Noticed a lot of comments asking why i didn't clear the floor first, it's what i would normally of done however the roof cleaning was a one man job so i used the first half of the first day to get as much of that done as possible whilst kev was finishing up a different job. we can both sweep at the same time but we didnt have the vans loaded to both clean a roof at the same time. So whilst on my own i was doing the one man job stuff while waiting for him to turn up! Hope that makes sense, you guys know how streamlined i like the jobs to be, already plan it out in my head a week before i start :D Also to put it into context the roof took 6 hours 1 man, the floor sweep took about 45 minutes 1 man, that was the easy part :D Thanks for all the love on this one, glad to get something new and exciting out for you all!
Hi Syd. I loved your explanation. I was wondering about that myself. But, I also wonder why you don't invest in a powerful leaf blower. You could have blown all of that stuff (except for the solid matter) out the door in 5 minutes. It's much harder to sweep, shovel wet stuff.
The barn looks like it could have built for horses. The holes in the floor could be for the support beams for stalls and the dark area could be the ally in the middle where they could drive stuff threw. Stalls often have mats on the floor so it would have stayed cleaner.
@@PartridgeExteriorCleaning make sense. When my parents moved to their home the barn (built in the late 1700’s) had piles and piles of rotten 50 year old hay in it. What a job that was. Cool thing with places that old is you are always finding something near the more you clean.
After watching the Hoof GP for while now, the two openings is like the race way for moving equipment around. The sides are for the animals. And in the back, where that thick layer of moss is, is a holding pen for the animal to be looked over or worked on. Looks kinda small for cows or horses, I’m guessing the possibility of pigs were kept there.
8:20 That "a lot of upwards looking" is the reason why belayers in rock climbing have angle glasses - so-called belay glasses. For jobs like this those might come in handy as well :)
As a cleaner myself I love the really dirty jobs, when your finished your soaked from head to toe with sweat and you stand back and see the wonderful job you’ve done.
cleaning is underappreciated as a job imo, it's dirty and stinky but it's completely stress free and easy, no silly targets to meet. no dealing with people you'd rather not all you gotta do it just get it squeaky clean
Hi Sid enjoyable vid as always, also I've worked on dairy/beef farms pretty much all my life and that barn was a deep litter cattle shed, the metal in the concrete is for metal posts so the farmer would be able to hang feed rails either side so you would have a feed passage down the middle, and the cattle would be either side and the farmer would drive up and down the middle feed passage either putting out silage or tmr (total mixed rations) from a diet feeder that would explain the staining mate.
@@PartridgeExteriorCleaning No Worries mate and for me as soon as I saw the barn I knew what it had been used for, but I've been around buildings like that since my childhood.
Great Job. If you have to clean the inside of a barn like that again, may I recommend a harness, and jury-rigging up some kind of velcro strap or a belt to wrap around and take the weight of the long pole and then you can just use leverage to maneuver the spout since it's so far out. Something like what they use for string trimmer for landscaping work. It might save your shoulders and arms from being destroyed the next day.
You did a great job. I am a farmer and we drive equipment through the center of our barns. the stain in the center is a combo of oil and hydraulic fluids. To clean the stains we use oven cleaner spray it on let it sit 10 -15 minutes then spray it again and use a stiff brush to scrub then rinse it off then sprinkle baking soda down or make a paste of baking soda and water and use it to scrub with a brush then rinse it off. Works great on driveways and bricks as well. it is also alot less expensive as alot of the industrial cleaners and works better.
Wow that was fab! 😅 1st time I’ve seen your channel but I’m hooked, you got yourself a new subscriber!! 😁 Looking forward to more but for now I’ll scan your previous posts. 👍🏼
I won’t complain about aching arms next time I have to paint one of our ceilings. This was a great job to watch, and I’m really looking forward to the last bit, outside. You two are absolute stars!
Being a truck mechanic for 50 years, I can absolutely assure that if you’re looking up and there is a piece of dirt falling, it will never fall on the ground next to you. It’s like it’s got a mind of it’s own and will aim straight for the centre of your eyeball.
6:07, we have a real "grime line" sighting! This is a fun job. Someone thought it can be done, you have the potential skills and equipment and it really is enjoyable to see a renewed barn come out from years of use. Kevin, thank you for managing the floor cleaning. Looking forward to the series, like the outside area being cleaned up too. That was funny, "just holes in the floor, not drains"....old post sites? The walls just keep looking better and better. Even with the swept floor it looks like you are going to have a lot of sludge, from ingrained material on rough concrete... Really appreciated your problem solving as you went along and chuckled at the biocide.
That was a massive undertaking for two days!! It looks great!! You guys worked so hard! You probably could shovel that mess outside into the pasture, it will decompose and feed the greenery. Hope this finds you and yours happy and healthy 🙂❤
The transformation is almost unreal- great work by Kev and yourself. I bet the old arms and shoulders are aching after that. We all love your content in this house, both you guys seem brilliant and professional 🙏👍
You won't probably see this with all the comments but i used to wash hog barns (well and a lot of other things too) here in the states. Best practices and suggestions for you, take em or leave em. Have the customer set up, 12-24 hours prior to you doing the cleaning, sprinklers. Not only does this loosen up the poop and mud but the fly poop as well. The kind that you use for your yard/grass. Especially heavier soiled barns. Make sure the hit the ceiling and walls. You will find barns that have massive build up several inches or more...use a zero tip here and "cut" them out in sections. If you plan on doing this for taller barns like this one you might want to start having a separate set of scaffolding with tie offs (so you don't fall). Sprinklers can be set on those too to reach the ceiling. Rain slickers for when you are doing the ceiling is good. Prescription eye googles. Rub the the inside with shaving cream and thoroughly wipe out and they won't fog. Your equipment will start taking on that odor so eventually you will want to separate sets of wands, hoses, and clothes. Fan tips are your friends. Lastly...washing animals barns. That smell will seep into your SOUL. You won't smell it after a while but trust me everyone else can. Spray deodorant works well but my go to was to wash (especially my hands and face) with a mixture of lemon juice/oil and baking soda. It really helps cut the odor down. Loves your videos!!! Hope this helps a little.
I know my papaws dairy cattle barn would have cattle on each side with the feed tracking down the middle. He would use his tractor to push all the old or yucky feed out of the barn to replace it with new or to move the gates to let them out in the pasture to roam and free feed.
I used to clean commercial air conditioners before they were needed in the summer so this looks similar. BUT I wore a respirator/full face double filter doing it. No way I was breathing any of that nasty stuff. Kudos!
Probably pens on each side and cattle tracking through the middle - would be the common thing and that's what it looks like. Hoofs will wear the concrete smooth. There would be hay in the pens keeping the floor from staining so much, Long as the customer is happy that's what matters.
Gotta say, that barn was an ideal job for Soft Washing. Put it on like foam with extra surfactant, and let it dwell 2x. Re foam in spots to saturate. Your only environmental concern is the surfactant. I use organic laundry soap because everything breaks down to salt, water and essential minerals in under 8 hours on a sunny day or till dry. Without giving too much of the recipe away, hope you understand. Reach out and I'll hook you up with my Organic Farm Safe cleaner mix recipe. Took me 3 years and a dozen farms to perfect the levels of cleaner and sanitizer to do the work with very short half lifes to ensure no harm to soils or livestock.
Hi Sid, this might be a weird suggestion but would a fisherman’s fighting belt be useful to secure the pole into and hold the weight of your pole instead of killing your upper body on the ceiling areas?
Wow, definitely one of the most satisfying videos on this channel. This looks phenomenal. And I too was expecting an awful smell from this, glad it wasnt there!
Just throwing out an idea for the staining, I worked for a haulage company which delivered animal feed round the country and two main product was sugarbeet pellet (a dry store pellet) and supaflow (basically sugarbeet coated in molasses). When the firm packed up and we emptied the stores of feed, the supaflow store floor was stained like that in the video and not much brings it up if it’s engrained in the concrete. Heat is best as molasses is just a sugar syrup like treacle but probably not worth clients money to put hard graft into something that might not shift👍 and as per the other comments the hole in the floor is just a lump of box section steel embedded in the concrete so that dividers or temporary walls can be put in, great job and an enjoyable watch as per Sid👍🧼
Big job, my neck and shoulders were aching in sympathy for you mate 😝 I did something similar years ago when I was younger and it took 4 visits to an osteopath to get my neck sorted 😩 A good commercial quality degreaser sprayed and left to soak in a bit and high pressure wash off will get that greasy patch looking better I recon.
Might be a good idea to get yourself a pole pruner harness and rig it up to your extension pole if you plan on doing ceilings like that again. Nice job though!
Those holes are for steel fence posts, leaving a central through way for feeding the cattle. The dark staining would be from silage, which would be spread down the middle for the cows from each side to eat. The posts and fencing would be removed in the spring when the cows go back out to grass, this leaves the shed usable for other uses in the summer months.
Hi Sid I have a good tip for saving your neck in that situation - get a good backpack that comes up high behind your head (like the old-style hiking packs) and put a rolled up towel or sleeping bag on top, right up against your neck. You can then tilt your head back at an angle and relax it on the support, makes a huge difference. I can roll ceilings (paint) all day with that trick. I thought of it myself, so if you use it, give me a shout out on a video lol :) Great clean again, thanks for sharing!
WOW! On to bigger projects, that was a super job for you! Well done Sid & Kev, you never fail to impress your subscribers! Looking forward to the next part, it’s always satisfying from beginning to end.
My neck hurt so bad just watching you do the celling "Yes sir, that quote is for everything BUT the ceiling" is how I would have wanted that to go lol.
I'm glad you mentioned how painful that was instead of just acting like it was as easy as it looks lol. My neck and shoulders were hurting just watching you
I think your right, seems like oil. Was this old horse stable? Those “holes” in floor were for 4x4s, probably stables? Probably tractors driving down the middle over the years, and got only knows what leaks out of those things. Phenomenal job.
Holy moley...it looks like a completely different barn now! Sid, you and Kev are miracle workers~ Granted, I still wouldn't _eat_ off that floor (maybe another 2 high-temp steam washes), but I'd at least be willing to sit on it! 😅🤣
Looks like the floor holes may have housed a vehicle lift; anchor points. They may have used the center area for vehicle maintenance. Could be all kinds of fluid stains.
Excellent! Would it help any to have something like flag bearer’s use in parades for the pole when cleaning big ceilings? That might take a lot of weight off the shoulders and put it more on the hips. It should also create a fulcrum point with your arms which would help I think. Anyway, great job! Wish you were in the US where I live. I have a job need’s done! Keep up the great content, really look forward to your releases.
The mark on the floor is from a 'slurry slide'. which is basically a thing that drags cow shit along the floor to an end area, then it returns to start all over again. We'll done, you have done, a really good job 👍
this should serve as a neat little reminder that there's rural everywhere. it came up quite neatly. and, yeah, that black stain is probably every petroleum product used in equipment combined.
You should look Into getting climbing glasses. The kind that has a mirror inside pointed upwards. That way you could take some serious tension off your neck. Not sure about fogging and water on the glass. But it is absoloutely worth it for those kinds of jobs! Love the content!!
On UA-cam I've so far moved from watching restoration videos to pressure washing and garden maintenance. A whole channel dedicated just to barn cleaning? Yes, I know you were joking but I'll bet there's an audience for it. I might even follow it myself.
Hi mate. For these types of job i use a Stihl Power brush. I swap the brush attachments for the power paddle. The rubber blade shifts debris is one pass. If you are doing more barns, it will pay for itself in one or two jobs.
Absolutely incredible work. So glad when you dropped the comment about it being concrete sheets. Maybe worth hiring a battery operated (110v) scissors lift for the next one. Save your back big time.
That barns looks lovely. I’d say there were stalls with mats down on each side. I pressure washed my wood stalls in my barn a couple of years ago, looked lovely when I got done.
Probably another farm building converted to industrial use ! When we are all hungry you will wonder where have all the farmers gone .the oil on the floor is from silage ( fermented grass/ maize)
The stain is where the cow's feed was laid out for them. It's fermented grass, and has probably been put in the same place, twice a day, for decades. As you pointed out it's in line with the holes, and that's where a fence would have been to separate the feeding alley from the bedpack.
I have an Idea for you, try to get one of those belts that hold deep sea fishing rods, the bottom of your pole sits in a hard pocket on the belt, so in turn takes the strain off your arms holding the long pole up, and takes weight off it as well. :)
Noticed a lot of comments asking why i didn't clear the floor first, it's what i would normally of done however the roof cleaning was a one man job so i used the first half of the first day to get as much of that done as possible whilst kev was finishing up a different job. we can both sweep at the same time but we didnt have the vans loaded to both clean a roof at the same time. So whilst on my own i was doing the one man job stuff while waiting for him to turn up! Hope that makes sense, you guys know how streamlined i like the jobs to be, already plan it out in my head a week before i start :D
Also to put it into context the roof took 6 hours 1 man, the floor sweep took about 45 minutes 1 man, that was the easy part :D
Thanks for all the love on this one, glad to get something new and exciting out for you all!
Hi Syd. I loved your explanation. I was wondering about that myself. But, I also wonder why you don't invest in a powerful leaf blower. You could have blown all of that stuff (except for the solid matter) out the door in 5 minutes. It's much harder to sweep, shovel wet stuff.
Sorry, couldn't help this, but '...would normally have done...' not '...would normally of done...'
When I clean out barns I use a leaf blower first! So much easier then when the dust settles you wash down everything.
@@pintokitkat Feel better now?
Very good video, and what music did you use? It was so chilled out.
The barn looks like it could have built for horses. The holes in the floor could be for the support beams for stalls and the dark area could be the ally in the middle where they could drive stuff threw. Stalls often have mats on the floor so it would have stayed cleaner.
I agree. Not sure how the floor was that dirty unless they just dumped manure off the mats when they removed them.
Could of been, properties just been acquired so no facts for me to work with from the owner unfortunately!
@@PartridgeExteriorCleaning make sense. When my parents moved to their home the barn (built in the late 1700’s) had piles and piles of rotten 50 year old hay in it. What a job that was. Cool thing with places that old is you are always finding something near the more you clean.
I agree! at 0.40 seconds where he shows the dung... that dont look like cow pats to me .....
After watching the Hoof GP for while now, the two openings is like the race way for moving equipment around. The sides are for the animals. And in the back, where that thick layer of moss is, is a holding pen for the animal to be looked over or worked on.
Looks kinda small for cows or horses, I’m guessing the possibility of pigs were kept there.
8:20 That "a lot of upwards looking" is the reason why belayers in rock climbing have angle glasses - so-called belay glasses. For jobs like this those might come in handy as well :)
As a cleaner myself I love the really dirty jobs, when your finished your soaked from head to toe with sweat and you stand back and see the wonderful job you’ve done.
I too, like jobs that have a beginning and an end- the end is always so satisfying. I think that also explains why I like these videos.
cleaning is underappreciated as a job imo, it's dirty and stinky but it's completely stress free and easy, no silly targets to meet. no dealing with people you'd rather not all you gotta do it just get it squeaky clean
@@mikelibby990 Working during Covid for me was really stressful especially with the extra amount of work I had to deal with.
@@becca1927 covid was a different beast all together though so i can understand that
Fantastic work Sid & Kev. Looks all bright & clean. Barn cleaning is another string to your bow. Now it's hot baths all round. Thanks,
Hi Sid enjoyable vid as always, also I've worked on dairy/beef farms pretty much all my life and that barn was a deep litter cattle shed, the metal in the concrete is for metal posts so the farmer would be able to hang feed rails either side so you would have a feed passage down the middle, and the cattle would be either side and the farmer would drive up and down the middle feed passage either putting out silage or tmr (total mixed rations) from a diet feeder that would explain the staining mate.
fantastic comment thank you!
@@PartridgeExteriorCleaning No Worries mate and for me as soon as I saw the barn I knew what it had been used for, but I've been around buildings like that since my childhood.
Okay just dropped everything...yeah Sid time!
Oh, no! Those were your marbles! Lol.. And now you've lost them!!
@@ppiechnik don't mind it. It was worth it
Wow, Syd - and Kevin! Great job. That was super satisfying to watch 😊
Great Job. If you have to clean the inside of a barn like that again, may I recommend a harness, and jury-rigging up some kind of velcro strap or a belt to wrap around and take the weight of the long pole and then you can just use leverage to maneuver the spout since it's so far out. Something like what they use for string trimmer for landscaping work. It might save your shoulders and arms from being destroyed the next day.
Sid, been quite a while since you've been so 'kid like' with a job. Your smile was about a mile wide. Big job, big results 💪
Woooow 😳 fantastic transformation!!
Must be very satisfying to get immediate feedback on how well you are doing your job! Looks like Kev got the worst of it with mucking out that floor.
You did a great job. I am a farmer and we drive equipment through the center of our barns. the stain in the center is a combo of oil and hydraulic fluids. To clean the stains we use oven cleaner spray it on let it sit 10 -15 minutes then spray it again and use a stiff brush to scrub then rinse it off then sprinkle baking soda down or make a paste of baking soda and water and use it to scrub with a brush then rinse it off. Works great on driveways and bricks as well. it is also alot less expensive as alot of the industrial cleaners and works better.
Wow certainly didn’t think it would turn out that good. It looks awesome. Top quality hard work Sid & Kev. Cheers for the video take care
Wow that was fab! 😅
1st time I’ve seen your channel but I’m hooked, you got yourself a new subscriber!! 😁
Looking forward to more but for now I’ll scan your previous posts. 👍🏼
Yeah the walls look magic. Hope you get a lot of referrals from this job.
I like to watch this type of video when I'm falling asleep and I usually put them on mute. But I love his voice, it's so relaxing!
I won’t complain about aching arms next time I have to paint one of our ceilings. This was a great job to watch, and I’m really looking forward to the last bit, outside. You two are absolute stars!
hey painting is no joke!! it burns! :D
Being a truck mechanic for 50 years, I can absolutely assure that if you’re looking up and there is a piece of dirt falling, it will never fall on the ground next to you. It’s like it’s got a mind of it’s own and will aim straight for the centre of your eyeball.
Absolutely! It finds its way under my glasses and straight In there
6:07, we have a real "grime line" sighting! This is a fun job. Someone thought it can be done, you have the potential skills and equipment and it really is enjoyable to see a renewed barn come out from years of use. Kevin, thank you for managing the floor cleaning. Looking forward to the series, like the outside area being cleaned up too. That was funny, "just holes in the floor, not drains"....old post sites? The walls just keep looking better and better. Even with the swept floor it looks like you are going to have a lot of sludge, from ingrained material on rough concrete... Really appreciated your problem solving as you went along and chuckled at the biocide.
You looked like you had wayyyy too much fun on that job. I love it. Plus it never hurts when Kev gets more screen time. Top job as usual lads
That was a massive undertaking for two days!! It looks great!! You guys worked so hard! You probably could shovel that mess outside into the pasture, it will decompose and feed the greenery. Hope this finds you and yours happy and healthy 🙂❤
Great Idea!
Love your work ethic you are a machine! Love the channel keep up the great work
The transformation is almost unreal- great work by Kev and yourself. I bet the old arms and shoulders are aching after that. We all love your content in this house, both you guys seem brilliant and professional 🙏👍
Would've never crossed my mind to powerwash the entire structure. That's a lot of work. Good job.
Watching you do the inside of the roof made my arms ache! I don’t know how you did that. Super great job as always Sid!!🥰❤️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
You won't probably see this with all the comments but i used to wash hog barns (well and a lot of other things too) here in the states. Best practices and suggestions for you, take em or leave em. Have the customer set up, 12-24 hours prior to you doing the cleaning, sprinklers. Not only does this loosen up the poop and mud but the fly poop as well. The kind that you use for your yard/grass. Especially heavier soiled barns. Make sure the hit the ceiling and walls. You will find barns that have massive build up several inches or more...use a zero tip here and "cut" them out in sections. If you plan on doing this for taller barns like this one you might want to start having a separate set of scaffolding with tie offs (so you don't fall). Sprinklers can be set on those too to reach the ceiling. Rain slickers for when you are doing the ceiling is good. Prescription eye googles. Rub the the inside with shaving cream and thoroughly wipe out and they won't fog. Your equipment will start taking on that odor so eventually you will want to separate sets of wands, hoses, and clothes. Fan tips are your friends. Lastly...washing animals barns. That smell will seep into your SOUL. You won't smell it after a while but trust me everyone else can. Spray deodorant works well but my go to was to wash (especially my hands and face) with a mixture of lemon juice/oil and baking soda. It really helps cut the odor down. Loves your videos!!! Hope this helps a little.
I will say this I’m glad it didn’t smell as bad as it looked, you guys did a great job!
I know my papaws dairy cattle barn would have cattle on each side with the feed tracking down the middle. He would use his tractor to push all the old or yucky feed out of the barn to replace it with new or to move the gates to let them out in the pasture to roam and free feed.
I used to clean commercial air conditioners before they were needed in the summer so this looks similar. BUT I wore a respirator/full face double filter doing it. No way I was breathing any of that nasty stuff. Kudos!
Probably pens on each side and cattle tracking through the middle - would be the common thing and that's what it looks like. Hoofs will wear the concrete smooth. There would be hay in the pens keeping the floor from staining so much, Long as the customer is happy that's what matters.
I just want to say how much I love the music you choose for your videos. Just sublime!
Wicked job. Well done. Barn cleaning is really hard work and it looked like it was the first time it had ever been done!
Wow! Just wow!
Gotta say, that barn was an ideal job for Soft Washing. Put it on like foam with extra surfactant, and let it dwell 2x. Re foam in spots to saturate. Your only environmental concern is the surfactant. I use organic laundry soap because everything breaks down to salt, water and essential minerals in under 8 hours on a sunny day or till dry. Without giving too much of the recipe away, hope you understand. Reach out and I'll hook you up with my Organic Farm Safe cleaner mix recipe. Took me 3 years and a dozen farms to perfect the levels of cleaner and sanitizer to do the work with very short half lifes to ensure no harm to soils or livestock.
Hi Sid, this might be a weird suggestion but would a fisherman’s fighting belt be useful to secure the pole into and hold the weight of your pole instead of killing your upper body on the ceiling areas?
Something along those lines would save your arms.
Wow, definitely one of the most satisfying videos on this channel. This looks phenomenal. And I too was expecting an awful smell from this, glad it wasnt there!
ABSOLUTELY POSITIVELY AMAZING. A DIFFERENCE FROM NIGHT TO DAY. YOU AND KEV ARE A GREAT PAIR 👍 👌 👏
Well that was different and such a satisfying watch but your poor neck! Looking forward to that outside part. Epic muck shifting by kev too
Seriously impressed with this one - I can see the point of this cleaning job over people wanting their roof washed.
Who knows your next video might be cleaning a fleet or agricultural vehicles - Tractor and a combine 🤣🤣 loving it mate keep it up 👊👊👊
Just throwing out an idea for the staining, I worked for a haulage company which delivered animal feed round the country and two main product was sugarbeet pellet (a dry store pellet) and supaflow (basically sugarbeet coated in molasses). When the firm packed up and we emptied the stores of feed, the supaflow store floor was stained like that in the video and not much brings it up if it’s engrained in the concrete. Heat is best as molasses is just a sugar syrup like treacle but probably not worth clients money to put hard graft into something that might not shift👍 and as per the other comments the hole in the floor is just a lump of box section steel embedded in the concrete so that dividers or temporary walls can be put in, great job and an enjoyable watch as per Sid👍🧼
Big job, my neck and shoulders were aching in sympathy for you mate 😝
I did something similar years ago when I was younger and it took 4 visits to an osteopath to get my neck sorted 😩
A good commercial quality degreaser sprayed and left to soak in a bit and high pressure wash off will get that greasy patch looking better I recon.
OMG. Love this I mean really wish I could help you but I’m across the water from ya. Oh well love to watch. You ROCK
10:30 I understood that reference! *laughs like a kookaburra*
That's awesome and very impressive!
Might be a good idea to get yourself a pole pruner harness and rig it up to your extension pole if you plan on doing ceilings like that again. Nice job though!
Those holes are for steel fence posts, leaving a central through way for feeding the cattle. The dark staining would be from silage, which would be spread down the middle for the cows from each side to eat.
The posts and fencing would be removed in the spring when the cows go back out to grass, this leaves the shed usable for other uses in the summer months.
Just seen this pop up on my feed!!!! Soooooo excited.
What fab content thank you xx
Results were amazing. Great job 🌻👍
Love the music for the floor washing!
Hi Sid I have a good tip for saving your neck in that situation - get a good backpack that comes up high behind your head (like the old-style hiking packs) and put a rolled up towel or sleeping bag on top, right up against your neck. You can then tilt your head back at an angle and relax it on the support, makes a huge difference. I can roll ceilings (paint) all day with that trick. I thought of it myself, so if you use it, give me a shout out on a video lol :) Great clean again, thanks for sharing!
Appropriate saying for the job, "what goes up, must come down". You guys are awesome!! 👌 👏 Great job!
I love seeing the finished beauty of these big messy jobs. This one lived up to expectations, nice job Sid. A good video for me to watch before bed :D
This
Was a PHENOMENAL JOB.
Beautiful job 👏
WOW! On to bigger projects, that was a super job for you! Well done Sid & Kev, you never fail to impress your subscribers! Looking forward to the next part, it’s always satisfying from beginning to end.
My neck hurt so bad just watching you do the celling "Yes sir, that quote is for everything BUT the ceiling" is how I would have wanted that to go lol.
Wow what a big job can't wait to see the finish, you do the best that I've seen on utube. Love the video your amazing. 👍👍👍
Fantastic job done by the pair of you Sid & Kevin, made me feel knackered just looking at you both working so hard. 😫👍
Been looking forward to this one!!!! Yay. Wow, it came up well… looove ur vids. Keep up the good work.. from Sydney Australia.
What a great job with excellent results, well done Syd and Kevin. Love watching your videos.
Just loved watching all thoes walls come up nice and clean , brilliant job
Wow!! Amazing!! And it only took 2 men to do it!! An example of beautiful coordination!
I'm glad you mentioned how painful that was instead of just acting like it was as easy as it looks lol. My neck and shoulders were hurting just watching you
Absolute monster job, and you guys nailed it. A transformation. 👍
Well done. You deserve every penny you get for this Job.
I think your right, seems like oil. Was this old horse stable? Those “holes” in floor were for 4x4s, probably stables? Probably tractors driving down the middle over the years, and got only knows what leaks out of those things.
Phenomenal job.
Ultimate pressure washer simulator.
One large mess down. Good job. Glad you have the rest of the day to recuperate.😊
It looks amazing!!! So satisfying to see the decades of muck instantly disappear! You did great! 👍❤
Super satisfying to watch 👍👍👍.
Holy moley...it looks like a completely different barn now! Sid, you and Kev are miracle workers~
Granted, I still wouldn't _eat_ off that floor (maybe another 2 high-temp steam washes), but I'd at least be willing to sit on it! 😅🤣
Glad you showed all the hard graft from Kev too. Well done gentlemen, don't envy this job at all, it looked a right stinker before
Looks like the floor holes may have housed a vehicle lift; anchor points. They may have used the center area for vehicle maintenance. Could be all kinds of fluid stains.
Excellent! Would it help any to have something like flag bearer’s use in parades for the pole when cleaning big ceilings? That might take a lot of weight off the shoulders and put it more on the hips. It should also create a fulcrum point with your arms which would help I think. Anyway, great job! Wish you were in the US where I live. I have a job need’s done! Keep up the great content, really look forward to your releases.
The mark on the floor is from a 'slurry slide'. which is basically a thing that drags cow shit along the floor to an end area, then it returns to start all over again. We'll done, you have done, a really good job 👍
For the past 2 weeks I’ve been washing cattle sheds and it’s so annoying props to you for making it your occupation 😂
The holes in the floor are where vehicle hoist posts were installed. They used to do under body or engine work on vehicles there. Great job Sid!!!!
5 STAR Work well done
this should serve as a neat little reminder that there's rural everywhere. it came up quite neatly. and, yeah, that black stain is probably every petroleum product used in equipment combined.
You should look Into getting climbing glasses. The kind that has a mirror inside pointed upwards. That way you could take some serious tension off your neck. Not sure about fogging and water on the glass. But it is absoloutely worth it for those kinds of jobs!
Love the content!!
wow!!! 2 thumbs up
Hard work but a great result 👍. Awesome 👌
Another absolutely fantastic job! Huge difference after you finished, very impressive!!
On UA-cam I've so far moved from watching restoration videos to pressure washing and garden maintenance. A whole channel dedicated just to barn cleaning? Yes, I know you were joking but I'll bet there's an audience for it. I might even follow it myself.
Nice to see a CLEAN instead of a demolish and rebuild!
Great job! I can't resist mentioning the pristine white t shirt you wore for the job - at least it was at the start.
Oil on that floor……my dad owned garages and this is how the floors looked. Oil litter is only thing that will clean it up. Great job.
I hope you get more of these kind of jobs because this is satisfying 😀.
amazing how a place is transformed after cleaning.
Awesome job done.
Effing BRUTAL!! You definitely earned your money on this one...
Hi mate. For these types of job i use a Stihl Power brush. I swap the brush attachments for the power paddle. The rubber blade shifts debris is one pass. If you are doing more barns, it will pay for itself in one or two jobs.
There's something familiar about this! .... 🎥 ( Biff Tannen spits ) "I HATE MANURE". 🚫🐂. 😨😂😂
Absolutely incredible work. So glad when you dropped the comment about it being concrete sheets. Maybe worth hiring a battery operated (110v) scissors lift for the next one. Save your back big time.
I've seen both movies 28 days later and 28 weeks later and I had that same thought while you were cleaning the ceiling part
I'm glad videos don't come with a smell. Posted right before you mention that it doesn't stink. lol
Congrats PEC on pressure washing the top, sides, and the floor. Alot of work, butt it turned-out great.. lv the video.
That barns looks lovely. I’d say there were stalls with mats down on each side. I pressure washed my wood stalls in my barn a couple of years ago, looked lovely when I got done.
Probably another farm building converted to industrial use ! When we are all hungry you will wonder where have all the farmers gone .the oil on the floor is from silage ( fermented grass/ maize)
The stain is where the cow's feed was laid out for them. It's fermented grass, and has probably been put in the same place, twice a day, for decades. As you pointed out it's in line with the holes, and that's where a fence would have been to separate the feeding alley from the bedpack.
I have an Idea for you, try to get one of those belts that hold deep sea fishing rods, the bottom of your pole sits in a hard pocket on the belt, so in turn takes the strain off your arms holding the long pole up, and takes weight off it as well. :)