmhouses in the most beautiful rural areas in your area of Australia and this old farmhouse really is great filled with a lot of things left behind and the old sheds also with a lot of stuff in it as well and this is a really great big house to explore Thank You as always and take care until your next video Thank You very much. 🇦🇺☕🇦🇺👋🤠👋🇦🇺☕🇦🇺
Beautiful old house! I'm amazed that you are finding SO many of these abandoned old houses in country South Australia! I was born on Yorke Peninsula - & on my journeys i have not come across many abandoned houses. Keep up the great work.
hiya paul! massive kitchen. i picture what it would look like today - and me in it! the stained glass is beautiful. you find the best places to explore. must have been well loved in its day. farm finds are always interesting.
Looks like someone has been coming and using the sheds, possibly for storage and kept the toilet clean for their use, as indicated by the Earth Choice cleaner which has been in production since 1981. Would love to have seen more of the horse float. Could have been a Rice or Kentucky remodelled, possibly?? Love the explores. Keep up the great work. Cheers from Ballarat, Victoria, Australia. It was a real mystery that the smoke detector was still emitting its “Low Battery” alarm. Love to know the story behind that. 😊😊
Hi Paul, this is a fantastic explore! Thankyou for all your fieldwork! Wonderful you have rain, wanna share some with WA? We had 48c here today so kinda melting! 😂 Awesome!
The sound of the rain on the tin roof is awesome you don't get that with tiled roofs. Volcon also made oil heaters that look the same as the front of the gas heater. We had an oil heater at home in the late 70's early 80's. That was another great find thanks,
Urbex Indigo thanks for another awesome video it was a very cool find the home looks like it could fix the cracks up and do a little work on it it could be still lived in thanks for sharing it with me my friend i am from the U.S.A and i really enjoy your channel and i will always show you support to your channel and God Bless keep up the great work you are doing.
wow!! this was a good one!! so cool to see the ads you found , like the goodyear ad .i'm from akron, ohio which was once known as the rubber capital of the world. it had many rubber companies in that town, goodyear, firestone, general tire, goodrich. also after many years of watching videos of abandoned places all over the world, this is the first time i saw a shower with two sets of taps,(especially down that low).have a good week.
One wouldn't think it would be raining at this time of year. It's not 'normal." Love these old places. The big cracks are hard to fix. There was some big dust storms in the 60's and 70's.
I love stained glass and this was lovely. Big farm kitchen I am sure there would have been a coal/wood range at some stage. Yes I am also sure someone is coming back now and then although I didnt see any tracks in the grass. Thank you Paul :)
Wow another beautiful old gem out in the country side, love the stained glass in the front door, glad to see one mantle was still there. So peaceful and quite great off the grid living! I can just imagine the home back in its prime. Just love hearing the rain 🌧️ on the tin roof. Thank you so much for the tour. 😊❤🌟x
Hello Paul pretty nice home real big kitchen look like it was a dining room kitchen combo think last lived in like you said late 90s early 2000s thanks for bringing us along take care love from upstate New York❤😊
great vid!. i would hazard a guess and say the low taps and shower are to clean your boots after your days work. just a guess but a modern idea for its time if it was.
Thanks, Paul. These country finds never cease to be of interest. The large farm kitchen says to me that it was used to feed family and farm hands. My minds eye sees a large table with many chairs around. One of the questions I have is ... did the subsidence which caused the cracks mean that the family moved away when the cracks became too bad to repair, or have most of the cracks happened since the home was vacated? I think you are correct in thinking that people return at times considering the condition of the horse float.
The two sets of faucets in the bathroom was used as a regular shower the lower was used maybe for bathing children in the lower most likely used a was tub too.
2:46 Great,he probably was in army as mechanic or truck instructor..With those cool army boxes...House wasn't in super bad condition...but yeah great spot......tin ceiling is just super top vid...UI...
Loved the glass in the front door it same it properly won't be saved as the house seems to have some severely cracking , if nobody looking after the building they will disappear along with the home..
It doesn’t look like it was that long ago that they moved out. The cheap lamp looks more modern than the ‘80’s. They must have been so relieved to move into a new home. The poor old home was suffering.
I really liked that nice big kitchen. 10:01 What you call a blind, I call them shades. You give a little jerk on the middle bottom to raise or lower them. 11:54 I can't believe they wrapped them then left them. 14:41 Now those are blinds.
Great explore, I would say someone has been there in the last 10 years as I can't imagine a smoke alarm battery lasting longer than that also the roof looks too new.
14:30 On the newspaper: "Canada's Secret Garden" is probably Butchart Gardens, near the city of Victoria, in British Columbia. The side story of "Carnival Legend - 99 Days to Go" is a cruise ship in service from August, 2002.
Bonjour d'Occitanie (France) 13:15 Très joli cadre de porte, les vitraux jouent entre les couleurs et l'apparence du verre (texture). Les hangars sont comme autant d'atelier spécialisé, un la vidange, un autre la mécanique avec les courroies de transmissions...
Well at least we know because of the 1968 newspaper that the addition in the back of the house was cleaned up and maybe added in the mid to late 1969's.
The house looked Edwardian era ! I agree probably 90s last lived in as the cds came out then.. I am curious .. what makes the houses have those huge cracks down the walls? I live in NZ and have only seen that on the houses damaged in earthquakes. Love your videos I look forward to the next one 😊 Thank you
Can’t edit OP i noticed an AusPost e-Parcel in the shed so as you said late 90’s early 2000’s. perhaps some of those folders in the boxes had receipts.
Several of those military crates were marked TNT. That's interesting. How did those big old overstuffed chairs fit through the narrow door into that room? (maybe I missed another door).
I always imagine with these old farmhouses what happened. An old couple. Wartime generation. Kids long since grown up and moved away either near or far. One of the couple passes away. Maybe the old guy. The other in declining health. Gets too much so they move out or pass away themselves. Home too unprofitable to sell. Needs too much work. So they sell off some of the land instead. The house still stands but with nature slowly reclaiming it. I could be completely wrong of course ☺️. But one thing's for sure. They've become historical landmarks of an age fast disappearing.
Did those crates have army info on them?? My dad worked for PMG and there was a huge depo at Pasedena. To do with line & country. He brought many of those crates home.
Can someone explain...why a majority of these homes....are identical....same materials same design...same bullnose veranda..... I expect it had alot to do with the materials available... but someone must of said...I want my home to be different from everyone else...lol
So you just go walking through private property, with out permission, and film for the whole world to see, all the possessions etc. Good on ya bloke, but its just not the way its done in Australia farm lands.
She is beautiful with that stained glass front door. Thank you for everything you do to bring us these houses
I always enjoy the search for clues of when homes were last occupied - spotting a newspaper or a calendar - or an old phone book 😊
That's a really cool old farm house. I like that big kitchen. I always imagine the smell of breakfast and coffee, people sitting at the table talking. The kitchen table is an important place for farmers haha. Thanks for another great video Paul.
wow loved this one, the yellow kitchen and beautiful stained glass around the door, I try to envision it as a functioning lived in home back in the day , must have been wonderful. Thanks Paul for the mid-week vid
These old homesteads are amazing.
So sad to see them fall into this state of disrepair.
Great video enjoyed it thank you love the lead windows
Another awesome place Paul, this home has so many cracks through her and it wont be long till she falls to the ground. that kitchen wow massive you could probably entertain 50 people in there LOL. I wonder if the farmer who once lived there was a diesel mechanic at some point. Those sheds had so pretty cool things inside of them cool explore mate cheers for this one.
Mid to late 90’s would be about right as far as the last time the house was occupied. Lovely big place . Must have been a bitterly cold place in winter and quite dreary on rainy days. Nice collection of old Army Ammunition Boxes in the shed. Thanks for sharing this explore.
What a awesome old farm house. I love the stained glass front door 🚪. What a nice big kitchen. Thanks for sharing 👍 😊
"nothing in the barrel" don't joke 😂
What a huge kitchen ! Lots of counter space. You could have a sit down meal for a bunch of people at one time. Love to know the back history on this home. Thanks for taking us along on the explore.👍🏻❤️
Hey Paul. Lovely old home. Love the brick work around the windows and on the corners of the house. The stonework to build these homes is good engineering. Stained glass in front door panels are very classy looking. Real craftsmanship. Glad to see the amount of people still interested in our amazing past.
Thank you for the upload. 🇦🇺
Another great old gal that was a bit of strange set up in the shower thanks Paul for another great explore 🙂🦘👍
OMG, i woukd have to save the beautiful stained glass! Love your videos Paul. ❤
Hi Alma, yes the stained glass is always a highlight for me too. Glad you enjoyed, Cheers for watching 👍😁
Love the midweek explores. This is a classic 1800s house with 1960s updates for sure. The stained glass is beautiful!!
Awesome size kitchen too. Gets me visualising how it Would have been 100 years ago😊 Thanks for the great explore. Looking forward to your next one on the weekend 😁
Beautiful home Paul ❤ & your cute 😊
always a great job
Now thats a kitchen! 💛💛💛
A nice old place so many cracks in those walls beyond 'Propper' repair, I'd say, unfortunately. It's still great to see it before it falls down. Thanks for sharing. Cheers, MM :)
Beautiful, just before sleepy time!
Thank you for taking us along 🙂
My pleasure Sandra! Cheers for the support :-)
@@urbexindigo5164
Did you pick up on the flat battery in the smoke detector,? (BEEP) Cheers.
Another great explore.......The lead lighting is stunning! And what a massive kitchen!
Another great find Paul love going on your journeys into the past . With these old beautiful beautiful homes I can’t look but when you open doors full of cobwebs , and pick up tins , Gees your brave OOOOOOH you just saw a red back spider in the barrel, he should be outback in the DUNNY . THANKYOU SOSO MUCH PAUL I WILL NEVER FORGET MY MEMORIES OF REMEMBER WHEN WHILE YOU KEEP YOUR PASSION ALIVE .YOUARE A TRU BLUE AUSSIE ,😊😊 Dane 🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺👍👌😎😎😎✊ KEEP SAFE
The leaded glass gorgeous!!
But I'm laughing at what sounds like a smoke alarm!!
Lots of cracks in this one, I believe it's seen it's days.
That and I belive the man worked on his own farm equipment. Once again the outbuildings facinated me more.
Thanks for the tour Paul!
👍🤠
An excerpt from the newspaper:
"Clouds of dust rolled into Adelaide yesterday afternoon as floodwaters receded following the heaviest February rainfall for 22 years.
Adelaide's humidity of 69 percent yesterday, was described by the Bureau of Meterology as "very high," and the temperature of 93.6 was the city's eighth consecutive day with highs above 90 degrees.
Relief, however, is on track for the agency's forecast tonight that a cooler, southwesterly change would come overnight. It swept through Caduna at 4.30am, the temperature dropped to 75 after a high of 106."
Hi paul, what a grand old girl. Love the stained glass windows. Good to be able to find news papers that is that old. Bring back the lining out the cubourd. Sad to see so many cracks in the walls . Keep up your good work .cheers Deb
You really find the best old abandoned farmhouses in the most beautiful
rural areas in your area of Australia and this old farmhouse really is great
filled with a lot of things left behind and the old sheds also with a lot of
stuff in it as well and this is a really great big house to explore Thank You
as always and take care until your next video Thank You very much.
🇦🇺☕🇦🇺👋🤠👋🇦🇺☕🇦🇺
Beautiful old house! I'm amazed that you are finding SO many of these abandoned old houses in country South Australia! I was born on Yorke Peninsula - & on my journeys i have not come across many abandoned houses. Keep up the great work.
hiya paul! massive kitchen. i picture what it would look like today - and me in it! the stained glass is beautiful. you find the best places to explore. must have been well loved in its day. farm finds are always interesting.
Who great vidéo 👍 👍❤️❤️😺😘
Looks like someone has been coming and using the sheds, possibly for storage and kept the toilet clean for their use, as indicated by the Earth Choice cleaner which has been in production since 1981. Would love to have seen more of the horse float. Could have been a Rice or Kentucky remodelled, possibly?? Love the explores. Keep up the great work. Cheers from Ballarat, Victoria, Australia. It was a real mystery that the smoke detector was still emitting its “Low Battery” alarm. Love to know the story behind that. 😊😊
Awesome video mate! I wish I could buy & restore Al these beautiful old homes! ❤️🤘👍
Beautiful old house. It is a shame how they just let them run down. Very cool explore. Thank you for sharing. 🤗
Cheers guys , thanks for watching 🙂👍
Beautiful you all ways find grant places the window s around the door 💕 colors
I like the kitchen colors,I could do with out the pink. I always like seeing stain glass.
Hi Paul, this is a fantastic explore! Thankyou for all your fieldwork! Wonderful you have rain, wanna share some with WA? We had 48c here today so kinda melting! 😂
Awesome!
Great job
The sound of the rain on the tin roof is awesome you don't get that with tiled roofs. Volcon also made oil heaters that look the same as the front of the gas heater. We had an oil heater at home in the late 70's early 80's. That was another great find thanks,
Urbex Indigo thanks for another awesome video it was a very cool find the home looks like it could fix the cracks up and do a little work on it it could be still lived in thanks for sharing it with me my friend i am from the U.S.A and i really enjoy your channel and i will always show you support to your channel and God Bless keep up the great work you are doing.
Interesting place. Gives me a rental vibe. It's been emptied out pretty well of furniture. I agree with you last lived in 90s or even early 2000.
wow!! this was a good one!! so cool to see the ads you found , like the goodyear ad .i'm from akron, ohio which was once known as the rubber capital of the world. it had many rubber companies in that town, goodyear, firestone, general tire, goodrich. also after many years of watching videos of abandoned places all over the world, this is the first time i saw a shower with two sets of taps,(especially down that low).have a good week.
thanks again Mr indigo great explore
Such a beautiful farmhouse 😊. Great footage 👍❤️
One wouldn't think it would be raining at this time of year. It's not 'normal." Love these old places. The big cracks are hard to fix. There was some big dust storms in the 60's and 70's.
Hi Mark, some of my videos are filmed well before they are uploaded but it has been raining here more than usual in our summer also 👍😁
El nino 🤦🤣
Monuments of forgotten lives.
Hi Paul. Cool old place. The stained glass beautiful. Kinda weird hearing a smoke alarm in an old farmhouse. Thank you. Take care.
Just stunning 🙌
The smoke detector is a hint.A Radioactive type would run for years Beeping like that.A old house next to me has one doing just the same.
Many manuals, for machinery, etc. House had good-sized rooms for a change. The stained glass lovely. The home vacant many decades. Thanks!
I love stained glass and this was lovely. Big farm kitchen I am sure there would have been a coal/wood range at some stage. Yes I am also sure someone is coming back now and then although I didnt see any tracks in the grass. Thank you Paul :)
Wow another beautiful old gem out in the country side, love the stained glass in the front door, glad to see one mantle was still there. So peaceful and quite great off the grid living! I can just imagine the home back in its prime. Just love hearing the rain 🌧️ on the tin roof. Thank you so much for the tour. 😊❤🌟x
Hello Paul pretty nice home real big kitchen look like it was a dining room kitchen combo think last lived in like you said late 90s early 2000s thanks for bringing us along take care love from upstate New York❤😊
Great home and I am surprised the stained glass at the front door is in such nice condition, not a single one broken.
the front door is beautiful! Thanks Paul!
plenty of old army lock boxes there and those roadie cases aswell must of travelled alot by the looks of it love the big kitchens in these old houses
I think that rains coming our way ... we're in for a very wet weekend
great vid!. i would hazard a guess and say the low taps and shower are to clean your boots after your days work. just a guess but a modern idea for its time if it was.
another good one
Thanks, Paul. These country finds never cease to be of interest. The large farm kitchen says to me that it was used to feed family and farm hands. My minds eye sees a large table with many chairs around. One of the questions I have is ... did the subsidence which caused the cracks mean that the family moved away when the cracks became too bad to repair, or have most of the cracks happened since the home was vacated? I think you are correct in thinking that people return at times considering the condition of the horse float.
The two sets of faucets
in the bathroom was
used as a regular shower
the lower was used maybe
for bathing children
in the lower most likely
used a was tub too.
What happens to all the beautiful stained glass in these old homes beyond repair? I believe this one was the most beautiful glass you've shown us!!!
2:46 Great,he probably was in army as mechanic or truck instructor..With those cool army boxes...House wasn't in super bad condition...but yeah great spot......tin ceiling is just super top vid...UI...
Loved the glass in the front door it same it properly won't be saved as the house seems to have some severely cracking , if nobody looking after the building they will disappear along with the home..
It doesn’t look like it was that long ago that they moved out. The cheap lamp looks more modern than the ‘80’s. They must have been so relieved to move into a new home. The poor old home was suffering.
I really liked that nice big kitchen. 10:01 What you call a blind, I call them shades. You give a little jerk on the middle bottom to raise or lower them. 11:54 I can't believe they wrapped them then left them.
14:41 Now those are blinds.
Great explore, I would say someone has been there in the last 10 years as I can't imagine a smoke alarm battery lasting longer than that also the roof looks too new.
Definately late 90s since lived in UHF tv antenna says that. Port Pirie got Aggregation in 1993 therabouts
Love that kitchen.❤️👍❤️Such a shame its in such bad shape now.❤️🇺🇸
14:30 On the newspaper: "Canada's Secret Garden" is probably Butchart Gardens, near the city of Victoria, in British Columbia. The side story of "Carnival Legend - 99 Days to Go" is a cruise ship in service from August, 2002.
Hi I love your videos. I think the bottom taps were probably for feet, or children.
Bonjour d'Occitanie (France)
13:15 Très joli cadre de porte, les vitraux jouent entre les couleurs et l'apparence du verre (texture).
Les hangars sont comme autant d'atelier spécialisé, un la vidange, un autre la mécanique avec les courroies de transmissions...
Well at least we know because of the 1968 newspaper that the addition in the back of the house was cleaned up and maybe added in the mid to late 1969's.
I was thinking people here fixes faucet lower to wash small dogs. Then saw the dog carrier.
Australia turned metric in 1974. The money changed from pounds and schillings to dollars and cents on Valentine’s Day 1966.
The house looked Edwardian era ! I agree probably 90s last lived in as the cds came out then..
I am curious .. what makes the houses have those huge cracks down the walls? I live in NZ and have only seen that on the houses damaged in earthquakes.
Love your videos I look forward to the next one 😊
Thank you
Can’t edit OP i noticed an AusPost e-Parcel in the shed so as you said late 90’s early 2000’s. perhaps some of those folders in the boxes had receipts.
Awsome explore glad you found it when you did what year do you think it's from did I miss it
Several of those military crates were marked TNT. That's interesting. How did those big old overstuffed chairs fit through the narrow door into that room? (maybe I missed another door).
I always imagine with these old farmhouses what happened. An old couple. Wartime generation. Kids long since grown up and moved away either near or far. One of the couple passes away. Maybe the old guy. The other in declining health. Gets too much so they move out or pass away themselves. Home too unprofitable to sell. Needs too much work. So they sell off some of the land instead. The house still stands but with nature slowly reclaiming it. I could be completely wrong of course ☺️. But one thing's for sure. They've become historical landmarks of an age fast disappearing.
Cheers Paul, great comments. I see them as markers in time also. Cheers for watching 👍😁
Did those crates have army info on them?? My dad worked for PMG and there was a huge depo at Pasedena. To do with line & country. He brought many of those crates home.
There may have been a bath where those taps were positioned. Replacing the taps, may have caused more harm than good.
Earth Choice started in 1981 if thats anything to go by....
That house had huge cracks that went thru the walls. What causes this and can those houses be fixed?
The poor old thing looks like its just holding on.
It's not a pie safe, it's called a "meat " safe
Can someone explain...why a majority of these homes....are identical....same materials same design...same bullnose veranda.....
I expect it had alot to do with the materials available...
but someone must of said...I want my home to be different from everyone else...lol
Those rodent droppings can make you very sick be careful
So you just go walking through private property, with out permission, and film for the whole world to see, all the possessions etc. Good on ya bloke, but its just not the way its done in Australia farm lands.
Getting permission is always the best way for sure and no location details are ever given. Im glad you are passionate about the farmlands. Cheers.
Best stay away from the mid north and yorks bloke, we dont need your publicity.