The Cowboy Line Shack

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  • Опубликовано: 6 янв 2025

Комментарии • 272

  • @robdavidson4945
    @robdavidson4945 2 дня назад +3

    In the summer of 1972 I was 17 working as a "hayshaker/Cowboy" for the old Circle C ranch headquartered in New Medows, Idaho. At the time it was the oldest and biggest ranch most of the job was picking up or stacking hay on trucks only helping with cattle and horses occasionally. The ranch was over 100,000 acres scattered over a large chunk of West central Idaho. The hay was moved to wintering grounds. The crew stayed in line shacks and bunkhouses that had holes big enough to throw a cat through. Rattlesnakes and badgers came up through a couple badger holes in the floor. I woke up one morning put on my boots before I realized I had a HUGE bull snake under my bunk. The rattlesnakes were in there also but mostly in the rocks on the way to the outhouse. The outhouse was the place the Black Widow Spiders hung out. Yep working nature was wonderful.

    • @ArizonaGhostriders
      @ArizonaGhostriders  День назад +1

      Pretty much everything could bite you, stab you, or sting you there. Wow!

  • @Snuffy03
    @Snuffy03 2 дня назад +28

    Gooooood Saturday morning Santee. I have always had the utmost respect and admiration for the cowboy and his way of life, and your videos always remind me what a difficult life it was. This video, like all your others, gives you that kind of "you are there" vibe. Heck, I'm 72 now but your videos on Saturday morning turn me into the 8 year old, in front of the tv, mesmerized by six guns, shoot 'em ups, and galloping horses. Thanks pard.

  • @ericruss6734
    @ericruss6734 2 дня назад +2

    When I was researching chuck boxes, for a chuckwagon that I was planning, I saw a line shack with a chuckbox mounted on the wall. It could be taken down and placed in a wagon if they needed to. As always, I really enjoyed the video. Happy New Year, Santee!

  • @thomasallen3818
    @thomasallen3818 День назад +2

    Santee, I’m from Kingsville Texas, born and raised in. It’s the home of the King Ranch. I actually grew up on a ranch south of Kingsville, but my family also had diverse businesses in town and throughout South Texas. One of my best friends going up was Tommy Armstrong, whose father was a vice president of the King Ranch. Tommy and I grew up hunting together on the King Ranch, something that will run over $25K nowadays. Tommy died when he was 21, he had finished mowing the polo field for an upcoming weekend and was loading the tractor on the trailer and it flipped over and crushed him. He was his dad’s heir to his portion of the ranch, and since he died it went to his cousin Tio Kleberg.

  • @Sleeperdude
    @Sleeperdude 2 дня назад +7

    Thanks for the video

  • @franks6857
    @franks6857 2 дня назад +15

    Thanks Santee for revealing to us another real piece of American history!

  • @michaelpage4199
    @michaelpage4199 2 дня назад +6

    These reviews are so amazing. Life was beyond tough back then.

  • @normangerring4645
    @normangerring4645 2 дня назад +6

    Interesting and nicely done. Thanks!

  • @johnraines4825
    @johnraines4825 2 дня назад +15

    Great one, Santee! Keep 'em comin', Pard!

  • @bobcarroll2805
    @bobcarroll2805 День назад +3

    Our cabin outside of Payson started as a line shack, it was built in 1871 and built on since.

  • @faceman96
    @faceman96 2 дня назад +2

    Haha! I was reading about line shacks. Looks like the telepathic telegraph is working. Great video.

  • @rhondaz356
    @rhondaz356 2 дня назад +15

    This was so enjoyable and very informative. You always make these videos so entertaining... FANTASTIC 🤠👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻

  • @SlickSixguns
    @SlickSixguns День назад +3

    Didn’t know these existed, but it makes sense

  • @Rags2Itches
    @Rags2Itches 2 дня назад +2

    I went through the Blizzard of 78. Five feet of snow in 3 days. Everything was closed for two weeks. Seeing this video and now thinking how much longer a Winter could last back in those days with nothing around you for miles? Just what you packed in and maybe some hunting ...it is a statement of just how hard it was and the caliber of the men that did the job.
    In my ancestry, I have a many times great uncle that froze to death (along with others) as a fur trapper for XY Company.
    Not enough supplies and little to no game, the Winter was that bad. His name was just a footnote in the Company's records.
    LOL and hooray for the Lone Ranger. My great grandmother used to listen to that show every week on the radio. When it came on the air, no one was allowed to make a peep; except her as she rooted for him to get the bad guys !!

  • @robertjensen1438
    @robertjensen1438 2 дня назад +6

    A cowboy thought he had 100 cows, but when he counted them, there were only 97.
    So he rounded them up.

  • @ScarletRebel96
    @ScarletRebel96 2 дня назад +4

    Would definitely prefer one of those shacks over a apartment unit , preferably located in the forest or a mountain

  • @marcosaraiva9205
    @marcosaraiva9205 2 дня назад +4

    A very tough and rough life does cowboys have back then! Have great 2025 Santee and family thanks for sharing!

  • @ralphperez4862
    @ralphperez4862 2 дня назад +2

    Another great episode. Thanks for making my Saturday complete. I’ve been in a line shack of sorts here in Idaho. It’s called Frenchman’s Cabin. A landmark on the north side of the Big Southern Butte. A sign on the door welcomes anyone to spend the night or come in and warm up should you need to protect yourself from the elements. It’s a great experience, should anyone have a chance. Thanks Santee

  • @KoniB.
    @KoniB. 2 дня назад +3

    I am so hooked on this channel. Thanks for great teaching content.

  • @trynsurviven2440
    @trynsurviven2440 2 дня назад +8

    Very interesting Santee thanks for sharing this.

  • @DALEf4u
    @DALEf4u 2 дня назад +2

    My grandpa as a young man rounded up stray cattle on horseback. Back in 1991 I spent a weekend in Palm Springs with my parents. We were at Gene Autrys hotel for breakfast when he and his wife came walking in. My dad struck up a conversation with him and told him that his dad worked on the 6666 Ranch in Texas. Mr. Autry said he knew that family well. Thanks Santee, I always learn something new!

  • @SmallCaliberArmsReview
    @SmallCaliberArmsReview 2 дня назад +5

    Them fellers were tougher than shoe leather! I'm pretty fond of modern insulation, but what amazing bunch of folks back then. Very cool video Santee!

  • @mattvermillion6062
    @mattvermillion6062 День назад +3

    Thank you for the fried rattlesnake recipe. Sounds yummy. :)

  • @TonyYork-KB9RAO
    @TonyYork-KB9RAO 2 дня назад +7

    Another great one Mr. Santee.

  • @greghardy9476
    @greghardy9476 2 дня назад +4

    Great one, Santee! Tidbits like this are always good to see!

  • @chubbethsthunder
    @chubbethsthunder 2 дня назад +2

    Santee, Absolutely love it. The Old West content keeps getting better. You and Mrs Pew Pew have a beautiful and blessed weekend. LORD GOD Bless and stay vigilant. Happy New Year!!!

  • @Theseus9-cl7ol
    @Theseus9-cl7ol 2 дня назад +3

    It must have absolutely sucked to have to live in one of those shacks during the winter. Those cowboys were hard men back then. 🤠

  • @timlacy2284
    @timlacy2284 2 дня назад +2

    Santee, Great Video and Information Thanks for sharing. I remember seeing and looking inside a Line shack on the Rowe Ranch jut outside of Fort Sill, Oklahoma in 1983 . Thanks Again Sir. God Bless Y'all You and Mrs. Santee.

  • @georgehenrich2753
    @georgehenrich2753 День назад +2

    Thank you for the wonderful information.....CG

  • @Aswaguespack
    @Aswaguespack 2 дня назад +2

    Always top notch productions and valuable historical info you usually don’t find anywhere else.
    If there was a RUclips Award for Best Theme Music Your Production would be consistently #1 every year.
    Thank you Santee m, Mrs Santee and your entire support staff for all you have done preserving the history of an important part of Americana

  • @jackthunderbolt4307
    @jackthunderbolt4307 2 дня назад +2

    I cannot get enough of cowboy stuff. You need a whole video of just cowboy facts you couldn't fit in other videos

  • @TimKoehn44
    @TimKoehn44 2 дня назад +2

    Great episode Santee! Those cowboys had hard winters. Thanks for sharing. Have a great weekend! Cheers!

  • @bigfokkerdog
    @bigfokkerdog 2 дня назад +2

    good rundown on these old shacks. I have seen them all over the west when I was younger and would adventure out with my dad on horseback.

  • @OpieDogie
    @OpieDogie 2 дня назад +2

    Another awesome video Santee! Thanks

  • @alacharger
    @alacharger 2 дня назад +2

    Thanks for another great video!

  • @graycloud057
    @graycloud057 2 дня назад +1

    And another good rootin tootin good job pard. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ This old cowboy appreciates ya. 🙏👍🏼Happy durn good new year.

  • @Z7d3nR4
    @Z7d3nR4 2 дня назад +3

    Interesting video. Thanks.

  • @mathewweeks9069
    @mathewweeks9069 День назад +2

    Your awesome be safe out there

  • @indigowolf556
    @indigowolf556 2 дня назад +2

    Thanks for the information. I never really knew much about this subject. Thank you for the history. And happy 2025. Looking forward to more terrific topics of the West! 🤠🤠

  • @joelhurley2678
    @joelhurley2678 2 дня назад +1

    Thank you Santee for sharing another great History Lesson. We here in Kansas are getting 8- 12 inches tomorrow. So I can relate to those snowed in Cowboys 🤠.

  • @TheHaydena76
    @TheHaydena76 2 дня назад +2

    Thanks for posting. When I eventually get home to Utah, I'll have to swing down to Arizona. I miss the West.

  • @brianfuller757
    @brianfuller757 2 дня назад +3

    Great video as usual.

  • @nagjrcjasonbower
    @nagjrcjasonbower День назад +2

    Nice! Happy New Year!

  • @Danny2310C
    @Danny2310C 2 дня назад +2

    Thank you for showing the old west and cattle 🤠👍👍

  • @bradleywilkerson8497
    @bradleywilkerson8497 2 дня назад +1

    I really enjoy your videos been watching them for a long time I'm 60 years old but I've always considered myself a cowboy never have wore a pair of sneakers always cowboy hats boots Jean's always loved the old west

  • @k.j.lindsey3048
    @k.j.lindsey3048 2 дня назад +1

    Another interesting video on line shacks. We just visited King Ranch this fall and it is a huge spread. They offered a driving tour with an older cowboy as the driver and we only saw a small part of it! Im glad of your clips from Monte Walsh. I think that movie showed the real flavor of it

  • @Norseman-k6z
    @Norseman-k6z 2 дня назад +1

    Another great one san tee.. your the greatest san tee .. thank you..

  • @546cowboy6
    @546cowboy6 2 дня назад +1

    My uncle at one time spent time in a line shack in Colorado as I recall. One year we went on vacation and went to that ranch in Rifle, CO.

  • @Natethefishguy-t9t
    @Natethefishguy-t9t День назад +2

    Great video 😁

  • @billm2078
    @billm2078 2 дня назад +2

    Love the content Santee. Hope to see you in some more movies.

  • @SandraPinkParanormal
    @SandraPinkParanormal 2 дня назад +2

    Awesome Video Thanks For Sharing 👍

  • @wiseguy4368
    @wiseguy4368 2 дня назад +1

    Here in Pacific northwest line shacks are still in use on open range during the summer many ranchers have a small cabins, campers adn travlel tralers in the Cascades Moutian and Eastern Oregon they use while watching over their cattle during the summers .

  • @jerseyred9554
    @jerseyred9554 2 дня назад +2

    Great episode Santee, something I never really thought of

  • @traviswebb5094
    @traviswebb5094 2 дня назад +3

    My great grandfather thought about moving the family to Oklahoma in the 20's. Found it was a dugout farmstead and heavily populated by rattlesnakes. He noped it right back to Kentucky.

  • @timroot4207
    @timroot4207 2 дня назад +1

    Thank you !!!

  • @millcreekrange
    @millcreekrange 2 дня назад +1

    Great Video Santee!! Men back then was definitely built different. Just imagine having to live like that today. There’s definitely some willing to try it, but most likely many would give up after a short while. See ya on down the trail and keep your powder dry!

  • @JG-six-gun
    @JG-six-gun 2 дня назад +2

    Thanks for the video!

  • @tracyblackfox152
    @tracyblackfox152 2 дня назад +2

    Love you videos so much and I can't click the mouse button fast enough to get them started! How does one offer up a topic question for a possible future video, though? Much obliged! Thanks for all you do!

  • @Tipi_Dan
    @Tipi_Dan 2 дня назад +1

    Somewhere out there, probably in the living room of a very wealthy man, is a painting called "The Line Shack". It was painted by the famous artist and illustrator Maguinnes, well known for his James Bond posters, but also his pulp fiction novel covers. I posed for this painting in my Tom Mix, and wearing a red wool jacket, while gripping my Marlin rifle, in 1975. At the time I had no idea how famous Maguinnes was, and I was 22 and full of myself. When he finished the painting he offered me one of a limited edition of prints made of it. I politely declined because I had no wall to hang it on. This, a decision I deeply regret to this day, as Mr. Maguinnes directly stated I would. Years later I contacted his son about the painting and prints. His father remembered the painting, but did not know who had it, and all the prints were gone. My self-recriminations knew no bounds. The painting depicts a dark and stormy night somewhere in the Rocky Mountains. A cowboy has stepped out of a line shack, warmth of a fire spilling into the darkness. He grips his trusty rifle, scanning the surroundings. At the other end of the panoramic scene, a puma can be seen hiding among the pines. If any one among your enthusiasts here has seen the painting, or might know of its location, I would greatly appreciate hearing about it.

  • @CandidZulu
    @CandidZulu 2 дня назад +1

    Can't feel to sorry for the old cowboys, that sounds like a nice way to spend the winter.

    • @ArizonaGhostriders
      @ArizonaGhostriders  День назад

      Unless it was the winter of '86 and you didn't have enough firewood to keep you warm.

  • @led8541
    @led8541 2 дня назад +1

    Great video Santee

  • @justinweaver8107
    @justinweaver8107 2 дня назад +1

    Hope you had a good Christmas and New year 😊

  • @readytogo6569
    @readytogo6569 День назад +1

    That was so interesting! Wanted a longer vid

  • @RogerEhinger-tg1hv
    @RogerEhinger-tg1hv 2 дня назад +1

    That opening clip and the Flatiron range clip were from the movie Will Penny. Worth watching.

  • @scenicdriveways6708
    @scenicdriveways6708 2 дня назад +1

    Another great episode Santee.
    Happy New Year to You, Mrs. Santee, and all the Arizona Ghost Riders.
    JT

  • @OSRgrumbler
    @OSRgrumbler 2 дня назад

    Enjoyed the video. It reminded me of one of my personal favourite Westerns: Will Penny (1967), starring Charlton Heston and Donald Pleasence. Happy New Year to you and your family from England. 😁

    • @ArizonaGhostriders
      @ArizonaGhostriders  День назад

      It should have reminded you since there are two clips in there from it. One of Heston's better westerns.

  • @classicgunstoday1972
    @classicgunstoday1972 2 дня назад +2

    As soon as I saw “Lineshacks”, I knew Will Penny was going to be involved! Very good western

  • @colinmoore7460
    @colinmoore7460 2 дня назад +2

    Loneliness was as much of a problem in isolated lighthouses. Especially if someone died. There is the story after a two man crew, one of whom died, and the only place to put the body was in a body bag hanging outside the main room window. The bag tore in a storm, freeing an arm...and causing the arm to tap on the window and seem to becon in the wind, driving the survivor insane with fear. When the supply boat arrived several weeks later, they found a corps and a mad man. Since then they used three man crews. Did anything similar happen?

  • @tyrranicalt-rad6164
    @tyrranicalt-rad6164 2 дня назад +3

    Reach for the sky Santee ! 💥🔫🤠

  • @stephenrice4554
    @stephenrice4554 2 дня назад +1

    Happy New year Santee .

  • @StevenBunker-d6v
    @StevenBunker-d6v 2 дня назад +1

    I can remember lineshacks on the old ranch i grew up on and it was over 100,000 acres

  • @classicgunstoday1972
    @classicgunstoday1972 2 дня назад +2

    “An acre is about 43,560 sq ft”. Spoken like a true Petroleum Landman (old school with an Allen Scale)! And a section is typically about 640 acres and each side of a section is a mile which is 5,280 feet. In old Spanish metes & bounds descriptions, their units of measurement are varas. A vara (in Texas anyway) is equal to 2.77 feet.

    • @ArizonaGhostriders
      @ArizonaGhostriders  2 дня назад +1

      Well, I got that from about 4 different websites and one book (not petroleum based),

    • @classicgunstoday1972
      @classicgunstoday1972 День назад +1

      @ those things I learned on day 1 when I started my career as a landman 27 years ago. Helps a lot on estimating acreage. Metes & Bounds descriptions on old land deeds often include little things like line shacks, barns, oak trees, pin oaks, cow skulls, tree stumps, fence posts, creek meanderings etc as points of reference and many these descriptions are used to this day even though many of those things have been lost to time and are not referenced on any map.

    • @ArizonaGhostriders
      @ArizonaGhostriders  День назад +1

      @@classicgunstoday1972 Yep. Gotta measure it somehow!

  • @erikhansen7766
    @erikhansen7766 2 дня назад +3

    Hey Santee, I actually didn't know this until recently, but my friend Jazi actually works at Old Tucson! So cool to know someone who's met you, since I haven't been able to get to Old Tucson myself since I was little.

    • @ArizonaGhostriders
      @ArizonaGhostriders  2 дня назад

      That's awesome! I am not sure I've met this person. If they work Yuletide we are ships passing in the night. Perhaps I'll get a good introduction at some point. Thanks!

  • @justinsane7128
    @justinsane7128 2 дня назад +1

    Well done pard

  • @joemortimer1763
    @joemortimer1763 2 дня назад +1

    Great episodie thar, Pard. Ya had to show the rattlesnake getting whacked along with a recipe fer it. Ya know, this is the Year of the Snake. 🤣🐍 Ya ruined the whole thang with a tintype of that thar varmint hornswagglin' rapscallion feller Sarsaparilla Joe at the end. 🤣 Was great seeing you! Keep up the great work!

  • @Thoroughly_Wet
    @Thoroughly_Wet 2 дня назад +2

    2:17 is that Charlie Sheen? *Joking

  • @martykitson3442
    @martykitson3442 2 дня назад +1

    A nod to those old line cabins, on many federal grazing permits the ranches holding those permits have an area set aside that can have a cabin on it, it's usually used in the summer when stock is on the permits then left as an emergency shelter for anyone who needs it the rest of the year, please refill the woodbox inside in case someone else needs it dry wood could be life or death in an emergency

  • @nilescho2688
    @nilescho2688 День назад +2

    Hi santee. What’s the movie clips you have scattered throughout this video? Especially the ones of the cowboys in snow

  • @FaidosWorkshop
    @FaidosWorkshop День назад +3

    I never expected a youtube channel about the old west, guns, and such to be so wholesome

  • @thomaslietzau2813
    @thomaslietzau2813 2 дня назад +1

    HOWDY SANTEE ! LINE SHACKS ARE STILL IN USE TODAY .. MOSTLY FOR THE GUYS TO HIDE OUT IN WHEN THE WIFE IS ON HER MOON CYCLE .. ANOTHER GOOD ONE ALL AROUND.. YOU AND THE FAMILY HAVE A GOOD WEEKEND ..ADIOS SANTEE

  • @terryschiller2625
    @terryschiller2625 2 дня назад +1

    Happy New Year to you Santee! I wonder if that's we're the phrase"cabin fever" came from? A long winter all alone for a cowboy had to take it's toll on you! Thanks for all your hard work and time Sir.🤠🇺🇲

  • @johnlea8519
    @johnlea8519 2 дня назад +1

    There are times when I would like to live in a Line Shack all year round, I prefer cattle to a lot of people 🐂🌵🤠

  • @gringo3009
    @gringo3009 2 дня назад +1

    I like your hat!

  • @erikwillis2181
    @erikwillis2181 2 дня назад +1

    this could work as a setting for a horror movie, maybe a group of cowboys being hunted by a wendigo that's a pretty classic winter monster.

  • @mrchiefbs
    @mrchiefbs 2 дня назад +1

    I finally got around to watching Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid recently and I definitely want to run away to Bolivia.

  • @jackthunderbolt4307
    @jackthunderbolt4307 День назад +1

    I know I suggest a lot of videos but surely there's a *wealth* of stuff you can talk about when it comes to the effect westerns have on sci fi.
    Off the top of my head: star wars (mandalorian/Boba fett especially), firefly and fallout new vegas

  • @Rollin_L
    @Rollin_L 2 дня назад +1

    There was a dugout on John Tunstall's ranch, on the Rio Feliz in New Mexico, where his hired hands stayed. (Including one William H. Bonney.) It is often called a choza. Its remains still exist, though support for the roof collapsed over the past decade or two. Sad it wasn't maintained just for its historic value by the property owners.

    • @ArizonaGhostriders
      @ArizonaGhostriders  2 дня назад

      Too bad, but I see this in a lack of preservation in a few historic places.

  • @MarSchlosser
    @MarSchlosser День назад

    Hey-lo Angelo! Summer in the Colorado Rocky Mtns freeze all night and sweat all day. that was better than a place I heard of, were two boys were supposed to guard feeder cattle on mountain pasture (Montana or Wash.) where grizzly bears outnumbered the cattle. That place was leased out, cheap, by the Park Dept. Yeah, might be some-buddy had to keep the bears fed. and, nope, no shooting at the bears. Last gentleman to lease it trucked in a few hundred head of mama cows, Longhorns, and bulls. When the cows started to calve the bears got busy. Did you know a Longhorn loves nothing better than a fuzzy medicine ball? By the time the snow flew, there were a lot fewer bears on the lease ground and a lot of very angry feds.

    • @ArizonaGhostriders
      @ArizonaGhostriders  18 часов назад +1

      That’s a heck of a story!

    • @MarSchlosser
      @MarSchlosser 2 часа назад

      @@ArizonaGhostriders Just a small one in the great wild West. In Time Life Books the Western Series, the Cowboys, they mentioned two youngsters who helped tail a herd of Longhorn to Montana, They sat their horses on the top of a coulee watching a cow calve. She got the calf up and then they spotted a devil bear, a griz, walking up the coulee sniffing at the smell of blood. Nose in the air, smelling it, too, a bull charged up the coulee, flipped the bear out of way and ran right to Mama looking for some love. to thank her big brave hero, she clouted him on the face and walked away. Than gave a coy look over one shoulder. 9 months and 9 minutes, folks say of the retinta (founder of the Longhorn breed). 9 month to calving, 9 minutes before she's bulling. Keep up the good work!

  • @LowPlainsDrifter60
    @LowPlainsDrifter60 2 дня назад +1

    Great that you used clips from 'Will Penny'......a real cowboy movie with a lot of realism.

  • @CowboyShortY4
    @CowboyShortY4 2 дня назад +1

    You can find Will James (Smoky the Cowhorse fame) illustrations in line shacks in Montana

  • @Paladin1873
    @Paladin1873 2 дня назад +1

    A small portion from the rock foundation of a line shack still sits by a creek on my property. I've tried to preserve it as a reminder that I am far from being the first person to live on this piece of ground in Montana. On a separate note, which Tom Selleck movie was that clip taken from?

  • @KidYuma1880
    @KidYuma1880 2 дня назад +1

    Thanks Santee for another educated video that most cowboys or non but like the history of Old West hard way of living on ranches. I bet those shacks after riding all day winter or summer was welcomed. By the way Happy New Year to you and family rapscallion Santee-Kid Yuma

  • @anthonycalbillo9376
    @anthonycalbillo9376 2 дня назад +1

    You just described my apartment.

  • @fordenginebuildersv8power184
    @fordenginebuildersv8power184 2 дня назад +1

    The good ole days

  • @joshuatichota5046
    @joshuatichota5046 2 дня назад +1

    Thank you for the educational videos, half of the info I know about the old west has been through Arizona Ghost riders. Is it possible to do one on how the Native Americans in that area had influenced the wardrobe and culture in the southwestern regions? That is if you don't already have a video on that.

    • @ArizonaGhostriders
      @ArizonaGhostriders  День назад

      I've talked about it in regards to the cowboy. Watch my video on Botas. I think I mention it in there.

    • @joshuatichota5046
      @joshuatichota5046 День назад

      @ArizonaGhostriders okay thank you, I will go back and watch that one. 🙂

  • @jacktribble5253
    @jacktribble5253 2 дня назад +1

    "Run out and check the Northwest corner, see you in three months." That's when you know you have some land... Best of days.

  • @charlesmiller6826
    @charlesmiller6826 2 дня назад +1

    That was one tough life to live.

  • @simiouno6125
    @simiouno6125 2 дня назад +1

    I would live in one

    • @ArizonaGhostriders
      @ArizonaGhostriders  2 дня назад

      The desolation would get to me. I guess I'm more of a city folk.

  • @MrWheelchairPreacher
    @MrWheelchairPreacher День назад +1

    4:42 :) There's a couple of characters.

  • @MomentsInTrading
    @MomentsInTrading 2 дня назад +1

    Not sure if I had heard the term Line Shack before this.
    I own a little silver myself.