Well sir, I know those folks didn’t want that shelter, but what saw was a neat place to put in a little hand tool shop or a man cave. It appeared to be constructed quite well. I was waiting for the bricked in end to fall apart on you as you loaded that section, that would have been oh so not good for the morale! Nice looking finish yard when you were done, hope you figure out the BOBCAT issue, thanks for the update, enjoyed watching.
Thanks Terry! It’s pretty cool how it was done. That bricked end is surprisingly stout. I had to lay it down on the bricked end to load it and it never moved.
Well, that beats anything I've done since I've been doing dirt work. The weirdest thing I've done is digging a hole so a guy could bury a car he was hiding from his soon to be ex-wife. He didn't tell me what he was doing, I found out when he hired me to come back and dig it out after the divorce was final. Lol That was a good idea for the storm shelter.
It was taking up so much of their back yard. She said they had been in it only two times since they moved there. It was used more for her grandkids sledding down the slopes than a tornado shelter.
@@Dirtdaddy953 It could happen again if they already used it twice.....LOL. Just like folks who build on a side hill or near the oceans edge and then the house is gone. They usually say " nothing like that has happened in 40 years" but guess what.....LOL I have always felt that better to have something and not use..... it is better than not having it and need it.
Good job mate love your work looking forward to seeing more of your videos
@@malcolmyarnold6172 Thanks buddy!
Well sir, I know those folks didn’t want that shelter, but what saw was a neat place to put in a little hand tool shop or a man cave. It appeared to be constructed quite well. I was waiting for the bricked in end to fall apart on you as you loaded that section, that would have been oh so not good for the morale! Nice looking finish yard when you were done, hope you figure out the BOBCAT issue, thanks for the update, enjoyed watching.
Thanks Terry! It’s pretty cool how it was done. That bricked end is surprisingly stout. I had to lay it down on the bricked end to load it and it never moved.
Pretty interesting great video buddy 👍
Thanks!
So, serious question, how was the ventilation system plumbed in? How did that work?
It was vented out the top, no actual ventilation system.
Oh boy that was very interesting ‼️where did you take it all? Thank you 🌺🍍🌴🇺🇸✝️🤙🏽
I actually have it for sale on FB Marketplace. Lots of interested people but it’s heavy and that kind of scares folks away I guess.
Well, that beats anything I've done since I've been doing dirt work. The weirdest thing I've done is digging a hole so a guy could bury a car he was hiding from his soon to be ex-wife. He didn't tell me what he was doing, I found out when he hired me to come back and dig it out after the divorce was final. Lol
That was a good idea for the storm shelter.
Yeah, it was unique for sure. Never buried a car though...😂
Why would they want to get rid of it? They don't have a basement. This was their safe room in case of a tornado.
It was taking up so much of their back yard. She said they had been in it only two times since they moved there. It was used more for her grandkids sledding down the slopes than a tornado shelter.
@@Dirtdaddy953 It could happen again if they already used it twice.....LOL. Just like folks who build on a side hill or near the oceans edge and then the house is gone. They usually say " nothing like that has happened in 40 years" but guess what.....LOL I have always felt that better to have something and not use..... it is better than not having it and need it.
@@kidhenderson8260lol… I agree!