@@karlwright-h8z Thank you so much!!!! Now that you identified it, I can remember that piece of hardware from when my dad farmed with a team of horses. Wow! Talk about something stored in the back of my feeble brain!
@@rogerfuhr8067 I think you’re right! We eventually found holes back under the troughs. From the amount of rocks and dirt, there either had to be 50 ground hogs, or a couple that worked 50 years!
❤❤VIDEO ❤❤ liked to see you’re doing good ❤❤❤❤❤
@@briangrammer898 Thanks for checking in!
It is amazing the drastic changes cleaning can make to a place or a building. What a pretty barn!
@@rmiller8000 Thank you!
1973-1983 Chevy pickups had those hub caps!
Really cool to see yall bringing that back to life! I gotta question for ya, what are the brand of those orange mineral feeders you use?
@@ChandelierRanch Thanks! The mineral feeders are Sioux brand, and I have been using them for 20 years. They’re great.
@@JERRYCROWNOVER appreciate it!! We are looking for some good nines and I’ve seen you mention those a lot
Merry me, i sure wish you would hire me.
Nice clean up!!
@@cordovanbee Thanks! It was quite a chore.
What an awesome video. I would love to have a barn like this on my farm.
@@whitechurchfarm It is pretty neat! Thanks.
i was waiting on this barn cleaning, thanks for sharing
@@craigrudd6093 It was quite the week’s work, for an old man! Thanks, as always, for watching. Any idea as to what that iron hook was for?
@@JERRYCROWNOVER single tree hook, i still have my grandpas
That barn sure did clean up good! I know that was a lot of work! I wonder how many buildings built today will still be around in 100 years?
@@randymaclin9687 Not very many, for sure!
I would be interested in purchasing the Newspaper!
I would certainly be willing to talk to you about it, Contact me at zacrown@aol.com
@@JuliaNaylor-bj2fw I would certainly be interested in talking to you about it. Reach me at zacrown@aol.com
Strong work!! I was wondering how you retrieve the darts after you dart a cow. As always, thanks for taking us along.
@@douglasburch2320 Sometimes I wait around until they fall out (10-15 minutes, usually) or I go back in a couple hours & find them.
Hardware off of a wooden single tree.
@@karlwright-h8z Thank you so much!!!! Now that you identified it, I can remember that piece of hardware from when my dad farmed with a team of horses. Wow! Talk about something stored in the back of my feeble brain!
I would say the rocks in the barn came about from ground hog excavations. They like barn living and tunneling.
@@rogerfuhr8067 I think you’re right! We eventually found holes back under the troughs. From the amount of rocks and dirt, there either had to be 50 ground hogs, or a couple that worked 50 years!
Genius!
80 hub cap
@@nealcarpenter4405 Car or pickup?
pickup