All that stainless steel equipment looks like milk processing equipment. In the shed, the New Holland machine is a square bailer (makes rectangle bails of hay). In the other end of the shed, the large rusty box contraption is also a kind of bailer, the notched shaft in the center is used to press the top part down to compress the material you are bailing. On the floor in front of the old wardrobe is an antique post mounted drill press (it is laying on its side, for use it would be vertical with the large round wheel at the top). Thanks for another great video!!!
I would love for you to do a video/story on the most creepy and confronting explore that you have ever done! There must be times where you have gone into a place and someone or something has totally freaked you out. Where I grew up in England there was an old castle with adjoining forest that we'd explore and the legend behind the castle and its surrounds certainly made for a spooky freak out time.
Nice to find your channel dude. Liked the video and presentation. The green kitchen is insane and loving it. Hope to see more such great videos, blessings and be safe - from a new fan 😎
this place sure is run down. your game going into some of those rooms with so many spiders... id freak out if it was me.. haha. thanks for showing us this house :)
They look like dairy units mate maybe a dairy farm at some stage. When I heard that fly I almost looked around thought it was flying past my face and was about to squat it. The 3D fly. The kitchen looked cool, wow I have never seen so many dead bees the new colony probably killed the old ones and started a new tribe in that cabinet. Nothing worse than the smell of a decaying sheep, this was a cool explore mate cheers.
Hey Werner! They did look commercial for sure. Another old place just used to dump things over the years. That bathroom cabinet is the honey cabinet now! :-) Cheers foe watching mate, will catch up on yours now :-)
Ugh! Spider webs😜. That shiny metal thing looks like something my cousin had on his dairy farm. That still looked pretty clean for being abandoned. Thanks Paul👍🏻😊
The big stainless tank in the backdoor is a milk bulk tank, goes in a dairy barn. There was also a receiver for the pipeline. Pretty neat old farm. It's cool to see how old farmhouses and buildings in Australia and the USA are different in some ways and the same in others. You should have gone back to that other building, it might have been the old milking parlor. Would have been cool to see.
Thank you Paul for all the hard work you put into theses videos to show us the beautiful older houses.I was just able to start watching your videos again as i have had to get a part time job to help pay my rising Medicare cost.
🌟Hi Paul, ahh another classic roadside find love it love it. So peaceful and quite would have been beautiful in its prime so sad to see it lonely and unloved. Thank you so much again 😊❤🌟x
Urbex Indigo thanks for sharing this awesome video i really enjoyed it so much about Creepy old house and sheds with stuff abandoned since the 80`s i always enjoy your channel i am from the U.S.A. i look forward to watch your videos keep up the great work you do and always be safe and God Bless.
Thanks, Paul. It's interesting how 2nd hand farm equipment is only worth scrap metal value and not trade-in value, when buying new equipment. Most farms have old machinery in sheds or lying in paddocks.
Those sagging/falling ceilings were made of hardboard - Masonite or Burnie Board - very common material for ceilings and walls of the era. It was cheap and easy to use, but tended to sag and warp, especially if it got wet.
Hello Paul that house really did look really creepy I hope you're doing all right after all the cobwebs thank you for taking us along till next time take care stay safe love from upstate New York
That home is cute all of it minus the bees in bathroom id close that for ever. other than that thanks for this little time capsule:) Take and saty safe my friend cya Barbara NWFL.Usa baby
Nice 30’s music intro, very appropriate, indeed. I like the Roaring 20’s, if I could go back in time, I’d like to party with those animals, learning the Charleston , b4 it all collapsed in 1929. Man they partied Hearty, yeah man. 30’s music 🎼 is just as awesome! I still have the party in me, and I’m 58 years old, but I’ve been told I don’t act like I’m an old fart, but, in a good way, not childish, just young at …but, my wretched body, not so good, haha!!!
Hi apoclydoomer :-) It would be awesome to go back and spend some time in the roaring 20`s and in to the 30`s. Anytime travel back to the good old days I would be up for! Cheers for watching and stay young at heart man. :-)
Hi Paul This is or was a cute little house now it’s just somewhat creepy. It looks so peaceful there but there are no other homes around. I like peaceful but I also like my neighbors. Paul what was that big green tank. I can’t believe all those dead bees. There were tons of them in that house. There were a lot of sheds there too filled with some kind of equipment and thankfully no possums. How are Nikolai, Noah and Tux doing. Give them a little Pat on their heads for me. Thanks for another interesting exploration. Stay safe and well.🐈
Hi Irene :-) It was a bit creepy in there for sure! Those bees!!! lol. Thanks for asking about my 3 boys! Yes they are going well, I will put them in a video in the next few weeks. Cheers for watching :-)
I always feel a bit sorry to see the old agricultural trappings abandoned and forgotten. As you say, another operator might still be using the land or old sheds for seasonal equipment. I would assume that the rainfall amounts no longer allow for dry land farming anymore.The Advent of irrigation here permitted some to hang on past the time to chuck it in. Cheers
Its sad but there is plenty of old deceased estate farms like that in Australia as there kids have moved on to the city for education and work and want nothing to do with it when inherited a friend of mine grew up on a cattle and sheep property at Tamworth he wanted nothing to do with that life he moved to Sydney at 18 went to university and become a lawyer got married and had a family and never went back even once to Tamworth even when he was left it when his father died he just hired some one to sell every thing and the property but was happy to take the money quite selfish really
Very well summed up mate. That is exactly what happens here with these ones and they get absorbed in to neighboring farms who purchase the land then use the old sheds for storage and dumping old things. Some farms build a newer homestead nearby also and the old ones just sits to decay. Cheers for watching :-)
I love all these roadside finds. Is that big green tank a septic tank ? Love the big open kitchen and that big walk in pantry. What a waste the bailing twine is. Wasn't that rolls of fence wire outside
Most plastic septic tanks that I’ve seen are more of a rectangle and have 2 compartments with lids and also holes at each end for the inflow and outflow to the drain field. In the earlier part of the 1900’s in the US people in very rural areas used other things for their septic tanks. It wasn’t uncommon to find that someone had buried a car body or two as the tank. They just needed to create a void down there and there weren’t the regulations there are now.
All that stainless steel equipment looks dairy to me. The tall canister thing is a cream separator I’m pretty sure. Not a large operation though. Do they do a lot of goat milk down there? Looks about the right size for that. Baling twine, the bane and savior of the farm. If you can’t fix it with baling twine and duct tape it can’t be fixed 😂. Just be sure to pick up all the loose strands you find and if you can’t pick it up and it makes a loop, cut it so it’s no longer a trip hazard.
Yup. Had a bad accident in my hay barn with loose baling twine, loop caught on my boot and pitched me into a manure spreader. Lovely visit to the er at 9 pm to stitch up my face.
@@williebeamish5879 yikes. When we moved into our last house the former owner didn’t pick up their twine and it was so embedded in the dirt all you could do was cut it until you could get a tractor in the pen to scrape everything out. Even then more would come up. I hope you healed up well. Not the most sanitary place to get hurt in.
@@marthamitchell9452 I did, scar blends right in with my wrinkles. And this farm had embedded plastic twine everywhere in fields, too. Not easy to pull out, but can disable a horse easily, too.
That thing you didnt know what it was out the back was a milk tank when they milk cows it goes into that and the white thing on top helps separate the cream.
Maaaaaaate that was dairy equipment you walked past on the way in, and we don’t have “mud rooms” in Australia, and it was just a pantry mate, which you know because you grew up in the bush! Perhaps you used those terms for your OS followers? But a great old find nonetheless, still loving your episodes 😃
Yeah Frankie here in Texas on most farms there is a small bathroom with a toilet and shower and shelves for your boots at the rear entrance. Our soil is black loam and when it rains it is the type of mud that will suck your boots off of your feet when you walk. My mom would "kill" us kids if we tracked the mud into the house. So most fall and spring months when it rained we had to strip down in the mud room, shower down with our clothes on to wash off the large chunks, throw the dirty clothes in the sink, shower again and by then mom would have clean jeans and shirts waiting. Afterwards into the kitchen for a hot meal then off to bed. About 20 years later when visiting the farm with my family my mom would stand by the back porch with a water hose and hose down my 3 boys who were covered from head to toe with mud before she would let them into the mud room to shower. Yeah OS in the states most farms had a mud room.
Man a lot of died sheep in those old farms it kind sicking to think people don't see that live stock go missing they in barn didn't look water tank any where for sheep to drink water poor things look 2 from see bones laying ground eeewwww
Some for sure madamwhich but giving too many details can give the location away, the ones in the suburbs that are going to be demolished I have done extensive history :-)
I was having an amazing time exploring abandoned houses like this a few years ago… until the police turned up on my doorstep one day and I got done for trespassing… 😢
Love the Green Color Kitchen
More awesome Sunday viewing. I love Sundays LOL!!!
Cheers, glad you are enjoying pagonabarbata1364, thanks for the support :-)
All that stainless steel equipment looks like milk processing equipment. In the shed, the New Holland machine is a square bailer (makes rectangle bails of hay). In the other end of the shed, the large rusty box contraption is also a kind of bailer, the notched shaft in the center is used to press the top part down to compress the material you are bailing. On the floor in front of the old wardrobe is an antique post mounted drill press (it is laying on its side, for use it would be vertical with the large round wheel at the top). Thanks for another great video!!!
Thanks heaps for the info on the machinery ludercoarms :-) Glad you enjoyed, cheers for watching :-)
Was gonna say they looked like dairy vats
I would love for you to do a video/story on the most creepy and confronting explore that you have ever done! There must be times where you have gone into a place and someone or something has totally freaked you out. Where I grew up in England there was an old castle with adjoining forest that we'd explore and the legend behind the castle and its surrounds certainly made for a spooky freak out time.
Also, Paul could take his ghost detecting equipment!
Yeah that would be really cool, Urbex Indigo2 exploring the paranormal
@@maureenmaunder7508 😂
@@ktt8237 😂
Hi Keven :-) This is something I will certainly do as there have been a few and I know of more yet to do! Cheers mate :-)
Nice to find your channel dude. Liked the video and presentation. The green kitchen is insane and loving it. Hope to see more such great videos, blessings and be safe - from a new fan 😎
this place sure is run down. your game going into some of those rooms with so many spiders... id freak out if it was me.. haha. thanks for showing us this house :)
Those thistles are budgie heaven
In the U.S. the kitchen table and chairs were called A "chrome set". The top of the table was always a pretty color Formica!! Good explore!!
Formica! that is what I was trying to remember , Cheers Nancy :-)
nice find paul creepy old shed alright with some good things still in there great explore paul.
thanks for the tour.
Be safe!
Watching your videos is relaxing!
Glad you like them kenanger6877 :-) Cheers for watching
That was a pretty nice roadside find there!!! Thanks for the walk through. I'm happy to see someone else trip for a change!!!
Cheers for watching Heather, yes taking a tumble here and there can be fun and not fun! haha :-)
They look like dairy units mate maybe a dairy farm at some stage. When I heard that fly I almost looked around thought it was flying past my face and was about to squat it. The 3D fly. The kitchen looked cool, wow I have never seen so many dead bees the new colony probably killed the old ones and started a new tribe in that cabinet. Nothing worse than the smell of a decaying sheep, this was a cool explore mate cheers.
Hey Werner! They did look commercial for sure. Another old place just used to dump things over the years. That bathroom cabinet is the honey cabinet now! :-) Cheers foe watching mate, will catch up on yours now :-)
@@urbexindigo5164 cheers mate
Agreed on all points 👌
Ugh! Spider webs😜. That shiny metal thing looks like something my cousin had on his dairy farm. That still looked pretty clean for being abandoned. Thanks Paul👍🏻😊
I'm home pigeons 😂😂😂 Cracking find👍
Wow what a creepy place!!! Your braver than me. Haha. Great explore! 🥰🥰🥰
Glad you enjoyed Robin :-)
The big stainless tank in the backdoor is a milk bulk tank, goes in a dairy barn. There was also a receiver for the pipeline. Pretty neat old farm. It's cool to see how old farmhouses and buildings in Australia and the USA are different in some ways and the same in others. You should have gone back to that other building, it might have been the old milking parlor. Would have been cool to see.
Cheers for the info Krissyb1980 :-) Glad you enjoyed
I really liked the house exterior and interior.
Another great roadside find Paul. I love the sound of birds chirping, but when you walked inside that house it was quiet and creepy. Nice find.
poor old house dosent have much left in her but always good to document it
Sad scenes 😢 Yu guys had a tough job exploring, take care God bless ! from India
Great find yet again, a few retro things to look at. I am loving these country properties your featuring nice work. Thanks for sharing. Cheers MM :)
Glad you enjoyed it again MM, thanks for all your support! Cheers :-)
@@urbexindigo5164 No worries 👍
Thank you Paul for all the hard work you put into theses videos to show us the beautiful older houses.I was just able to start watching your videos again as i have had to get a part time job to help pay my rising Medicare cost.
You are very welcome Barbara, welcome back. Hope your new job goes well :-)
Another good video! Thanks from AZ USA
My pleasurekx2437 :-)
🌟Hi Paul, ahh another classic roadside find love it love it. So peaceful and quite would have been beautiful in its prime so sad to see it lonely and unloved. Thank you so much again 😊❤🌟x
Hi Megan, cheers for watching again. Peaceful but also creepy! :-)
@@urbexindigo5164 yes a bit creepy I agree
I liked the swallow's nest on the shower-head fitting... (4:55) ....a mud nest in the mud-room. :)
Indeed it was ACEin Oz :-) Cheers for watching
Urbex Indigo thanks for sharing this awesome video i really enjoyed it so much about Creepy old house and sheds with stuff abandoned since the 80`s i always enjoy your channel i am from the U.S.A. i look forward to watch your videos keep up the great work you do and always be safe and God Bless.
I think the bathroom was "bee Valhalla". Looking down the hallway was definitely a creepy vibe.
I’d love to go live there completely off the grid 🙌
Hi Sue :-) Absolutely, I have found a few really secluded quiet places that would be a perfect retreat. Cheers for watching :-)
@@urbexindigo5164 I’m so tempted. A few lately you have shown us would be perfect 🙏
3:24 I'd guess dairy equipment, bulk milk storage maybe.
Thanks for the tour Paul!
🤠👍
Thanks John, and for watching mate. Cheers :-)
Thanks, Paul. It's interesting how 2nd hand farm equipment is only worth scrap metal value and not trade-in value, when buying new equipment. Most farms have old machinery in sheds or lying in paddocks.
Hi Ken, agreed mate, such a waste. Cheers for watching
Another good one 👍❤️🇺🇸
Glad you enjoyed it Gayle, thanks for watching :-)
@@urbexindigo5164 your very welcome 👍❤️😒
Really cool 😎👍 place you can only imagine the hard working family that lived there I don't think anyone works that hard anymore
I was suprised that house looks in good shape and when you entered I see it is in total decay.
I really like this quaint style of weatherboard. (Amazing weeds) :D
Cheers for watching again herogamer! :-) Tall weeds!!!! lol
As always great👍👍 how is Tuxy she gets on well with your cats now 😺😺😺😺🙋🙋🙋🙋
Tuxy is going well he is a boy! :-) I have 3 boys, will put them in a video very soon! :-)
Awesome👍👍 I would be very happy to see them see you soon 😺😺🙋🙋
Those sagging/falling ceilings were made of hardboard - Masonite or Burnie Board - very common material for ceilings and walls of the era. It was cheap and easy to use, but tended to sag and warp, especially if it got wet.
Hello Paul that house really did look really creepy I hope you're doing all right after all the cobwebs thank you for taking us along till next time take care stay safe love from upstate New York
Glad you enjoyed it Nancy :-) Yes all safe after that creepy place! :-)
That home is cute all of it minus the bees in bathroom id close that for ever. other than that thanks for this little time capsule:) Take and saty safe my friend cya Barbara NWFL.Usa baby
I can see you enjoy doing this. Have a good Sunday
Thank you! You too Anna`sBC :-) Cheers for watching again
Very cool.
Nice 30’s music intro, very appropriate, indeed. I like the Roaring 20’s, if I could go back in time, I’d like to party with those animals, learning the Charleston , b4 it all collapsed in 1929. Man they partied Hearty, yeah man. 30’s music 🎼 is just as awesome! I still have the party in me, and I’m 58 years old, but I’ve been told I don’t act like I’m an old fart, but, in a good way, not childish, just young at …but, my wretched body, not so good, haha!!!
Hi apoclydoomer :-) It would be awesome to go back and spend some time in the roaring 20`s and in to the 30`s. Anytime travel back to the good old days I would be up for! Cheers for watching and stay young at heart man. :-)
The old fashioned up ended bed frame with big springs, single mattress with the floral patterned cover on it in the past
Be careful.😳🤕
Hi Paul
This is or was a cute little house now it’s just somewhat creepy. It looks so peaceful
there but there are no other homes around. I like peaceful but I also like my
neighbors. Paul what was that big green tank. I can’t believe all those dead bees.
There were tons of them in that house. There were a lot of sheds there too filled
with some kind of equipment and thankfully no possums. How are Nikolai, Noah
and Tux doing. Give them a little Pat on their heads for me. Thanks for another
interesting exploration. Stay safe and well.🐈
Hi Irene :-) It was a bit creepy in there for sure! Those bees!!! lol. Thanks for asking about my 3 boys! Yes they are going well, I will put them in a video in the next few weeks. Cheers for watching :-)
I always feel a bit sorry to see the old agricultural trappings abandoned and forgotten. As you say, another operator might still be using the land or old sheds for seasonal equipment.
I would assume that the rainfall amounts no longer allow for dry land farming anymore.The Advent of irrigation here permitted some to hang on past the time to chuck it in. Cheers
Definitely creepy. Poor sheep at least it wasn't in the house. I can't believe all those bee's amazing.
Cheers for watching Kathy :-)
Its sad but there is plenty of old deceased estate farms like that in Australia as there kids have moved on to the city for education and work and want nothing to do with it when inherited a friend of mine grew up on a cattle and sheep property at Tamworth he wanted nothing to do with that life he moved to Sydney at 18 went to university and become a lawyer got married and had a family and never went back even once to Tamworth even when he was left it when his father died he just hired some one to sell every thing and the property but was happy to take the money quite selfish really
Very well summed up mate. That is exactly what happens here with these ones and they get absorbed in to neighboring farms who purchase the land then use the old sheds for storage and dumping old things. Some farms build a newer homestead nearby also and the old ones just sits to decay. Cheers for watching :-)
That thing flying in front of camera while you saying you not getting good vibes 😂😲
Abandoned since the 1980's ceiling panels coming down, old furniture, bed frames etc, old single mattress with a 1970's floral pattern on the cover
Great video
Glad you enjoyed it again Michelle :-) Cheers for watching
Even the thistle was creepy.
All those dead bees, ugh. Never seen anything like that.
I love all these roadside finds.
Is that big green tank a septic tank ?
Love the big open kitchen and that big walk in pantry.
What a waste the bailing twine is. Wasn't that rolls of fence wire outside
Hi Linda, yes either used for an in ground septic or a rain water tank I think. Cheers for watching :-)
Most plastic septic tanks that I’ve seen are more of a rectangle and have 2 compartments with lids and also holes at each end for the inflow and outflow to the drain field. In the earlier part of the 1900’s in the US people in very rural areas used other things for their septic tanks. It wasn’t uncommon to find that someone had buried a car body or two as the tank. They just needed to create a void down there and there weren’t the regulations there are now.
I think you should bring your ghost hunting equipment with you and do a bit of investigating in these creepy ones.
amazing video
Glad you enjoyed elmin82, cheers for watching :-)
Backyard of house..looked like commercial kitchen equipment..than that in shed
Hi Goldenmare, yes they were certainly large pieces of equipment. Cheers for watching :-)
All that stainless steel equipment looks dairy to me. The tall canister thing is a cream separator I’m pretty sure. Not a large operation though. Do they do a lot of goat milk down there? Looks about the right size for that. Baling twine, the bane and savior of the farm. If you can’t fix it with baling twine and duct tape it can’t be fixed 😂. Just be sure to pick up all the loose strands you find and if you can’t pick it up and it makes a loop, cut it so it’s no longer a trip hazard.
Yup. Had a bad accident in my hay barn with loose baling twine, loop caught on my boot and pitched me into a manure spreader. Lovely visit to the er at 9 pm to stitch up my face.
@@williebeamish5879 yikes. When we moved into our last house the former owner didn’t pick up their twine and it was so embedded in the dirt all you could do was cut it until you could get a tractor in the pen to scrape everything out. Even then more would come up. I hope you healed up well. Not the most sanitary place to get hurt in.
A lot of dairy farms martha so all the milk equipment makes sense :-)
Ouch! :-) Cheers for watching
@@marthamitchell9452 I did, scar blends right in with my wrinkles. And this farm had embedded plastic twine everywhere in fields, too. Not easy to pull out, but can disable a horse easily, too.
That thing you didnt know what it was out the back was a milk tank when they milk cows it goes into that and the white thing on top helps separate the cream.
Maaaaaaate that was dairy equipment you walked past on the way in, and we don’t have “mud rooms” in Australia, and it was just a pantry mate, which you know because you grew up in the bush! Perhaps you used those terms for your OS followers?
But a great old find nonetheless, still loving your episodes 😃
Yeah Frankie here in Texas on most farms there is a small bathroom with a toilet and shower and shelves for your boots at the rear entrance. Our soil is black loam and when it rains it is the type of mud that will suck your boots off of your feet when you walk. My mom would "kill" us kids if we tracked the mud into the house. So most fall and spring months when it rained we had to strip down in the mud room, shower down with our clothes on to wash off the large chunks, throw the dirty clothes in the sink, shower again and by then mom would have clean jeans and shirts waiting. Afterwards into the kitchen for a hot meal then off to bed. About 20 years later when visiting the farm with my family my mom would stand by the back porch with a water hose and hose down my 3 boys who were covered from head to toe with mud before she would let them into the mud room to shower. Yeah OS in the states most farms had a mud room.
Some lingo for both Oz and Os :-) Yes always more to learn even with growing up in the bush mate :-)
Ok the bee bathroom was creepy 🥹.
Man a lot of died sheep in those old farms it kind sicking to think people don't see that live stock go missing they in barn didn't look water tank any where for sheep to drink water poor things look 2 from see bones laying ground eeewwww
Is this in Australia? Just looks to dry to be new New Zealand
Yep Australia here David, cheers for watching :-)
Do you even find out the history of these places - does anyone still own them and if so why do they not fix them up or sell them off ??
Some for sure madamwhich but giving too many details can give the location away, the ones in the suburbs that are going to be demolished I have done extensive history :-)
00:57 Cool!
It was creepy.😊😊
It did have a creepy feel painterbrush :-) cheers for watching
Straight when the notification comes up that ur ex indigo has posted I don’t. Care what video I’m on I go straight to urbex indigos 😂 😀
Hi Joe :-) Thanks heaps for the support and watching, appreciate it. :-)
urbex indigo that crabby place that you went into everything was falling apart
Those coffee mugs in the kitchen were popular around the late 80s so probably no one been there since the 90s be my guess
U should have checked the back house or at least sneek a peek....the whole place looked abandoned.....oh well,safe travels
I was having an amazing time exploring abandoned houses like this a few years ago… until the police turned up on my doorstep one day and I got done for trespassing… 😢
Very unlucky Liana. 🙂 Cheers for watching
Laminex table
Good place for Critters to live
👍☺
Creepy
Please be careful of the bees!
They need to Mow it
Has anyone ever confronted you while doing your videos and what about getting permission to these videos
Thts an old door
Too scary this time, sorry
I'm usually not a wimp, but this time I kept feeling like you were going to be hurt.....snakes are sneaky.
That place is haunted