OMG, I literally had this same idea at the beginning of the war. I'm glad you're being a guinea pig for us and showing this process. I personally am VERY interested to see how this turns out. I don't want an investment property, but I would LOVE to gift a home to some Ukrainian families after Ukraine's victory. Thank you so much for all you do, Johnny. 😊
Also, Ryan MacBeth (US Army vet) has a short video on how to convince people to leave. He says to hand them a black marker and tell them to write their names on their arms and legs, then do the same on their children's extremities. That way all of their body parts can be identified after they are blown to pieces. He says this is black marker is the most effective tool Ukrainian soldiers can have.
These old "Babushka" houses need to be totally renovated to live there comfortably. It would be freezing cold in winter with an outside bathroom area & cold water shower. The big yards are good you can plant fruits trees and have a big garden & BBQ area.
Love how The Zona folks crossed out Russia and wrote "MORDOR" on the map. The personal interactions were heart-breaking. You're doing good things there, JFD.
Goats are good but they do not eat all the grass, sheep is much better because they eat all the grass. I like the first location which is located near the railroad. You can upgrade the doors and window and flooring, I will wait to see other homes for part 2. Back in the year 2014 some bad people demolished my home in Trinidad so I know how it feels to not have a home. You are doing well by buying old homes and fix it up so people and children can live
Hey Johnny! What a great idea, it'd be great to raise money to purchase more small homes like these to give people with little hope and the feeling of uselessness a place where they can feel comfortable. Maybe even purchasing the home for themselves if their situations improve in the future. I really liked the 1st property you looked at with all the fruit trees and chicken coop, etc. It definitely needs some work but the "bones" are good. I was thinking it'd be awesome to have a larger property with several homes on it to allow groups the option to be near each other. Maybe a trend can be started to purchase land, properties, etc. for Ukrainians in need that feel like they have nowhere to go. Keep up the good work, looking forward to part 2.
Thank you for another great and humane idea helping refugees to get places to stay and also contributing into Ukrainian economy. This project is worth to chip in. Hopefully crowdfunding helps to get supplies, too, to help with renovation projects and outhouse upgrades. Ukrainians are great people. It's very difficult to leave your home, but if you can at least stay in your homeland and have a place to stay, it's definitely easier for people to evacuate from dangerous areas indeed. For elderly people there's less cultural shock, too, if they get to similar place, babushka house with wooden heater, fruit garden and chicken coop. Slava Ukraini!
Thankyou for everything you are doing and hoping many join you in this support. Peace to Kyiv. God bless Ukraine 🇺🇦 Wishing you and your friends a good day. Take good care. 🌻💖🙏🙏
My wife and I sent $40 last night to Eva after watching your video. She promptly got back with us and is helping us through the process of realty there. Thank you SO much for your awesome videos. You are our new favorite RUclips star. 😁
@@Oana14Montreal : Well, like Johnny said her contact info is there in the information he posted under his video title. She also has a RUclips channel called Your Ukraine.
💐 Thanks John for the information I have always been interested in bind one of these properties Just before the war broke out Unfortunately solicitors are not always working Especially in Kiev I would like to go and retire as soon as possible to live in the Ukraine I'm still waiting to buy a house there to retire From the UK England the Ukraine 🇺🇦 Have everything I'm looking for Who knows by the time Christmas comes I will be there and Putin will be gone And the war will end My peace be with everyone 🙏🤲🤝
Ukraine cheerleaders point to poor rural Russian areas as "proof" that Russians are stupid Orcs. When Ukrainians live that way it's viewed romantically. Pathetic.
Wow, there are so many fruit and nut trees and berry bushes on that land. With chickens, a milk goat, and a garden, a family could live there comfortably.
It does need renovations. But the important questions are: * How hard is it to find skilled labour there to do the proper jobs? Most of the good ones have moved to the West to earn top dollars,the rest there aren't so great. Can you trust them to do get the jobs done? * Are the quality materials reasonable cost and accessible? * How reliable are the utilites there? if not , you would to make the property self sustainable and have the skills to mainain on your own. I personally would just buy the land for a fire sale price, skip the fixing for now, wait till the war is over, and when economy stabilizes, then start planning renovations.
it very easy faind workers in ukraine. every person in the wilage can do it since it is tradition to give that knowlage to children. and in ukraine now a lot of mans that have back to country and wait to go to army. and a lot of scholls that teach that. ukraine is country of schoolls and universitys
Nice to see the countryside, and the old houses. In summer it is easy to live there, but in the winter it is going to be really tough. These old houses do not have any insulation.
Goodness, I would buy the house just for the fruit trees. WOW! I love it. You have a great idea there Johnny. Buy the house, allow displaced people to live there. Maybe they can pay the bills themselves and maintain the property. In the future, when this normalizes, that house may be worth more. How is it for foreigners to buy property there?
It is easy if you have an honest agent that can walk you through the process! I would be there now if I could get my wife to go back but she has PTSD from the initial attacks, she has only been in America a little over 3 months!
Brave but not very judicious...I guess at that time they haven't yet discovered all the atrocities that some of the Russian units were committing in occupied towns near Kiev, like Bucha.
very interesting Video Johnny! I looked at similar era houses in Estonia , also an ex Soviet country and the problem there was that a lot of these old houses are full of Asbestos (carcinogenic) which was a commonly used building material in the Soviet Union as it was indeed in Western Europe in the 1960's and 70's .In fact many schools in the UK still have it. It's fine as long as you don't disturb it so that particles are not released into the breathable atmosphere. I don't know about Ukraine but in EU countries you have to employ specialist licensed companies to demolish a house with asbestos or even remove small amounts of it, which costs a small fortune. The thing to do here is to demolish the house and replace it with a wooden flat pack House delivered on the back of a lorry and you would have a modern fully insulated dwelling for under 100K € you can buy them in Estonia, Latvia and Poland and Lithuania among other places and more than likely also in Ukraine . It would be interesting to know if they are manufactured in Ukraine as well. As for those who warn of being scammed I would suggest you should consult with the 1000's of poor Americans who were sold unsustainable mortgages before the 2008 financial crash and had their houses repossessed and are now homeless.Bankers are the real scammers of the world! If you want to find out what happened to a lot of those people i suggest you watch this video from the land of the free and home of the brave! ruclips.net/video/UJ1Wq7gHSyI/видео.html
Look forward to seeing more houses. The houses you looked at remind me of old houses in Maine we tried to buy in my childhood. Both properties you looked at were beautiful, so green and fruitful, especially the first one.
Hi, Johnny! Thank you for the initiative! It's very kind of you to do this and to keep showing what life in Ukraine is like. Stay safe! Все буде Україна!
Totally agree, the price for that kind of comfort would be somewhat comfortable to these old houses +fixing price, but you have option to move it and reuse by other family
Ideal and practical in the US or Western Europe, but Ukraine right now during the war has a huge problem with supply chains - concepts of Home Depot or Lowes have been noticeably abrupted - and, therefore, getting "inexpensive prefabricated anything" is a challenge. I've been talking to my sister in law who lives in Berlin, but is overseeing our childhood home from Ukraine, so this is first hand conversation.
you can bild extra room before enterence . that is how you wount remove walls. people often do so in old houses. bild one big veranda or even part of house that has 2 flors.
I wonder how much it would cost to renovate? I would put in a new kitchen, and indoor bath/shower and redo the walls. It's def a must for anyone living there. I just love the hospitality of the Ukrainian people. The redo older guy was so sweet.
hospitality ? I was there in 2019 got scammed twice and nobody could speak English, the hotel staff stole some of my stuff after cleaning.. and no help at all from hotel management. people were angry no smiles. I will never visit again. I think they are nice to Johnny cos he is American.
🧐Too good to be true Johnny. Don’t get scammed. Since a lot of people have left Ukraine someone can take possession of a property and say that it’s theirs.
Do you feel good to leave such negative, hateful comments??? Are you Russian to spread lies about the people of Ukraine? NO ONE in Ukraine can take possession of a property and say that it's theirs. I watched various channels about empty houses in Ukraine and have read many comments under them. Many people in Ukraine nowadays would want to buy a house like that because they've got nowhere to go. They would renovate it and live peacefully there, not to mention eat fruits and veggies from their own garden. Now about the outhouse/toilet, many people in Ukraine live like that, even work going out to the toilet at the end of the backyard.
@@sweetvictory5643 Is my name Russian? Off course not. That would be a curse. I live in the USA. These were not hateful comments but just to be on the precaution side. Too good to be true. In times of war anything can happen. Johnny has a good heart to try to help someone. The war continues. Even if Putin leaves the other guy is there and he is as hateful as him and war may continue. If I was Johnny, I would wait till war is over.
There seems to be structural damage on various structures. Either they experience regular earthquakes or the quality of cement is poor? The downspout also needs to be collected (to flush toilet?) because it seems to be rotting the corner foundation. FYI, goats will eat the fruit trees and bushes. Sheep are a better choice for 'lawnmowing', or a donkey 😁 Best of luck!
@@TabithaNS He's a native English speaker. It's almost impossible for native English speakers to learn any slavic language quickly unless you have already learned and mastered a few other relevant Indo European languages. Well, if you speak another Slavic language then its easy. Especially at his age and I want to say it's almost too late but maybe in about 10 years he'll get it down. He just needs to go to a Russian language boot camp for 3 months where they drill it in to him and don't allow him to speak English. Its not easy to learn any Slavic language. It took me about 7 years to Speak Czech fluently learning on my own I did not work on it very hard either i as very lazy, and i started in my 30's. But i spoke several other foreign languages so that helped me. I know Americans and Brits that have been here in the Czech Republic for 20 or more years and still can't do more than order food in a restaurant. Angloczech is a dialect in Prague.
Same in small villages in western Hungary, but much cheaper there. You can get houses cheap but they need renovation. Still its very cheap compared to the USA. My friends have a few houses one has the shower in a shed attached to the house, its fine in summer, but winter forget it! where is the boiler? Thats pretty cheap to add the shower/toilet inside. maybe they don't have one. Anyhow, they are all going to need renovation.id go with the first near the train station. Your whole video is like the village i go to for grape harvest/winemaking every September! But, i do love it there!
It seems like it would be easier to just raze the existing houses in most of these cases and place an inexpensive modular home like they build lots of in Latvia, Estonia, etc. and hook it up to the existing services. Or even place 2 or 3 on some of these lots like the first one with the fruit trees.
Yes - in the US or high(er) GDP Western Europe. But in Ukraine - a) the supply chain is sorely disrupted that it's a huge challenge to get all these western supplies in is nearly impossible today, and b) ROI - most people are staying put and not over investing on home renovations as it's not sure which side will win... if Russia wins, and property rights laws get adjusted...???....
I could read and write Russian fairly well in just three months, and 10 months after finishing Russian in Zaporizhia, I went to University in Petersburg to study Engineering. But after years of living in Ukraine, Johnny breaks his teeth and tongue to pronounce simple words. He said Sectdesiat Piats let, Johnny, translated it 68 and hurt his tongue.
Yes, it's not easy for English speakers to learn any language in your 30's any slavic language is concidered impossible unless you are a well practiced linguist and have already mastered a few other languages. I know English speakers that have been in the Czech Republic for more than 20 years and still cant pronounce the items on the menu correctly and even make a simple sentence without making a grammatical mistake. The only way for him to learn now would be to live in a villiage with no English speakers for a year. He will never learn in Kiev there are just too many opportunities to speak English, hanging out in fancy Coffee shops and fancy restaurants and in shopping malls with chicks that speak English. IN this case you just repeat the same Ukrainian and Russian words over and over. Jon Boy if you want to learn Ukrainian in Kiev or Russian then get a job working pro bono in with some burly Ukrainian dudes that spit and curse and do shots all day and whilst working on cars like in that one auto repair shop you visited to get that bolt changed on your bad ass G's look at me ride. I learned to speak German fluently working hard labor illegally in Constructon, Gardening, an in warehouses with other illegal Poles and Czechs in the early and mid 90's. Czech and SLovak little Polish and Russian learned too doing many shots with them burly dudes. 15 years here. When i drink with Ukrainians i just mix 4 Slavic languages we get along just fine. Every American would think i was fluent.
This is good, but on October 1, 2022, Ukraine issued a decree that said women are not able to leave Ukraine after this date. So, if you plan on getting married to someone there, keep that in mind that she will not be able to leave with you.
Thanks for sharing Johnny. The way I see it if the family is willing to work on the house to make it livable so they can live there for free as a trade. It can be a great investment. Being an American this may be a good early retirement plan for myself as well.
RUclips first suggested your Chanel to me and I am not gonna lie watching you with Bald and Bankrupt, I was not interested but the new videos are heartwarming and I like them a lot more --- also kinda interesting that your friend chose the side of the Orks
There's a law in Ukrain saying that real estate transaction are obsolete in catastrophic situations ( that was meant for flooding, earthquake, ....) & I guess that war is also concerned even if it's not state directly in the law. Moreover the country got empty and many of those who left won't get back even if peace comes back. It's still a big risk for investing there especially in the neighbourhood & prices will go down in winter ( there was always a cyclical trend in this market regardless of currency devaluation).
Yeah I’ve been told this to by several Ukrainians now who are in Kyiv and Odessa. I wonder about the legality that even if “title offices” are open it could be like American title companies that aren’t part of the government and simply operating outside of the law in order to stay in business and keep making money. I also find carpet bagging to be somewhat tasteless. Throughout history people generally disapprove of the practice.
I know I have annoyed you and probably pissed you off but I want you to know I am still proud of you for what you are doing! If I could get my wife to move back to Ukraine and live in the country I would jump on that first house in a heartbeat, $7000 and another $10000 to $15000 in updates and repairs and it would be a beautiful little cottage!
I was in Ukraine last week. Yeah, if I could save 7000 $ I would buy a home. So, I think seriously and maybe next year, at the border with Romania. For reparations, maybe 20-30 000$ in the next 10 years. Yeah, I think to retire there in 10 years. Ukraine is a big country, in the East it's safe.
@@Oana14Montreal I have found beautiful huge homes in and around Lviv that are cheap even before the war! I would go now if I could get my wife to go but she was there the first 3 weeks of the war and she is scared!
I don t know how safe is Yahotyn , but buying properties for 7.000 USD is probably cheaper version of helping that people and that is definitely praise worthy , but expecting and advertising it as good investment is not so realistic. If residents of these houses really came from most war struck regions, the possibility of them having a place to return to is not very high. So what are you and eventual other investors going to do after a few years with those people? Throw them out, make them pay some crazy rents? Just me thinking loudly, no beef. Also to make a bathroom , toilet in the first house for 1.000 USD is a bit of a fairy tale.
Thanks for another great video Johnny, this is most heartbreaking seeing the elderly crying and having no place to go. You are such a good man for the help and compassion you are showing these people. Slava Ukraine 🇺🇦
How do people not see this as un ethical? Profiting from the plight of locals fleeing from a war? Let the local economy dictate the price of housing. So locals working locally can afford to live there. All the people from rich countries want to retire there because the same thing caused them to not be able to afford to retire where they lived there entire life. If you really want to help the local Ukrainian population buy some made in Ukraine products. Or even rent a cottage from a local in Ukraine not some foreign rich dude. This smacks of rich getting richer on the backs of the working poor. There is going to be a housing shortage at the end of the war when people return from exile.
My Ukrainian Russian teacher and old AirBnB host in Kyiv are both telling me that property sales are illegal during the war to prevent carpet baggers from taking advantage of the war torn people... I guess stuff is just being sold regardless... I'd be careful buying stuff that isn't legal to sell, as later on you could lose it after the war.
UKRAINE is a poorer country than most of Europe…. These houses need $10,000 to $50,000 repairs to bring up to USA standards…. Cheap prices and the War has caused $600 Billion at least in damages to homes/infrastructure to bring back to Western standards. Reminds me looking at old, rundown homes in California but sell for $800,000 USA…
Johnny from everything i have seen of Ukraine from your videos i love that country. the people are so nice and very friendly . i am a 78 year old man and i would love to live in a place like yahotyn myself. it is quiet, has a rail station where i could get to a city like Kiev . the prices in Yahotyn are very low. i think when this war is over the property values will only go up in these areas. i also love the idea of being able to grow fruit and vegatables on your own property. l loved this video please do more of these, take care and stay safe.
Frank don't get too excited. Ukraine is as corrupt as hell and is run by the deep state. I have been there many times and at every level of governemt is corrupt. I have paid off Police, Civil Service, Immigration and even paid off a judge to remove a child from the Ukraine. It is a very sick place. The child is now grown up and left home. Most Ukraine folks have sold out to the dollar and will sell themselves like whores. One thing I have noticed about many houses I have visited in the Ukraine, they have no bookcases, they do not read at all.
Johnny take a look at a beautiful place in the south of Kyiv region, village Medvyn. It has so amazing landscapes, like a small Carpathians. You definitely fall in love when see it.
You can get the family to work on the house and you supply the amenities. They will feel good about helping you out and in the end you have a nicer investment.
Great idea Johnny!! Agree, anyone who contacts Eva should show the respect of sending the consultation fee you mentioned and not wasting her time. Thanks for all you do Johnny, keep up the fantastic work supporting Ukraine!!!
Seriously, I'd rather buy a house in an area prone to flooding or near a volcano than in Ukraine at the moment. I know you should buy when there's blood on the streets and high risk = high reward but no, thanks.
Why do you watch someone's video then pretend to threaten them... You think the Ukrainian government gives a toss about a few sunflowers when it's in a war 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂 707 baby
Johnny, I'm interested in looking around to buy a cheap house in the village after the war. What is the process of getting a residency in Ukraine for military veterans with pension. I want the $7k🏠. Is it walking distance from the bus stop or train station? I would want the bathroom and shower to be added first. What is the realtor info?
I worry that many of these houses that are now vacant will not withstand the winter. Pipes will freeze and an unheated house going through a freeze thaw cycle in the winter will deteriorate at a very high rate. I live in a very similar climate in the US and vacant buildings will soon become unusable during and after a winter without heat and human attention.
this house already withland 100 winters and will sill about 200 years. ukrainian houses are not bilt from wood. it mixs of wood clay mud lime. so winter for that house is not problem
@@KingAGBozz no. russian guss was been used for a citys. in the same time we sell our own gus to uerope. these guse bullon with ukrainian guss. for many long time we had goverment that was moscow serwants. so they forbided production ukrainian gass for very long time, to make all country buy moscowien gass. now we stop it and use our own gass
Great idea Johnny but keep looking. Too much work to be done on both of these two properties. Good rule of thumb is if you wouldn't happily live in it yourself then don't expect anyone else to be happy there either. I think you 'd be uncomfortable putting people into substandard living conditions and them feeling beholden to you because its free and they are in a desperate situation. I'm sure the plan can work well with the right property.
@@JohnnyFD maybe look for some modular/detached houses, it’s more expensive but has more potential since it modern living environment and it can be moved later if needed.
Hate to say it Johnny, as much as I feel for the people.....can't help feeling that you're going to get burnt at the end of this experience..... good luck though...... Remember the old saying......the road to hell is paved with good intentions....
Johnny, be careful bro. You have a good heart, but you can't save Ukraine all by yourself. You have given more than your fair share. You're still a young cat, with a long way to go, make sure your money stays with you. look forward to seeing you back on the trail "nomadding it" across the globe.
It’s 10k$+ for sure, and it’s still gonna miss some features, thats why it’s better to look at some prefab homes options, which can be at same price but can be moved further if situation gets worse and can be reused by different families
If this took off with many people. Wouldn't it mess up the housing market for the locals.. long-term house price rise.. locals can't afford... I am taking the idea to it's limit mind you...
have you looked at buying a piece of property and just building a basic small apartment building on it maybe like 4 or 5 units and what that cost you can talk to a builder you might get a discount because of what the projects for
Investing 7K in Ukraine these days is like throwing your money into the toilet. No insurance coverage for real estate, no security, most ppl don’t speak and don’t understand english or other languages “those who did went out somewhere else - not everyone”, bribery and theft all over the country. It would be better to invest the 7K somewhere else not necessarily in real estate. Could be education, stocks, travel, food, technology, crypto or anything else.I love Ukraine so much and I used to fly 3 times a year to Kiev-Odessa-Lviv for business and leisure. But, as long as there’s uncertainty and war conditions it’s too risky for foreigners. Peace from Jerusalem
HOLY CRIPES JOHNNY! I don't know how to SHOW the spot in the film but about the place of 31:13 there appears to be a BODY in the bed and everyone is cool with it? Is that the deceased Babushka? I know we have different cultural norms but MAN! that would have had me flippin' out if I walked in on that scene. Tell me it is not the deceased lady of the house there in the bed?!!! I am an RN so I am no stranger to death but still, would have had to push my way through that moment, in your shoes. :)
GPS is an American thing. I'm guessing they blocked Russian equipment somehow. GLONASS is a Russian thing with absolutely shit coverage outside Russia. Even within Russia, your phones fixes in on GPS rather than GLONASS most of the time. How bad is GLONASS? Compare them to Indian and Chinese systems, which have worldwide coverage. I think Russia is the only country with positioning satellites now without global coverage.
OMG, I literally had this same idea at the beginning of the war. I'm glad you're being a guinea pig for us and showing this process. I personally am VERY interested to see how this turns out. I don't want an investment property, but I would LOVE to gift a home to some Ukrainian families after Ukraine's victory. Thank you so much for all you do, Johnny. 😊
Good minds think a like. I'll keep you posted!
@@AusValue yup and cost will go up and displace those broke from going thru war no jobs etc.
@@AusValue
Or giving the chance for someone to get a home that can’t afford it…
In regards to gifting property to Ukrainians/refugees.
Also, Ryan MacBeth (US Army vet) has a short video on how to convince people to leave. He says to hand them a black marker and tell them to write their names on their arms and legs, then do the same on their children's extremities. That way all of their body parts can be identified after they are blown to pieces. He says this is black marker is the most effective tool Ukrainian soldiers can have.
I follow him. If I remember correctly Ryan was a tank commander in the early 90's. You know the commenter before me is a bot, right?
That makes no sense at all!
The other way is to ask for the name of their dentist to help save time identifying their body.
There are homes for sale for $5k in Detroit USA. Ukraine might be slightly safer though.
Ukraine safer?? IT'S IN A FUCKING ACTIVE WAR WITH FUCKING RUSSIA!
UKRAINE 🇺🇦 ALSO HAS THE HOT UKRAINIAN WOMEN UNLIKE DETROIT SO IT WORTH 2 GRAND$ MORE....👍👍
Not wrong. Went through Pontiac in 2010 and Jesus…talk about the country failing a place.
@@Dave-ji1yphighest std hiv rates btw
Would like an update more about properties And more information On rural village properties 2023 2024 And of course prices
These old "Babushka" houses need to be totally renovated to live there comfortably. It would be freezing cold in winter with an outside bathroom area & cold water shower. The big yards are good you can plant fruits trees and have a big garden & BBQ area.
The place looks a tip.
Love how The Zona folks crossed out Russia and wrote "MORDOR" on the map. The personal interactions were heart-breaking. You're doing good things there, JFD.
Absolutely he is doing good things, the man has such a good persona and the heart of a giant. Definitely one of my favorite RUclipsrs
Thanks guys! And yes, Mordor is the realm and base of the evil, which now Russia is as well.
Yes the evil Mordor Mongolian hordes
i didnt notice that , very funny though
Goats are good but they do not eat all the grass, sheep is much better because they eat all the grass.
I like the first location which is located near the railroad. You can upgrade the doors and window and flooring, I will wait to see other homes for part 2.
Back in the year 2014 some bad people demolished my home in Trinidad so I know how it feels to not have a home. You are doing well by buying old homes and fix it up so people and children can live
Hey Johnny! What a great idea, it'd be great to raise money to purchase more small homes like these to give people with little hope and the feeling of uselessness a place where they can feel comfortable. Maybe even purchasing the home for themselves if their situations improve in the future. I really liked the 1st property you looked at with all the fruit trees and chicken coop, etc. It definitely needs some work but the "bones" are good. I was thinking it'd be awesome to have a larger property with several homes on it to allow groups the option to be near each other. Maybe a trend can be started to purchase land, properties, etc. for Ukrainians in need that feel like they have nowhere to go. Keep up the good work, looking forward to part 2.
Thank you for another great and humane idea helping refugees to get places to stay and also contributing into Ukrainian economy. This project is worth to chip in. Hopefully crowdfunding helps to get supplies, too, to help with renovation projects and outhouse upgrades. Ukrainians are great people. It's very difficult to leave your home, but if you can at least stay in your homeland and have a place to stay, it's definitely easier for people to evacuate from dangerous areas indeed. For elderly people there's less cultural shock, too, if they get to similar place, babushka house with wooden heater, fruit garden and chicken coop. Slava Ukraini!
I like your very thoughtful comments
What Doe's slava Ukraine stand for? What Doe's it mean ?
Thankyou for everything you are doing and hoping many join you in this support. Peace to Kyiv. God bless Ukraine 🇺🇦 Wishing you and your friends a good day. Take good care. 🌻💖🙏🙏
My wife and I sent $40 last night to Eva after watching your video. She promptly got back with us and is helping us through the process of realty there. Thank you SO much for your awesome videos. You are our new favorite RUclips star. 😁
That is awesome! I'm glad you were able to connect with her! Thank you for sending her $40 for her time, I'm sure she appreciates it!
How silly
How can I have her contact? For when I will be ready to buy?
@@Oana14Montreal : Well, like Johnny said her contact info is there in the information he posted under his video title. She also has a RUclips channel called Your Ukraine.
Are these abandoned houses, these poor people may return, surely it’s illegal to sell these properties
Not abandoned.. on the market with an agent
You didn't understand the context. The owners of these houses simply do not live there. They live in the cities or just in better houses.
💐 Thanks John for the information I have always been interested in bind one of these properties Just before the war broke out Unfortunately solicitors are not always working Especially in Kiev I would like to go and retire as soon as possible to live in the Ukraine I'm still waiting to buy a house there to retire From the UK England the Ukraine 🇺🇦 Have everything I'm looking for Who knows by the time Christmas comes I will be there and Putin will be gone And the war will end My peace be with everyone 🙏🤲🤝
If an area close to nature suits you, consider housing in Ivano-Frankove (Lviv region) - incredible nature here
i think you should try Philippines for retirement of course if you are Ukrainian originally thing will be different
eye opening to see how these rural areas look, and their living conditions.
Ukraine cheerleaders point to poor rural Russian areas as "proof" that Russians are stupid Orcs. When Ukrainians live that way it's viewed romantically. Pathetic.
Wow, there are so many fruit and nut trees and berry bushes on that land. With chickens, a milk goat, and a garden, a family could live there comfortably.
There is a reason why Ukraine was always called "the breadbasket of the former USSR" = the soil and climate is tremendously ideal for many crops.
It does need renovations. But the important questions are:
* How hard is it to find skilled labour there to do the proper jobs? Most of the good ones have moved to the West to earn top dollars,the rest there aren't so great. Can you trust them to do get the jobs done?
* Are the quality materials reasonable cost and accessible?
* How reliable are the utilites there? if not , you would to make the property self sustainable and have the skills to mainain on your own.
I personally would just buy the land for a fire sale price, skip the fixing for now, wait till the war is over, and when economy stabilizes, then start planning renovations.
I have property still in Ukraine in Ternopil and we did not have issues doing some renovations with trusted team, you just need to know right people
it very easy faind workers in ukraine. every person in the wilage can do it since it is tradition to give that knowlage to children. and in ukraine now a lot of mans that have back to country and wait to go to army. and a lot of scholls that teach that. ukraine is country of schoolls and universitys
As a person who worked in the field of construction, I can say that there is a very large number of specialists of a very high level.
Nice to see the countryside, and the old houses.
In summer it is easy to live there, but in the winter it is going to be really tough. These old houses do not have any insulation.
У нас не старий будинок в селі з газовим опаленням і площею 100квадратів можна купити за 10-15К. Проблема тільки в тому що немає роботи на місці
Goodness, I would buy the house just for the fruit trees. WOW! I love it. You have a great idea there Johnny. Buy the house, allow displaced people to live there. Maybe they can pay the bills themselves and maintain the property. In the future, when this normalizes, that house may be worth more. How is it for foreigners to buy property there?
It is easy if you have an honest agent that can walk you through the process! I would be there now if I could get my wife to go back but she has PTSD from the initial attacks, she has only been in America a little over 3 months!
@Your Ukraine 👍🏽💙💛💙💛 I’m glad to see you on here, Іва!! I gave a couple people your channel name already. God bless you! 💙🙏🏽💛
Such a brave women standing up to the Russian soldiers like that I hope she is doing well🌻🌻🌻
Brave but not very judicious...I guess at that time they haven't yet discovered all the atrocities that some of the Russian units were committing in occupied towns near Kiev, like Bucha.
I hadn't heard or seen so much, just a clip of her saying the stuff about the sunflower seeds. She really gave that soldier a mouthful.
The good price now but once it’s in a fallout zone I don’t know if that would be a good price.
very interesting Video Johnny! I looked at similar era houses in Estonia , also an ex Soviet country and the problem there was that a lot of these old houses are full of Asbestos (carcinogenic) which was a commonly used building material in the Soviet Union as it was indeed in Western Europe in the 1960's and 70's .In fact many schools in the UK still have it. It's fine as long as you don't disturb it so that particles are not released into the breathable atmosphere. I don't know about Ukraine but in EU countries you have to employ specialist licensed companies to demolish a house with asbestos or even remove small amounts of it, which costs a small fortune. The thing to do here is to demolish the house and replace it with a wooden flat pack House delivered on the back of a lorry and you would have a modern fully insulated dwelling for under 100K € you can buy them in Estonia, Latvia and Poland and Lithuania among other places and more than likely also in Ukraine . It would be interesting to know if they are manufactured in Ukraine as well. As for those who warn of being scammed I would suggest you should consult with the 1000's of poor Americans who were sold unsustainable mortgages before the 2008 financial crash and had their houses repossessed and are now homeless.Bankers are the real scammers of the world! If you want to find out what happened to a lot of those people i suggest you watch this video from the land of the free and home of the brave!
ruclips.net/video/UJ1Wq7gHSyI/видео.html
My primary school in greece was from asbetos and they build it again, that was like 20 years ago
Наші старі будинки зроблені з глини і можуть бути обкладені кирпичем, тому побоювання даремні
Great comment. Thank you 😊
I received my new tank pulled by 🚜 tractor t-shirt and I love it.
Got the pink one.
I wear it proudly for Ukraine in Hawaii.
Thank you.
Wow that's awesome! If you can please take a photo in it and tag me on instagram. =)
(12:23) I like how on the map in the Zona coffee shop, they have crossed out the word "Russia" and wrote in "Mordor".
Look forward to seeing more houses. The houses you looked at remind me of old houses in Maine we tried to buy in my childhood. Both properties you looked at were beautiful, so green and fruitful, especially the first one.
Why is everyone ignoring the shape of a body wrapped up on the sofa at 31:09 I replayed it a number of times and cannot believe it!!!
The guy showing the house said the boy is sleeping but come in
Hi, Johnny!
Thank you for the initiative! It's very kind of you to do this and to keep showing what life in Ukraine is like.
Stay safe!
Все буде Україна!
You can buy an inexpensive plot of land and install a quickly prefabricated mini house with a sandwich panel
Totally agree, the price for that kind of comfort would be somewhat comfortable to these old houses +fixing price, but you have option to move it and reuse by other family
Ideal and practical in the US or Western Europe, but Ukraine right now during the war has a huge problem with supply chains - concepts of Home Depot or Lowes have been noticeably abrupted - and, therefore, getting "inexpensive prefabricated anything" is a challenge. I've been talking to my sister in law who lives in Berlin, but is overseeing our childhood home from Ukraine, so this is first hand conversation.
you can bild extra room before enterence . that is how you wount remove walls. people often do so in old houses. bild one big veranda or even part of house that has 2 flors.
I wonder how much it would cost to renovate? I would put in a new kitchen, and indoor bath/shower and redo the walls. It's def a must for anyone living there. I just love the hospitality of the Ukrainian people. The redo older guy was so sweet.
hospitality ? I was there in 2019 got scammed twice and nobody could speak English, the hotel staff stole some of my stuff after cleaning.. and no help at all from hotel management. people were angry no smiles. I will never visit again. I think they are nice to Johnny cos he is American.
🧐Too good to be true Johnny. Don’t get scammed. Since a lot of people have left Ukraine someone can take possession of a property and say that it’s theirs.
I think he is good with that real estate agent, if they check documents it should be good
It is true.
Ukraine is not stone age. They do have registers of who owns what.
Do you feel good to leave such negative, hateful comments??? Are you Russian to spread lies about the people of Ukraine? NO ONE in Ukraine can take possession of a property and say that it's theirs. I watched various channels about empty houses in Ukraine and have read many comments under them. Many people in Ukraine nowadays would want to buy a house like that because they've got nowhere to go. They would renovate it and live peacefully there, not to mention eat fruits and veggies from their own garden. Now about the outhouse/toilet, many people in Ukraine live like that, even work going out to the toilet at the end of the backyard.
@@sweetvictory5643 Is my name Russian? Off course not. That would be a curse. I live in the USA. These were not hateful comments but just to be on the precaution side. Too good to be true. In times of war anything can happen. Johnny has a good heart to try to help someone. The war continues. Even if Putin leaves the other guy is there and he is as hateful as him and war may continue. If I was Johnny, I would wait till war is over.
That map on the wall in that coffee shop had the Australian states marked out I'm impressed with that kind of detail.
Except for South Aust, we are just Australia 😂 😂
There seems to be structural damage on various structures. Either they experience regular earthquakes or the quality of cement is poor? The downspout also needs to be collected (to flush toilet?) because it seems to be rotting the corner foundation.
FYI, goats will eat the fruit trees and bushes. Sheep are a better choice for 'lawnmowing', or a donkey 😁 Best of luck!
bad cement and houses from the 70s or older
selling home person still actively living in home sleeping on bed totally not trashy.
Mulberry is that one tree. I have them on my property. Can make jam or pie from the berries.
John not to be rude. but, I thought since you lived in Ukraine for a while I thought your Ukraine was better. I didn’t know you needed a translator.
His Ukrainian sounds like he doesn’t even remotely try to learn it at all.
@@TabithaNS He's a native English speaker. It's almost impossible for native English speakers to learn any slavic language quickly unless you have already learned and mastered a few other relevant Indo European languages. Well, if you speak another Slavic language then its easy. Especially at his age and I want to say it's almost too late but maybe in about 10 years he'll get it down. He just needs to go to a Russian language boot camp for 3 months where they drill it in to him and don't allow him to speak English. Its not easy to learn any Slavic language. It took me about 7 years to Speak Czech fluently learning on my own I did not work on it very hard either i as very lazy, and i started in my 30's. But i spoke several other foreign languages so that helped me. I know Americans and Brits that have been here in the Czech Republic for 20 or more years and still can't do more than order food in a restaurant. Angloczech is a dialect in Prague.
It is a bit rude
Well at least he understands that man at the end of the video so I think it’s fine
Same in small villages in western Hungary, but much cheaper there. You can get houses cheap but they need renovation. Still its very cheap compared to the USA. My friends have a few houses one has the shower in a shed attached to the house, its fine in summer, but winter forget it! where is the boiler? Thats pretty cheap to add the shower/toilet inside. maybe they don't have one. Anyhow, they are all going to need renovation.id go with the first near the train station. Your whole video is like the village i go to for grape harvest/winemaking every September! But, i do love it there!
It seems like it would be easier to just raze the existing houses in most of these cases and place an inexpensive modular home like they build lots of in Latvia, Estonia, etc. and hook it up to the existing services. Or even place 2 or 3 on some of these lots like the first one with the fruit trees.
Yes - in the US or high(er) GDP Western Europe. But in Ukraine - a) the supply chain is sorely disrupted that it's a huge challenge to get all these western supplies in is nearly impossible today, and b) ROI - most people are staying put and not over investing on home renovations as it's not sure which side will win... if Russia wins, and property rights laws get adjusted...???....
Donated on go fund me and also sent some funds to Eva to go towards to buying a meal or coffee. Love your videos and you’re amazing
Thanks Momo!
I could read and write Russian fairly well in just three months, and 10 months after finishing Russian in Zaporizhia, I went to University in Petersburg to study Engineering. But after years of living in Ukraine, Johnny breaks his teeth and tongue to pronounce simple words. He said Sectdesiat Piats let, Johnny, translated it 68 and hurt his tongue.
Who cares tho
What can you expect from an American?..
Yes, it's not easy for English speakers to learn any language in your 30's any slavic language is concidered impossible unless you are a well practiced linguist and have already mastered a few other languages. I know English speakers that have been in the Czech Republic for more than 20 years and still cant pronounce the items on the menu correctly and even make a simple sentence without making a grammatical mistake. The only way for him to learn now would be to live in a villiage with no English speakers for a year. He will never learn in Kiev there are just too many opportunities to speak English, hanging out in fancy Coffee shops and fancy restaurants and in shopping malls with chicks that speak English. IN this case you just repeat the same Ukrainian and Russian words over and over. Jon Boy if you want to learn Ukrainian in Kiev or Russian then get a job working pro bono in with some burly Ukrainian dudes that spit and curse and do shots all day and whilst working on cars like in that one auto repair shop you visited to get that bolt changed on your bad ass G's look at me ride. I learned to speak German fluently working hard labor illegally in Constructon, Gardening, an in warehouses with other illegal Poles and Czechs in the early and mid 90's. Czech and SLovak little Polish and Russian learned too doing many shots with them burly dudes. 15 years here. When i drink with Ukrainians i just mix 4 Slavic languages we get along just fine. Every American would think i was fluent.
This is good, but on October 1, 2022, Ukraine issued a decree that said women are not able to leave Ukraine after this date. So, if you plan on getting married to someone there, keep that in mind that she will not be able to leave with you.
And where is the link supporting your claim ?
He's correct. But not sure how the marriage part is relevant; after all this isn't 90 Day Fiancee
Isn't that the date they start conscripting women for the armed forces?
Thanks for sharing Johnny. The way I see it if the family is willing to work on the house to make it livable so they can live there for free as a trade. It can be a great investment. Being an American this may be a good early retirement plan for myself as well.
RUclips first suggested your Chanel to me and I am not gonna lie watching you with Bald and Bankrupt, I was not interested but the new videos are heartwarming and I like them a lot more --- also kinda interesting that your friend chose the side of the Orks
There's a law in Ukrain saying that real estate transaction are obsolete in catastrophic situations ( that was meant for flooding, earthquake, ....) & I guess that war is also concerned even if it's not state directly in the law. Moreover the country got empty and many of those who left won't get back even if peace comes back. It's still a big risk for investing there especially in the neighbourhood & prices will go down in winter ( there was always a cyclical trend in this market regardless of currency devaluation).
Yeah I’ve been told this to by several Ukrainians now who are in Kyiv and Odessa. I wonder about the legality that even if “title offices” are open it could be like American title companies that aren’t part of the government and simply operating outside of the law in order to stay in business and keep making money. I also find carpet bagging to be somewhat tasteless. Throughout history people generally disapprove of the practice.
Lebanon u can buy a 3 bedroom apartment for 5000 Canadian. Now that’s a deal
I know I have annoyed you and probably pissed you off but I want you to know I am still proud of you for what you are doing! If I could get my wife to move back to Ukraine and live in the country I would jump on that first house in a heartbeat, $7000 and another $10000 to $15000 in updates and repairs and it would be a beautiful little cottage!
@@EBZ-bx7zc 100k and you could have 1500 square ft with a 2 car garage! And you would never get your money back in that neighborhood!
I was in Ukraine last week. Yeah, if I could save 7000 $ I would buy a home. So, I think seriously and maybe next year, at the border with Romania.
For reparations, maybe 20-30 000$ in the next 10 years. Yeah, I think to retire there in 10 years. Ukraine is a big country, in the East it's safe.
@@Oana14Montreal I have found beautiful huge homes in and around Lviv that are cheap even before the war! I would go now if I could get my wife to go but she was there the first 3 weeks of the war and she is scared!
You need to be careful walking around. Are you 100% certain there are no mines?
Там не было россиян. Они нападали с севера.
@@oleksandr733 ???
@@ckcnj9175 That is a different area- there were no Russians in that area to mine anything.
I don t know how safe is Yahotyn , but buying properties for 7.000 USD is probably cheaper version of helping that people and that is definitely praise worthy , but expecting and advertising it as good investment is not so realistic. If residents of these houses really came from most war struck regions, the possibility of them having a place to return to is not very high. So what are you and eventual other investors going to do after a few years with those people? Throw them out, make them pay some crazy rents? Just me thinking loudly, no beef. Also to make a bathroom , toilet in the first house for 1.000 USD is a bit of a fairy tale.
Thanks for another great video Johnny, this is most heartbreaking seeing the elderly crying and having no place to go. You are such a good man for the help and compassion you are showing these people. Slava Ukraine 🇺🇦
How do people not see this as un ethical? Profiting from the plight of locals fleeing from a war? Let the local economy dictate the price of housing. So locals working locally can afford to live there. All the people from rich countries want to retire there because the same thing caused them to not be able to afford to retire where they lived there entire life. If you really want to help the local Ukrainian population buy some made in Ukraine products. Or even rent a cottage from a local in Ukraine not some foreign rich dude. This smacks of rich getting richer on the backs of the working poor. There is going to be a housing shortage at the end of the war when people return from exile.
You can't be serious Johnny. Military does not use GPS meant for a civil purposes.
My Ukrainian Russian teacher and old AirBnB host in Kyiv are both telling me that property sales are illegal during the war to prevent carpet baggers from taking advantage of the war torn people... I guess stuff is just being sold regardless... I'd be careful buying stuff that isn't legal to sell, as later on you could lose it after the war.
The title offices are working again.
UKRAINE is a poorer country than most of Europe…. These houses need $10,000 to $50,000 repairs to bring up to USA standards…. Cheap prices and the War has caused $600 Billion at least in damages to homes/infrastructure to bring back to Western standards.
Reminds me looking at old, rundown homes in California but sell for $800,000 USA…
Розвеселив😀, навіщо ремонт за 50к, якщо за таку суму можна взяти готовий крутий дім
Johnny from everything i have seen of Ukraine from your videos i love that country. the people are so nice and very friendly . i am a 78 year old man and i would love to live in a place like yahotyn myself. it is quiet, has a rail station where i could get to a city like Kiev . the prices in Yahotyn are very low. i think when this war is over the property values will only go up in these areas. i also love the idea of being able to grow fruit and vegatables on your own property. l loved this video please do more of these, take care and stay safe.
Frank don't get too excited. Ukraine is as corrupt as hell and is run by the deep state. I have been there many times and at every level of governemt is corrupt. I have paid off Police, Civil Service, Immigration and even paid off a judge to remove a child from the Ukraine. It is a very sick place. The child is now grown up and left home. Most Ukraine folks have sold out to the dollar and will sell themselves like whores. One thing I have noticed about many houses I have visited in the Ukraine, they have no bookcases, they do not read at all.
You can buy a house like this for the same money in Bulgaria or Romania.
Also in Detroit.
The crappy house in Toronto will cost you 1 million dollars. We are ripped off badly here in Canada.
Johnny take a look at a beautiful place in the south of Kyiv region, village Medvyn. It has so amazing landscapes, like a small Carpathians. You definitely fall in love when see it.
Там явно будет дороже
You can get the family to work on the house and you supply the amenities. They will feel good about helping you out and in the end you have a nicer investment.
Great idea Johnny!! Agree, anyone who contacts Eva should show the respect of sending the consultation fee you mentioned and not wasting her time. Thanks for all you do Johnny, keep up the fantastic work supporting Ukraine!!!
I like the first place so many fruit trees and with some TLC could be a good place.
Кожен може купити будинок з яким є 10-20 соток землі і посадити сад на свій смак, всі саджанці фруктових дерев і кущів є у продажу
please buy a external microphone
Lmao
These houses are for those who want to buy the land and completely (or almost) rebuild them.. “you’d rather buy a 1 euro home in Italy”..
Seriously, I'd rather buy a house in an area prone to flooding or near a volcano than in Ukraine at the moment. I know you should buy when there's blood on the streets and high risk = high reward but no, thanks.
I would buy it now while the prices are down, and move in when the war is over.
Johnny, here comes the SUN,...flowers. Glory to Ukraine! 🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦
Good idea. Hope you follow up with video of any repair work you do and moving the family in.
You can still get a house and yard for even less in Flint Michigan!
So this sunflower thing is called stealing and you can get 10 years for it i will send the video to the gouvernment
Why do you watch someone's video then pretend to threaten them...
You think the Ukrainian government gives a toss about a few sunflowers when it's in a war 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂 707 baby
John try finding house that children can go to park etc Thanks for doing this. God Bless
houses near me are $169,000, $475,000, if u go to the north side, which no one feel safe moving there, some are $5,000 in very bad areas.
Johnny, I'm interested in looking around to buy a cheap house in the village after the war. What is the process of getting a residency in Ukraine for military veterans with pension. I want the $7k🏠. Is it walking distance from the bus stop or train station? I would want the bathroom and shower to be added first. What is the realtor info?
I like the fact that even if the house it is how it is, johny is still like: “ahh nice , thats cool” 😂
I worry that many of these houses that are now vacant will not withstand the winter. Pipes will freeze and an unheated house going through a freeze thaw cycle in the winter will deteriorate at a very high rate. I live in a very similar climate in the US and vacant buildings will soon become unusable during and after a winter without heat and human attention.
this house already withland 100 winters and will sill about 200 years. ukrainian houses are not bilt from wood. it mixs of wood clay mud lime. so winter for that house is not problem
@@panchenkoo5718 first time without gas tho
@@KingAGBozz they dont use gass. and ukraine has a lot of gass, so people in vilage if they want buy gass ballons
@@panchenkoo5718 lol what. They imported Russian gas all the time
@@KingAGBozz no. russian guss was been used for a citys. in the same time we sell our own gus to uerope. these guse bullon with ukrainian guss. for many long time we had goverment that was moscow serwants. so they forbided production ukrainian gass for very long time, to make all country buy moscowien gass. now we stop it and use our own gass
Yemen seems like a good buy too.
There is some expression.. buy houses when the streets on fire... Cheapest price 👍.
I would buy a home and sell it for cheap to Ukrainian people later. But with the risk of having it blow up i have to pass
Hello, I'm from Siberia, the city of Novosibirsk 💝👍🌺🌺🌺
Your city is very clean and well run, is this true? 🤚🏻🙂
Great idea Johnny but keep looking. Too much work to be done on both of these two properties. Good rule of thumb is if you wouldn't happily live in it yourself then don't expect anyone else to be happy there either. I think you 'd be uncomfortable putting people into substandard living conditions and them feeling beholden to you because its free and they are in a desperate situation. I'm sure the plan can work well with the right property.
Yes agreed, that's why I'm still looking for something I'd personally be happy living in and giving someone to live in.
@@JohnnyFD maybe look for some modular/detached houses, it’s more expensive but has more potential since it modern living environment and it can be moved later if needed.
Hate to say it Johnny, as much as I feel for the people.....can't help feeling that you're going to get burnt at the end of this experience..... good luck though...... Remember the old saying......the road to hell is paved with good intentions....
Johnny, be careful bro. You have a good heart, but you can't save Ukraine all by yourself. You have given more than your fair share. You're still a young cat, with a long way to go, make sure your money stays with you. look forward to seeing you back on the trail "nomadding it" across the globe.
How much would it cost to get a place like this completely renovated?
It’s 10k$+ for sure, and it’s still gonna miss some features, thats why it’s better to look at some prefab homes options, which can be at same price but can be moved further if situation gets worse and can be reused by different families
If this took off with many people.
Wouldn't it mess up the housing market for the locals.. long-term house price rise.. locals can't afford... I am taking the idea to it's limit mind you...
Hi Johhny, the blue ford sierra is worth more than the house so if it comes with it your quids in👍🏴
My wifes parents live not far from this place and i was there in april in Yahotyn so i recognize some of the video.
Merry Christmas my friend answered thinking of you Ukraine love your work
What courage that Ukrainian strong woman showed confronting those Russian occupiers!
i like looking at houses with you. it's always interesting to see how others live.
Dude way to much needed and the upkeep I can’t even imagine
liked the first house and all the fruit trees.
Wow we don’t know how good we have it in Canada
have you looked at buying a piece of property and just building a basic small apartment building on it maybe like 4 or 5 units and what that cost you can talk to a builder you might get a discount because of what the projects for
Please work on better sound!
Investing 7K in Ukraine these days is like throwing your money into the toilet. No insurance coverage for real estate, no security, most ppl don’t speak and don’t understand english or other languages “those who did went out somewhere else - not everyone”, bribery and theft all over the country. It would be better to invest the 7K somewhere else not necessarily in real estate. Could be education, stocks, travel, food, technology, crypto or anything else.I love Ukraine so much and I used to fly 3 times a year to Kiev-Odessa-Lviv for business and leisure. But, as long as there’s uncertainty and war conditions it’s too risky for foreigners. Peace from Jerusalem
You were Rush the buy Properties , if you some how able to wait , you could buy now less then half you pay before .
The first property. All of those fruit trees. I could make that a very beautiful garden.
Have you ever watched "My galaxy" youtube channel? They are from Yahotin, really nice family, watching them for years
HOLY CRIPES JOHNNY! I don't know how to SHOW the spot in the film but about the place of 31:13 there appears to be a BODY in the bed and everyone is cool with it? Is that the deceased Babushka? I know we have different cultural norms but MAN! that would have had me flippin' out if I walked in on that scene. Tell me it is not the deceased lady of the house there in the bed?!!! I am an RN so I am no stranger to death but still, would have had to push my way through that moment, in your shoes. :)
Hi, don't worry, there wasn't a body there.
Чувак, ти реально насмішив і підняв настрій🤭🤣ти передивився фільмів жахів😀
Johnny keep up the great work helping others
thanks for video.epect more house and introduction of rebuild and repair in ukraine.good luck
russian rocket fire included! nice! and cat included aswell
That 1st house will be a great investment when the war ends and money for rebuilding moves in. If Ukraine joins the EU the price will go way up.
Yes that field is using Orc fertilizer 👌
GPS is an American thing. I'm guessing they blocked Russian equipment somehow. GLONASS is a Russian thing with absolutely shit coverage outside Russia. Even within Russia, your phones fixes in on GPS rather than GLONASS most of the time. How bad is GLONASS? Compare them to Indian and Chinese systems, which have worldwide coverage. I think Russia is the only country with positioning satellites now without global coverage.
Why would i buy a house in a country that won't be existing for too long?
Or a home where the Ukr. Army uses you as a human shield...🤷
you could use geese to cut the grass etc or maybe a cow
I wouldn’t buy anything till the war ends. It’s very high risk.
The only issue here. Maybe not Ukrainian in a few months
That's hard to believe Russia's been trying to move any closer for the last 8 years