The dude toasting the barrels looks like he toasts a few marshmallows over them flames as well. Great work by all staff. Loved the whole video, music combo and cold almost smell the wood. Fantastic looking product.
Looks like a nice environment to work in, artisan craftsmanship and job satisfaction at the end of the day. Loved the video and thanks for sharing. Just hope there are youngsters, who come along as an apprentice, for the next generation of coopers and it’s not a dying art.
I saw the name and had to watch, my family is from this area, some still live and work in East Bernstadt and London. The ones that have passed are all up on Pilgrims Rest so seeing the area having jobs and doing well makes me happy. Dammit now I am homesick.
Good, honest work. No wasted motion. The last scene, with the young man finishing the head and carefully tacking on the plaque, to me epitomized the bone-deep care you guys have for your work. Superb.
Excellent product because they take pride in their craft. They have demonstrated responsibility to the land which is the source of their raw material, and they share their success with their community. Great vid!
These beautiful barrels have a second life beyond their bourbon aging time, because they can be used only once for aging bourbon. Scottish whiskey distillers buy the used barrels to age Scotch whiskey. You may find many barrels in their warehouses over one hundred years old!
I was pretty much going to say the same thing. Going into watching this, I was thinking to myself this looks primarily automated and not much of any craftsmanship goes into it. I was quickly correctly just by watching further and fully realizing the mechanized processes only increased output but it still took an artisan to complete the work. Very cool. Very cool indeed.
An American company, using American workers and American supplies, the white oak, to produce a product that can be used worldwide. I love it! This is what we need more of. Yes the barrels for adult beverages and American growth!
Good barrels, made better than the best furniture. I have sold hundreds of the old ones. Smells great and looks great. Thanks so much. We need more Americal factory videos.
A very good video , impressive ethos and the staff appear engaged . If you would indulge an old fella , is there a full time cooper plying his trade on site ? Not criticizing , just enquiring . Great video 👍🇬🇧
best video yet on stave production and barrel making, though in most locations a "select cut" is a high grade, which is totally unsustainable forestry and the worst thing you can do. In the American East most private forests have been "select cut" to death, leaving red maple and black birch as the dominant species. This is because the loggers keep telling the landowner each time "See, we are leaving lots of trees, so the forest is still there," while they are in fact removing the highest grade of timber and leaving behind the junk. Worst-first is the correct way to harvest timber. If you can get a stand of mixed age trees, then you can manage it on a mixed age basis, removing the older trees and leaving the younger trees to grow. It is not true that smaller trees are young. Lots of small trees are the same exact age as the larger trees, and doing a diameter-limit cut (another "select cut") is the worst thing you can do to a forest. Good forest management removes the oldest and least desirable trees first. Loggers want the best trees first because they make the most money with the biggest trees, and they spend the most money cutting and handling small diameter trees. Anyhow, a select cut is hardly the best or sustainable forestry. Very few private forests are well managed or carefully managed for successive stages of valuable timber production. In the American East, so many private forests have been high graded so badly for so long that only a clearcut can re-set the forest back to zero to start over. Or set it on fire, like Nature used to do. That will weed out the junk trees and leave the good ones with thick bark.
You think thats bad forest management come on up to British Columbia, Canada its a real gong show we sell most of our logs to China . They have the logs cut to 20 ft. lengths packed into shipping containers , whatever is left of the log is left to rot regardless of what ever value they might be worth.
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Pretty slick operation ! I’m a retired Woodworker i found watching some of your idustry Speifi Woodworking tools. Very interesting Also thought it was cool that the logos were still hand nailed in place as many modern Woodworking people are forgetting. How to use hammers with everything so automated now days
No modern woodworker is forgetting how to use a hammer. Nearly every woodworker has had to correct a joint with a blow from a mallet or hammer, no matter the age. Nothing has changed, infact most tools used by modern woodworkers are still from the 40s. Do you mean Carpenters? Homebuilding is a much different craft and the automation is a necessary sacrifice for the best possible result in the shortest amount of time. It was the natural progression from the only way to do something; to having options that are faster and cheaper.
i want to be a cooperage worker in my next life.Seriously theres something about these oak barrels that beats sitting in front of a monitor the whole day...regards from the orient.
Bornapatriot BythegraceofGod No doubt about that! The laid back music in this video and the fascinating, traditional product they are making can't hide the fact, that the working conditions in this plant is just terrible. The dust, smoke and noise in this place is a joke. No masks or hearing protection 😣 Just hard work and old, crappy machines all day long. I wonder what they get paid and how long they last before moving on to something else..
I watched all the way to the end. I assume these casks are going to mature wine as, had they been destined for a whiskey or Bourbon distillery, they would have been charred and not just toasted. Correct?
Very hands on still , hopefully it can stay that way for the employees. Amazing to think all liquid was carted in wooden barrels years ago. That is a piece of furniture not a barrel
No glue, we missed the boards being drilled. You do see him joining the boards with dowels (go into the drilled holes). Glue would dissolve over time and taint the liquid. Its also unnecessary, as the wood swells to become water tight.
Any of you watched the origins of cooperage? It's a bit different to this.... kinda - last century. Or so. Tugs at the heart strings.... But it's still alive today!
Wonderful and nice looking pieces. I did notice that the workers are not wearing noise protection when working on the power tools, which are extremely noisy, well over 120 decibels. They are not wearing respiratory protection either when sanding....is this a regular industry practice?
@@enthalpiaentropia7804 air drying is to let the inner wood dry out. rain or snow only wets the outside and that quickly dries off with a few sunny days.
@@enthalpiaentropia7804 Even over here in rainy UK the wood stacks are outside for a year or more. Then each piece has to go through the machines again to cut off the dirty outside wood. Wood processing is wasteful but but the waste has alwasy been used for firewood or animal bedding.
NOSA for sure would be interested in the working conditions there? safety,earplugs, headgear? nothing of that sort needed? all legal? until the first accident. and i did not even ask about safety footwear.
I caught that also. OSHA would be concerned. The guy sanding barrels with an air sander is breathing in a lot of dust. Either a vacuum system on the sander or next to it, or a dust mask would greatly reduce his exposure. I'm assuming he does this job every day. It is quite noisy in that factory and I didn't see anyone using ear pro...........I can vouch, as a trades person, that it adds up (even the exposure of saws, hammers, impact drivers, and nailguns). While I'm not a safety sally ( I hate hard hats and they are very painful with my neck issues, but I have been on jobs lately that require them. They were not required and wouldn't have served much purpose on the first 23 years of my construction career), there are easy ways to reduce risk, especially in a factory setting where the risk is there everyday.
Hotrod Hog, I didn’t know they were that expensive, I’m going into the cooper business! I bought a used barrel with Dickel stamped on it I’m going to use in my blacksmith shop. If they’re that expensive, I wonder why they don’t use them for more than one time for liquor other than bourbon. I’d think if they were always filled with fluid, they’d have an indefinite lifespan.
@@shanek6582 They do get reused, at least in some cases. Some beers are aged in barrels to add flavor from the previous product that was in the barrel. I would think that wine could be made again in the barrels, but I don't know much about the process. It would seem like a waste to use a barrel once. I do use jack daniels chips in my smoker, made from the barrels their liquor is aged in. That is my favorite flavor for smoking.
Darrell Copeland I rivited the. Hoops for 9years at eb cooperage when the band is cut it goes through a two wheel curling machine and bottom and top is angled to make the band curl so won't cut in the barrel and I riveted each of the bands by hand on a rivet machine
@@kjchandler7495 Your answer was very helpful and thank you for your reply. I have been looking into maybe using offset rollers. Any plans on giving us a short video on this? Thanks Again
Fun fact: the extinction of the passenger pigeon caused a shift in American forests from white oak to red oak. The two oaks put out acorns at different times and the pigeons fed off of red oak acorns in their migratory patterns leaving more white oak acorns to germinate. ruclips.net/video/b8BPANZzsyU/видео.html
About 45 years ago l worked for a time running a jointer wheel, making barrels that went to Jim Beam down in Missouri. Was also a pinner making heads. It was a bit different than how these guys are doing it. A lot more manual labor. We didn't have the leisurely pace these guys do either.
Fantastic video! I luv LuV LUV this kind of stuff! That would have been a lot better career than the one I chose!! Working with wood and having something tangible in front of you at the end of the day! Being able to say, "I made that!"
Drives to Work But at least you can breathe when you're 40. The working conditions at this plant is horrendous.. sad to see in this day and age. I agree with you, that it is very satisfiyng to have something tangible at the end of the day - I'm a bricklayer myself (and that's a dirty, dusty, hard and noisy business) - but these guys are not going to last long under these conditions. I hope you do enjoy your line of work a bit more after watching this video yet again and paying attention to the dust and smoke and noise and how labouring it is all day long..
Great Video, I do like the product you make and the attention to detail for your product. But as an SOHO/OSHA safety specialist for the department of defense, i want to use this video as a workplace safety inspection example. There are so many safety violations in this video i would love top see your OSHA 300 Log. I don't want to be the bad guy here but i would like to point out to my soldiers and civilian employees the safety violations i have observed. I can only guess as to what all the cables and hoses are that are lying around and hanging from the ceiling. Starting at the video time stamp i'd like to point out what i saw and the violation, I will provide the OSHA regulation in violation if you like, later. Time Stamp- 3:00 - where the sub titles point out "they are cut in half" right side of the picture if you froze the video an electrical powered diesel heater in in the indoors where wood is cut and saw dust is airborne and piled everywhere, the manufacture user manual strictly warns not to use their product in such areas. Also in that area there isn't a Fire Extinguisher (FE) in sight. Also above the wall opening there are what looks like electrical extension cords hanging from the ceiling and along the wall. 3:04- worker walks under a bridge platform for getting over the machine. The worker ducked under a steel platform which is a head hazard. No marking or protection from blunt injury, soft impact materials. 3:11- worker is not wearing Personal Protective Equipment (PPE), eye protection, and also another possible electrical cord hanging from the ceiling, accumulation of flammable materials, saw dust and wood chips 3:23 - what appears to be electrical wires lying and hanging around bottom left of screen, the vacuum system generates static electricity, is it grounded and where is in grounded, and how often inspected? 3:28 - worker no PPE , eye protection, also three electrical cords hanging from ceiling 3:52 - diesel operated machine operated indoors. manufacture requires electrical grounded, where is the grounding, and why isn't it vented out doors, why is in even being used indoors? 4:01- grass is fire fuel, should not be around wood products, fire hazard, needs to be cut or eliminated with herbicide or tilling of earth around them. 4:51 - only one guy wearing eye pro, no PPE, shelf behind worker has item stacked on the top of the shelf fixture without fall protection. Is the shelf anchored to the wall? 5:08 - no eye protection PPE, no fire extinguishers 5:37 - No PPE, what looks like gas piping in back ground, isn't properly marked or protected from moving equipment. 5:42 - no PPE, no grounding for static electricity 6:09 - this concerns Machine Guarding, no machine guarding on pulley's, no machine guarding over sprockets at end of machine just beyond the right shoulder of worker. Rule is that any moving machinery that is under a height level below 8 feet needs to be guarded from worker 6:33 - No Fire Extinguisher at exit, no cover on garbage can 6:41 - no guard on pneumatic press (ram), worker isn't wearing eye protection 7:33 - no eye pro, fire extinguisher not properly mounted on wall and it's being blocked by a machine or equipment, no Fire Extinguisher signage, black electrical cord hanging from ceiling, worker in flammable cotton clothing, facial hair and tennis shoes with slippery floor to walk on, where are the fire extinguishers? 7:46 - no eye pro, machine guarding from rotating machine, machine worker has it's machine guarding lying on the floor, is it locked out, just to the left of the worker 8:05 - Kerosene stored inside building near roll up door, the cabinet in the back has fire extinguisher signage but where are the FE's 8:15 - no eye pro on worker and where is the machine guarding? 8:57 - No PPE, no machine guarding, trip hazards from all the stuff around worker air hoses? no electrical emergency cut off switch, why is the worker using a scrap piece of wood as a tool, needs machine grab to hold barrels firm 9:22 - worker no PPE, machine to workers left has no machine guarding, no PPE Fire Hazard 9:35 - worker on the right has no PPE eye pro just gloves on other worker but no eye pro 10:10 - no machine guarding for rotating machine and barrel, also no guard in machine barrel arbor 10:45 - no machine guarding for strap being pressed into place from stored energy and applied energy, the cooling fan cover on the electrical motor with brushes from spark and flammability 11:11 - No PPE or heat resistant gloves, rubber is flammable, no guarding from heated surface of the brand and no employee warning for the hot iron hazard, green and red electrical of air hose on ground fall hazard and electrical shock hazard 11:36 - no PPE, bottle hanging on conduit in back ground not properly stored and what about the SDS (MSDS) 11:55 - no PPE as required by the sanders manufacture user manual 12:11- blowing saw dust with compressed air, what is the service pressure (PSI), no eye pro There is also a little room in the video with stuff stored on top of the ceiling for the little room, whats the engineers weight limit for the ceiling and the stuff isn't protected from falling on someone in the event of an earthquake Tha'ts just the stuff i caught while slowing down the video, i'm sure the employer is a great boss and they employ a lot of local workers, great on them. But I also bet the employer doesn't want injured employees or law suits from those injuries. A simple walk through safety inspection and some work to correct those issues that I pointed out. I'm sure there are plenty of hazards in the yard and these are exposing employees to other work place hazards. Federal OSHA can give this and other businesses a free safety inspection, however they will expect all of the things they find wrong will have to be corrected if the business owner doesn't want fines or closure. Find a person trained or business trained to come in and preform a safety inspection for you. A lot of these problems can be corrected by education and employee training. Electrical standards are plainly defined bu code. The electrical code is lost on the place. The electricians should be ashamed of themselves. new employee training for everyone to start and refresher training annually for workplace safety, and a huge suggestion is i would install a safety committee that is trained and free from harassment by the employees and management.
@@snoebay88 Parties suck! And, that is such a stupid phrase. For me, just the lack of ear protection and breathing protection really stood out. People don't realize how that exposure adds up over the years. While I often didn't wear safety glasses in the past, I always used a face shield or goggles with grinding and cutting, but have worn prescription glasses for a number of years now. Since I always have to wear glasses to see clearly, I always have some protection and it has saved my eyes from injury. From a business standpoint, the suggestion of having an outside company help them comply with good safety practices is great. Employers have to cover their asses. While I do hate some practices, such as using hard hats, others are very easy to implement and make a major impact on worker health.
they might have been in a poor position, or starting to crowd a seed tree, or had damage further up near the crown lots of reasons to pull small ones from time to time
This is very interesting and I see that it IS hard work,. Great job and video. Take a look at “ Traditional Coopering” with George Smithwick. He’s a cooper that does it ALL the REAL old fashioned way by hand. It’s a great watch.
This place looks laid back. I worked at Kentucky Cooperage Inc. in Lebanon KY. I will tell ya. You will work your butt off. Its hot and stinks of smoke. It is very hard work. when I was there it was 12 hr shifts 13 days 1 day off and back at it for 13 more and so forth. not fun at all.
The dude toasting the barrels looks like he toasts a few marshmallows over them flames as well. Great work by all staff. Loved the whole video, music combo and cold almost smell the wood. Fantastic looking product.
I am not into barrels but found it interesting enough to watch from start to finished , true workmanship from each individual
A most enjoyable watch. Highly mechanized and very productive operation. You guys rock.
I worked in a cooperage in Peoria,Il for six years. Never got to see the logs turned into staves and heading boards. Fascinating.
Looks like a nice environment to work in, artisan craftsmanship and job satisfaction at the end of the day. Loved the video and thanks for sharing. Just hope there are youngsters, who come along as an apprentice, for the next generation of coopers and it’s not a dying art.
I saw the name and had to watch, my family is from this area, some still live and work in East Bernstadt and London. The ones that have passed are all up on Pilgrims Rest so seeing the area having jobs and doing well makes me happy. Dammit now I am homesick.
One cant help but being simply amazed at the ingenuity involved in the machinery and their use ! Great to see !
Good, honest work. No wasted motion. The last scene, with the young man finishing the head and carefully tacking on the plaque, to me epitomized the bone-deep care you guys have for your work. Superb.
I will have a new found appreciation every time I crack open a bottle of whiskey. Thank you EBC.
The craftsmanship and attention to detail are amazing. So glad to see them made in the USA!
Excellent product because they take pride in their craft. They have demonstrated responsibility to the land which is the source of their raw material, and they share their success with their community. Great vid!
These beautiful barrels have a second life beyond their bourbon aging time, because they can be used only once for aging bourbon. Scottish whiskey distillers buy the used barrels to age Scotch whiskey. You may find many barrels in their warehouses over one hundred years old!
Amazing amount of work, even with the mechanized process of making a barrel. It is beautiful and practical, as it has been for centuries.
I was pretty much going to say the same thing.
Going into watching this, I was thinking to myself this looks primarily automated and not much of any craftsmanship goes into it. I was quickly correctly just by watching further and fully realizing the mechanized processes only increased output but it still took an artisan to complete the work.
Very cool. Very cool indeed.
An American company, using American workers and American supplies, the white oak, to produce a product that can be used worldwide. I love it! This is what we need more of. Yes the barrels for adult beverages and American growth!
Fantastic informative video, great skills and product, Grandad was a cooper, Slàinte mhath from Scotland
What an outstanding process. Beautiful results.
I was impressed with the obvious pride in the finished product, well deserved pride, I might add.
Very enjoyable, thanks for having a company like yours.
Teamwork, Craftsmanship, Pride, and Honor. Little wasted talking. Makes good sense to me.
Good barrels, made better than the best furniture. I have sold hundreds of the old ones. Smells great and looks great. Thanks so much. We need more Americal factory videos.
That was a fascinating video! Thanks for giving us insight into your Company and products.
This is not a barrel. This is piece of beautiful furniture.
Very interesting video. Thanks. It looks like you have a good staff of skilled workers.
These guys are true craftsman, just think how hard it must have been before power tools and all work was done by hand.
More to the barrel than I thought awesome presentation
Fascinating video, I enjoyed it very much. Thank you for sharing it.
A very good video , impressive ethos and the staff appear engaged . If you would indulge an old fella , is there a full time cooper plying his trade on site ? Not criticizing , just enquiring .
Great video 👍🇬🇧
best video yet on stave production and barrel making, though in most locations a "select cut" is a high grade, which is totally unsustainable forestry and the worst thing you can do. In the American East most private forests have been "select cut" to death, leaving red maple and black birch as the dominant species. This is because the loggers keep telling the landowner each time "See, we are leaving lots of trees, so the forest is still there," while they are in fact removing the highest grade of timber and leaving behind the junk. Worst-first is the correct way to harvest timber. If you can get a stand of mixed age trees, then you can manage it on a mixed age basis, removing the older trees and leaving the younger trees to grow. It is not true that smaller trees are young. Lots of small trees are the same exact age as the larger trees, and doing a diameter-limit cut (another "select cut") is the worst thing you can do to a forest. Good forest management removes the oldest and least desirable trees first. Loggers want the best trees first because they make the most money with the biggest trees, and they spend the most money cutting and handling small diameter trees. Anyhow, a select cut is hardly the best or sustainable forestry. Very few private forests are well managed or carefully managed for successive stages of valuable timber production. In the American East, so many private forests have been high graded so badly for so long that only a clearcut can re-set the forest back to zero to start over. Or set it on fire, like Nature used to do. That will weed out the junk trees and leave the good ones with thick bark.
You think thats bad forest management come on up to British Columbia, Canada its a real gong show we sell most of our logs to China . They have the logs cut to 20 ft. lengths packed into shipping containers , whatever is left of the log is left to rot regardless of what ever value they might be worth.
yep, keep ripping the good genetics out and pretty soon you've got nothing left but garbage.
I don't know how I ended up with this video suggestion, but I'm glad I watched it.
Great job East Bernstadt Cooperage from NLHS!!!!
Things of great beauty by any measuring stick !
Amazing. No one talking on their phone or a water bottle up their sleeve. Tough work. A lost art.
Obviously NOT a lost art... they're still making barrels.
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i learned a lot watching this video. new appreciation for drinking my whiskey
It's amazing that such a slow manual factory can survive in USA as all similar factories in UK have been put out of business by cheap imports.
can’t grow American oak in China!
Well over 1 million barrels of bourbon were produced in Kentucky last year. Only white oak barrels are used. EBC makes barrels for the distilleries.
Wow what Beautiful process I really enjoyed this video amazing how the Barrels being made 😃😃
Really a wonderful video. Thank you.
I don’t need a whiskey barrel, but I feel compelled to buy one now.
Pretty slick operation ! I’m a retired Woodworker i found watching some of your idustry Speifi Woodworking tools. Very interesting Also thought it was cool that the logos were still hand nailed in place as many modern Woodworking people are forgetting. How to use hammers with everything so automated now days
No modern woodworker is forgetting how to use a hammer. Nearly every woodworker has had to correct a joint with a blow from a mallet or hammer, no matter the age. Nothing has changed, infact most tools used by modern woodworkers are still from the 40s. Do you mean Carpenters? Homebuilding is a much different craft and the automation is a necessary sacrifice for the best possible result in the shortest amount of time. It was the natural progression from the only way to do something; to having options that are faster and cheaper.
A very good informative & entertainng video. Cheers !
Barrels are beautiful, all pure shaping and tension. Good onyer!
thanks for the great video! exactly what I was looking for!
The way the world should harvest and mass produce, sustainably and zero waste!
Love to see skilled fit and finishing at work. USA!
Dang, those are like show-quality barrels!!!
i want to be a cooperage worker in my next life.Seriously theres something about these oak barrels that beats sitting in front of a monitor the whole day...regards from the orient.
Good
Hope your ready for slave labor, these people work their employees to death and pay them chicken shit !!!
@@vsetkoumiera7683 Counter culture azzhole.
@@TBPollock
Azzhole LMAZZO !!!
How many hours have you worked in a coop
Bornapatriot BythegraceofGod No doubt about that! The laid back music in this video and the fascinating, traditional product they are making can't hide the fact, that the working conditions in this plant is just terrible. The dust, smoke and noise in this place is a joke. No masks or hearing protection 😣 Just hard work and old, crappy machines all day long. I wonder what they get paid and how long they last before moving on to something else..
I watched all the way to the end. I assume these casks are going to mature wine as, had they been destined for a whiskey or Bourbon distillery, they would have been charred and not just toasted. Correct?
Very hands on still , hopefully it can stay that way for the employees. Amazing to think all liquid was carted in wooden barrels years ago. That is a piece of furniture not a barrel
most things were...from flour to salted fish and meats, to pottery ....definitely amazing, I agree!
Beautiful work , I look forward to drinking its contents. Thanks for video.
Nicely done and informative. Thank you.
Rubber mats at work stations are a must. Working on concrete floors all day with no mat turns a young man into an old man much quicker than necessary.
Concrete floors sucks.. And watch the video again and pay attention to the dust and smoke and noise at this plant.. 😣 It's really bad.
Wimps
@@mark-wn5ek Evidently you spend your workday sitting on your ass.
Hi. At 5:30, how are the parts of the heads stuck together? You don't explain. With some kind of glue? Some other method?
No glue, we missed the boards being drilled. You do see him joining the boards with dowels (go into the drilled holes). Glue would dissolve over time and taint the liquid. Its also unnecessary, as the wood swells to become water tight.
Any of you watched the origins of cooperage? It's a bit different to this.... kinda - last century. Or so. Tugs at the heart strings.... But it's still alive today!
Kudos boys, well done. You don't see anything like this coming from China. We do good work here.
Wonderful and nice looking pieces. I did notice that the workers are not wearing noise protection when working on the power tools, which are extremely noisy, well over 120 decibels. They are not wearing respiratory protection either when sanding....is this a regular industry practice?
that's beautiful question are the bands and plaque stainless steel.or just metals
May the whiskey flow so that those wonderfully built barrels are always needed. 😁
Thanks for the video. 👍
Great video. What happens if it rains during the air drying? Wouldnt that set things back to square one?
elliot mallon Good question , rains & snow....we need an answer..!
@@enthalpiaentropia7804 air drying is to let the inner wood dry out. rain or snow only wets the outside and that quickly dries off with a few sunny days.
@@rosewhite--- May be...!
@@enthalpiaentropia7804 Even over here in rainy UK the wood stacks are outside for a year or more.
Then each piece has to go through the machines again to cut off the dirty outside wood.
Wood processing is wasteful but but the waste has alwasy been used for firewood or animal bedding.
@@rosewhite--- Thanks for your kind explanation..
Greetings from Paris-France..
Sure wish I had smellavision...... great video. Thank you.
great video. vintage machinery & still hand-made. but no hard hats?
Really cool. What a great and responsible company.
Ann Teve You must be kidding. You can't treat your workers like that and be regarded as resposible..
Love it, great vid
NOSA for sure would be interested in the working conditions there? safety,earplugs, headgear? nothing of that sort needed? all legal? until the first accident. and i did not even ask about safety footwear.
I caught that also. OSHA would be concerned. The guy sanding barrels with an air sander is breathing in a lot of dust. Either a vacuum system on the sander or next to it, or a dust mask would greatly reduce his exposure. I'm assuming he does this job every day. It is quite noisy in that factory and I didn't see anyone using ear pro...........I can vouch, as a trades person, that it adds up (even the exposure of saws, hammers, impact drivers, and nailguns). While I'm not a safety sally ( I hate hard hats and they are very painful with my neck issues, but I have been on jobs lately that require them. They were not required and wouldn't have served much purpose on the first 23 years of my construction career), there are easy ways to reduce risk, especially in a factory setting where the risk is there everyday.
austrorus Absolutely agree!!!
CGT80 It's actaully horrendous.. (I'm a bricky from Denmark. That's dirty, dusty and noise work.. but this is bad)
I Bought a Barrel like this From the Gallo Winery in Sonoma California for $20 Bucks...It even Smelled like Wine.
I wonder if they make and sell smaller barrels
How do these guys get so barreled them selves with all the fiscal hard labor they do. Straight to the bar after work?
Beautiful video!
Very nice. Must be good to work there.
Evan Penny Not really.. Watch the video again and pay attention to the noise and dust and smoke. It's really bad.. No headgear or masks to be seen 😑
I️ work at KYCooperage and they way we do it is similar but It’s not an easy job and we haul ass
@@shanek6582 new barrel at EBC is $525 for one.
Hotrod Hog, I didn’t know they were that expensive, I’m going into the cooper business! I bought a used barrel with Dickel stamped on it I’m going to use in my blacksmith shop. If they’re that expensive, I wonder why they don’t use them for more than one time for liquor other than bourbon. I’d think if they were always filled with fluid, they’d have an indefinite lifespan.
@Hotrod Hog Yes but they donate $3 to forest management lol.
mark rainford, IKR, they act like cutting only the biggest best trees is good for the forest.
@@shanek6582 They do get reused, at least in some cases. Some beers are aged in barrels to add flavor from the previous product that was in the barrel. I would think that wine could be made again in the barrels, but I don't know much about the process. It would seem like a waste to use a barrel once. I do use jack daniels chips in my smoker, made from the barrels their liquor is aged in. That is my favorite flavor for smoking.
Iv lived in Kentucky all my life never knew of this place
And now I know why they cost so much. Wonderful work, beautiful product.
$525.00
Please explain what the letters on the brand mean? 3 YR - three years? MT + TH?
The american music is so beautifull !!!
very good video
How do you put the taper on the hoops? Very interesting video - Thanks!
Darrell Copeland I rivited the. Hoops for 9years at eb cooperage when the band is cut it goes through a two wheel curling machine and bottom and top is angled to make the band curl so won't cut in the barrel and I riveted each of the bands by hand on a rivet machine
@@kjchandler7495 Thank you for your answer.
Darrell Copeland no problem darrell hope my comment was helpful
@@kjchandler7495 Your answer was very helpful and thank you for your reply. I have been looking into maybe using offset rollers. Any plans on giving us a short video on this?
Thanks Again
Fun fact: the extinction of the passenger pigeon caused a shift in American forests from white oak to red oak. The two oaks put out acorns at different times and the pigeons fed off of red oak acorns in their migratory patterns leaving more white oak acorns to germinate. ruclips.net/video/b8BPANZzsyU/видео.html
I gave er an ole thumbs up tha rest speaks for itself
Use an ordinary black nylon hair comb to hold tacks by placing between the teeth
About 45 years ago l worked for a time running a jointer wheel, making barrels that went to Jim Beam down in Missouri. Was also a pinner making heads. It was a bit different than how these guys are doing it. A lot more manual labor. We didn't have the leisurely pace these guys do either.
Was it in Cuba
@@taragabel6383
No that was in Lebanon
How much do the barrels cost if you don't mind?
I worked at eb barrel factory 14 years
EBC, How many barrels do you get out of one tree? Of course I know it depends on the size of the tree, but approximately. Thank You.
yes, i'd like to know as well!
Fantastic video! I luv LuV LUV this kind of stuff! That would have been a lot better career than the one I chose!!
Working with wood and having something tangible in front of you at the end of the day! Being able to say, "I made that!"
Drives to Work But at least you can breathe when you're 40. The working conditions at this plant is horrendous.. sad to see in this day and age. I agree with you, that it is very satisfiyng to have something tangible at the end of the day - I'm a bricklayer myself (and that's a dirty, dusty, hard and noisy business) - but these guys are not going to last long under these conditions. I hope you do enjoy your line of work a bit more after watching this video yet again and paying attention to the dust and smoke and noise and how labouring it is all day long..
I would like to hust have some of those nice thick barrels stays to use a lever like these guy use.
Just awesome,,
Great Video, I do like the product you make and the attention to detail for your product. But as an SOHO/OSHA safety specialist for the department of defense, i want to use this video as a workplace safety inspection example. There are so many safety violations in this video i would love top see your OSHA 300 Log.
I don't want to be the bad guy here but i would like to point out to my soldiers and civilian employees the safety violations i have observed. I can only guess as to what all the cables and hoses are that are lying around and hanging from the ceiling.
Starting at the video time stamp i'd like to point out what i saw and the violation, I will provide the OSHA regulation in violation if you like, later.
Time Stamp- 3:00 - where the sub titles point out "they are cut in half" right side of the picture if you froze the video an electrical powered diesel heater in in the indoors where wood is cut and saw dust is airborne and piled everywhere, the manufacture user manual strictly warns not to use their product in such areas. Also in that area there isn't a Fire Extinguisher (FE) in sight. Also above the wall opening there are what looks like electrical extension cords hanging from the ceiling and along the wall.
3:04- worker walks under a bridge platform for getting over the machine. The worker ducked under a steel platform which is a head hazard. No marking or protection from blunt injury, soft impact materials.
3:11- worker is not wearing Personal Protective Equipment (PPE), eye protection, and also another possible electrical cord hanging from the ceiling, accumulation of flammable materials, saw dust and wood chips
3:23 - what appears to be electrical wires lying and hanging around bottom left of screen, the vacuum system generates static electricity, is it grounded and where is in grounded, and how often inspected?
3:28 - worker no PPE , eye protection, also three electrical cords hanging from ceiling
3:52 - diesel operated machine operated indoors. manufacture requires electrical grounded, where is the grounding, and why isn't it vented out doors, why is in even being used indoors?
4:01- grass is fire fuel, should not be around wood products, fire hazard, needs to be cut or eliminated with herbicide or tilling of earth around them.
4:51 - only one guy wearing eye pro, no PPE, shelf behind worker has item stacked on the top of the shelf fixture without fall protection. Is the shelf anchored to the wall?
5:08 - no eye protection PPE, no fire extinguishers
5:37 - No PPE, what looks like gas piping in back ground, isn't properly marked or protected from moving equipment.
5:42 - no PPE, no grounding for static electricity
6:09 - this concerns Machine Guarding, no machine guarding on pulley's, no machine guarding over sprockets at end of machine just beyond the right shoulder of worker. Rule is that any moving machinery that is under a height level below 8 feet needs to be guarded from worker
6:33 - No Fire Extinguisher at exit, no cover on garbage can
6:41 - no guard on pneumatic press (ram), worker isn't wearing eye protection
7:33 - no eye pro, fire extinguisher not properly mounted on wall and it's being blocked by a machine or equipment, no Fire Extinguisher signage, black electrical cord hanging from ceiling, worker in flammable cotton clothing, facial hair and tennis shoes with slippery floor to walk on, where are the fire extinguishers?
7:46 - no eye pro, machine guarding from rotating machine, machine worker has it's machine guarding lying on the floor, is it locked out, just to the left of the worker
8:05 - Kerosene stored inside building near roll up door, the cabinet in the back has fire extinguisher signage but where are the FE's
8:15 - no eye pro on worker and where is the machine guarding?
8:57 - No PPE, no machine guarding, trip hazards from all the stuff around worker air hoses? no electrical emergency cut off switch, why is the worker using a scrap piece of wood as a tool, needs machine grab to hold barrels firm
9:22 - worker no PPE, machine to workers left has no machine guarding, no PPE Fire Hazard
9:35 - worker on the right has no PPE eye pro just gloves on other worker but no eye pro
10:10 - no machine guarding for rotating machine and barrel, also no guard in machine barrel arbor
10:45 - no machine guarding for strap being pressed into place from stored energy and applied energy, the cooling fan cover on the electrical motor with brushes from spark and flammability
11:11 - No PPE or heat resistant gloves, rubber is flammable, no guarding from heated surface of the brand and no employee warning for the hot iron hazard, green and red electrical of air hose on ground fall hazard and electrical shock hazard
11:36 - no PPE, bottle hanging on conduit in back ground not properly stored and what about the SDS (MSDS)
11:55 - no PPE as required by the sanders manufacture user manual
12:11- blowing saw dust with compressed air, what is the service pressure (PSI), no eye pro
There is also a little room in the video with stuff stored on top of the ceiling for the little room, whats the engineers weight limit for the ceiling and the stuff isn't protected from falling on someone in the event of an earthquake
Tha'ts just the stuff i caught while slowing down the video, i'm sure the employer is a great boss and they employ a lot of local workers, great on them. But I also bet the employer doesn't want injured employees or law suits from those injuries. A simple walk through safety inspection and some work to correct those issues that I pointed out. I'm sure there are plenty of hazards in the yard and these are exposing employees to other work place hazards.
Federal OSHA can give this and other businesses a free safety inspection, however they will expect all of the things they find wrong will have to be corrected if the business owner doesn't want fines or closure.
Find a person trained or business trained to come in and preform a safety inspection for you. A lot of these problems can be corrected by education and employee training. Electrical standards are plainly defined bu code. The electrical code is lost on the place. The electricians should be ashamed of themselves. new employee training for everyone to start and refresher training annually for workplace safety, and a huge suggestion is i would install a safety committee that is trained and free from harassment by the employees and management.
You must be a lot of fun at parties!
After doing this stuff for 30 years I just turn it off. Did you learn anything from my 1D view of the workplace?
@@snoebay88 Parties suck! And, that is such a stupid phrase. For me, just the lack of ear protection and breathing protection really stood out. People don't realize how that exposure adds up over the years. While I often didn't wear safety glasses in the past, I always used a face shield or goggles with grinding and cutting, but have worn prescription glasses for a number of years now. Since I always have to wear glasses to see clearly, I always have some protection and it has saved my eyes from injury. From a business standpoint, the suggestion of having an outside company help them comply with good safety practices is great. Employers have to cover their asses. While I do hate some practices, such as using hard hats, others are very easy to implement and make a major impact on worker health.
Great job folks.
2:05 those bottom logs are anything but “prime oak” should have let those grow a while yet.
they might have been in a poor position, or starting to crowd a seed tree, or had damage further up near the crown
lots of reasons to pull small ones from time to time
I love you not waste anything but why are not the branches chipped up.to decompose using a tractor or a 3 pto attached to grind them
They just rot on the forest floor like nature intended.
Beautiful.
You guys do awesome work!!!
Anybody know how much one of these barrells cost ??
wonder how much a barrel sells for
Just one barrel will set you back $525.00
Is the middle of the barrel called the bilge? Should it not be the bulge?!
bilge as in lowest part of a ship where liquid collects.
@Jake from State Farm back to the prison farm, Jakeboy!
Hate to tell ya but that's not a planner that cuts them down. It's a band saw
AWESOME JOB
How much do those barrels cost?
400 to 500 each
We live next to Old House Vineyards in VA...They run from about $900 to $1400 depending on the wood. I bet they would love to get some for $500...
This is very interesting and I see that it IS hard work,. Great job and video. Take a look at “ Traditional Coopering” with George Smithwick. He’s a cooper that does it ALL the REAL old fashioned way by hand. It’s a great watch.
Whats one of those barrels worth?
Wonderful! But once again, another barrel-making video that leaves out the stave making process....that's the part I want to see most!
This place looks laid back. I worked at Kentucky Cooperage Inc. in Lebanon KY. I will tell ya. You will work your butt off. Its hot and stinks of smoke. It is very hard work. when I was there it was 12 hr shifts 13 days 1 day off and back at it for 13 more and so forth. not fun at all.