Dry stone bridge dropping the form

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  • Опубликовано: 8 ноя 2019

Комментарии • 366

  • @timhinchcliffe5372
    @timhinchcliffe5372 28 дней назад +871

    To this day, he still hasn't stood on it.

    • @paulmason614
      @paulmason614 27 дней назад +27

      And he NEVER will.

    • @woozy607
      @woozy607 26 дней назад +13

      He said it’s still standing strong in 2024

    • @jeremytibbs13
      @jeremytibbs13 26 дней назад +9

      Some works of art are just meant for viewing

    • @Matt-my7pz
      @Matt-my7pz 26 дней назад +14

      Nohohoho he has not!

    • @chrisking1457
      @chrisking1457 26 дней назад +15

      ​@@jeremytibbs13yeah, not a bridge tho

  • @DavidCaddock
    @DavidCaddock 25 дней назад +483

    The algorithm is generating a lot of interest in this bridge 4 years later. Have we walked across it yet?

    • @PhilUrbanex
      @PhilUrbanex 23 дня назад +17

      i got this recommended too

    • @quietobserver4636
      @quietobserver4636 23 дня назад +9

      Just got here too. Wondering the same. 😂

    • @robinhodgkinson
      @robinhodgkinson 22 дня назад +15

      It’s the algorithm noting that you’ve been watching some random stuff lately. Let’s go right off track - dry stone bridges anyone?

    • @Bibibosh
      @Bibibosh 22 дня назад +8

      It takes time for the stones to set.
      You must poor grit all over it and get a rock and tap to make vibration run through the brigde so the grit falls inbetween the crevices.

    • @kitewinds663
      @kitewinds663 22 дня назад +4

      Bridge selling times… or just Kamala?

  • @Hopeless_and_Forlorn
    @Hopeless_and_Forlorn 25 дней назад +118

    "Because the last time...." Enough said.

  • @danielrenwald7716
    @danielrenwald7716  4 года назад +534

    Still standing strong! More esthetic trimming to be done in the Spring. Thanks for your interest.

    • @narayanamurthy6177
      @narayanamurthy6177 2 года назад

      ruclips.net/video/gzaUpoQPNsY/видео.html...

    • @TheHomeWoodShop
      @TheHomeWoodShop 29 дней назад +20

      It looks great. You should have more confidence in your work. 😊

    • @86supra420
      @86supra420 27 дней назад +34

      Any chance for an update video?

    • @audioartisan
      @audioartisan 27 дней назад +49

      Is it still standing in 2024?

    • @Chief952
      @Chief952 26 дней назад +47

      @@audioartisanthis guy hasn’t posted since this video. Maybe he tried to walk over it, and you, didn’t make it. 😮

  • @user-hf3lj8jh8x
    @user-hf3lj8jh8x 26 дней назад +266

    I’m from Yorkshire in England and we have over 5000 miles of dry stone walling in Yorkshire, what you’ve made looks beautiful and is a real piece of old style engineering. We’ll done pal.

    • @timhinchcliffe5372
      @timhinchcliffe5372 24 дня назад

      @@user-hf3lj8jh8x does it still keep the Scotts out?

    • @madbeef.
      @madbeef. 24 дня назад +2

      Another Yorkshireman here. Had to watch this. That bridge looks sound as a pound 👍

    • @timhinchcliffe5372
      @timhinchcliffe5372 24 дня назад +4

      @@madbeef. I'm actually 1/4 Yorkshire ancestry, never been to Yorkshire, or England for that matter. I guess this video appealed to me given my DNA.

    • @noizeaous7267
      @noizeaous7267 23 дня назад +1

      *Well done

    • @timhinchcliffe5372
      @timhinchcliffe5372 23 дня назад

      @@noizeaous7267 😂 grammar nazi... which I do find funny at times... but not appropriate on this video. Save it for the political videos.

  • @hectatusbreakfastus6106
    @hectatusbreakfastus6106 27 дней назад +173

    That's a pretty cool bridge. Probably a good idea to let it settle for a bit before walking across it. I think we would all love to have one of these in our back yards.

    • @mrfingers4737
      @mrfingers4737 25 дней назад +6

      It's gonna settle, alright

    • @potterfanz6780
      @potterfanz6780 24 дня назад +15

      It's had about 4 years of settling at this point

    • @jauxro
      @jauxro 23 дня назад +3

      That and a swing bench ❤
      I got a wood swing bench but the previous owners didn't oil it... Does anyone know if I can hold it together with epoxy. To one day have a dream backyard

    • @RustyShakleford1
      @RustyShakleford1 3 дня назад

      ​@jauxro yea use alot of expoxy

  • @Uncommonsenses
    @Uncommonsenses 27 дней назад +426

    In Rome, when a bridge was opened, the engineers and their families stood beneath as the first carts passed above.
    And that is why some Roman stone bridges stand to this day.

    • @nanook6620
      @nanook6620 27 дней назад +147

      We need to bring back this level of accountability in public office.

    • @jacquevanlopeznoroff8827
      @jacquevanlopeznoroff8827 26 дней назад +11

      @@nanook6620100%

    • @aarontooth
      @aarontooth 26 дней назад +45

      Ummm yeah you guys can go do that. I'm going to rely on modern professional engineering. Thanks but no thanks.

    • @christopherarendt3531
      @christopherarendt3531 26 дней назад +17

      As long as the bridge doesn't fall on day one, you're good!

    • @Schoolship.
      @Schoolship. 26 дней назад +48

      ​@@aarontoothgo do what? ... stand under bridges after they're built, or build bridges that are still strong after two thousand years? And, still in regular use where they stand. No modern replacements are built next to them, because they're fine! I just don't understand your comment here

  • @samTollefson
    @samTollefson 27 дней назад +12

    I'm glad he got his boat back!

  • @WeazelJaguar
    @WeazelJaguar Месяц назад +72

    Beautiful!
    Not bridges, but hand cut stone tunnels under the 1850's railway tracks in Niagara, the largest 160 feet x 20 feet x 20 feet still standing.
    And fun to paddle through!
    Everyone forgets the form work the carpenters had to do first to make them a reality.
    Thanks for posting!

    • @LitoGeorge
      @LitoGeorge 23 дня назад +2

      And the blacksmiths to make the carpenters tools? Although in 1850's there were a bunch of factories churning out good carpenters tools.

    • @OffGridInvestor
      @OffGridInvestor 23 дня назад +2

      There's ones near me in Australia, handcut in the 1800s to allow a water pipeline thru a few hills, 2 or 3. They're properly caged in now but 10 years ago, I went up inside one on a hot day, about 25 meters. Cool inside and it was just solid stone in there.

    • @WeazelJaguar
      @WeazelJaguar 23 дня назад +1

      @@LitoGeorge some very interesting stories of blacksmiths forging tools for stonecutters building lighthouses, off England.

    • @BodywiseMustard
      @BodywiseMustard 2 дня назад +1

      1850s *
      You may be thinking of the apostrophe in '50s

    • @LitoGeorge
      @LitoGeorge День назад

      ​@@BodywiseMustard I think you're incorrect.

  • @timmullen8951
    @timmullen8951 10 дней назад +3

    Guy #1: "Go STAND on it."
    Guy #2: "No. You go stand on it "
    Guy #1: "I am NOT going to stand on it. YOU stand on it."
    Please show the follow-up video of you two standing on top of your handiwork.

  • @JOHNSmith-pn6fj
    @JOHNSmith-pn6fj Месяц назад +63

    Very Cool bridge. I read someplace that the Romans would make the head mason stand under the arch while the cribbing and formwork was removed.

    • @harveysmith100
      @harveysmith100 Месяц назад +28

      As a bricklaying apprentice, we had to build an arch, to get a pass mark you had to stand on your arch the next day.

    • @SilentShiba
      @SilentShiba 29 дней назад +7

      ​@@harveysmith100That's epic

    • @tryscience
      @tryscience 28 дней назад +7

      Guaranteed to have either very lucky, or very skilled head masons moving forward.

    • @FirstnameLastname-rc8yd
      @FirstnameLastname-rc8yd 27 дней назад +20

      I don’t know if it’s true but it sounds like the exact Roman thing to do lol

    • @wcswood
      @wcswood 27 дней назад

      The vast majority of "Romans" were slaves. Something like 8 out of 10 of 'em.

  • @damianabbate4423
    @damianabbate4423 29 дней назад +97

    Could have left the form loose under the bridge and then walked on it.

    • @seventeen912
      @seventeen912 27 дней назад +14

      Who would’ve thought of that? Hands down you’re smarter than the man who built it! I know it’s not an engineered bridge but if one is going to build such a bridge(walk way) then one must be able to QC their work. Like you suggested, leave the loose form setting underneath then go walk across it and jump up and down on it. As he said, it’s gotta set there for a while,………what difference does that make? Either it’s stable or it isn’t. Time will not make this friction interlocking design anymore secure even if you left it to stand for decades. Great point you suggested!

    • @wpjohn91
      @wpjohn91 26 дней назад +17

      With the form removed the stones will settle under gravity a little more. I dont see a key stone though which worries me. Also they baisicly used shale. You can have a dry stone arch bridge with much larger pieces of stone

    • @nathanmiller9381
      @nathanmiller9381 24 дня назад +7

      @@seventeen912 could be a case of if it was unstable and fell, at least they could enjoy how nice it looks until they test it to find out it will collapse.
      I know if I had just built something like that and you are really tired it would feel more crushing emotionally knowing all that work you just did was for nothing and had to be done again, in this case sounded like it already was the second time. give yourself a fresh day to test in case it falls then you'll be in a better position to fix it then and there

  • @CybershamanX
    @CybershamanX 23 дня назад +14

    We never found out what happened to ol' Daniel Renwald after that fateful day. Hopefully, Daniel finally crossed that bridge and walked into the light. However, some still say that on lonely fall nights just after the sun sets, if you sit quietly and listen to the wind, you can still hear him shouting in the distance "No! It's gotta stand there for a while!"

  • @vladimirvladimirovich8081
    @vladimirvladimirovich8081 Год назад +28

    От меня подписка и пальчик вверх !
    В Ютубе мне удалось посмотреть не
    менее десяти подобных мостиков .
    Все они меня завораживают давно .
    И вашим мостиком я восхищён !
    Вы построили мостик из камня
    который у вас был в наличии !
    Из Сибири с уважением, Владимир
    Мой город-Нижневартовск-Nizhnevartovsk.

  • @user-cj1ce6vy9r
    @user-cj1ce6vy9r 28 дней назад +17

    That’s a work of art!
    Thanks for posting

    • @LOOSEbowelz
      @LOOSEbowelz 27 дней назад

      His name was Bob so it was actually a work of Bob! 😅

  • @CiscoWes
    @CiscoWes 26 дней назад +7

    "Go stand aaan it" 😂

  • @VibratingDolphinNow
    @VibratingDolphinNow 28 дней назад +9

    That's incredible, I can't believe it fits together so nicely!!

  • @micahwest5347
    @micahwest5347 Месяц назад +111

    Beautifully done but I’m certain that the original dry stone bridge makers would have happily incorporated cement if they had access to any. And if you would have used some in the sub layers there wouldn’t be any arguing about who is going to be first to walk over it.

    • @markjones4704
      @markjones4704 Месяц назад +8

      yes why not use it and would surely stay complete many times longer

    • @johnstarkie9948
      @johnstarkie9948 Месяц назад +35

      @@markjones4704
      But,
      it wouldn’t then be a ‘dry stone bridge’!

    • @micahwest5347
      @micahwest5347 Месяц назад +8

      @@johnstarkie9948 true, that’s why you don’t see too many.

    • @mattgraham4340
      @mattgraham4340 26 дней назад +4

      @@markjones4704 Dry stone walls last longer than mortar built walls. Dry set bridge might be a different outcome

    • @davehaggerty3405
      @davehaggerty3405 25 дней назад +3

      Roman arches last a couple thousand years. Tho they are cut stone.

  • @91thewatcher23
    @91thewatcher23 24 дня назад +2

    Fun fact: they are dry stone bridges because it would be too wasteful if they used whetstone.

  • @toddglover1121
    @toddglover1121 Месяц назад +8

    It doesn’t look like it is going anywhere soon. Nice job!

  • @edwardgoldthorpe8260
    @edwardgoldthorpe8260 25 дней назад +11

    This is super cool and has fundamentally changed my understanding of the physical world. Thanks for posting!

  • @noahcarver6072
    @noahcarver6072 Год назад +6

    What a sound, the rocks compressing on each other.

  • @waynepilz
    @waynepilz Месяц назад +5

    Awesome job! Great skill and thought involved!

  • @circusitch
    @circusitch 10 дней назад +1

    This is EXACTLY how they made the St. Louis Arch.

  • @aypahyo
    @aypahyo 24 дня назад +3

    Upvote if you think this needs a follow up video.

  • @youngprince716
    @youngprince716 27 дней назад +3

    That was the most confident "says me" lol

  • @Tanoaproductionsfiji
    @Tanoaproductionsfiji 26 дней назад +3

    Cool!! Well Done. Hope to see a follow up! Great work guys!!

  • @TheRealJohnMadden
    @TheRealJohnMadden 23 дня назад +1

    Dude said “the tappy tap”, I’m hooked 😂

  • @rajeevsharma8024
    @rajeevsharma8024 3 года назад +7

    Superb technique.Classic yet very stable.Ancient architectural beauty.

  • @propertyofranger
    @propertyofranger 21 день назад +1

    So gorgeous! You did a wonderful job!

  • @DrewWithington
    @DrewWithington 7 дней назад

    TBH it doesn't look very strong at all. 1) It would be better if the stones that actually make the arch were more of a wedge shape so when there is a downward load on the bridge they are compressed together, making the arch stronger. 2) There is no cement to hold the stones together and stop them sliding against each other. Nice folly though!

  • @patmiddleton3947
    @patmiddleton3947 26 дней назад +2

    One man pulls very heavy object.Other man watches,supervising.🥴

  • @pixelpatter01
    @pixelpatter01 5 дней назад

    Knowing the arch must transfer it's weight to the ends of the arch, it should be dug into the banks on bth sides.Looking at the bridge, the left side has a fairly substantial base but the right side looks a little light and if it slides or shifts to the right the whole thing would come down..

  • @hinspect
    @hinspect Месяц назад +3

    I wish I was younger so I could at least make a half-assed attempt at that! 😄
    *_GREAT JOB!_* 👍

    • @jlaw8882
      @jlaw8882 29 дней назад

      Me too! Those rocks... my back.... 😮

    • @samwallaceart288
      @samwallaceart288 25 дней назад

      I know a 70-year-old guy who still climbs 30 feet up to build roof extensions

  • @augustkraus1389
    @augustkraus1389 20 дней назад

    "I wanna get it OUT FROM UNDER THE BRIDGE" I felt that brother!!! Hahaha

  • @The_Vaporizer
    @The_Vaporizer 25 дней назад +1

    Don't let the Flex Seal guy get near it, he'll try to seal all the cracks 😂

    • @itzsoweezee9980
      @itzsoweezee9980 25 дней назад

      Yeah Phil Swift will seal it. 😆

    • @bedeckt
      @bedeckt 25 дней назад +1

      there isnt enough damage yet. it has to be a lot of damage.
      that said, he may take all the stones, bring them back to the quarry & glue the whole mountain back together. because THATS a LOT of damage!

    • @bedeckt
      @bedeckt 25 дней назад

      what the hell am i saying, phil swifts endgame is obviously to bring the whole universe back together to its state before the big bang. because that is truly a lot of damage. its all of the damage.

  • @aboutwhat1930
    @aboutwhat1930 8 дней назад

    Rumor has it, this ancient bridge still stands today.

  • @rasputinsorphan1260
    @rasputinsorphan1260 21 день назад

    Even though it's been 4 years, that is a damn good looking arch bridge fellas!

  • @johnking6252
    @johnking6252 29 дней назад +3

    How'd the first flood work out ! Looks nice 👍 🌈

  • @MazeElwin
    @MazeElwin 22 дня назад +1

    4 years later, we need an update.

  • @robi4387
    @robi4387 8 дней назад +1

    A thing of beauty but please finish the right abutment before you stand on it

  • @user-ei2qn9kv1m
    @user-ei2qn9kv1m Месяц назад +2

    It looks like the scales on the back of a little dinosaur, and it's cool🙂
    There will be a noise when you hit it with a hammer,remove the formwork.
    That's a wild sound.

  • @dominiccirino2069
    @dominiccirino2069 Год назад +6

    Hihiiiiii,,,,,,where is the chicken that build this bridge,,,,,,,,,walk the stones

  • @nomusicrc
    @nomusicrc 25 дней назад +2

    This was 4 years ago and it just came up in my recommended did they ever walk on it or better yet is it still standing

  • @bretthess6376
    @bretthess6376 28 дней назад +1

    Fine job, Gentleman.
    "You stand on it first."
    How about NOOOOOOO!. " 😁

  • @billrobinson198
    @billrobinson198 24 дня назад

    I believe the old builders of arches didn't use
    a solid form. They used dirt, built the arch and
    then dug out the dirt. That way, if it started to
    fall, they could fill the dirt back in and redo the
    arch. I really doubt the use of a solid form.

  • @alexandermorozov2248
    @alexandermorozov2248 4 дня назад +1

    Я один ждал, что мост обрушится? 😅

  • @paulliming7891
    @paulliming7891 25 дней назад +1

    a work of art, well done.

  • @barnabyaprobert5159
    @barnabyaprobert5159 3 года назад +9

    My favorite magic trick! It never gets old!

  • @tynangroves4870
    @tynangroves4870 5 дней назад

    One works, one watches. This is the way.

  • @CybershamanX
    @CybershamanX 23 дня назад

    (0:50) I'm almost certain that a variation of this dialog was uttered during the construction of the Great Pyramid of Giza. Similarly, much like three of the worst words (and their various equivalents throughout the ages) that have ever been uttered: oops, uh-oh, and oh no.

  • @SciHeartJourney
    @SciHeartJourney 26 дней назад +1

    I imagine in the old days that it went like this, "YOU lad, run in there and pull out that beam."
    Lad: 😨

    • @buakawfan333
      @buakawfan333 26 дней назад

      RIP lil' Tommy, send his mother a shilling

  • @wavydavy9816
    @wavydavy9816 8 дней назад

    That is so cool.
    Now _I_ want to go out and build a bridge 🤔

  • @robgrey6183
    @robgrey6183 9 дней назад +1

    Random stuff to distract us and make advertisers happy.

  • @hujiko44745278184
    @hujiko44745278184 25 дней назад +1

    We need a follow up vid Dan!

  • @danielrenwald7716
    @danielrenwald7716  19 часов назад

    It is supported by it's own weight, locking the stones above down against each one below.... an old Roman trick.

  • @robgrey6183
    @robgrey6183 9 дней назад +1

    RUclips: Here, this will distract you.

  • @gunnarsson272
    @gunnarsson272 26 дней назад +1

    we have such bridges that are 100+ years old that cars drive over today.

  • @kirkglundal4289
    @kirkglundal4289 21 день назад

    Nice job guys!
    I like to use a little stone dust to help w some of the teetering between the stones. Is that enough mass on top to maintain the compression on the arch stones!

  • @masonryjoe
    @masonryjoe 25 дней назад

    Its a cool but thing but if you put some masonry in it , it would last a hundred years, it will move and fall in time, its too thin over the arch IMO .

  • @thirdeyesurvivor3886
    @thirdeyesurvivor3886 23 дня назад +1

    It’s magnificent

  • @dedrumdebass07
    @dedrumdebass07 24 дня назад +1

    Let’s have another look now that it’s weathered in. Fresh upload needed!

  • @JAMamation
    @JAMamation 3 года назад +5

    How did you make the form for the bridge? Thanks!

  • @BillSmith-fx7xx
    @BillSmith-fx7xx 23 дня назад

    I see the outer edge arch. Does it have back-to-back arches all the way thru ? What do the flat stones set on ?

  • @nomobo1778
    @nomobo1778 27 дней назад +1

    I wouldn’t get out the electric chair to crawl underneath that bridge if a hummingbird were to light on it.

  • @petemavus2948
    @petemavus2948 26 дней назад

    Wow, I loved the first I ever saw of yours with the steps, now this appeared. Keep up the great work ! If you ever want a free helper HMU. 😊

  • @RBCharger
    @RBCharger 25 дней назад +9

    I'd jump up and down on that bridge if I built it. He's not going to chance it because "it would fall and you would be trapped under a thousand pounds of rock". Dude, he never asked you to stand under it.

    • @BobfromSydney
      @BobfromSydney 24 дня назад +8

      If the bridge collapsed the first part to fall would probably be the part under load, where the person is standing. Then the rest would fall down around it, likely doing bad things to that person's feet and legs (if they manage to stay upright).

    • @RBCharger
      @RBCharger 24 дня назад +2

      @@BobfromSydney Bob, if you can't trust something you built to be safe, you shouldn't leave it as a possible death trap for others.
      I guess there are two types of people in the world: those who are afraid of falling, and those who aren't afraid enough.

    • @BobfromSydney
      @BobfromSydney 24 дня назад +6

      @@RBCharger mate settle down, that guy just wanted the stones to settle down too before he walked on it.

  • @jbrown7403
    @jbrown7403 26 дней назад +1

    We need a follow up video! 😊

  • @MrSpliffy3
    @MrSpliffy3 25 дней назад

    Very cool skill set. Respect fellahs

  • @LarsPallesen
    @LarsPallesen 18 часов назад

    How did you manage to get the video resolution down to 240p in this day and age? Used an old Nokia flip phone camera from 1998?

  • @bradhiser9230
    @bradhiser9230 25 дней назад

    Good idea to mortar between all the top stones while the form is still under. Then when you’re done while mortar is still setting remove the form.

  • @mccanlessdesign
    @mccanlessdesign 27 дней назад

    Freakin' gorgeous!

  • @MattnUska
    @MattnUska 25 дней назад

    That must have been a good feeling to see it stay up.

  • @user-th6gv9jh6z
    @user-th6gv9jh6z 29 дней назад

    That is a great job

  • @RealGeorg3
    @RealGeorg3 10 дней назад

    And the algo said "let your hair down, watch a nice one".

  • @LinkandGavin
    @LinkandGavin 22 дня назад +1

    The internet demands an update

  • @robinhodgkinson
    @robinhodgkinson 22 дня назад

    Super glue. It’s the invention of the age.

  • @jwrosenbury
    @jwrosenbury 25 дней назад

    Traditionally, the builder was required to stand under the bridge while testing was done.

  • @zacmumblethunder7466
    @zacmumblethunder7466 25 дней назад

    I was expecting to see some sort of settling, no matter how small, but it looked pretty solid.

  • @mckenziekeith7434
    @mckenziekeith7434 26 дней назад

    So have you come to trust it for walking across? Seems really cool.

  • @Synky
    @Synky 24 дня назад

    The quality if this video makes me feel like this is from 2002

  • @LifesLaboratory
    @LifesLaboratory 23 дня назад

    It's damned impressive... but I think I would have still thrown some concrete in there... just in case. ;)

  • @racerx3669
    @racerx3669 2 года назад +2

    safety first.
    well done.

  • @Golden_SnowFlake
    @Golden_SnowFlake 2 дня назад

    Beautiful.

  • @lawrencewillard6370
    @lawrencewillard6370 24 дня назад

    Wanted to have someone ask us to build a bridge, built almost everything in stone, but not a bridge. Congratulations.

  • @cryowreck3193
    @cryowreck3193 5 дней назад

    I also want part 2

  • @MizterMoonshine
    @MizterMoonshine 3 дня назад

    Okay I watched it, now leave me alone.

  • @bendenisereedy7865
    @bendenisereedy7865 Месяц назад +1

    Almost as nice as the Pennine packhorse bridges in England! They've stood since the 1700s, so will this stand for 300 years?

    • @itoibo4208
      @itoibo4208 29 дней назад +3

      i would think it needs more stone on top. it needs weight on it to keep it stable.

  • @Chief952
    @Chief952 26 дней назад

    Doesn’t really look like a bridge. It looks like an arch. I wouldn’t walk across it as the ends are still quite a ways off the ground.

  • @jujjuj7676
    @jujjuj7676 23 дня назад

    😂 how to say you don't trust ur work. Without saying you don't trust ur work..😅

  • @williamogilvie6909
    @williamogilvie6909 27 дней назад

    Nice work.

  • @agoradacerto
    @agoradacerto 24 дня назад

    Looks like the algorithm wants to know how this bridge is going now.

  • @mospeada1152
    @mospeada1152 22 дня назад

    I would've immediately walked across it!

  • @mhoover
    @mhoover Месяц назад

    When you say dropping the form...you mean it!

  • @zrodger2296
    @zrodger2296 25 дней назад

    My Dad would have loved this! ❤

  • @user-sq3ne3dt4c
    @user-sq3ne3dt4c 2 года назад +1

    Nice

  • @mrmosty5167
    @mrmosty5167 25 дней назад

    Beautiful piece of art but don't stand on it

  • @billl1127
    @billl1127 26 дней назад

    Perhaps just leaving the form there permanently would help

  • @JJE2010MO
    @JJE2010MO 27 дней назад

    More video of doing this process from the start please.

  • @HiThisIsMine
    @HiThisIsMine 25 дней назад

    Don’t be crazy, you don’t test it by standing on it… everyone knows you have to lay under it.