in the 70s me mum, dad and sister use to live in a really old farm town house in Yanco NSW and a off house on a farm in Yanco and some of your vid's kinda reminds me of them home once lived in in the 70s
Cheers mate yes this was a good old gem and someone with the time and money could definitely get her liveable again. The room with the cupboard fallen over there was a cat that scared me and Nadia when it ran past us. The kitchen looks like it had a makeover probably in the 70s I’m glad you enjoyed this one like we did. Cheers again for the shoutout mate 😊😊
Gorgeous old place. I’d love to live somewhere like that, fixed up of course and character intact. No neighbours. Still call the outside loo the thunderbox lol 😂
G'day Paul ... you never disappoint. The disappointment comes because of the houses, sheds and machinery of all types being left to rot. Heart breaking at times. Thanks, Ken
At 17:36 - That's a spectacular shot there. The sun is out and despite the home being run down, the stonework and brickwork are just lit up. It's postcard perfection. Great video.
Another old home with gear left behind gathering dust and decay. It's so great to still see old features still intact. Thanks for sharing. Cheers, MM :)
Hi Paul, another Sunday treat! What you refer to as a 'lean to' off the front veranda, were called 'sleep outs' when I was growing up in the late '50's/'60's. They were very common, an easy way to add an extra room and nearly always had louvered windows. My Nan and Pop had one at the rear of their beautiful bluestone cottage in Torrensville, where I stayed when I went to live with them. My husband also spent years in one, as a shared bedroom, as did a good friend of mine....a double. Hers on one side and her brother on the otherside of the back verandah. Cheers 😍
Definitely one to save. When you entered the front door I noticed you didn't mention bees, so reckoned you had a good look - but you found them around the back. As you walked around I thought no big cracks - until you found one. Then I thought no cobwebs - and then you found one. Also thought there were no birds nesting - until you found one. Great that the ceilings were intact - but you found one with a small leak. I thought about snakes - but you didn't find one - thank goodness! 😨😁 Hope somebody rescues it and does it up. By the sounds of the traffic nearby, it could be an easy commute for someone.
I live in a 1908 Federation Queen Anne place in southern NSW. Double brick, with interesting earlier decorative elements like quoining, a plaster arch in the hallway rather than timber fretwork, and the two ‘big’ main windows under the gables formerly had the pair of narrow single sash windows rather than triple-casemented windows, until 1980 when someone had the bright idea of fitting aluminium replacements. The house was built by the main builder in this town, so he went all-out to make it exactly as he wanted for his family. We’ve worked hard to bring it back to something approaching original, and it’s good fun! But yes, being double brick, it takes a while to heat up, but it holds the heat something fierced!
Hi Matt, Cheers mate 😁 love reading about people's pride and joy home's. Yes when those double window's get replace it sticks out like a sore thumb! Some Queen Anne's definitely seem to have a nice blend of retaining Victorian era while still having Federation signature. Glad you own one and are bringing it back and embracing the heat 😁👍
Hi Urbex Indigo, this house does seem that it could be saved, but I think that the water is the problem with many of these Old Beauties. Plus a lot of the Properties have been purchased for the Mines underneath, so the houses are left to decay. I am saddened with this procedure when so many people are homeless. You do a great job documenting houses and the property left behind, thank you 😊
A few years back (just before the coof-coof started) I had been looking for things like this, found a couple of nice ones out in Country NSW and enquired with the local councils about ownership/who owns the land and they were never interested, didnt care and openly admitted they were probably no owners but were waiting for them to rot and collapse so the councils could 'take the land back'... heartbreaking.
When I was a kid I hated going to the outhouse ( American) term for it. Never know what you would find ( bees, snakes, spiders, and an occasional opossum or skunk) I was so happy for my family members to get indoor plumbing. This was in the 1950's and early 1960's.
That green glass in the front hallway…what a design statement. Especially if the setting sun would shine through wow. But it complimented the green, gold and lavender tile work in the front fireplace 😍💚💚💚.
🌟Hi Paul, what a beautiful old gem love love love it, in really good condition love the grill work i agree i hope it gets restored. Thank you so much again 😊🌟❤️:-)
Urbex Indigo thanks for sharing this video with me about Early 1900`s farm house with stuff/Tractors/Sheds. Can be saved and restored! it was not a nice home it could be restored if some one cared enough to do so i always enjoy your youtube channel and i always show you support my friend i gave you a thumbs up and put you on my community tab to share you out i am from the U.S.A and i can't wait to watch your next video and God Bless.
I love these old farm homes! Have you tried picking the fruit from those prickly pear cactus? When they turn pinkish red they're delicious. Makes good wine also.
those old stone homes can be brutal when it's hot. My old man lived in one on a farm property towards Meringur in Victoria for a few years and that was brutal on days when it was super-hot
This is a cool old house. I could picture the dog on the verandah coming up to greet you as you approached. Lots of memories in those rooms. I'm always amazed at the outdoor "dunnies" being used until fairly recent times, ie the 70's, and the loos in the lean-to's. It's pretty easy to see that Australia is a warmer climate than here in Canada. 😂 Outhouses (dunnies) were replaced with indoor plumbing sooner here. It's bloody cold using outhouses in the winter in many parts of this country. 🇨🇦 I love "touring" Oz through your eyes. Thanks.
My grandparents had an outdoor dunny way down the back, more like a thunderbox, in the old house that I lived in before we moved to the newer one it had an outside dunny but it was just off the veranda and a flush one that was on the sewer system. My part of Australia is pretty cold, although it was 20.C today warm for beginning of winter. lots of rain comming though.
@@steviebboy69 cool. What's your definition of cold though? Does it go below zero Celsius there? I loved when my Aussie friend would complain of it being cold when it went down to 13 at the same time we were celebrating that it had warmed up to 13. 🙂
@@NorthwindPeace the average overnight low goes down to -3.C. it can get cold here in the day time 10.C average. lowest on record here was -7, but its mild compared to Canada and I still wear shorts anyway. Some mornings mid winter its warmer in the fridge than in the house heheh.
@@steviebboy69 that's pretty cool for using an outhouse. But then if you're wearing shorts in that weather you might be a Canadian in the wrong country. 😉😎
@@NorthwindPeace Yes true but remember it is a more mild climate, I have never seen snow, just frost and that gets burned of the lawn by about 10 in the morning.
Love this I hope it gets restored back to its original settings as much as possible. I'm in south west western Australia and we still have a few of these type homes not many but one or two I know of around Capel area.. can't wait to watch more of your videos ❤
Up north old homesteads just get inhaled into the landscape quick due to seasonal fires & floods & termites & general lack of building materials purloined . . down south stuff just hangs around for an age not disturbed by man or beast
Maybe a lot of these places dont get restored is because people have to buy a large parcel of land that goes with it, maybe the owner cant subdivide because of zoning laws.Loved the firplace at the start..that highway sounds busy
I can't c it getting restored. The house has moved with cracks through the main hallway. I can here a main road there to nearby. It will be up for a extension suburb. Shame but that's how it goes. Great find again especially the stove 👍
What a cool old home!! Hopefully somebody will save it. Their first move should be to redo that kitchen!! It reminds me of why even though I am a child of the 1970's, I hope 1970's style never makes a comeback!! So god awful ugly!! Thanks for another great explore from South Carolina, USA!!
hey paul this was a wonderful explore and werner i really enjoy hes explorations to specially when he adds hes droin to do veiwing from the skies can be spactacula to see liked the old tractors and wash house very rare now these days you see old sinks made out of cement but my they were pretty big very nice old farm house this one was a question for you paul have you and werner any plans at some stage doing a video exploration together as like some videos you had done with other explorers be nice to two abandon explorers doing a video of places they discover and share but allways enjoy the videos you do paul keep them coming mate cant wait until your next explore paul and i have subscribed to werners channel very nice guy to communicate with cheers paul.
Could be done up, we looked at a place in Paskeville that a pigeon had fallen through the gap was that big between the wall and ceiling, that got done up and another in Maitland. Have to watch for termites though.
A lot of places where built in this style. Four to five rooms to at the front. Usually 1 room was a lounge, the other three/four rooms were bedrooms. Kitchen etc was down the back.
Did an urbex through an abandoned leper colony cool up near Darwin . . huge thing main for entire north . . old jails & mess halls etc .. I think everyone was spooked by the disease still & did't go near
With a great deal of effort, this lovely old stone farm house with the red brick quoining, would be worth saving and restore the original features left behind, such as the Edwardian fire surrounds. The front door with the coloured glass and the higher knob, appears to have been Edwardian. There were some items inside the farmhouse that are familiar to my childhood days, such as the old World Book Encyclopaedia and the 1970s bedroom dresser, with matching drawers, that was similar to what my mother used to have. If only those old tractors could also be restored and placed on display. 😊
I would be more than happy to relocate to Australia and buy property and save some of these homes- the sticking point is my dogs and the issues I would have bringing them into the country. I'm not willing to put them into quarantine for 6 months, and I can only have 2 out as service dogs and even then I have to quarantine those at home. I understand the need for it, and I really want the houses and land, but the dogs come first. You, however make me want it more and more with every explore- great job!!! How would I go about getting one of these, if I did come over, just for the information?-SDK
Why do you call the outside toilet a dunny (?) In the US, we call it an outhouse. I notice that you also call other buildings on the property "outhouses". We call them out buildings. Just curious. (I have no idea why we use the terms we do.)What a cool place, though!
Dunny either descended from British "dunnekin" (dung house) or French "dunegan" which means privy (private), hence dunny (slang). Just worth noting, we also refer to it as "boghouse", "sh_thouse" and "dunnycan". 😊
Paul what was the diamond shape thing behind the catch pins? If that was dairy machines maybe milk goats. Just guessing,the green was beautiful. Thanks for the tour.
the home could be saved, with the three , time, effort and money. Nice old timer WW 1 vintage. there's a man i watch in Iowa USA that puts a crop in on the 7 acres he lives on with abandoned, derelict outdated farm machines, what a Bonzer job he does, Kev Brown from Junkyard digs. Those old tractors might slow him up however....Cheers
I think there were Indonesian back packers living in the house for a while. In the begninning of the video, the pallets next to the blue fuel can showed a void underneath them, so I'm guessing a hiding spot?
The Vic's weren't smart enough to build with stone. 😉 I'm glad you chose not to give the locations of these gems. They would be ransacked within 24 hours of posting the video! Definitely worth renovating as it wouldn't take a fortune to make it functional. Would suit a young couple as you could have it at least habitable in a short time. Then over time renovate room by room. Savable for sure!
Another great old farmhouse out in the country sitting vacant for so long and at one time a very beautiful place but it still could be fixed up by someone who has the money for it another really great video of interesting houses that have been abandoned and until your next new video Thank You.🤠🐨🦘 🏚️🏚️🏚️🏚️🏚️🏚️
Plug up all the holes against possums & rats & mice in roof & half the battle won of a good nights sleep for the reno . . possums inside the ceiling annoying & have made spears & hunted them in roof space . . sounds a joke but not funny after many sleepless nights with those gold bricks thumping around overhead
When I watch these I always think this was at one time someones beloved home. Sad they just go downhill.
Very interesting. Worth fixing up.
in the 70s me mum, dad and sister use to live in a really old farm town house in Yanco NSW and a off house on a farm in Yanco and some of your vid's kinda reminds me of them home once lived in in the 70s
I have a mind to travel across the world and live out my days in a house like this in Australia!
I'd love to see this ol' beauty brought back to life & given a second chance.
The Bart Simspson stove is hilarious! Makes you wonder. Always a pleasure. 🏘😊
Cheers mate yes this was a good old gem and someone with the time and money could definitely get her liveable again. The room with the cupboard fallen over there was a cat that scared me and Nadia when it ran past us. The kitchen looks like it had a makeover probably in the 70s I’m glad you enjoyed this one like we did. Cheers again for the shoutout mate 😊😊
Paul, I hope someday you will buy one of these old gems and restore it. I think you would put a lot of love into it and bring it back to life.
Gorgeous old place. I’d love to live somewhere like that, fixed up of course and character intact. No neighbours.
Still call the outside loo the thunderbox lol 😂
Great again mate , thanks to Werner as well.
Thank you, Paul, and may God bless you.
You had a lovely day for filming when you did this grand old gem urbex indigo
G'day Paul ... you never disappoint. The disappointment comes because of the houses, sheds and machinery of all types being left to rot. Heart breaking at times. Thanks, Ken
This place is salvageable for sure. Massive job though. Awesome tractors. Cheers mate 👍😎🇦🇺
At 17:36 - That's a spectacular shot there. The sun is out and despite the home being run down, the stonework and brickwork are just lit up. It's postcard perfection. Great video.
I always look forward to your videos
Hi, Paul. Another great one. Thanks
I'd buy it. Nice retirement fixer-upper.
Another old home with gear left behind gathering dust and decay. It's so great to still see old features still intact. Thanks for sharing. Cheers, MM :)
With how busy the road is that house must be well worth restoring. I wish I had the money to do it.
lovely old gem in decay
Interesting old house the old machine under cover is a hammermill for crushing grain the 2 tractors are Massey Ferguson 35s around the 60s
Very nice old place.... definitely needs to be saved.
Hi Paul, another Sunday treat! What you refer to as a 'lean to' off the front veranda, were called 'sleep outs' when I was growing up in the late '50's/'60's. They were very common, an easy way to add an extra room and nearly always had louvered windows. My Nan and Pop had one at the rear of their beautiful bluestone cottage in Torrensville, where I stayed when I went to live with them. My husband also spent years in one, as a shared bedroom, as did a good friend of mine....a double. Hers on one side and her brother on the otherside of the back verandah. Cheers 😍
Definitely one to save. When you entered the front door I noticed you didn't mention bees, so reckoned you had a good look - but you found them around the back. As you walked around I thought no big cracks - until you found one. Then I thought no cobwebs - and then you found one. Also thought there were no birds nesting - until you found one. Great that the ceilings were intact - but you found one with a small leak. I thought about snakes - but you didn't find one - thank goodness! 😨😁 Hope somebody rescues it and does it up. By the sounds of the traffic nearby, it could be an easy commute for someone.
I live in a 1908 Federation Queen Anne place in southern NSW. Double brick, with interesting earlier decorative elements like quoining, a plaster arch in the hallway rather than timber fretwork, and the two ‘big’ main windows under the gables formerly had the pair of narrow single sash windows rather than triple-casemented windows, until 1980 when someone had the bright idea of fitting aluminium replacements. The house was built by the main builder in this town, so he went all-out to make it exactly as he wanted for his family. We’ve worked hard to bring it back to something approaching original, and it’s good fun! But yes, being double brick, it takes a while to heat up, but it holds the heat something fierced!
Hi Matt, Cheers mate 😁 love reading about people's pride and joy home's. Yes when those double window's get replace it sticks out like a sore thumb! Some Queen Anne's definitely seem to have a nice blend of retaining Victorian era while still having Federation signature. Glad you own one and are bringing it back and embracing the heat 😁👍
Hi Urbex Indigo, this house does seem that it could be saved, but I think that the water is the problem with many of these Old Beauties. Plus a lot of the Properties have been purchased for the Mines underneath, so the houses are left to decay. I am saddened with this procedure when so many people are homeless.
You do a great job documenting houses and the property left behind, thank you 😊
A few years back (just before the coof-coof started) I had been looking for things like this, found a couple of nice ones out in Country NSW and enquired with the local councils about ownership/who owns the land and they were never interested, didnt care and openly admitted they were probably no owners but were waiting for them to rot and collapse so the councils could 'take the land back'... heartbreaking.
get your mail sent there and get the power on and in about 5 years, you can claim squatters rights.
When I was a kid I hated going to the outhouse ( American) term for it. Never know what you would find ( bees, snakes, spiders, and an occasional opossum or skunk) I was so happy for my family members to get indoor plumbing. This was in the 1950's and early 1960's.
That green glass in the front hallway…what a design statement. Especially if the setting sun would shine through wow. But it complimented the green, gold and lavender tile work in the front fireplace 😍💚💚💚.
Lovely find, I really hate seeing these old homes just sitting rotting away.
🌟Hi Paul, what a beautiful old gem love love love it, in really good condition love the grill work i agree i hope it gets restored. Thank you so much again 😊🌟❤️:-)
Great old house definitely needs saving
That is a nice old house and yes it could be fixed easily. Would make someone a nice home.
Wow! How lovely to see complete fireplaces. But, oh, that purple paint. I never tire of seeing brick quoins looking so smart. Thanks again.
Oh..I love quoins too..but until now never knew what they were called..what a quirky little word..ta for that🙂
I think a definite savable home.
I see those Massey Ferguson tractors in use still today.
Urbex Indigo thanks for sharing this video with me about Early 1900`s farm house with stuff/Tractors/Sheds. Can be saved and restored! it was not a nice home it could be restored if some one cared enough to do so i always enjoy your youtube channel and i always show you support my friend i gave you a thumbs up and put
you on my community tab to share you out i am from the U.S.A and i can't wait to watch your next video and God Bless.
Yes Wernersadventures equally a great channel. Isnt this place an old gem. thank you for sharing. Nice clear footage too enjoyed Stay safe.
Wonderful old house, worth restoring as the bones are still good. Think that machine might have been a chaff cuttet
I do like your accent always do,aussies,scots,kiwis,welsh music to my ears
Wow that could be a lovely home with some ❤
I love these old farm homes!
Have you tried picking the fruit from those prickly pear cactus? When they turn pinkish red they're delicious. Makes good wine also.
We also had honeysuckle and we ate the flowers from it also.
@@TheLightbright01 honeysuckle makes good wine too. 🙂
Need to make sure all spines are removed, one in the
tongue is hell on earth!
Aye Krumba that was funny yep makes you think in the frount room there was a large crack above the window aswell so needs a fair amount of work👍
Beautiful old home
Loved it thank you,
G'day mate
The thingy on the front veranda is a belt drive hammer mill
Used to crush whole grains
Thanks for the explore
those old stone homes can be brutal when it's hot. My old man lived in one on a farm property towards Meringur in Victoria for a few years and that was brutal on days when it was super-hot
My bedroom in SA after the walls warm up its 30° of a night 😭
Great vidéo 👍❤️😺👋
Another wonderful find. Would be great to see her restored , thanks x
Leanto bedroom wallpaper reminds me of William Morris artichoke pattern
This is a cool old house. I could picture the dog on the verandah coming up to greet you as you approached. Lots of memories in those rooms. I'm always amazed at the outdoor "dunnies" being used until fairly recent times, ie the 70's, and the loos in the lean-to's. It's pretty easy to see that Australia is a warmer climate than here in Canada. 😂 Outhouses (dunnies) were replaced with indoor plumbing sooner here. It's bloody cold using outhouses in the winter in many parts of this country. 🇨🇦 I love "touring" Oz through your eyes. Thanks.
My grandparents had an outdoor dunny way down the back, more like a thunderbox, in the old house that I lived in before we moved to the newer one it had an outside dunny but it was just off the veranda and a flush one that was on the sewer system. My part of Australia is pretty cold, although it was 20.C today warm for beginning of winter. lots of rain comming though.
@@steviebboy69 cool. What's your definition of cold though? Does it go below zero Celsius there? I loved when my Aussie friend would complain of it being cold when it went down to 13 at the same time we were celebrating that it had warmed up to 13. 🙂
@@NorthwindPeace the average overnight low goes down to -3.C. it can get cold here in the day time 10.C average. lowest on record here was -7, but its mild compared to Canada and I still wear shorts anyway. Some mornings mid winter its warmer in the fridge than in the house heheh.
@@steviebboy69 that's pretty cool for using an outhouse. But then if you're wearing shorts in that weather you might be a Canadian in the wrong country. 😉😎
@@NorthwindPeace Yes true but remember it is a more mild climate, I have never seen snow, just frost and that gets burned of the lawn by about 10 in the morning.
Love this house
Love this I hope it gets restored back to its original settings as much as possible. I'm in south west western Australia and we still have a few of these type homes not many but one or two I know of around Capel area.. can't wait to watch more of your videos ❤
13:55 😂
Thanks for the tour Paul!
Cheers! 🤠👍
Another great explore really like that fire place and that deep bath thanks Paul
Up north old homesteads just get inhaled into the landscape quick due to seasonal fires & floods & termites & general lack of building materials purloined . . down south stuff just hangs around for an age not disturbed by man or beast
Definitely worth saving. Love these old stone homes. Just sold my 1900 stone home in Warooka will be sad to leave love the old girl.
Very cool 😎👍 love that your doing the old farm houses 🏘️🏡
Maybe a lot of these places dont get restored is because people have to buy a large parcel of land that goes with it, maybe the owner cant subdivide because of zoning laws.Loved the firplace at the start..that highway sounds busy
I grew up in a house with a Simpson Karumba but never made the connection to the cartoon.....cartoon connection! I'm on fire!
And it looks like apu lived there as well 🤣
It's a wonderful house!!!
Linda casa e pelo jeito faz anos que está no abandono, ainda sobrou alguns móveis o lugar eh bonito deixo meu like na hora 👍
Maybe not so much the house but the area would be great to live. You could close your eyes and breathe in the serenity. Mmmmmm there already:}
Lol the serenity ..with the sound of that highway and the smell of car fumes...yummm.maybe between dusk and dawn eh xx
Hope someone restores this home
Sounds like there will be a Highway going through it soon!
I can't c it getting restored. The house has moved with cracks through the main hallway. I can here a main road there to nearby. It will be up for a extension suburb. Shame but that's how it goes. Great find again especially the stove 👍
What a cool old home!! Hopefully somebody will save it. Their first move should be to redo that kitchen!! It reminds me of why even though I am a child of the 1970's, I hope 1970's style never makes a comeback!! So god awful ugly!! Thanks for another great explore from South Carolina, USA!!
hey paul this was a wonderful explore and werner i really enjoy hes explorations to specially when he adds hes droin to do veiwing from the skies can be spactacula to see liked the old tractors and wash house very rare now these days you see old sinks made out of cement but my they were pretty big very nice old farm house this one was a question for you paul have you and werner any plans at some stage doing a video exploration together as like some videos you had done with other explorers be nice to two abandon explorers doing a video of places they discover and share but allways enjoy the videos you do paul keep them coming mate cant wait until your next explore paul and i have subscribed to werners channel very nice guy to communicate with cheers paul.
I’m thinking pig pens and I second the vote on the machine being a chaff cutter
Could be done up, we looked at a place in Paskeville that a pigeon had fallen through the gap was that big between the wall and ceiling, that got done up and another in Maitland. Have to watch for termites though.
A lot of places where built in this style. Four to five rooms to at the front. Usually 1 room was a lounge, the other three/four rooms were bedrooms. Kitchen etc was down the back.
Did an urbex through an abandoned leper colony cool up near Darwin . . huge thing main for entire north . . old jails & mess halls etc .. I think everyone was spooked by the disease still & did't go near
That front room would probably have been a sleep out originally.
With a great deal of effort, this lovely old stone farm house with the red brick quoining, would be worth saving and restore the original features left behind, such as the Edwardian fire surrounds. The front door with the coloured glass and the higher knob, appears to have been Edwardian. There were some items inside the farmhouse that are familiar to my childhood days, such as the old World Book Encyclopaedia and the 1970s bedroom dresser, with matching drawers, that was similar to what my mother used to have. If only those old tractors could also be restored and placed on display. 😊
I think the toy in the yard was from Peter Pan. They looked like 3 of the Lost Boys. This would be a really nice house if someone could fix it up.
I would be more than happy to relocate to Australia and buy property and save some of these homes- the sticking point is my dogs and the issues I would have bringing them into the country. I'm not willing to put them into quarantine for 6 months, and I can only have 2 out as service dogs and even then I have to quarantine those at home. I understand the need for it, and I really want the houses and land, but the dogs come first. You, however make me want it more and more with every explore- great job!!! How would I go about getting one of these, if I did come over, just for the information?-SDK
Crow eaters love their stone
Looks like a good place to get bit by a snake in all those abandoned littered spaces . Keep your eyes open .
Why do you call the outside toilet a dunny (?) In the US, we call it an outhouse. I notice that you also call other buildings on the property "outhouses". We call them out buildings. Just curious. (I have no idea why we use the terms we do.)What a cool place, though!
I've always assumed
"Done with it"
Dunny either descended from British "dunnekin" (dung house) or French "dunegan" which means privy (private), hence dunny (slang). Just worth noting, we also refer to it as "boghouse", "sh_thouse" and "dunnycan". 😊
@@annapapas2686 Also thunderbox, brasco, bog, longdrop if apropriate,
shizen, crapper and a few unmentionables!
@@ivanolsen8596 Thanks for the great laugh down memory lane! 🤣
Paul what was the diamond shape thing behind the catch pins? If that was dairy machines maybe milk goats. Just guessing,the green was beautiful. Thanks for the tour.
the home could be saved, with the three , time, effort and money. Nice old timer WW 1 vintage. there's a man i watch in Iowa USA that puts a crop in on the 7 acres he lives on with abandoned, derelict outdated farm machines, what a Bonzer job he does, Kev Brown from Junkyard digs. Those old tractors might slow him up however....Cheers
That has to be rough, have to go to the loo in the middle of the night, a dinky flashlight and all the junk all over. You may not get there in time! 🙁
Need a few skiffs to clear that one :P
I think there were Indonesian back packers living in the house for a while. In the begninning of the video, the pallets next to the blue fuel can showed a void underneath them, so I'm guessing a hiding spot?
The machine says 'hammer mill', that would be for crushing grain and probably driven by the p.t.o. of a tractor.
I’d guess those pens out the back were for pigs.
The Vic's weren't smart enough to build with stone. 😉
I'm glad you chose not to give the locations of these gems. They would be ransacked within 24 hours of posting the video!
Definitely worth renovating as it wouldn't take a fortune to make it functional. Would suit a young couple as you could have it at least habitable in a short time. Then over time renovate room by room. Savable for sure!
Id say this was likely a ex pickers/farm workers dwelling in its last use and was likely abandoned in around 2012. Or possibly a ex squatters house
Who sings the song in your intro, Paul ?
Hi Dave :-) Here it is, I slowd it down a bit for my intro :-) ruclips.net/video/-YyQqU08SDI/видео.html
The machine at the end was a hammer mill you put grain in it crushes it so you can feed to the Animals by the looks of it run off the tractors PTO
There's a mob using a mulcher to kill the prickly pear
You can eat the fruit on them but you gotta be careful collecting them ..those needles get everywhere
a fixer upper
Pig pens maybe?
It seems you can't do your show without a face full of cobwebs LOL from Seattle Washington
10:21 that writing looks more close to Cambodian (Khmer) language or somewhere abouts.
Another great old farmhouse out in the
country sitting vacant for so long and
at one time a very beautiful place but
it still could be fixed up by someone
who has the money for it another really
great video of interesting houses that
have been abandoned and until your
next new video Thank You.🤠🐨🦘
🏚️🏚️🏚️🏚️🏚️🏚️
Not smurfs little ghosts Disney cartoon can't remember the name
Casper
Plug up all the holes against possums & rats & mice in roof & half the battle won of a good nights sleep for the reno . . possums inside the ceiling annoying & have made spears & hunted them in roof space . . sounds a joke but not funny after many sleepless nights with those gold bricks thumping around overhead
Not worth saving. To many cracks infrastructial damage.