Very interesting! I'll send this to Lee Lewis of Welshman Studios, as he's always talking about this subject. God bless you in the name of Jesus Christ💕
I'm glad you salvaged those beautiful well preserved bricks! A lot of old bricks were made with creek bottom clay and had lots of pebbles, chalky limestone and quartz in them. I have two -200 year old protected indoor hearths and chimneys made out of the same kind of bricks. Using your bricks as planters might cause them to start to fall apart over time, I find old bricks outside that are crumbly with moss growing on them. If your bricks soak up water, be careful making an oven out of them. They could explode. I recommend using firebrick with the old bricks around them where they won't get as hot. Research on brick rocket stoves mentions that. Whatever you decide I wish the best of luck to you! Salvaging old objects is a labor of love!
Actually 200' doesn't sound crazy at all. There is one one canal st in Lewiston Maine that is at least that high. Check it out on Google Earth or whatever. It is a crazy feat of engineering. It was for all the textile mills.
Ridicules ? The app darkened the video so I’d didn’t show what I was trying to show. But I’m totally glad u found it ridicules. Good thing I didn’t miss spell anything with it .
@@timchandler4427 Next time you make a 2 minute video maybe spend 30 seconds watching it before you post it and waste everyone’s time. Which is obviously what you did since there were numerous comments about people not seeing anything except a black sky.
Very interesting! I'll send this to Lee Lewis of Welshman Studios, as he's always talking about this subject. God bless you in the name of Jesus Christ💕
Kool thanks
I'm glad you salvaged those beautiful well preserved bricks! A lot of old bricks were made with creek bottom clay and had lots of pebbles, chalky limestone and quartz in them. I have two -200 year old protected indoor hearths and chimneys made out of the same kind of bricks. Using your bricks as planters might cause them to start to fall apart over time, I find old bricks outside that are crumbly with moss growing on them. If your bricks soak up water, be careful making an oven out of them. They could explode. I recommend using firebrick with the old bricks around them where they won't get as hot. Research on brick rocket stoves mentions that. Whatever you decide I wish the best of luck to you! Salvaging old objects is a labor of love!
Kool thanks for the information I’ll probably just use them on the outer shell to for looks
@@timchandler4427 YW :) All the best!
Glad to see you back. Truth is coming quickly.🙏🗡️🛡️
Welcome back🎉
Actually 200' doesn't sound crazy at all. There is one one canal st in Lewiston Maine that is at least that high. Check it out on Google Earth or whatever. It is a crazy feat of engineering. It was for all the textile mills.
Glad to see you took down that previous ridiculous video of your windy night sky that showed nothing
Ridicules ? The app darkened the video so I’d didn’t show what I was trying to show. But I’m totally glad u found it ridicules. Good thing I didn’t miss spell anything with it .
@@timchandler4427 Next time you make a 2 minute video maybe spend 30 seconds watching it before you post it and waste everyone’s time. Which is obviously what you did since there were numerous comments about people not seeing anything except a black sky.
@@timchandler4427 Also the word is ridiculous. Not ridicules.
@@timchandler4427 I guess you have trouble reading words? You do know that “ridiculous” is a real word I hope.
Think they used red dirt? My state has lots and lots of red dirt.
Could the yellow be something called soapstone? It looks like it
What ever it is it’s very hard to
@@timchandler4427 That’s what soapstone is it’s yellow like that and hard I believe it is some sort of rock
🎩