Excavating The Collapsed Omega Tunnel at Cerro Gordo Ghost Town and Silver Mine

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  • Опубликовано: 5 май 2023
  • In this video, we attempt to dig out and excavate a collapsed mine tunnel at the Cerro Gordo ghost town and silver mine. This mine has a long history of producing silver and other valuable minerals, but over time, many of the old tunnels have collapsed or been sealed off, hiding their treasures.
    Excavating a collapsed mine tunnel is always a risky and dangerous job, and this one proved to be even more challenging than expected. The tunnel almost collapsed on us, and we had to work quickly to avoid being buried alive. We were lucky to make it out alive, and it's a reminder of the risks involved in underground mining.
    But the lure of what lies beyond the collapse is too strong to resist, and we will be back to try again. The Omega Tunnel at Cerro Gordo remains caved and inaccessible, but we won't give up. We'll keep trying until we can uncover the treasures hidden within.
    If you're interested in the history of mining, ghost towns, or just enjoy a good adventure, this video is for you. Watch as we risk it all to uncover the secrets of the Cerro Gordo silver mine. Don't forget to like, subscribe, and hit the notification bell to stay up-to-date with our latest mining adventures!
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Комментарии • 544

  • @stlrsmike
    @stlrsmike Год назад +108

    I ran equipment in strip mines. It always starts out as a trickle and that's when you need to get out of the way before it's too late. Pretty risky there guys, glad you're all safe.

    • @missingremote4388
      @missingremote4388 Год назад +6

      Could be natural gravel flowing down in there.
      Could be tailings from 100 years ago

    • @adamcarter74
      @adamcarter74 Год назад +15

      @@missingremote4388 tailings was my guess.. Unless you are going to add a ton of new lumber to that part of the mine, I think they are playing with fire.

  • @krockpotbroccoli65
    @krockpotbroccoli65 Год назад +223

    I'm no miner, but if it were me, my first priority would be to excavate the entrance and begin laying tracks so mine carts could be used to remove waste rock.

    • @Damian-Church-NZ
      @Damian-Church-NZ Год назад +13

      That would be a fun mission 👌i think the snow at the entrance will melt in summer and leave a nice entrance but not sure ✌️

    • @outdoorloser4340
      @outdoorloser4340 Год назад +10

      ​@@krockpotbroccoli65 That might require permits and funding and hours of hard labor. I'm not sure if they are actually trying to put the mine back into production.

    • @krockpotbroccoli65
      @krockpotbroccoli65 Год назад +22

      @@outdoorloser4340 Brent could do it all under the auspices of turning it into a tourist attraction similar to what Frank and his wife of the exploringababdonedmines channel are doing with their derelict mine in Canada.

    • @acquasanta6676
      @acquasanta6676 Год назад +3

      ​@@krockpotbroccoli65 sure he could have a mini train ride. Be great way for tourists to get around the mine and save on heart attacks at that altitude .

    • @crohkorthreetoes3821
      @crohkorthreetoes3821 Год назад

      Yep, that is what has to be done.

  • @JhonDiamond2021
    @JhonDiamond2021 Год назад +8

    Digging a collapsed tunnel, I hope you have to maintain the safety of friends. Greetings from Indonesian agate hunters.

  • @RyanDCH
    @RyanDCH Год назад +13

    You probably have a backfilled stope above that. You should check out what Frank's been dealing with opening up his mine. Might give you some idea of what to expect. You're gonna need a backhoe and a mucker, lol.

  • @yorkazuna5934
    @yorkazuna5934 Год назад +9

    I love your collaborations with Brent. Viva la Cerro Gordo.

  • @lindabartoli8180
    @lindabartoli8180 Год назад +2

    You guys are so grounded. What you just did is DANGEROUS.

  • @markae0
    @markae0 Год назад +30

    Good thing the tunnel kept collapsing right away, not five minutes after you passed it , when going in deeper.

    • @ligametis
      @ligametis 11 месяцев назад +4

      I am clueless, but what kind of mining is this? Like with zero structural support and without cleaning, reinforcing the entrance

    • @cuebj
      @cuebj 11 месяцев назад +2

      ​@Labas Labas It's not. It's untrained owner occupier adventure for RUclips entertainment. You might be surprised to know he is usually more responsible than when he started. Two guys of similar temperament reinforcing each other's recklessness tendency. But, if no other responsibilities, why not? The whole region is crumbly material, not solid rock granite

  • @hardrockuniversity7283
    @hardrockuniversity7283 Год назад +12

    Imagine the same situation but with the bottom half of a man trapped in the muck pile, quite a bit more room to work, and 500 tons or broken rock still above. been there, done that, proud of the men I worked with as they were lined up to replace tired or damaged bodies doing the actual work. Turned out well, no serious injuries.

  • @stephenmiller5023
    @stephenmiller5023 Год назад +178

    That whole 200 foot level looks to have been dug through a “ Fracture zone “ possibly created or a result of that 1872 Earthquake that rattled that whole area . Or that may be a level of just loose strata throughout that whole mountain from Eons ago due to volcanic / tectonic plate activity during the earths mountain building times. There’s reasons these areas are usually avoided by miners in general due to the serious nature of collapse & injury / deaths. Be wary and stay safe . Better to second guess your decisions than to seriously regret them. 😐. C-ya 🤞

    • @runs_through_the_forest
      @runs_through_the_forest Год назад +35

      i don't want to sound all doom and gloomy but i won't be surprised when one day brent and maybe some other guests don't come out.. have you seen his adventure down the chimney i think he called it? just endless pits where the main ore deposit was extracted with loose everything hanging, unsupported stope like formations, just plain madness to really hope for the best and rappel down random bottomless holes.. ah well, guess he did some wild stuff while living, not everybody can say that..

    • @mr.j1381
      @mr.j1381 Год назад +17

      Might not be the worst idea to launch a major infastucture campaign spice the place up a bit for future mining modernized your hole in the ground.

    • @donaldkasper8346
      @donaldkasper8346 Год назад +15

      Stope or cross ore drop shaft debris. To save lift time, miners often backfilled unused tunnels of waste rock. Only the high graded ore was sent up.

    • @P_RO_
      @P_RO_ Год назад +21

      @@runs_through_the_forest I doubt Brent's really thought it through. In a big commercial operation you've got equipment and people ready to go if something goes wrong yet it can still be days before folks can get to you. How much of this is at or near Cerro Gordo? Are the local responders any good with mine rescues? It could take 24-36 hours just to get a rescue attempt started up there. I respect his honorable intentions, dreams, and desires, but dirt and rocks don't care about anything except obeying the law of gravity.

    • @Porty1119
      @Porty1119 Год назад +18

      ​@@P_RO_There are plenty of good things that can be said about Brent, but he's not a miner.

  • @CobCeo
    @CobCeo Год назад +21

    Brent makes me worried often. Really glad the snow slide of death didn't have any melt holes or things like a crevasse. You are brave, or too trusting. Look out for yourself all ways. I guess all is well that ends well, but not sure the entrance was a safe move for a family man. I am an old woman that worries. Like your channel.

    • @intothewildexplore
      @intothewildexplore Год назад +5

      creavasses to where? he did excavate that area, he knew what it was like without snow...

    • @CobCeo
      @CobCeo Год назад +1

      @@intothewildexplore the snow at that time was 20-30 feet deep.

    • @cuttlefishrampant5241
      @cuttlefishrampant5241 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@CobCeo Yes but Brent had been there many times before, and even Jason had been in there once before. They knew there wasn't a chasm under the snow, they knew it to be safe and level ground under the snow.

  • @PMPCMining
    @PMPCMining Год назад +34

    Rule #1. Never work under unsupported ground. If its collapsing, sluffing, or moving its unsupported. Mine rehab is dangerous work. Start from the front and move forward. Or just reopen another portal that has closed, but in better ground.

    • @lotharschiese8559
      @lotharschiese8559 11 месяцев назад +4

      There has to be a keen respect for the rock, its structure when excavating rock undergound! Eh?

    • @jamesthompson8008
      @jamesthompson8008 7 месяцев назад +1

      @PMPCMining Immediately followed by Rule 1a - IF timbering, lagging or other supporting structures are visibly damaged, DON'T TOUCH OR REMOVE THEM!

  • @Thetimecapsuletx
    @Thetimecapsuletx Год назад +35

    Those areas where the loose rock is falling, can be quite huge. Frank and Sharon, clearing out the Yankee Boy mine was interesting when Sharon was up on the top and feeding in golf balls. Took a lot of material for Frank down below, to find them.

    • @TekedixXx
      @TekedixXx Год назад

      If I recall it was over 100 cart loads spanning multiple weeks of work, and they still have material pouring out of that hole. I was thinking the same thing.

  • @MichaelJohnson-jt5cu
    @MichaelJohnson-jt5cu Год назад +42

    Good thing you guys have a structural engineer and a geologist on hand to advise on your mining excavations. There is a reason they use massive timbers to brace some of the tunnels in a mine.

  • @mridaho7871
    @mridaho7871 Год назад +20

    Good thing you hadn't gotten through and it started collapsing behind you. That could be a fracture zone and will take quite some effort to get past. A large boring machine drilling a tunnel in the Alps ran into one. The machine was stuck for months while they cemented the fracture then drilled through the cement.

  • @donaldkasper8346
    @donaldkasper8346 Год назад +9

    If you have an overhead shaft or stope backfilled with waste rock by the miners, you have to put in one overhead beam every 6 inches and work your way in.

  • @sjldfilms5126
    @sjldfilms5126 Год назад +13

    You both are brave! But that’s what explorers/prospectors do!

  • @midnitemike
    @midnitemike Год назад +15

    Love to hear what Dan Hurd would think of your snow slide of death! Jason this was a good video but I can’t believe you went in there. Be safe guys.

    • @semoneg2826
      @semoneg2826 4 месяца назад

      That cave look dreadful especially with all that snow surrounding it...I would be able to breathe inside

  • @kaboom4679
    @kaboom4679 Год назад +12

    Pretty sure you will have to crib and timber as you go even if you redirect over the top .
    Hard to say how many yards of gravel and rock are just waiting to slump into any void you create .
    You are not going to make fast progress there and do it with any safety margin otherwise .
    It may be safer and faster to go around that spot , even if it means redirecting the tunnel around the area of collapse .
    Worst case scenario would be if that zone extends to the surface , in which case you would probably have to start a new adit just in from that rotten area .
    OR , you could wait until next winter and pump water into the area , assuming it is below freezing at that depth . The ice may stabilize it long enough to clear a route , timber it , and , stabilize the tunnel . Alternately a grout slurry could do the same thing , but will not be cheap .
    The old mine really wants its privacy it seems .

    • @Yutani_Crayven
      @Yutani_Crayven Год назад +1

      Terrible suggestions. Widening the tunnel weakens the structural support around the area. Especially since it's unknown how large and in what direction the fracture is. And ice would introduce more cracks, too, destabilizing it further, instead of stabilizing it.

  • @iamelcapitan
    @iamelcapitan Год назад +12

    Looks like y’all might need some 5 gallon buckets and a assembly line to clear a lot of that loose rock. I think you’re on the right track though.

  • @patrickc.allenlive4373
    @patrickc.allenlive4373 Год назад +3

    Exciting movie! Real adventure. Thank you! Jason.

  • @MindsetOfTheRich
    @MindsetOfTheRich Год назад +6

    thank you for letting us come on your adventures, love your content !

  • @Tsuchimursu
    @Tsuchimursu Год назад +11

    you just need to organise "the omega day" and have a bunch of volunteers chaining buckets out the mine

  • @jayarnett4157
    @jayarnett4157 Год назад +17

    Jason, Brent and Scott, great exciting adventure. Don't give up. We enjoyed every minute of it.

  • @jimmime
    @jimmime Год назад +32

    One step forward, two steps back. That's the life of a miner, just keep going forward!

    • @jimmime
      @jimmime Год назад +2

      @@runs_through_the_forest Have you ever dug yourself out of a hole? LOL

    • @runs_through_the_forest
      @runs_through_the_forest Год назад +4

      @@jimmime i usually dig myself into a hole.. damn this is going nowhere is it? 🤐🤣

    • @jimmime
      @jimmime Год назад +1

      @@runs_through_the_forest That's what I was trying to say.😆

  • @1kreature
    @1kreature Год назад +5

    That almost seems like backfill.
    Maybe a filled vertical shaft?

  • @TyMoore95503
    @TyMoore95503 Год назад +12

    Honestly, that was really sketchy. Maybe more than you realize. To open up that addit you are going to have to completely level clear it out, starting with 20 feet of snow removal at the front. Once you restablish that incline at the portal, your going to need to go slow, and carefully, retimbering each section. In a lot of ways a completely new mine is safer...to open that thing up properly, you are looking at moving thousands of cubic yards of material. Once you get through that fracture zone it will be easier. Stay safe, Guys!

  • @markroper9269
    @markroper9269 Год назад +3

    Patience is rewarded.....and caution is too!!! Great video!!

  • @B0NGSHEAD
    @B0NGSHEAD Год назад +3

    Thanks to Jason, Brent and Scott for the Educational videos that remain free to watch to this day. You have inspired me a lot and have to appreciate been hard on you'r tools. That short spade is normally used for vertical digging using you'r forearm to support the whole handle. My bulldog has a slight fracture and was basically unavoidable. Hope you guys find some gargoyles.
    I have worked with Zinc for 16 years now and believe you could be onto some amazing

  • @vladdracula2643
    @vladdracula2643 3 месяца назад

    You boys just love to saw the limb you're standing on, you're either very brave or lacking in respect for the mine. I love what you do and respect it to a great degree, please stay safe.

  • @jasonwcoleman250
    @jasonwcoleman250 Год назад +44

    The best shovel I've ever used has been a steel handled Fiskars brand. I've had it for at least 10 years now and it's received nothing but compliments from others who have used it. It's about the same weight as a wood handled shovel, I think it's because the handle shape isn't round, it's more like an egg 🥚 which adds rigidity while keeping the weight down.
    I would strongly recommend this shovel to anyone who has to move earth, it will change your perception of how holes can be dug.

    • @mdhaynie
      @mdhaynie Год назад +4

      For tight spaces a M43 or M51 entrenching tool locked in the 90 degree position would be good. It’s like the pelican tool mentioned below, but it folds up and is less expensive.

    • @jonnymoka
      @jonnymoka Год назад +1

      Agreed

    • @thatguy2201
      @thatguy2201 Год назад +2

      Cyclone Pelican Pick, standard piece of equipment in every Australian underground mine, and above ground too.
      You'll move more coarse material and works far better in confined spaces than a shovel.

    • @baseballjustin5
      @baseballjustin5 Год назад

      ​@@mdhaynie m32 Abrams also works for making holes lol

    • @mdhaynie
      @mdhaynie Год назад +2

      @@baseballjustin5 if that doesn’t work we will need to drop a MOP or MOAB

  • @johntenhave1
    @johntenhave1 Год назад +3

    I was terrified but could not stop watching. I would have called it quits faced with having to slide down a snow face of unknown stability…great video..

  • @JD-ou2ce
    @JD-ou2ce Год назад +6

    You left that as a death trap. At least the old timers had the sense to board it up

  • @robertdutton2950
    @robertdutton2950 Год назад +5

    I think you should put safety first and maybe do some timber in the entrance and improvement on tunnel. It's not worth someone getting injured or losing their life.

  • @carlspiva5570
    @carlspiva5570 Год назад +3

    Man you are living the life, love how you stick it out with Brent... Brent, you need like 20 guys to go back in & then make some better headway with better manpower.

  • @tarmach523
    @tarmach523 6 месяцев назад +1

    I can smell that fresh snow! I could x-ski for miles there wow! I love these videos, many of my mum’s side of the family along with my husband are/were miners.

  • @markg3025
    @markg3025 Год назад +7

    Yikes collapsed timbers signals a need to turn back for the sake of safety.

  • @chuckerickson6721
    @chuckerickson6721 Год назад

    Thank you Jason a great video with my morning coffee !

  • @earlaagaard8175
    @earlaagaard8175 Год назад +1

    A "catty-wampus" beam, and a flow of rock, are sending a pretty clear message, guys!

  • @lolawallace2186
    @lolawallace2186 Год назад +1

    Awesome Adventures gaining valuable knowledge!!! 😎✌❤

  • @andrewgump3667
    @andrewgump3667 Год назад +2

    Looks like so much fun!

  • @frackstonwilson685
    @frackstonwilson685 6 месяцев назад +1

    Be careful and safe in those dangerous old mines!

  • @hankb9104
    @hankb9104 11 месяцев назад +1

    These guys worked hard today. Never forger though the men who built these mines did so with HUGE effort and risk. No power equipment, trucks, electricity, communications, etc. Everything was hauled in and out with mules and wagons. Food was sparse, it was hot, cold, dirty and simple injury or illness could mean death.

  • @ReclusiveMountainMan
    @ReclusiveMountainMan Год назад +13

    Dynamic duo. This a great collaboration. Thanks for bringing us along in the safety of our homes. ;p Stay safe, guys.

  • @VendettaProspecting
    @VendettaProspecting Год назад +1

    Jason 😂, 13:00 at this point I expected to to start the dialogue of: I love my family, friends, if we don’t make it ….. 😂😂😂. Soooo much fun underground brother man 🤙🤙

  • @barryclarke3010
    @barryclarke3010 Год назад +2

    You should clear out to floor level then drive in timbers above and side were its coming in ,it will be slow but better than getting buried

  • @1971jwing
    @1971jwing Год назад +6

    Glad you guys are safe. That was a bit of a nail biter. Until next time. Great health to all.

  • @ZoonCrypticon
    @ZoonCrypticon Год назад +3

    @14:40 It would have been worse, if you´d have crossed that part and then afterwards the collapse took place. No option of return. That is creepy down there in the mines !

  • @frothinggrom9170
    @frothinggrom9170 Год назад +1

    Appreciate all your vids & humble nature...hope to see u on other side...God bless!

  • @d.t.4523
    @d.t.4523 Год назад

    Thank you, Keep working. Good luck! 👍

  • @iainpaton1865
    @iainpaton1865 Год назад +2

    Keep the great videos coming friend from Scotland thanks 😊

  • @kelaarin
    @kelaarin Год назад +4

    Yes, it would definitely help to have a tunnel you could use to escape the mine if the hoist were ever incapacitated.

  • @froglizard6135
    @froglizard6135 Год назад +1

    That looks like so much fun!

  • @rockman531
    @rockman531 Год назад +7

    Hey Jason, BIG thumbs up! Should only take a week or 2 to muck all that loose dirt & rock out to the portal! Start digging! Brent needs a couple of the small, folding Army shovels to dig with - made for cramped spaces. Hopefully Brent will do more work in there! Glad everyone is safe! Take Care, Jim

  • @Thudd100
    @Thudd100 Год назад

    Thanks for the trip

  • @Phoenix_Enterprises
    @Phoenix_Enterprises Год назад +1

    Mining is not for the timid...lol thanks for sharing...fun stuff.

  • @carlwest859
    @carlwest859 Год назад +5

    Place some timbers to stop the loose material from trickling down. Start shoring it up proper as you dig in a little at a time.

    • @semoneg2826
      @semoneg2826 4 месяца назад

      Timber??? They didn't go in to work they are having fun

  • @Diogenes2077
    @Diogenes2077 Год назад +5

    Good that you got out safe, better if you stayed out I guess.
    I mean you move a softball sized rock and that happens.
    So what about those smaller collapses you climbed over on your way in. What if your climbing over them loosens a softball sized rock and that happens?
    You need a way to support those spots before you go on and make them passable again. That way there is at least a chance that people move in with rescue equipment if anything happens.
    I think there has been a reason why they didn't open it up back in the days. Probably they considered it to difficult and to dangerous.
    Usually old mines are closed up because people die doing what you do there.

  • @casedoumasr656
    @casedoumasr656 Год назад +2

    Great adventure like the old miner said just a little bit more ⛏️ and we will be clear .You are closer ❤️🤔

  • @christurley391
    @christurley391 5 месяцев назад

    Thanks again

  • @baseballjustin5
    @baseballjustin5 Год назад +3

    Love seeing these videos of you and Brent
    Def a fun side of youtube im not used to. Hope you guys stay safe.
    Id probably try steel ibeams woth wood to support, time to remake the supports

  • @TheN30M
    @TheN30M Год назад +7

    what about, building some new support beams to prevent it from collapsing further? would be needed no matter what right?

  • @EddieSchirmer
    @EddieSchirmer Год назад +2

    it seems to me, that ti may be time to invest in some timber (ouch right?) and do a full timbering of that tunnel, and get some electric digger scoops in there to dig out a quarter yard at a time. be the only way i feel to really get access is just to get to it with machinery. granted, going at it by hand has a certain pleasure in its own way. sorting stone by hand for my own project the last 12 years has been pretty fun haha. i sort by size, and classify out the smallest dirt and gravels, and have made nice piles of Stack-ready stone for my crew and I. its a labor of love and Art, as i feel getting to working that Tunnel is for Brent.

  • @mikeking6851
    @mikeking6851 Год назад +13

    I'm certainly not an expert and don't know what is above the collapse. It seems the correct way to safely get in the omega is to rebuild it starting from the portal. After watching this...I'm wondering if it would be possible to dig down from ground level to the collapse and build square set framing and lagging to provide a safe way down to the omega? I'm not sure those are correct terms. Basically, build a ladder down from ground level. My thought is that so much has collapsed that there has to be a large hole already void going up toward ground level. If not sure Brent has big enough equipment to pull that off or the wood to build it.

    • @missingremote4388
      @missingremote4388 Год назад +1

      There is dead people down there.

    • @steveanderson9290
      @steveanderson9290 Год назад +1

      I sincerely doubt they have the budget to make that tunnel section even remotely safe. I'm not an expert either, but I suspect the vertical option would be even more expensive. Heck, just the timber cost these days would be astronomical let alone the equipment and expertise to install it. I suppose the adoption of, ahem, "period appropriate" mining techniques could reduce the monetary costs if only Cerro Gordo was in some third world country, but here in the US you are stuck with contracting using techniques with a low probability of killing anyone. Despite it's siren song, I would forget about the Omega entrance until you get the money to make it safe.

    • @JtagSheep
      @JtagSheep Год назад

      @@steveanderson9290 Brent has plenty of money I just think he wants to explore if it even connects to the main mine before putting any substantial work into the tunnel. I do agree its risky to work there but its gotta be done.

    • @Jmstraubgamer
      @Jmstraubgamer 4 месяца назад

      @@JtagSheep Not to mention that Jason also has his own timberland and a sawmill where he makes his own timbers. While they dont live right next door it would be possible for Jason to make timbers and either have them shipped or move them himself.

  • @AmericanMadeAdventures
    @AmericanMadeAdventures Год назад +2

    I wish so bad I could have been there to help move the rock out of the way for you guys. Great vid. Thumb up and shared.

  • @DeliciousDeBlair
    @DeliciousDeBlair Год назад +4

    Y'all need a dedicated snow plow blade for your little Kubota there.
    One of those that splits in the middle to push to both sides equally and makes a track wider than the machine say by a foot on each side.

  • @stephenmiller5023
    @stephenmiller5023 Год назад +2

    One more comment from me here , don’t be discouraged. Up at the Main mine in Bodie California ( Brent did a video from there I think last year or year before) there were a couple of miners who leased access and one day while out of the mine on a lunch or rest break heard a huge rumble from the portal . Once the dust cleared and they were able to regain access back in they were amazed to see the collapse had exposed a huge vein of very rich ore chock full of gold. The leaser’s of the mine made an agreement to sell it back to the main owners for a very tidy sum at the time & it made headlines around the world once that vein proved its worth . Only problem here is Brent is the one working it & he already owns all the rights .😆👍😉. Good luck guys in your endeavors.

    • @showgirlsaroundtheworldada4484
      @showgirlsaroundtheworldada4484 Год назад +2

      Somebody else owned the mineral rights from day one unless Brent bought them out

    • @stephenmiller5023
      @stephenmiller5023 Год назад +2

      @@showgirlsaroundtheworldada4484 Since Brent bought the entire town over 3 years ago now I just naturally figured he owned the mineral rights underground as well . Since he mined & made silver produced from the ore already I’m pretty sure he has the right to do so. I could be wrong however…..

    • @notsure6183
      @notsure6183 Год назад

      @@stephenmiller5023 It was bought by an "investment group" They are hoping to use it as a corporate resort in the future. They are frauds.

    • @showgirlsaroundtheworldada4484
      @showgirlsaroundtheworldada4484 Год назад

      @@stephenmiller5023 he has a previous vlog stating that the people that owned the mineral rights were going to lease out to a commercial company. So no he did not buy the minerals rights to the land to start with. Most people will never sell the mineral rights when they sell a property anyway. They make far too much revenue. You as the landowner can go thru tons of crap with them tearing your land up too.

  • @donaldfitzgerald8950
    @donaldfitzgerald8950 Год назад

    A whole lot of rucking lol! Keep up the adventures! Love it all, even the work! Lol!😅

  • @GreenForce82
    @GreenForce82 Год назад

    "the mountains win again"
    Blues Traveler.
    But dang iffin they ain't trying to fight it, to explore and entertain us!

  • @dieselstreet8057
    @dieselstreet8057 Год назад +1

    Absolutely brilliant, the best underground video I've seen in ages! It would be good if it's possible to sure up the entrance portal not just to ease but I don't like the look of them rocks and if assistance was required the portal would be much easier to find, keep up the good work lads.

  • @carol242
    @carol242 Год назад +1

    Hey, I was looking forward to seeing how you got back up that slide!

  • @oxygen454
    @oxygen454 Год назад +2

    Does this mean Brent will have a video for this weekend too? 😊

  • @sdelling1
    @sdelling1 Год назад +2

    Just keep up the good work. It will pay off some day!

  • @JIGgameoverSAW
    @JIGgameoverSAW Год назад +1

    Nice to see this little adventure from your side of the camera :D

  • @c8089923
    @c8089923 Год назад +3

    Is there a level / adit above the Omega tunnel that is collapsing into this tunnel?

  • @WestCoastGoldProspecting
    @WestCoastGoldProspecting Год назад +1

    I went in to my first mine today here in southern Oregon. Detected the walls a bit but no luck . Glad you didn’t die bro 😂👊

  • @amyhepker9025
    @amyhepker9025 Год назад +9

    I think a steel rake would work better. You should also have a small cart of some kind to take away the gravels and rocks. Y'all should be pulling out that that keeps falling and then brace it.

    • @stillinfamous
      @stillinfamous Год назад +1

      I was thinking the same thing but just disperse the gravel on the floor since it would be way less effort.

  • @hondolane3125
    @hondolane3125 Год назад +1

    It looks like you have your own version of the Oak Island "Money Pit" there!

  • @seanparchim9165
    @seanparchim9165 Год назад

    I was rooting for you guys next time✌️ Napa California

  • @EastBayFlipper
    @EastBayFlipper Год назад +1

    That was a really entertaining video 😀👍
    Im so glad that you're collaborating with Dan Hurd prospecting so I could find your videos 😎

  • @deville.c
    @deville.c Год назад

    Super cool

  • @ravoniesravenshir3926
    @ravoniesravenshir3926 Год назад +4

    @mbmmllc
    Could you process whatever keeps falling down to see if there is anything useful in that? I mean, if you can find something in there, then this isn't a complete loss.

  • @drewpackman2929
    @drewpackman2929 Год назад +6

    As cavers we used to treat digs like that as a long term project.
    8 people. Buckets, crow bars, shovels, hoes, a red wagon to move the buckets. Just did, dig, dig. Trip after trip. We always made it fun. Most of the time we would get in after hard work. Does it move any air?

    • @kaboom4679
      @kaboom4679 Год назад +5

      Long term dig projects always suffer from recruitment challenges , and this is often the biggest impediment to forward progress .
      That rumbling noise like you heard in the video will reduce your recruitment strategy to blackmail and bribery , I don't care HOW much depth potential you have or possible miles of virgin borehole you predict .
      I recall one project that had 20+ regular participants , until , a deep distant rumble was heard .
      Suddenly the workforce was down to half that number and half of the remainder was just waiting on the first wave to exit .
      We learned to stop scheduling trips when the nearby quarry was blasting ...

    • @Jagabot_Esq.
      @Jagabot_Esq. Год назад

      Yes, air is coming out of the tunnel from the direction of the collapse, when they were there 9 months ago you could see moss swaying in the wind.

  • @jaratt85
    @jaratt85 Год назад +8

    There's two sounds you never want to hear in a hard rock mine: sudden cracking and the falling of rocks, and a low growl or high pitched yowl that tells you someone has made it their home and doesn't want you there.
    I guess that if they wanted to actually reopen that section of the mine they'd probably want to put up expanded steel caging and shotcrete it to support it safely right? Timbering probably would be more expensive and less safe right? Brent definitely needs some of those muckers like they use in opal mines in Australia to clean that place out.

    • @Porty1119
      @Porty1119 Год назад +2

      Either one of those walk-behind skid-steers or a half-yard LHD. I'd be most comfortable with a remote-control machine considering the proximity to what is essentially an uncontrolled drawpoint. That collapse is more dangerous than it looks.

    • @TyMoore95503
      @TyMoore95503 Год назад +1

      I agree. Expanded or corrigated steel arches and injectable concrete. Loose rocks are scary in a mine. Always. Gravity and mass respect no one.

  • @jimwednt1229
    @jimwednt1229 Год назад

    Nature makes you work for it !

  • @BitterDemo
    @BitterDemo Год назад

    You have to remember the easier it is the harder it is to get out. I learned that many tears ago in a salt mine in Hutchison, Kansas when we were driving a hew deain tunnel.

  • @ARGONUAT
    @ARGONUAT 11 месяцев назад

    Take good care of our Brent. We’ve grown rather fond of our Cerro Gordo guide.

  • @haroldishoy2113
    @haroldishoy2113 Год назад

    Incredible snowfall this year. Ski Cerro Gordo!

  • @MadMaxBeyondThunderBone
    @MadMaxBeyondThunderBone Год назад +1

    17:50 on our end it was worth the work . Outstanding gents👍

  • @davidmccleary5540
    @davidmccleary5540 Год назад

    Great video but be careful. Wow

  • @nocapyoulackn3594
    @nocapyoulackn3594 Год назад +1

    Idk if I could be under ground with all that going on lol great video

  • @frozenpann
    @frozenpann Год назад +2

    You can thank Dan Hurd for my subscription. Been following him for quite some time. I'd jump at the chance to crawl into that mine!

  • @PKIllinoisFIN
    @PKIllinoisFIN Год назад

    Get mine going!

  • @Mmlj68
    @Mmlj68 Год назад +2

    One of the best wood shovels you can get is from poles inc but they cut the tips of they are used to dig utility poles.

  • @lindatoole4531
    @lindatoole4531 Год назад +1

    I’m glad you weren’t alone in their when it happened.

  • @Thetimecapsuletx
    @Thetimecapsuletx Год назад +2

    It’s like a dangerous game of Jenga. 😱

  • @patmccrady6063
    @patmccrady6063 Год назад +15

    Could that have been a tailings shaft that collapsed? Just doesn’t seem like a roof collapse would be that fine.

    • @RexSkittles
      @RexSkittles Год назад +7

      That is my question too. They need to look at the rocks with a geologist to determine if they were broken naturally or from mining. It might be a tailings pile shoved off in another section of the mine. If that’s so then there’s a whole lot of old activity on the other side that needs exploring!

  • @timothydeyoung5653
    @timothydeyoung5653 Год назад +3

    Is that loose stuff coming down possibly ore, or mineral rich, what makes such loose gravel happen in bed rock?

  • @lotharschiese8559
    @lotharschiese8559 11 месяцев назад

    With the right tools and a scaling bar, some timbering and determination. Yes, constructive effort is definitely required! That's where the fun is!

  • @macfilms9904
    @macfilms9904 Год назад +3

    Jason - the collapse almost looks like muck, but that wouldn't make sense - is it the country rock and if so, why is it so broken up? All that stuff coming down reminds me of failed stopes you see.

  • @aaronkeeth651
    @aaronkeeth651 Год назад +2

    can't say with all the exploring abandoned mines channels and level's of experience that this is any kind of surprise.
    lucky to get out alive.without doing a full rehab..... it's just a matter of time before the grim reaper gets his due😮