Awesome explore Paul! Thanks so much for sharing. The old homes would have been beautiful when lived in. This would have been a nice farmhouse. Life was so much simpler back then although it was alot of hard work living off the land. Can you imagine collecting fresh eggs every day from the chickens in their pan and cooking a nice hearty breakfast in the summer kitchen? Lots of happy family memories now forgotten with time.
Thanks for another midweek bonus, Paul. I had to smile when you quoted the kitchen "had seen better days". Not that I want to live in the past, but I would like to have seen that house when it was first built and furnished for the family ... no electricity etc.
As soon as you opened the door of the first room I knew that was a stumpy tailed lizard. I'm learning as you have shown us one live one and two dead ones recently! When you walked into the bathroom area, it looked as though there were lights above the door near the art deco sink, but maybe they were just a reflection. Loved the arched fireplaces.
🌟oh wow another beautiful old gem hidden away in the trees, a lot of history, and you found a keepsake what a bonus! Thank you so much again for the tour. ❤😊🌟x
Well, this place has seen better days, plenty of features of the old days but decay has claimed this place unfortunately. Thanks for sharing this. Cheers, MM :)
It is amazing how the older the place is the more atmosphere there seems to be & I can feel it even just watching a video from thousands of miles away!
Great a mid week bonus and this looks like another awesome find in an empty farm cottage near a very busy highway but I really like these old style of houses and you don't know what you will find in them and it is a very nice area there, I like the outdoors look at the property especially the chicken coop and sheds, this was a really great mid week bonus here and I can't wait until Saturday for the next new video and another abandoned house Thank You.👋👋 🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺
Poor lizards. They often get themselves trapped in places where they can't get out. I rescued one from a mine shaft once. Great explore here Paul and this one was well hidden behind those trees so well spotted 😍
Urbex Indigo thanks for sharing this video with me i really enjoyed it about Farm Cottage set back in the trees it was a really good video and i am from the U.S.A and i will always show your channel support and God Bless.
Love those pressed tin ceilings!! I notice in all of your videos that the corrugated metal used for ceilings has smaller and closer together corrugations than the kind used on roofs and sides of buildings. I have never been able to find the closer/smaller corrugations for sale, only the classic roof style (at least in the USA) Thanks for sharing another cool old house!!
Thanks Paul. Another great find. In the front room which was probably what they would call a parlour. They always made that the nicest room for receiving guests. That's probably why it's the only room with the beaten metal ceiling. Except for the hallway. You wanted to show your quests how refined you are. They would have bought out the best China as well. Grand old days.
Hello Paul great find Country House I can only imagine what it looked like when it was first built also great find the newspaper clipping of 1960 thank you Paul for this video until next time stay safe take care love from upstate New York❤😊
A wire wove bed with a kapok mattress is only surpassed by sleeping on wet rocks. That's an old one. When it was new it would have been a nice place to come home too. I like those old fire place surrounds. Another good video.
Thanks Paul for your efforts to bring the past to life through these videos. If only the houses could talk! I am in Kilsyth, an outer east suburb of Melbourne. I recall in the 1960”s our scout group met in an old house on land that belonged to the scoutmaster. It was made from hand made bricks from a local brickworks in the style of a central corridor and two rooms off to each side. An old well had existed outside at some stage. Must have dated from 1800”s? Have you ever seen any real “nasties” in any houses, or come across ones still inhabited? Cheers, George
Hi George 😊 welcome to the channel. Old houses are so intriguing and we can learn a lot about our past from them. The one you describe definitely sounds like an oldie! Luckily I have not come across and nasties either human or animals! Well none that were a huge threat. Many more videos to come 🙂👍
Hello Paul, it’s Sunday morning and my morning ritual is to enjoy a cuppa watching your latest vid. Hope your ok, just wanted to let u know i miss u 😂😘
Another great Vlog, I was wondering what do other viewers think about the Newspapers under the floor coverings? Why did people do that? Cheers from Downunder ❤️🦘🦘🦘
As well as having insulating properties, newspapers were also used to stop the lino from sticking to the floorboards from heavy footfall over the years, so much easier to lift when needed. Must have been a universal thing as we did it here in the UK, too.
@@bronwyn6415, The lino, I believe had an oil content, it used to get sticky, especially on hot days , newspaper was cheap and easily attainable, I've seen where it wasn't used , The lino self glued to floor boards,
Another trip into the past. Thanks Paul, these places are just beautiful to see. A family home where love and laughter ruled.
I enjoy your filming.......you scan slow enough for us to see everything!! Good one!!
Awesome explore Paul! Thanks so much for sharing. The old homes would have been beautiful when lived in. This would have been a nice farmhouse. Life was so much simpler back then although it was alot of hard work living off the land. Can you imagine collecting fresh eggs every day from the chickens in their pan and cooking a nice hearty breakfast in the summer kitchen? Lots of happy family memories now forgotten with time.
Wouldn't it be wonderful to be transported back to that time it would be AMAZING .
Thanks for another midweek bonus, Paul. I had to smile when you quoted the kitchen "had seen better days". Not that I want to live in the past, but I would like to have seen that house when it was first built and furnished for the family ... no electricity etc.
Another cool of gem mate loved the pedestal basin and dam pigeons as always cheers.
As soon as you opened the door of the first room I knew that was a stumpy tailed lizard. I'm learning as you have shown us one live one and two dead ones recently! When you walked into the bathroom area, it looked as though there were lights above the door near the art deco sink, but maybe they were just a reflection. Loved the arched fireplaces.
Always great to see one of your videos; two in one week is extra special😊👍🏻. Thanks Paul
🌟oh wow another beautiful old gem hidden away in the trees, a lot of history, and you found a keepsake what a bonus! Thank you so much again for the tour. ❤😊🌟x
Well, this place has seen better days, plenty of features of the old days but decay has claimed this place unfortunately. Thanks for sharing this. Cheers, MM :)
Always enjoy an explore! No matter what day! Thank you .
It is amazing how the older the place is the more atmosphere there seems to be & I can feel it even just watching a video from thousands of miles away!
Great a mid week bonus and this looks like another awesome find
in an empty farm cottage near a very busy highway but I really like
these old style of houses and you don't know what you will find in
them and it is a very nice area there, I like the outdoors look at the
property especially the chicken coop and sheds, this was a really
great mid week bonus here and I can't wait until Saturday for the
next new video and another abandoned house Thank You.👋👋
🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺
Poor lizards. They often get themselves trapped in places where they can't get out. I rescued one from a mine shaft once. Great explore here Paul and this one was well hidden behind those trees so well spotted 😍
Urbex Indigo thanks for sharing this video with me i really enjoyed it about Farm Cottage set back in the trees it was a really good video and i am from the U.S.A and i will always show your channel support and God Bless.
Love those pressed tin ceilings!! I notice in all of your videos that the corrugated metal used for ceilings has smaller and closer together corrugations than the kind used on roofs and sides of buildings. I have never been able to find the closer/smaller corrugations for sale, only the classic roof style (at least in the USA) Thanks for sharing another cool old house!!
Thanks Paul. Another great find. In the front room which was probably what they would call a parlour. They always made that the nicest room for receiving guests. That's probably why it's the only room with the beaten metal ceiling. Except for the hallway. You wanted to show your quests how refined you are. They would have bought out the best China as well. Grand old days.
Hello Paul great find Country House I can only imagine what it looked like when it was first built also great find the newspaper clipping of 1960 thank you Paul for this video until next time stay safe take care love from upstate New York❤😊
The old farmhouses are the most interesting places to look at I feel. I can imagine families living there. Someone calling people in for meals etc.
Its amazing back in the day, what kind of lives these people lived.
I have a memory of my mother laying newspapers underneath the linoleum.
Your is TRUE BLUE . Take care UI .🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺👍
Those old beds were great for jumping on. More bounce than the modern backyard trampoline.
What a great find with the well preserved 1960's newspaper.
Thanks for the video. Another great old home.
A wire wove bed with a kapok mattress is only surpassed by sleeping on wet rocks. That's an old one. When it was new it would have been a nice place to come home too. I like those old fire place surrounds. Another good video.
Thanks Paul for your efforts to bring the past to life through these videos. If only the houses could talk!
I am in Kilsyth, an outer east suburb of Melbourne. I recall in the 1960”s our scout group met in an old house on land that belonged to the scoutmaster. It was made from hand made bricks from a local brickworks in the style of a central corridor and two rooms off to each side. An old well had existed outside at some stage. Must have dated from 1800”s?
Have you ever seen any real “nasties” in any houses, or come across ones still inhabited?
Cheers, George
Hi George 😊 welcome to the channel. Old houses are so intriguing and we can learn a lot about our past from them. The one you describe definitely sounds like an oldie! Luckily I have not come across and nasties either human or animals! Well none that were a huge threat. Many more videos to come 🙂👍
Hello Paul, it’s Sunday morning and my morning ritual is to enjoy a cuppa watching your latest vid. Hope your ok, just wanted to let u know i miss u 😂😘
early this week- nice
Hello Paul, another great video. As always, be safe and be careful. See you in the next explore.
That is definitely an old art deco style sink. Very chunky looking.
👋🙂
Another great explore! And how cool was that newspaper!
Dig the bonus
Wow. I used to have an old tea pot just like that.
Wow very creepy old place did you notice was that a stick of dynamite on that window seal
isnt it cool to find a near perfect newspaper under lino I found some once but no where near as old as that very nice find
Great video enjoyed it thank you ❤
👍👍👍❤️❤️❤️❤️🏡🏡🏡😺😺👋👋👋
You Missed some farm equipment out there
They painted the walls lovely pastels but the doors YUCK
Not corn flakes xo how much do you think us 12 ate
What’s the go with these houses? Who owns them? Can you go inside like you do?
Another great Vlog, I was wondering what do other viewers think about the Newspapers under the floor coverings? Why did people do that? Cheers from Downunder ❤️🦘🦘🦘
As well as having insulating properties, newspapers were also used to stop the lino from sticking to the floorboards from heavy footfall over the years, so much easier to lift when needed. Must have been a universal thing as we did it here in the UK, too.
I remember my parents doing the same, I never asked why I presumed it was like underlay.
@@bronwyn6415, The lino, I believe had an oil content, it used to get sticky, especially on hot days , newspaper was cheap and easily attainable, I've seen where it wasn't used , The lino self glued to floor boards,
@@Romeo-kp8tc Makes sense.