@@letsdig18 for something like this a paddle conveyor belt would probably be a lot more useful than a pump, the problem would be you would need a really big one in order to keep up with you. If you got a regular size mobile stacker conveyor like Charlie has, you would be dribbling mud onto it and mostly waiting for it to go instead of digging. And getting one in large enough to work fast would need a big crane lol
Over the years there have been countless comments about bigger buckets and concrete pumps. Chris has addressed this many times. Now he pretty much silently nods his head while we armchair operators weigh in on how he should do his job. I just watch and enjoy the privilege of looking over his shoulder while he takes us along.
no damn, I'm no expert on excavators and their buckets. But I have a neighbor with a 7-ton Volvo, and he does almost all the digging work with the "planting bucket"
The learning Value of your videos is off the charts! A person interested in equipment operating would be well served to watch your videos. Well done Sir!
I'd say you run grade rod for three years with a goon spoon next to ya a.k.a. a shovel, watching an expert and getting time in here and there on small tasks and build your way to this ...his videos are really great though and he is an amazing operator.
Funny that you mention watching his videos as a “how to”. I’ve never operated an excavator before, but approached the task with a whole lot more confidence after doing so. I rented a mini-excavator to clean up around the new homestead and ended up using the front blade/bucket trick to move rock that was well over the boom’s lifting capacity. Can’t wait to do it again!
@@curtislavender5880 - I have watched Chris for years and rented a mini excavator for a few trenches to put in a home irrigation system on the ranch. I STILL sucked!,!! Hahaha. I can do a lot of challenging things with a loader, Zoom-boom (telehandler), even a skid steer (mostly). For some reason I am not very good at running an excavator or even a rear attachment for a boom on a tractor or loader!! There’s some natural talent as well. I got missed on that one but you Mr Lavender must have been blessed!!!! That’s awesome!! Especially the boom blade trick for bigger stones/boulders. I’m jealous!!! Heh heh.
I cannot fathom the actual cost of these latest two projects, the 10 acre pond and this one! These videos are absolutely fascinating. Thank You for all of your hard work and for taking me along, I'm enjoying the rides for sure.
Other than 6k-15K forklifts and a mobile Grove crane, I've never operated as much as a skid steer. Two days ago I was offered the opportunity to haul some sloppy material from a pond dredging with a Terex TA300. While the steering took a few loads to get used to, I was as happy as a pig in mud and look forward to the day when I get another chance to sit in drivers/operator seat. I know being an operator is old hat for most of the folks watching your channel, but it was downright exciting for this (nearly 60 year old) to putt around for a few hours with tons of mud in the bed, dump it and go back for another load. I truly enjoy your content and look forward to future videos.
Only you, Chris, can scoop mud with mats and make mud moving shape up after being patient and keep on scooping. Thank u for explaining each detail. Loved the video. God's blessings and stay safe.
You have moved a huge amount of mud sir. Anyone tuning in for the first time may think it will never end. The view from the excavator really shows how much mud has been transferred. Keep up the good work Chris.
29 minutes and 1.4 likes is a pretty good indicator Chris is most definitely fascinating to watch. It's like a university class in Movin' Mud 101. I have no doubt it's gonna keep me watching glues to my screen.
That looks just like the mud that use to come out of the bailer on the oil field rig my dad ran. Brings back a lot of good memories. His dozer man got stuck one time making a location and had to get more equipment to get it out. Thank you for sharing. Love and Peace
Hey Chris I’ve watched pretty much all your videos an I like all of them. But I like when people tell you how you should do your job. What they don’t understand is that you probably done this all your life so you know how to do it an the most efficient way of doing it. I’m just saying it’s funny to me.
there is a way to clean that mess up but mother nature has too help ... winter time freeze ,, other then that scoop splat repeat .. good video Chris ..
Alot of mud, the spot where your dumping, it's gonna take awhile for it to dry, but it should grow some really good grass, eventually, thanks for sharing Chris, 💪🇺🇸
The tailgate on John's haul truck worked well, that was potentially your biggest Achilles heel for this project having that thing sliding around on that slope
Chris. Love to watch you operate your equipment Thank You for the videos and the dialog as you operate. It look's wild out there were you are dredging that pond out. Yes i agree with you those two Volvo girl's will need a good bath. Do not forget to clean behind their ears Ha Ha Ha. Please Take Care of your self Plus Be Very Care Full around all Equipment.
I've had soup thicker than that and he's out there driving and working an excavator in it. Give me 10 minutes in it and he'd had a brand new "my worst recovery ever" video, lol.
Man, That has to get on ya nerves after awhile Chris !! lolol... Seems like it takes forever to make any progress, don't it ? Like you said, it is moving, and coming out just takes a good minute !! lolol... But, you guys will have it licked before ya know it and out and gone... Great as always Chris !! Have a Great Evening , and , On too the Next !! Got Storms moving in here in Western Ky this evening ourselves !! And the Wind is really Bad and the storms ain't even got here just yet !! Hope No Tornadoes spin up on this round , still cleaning up from last time the storms came threw !! Tornadoes tore up several small towns.... HAve a good one..
That is a big mess. This ground seems to be like we have here in South Estonia. Sometimes it's hard like asphalt, but if you make a cut then it turns to liquid. For that reason, I'm following that project with extra interest. 🙂 When you started this project I wondered how would I do it. Probably I would start it with cutting the further shore first and then transferring it all from there cut by cut. The left shore will be last. That is leaving extra room for maneuvering and transferring the mud. Shortly I mean that my cuts were perpendicular to your cuts. But things can be done differently. You are a high-level operator and I'm watching you with great interest. Cheers! 👍
If you can pull that much mud with a matt.. perhaps it's time to create a crazy wide mud bucket. Perhaps hinge the wide wings and use hydraulics to fold them out full width
Interesting project Chris, but not a fun one….that much mud, kind of mind numbing. Great planning and strategy on how to actually get through that mess. Enjoy watching you do these jobs. I learn a lot from watching you. Keep up the great work
I've never seen this much mud in my life. I feel for you Chris. Wish you could use the Mud Mat technique at least you can see the lava flow. Well Done.
Chris i watch all of your videos. i am not an operator but i have been around alot of them and you are one of the most knowlegable one i have ever seen. i really enjoy your videos. keep them coming buddy you are doing a great job. how did you and dirt perfect meet?
After looking at all that mud,only thing comes to my mind,could you imagine a person or animal getting stuck out in the middle of that.you’ve accomplished so much. Great video.keep on doing what your doing.👍👍👍😎😎😎
Watching you squeegee mud for days on end, I, with the authority invested in me by myself, hereby christen this project “Kīlauea Pond”! It certainly did look like an unending lava flow!
Obviously the method you are using is the best/most efficient for you and the equipment you have but is there a better method for dredging out a pond like this? If money was no object and you could have any piece of equipment you needed, what is the best method to use?
Hi from uk chris and john👋👍 hope everything goin well 👍 noticed that you mentioned long reach but I think you would struggle more although your moving more material the forces from a long arm would me more and I think would be just as bad for you guys as using a pump or dozer 😵 cos liquefaction happens that quick here ( I mean I watched johns machine slew 6 times over minute and he had to reposition himself and 4 slews later machine moved a foot and half at least🙈 your doing great job u2👌 don't need any more hassle from bigger machines or heavier ones either plus a long reach slipping would carry more momentum and be harder to save in event of the oops moments 🙈 thanks for your time guys be safe and see you soon 👍👋
I would really like to help you transferring all that mud... I only way I could help speeding it up is by watching your vid at 1.5x :-) :-) Great job as always Chris!
This is definitely the monotonous part of this project. Moving mud. I swear it doesn't look like you move anything. One full bucket of mud into the removal pit, and it doesn't seem to change. Lol Keep on keepin' on. It'll get done eventually. And look great after you put the finishing touches on it.
Damn... I couldn't do it even if I knew how! I'd feel claustrophobic and locked down. You're a brave contractor to tackle this situation. Of which I'm sure you'll pull off perfectly. Good lerd almighty that's A LOT OF MUD!!
Hell man, you should be holding weekly Mudfest every weekend out there! What a sippy hole... I'd run mats all the way out for the Dump and fill it in situ, it would go much faster and save on your equipment too...
At the 19:15 point, "SLOW" is right! Earlier the statement was made about budget for "long stick". I wonder if this refers to the project budget or other "budgets". Either way, when you look at the long term effect on equipment, fuel use, etc. if leasing/renting a long stick would not have been an advantage on this "project". The comments concerning dosing and the dipping was likely the way this job was priced and then budgeted. This multiple handling times of the removable of mud/dirt to me would not necessarily be the way you would competitively figure this job. Hope this was not a fixed job cost project, but some sort of cost plus non bid job.
You know some people are going to say that you should get a bigger bucket so you can move more material but I don't think they realize how big it truly is. Next video you need to have someone next to the bucket with a 5-gallon bucket for comparison.
See that’s what I thought a long reach would be nice but didn’t want to say anything Chris, those old draglines could throw mud a long way back in the day! As a kid I would go to where they were digging a pit for an oil well that was going to be drilled! I couldn’t ever do it but just watching those old coonass operators run that machine was amazing to watch, his hands and feet were always moving as he was building the levee for the called mud pit! They the excavator operators when as a welder I would do jobs at those wells and to watch those operators build the mud pit was as amazing, the levee was 20-25 feet high because it was going to settle and he had that machine up there and go up and down that tall steep pile all day long! Kinda like some of the steep climbs I’ve seen you making Chris , you’ve made a lot of steep climbs in and out of like the lake jobs you’ve done! Scary stuff but doesn’t seem like it would bother you my friend! That’s a good operator, and you on those mats can get sketchy at times! Thanks for sharing Chris and stay safe brother!👏🏻👏🏻👌🏻👌🏻👌🏻🤙🏻🤙🏻🤙🏻🇺🇸
Maybe the time will come when they want you back to take all of the mud out and make the bottom to be hard pack ground. Not sure how you'd make that happen but im sure you'd figure something out to make it all work. I'm sure having a hard ground to support a dozer would be a good thing to have when it comes to a pond. So the next time it need to be cleaned out you can use a Dozer.
here is a question for you and your uncle, you always do a lot of dredging but do you all ever think about getting floating attach tracks to put under to make the mud pits easier, just had to ask
I don't know how much the 220 weighs but you would need some big tracks to help float it then when you have a scoop of muck and reach out to dump it the machine would tip over like a canoe tips over when you lean too much ..
@@delbertconner5993 never seen one .. but if the cost of a long reach is out of the question per Uncle John then the cost of a amphibious excavator would be out of the question ,, with what they have too work with scoop splat dump repeat is the best method ,, or wait till mother nature puts a deep freeze in the ground then it would be less of a mess ,,
Thanks Chris for all your efforts to film, edit and post your content. I would be interested in how you price your projects. Do you have a set hourly rate for each piece of equipment? Do you price on a cost plus basis? How do you account for material, etc.?
Maybe one of the next machine Chris can get is a long reach excavator. 🤣 I can think of other jobs that are painstaking long to do again mudding sheet rock.
Having budget constraints from the client doesn’t give you many options for this job. Sometimes you just have to go back to basics. I was thinking of all the different things that would probably be in there, especially the odd dead body, didn’t think of the dinosaur fossils though😬😊 Take care & cheers 🐨🦘🥰
Seems that valley just was not meant to be dammed - wonder what the topography was like a few thousand years ago. Hope there is good music and etc to fill in the many hours of 'scoop and dump'.
Hahaha…! At about the 11:26min., mark when I saw that (whatever it was in your mouth) I immediately thought it was a “joint” (marijuana verity)…, after you had just talked about your feeling of not getting anywhere with movement of the mud, the day before…, I thought you lit on up to ease the stress…, made me laugh… Job is shaping up, Looks great.
You are the MUD-MASTER. I wondered if a specific wide scraper with a centre that fits securely when clamped in bucket with wood & metal for scraping use-?
Definitely a tough go but I'm sure you'll make it to the end and everybody will be happy. Is there anything going to happen up stream to stop all the silt from getting in again.
Maybe a partnership with Schwing. I believe their large pump can move around 100yrds/Hr. You could design a large hopper that an excavator could feed.
will it pump rocks, sticks logs, tires, household trash, bicycles, dead bodies and dinosaur fossils? Cause thats whats in this stuff
@letsdig18 I wonder if Jimmy Hoffa will turn up in that muck! 😉
@@letsdig18 🤣🤣
@@letsdig18 for something like this a paddle conveyor belt would probably be a lot more useful than a pump, the problem would be you would need a really big one in order to keep up with you.
If you got a regular size mobile stacker conveyor like Charlie has, you would be dribbling mud onto it and mostly waiting for it to go instead of digging.
And getting one in large enough to work fast would need a big crane lol
@@letsdig18 just put guards on the input that make oversize stuff fall out. It'll only be a small percentage of the mass after water and dirt..
Over the years there have been countless comments about bigger buckets and concrete pumps. Chris has addressed this many times. Now he pretty much silently nods his head while we armchair operators weigh in on how he should do his job. I just watch and enjoy the privilege of looking over his shoulder while he takes us along.
The Tonka drivers always have something to say.
What a great comment
Guins Cement Pumping Inc
no damn, I'm no expert on excavators and their buckets. But I have a neighbor with a 7-ton Volvo, and he does almost all the digging work with the "planting bucket"
Just of the bucket...as your 65 inch TV...that's about the close to true size...reference....
The learning Value of your videos is off the charts! A person interested in equipment operating would be well served to watch your videos. Well done Sir!
I'd say you run grade rod for three years with a goon spoon next to ya a.k.a. a shovel, watching an expert and getting time in here and there on small tasks and build your way to this ...his videos are really great though and he is an amazing operator.
I’d have to agree there im going through a trade program where they train you how to run heavy equipment and his videos have helped so much
Funny that you mention watching his videos as a “how to”. I’ve never operated an excavator before, but approached the task with a whole lot more confidence after doing so. I rented a mini-excavator to clean up around the new homestead and ended up using the front blade/bucket trick to move rock that was well over the boom’s lifting capacity. Can’t wait to do it again!
I have learned so much from watching chris he is a very good operator
@@curtislavender5880 - I have watched Chris for years and rented a mini excavator for a few trenches to put in a home irrigation system on the ranch. I STILL sucked!,!! Hahaha.
I can do a lot of challenging things with a loader, Zoom-boom (telehandler), even a skid steer (mostly). For some reason I am not very good at running an excavator or even a rear attachment for a boom on a tractor or loader!! There’s some natural talent as well. I got missed on that one but you Mr Lavender must have been blessed!!!! That’s awesome!! Especially the boom blade trick for bigger stones/boulders. I’m jealous!!! Heh heh.
I cannot fathom the actual cost of these latest two projects, the 10 acre pond and this one! These videos are absolutely fascinating. Thank You for all of your hard work and for taking me along, I'm enjoying the rides for sure.
Other than 6k-15K forklifts and a mobile Grove crane, I've never operated as much as a skid steer. Two days ago I was offered the opportunity to haul some sloppy material from a pond dredging with a Terex TA300. While the steering took a few loads to get used to, I was as happy as a pig in mud and look forward to the day when I get another chance to sit in drivers/operator seat. I know being an operator is old hat for most of the folks watching your channel, but it was downright exciting for this (nearly 60 year old) to putt around for a few hours with tons of mud in the bed, dump it and go back for another load. I truly enjoy your content and look forward to future videos.
Only you, Chris, can scoop mud with mats and make mud moving shape up after being patient and keep on scooping. Thank u for explaining each detail. Loved the video. God's blessings and stay safe.
You have moved a huge amount of mud sir. Anyone tuning in for the first time may think it will never end. The view from the excavator really shows how much mud has been transferred. Keep up the good work Chris.
That has to smell wonderful...like a fresh spring morning. LOL
That mud makes a lovely sound when it falls, it slaps harder than Will Smith :D
But I miss the tears of “poor me”!
Like a cow on a flat rock.
29 minutes and 1.4 likes is a pretty good indicator Chris is most definitely fascinating to watch.
It's like a university class in Movin' Mud 101.
I have no doubt it's gonna keep me watching glues to my screen.
That looks just like the mud that use to come out of the bailer on the oil field rig my dad ran. Brings back a lot of good memories. His dozer man got stuck one time making a location and had to get more equipment to get it out. Thank you for sharing. Love and Peace
When ever I see you push the mud around with the mat, it reminds me of the old movie the "Blob" or "Jabba the Hutt's" stomach .... 🤣🤣🤣
Takes a lot of patience to keep moving slop, I don’t miss it anymore…..stay safe and hydrated out there guys….
Hey Chris I’ve watched pretty much all your videos an I like all of them. But I like when people tell you how you should do your job. What they don’t understand is that you probably done this all your life so you know how to do it an the most efficient way of doing it. I’m just saying it’s funny to me.
That's like transferring diarrhea from one spot to another. lol. Thanks for the video.
You handled this mud pit like a field geologist and adjusted your attack accordingly. Great stuff!
there is a way to clean that mess up but mother nature has too help ... winter time freeze ,, other then that scoop splat repeat .. good video Chris ..
First it was the concrete pump people years ago, now it’s the get a snowcat people lol these arm chair operators are getting better and better
Alot of mud, the spot where your dumping, it's gonna take awhile for it to dry, but it should grow some really good grass, eventually, thanks for sharing Chris, 💪🇺🇸
That's why it's being put there. As he said in the other video.
@@JCrook1028 no shit
Using that mat to scrape back those huge amounts of mud is BRILLIANCE! Too bad you don't have a bucket that wide too!
The tailgate on John's haul truck worked well, that was potentially your biggest Achilles heel for this project having that thing sliding around on that slope
Funny how there’s always ppl that have a better way, that aren’t there, or paying the bills , love your vids 🤘🤘🤘
You should scratch around out in the middle and see if you find the drain plug.....🙃
It’s been done in the U.K., dredging a canal and pulled out an ancient wooden plug and drained the canal :o)
Watch the Volvo circling the drain.😊😊
I saw that remark somewhere else and thought I would pass that mental image along.
Chris.
Love to watch you operate your equipment Thank You for the videos and the dialog as you operate. It look's wild out there were you are dredging that pond out. Yes i agree with you those two Volvo girl's will need a good bath. Do not forget to clean behind their ears Ha Ha Ha. Please Take Care of your self Plus Be Very Care Full around all Equipment.
I've had soup thicker than that and he's out there driving and working an excavator in it. Give me 10 minutes in it and he'd had a brand new "my worst recovery ever" video, lol.
Overcoming a challenge is what it's all about in a job like yours bro. Safe travels
A project like this helps you appreciate some other projects. Keep up the good work!
Hey Chris hats off to you .. Id bet know one would have took this job..But its a challenge to make it happen ..KUDOS to you for never being beat
00:01 you could get a snowcat for pushing the mud up - tracks 5&1/2ft wide with 2.5 inch high stainless steel cleets
Well, there is at least one good thing about the job...I haven't heard a squeak out of the tracks! :D
It's the other 220 (Chris') that has the squeaky track.
Man, That has to get on ya nerves after awhile Chris !! lolol... Seems like it takes forever to make any progress, don't it ? Like you said, it is moving, and coming out just takes a good minute !! lolol... But, you guys will have it licked before ya know it and out and gone... Great as always Chris !! Have a Great Evening , and , On too the Next !! Got Storms moving in here in Western Ky this evening ourselves !! And the Wind is really Bad and the storms ain't even got here just yet !! Hope No Tornadoes spin up on this round , still cleaning up from last time the storms came threw !! Tornadoes tore up several small towns.... HAve a good one..
Love the mud videos, I'll say it again you really know how to manipulate the mud and get it move and hauled out.
That is a big mess. This ground seems to be like we have here in South Estonia. Sometimes it's hard like asphalt, but if you make a cut then it turns to liquid. For that reason, I'm following that project with extra interest. 🙂
When you started this project I wondered how would I do it. Probably I would start it with cutting the further shore first and then transferring it all from there cut by cut. The left shore will be last. That is leaving extra room for maneuvering and transferring the mud. Shortly I mean that my cuts were perpendicular to your cuts. But things can be done differently.
You are a high-level operator and I'm watching you with great interest. Cheers! 👍
If you can pull that much mud with a matt.. perhaps it's time to create a crazy wide mud bucket. Perhaps hinge the wide wings and use hydraulics to fold them out full width
Interesting project Chris, but not a fun one….that much mud, kind of mind numbing. Great planning and strategy on how to actually get through that mess. Enjoy watching you do these jobs. I learn a lot from watching you. Keep up the great work
The mud is so amazingly animated. Similar to lava but much messier.
Not as warm, either
Like cow plop.
Sounds ace slopping about
Acts like quick clay - fairly solid until it's disturbed or overloaded: ruclips.net/video/3q-qfNlEP4A/видео.html
A lot patience right their , slow and steady. Nice
I've never seen this much mud in my life. I feel for you Chris. Wish you could use the Mud Mat technique at least you can see the lava flow. Well Done.
Coming along real good Chris 👍👍👍👍
Gives new meaning to the phrase “happier than a pig in mud.” That mud pile would hold a lot of bacon!!😏😉😁
Chris i watch all of your videos. i am not an operator but i have been around alot of them and you are one of the most knowlegable one i have ever seen. i really enjoy your videos. keep them coming buddy you are doing a great job. how did you and dirt perfect meet?
Impressive bit of moving this mud. Yah, agree with you if you end up with half those mats you will be a winner. How you find them is anyones guess!!
After looking at all that mud,only thing comes to my mind,could you imagine a person or animal getting stuck out in the middle of that.you’ve accomplished so much. Great video.keep on doing what your doing.👍👍👍😎😎😎
Those Areas where you’re dropping the buckets of Muck look more Dangerous than the Mud Pots in Yellowstone. 🤔👍
whoever the homeowner is, he must make a really good living to be able to afford the new house and all the work you guys are doing
Busy busy busy here comes the mud pies 🙈🤣👍🏻
Watching you squeegee mud for days on end, I, with the authority invested in me by myself, hereby christen this project “Kīlauea Pond”!
It certainly did look like an unending lava flow!
U DO A PHENOMENAL JOB ON EVERY JOB SITE &VIDEO &EXPLAIN HOW IS THE BEST WAY TO DO IT.
Obviously the method you are using is the best/most efficient for you and the equipment you have but is there a better method for dredging out a pond like this?
If money was no object and you could have any piece of equipment you needed, what is the best method to use?
i think it would be a set of concrete pumps
Hi from uk chris and john👋👍 hope everything goin well 👍 noticed that you mentioned long reach but I think you would struggle more although your moving more material the forces from a long arm would me more and I think would be just as bad for you guys as using a pump or dozer 😵 cos liquefaction happens that quick here ( I mean I watched johns machine slew 6 times over minute and he had to reposition himself and 4 slews later machine moved a foot and half at least🙈 your doing great job u2👌 don't need any more hassle from bigger machines or heavier ones either plus a long reach slipping would carry more momentum and be harder to save in event of the oops moments 🙈 thanks for your time guys be safe and see you soon 👍👋
I would really like to help you transferring all that mud...
I only way I could help speeding it up is by watching your vid at 1.5x :-) :-)
Great job as always Chris!
I kinda feel that everyone watches at 1.5 playback speed.
@@crandonborth The master is to be watched in real time, thank you.......😁🤣🤣
@@stephenlehr6020 another real-time watcher here; speeding these videos up in sacrilege :D
Congratulations on 570,000 subscribers.👍👍
I am near 80 years old and you have caused me to want to be a heavy equipment operator🤭well almost. Love your videos.
This is definitely the monotonous part of this project. Moving mud. I swear it doesn't look like you move anything. One full bucket of mud into the removal pit, and it doesn't seem to change. Lol
Keep on keepin' on. It'll get done eventually. And look great after you put the finishing touches on it.
Oh Hell!! I should drive myself insane in this muddy pudding lol. Glad you are around Chris :-)
Damn... I couldn't do it even if I knew how! I'd feel claustrophobic and locked down. You're a brave contractor to tackle this situation. Of which I'm sure you'll pull off perfectly. Good lerd almighty that's A LOT OF MUD!!
Chris it seam,s like the more mud that you get out of the pond a lot more come,s back in.
Looks like you have a "Slopscivator"... and are doing a darn fine job with it!
Hell man, you should be holding weekly Mudfest every weekend out there! What a sippy hole... I'd run mats all the way out for the Dump and fill it in situ, it would go much faster and save on your equipment too...
I'm here watching and thinking about will this sloppy mud ever stop. I will never look at wet sloppy mud again as I use to. Chris it's looking great.
Chris, you need to invent a new Letsdig18 triple wide excavator mud moving bucket , Not sure if the machine could handle such a thing.
Soupy mess. Good thing they have you to build this out.
At the 19:15 point, "SLOW" is right! Earlier the statement was made about budget for "long stick". I wonder if this refers to the project budget or other "budgets". Either way, when you look at the long term effect on equipment, fuel use, etc. if leasing/renting a long stick would not have been an advantage on this "project". The comments concerning dosing and the dipping was likely the way this job was priced and then budgeted. This multiple handling times of the removable of mud/dirt to me would not necessarily be the way you would competitively figure this job. Hope this was not a fixed job cost project, but some sort of cost plus non bid job.
An impossible task, and Chris is just doing it like it aint no thing. Amazing.
You know some people are going to say that you should get a bigger bucket so you can move more material but I don't think they realize how big it truly is. Next video you need to have someone next to the bucket with a 5-gallon bucket for comparison.
Bucket by bucket its going there , its going down .
Don’t have to worry about hitting any old mine shafts around there !
I can since the frustration of moving all that mud. its like shoveling sand against the tide sometimes.
I think I would get depressed moving mud-you take one bucket and the hole just fills back in! You know. you are moving it, but it just keeps coming!
See that’s what I thought a long reach would be nice but didn’t want to say anything Chris, those old draglines could throw mud a long way back in the day! As a kid I would go to where they were digging a pit for an oil well that was going to be drilled! I couldn’t ever do it but just watching those old coonass operators run that machine was amazing to watch, his hands and feet were always moving as he was building the levee for the called mud pit! They the excavator operators when as a welder I would do jobs at those wells and to watch those operators build the mud pit was as amazing, the levee was 20-25 feet high because it was going to settle and he had that machine up there and go up and down that tall steep pile all day long! Kinda like some of the steep climbs I’ve seen you making Chris , you’ve made a lot of steep climbs in and out of like the lake jobs you’ve done! Scary stuff but doesn’t seem like it would bother you my friend! That’s a good operator, and you on those mats can get sketchy at times! Thanks for sharing Chris and stay safe brother!👏🏻👏🏻👌🏻👌🏻👌🏻🤙🏻🤙🏻🤙🏻🇺🇸
I love two videos in a row I hear them geese ....now I'm excited :)
The pit of despair.
Two amazing projects going at once. How do you keep up on the content for us?
He never sleeps ! 🤣
@@marcryvon anyone that watches this channel enough knows that’s only viable explanation. Lol
Actually Chris has three. This one,His full time gig, the stump job and the pond job.
@@briangardner5764 If that doesn’t make a fellow tried nothing will.
That mud was so deep, I was thinking if you disappeared in it, somebody would have to get Bobby Goodson to come find you and get you out.
Maybe the time will come when they want you back to take all of the mud out and make the bottom to be hard pack ground. Not sure how you'd make that happen but im sure you'd figure something out to make it all work. I'm sure having a hard ground to support a dozer would be a good thing to have when it comes to a pond. So the next time it need to be cleaned out you can use a Dozer.
here is a question for you and your uncle, you always do a lot of dredging but do you all ever think about getting floating attach tracks to put under to make the mud pits easier, just had to ask
Innertubes and blue barrels?🍻🍻
I don't know how much the 220 weighs but you would need some big tracks to help float it then when you have a scoop of muck and reach out to dump it the machine would tip over like a canoe tips over when you lean too much ..
@@randytravis3998 Only if it was floating, on this bottom an amphibious excavator would work really well.
@@delbertconner5993 never seen one .. but if the cost of a long reach is out of the question per Uncle John then the cost of a amphibious excavator would be out of the question ,, with what they have too work with scoop splat dump repeat is the best method ,, or wait till mother nature puts a deep freeze in the ground then it would be less of a mess ,,
Thanks Chris for all your efforts to film, edit and post your content. I would be interested in how you price your projects. Do you have a set hourly rate for each piece of equipment? Do you price on a cost plus basis? How do you account for material, etc.?
He prices the job. The contracts have outs for the unexpected like rock.
This isn’t mind numbing, you’re a far far better man than I Gunga Din. 😂😂
The fifth Labor of Hercules, the Augean Stables, in real life!
that mud is like scooping up gravy !
Tell me something. Does that swamp mud smell as bad as it looks?
not as bad manure, but it is special, and its fun on your gear
@@billsargent3407 I know. Here in Michigan. When get in the swamps mud bogging. It stinks almost as bad as gear oil lol
Maybe one of the next machine Chris can get is a long reach excavator. 🤣 I can think of other jobs that are painstaking long to do again mudding sheet rock.
He rented one some years, he did'nt have any other choice. And he hated it if I remember well. i.e. a smaller bucket.
Is it possible to improve mud transfer using a grading bucket. Thanks
Having budget constraints from the client doesn’t give you many options for this job. Sometimes you just have to go back to basics. I was thinking of all the different things that would probably be in there, especially the odd dead body, didn’t think of the dinosaur fossils though😬😊 Take care & cheers 🐨🦘🥰
That mud wont run out ever 😄
Seems that valley just was not meant to be dammed - wonder what the topography was like a few thousand years ago. Hope there is good music and etc to fill in the many hours of 'scoop and dump'.
Chris I'd trade you all that mud for the flint rock we're fighting on this water line replacement. 😉
Hahaha…! At about the 11:26min., mark when I saw that (whatever it was in your mouth) I immediately thought it was a “joint” (marijuana verity)…, after you had just talked about your feeling of not getting anywhere with movement of the mud, the day before…, I thought you lit on up to ease the stress…, made me laugh…
Job is shaping up,
Looks great.
You are the MUD-MASTER. I wondered if a specific wide scraper with a centre that fits securely when clamped in bucket with wood & metal for scraping use-?
I counted 5 plus buckets a minute @ 2000 lbs a bucket full , well done
Definitely a tough go but I'm sure you'll make it to the end and everybody will be happy. Is there anything going to happen up stream to stop all the silt from getting in again.
I love work. I could watch it all day. XD
Enjoy watching you work. Can you give me some idea about how long you will be at this project?
It looks like today that's not a bucket, it's a ladle! What a mess! You could almost just pump that out.
Good Morning Chris, Can We See the cleaning of the Excavator Please?
After dredging, what do you do / recommend to kick start habitat recovery for the bottom of the pond? Love the vids!
Most generally nothing.
Time.
Like emptying a bathtub with a tablespoon.
random question, what size machine would you say would be good to start out with digging for residential foundations? 20-30k lb 100hp machine?
Great video 👍👍
Kinda like playing in cold wet lava. That sand bottom is only hard until vibration starts moving sand granuals in the water - it makes quicksand.