YIKES!!! American Construction Worker Reacts "Fred Dibnah - How To Climb A Chimney Overhang at 50+"

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  • Опубликовано: 26 авг 2024
  • #freddibnah #scaffolding #americanreacts
    Original Video: • Fred Dibnah How to cli...
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Комментарии • 608

  • @davidatkins111
    @davidatkins111 Год назад +157

    One thing that is rarely mentioned is the immense physical strength the man must have possessed

    • @MyReallyCleverHandle
      @MyReallyCleverHandle Год назад +9

      I get shattered just watching him!

    • @johnlewis9158
      @johnlewis9158 Год назад +9

      He was by no means a young man which of course makes what he did here even more impressive

    • @borntoclimb7116
      @borntoclimb7116 Год назад +4

      True

    • @borntoclimb7116
      @borntoclimb7116 3 месяца назад

      ​@@johnlewis9158 watch the workers in india Kalkutta who climb the steelbridges for maintenance, even without a ladder. Just true lattice climbing on the structure, it is normal there

    • @user-wd3wk8bi9t
      @user-wd3wk8bi9t 2 месяца назад

      romour has it he had the grip of a gorilla . what a true English legend

  • @normanmart7933
    @normanmart7933 Год назад +174

    A national treasure was Fred , I think he epitomises everything we are proud of being british ie humble , down to earth , no airs and gracious despite being amazing at what he does. How can you not love Fred.

    • @1nikg
      @1nikg Год назад +11

      100%

    • @ElGordo1959
      @ElGordo1959 Год назад +10

      @@1nikg 110%

    • @pauldurkee4764
      @pauldurkee4764 Год назад +15

      My sentiments too, an example of the old British working class, stoical, dependable and hard as nails.

    • @borntoclimb7116
      @borntoclimb7116 Год назад +3

      Agree, greetings from germany

    • @HarryFlashmanVC
      @HarryFlashmanVC Год назад +1

      100% I'm 51 and I cannot belive how much this country has changed. I grew up in Scotland and live in the North of England, I returned to Edinburgh over Christmas, I don't recognise it. I studied at Newcastle, O don't recognise it... maybe it's the same for all generations but I cannot help but think we have lost something that was very rare and very dear in our country. Or maybe I'm just an old fart who lives in the middle if nowhere on a 17th C hill farm. Very little change round here.

  • @hiramabiff2017
    @hiramabiff2017 Год назад +158

    We tend to forget Fred's engineering prowess was just as big as his brass balls in steeple jacking. Some of the steam engines he restored will last hundreds of years after we are all long gone. We can watch Fred with nostalgia, but the lessons we can still learn from him on how anything can be fixed if we put our minds to it can be passed on in a age where we so readily throw away what is broke. The past holds many answers for the future.

    • @balucious
      @balucious Год назад +4

      I absolutely agree, as I have observed. Well said, that man.

    • @borntoclimb7116
      @borntoclimb7116 Год назад +2

      Thats right

    • @michaeltaylor8835
      @michaeltaylor8835 Год назад +1

      Last sentence rings true

    • @m4inline
      @m4inline Год назад +1

      He used to drive down't pub in bolton with them steam engines

    • @millyjames7891
      @millyjames7891 3 месяца назад

      I loved it when he went on his 'valedictory tour', knowing he had cancer, and visited all the old engineering shops that still remained around the country. I know my late father had trained as a Pattern Maker, but I had no idea what that involved until Fred kindly explained. x

  • @shaydon7315
    @shaydon7315 Год назад +52

    Pity Fred didn't live longer to see/hear this appreciation for his skills, now been seen on a world wide platform, I am sure his kids are very proud of his legacy

    • @grahambarlow1308
      @grahambarlow1308 2 месяца назад +1

      He was already world famous from a series he made ,which won the Euro Vision award shown throughout Europe. The Europeans had never seen anything like it before the ultimate unsung British eccentric par excellence.

  • @MadAl37
    @MadAl37 Год назад +80

    I believe he was still felling chimneys in 2004, the year he died, so he would of been 66 and still climbing these monsters even with cancer. FairPlay to the fella.

    • @djtonylee
      @djtonylee Год назад +4

      One of the last chimneys he felled was in Accrington, just 200 yds from my house. Would probably have been around that time, early 2000s.

    • @PlaidSuitPinstripeWorld
      @PlaidSuitPinstripeWorld Год назад +3

      @@djtonylee I was lucky enough to see Fred in Accrington when I was a kid, I'm less lucky to still be living there now...
      Lol.

    • @sidslick1
      @sidslick1 Год назад +8

      I lived around the corner from Fred when I studied History in Bolton. Bloody nice bloke with a encyclopedic knowledge of industrial engineering (all self-taught) and I had several long chats with him as I wandered home past his house. His technical drawings were beautiful, too. Such a shame he has passed on.

    • @MadAl37
      @MadAl37 Год назад +11

      @@sidslick1 I'd have to say the modern day equivalent of this amazing bloke would be Guy Martin, his Northern wit and love of everything engineering puts him up there in my opinion.

  • @susanmaxwell6033
    @susanmaxwell6033 Год назад +57

    I was hopeful you would watch this,; you did not disappoint. I grew up only a mile or so from Fred's home and saw him often around town. He did some work for the architects I worked for and I had to sign off the invoice. It was hand written and a work of art. I was assured by the senior partner that this was normal. He showed Freds previous invoices, reports and notes. Each one was beautiful.
    He did some work on a church for us and I was honoured to be in attendance. It was so much fun. You would not have been in awe. He was such a relaxed and genuine gentleman. What you see here is exactly what he was like.

  • @ianbower827
    @ianbower827 Год назад +11

    Good on ya lads. Fred was built of the kind of men that made Britain great.

  • @stevecrisell108
    @stevecrisell108 Год назад +154

    Can't Help Thinking How Disappointed Fred Would Be With The World We Live In Now.

    • @JoshBransonPhoto
      @JoshBransonPhoto Год назад +14

      He was disappointed with the world he lived in then! lol Hence the reason he had fully reverted back to the Victorian Era.

    • @nockreel1190
      @nockreel1190 Год назад +5

      People that complain about the eras they live in. 90percent of the problem is yall. The world is just fine and always will be. The human is the problem. Yall just ain't fuhking😂

    • @user-gc8pc3ol6l
      @user-gc8pc3ol6l 4 месяца назад +7

      Especially with the destruction of so many old buildings in favour of awful environmentally unfriendly monstrosities and the lack of practical skills and ability to think of many of the younger generation.

    • @S3VEN3245
      @S3VEN3245 3 месяца назад

      Yeah no, you’re just old as fuck. Just because you’re bitter doesn’t mean everyone else would be. Take a hike

    • @user-gj3di1rf6k
      @user-gj3di1rf6k 3 месяца назад +2

      You have to remember this is a different generation the war generation, a generation of people that came up to Gen X and baby boomers people after that they wouldn’t do stuff like this

  • @alecleamus3280
    @alecleamus3280 Год назад +45

    I met Fred with his beloved steam engine in Manchester.
    He was completely humble, and probably didn’t realise what the fuss was about.
    The lovely thing, was that he’d chat to absolutely anyone, especially about his engine.
    He also was a brilliant engineer, that I’m sure you’ll be seeing in future episodes.
    There wasn’t anyone like him at the time, or since, and watching him made you proud to be British 🇬🇧.
    Respect to you guys for bring Fred to a new audience. 👍🏻

    • @Turn1t0ff
      @Turn1t0ff Год назад +3

      Guy Martin is the closest thing to Fred we have these days. Both gentlemen are cut from that same cloth.

    • @theant9821
      @theant9821 3 месяца назад +1

      @@Turn1t0ff Guy is often known as, The Fast Fred Dibnah

    • @robertperkin9707
      @robertperkin9707 Месяц назад

      I met Fred once at a steam rally the smile on his face when he was talking about his steam engine was one of pure enjoyment . He was a legend!!

  • @davidcorbett1713
    @davidcorbett1713 Год назад +75

    A rare breed was Fred. Takes skill, fitness and sheer bravery on another level and loving what you do to take on that task of work.

    • @billybigballs196
      @billybigballs196 Год назад

      Doubt fred was very fit somehow

    • @davidcorbett1713
      @davidcorbett1713 Год назад +8

      @@billybigballs196 he climbed those ladders as if he was walkin down the Street.

    • @billybigballs196
      @billybigballs196 Год назад

      @David Corbett doesn't make him fit. Have you not heard the smokers cough? Fred was a 30-40 a day man.
      Brave certainly but fit n

    • @davidcorbett1713
      @davidcorbett1713 Год назад +5

      @@billybigballs196 he was fit enough to erect and fit scaffold and planks at the top of a tower, he was fit enough. Could you do that? Could an Athelete do that?.

    • @billybigballs196
      @billybigballs196 Год назад

      @David Corbett yes an athlete could do it, did I ever say I could? Get back in your box kidda

  • @-Old-School-Gamer
    @-Old-School-Gamer Год назад +15

    You also have to think about the fact, he had to climb the tower beforehand to attach all the ladders, because they weren’t there originally.
    RIP Fred, you were a British legend

  • @SyTheSoundman
    @SyTheSoundman Год назад +73

    He used to set those ladders piece by piece and set them with bolts into the mortar with a hammer. (Imagine climbing an ice wall). The segments were pulled up by hand on ropes. He would spend days erecting the ladders. He's an icon here in the UK. Families would watch these shows on a Sunday night and just sit there, mouths wide open surrounded by pools of spit because you forgot to swallow. People would get more scared of watching this than horror films. The way these shows were edited would set the viewer up wondering if he was going to fall or not. Truly amazing television.

    • @stevemccullagh36
      @stevemccullagh36 Год назад +11

      They've covered the videos of him putting up the ladders too.

    • @jackmason4374
      @jackmason4374 Год назад +7

      He never used bolts they were wooden stakes

    • @mariafletcher6603
      @mariafletcher6603 Год назад +2

      Hi sy Williams. I couldn't have put it better myself. I used to do the same thing as you described. He was an amazing man. It's a shame he's no longer with us. RIP FRED DIBNAH 🕊️💐

    • @balucious
      @balucious Год назад +8

      @@jackmason4374 Apart from the iron. The wood was basically rawlplugs.

    • @pault1964
      @pault1964 Год назад +2

      Never trust someone else’s ladder

  • @mgrimble3975
    @mgrimble3975 Год назад +38

    I grew up a mile away from this chimney it is insane how big it is lol, when i was growing up a pair of Peregrine falcon's very rare in the UK (fastest animal on earth, up to 200 mph during its hunting dives) decided to make the top their home for some years.

    • @Craig_Humphries
      @Craig_Humphries Год назад +5

      Is the chimney still standing? There can't be many structures like that remaining in the world these days.

    • @paulmurgatroyd6372
      @paulmurgatroyd6372 Год назад +3

      What industry was it attached to? It's a monster.

    • @carlboyd3091
      @carlboyd3091 Год назад +17

      It's called "India mill" its in Darwen, Lancashire. It was a cotton mill. Its still standing. I live basically opposite it! ☺️

    • @carlboyd3091
      @carlboyd3091 Год назад +20

      The falcons are still there. I watch them from my garden in the summer when they are teaching their youngsters to hunt pigeons etc. Quite noisy but I'm not complaining as they are beautiful! ☺️

    • @paulmurgatroyd6372
      @paulmurgatroyd6372 Год назад +2

      @@carlboyd3091 Do you ever see Freds' ghost hanging off the side? 👻

  • @mattking5936
    @mattking5936 Год назад +9

    In.1979 the BBC made a one off documentary 'Fred Dibnah Steeplejack' they struck TV gold with Fred. His antics are amazing but it's his character and humble nature that make him an incredible human being. Absolutely love him. He worked on, and pulled down loads of chimneys around where I lived as a kid.

    • @neilsun2521
      @neilsun2521 27 дней назад

      Yeah. If he was arrogant, or boring, his legacy wouldn't be quite as good. As spectacular as it was it was his nonchalant demeanour that you can't help liking.

  • @dragonmac1234
    @dragonmac1234 Год назад +26

    I stumbled across this channel a few weeks ago because of the Fred Dibnah videos. I have a fear of heights that is so bad I can barely stand on a ladder without feeling ill, Fred was a man with nerves of steel and a natural charm that made him a national hero when I was growing up in the 1970's/80's.

    • @paulmurgatroyd6372
      @paulmurgatroyd6372 Год назад +3

      I'm not even sure it's strong nerves that does it, just a complete lack of whatever it is we don't like about heights.
      Fred was just wired differently.

  • @hurnethehunter
    @hurnethehunter Год назад +14

    Fred was one of a kind. There will never be another one like Fred...R.I.P Fred..

  • @chrisfox3161
    @chrisfox3161 Год назад +47

    Nobody knows how Fred got the ladders around the overhang. It was too scary to watch.

    • @donfink7063
      @donfink7063 Год назад

      I believe the BBC purposely did not show how Fred laddered overhangs, basically to deter stupid numpties from trying to emulate him. If they didn't know how to start, then they couldn't fail in the attempt.

    • @chrisfox3161
      @chrisfox3161 Год назад

      @@donfink7063 there's no I in fall.

    • @donfink7063
      @donfink7063 Год назад

      @@chrisfox3161 I said "fail" not "fall", the one comes rather spectacularly after the other!

    • @chrisfox3161
      @chrisfox3161 Год назад +1

      In the case of a steeplejack both words are interchangeable.

    • @borntoclimb7116
      @borntoclimb7116 Год назад +1

      As a urban climber, i love it to watch him

  • @stephenwest9757
    @stephenwest9757 Год назад +11

    I have seen many Fred Dibnah videos including laddering a chimney and erecting scaffolding around the top which is amazing. But I have never seen how he secured the ladder to the overhang as seen here. I bet it is highly dangerous but he would treat it as he did the whole job. An inspirational man. RIP Fred.

    • @theant9821
      @theant9821 3 месяца назад

      probably a trade secret, back then the only way to learn the trade was to be in the trade, usually as an apprentice. so few people would know or find out how to do it. the straight ladder isnt rocket science so hes not giving away anything valuable by doing it on tv

    • @mikestrohm3271
      @mikestrohm3271 3 месяца назад +1

      @@theant9821 I believe he laddered up the vertical face below the overhang, then attached a fixing point into the stone work, this fixing point was used to haul the inclined ladder into the outer edge of the overhang with a rope. The bottom of the inclined ladder was secured with another rope onto a fixing point so the bottom of the inclined ladder overlapped the vertical ladder. This would do as a temporary measure until he had done the first climb round the overhang and attach another fixing point on the ledge of the overhang to secure the top of the inclined ladder more securely.

  • @1grizzlyrizzo
    @1grizzlyrizzo Год назад +14

    Many thanks for spreading Fred's name to a new generation, I have no doubt you've spoken to folks at work and love to see their reactions once they've experienced the Fred effect.

  • @clarenceflam
    @clarenceflam Год назад +12

    This guy is a legend. No fear, super intelligent and a lovely guy! He was the last of his kind. I grew up in the 80s fascinated as a young kid watching this guy with my parents. Sunday evenings you would watch his documentary' in the UK.

  • @FlissFloss2906
    @FlissFloss2906 Год назад +11

    Climbing those ladders must have taken a hell of a lot of stamina and strength. I love how he would hook one of his legs around the ladder to give himself a few seconds break while he looked at brickwork etc. The fact he does that shows he was safety conscious despite doing what must have been the most dangerous job in the world at the time! Xx

  • @blakefish80
    @blakefish80 Год назад +12

    Fred was a special guy. He was a man born out of time. Had he been born in the hight of the Victorian era, he would have been in his elemant... a true legend!

  • @davidbirchall832
    @davidbirchall832 Год назад +34

    To me the scariest part would be climbing back onto the overhang ladder to get down (I am 50 lol)

    • @MyReallyCleverHandle
      @MyReallyCleverHandle Год назад +1

      I was just thinking the exact same thing. It can't have been easy to get back on there

    • @columkenn
      @columkenn Год назад +4

      Can't even imagine it. There was a very funny story from the producer of his TV show. Fred persuaded him to climb a chimney, the guy did it but froze at the top and refused to go down. Fred had to lower him down on a plank of wood on a pulley rope)) Must have been totally terrifying in itself

    • @295walk
      @295walk Год назад

      @@columkenn Wow!

    • @royboy6890
      @royboy6890 3 месяца назад +1

      @@columkenn Its harder to even get from a platform through a trapdoor onto a 150ft vertical ladder than to get off the ladder onto a platform. I cant imagine getting onto an overhang ladder at that height. The highest overhang I did was at 20ft and even that was only a 2ft overhang.

  • @moonstomper68
    @moonstomper68 Месяц назад +1

    No matter how many times I watch Fred Dibnah I am still terrified every time. Saw him first on TV in the 70's but it still doesn't become an easy watch. The bravery of this man was staggering.

  • @philmasters7410
    @philmasters7410 Месяц назад +1

    Coming from the North of England like Fred makes me proud. Remember watching Fred as a kid in the seventies.Proper LEGEND

  • @bobbrooks266
    @bobbrooks266 2 месяца назад +1

    Had the pleasure and honour to meet Fred a truly amazing man a legend in my country and still is. ❤

  • @jamesthompson316
    @jamesthompson316 Год назад +12

    The term ‘legend’ is often overused..this guy owns the word!…mad respect 😮💪

  • @phot183
    @phot183 Год назад +6

    Fred had a tremendous work ethic...I've seen this chimney close up and it's a thing of beauty!

  • @lextex3280
    @lextex3280 Год назад +11

    Love Fred Dibnah, a true legend. The most modern thing he ever owned was his Land Rover. 😁.

  • @kalenvuysher4988
    @kalenvuysher4988 Год назад +13

    Spencer, you need a supply of paper bags in when watching Fred, just so Daniel can breathe in to them to prevent that hyperventilation 🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @markpalmer7215
    @markpalmer7215 Год назад +5

    Chuck Norris has a poster of Fred on his wall 😊

  • @Youtubechannel-po8cz
    @Youtubechannel-po8cz Год назад +7

    Fred - what a legend. Don’t forget John Noakes, he went up Nelson’s column in his flared jeans, with nothing more than a bit of old rope and a few wooden boards. He was just a Blue Peter Presenter, but had balls of steel. I can’t imagine H&S allowing that today, or one of our telly luvies agreeing to do it. RIP John 🌟

    • @ravenmasters2467
      @ravenmasters2467 Год назад +2

      Theres a blast from the past indeed. ' Get down shep!". He did, as you say, have balls of steel and he too was also humble and down-to-earth. I can see whey Fred made you think of him.

  • @colinmelling6369
    @colinmelling6369 3 месяца назад +4

    I admire the respect you both have for Fred . He was a legend.

  • @neoanderson5146
    @neoanderson5146 Год назад +7

    Watching ANY Fred Dibnah video makes my stomach roll, what a man he was :)

    • @joyridgway6398
      @joyridgway6398 Год назад +1

      Mine, too, just couldn't climb step ladder, let alone that high.

  • @Makotonine
    @Makotonine Год назад +4

    i've watched that particular episode numerous times, and i still get sweaty palms and anxious on Fred's behalf!

  • @andywrong3247
    @andywrong3247 Год назад +5

    Great vlog lads brought back many happy memories, I was 13 yrs old when Fred hit the screen most weeks, he seemed to disappear from our screens for a while but returned with vengeance until his untimely death 2004 from cancer. He was a one off, he could turn his hand to most things. He had his own work shop, steam traction engine, built his own mine in back garden, he tours Britain visiting industrial heartland.

  • @nickskidmore6011
    @nickskidmore6011 Год назад +4

    I met Fred at The Last Drop Inn and asked him what the flash point of his cap was.
    He laughed his head off and bought me a pint - what a night

  • @Orchardman53
    @Orchardman53 Год назад +12

    If you'd find going up a bit scary, just think what it is like stepping the ladder to go down.

    • @slayerrocks2
      @slayerrocks2 Год назад +1

      I've stepped off a bay window onto a ladder at about 18ft. That was bad enough.
      I reckon they'd be sending a rescue chopper for me, if I ever got where Fred was.

  • @HolyInquisition
    @HolyInquisition Год назад +5

    Even though I'm 29, I grew up watching Fred. I was always amazed at his steel in climbing these chimneys. He was and is a national treasure. Absolute respect for him. He is the man whom younger men should emulate.

  • @warriorwebb8746
    @warriorwebb8746 2 месяца назад +2

    I love Americans getting to experience Fred. Remember growing up watching him. Some men are just built different. Fred was one of those.

  • @chrisbow1776
    @chrisbow1776 10 месяцев назад +2

    I am English and grew up in the 70s and 80s watching Fred Dibnah programs with my dad as a kid, and loved them all. To many people in the UK, mainly builders like myself and real blokes who appreciate engineering etc etc, as you say, Fred is a God, haha. Amazed he could climb those ladder with such big and heavy cast iron bollocks dragging him down, AKA Testicals to you Americans.

  • @dondons27
    @dondons27 Год назад +6

    I remember seeing this before and my legs still turned to jelly!! Fred was and is a Legend!

  • @mattking5936
    @mattking5936 Год назад +8

    Can't wait until you do the series. BTW Fred was the most humble down to earth guy you could ever meet.

  • @Shoomer1988
    @Shoomer1988 Год назад +6

    He didn't just have balls of steel he was a very talented engineering. He had a life long passion for steam engines, even built his own.

  • @stevehawthorn8733
    @stevehawthorn8733 Год назад +4

    The Foo Fighter's song My Hero is playing inside my head watching this again.
    Saw this when it was originally aired and still impressive, Fred Dibnah an absolute British institution.
    Must watch TV for myself and my family at the time.

  • @jasonkendrick681
    @jasonkendrick681 Год назад +4

    Seen this so many times. Still completely freaks me out. Fred was awesome.

  • @PHDarren
    @PHDarren Год назад +5

    Angled ladders: Up straight as far as you can go, fix attachment pins close to you but under the lip of the overhang but still in the main wall, then pull up the ladder to do the overhang and roped the top part to the pins, then down the ladder to rope the bottom of the overhang ladder to the main ladder. Then add any additional support rope needed. Maybe?

    • @goose300183
      @goose300183 Год назад +2

      that's about what I thought - two rope lashings on the top of the angled ladder, then try to make as tight a triangle as possible tying them onto the middle of the straight ladder. They would have to be two, and super tight to prevent it washing around sideways. Then on the same place the two upper ropes are tied, just join the lower rung of the angled ladder to the same rung the two upper ropes are.

  • @marlecmarine5393
    @marlecmarine5393 Год назад +5

    The BBC first series is great, you will love his steam traction engine it was just fabulous to see it brought back to life and his workshop was steam powered....🙂

  • @Atacama87103
    @Atacama87103 Год назад +6

    I would love to see you guys react to Fred's full series.

  • @ksmith3997
    @ksmith3997 Год назад +4

    He’s so relaxing to watch and listen too. A simple man (with respect) in a simple age. Oh how I’m jealous

  • @felixthecat02
    @felixthecat02 Год назад +7

    That's where I grew up! Darwen in Lancashire.....love you guys!! You've made my day😃😃 (Also, interesting fact, Gandhi visited there!)

    • @vilebrequin6923
      @vilebrequin6923 Год назад +3

      Kudos to him for managing that climb in his dhoti😉

  • @pauldurkee4764
    @pauldurkee4764 Год назад +4

    Greetings Spencer and Daniel,
    That quote from Fred that you only fall off those chimneys once, was in response to someone asking him if he had ever fallen off!!!
    Best Wishes from Wales. 👍

    • @TimberwolfC14
      @TimberwolfC14 Год назад

      I remember Fred saying he has only fallen off one ladder and that was when changing a light-globe in his daughters bedroom, he laughed and said "The ladder was only about 3ft tall but he ended up hitting his head, knocking himself out and spent a week in hospital followed by 2 weeks off work'.

  • @markhughes8314
    @markhughes8314 Год назад +7

    James Bond moment at the end there.

  • @liamwaterworth923
    @liamwaterworth923 Год назад +3

    Love watching you guys and your reactions to Fred Dibnah, I live near to the mills and chimneys he would of worked on, especially the "laddering a chinmey" video, was no more than 5 miles from my house.
    i'm embracing, Embrace the Suck...keep up the videos!

  • @stelladavies2262
    @stelladavies2262 Год назад +2

    Thanks for giving your thoughts on Fred Dibnah, I haven’t seen these videos since they were first shown on TV a very long time ago, but I actually couldn’t watch this one through… I had to keep forwarding it even though I know he doesn’t fall! The worst thought of all is ….. he has to come back down the reverse of how he got himself up there in the first place OMG! How the hell does he put his first foot on that ladder to get back down! It just doesn’t bear thinking about! Kudos to you both for reminding us what an absolute legend this man is thank you. 👍

  • @bengalmillie
    @bengalmillie Год назад +2

    Fred wasn't dealt 'a bad hand' he loved what he did.

  • @stevemccullagh36
    @stevemccullagh36 Год назад +5

    Something nobody ever seems to think about when watching these Fred videos is what it must have been like getting back down 😬

  • @TimberwolfC14
    @TimberwolfC14 Год назад +5

    I could see how Fred set his ladders up also the scaffolding he used but I'd love to know how he rigged up his gear to get around those overhangs. He was born out of his time.

    • @highpath4776
      @highpath4776 Год назад

      poss temp scaffold ?

    • @EaglesNest1984
      @EaglesNest1984 2 месяца назад

      Most likely tied to the ladder thats going straight up and hanging out on the rope until he can climb up the hanging ladder and he can get a pin in near the top of the overhang to secure the ladder to.

  • @richardlaundon
    @richardlaundon Год назад +8

    Well I'm 50 next week and there is no way in hell you'd get me even a few rungs on those ladders let along 300 ft up to the top! Fred is an absolute legend over here but I bet he was an insurance companies nightmare although knowing him he probably didn't have any 🤣

  • @richardcardwell8882
    @richardcardwell8882 Год назад +2

    He's up in heaven now acting as god's steeplejack keeping Jacobs ladder maintained.....RIP Fred Dibnah

  • @lindadoswell9396
    @lindadoswell9396 Год назад +4

    Another great Fred Dibnah stream!!! Loved it thanks! I love your faces!!!

  • @bettyswolloks
    @bettyswolloks 3 месяца назад +3

    You need to watch his last series, Made In Britain. He made it while he was dying 😢 It's so inspirational and heart breaking. He takes his bloody steam engine all around the UK. He goes to London to see the Queen! I live about 10 miles from his home.

  • @josefschiltz2192
    @josefschiltz2192 Год назад +5

    The most that I saw in this area of scaling tall structures was a man local to my village, one Denis Parker. Ordinarily a builder/plumber by trade. but could also be an expert at disassembling a 70ft tree, which he did at our property, piece by piece, with no safety equipment. As with Fred, he must have been in his fifties when he performed this surgery on one of our Thujas, after it had been scored by a lightning strike and rendered with no hope of recovery. We looked on for a while, and then decided that we couldn't. This was in the 80s. The price? A mere seventy quid! I still have the receipt in our family archive, simply because no-one would believe it!

  • @stephenbrough8132
    @stephenbrough8132 Год назад +15

    I really like your fred reactions more than anyone elses - He's a legend here in Bolton. Lovely statue of him the town centre with his fat belly, oily cap and big boots - Hope you get to see him meeting the queen in his top hat and tails. I have a video of it on my ch if curious.

  • @nicklovell5872
    @nicklovell5872 2 месяца назад

    I had a Fred Dibnah binge a couple of months back and I love that you guys seem to be as anxious as I was watching the videos. You are right. Chuck Norris knocks the drops off when Fred Dibnah has a whizz.

  • @ThePalaeontologist
    @ThePalaeontologist Год назад +4

    Fred Dibnah; North Western English working class hero, steam engine enthusiast and restoration man, expert in Victorian engineering and architecture, a very fine architectural and mechanical artist low-key, true British patriot and one of the very last of his kind. Old school steeplejack. I couldn't even have gone 33 feet up one of those laddering arrays he has. Let alone 303 feet up like he did. I'd be howling for the moon if I were 11 metres up let alone what Fred did.

  • @TheRenoReviews
    @TheRenoReviews Год назад +7

    I actually think going back down would be scarier, not being able to see each step you’re taking down. That seems terrifying.

  • @andrewmoss3681
    @andrewmoss3681 Год назад +3

    Unsurprisingly, another great one guys. That overhang part has us all cringing. But we did learn something today. Spencer squeals when he hits those levels of terror 🤣
    Much love from here in the UK & The Muppet army

  • @elitestarquake3597
    @elitestarquake3597 Месяц назад

    Watching this for the second time, one year later. You have to admit, this is a very handsome chimney - some marvellous masonry and construction work.

  • @MyGlens
    @MyGlens Год назад +1

    I have seen a video of Fred scrambling over an overhang to ladder it. Now, THAT is the video you need to watch lol

  • @glencarle1009
    @glencarle1009 Год назад +1

    I met Fred Dibnah in real life. He was exactly as you'd expect. A true one off!

  • @philipstroud6327
    @philipstroud6327 Год назад +4

    Absolute legend !!

  • @pauls.arts.and.craft.
    @pauls.arts.and.craft. Год назад +2

    Fred was a great man, and a absolute sponge for history. If something interested him, he was an all in person. In terms of technique, knowledge and skill required.

  • @dawnwhittle2004
    @dawnwhittle2004 Год назад +1

    Omg I was hoping you two would see this one, I saw your last reaction and couldn't wait to see your faces to this one 🤣🤣

  • @petergarbutt9521
    @petergarbutt9521 3 месяца назад

    8:44 FRED HAD STOPPED ON THE OVERHANG LADDER, WRAPPED HIS LEG AROUND THE LADDER, THEN EXPLAINED THE STONES WEIGHED 5 TON... AMAZING MAN

  • @masterofparsnips5327
    @masterofparsnips5327 Год назад +7

    I live a couple of miles from this chimney 🙃

    • @annother3350
      @annother3350 Год назад +2

      Oh its still there? 👌 Are they taking good care of it??

    • @masterofparsnips5327
      @masterofparsnips5327 Год назад +1

      @@annother3350 .. Yes and yes 🙂

  • @KissMeWhereIWee
    @KissMeWhereIWee Год назад +7

    If the words 'fuck that' don't immediately spring to mind.

  • @comedywriter8408
    @comedywriter8408 Год назад +1

    Is that not the most terrifying thing ever to watch. I still get physically ill thinking about it. How on earth he ever did that is simply beyond me!

  • @Sorarse
    @Sorarse Год назад +4

    It's one thing climbing the ladders around those overhangs, but how did he get the ladders around them to start with?

  • @JaveyEL6369
    @JaveyEL6369 Год назад +1

    He climbed buildings like that most of his life, but it was cancer that took him from us. RIP Fred, you were a legend.

  • @industrialmonk
    @industrialmonk 3 месяца назад

    As a child in the 1970s in north Manchester I remember seeing Fred working & his land rover. It used to hurt my neck looking up & watching him so high & on local TV. It was fascinating & still is.

  • @markjackson6325
    @markjackson6325 Год назад +3

    Climbing up is bad enough, but can you imagine coming back down?? 🤯

  • @watcher24601
    @watcher24601 3 месяца назад +1

    Climbing up and over that overhang is one thing, climbing back down over it is something else!

  • @mikedavies1827
    @mikedavies1827 Год назад +4

    Fred is a one off, certainly now days. History hit did a video on Salisbury cathedral, showing how stones masons work on the up keep, which involves abseiling down.

  • @TheCuggsmeister
    @TheCuggsmeister 2 месяца назад

    He was also into steam engines and all types of industrial revolution machinery. He'd attend summer shows (I think he had a vintage steam roller) and I met him at one when I was a little kid. My Dad chatted to him for a while. He was just an all round, friendly guy.

  • @kathleenorr9237
    @kathleenorr9237 Год назад +1

    You could not pay me enough to climb that…as for the overhangs 😱 Fred was something else!

  • @stephenbrough8132
    @stephenbrough8132 Год назад +3

    PS THE KING was in Bolton yesterday, something to do with Bolton Town hall - I WONDER IF HE GOT TO SEE FRED'S STATUE ONLY 100 YARDS AWAY? I bl00dy well hope so.

  • @BassMatt1972
    @BassMatt1972 Год назад +6

    Its all fun and games until the end of the day and you have to climb DOWN again..

  • @NckBrktt
    @NckBrktt Год назад

    These Dibnah videos where obviously decades before youtube. Fortunately Fred was a legend in his own lifetime and had much coverage from the BBC at the time (find video of BBC reporter climbing chimney with Fred and having major panic attack)

  • @deniselawson2720
    @deniselawson2720 Год назад +1

    My dad worked with Fred and we would go and watch chimney's come down at the weekends he would wear a morning suit with top hat as he would be sad to take the chimney down.

  • @stevewalters4845
    @stevewalters4845 3 месяца назад

    This chimney is still standing at India Mill in Darwen,Lancashire,England,only live five minutes away from it,met Fred several times as a kid as was a friend of my uncles

  • @GSD-hd1yh
    @GSD-hd1yh 18 дней назад

    Half a day out with the undertaker refers to how short a funeral really is. When attending a funeral the typical time allowed off work was half a day, which is exactly what I was granted for my Grandfathers funeral - expected back to work after lunch.

  • @leewetherelt8925
    @leewetherelt8925 Год назад +4

    What a guy!!!!!

  • @MeFreeBee
    @MeFreeBee Год назад +4

    The technique for laddering an overhang is easy - you just start from the top and work down 😁

    • @stephenbrough8132
      @stephenbrough8132 Год назад

      So it doesn't involve double sided sticky tape then? Well that's my theory down the toilet.

  • @colinsingleton8675
    @colinsingleton8675 3 месяца назад

    Fred Dibnah had Balls of steel. What a legend.

    • @TwoFingeredMamma
      @TwoFingeredMamma 3 месяца назад

      Get it right pal, his balls were made of "wrought iron" 😉😀

  • @wildwine6400
    @wildwine6400 Год назад +3

    Check him out dropping a chimney next. Id do this older one first "Fred Dibnah How to bring down a chimney stack"

  • @joeking5310
    @joeking5310 Год назад +1

    At the end when he is on top of the chimney he says you could ride a bike round here, and if he had one I think he would!

  • @Parknest
    @Parknest Год назад

    RIP Fred Dibnah MBE (1938-2004). He was a steeplejack by trade but ended up demolishing chimneys the old fashoned way rather than with machines or explosives. He was also a TV presenter towards the end of his life. He demolished 90 chimneys in his lifetime. He was aborth about £1 million when he died and it was all left to his 5 children. He was married 3 times and the video you watched was when he was still with his 2nd wife (Sue) and that was one of his sons (Jack, I think).

  • @thirdratecontent585
    @thirdratecontent585 Месяц назад

    When my Nan lived in Atherton in the 90s, he used to ride his steam tractor around the town (from time to time).

  • @simonmorris4226
    @simonmorris4226 Год назад

    Man was the business! Brave, proud and utterly respectable. Role model or what!