This is what I did with my dad over 40 yrs ago...I own all my own power tools that he taught me to use, I will always be grateful for the lessons....these Girls are amazing! I think it’s great that your teaching them these great life skills
A family that root cellars together stays together. These girls are rockstars. Construction, steel work, concrete, math skills and hard labor. And it’s looks sturdy and safe. All I can say is: daughters are awesome.
Nice tomb!! Yes, I said it. This WILL collapse. I have built with concrete for 35 years and I PROMISE you this WILL fail. If you wish to utilize this unit please do the following at a minimum for safety. When you build shelving use concrete blocks from floor to overhead slab. Pour the cells with grout as you go up. Do not need to lay blocks with mortar between them. They can be dry stacked and grouted. Space these concrete pillars evenly around perimeter. Five columns will serve well. One on either side of door and three others space equally. Columns can be one 8”x8”x16” block stacked straight up. Sure wish you had back filled and tamped (continuously) to top of culvert then poured top with one foot overhang on the ground. Please cover slab with 20mil pond liner extending 4 feet past edge of slab then cover with one foot of dirt so rain or melting snow does not wash the dirt away from edge of slab. Wish I had not watched this video,,,,you have the most precious family I have seen on UA-cam. Please have an engineer discuss this with you.
I'm no engineer but as soon as I saw there was nothing supporting that slab apart from some thin steel I agree with you. I wonder if they have taken on board any of the comments like yours and those added below, it's a death trap! As you say such a lovely family which has put their lives at risk, hopefully they reinforce this ASAP.
You are ABSOLUTELY correct. This is a tragedy waiting to happen. I would recommend minimum 5 steel lally columns with poured concrete inside them with a suitable pad under neath and each column with a cap piece of 3'8" steel circles with an 8 inch diameter. all connected to the floor and to the ceiling pad. The corrugated steel is strong but it's strength truly is derived or comes from when all the sides or the entire circumference of the tube is equally supported with dirt or sand etc. This is why they are used for drainage "tubes" underground or partially underground. They are really strong this way but not the way you have them. Additionally, this fill dirt / sand needs to be compacted - tightly about every 10 to 12 inches every layer until you reach the height needed. PLEASE, please take these steps. Protect yourself and your family from yourselves. What Citizen 1 said is SPOT ON!
@@markonovacki2707 Thanks, i googled douchebags meaning, I don't think we are being obnoxious or offensive for raising our safety concerns, however, please enlighten me, what is armature, I thought it was electrical related.
Love seeing parents teaching kids how to handle a hard days work. I can't tell you how many teenagers I have hired that can't even complete a task like sweeping a garage floor properly. Your kids will never go hungry and will probably never be fired from a job for lack of effort. God bless all of you!
Rome Rides I don't see teenagers doing a damn thing here in Florida,besides text,shop,spend $$$ n not have much morals pretty sad guess they think all's dine for you like auto world...I think kids are better this way,they can move on if they want once of age, n see what they aren't missing for most of usa.. they will be more ready for real life...stay away from malls n Walmarts ext..material worlds already ruined the lemmings just don't know it yet...
The fact that your daughter even got that wheel barrel load of concrete up and dumped was amazing. Great job with the roof(s) pour. What a crew you have.
I'm impressed with how much you've instilled hard work into your girls. They don't seem to mind at all, and rather enjoy it knowing that something good is going to become of it in the end. Great parenting !!
My girls worked with me in our fencing business. Sometimes they didn't like it but now all these years later, they are all badass. Good job with yours.
Hubby and I are power watching your videos.....we have hunted in your area years ago....beautiful place. I just wanted to say that the whole time we are watching your videos I have this perpetual smile on my face.
I totally agree. I think that every construction crew needs to watch this video and practice the work ethics and skills of these young women. Their parents should be so very proud of their children. For sure I am
It's often m/l this way when parents involve their kids in life/projects/or family businesses such as farming ( dairy farm kid here ! 😀😀🐄). It just depends .. on the parents the mainly but the type of work & the kids to some extent too.. some don't give good directions, and r overwhelming and stressful to work with, even if only part of the time, that can really exacerbate any other issues such as some types of work being really not up some kids's alleys.
@AJ Burton: It is really important for children to learn there is joy and value in work when they are still young, and to feel valued and important in helping out to provide for the family. If the parents have a good attitude and enjoy the work they are doing, it will be contagious to the children. Even one and two-year-olds in the plain families I know really love to try and help out in the garden or barn, want to help wash dishes or hang laundry etc. Not every family is the same, but if everyone is having a good attitude, is able to laugh and share joy together while they are working, it can become almost like a party! Lots of families I know sing together while they are working, for example while weeding the garden or picking the apples or berries. Many hands make light work!
Spring go the other way on the bolts. They hold the brace up till you bolt it and automatically spin in correctly. Great video, my and 3 daughters just finishing a 93 foot rock wall at 8 feet on the end. A+
Years ago I had a concrete structural engineer design an underground house for me, a highly respected structural engineer. I still have those plans and there is a lot more steel in a lot smaller span than you have and a lot thinner pour on walls that are a lot stronger than corrugated steel culvert which is not intended to be loaded in compression. Hopefully you will put some steel columns inside the culvert because the collapse will be deadly without additional internal support.
Alan Davis yeah I know he sounds like a buzz kill, BUT... he makes a valid point. People have gotten in trouble burying shipping containers due to both downward and lateral forces at play on the walls and that culvert is waaay less solid than a steel container. Be Safe
that's a blessing, your girls out there working hard,, that's a blessing to you ! reminds me of my girls on our farm,, they still talk about it. hold them close and love them while you can,, gd bless them
What an incredible family project. Your girls will be changed forever because of this project. It will change how they are as parents. Your wife will be changed forever as well, Hopefully for the better. From now on ANY anniversary present will be an improvement.
Once the grass grows on top, the goats are gonna love it! Well design, functional, really ‘cool’... why doesn’t Rose love it? Twenty years of love, and this thing will last two hundred. Truly, love made it happen.
ever seen a person with there arm caught in a cement mixer?......well first you hear the screams then a twisted body dragged around and around until someone can get near to turn the machine off. The guy who just lost his arm that was the guy that worked in building sites for thirty years. There are laws about moving machines and kids in the same vacinity and I for one know why.
I have to say how amazing it is that you are empowering your girls to do things with you like this. They are going to grow up to be capable independent women who can do anything and I'm pretty sure the world needs more of them.
I'm a little late to the party, here's a suggestion. Many have suggested vertical supports. Use them for shelves. You are going to need shelving anyway, so may as well get the added safety and support. Great job. That's a better than average construction crew you have there.
This is Dammika from Sri lank ( South Asia ) I’m father of 2 daughters . But what I’m seen this all videos , I’m not sure my kids are where they comparing these kids . They are all rounders and they are the kids all parents expecting . Girls who having cosmetics / apple products and wasting whole day for nothing ... I’m proud of those kids , they just father foot steps behind and some time front of him too .. they deserve all goods in the world . I’m pray for them and I’m keep looking they all videos for have wish my next life to have those similar kids ..!!!
Hi Dave, I like your idea of using a culvert as the walls of the building structure, but I am concern for your safety, because concrete weights about 150 lbs per cubic foot or 1 cubic yard of concrete weights about 4050 lbs. If the roof structure has additional loads applied such as snow, people or dirt this can cause the corrugated steel culvert to buckle and collapse inward and off to one side. Please consider putting multiple 4x4 of 6x6 vertical column supports on the inside next to the walls, from the concrete floor stab to the concrete roof slab while interconnecting all columns together to insure that there is no chance for lateral forces from dirt covering outter side walls of structure to cause lateral movement of walls and columns, causing instability and structural failure.
You have made something very dangerous. These walls are not made to bear this enormous weight in this way . They will eventually collapse under the weight of the ceiling. So place stanchions to safe lives.
Great job.👍 surprised by all the negative comments by people who have probably never seen an actual root cellar, much less built one. As regards the structural strength, I’m sure you thought of this but any concerns could easily be rectified by installing some load bearing upright posts, steel, wood or whatever. I was raised in an era when and where root cellars were common. I have personally built 2 of them and currently still use one. The idea of an inner and outer cellar is a good one. Mine is a single compartment with a long entryway to reach it. 12 feet from the outer door to the inner sanctum, which also has an insulated door. I had the advantage of an existing hill to dig into, which eliminated a lot of work to build an artificial hill. I probably would have put in some upright steel posts given the dimensions of your culvert. But then I always overbuild everything I make. All in all you did a good job. Regarding the air entrained concrete, yes a freeze thaw cycle is hard on concrete, but your inner cellar particularly won’t be subject to freezing. That’s the whole object of a root cellar. The outer cellar, due to its exposed nature could perhaps be subject to some frost, depending on where you live and the average ambient winter temperatures. Here in northern Alberta we regularly get minus 40 temperatures although the average is probably more like minus 30.
I was thinking the same thing cause by cutting those holes for door ways its now gonna change how the weight is disturbed without properly supporting the weight ontop. The concrete looks to be 6 inches thick at least(8:08) .. it might hold for a while but who knows how long ..I'm not an engineer either but would have done a tin roof with no dirt ontop, as the man from the video says also wants to put dirt ontop to hide it.
I suppose once its fully backfilled its not going anywhere; but those horizontal corrugations on the mostly unsupported culvert... well I guess the ending was kinda spoiled since this video was uploaded and all.
Most good advice. Then set up the numerous interior columns to satisfy said engineer. Hint keep the mixer going ladies. Will need some piers poured in the floor to carry the lolly poles. Hope it ain't winter yet.
Hi Peter. I agree with you. I wish these folks the best of luck. Great human interest video but I have serious doubts about the structure itself. Corrugated materials derive their load strength perpendicular to the corrugation as in a Quonset hut. I fear that the structure in this video will rust and suffer a catastrophic collapse.
...the wheel barrow works best when the TIRE HAS AIR INSIDE. ...INFLATED, NOT DEFLATED... THESE GIRLS ARE AWESOME WORKERS... AND ALL SEEM TO HAVE GOOD ATTITUDES... GREAT JOB...
I found this channel last night. This is my new favorite channel. You all are a great loving family with great ethics and a will to succeed in your life. I love your off grid set up, its amazing. Your humor is wholesomely hilarious. Thanks for the laughs...
Wow I know u are a proud dad. What a family, hard working girls to. U just don't see this much any more. It was awsome to see. U all are Awsome. Thank u for a great video. God Bless U.
You are all one very special family. Every week you make me laugh out loud. I am so impressed by all of you getting this job done all together. You and Rose are raising your girls in a spectacular way Jeff. They are not only beautiful girls but so smart as well and will be a force to be reckoned with in the world. Good job well done. Cannot wait to see it finished and in action. Michelle
Hi just subscribed to your channel. I have been watching a few of your uploads with a big happy grin on my face. A lovely way of life and a lovely family. Thanks
New sub, wow so glad that I did, when I saw the big culvert standing on end, I thought at first you were converting a metal grain bin, because I completed my metal grain bin conversion a year ago. Totally insulated, and is just a very large yurt, I put in a circular stairway for the upper left bedroom, been living in it fulltime for a year now, 👍❤🇨🇦
I sure hope that you reinforced the corrugated metal culvert (walls) in a manner that'll support the ceiling... I've seen too many street & driveway culverts that didn't come close to 1% of expected life. Wish you all the best.
I watched this 4 years ago when your first posted and and it came up on my feed becasue I watched other root cellar vids... I just have to say that I think it's awesome that you are giving your children these opportunities?
I have been following this on IG and waiting for a video on this build. These young ladies are amazing as are their parents. This is family building not just a root cellar but a loving sharing bonding family. This is just so awesome to watch and listen to them having fun doing back breaking work! Also happy anniversary to Jeff and Rose you guys are are raising very beautiful family. You folks take care and continue to enjoy your off grid lives to the fullest.
While I agree with the posts pointing out the lack of structural integrity this building has, I applaud you and your wife for encouraging your daughters to develop life skills many women wish they had. And most would be envious of.
Thanks for the video, made my day. Your girls are so blessed, to you have parents like you. You and Rose are giving them memories that will last a lifetime, and then some.
Great idea. However I’m unsure of that suspended slab being held by just the culvert. As well as the position of the rebar. Because it would want to sag in the center, the tensile strength would need to be on the bottom and compressive on top. I would also question the bag mix you used. Freeze thaw environments require air entrained concrete. I’m a concrete finisher for 30 years.
Ive poured similar, never had issue the tube stock welded yowards bottom helps to support. I would have left wood in to dampon and encase sides in concrete, but as long as packed about every 12 inches should old nicely.
He must be trying to off his family. I’m a builder for over 26 years and a union rep and i did concrete for over two years and this thing will come down it will all leaning to one side and it will all come down including the roof
Awesome girls! Awesome parents! Awesome root cellar! I'm so envious of how you are living your life. ( Watching you from drought stricken Warwick, in Queensland, Australia)
Hope your weather changes soon, but knowing Qld, your next test will be a flood? Greetings from Tasmania, I used to live in Withcott, bottom of Toowomba Range, I was so tired of drought. Nature has had the last laugh, East coast of Tas has been in drought for last two years.
100% love your enthusiasm and love the hard work the girls put in. I can tell a lot by this video that you are an excellent father. I am really concerned that the steel culvert will not be strong enough to hold that much concrete. I say this because the culvert is more structurally sound when laid perpendicular to its current position when surrounded by earth. My suggestion would be to reinstalled the posts all around the edges of the walls to help hold the weight. I am just afraid that when it fails (and it will) it may hurt someone in the process. Please don't take this as a criticism, I love the project. I really just don't want to see anyone get hurt.
Hi Reality Survival. I agree with you. I wish these folks the best of luck. Great human interest video but I have serious doubts about the structure itself. Corrugated materials derive their load strength perpendicular to the corrugation as in a Quonset hut. I fear that the structure in this video will rust and suffer a catastrophic collapse.
Fascinating build. I'm surprised the metal culvert shell has enough strength to hold up such a thick cement slab. I didn't see any reinforcement along the walls or more importantly, the door openings.
it isn’t. he must be very stupid or he is trying to hurt his family. This will come down and hurt someone or a lot worse. I been a builder for over 27 years and i own my own company for over 17 years
That looks great! We made ours a few years ago using a c-can. We strung tires over it for air pockets, then covered with sawdust and dirt. Ours has three rooms and we're wanting to make one room into a freezer room for summer. Those canned peaches will sure be good! Girls, you're so special and beautiful. Each one of you.
OMG, great build and team work. I can tell you are one PROUD Father. Good to see that your daughters love to help out with things that really matter in life. I have a daughter myself and she is the same way. We aren't off the grid or anything but we are fixing to sale this home and buy land somewhere to build us a home and go somewhat off grid. Always best to learn them at a early age cause life is short. I'm a single father and lost my wife back in 2016, so we do everything together and I try to teach her everything I know. Keep up the great work and tell the family I said live free and soak up all the knowledge they can now. Y'all keep up the great work and keep them videos coming.
think you should add some vertical supports under that slab. theres no way that culvert can support that load. its a cool idea and bet it will be nice and cool once back fild.
Danger Danger Will Robinson: "Suspended Slab on a Culvert" What exactly is the slab suspended on ???? The edge of the culvert is about 1/8-1/4" thick. You poured concrete right to the edge of the culvert so the most that is holding up that slab is a thin line of steel. The culvert is galvanized the cut edge is not so it will rust faster than the side. Your side showed voids in the concrete. There is nothing holding that much concrete up, if the steel edge doesn't fail, the thin sliver of concrete the edge is resting on is not strong enough to not shear off over time. The steel will spread and fail, the concrete will shrink, the concrete edge will break, water will come in, and the plug will head to the bottom. The culvert was designed for compression around the outside with equal pressure on all sides. It will take some compression on the ends, not like what you are trying to do. You should have done one of two things. If you had made the slab a rectangle with 1' overlap on 2 sides then back filled tightly under the overhang the slab would have been self supporting. Now the only option is internal supports to hold up the slab. Congrats on the girls you have. People that are willing to work and have a good time doing it are far and few between.
I had the same thought, not to mention the added weight of planned soil on top of it. This design is going to fail, possibly with deadly results. I take it this was built without a building permit?
I agree. He made a death trap that will fail. And he ignorantly put his family at risk. He should fill that death trap with soul and start the heck over so nobody gets killed. He had good intentions, and he lives his family, but he did not research on the structural integrity of that very thin steel
Very Nice family guys! Not even sarcastic. It’s too bad we don’t see this everywhere. Families together - working together. Children are a direct reflection of the parents.
Is there an updated video on this buried culvert/storage cache? That shows what it looks like now, and what you've put inside of it (shelves, food storage like canning jars?). Thanks 👍☺️
This is probably the best video I have seen on UA-cam. Memories are built this way...and unless you have had a couple two or three young girls that have something to do besides punching away at a phone, you are teaching them to do things and be self sufficient. God I miss these jobs. At 75, I can easily recall the looks on my daughter's faces as we worked on home and vehicles. Then I trained my grandson on mechanics and he is a wiz. BTW, in case you hadn't noticed, your wife and you built some awesome daughters...
You guys are really developing your girls into some can do, never quit, well rounded, power house young ladies. Great job on your root cellar and parenting skills.
I was thinking the same. I'm sending a friend who's a structural engineer this video. I imagine he's gonna freak out like I did when I saw him cut the pine log supports out. Absolutely not safe. I'd use the same unistrut as he did for the bridging as uprights every 2' on the perimeter on the inside, it would eliminate the issue and give him shelving attachment points at the same time. I'd hate to see all their canned peaches crushed.
A friend of mine converted three grain silos to housing. It took a lot of work but they produced beautiful housing. They recycled all the wood from the inside silo walls. Spray foam was put into the walls for insulation. Ac/heating was about 1/3 the cost of a new home today.
Seriously man when u cut the wood supports I thought u were going to get crushed. Pls put vertical supports around the edges. B4 1 of ur kids get hurt.
sorry dave.. I didn't meant to put you on the spot with the teleprompter thing.., LMBO
I didn't know where to look anymore.
Excellent example of a good relationship between Father and Daughters. Good Job !
I think the "flip over the wheelbarrow" is a right of passage for the rural kid.
God bless!
rite you are!
Been there & done that, but I was a bit older before it happened. I survived & am 57 now.
I've done that a few times - with a wheelbarrow full of horse poop.
This is what I did with my dad over 40 yrs ago...I own all my own power tools that he taught me to use, I will always be grateful for the lessons....these Girls are amazing! I think it’s great that your teaching them these great life skills
is the culvert still functional 40 yrs later?
I too am very interested to know how it faired
A family that root cellars together stays together.
These girls are rockstars.
Construction, steel work, concrete, math skills and hard labor. And it’s looks sturdy and safe. All I can say is: daughters are awesome.
Nice tomb!! Yes, I said it. This WILL collapse. I have built with concrete for 35 years and I PROMISE you this WILL fail. If you wish to utilize this unit please do the following at a minimum for safety. When you build shelving use concrete blocks from floor to overhead slab. Pour the cells with grout as you go up. Do not need to lay blocks with mortar between them. They can be dry stacked and grouted. Space these concrete pillars evenly around perimeter. Five columns will serve well. One on either side of door and three others space equally. Columns can be one 8”x8”x16” block stacked straight up. Sure wish you had back filled and tamped (continuously) to top of culvert then poured top with one foot overhang on the ground. Please cover slab with 20mil pond liner extending 4 feet past edge of slab then cover with one foot of dirt so rain or melting snow does not wash the dirt away from edge of slab. Wish I had not watched this video,,,,you have the most precious family I have seen on UA-cam. Please have an engineer discuss this with you.
I'm no engineer but as soon as I saw there was nothing supporting that slab apart from some thin steel I agree with you. I wonder if they have taken on board any of the comments like yours and those added below, it's a death trap! As you say such a lovely family which has put their lives at risk, hopefully they reinforce this ASAP.
I'm a woman with no construction experience and I thought the same thing. yikes! 😬
You are ABSOLUTELY correct. This is a tragedy waiting to happen. I would recommend minimum 5 steel lally columns with poured concrete inside them with a suitable pad under neath and each column with a cap piece of 3'8" steel circles with an 8 inch diameter. all connected to the floor and to the ceiling pad. The corrugated steel is strong but it's strength truly is derived or comes from when all the sides or the entire circumference of the tube is equally supported with dirt or sand etc. This is why they are used for drainage "tubes" underground or partially underground. They are really strong this way but not the way you have them. Additionally, this fill dirt / sand needs to be compacted - tightly about every 10 to 12 inches every layer until you reach the height needed. PLEASE, please take these steps. Protect yourself and your family from yourselves. What Citizen 1 said is SPOT ON!
It wont colapse its armature...dont be douchebags
@@markonovacki2707 Thanks, i googled douchebags meaning, I don't think we are being obnoxious or offensive for raising our safety concerns, however, please enlighten me, what is armature, I thought it was electrical related.
I just found your channel and I think your girls are awesome, happy, no whining, no phones, I love them.
You guys are doing a good job raising responsible kids, and daughters, too.
Love seeing parents teaching kids how to handle a hard days work. I can't tell you how many teenagers I have hired that can't even complete a task like sweeping a garage floor properly. Your kids will never go hungry and will probably never be fired from a job for lack of effort. God bless all of you!
Rome Rides I don't see teenagers doing a damn thing here in Florida,besides text,shop,spend $$$ n not have much morals pretty sad guess they think all's dine for you like auto world...I think kids are better this way,they can move on if they want once of age, n see what they aren't missing for most of usa.. they will be more ready for real life...stay away from malls n Walmarts ext..material worlds already ruined the lemmings just don't know it yet...
I admire your girls being involved in every step of this project. The best education is when everything you learn comes together. Best classroom ever!
The fact that your daughter even got that wheel barrel load of concrete up and dumped was amazing. Great job with the roof(s) pour. What a crew you have.
I'm impressed with how much you've instilled hard work into your girls. They don't seem to mind at all, and rather enjoy it knowing that something good is going to become of it in the end. Great parenting !!
My girls worked with me in our fencing business. Sometimes they didn't like it but now all these years later, they are all badass.
Good job with yours.
You should be extremely proud of how hard the girls worked, I'm REALLY impressed...
Hubby and I are power watching your videos.....we have hunted in your area years ago....beautiful place. I just wanted to say that the whole time we are watching your videos I have this perpetual smile on my face.
You're little girls work hard er , and smarter than a lot of men I know.
I totally agree. I think that every construction crew needs to watch this video and practice the work ethics and skills of these young women. Their parents should be so very proud of their children. For sure I am
Most people don't like to work for someone because they value freedom & independence. People don't need jobs or work, they need purpose.
It's often m/l this way when parents involve their kids in life/projects/or family businesses such as farming ( dairy farm kid here ! 😀😀🐄). It just depends .. on the parents the mainly but the type of work & the kids to some extent too.. some don't give good directions, and r overwhelming and stressful to work with, even if only part of the time, that can really exacerbate any other issues such as some types of work being really not up some kids's alleys.
@AJ Burton: It is really important for children to learn there is joy and value in work when they are still young, and to feel valued and important in helping out to provide for the family. If the parents have a good attitude and enjoy the work they are doing, it will be contagious to the children. Even one and two-year-olds in the plain families I know really love to try and help out in the garden or barn, want to help wash dishes or hang laundry etc. Not every family is the same, but if everyone is having a good attitude, is able to laugh and share joy together while they are working, it can become almost like a party! Lots of families I know sing together while they are working, for example while weeding the garden or picking the apples or berries. Many hands make light work!
Spring go the other way on the bolts. They hold the brace up till you bolt it and automatically spin in correctly. Great video, my and 3 daughters just finishing a 93 foot rock wall at 8 feet on the end. A+
Years ago I had a concrete structural engineer design an underground house for me, a highly respected structural engineer. I still have those plans and there is a lot more steel in a lot smaller span than you have and a lot thinner pour on walls that are a lot stronger than corrugated steel culvert which is not intended to be loaded in compression.
Hopefully you will put some steel columns inside the culvert because the collapse will be deadly without additional internal support.
Alan Davis yeah I know he sounds like a buzz kill, BUT... he makes a valid point. People have gotten in trouble burying shipping containers due to both downward and lateral forces at play on the walls and that culvert is waaay less solid than a steel container. Be Safe
@@utamaverick2004 Please don't bring up Containers.
that's a blessing, your girls out there working hard,, that's a blessing to you ! reminds me of my girls on our farm,, they still talk about it. hold them close and love them while you can,, gd bless them
Couldn't be more impressed with your construction crew!
What an incredible family project. Your girls will be changed forever because of this project. It will change how they are as parents. Your wife will be changed forever as well, Hopefully for the better. From now on ANY anniversary present will be an improvement.
😂
You are teaching your daughters that they can do anything that they dream of. Great job Rose and Jeff. Great girls.
lol
I love this video. I love that your girls and your wife was involved in the whole thing. Very Nice.
Watching from united arab emirates...
..every time your videos pop up, you put a smile on my face...
your family is inspiring God Bless you all a nice family
Girl power!!! Great kids, great family. Wonderful you let us in your family.
Once the grass grows on top, the goats are gonna love it! Well design, functional, really ‘cool’... why doesn’t Rose love it? Twenty years of love, and this thing will last two hundred. Truly, love made it happen.
Girl power!💗 Lots of well trained helpers you have there. Y’all make the world a better place.
GOOD WORK ALL OF YOU GRIDLESSNESS, YOU HAVE DONE AN EXCELLENT JOB, STAY SAFE , HEALTHY AND FREE , FROM BOBBY QUEZON CITY PHILIPPINES.
I’ve seen grown men can’t push a wheelbarrow as well as she did, hard workers too. Nice family videos!
Is it true that in America, chiropractors are sending lobbyist to Washington DC to fight against the wheelbarrow industry for a lost revenue stream?
Dr mosfet Wow idk and further more don’t ask if igaf
ever seen a person with there arm caught in a cement mixer?......well first you hear the screams then a twisted body dragged around and around until someone can get near to turn the machine off. The guy who just lost his arm that was the guy that worked in building sites for thirty years. There are laws about moving machines and kids in the same vacinity and I for one know why.
@@bensouthwell1339 that's how the weaker or stupid ones used to get thinned from the gene pool, they got killed. Lol
good job teaching your girls.Awesome to see .my dad taught me many things and it's helped me throughout my life.
I have to say how amazing it is that you are empowering your girls to do things with you like this. They are going to grow up to be capable independent women who can do anything and I'm pretty sure the world needs more of them.
Great video. You are doing an exemplary job of raising those girls. They are doing an exemplary job of learning by doing.
I love that you involve your girls in the work, its really good for them.
I’m jealous! Look at you with all your little helpers now I really feel old, great family video
You go Girls!! So proud of your work ethic! Nice to see you all working together! May God Bless!
You guys are so funny. Great looking project!
I'm a little late to the party, here's a suggestion. Many have suggested vertical supports. Use them for shelves. You are going to need shelving anyway, so may as well get the added safety and support.
Great job. That's a better than average construction crew you have there.
He dont care, he said the people talling support are douchebags. Hope it lasts long enough kids are gone on own
Totally agree. Leave no margin for error and tragedy. That's a lot of weight overhead.
This is Dammika from Sri lank ( South Asia ) I’m father of 2 daughters . But what I’m seen this all videos , I’m not sure my kids are where they comparing these kids . They are all rounders and they are the kids all parents expecting . Girls who having cosmetics / apple products and wasting whole day for nothing ... I’m proud of those kids , they just father foot steps behind and some time front of him too .. they deserve all goods in the world . I’m pray for them and I’m keep looking they all videos for have wish my next life to have those similar kids ..!!!
Hi Dave, I like your idea of using a culvert as the walls of the building structure, but I am concern for your safety, because concrete weights about 150 lbs per cubic foot or 1 cubic yard of concrete weights about 4050 lbs. If the roof structure has additional loads applied such as snow, people or dirt this can cause the corrugated steel culvert to buckle and collapse inward and off to one side. Please consider putting multiple 4x4 of 6x6 vertical column supports on the inside next to the walls, from the concrete floor stab to the concrete roof slab while interconnecting all columns together to insure that there is no chance for lateral forces from dirt covering outter side walls of structure to cause lateral movement of walls and columns, causing instability and structural failure.
Very nice of you to give him advice
@@ryanmay3022 , yes, it could save a life or two
Well said
You have made something very dangerous. These walls are not made to bear this enormous weight in this way . They will eventually collapse under the weight of the ceiling. So place stanchions to safe lives.
I guess you've never stood on an empty soda can before. Most people let their imagined fears rule their lives. Others live gridlessness.
Great job.👍 surprised by all the negative comments by people who have probably never seen an actual root cellar, much less built one. As regards the structural strength, I’m sure you thought of this but any concerns could easily be rectified by installing some load bearing upright posts, steel, wood or whatever. I was raised in an era when and where root cellars were common. I have personally built 2 of them and currently still use one. The idea of an inner and outer cellar is a good one. Mine is a single compartment with a long entryway to reach it. 12 feet from the outer door to the inner sanctum, which also has an insulated door. I had the advantage of an existing hill to dig into, which eliminated a lot of work to build an artificial hill. I probably would have put in some upright steel posts given the dimensions of your culvert. But then I always overbuild everything I make. All in all you did a good job. Regarding the air entrained concrete, yes a freeze thaw cycle is hard on concrete, but your inner cellar particularly won’t be subject to freezing. That’s the whole object of a root cellar. The outer cellar, due to its exposed nature could perhaps be subject to some frost, depending on where you live and the average ambient winter temperatures. Here in northern Alberta we regularly get minus 40 temperatures although the average is probably more like minus 30.
I'd be getting an engineer to look at that structure.
You have a precious family there :)
I was thinking the same thing cause by cutting those holes for door ways its now gonna change how the weight is disturbed without properly supporting the weight ontop. The concrete looks to be 6 inches thick at least(8:08) .. it might hold for a while but who knows how long ..I'm not an engineer either but would have done a tin roof with no dirt ontop, as the man from the video says also wants to put dirt ontop to hide it.
I suppose once its fully backfilled its not going anywhere; but those horizontal corrugations on the mostly unsupported culvert... well I guess the ending was kinda spoiled since this video was uploaded and all.
Most good advice. Then set up the numerous interior columns to satisfy said engineer. Hint keep the mixer going ladies. Will need some piers poured in the floor to carry the lolly poles. Hope it ain't winter yet.
Hi Peter. I agree with you. I wish these folks the best of luck. Great human interest video but I have serious doubts about the structure itself. Corrugated materials derive their load strength perpendicular to the corrugation as in a Quonset hut. I fear that the structure in this video will rust and suffer a catastrophic collapse.
...the wheel barrow works best when the TIRE HAS AIR INSIDE. ...INFLATED, NOT DEFLATED... THESE GIRLS ARE AWESOME WORKERS... AND ALL SEEM TO HAVE GOOD ATTITUDES... GREAT JOB...
I found this channel last night. This is my new favorite channel. You all are a great loving family with great ethics and a will to succeed in your life. I love your off grid set up, its amazing. Your humor is wholesomely hilarious. Thanks for the laughs...
My gosh what a beautiful relationships up one side & down the other love you all!
Bro, your girls are studs.. Hats off to ya and your Ol'lady.. High five
Wow I know u are a proud dad. What a family, hard working girls to. U just don't see this much any more. It was awsome to see. U all are Awsome. Thank u for a great video. God Bless U.
My husband can give me a root cellar as a gift any time and I would work on it. Your girls r so impressive .
You'd be lucky to get the root from him.
I liked and followed just because of the anniversary project! :D
You are all one very special family. Every week you make me laugh out loud. I am so impressed by all of you getting this job done all together. You and Rose are raising your girls in a spectacular way Jeff. They are not only beautiful girls but so smart as well and will be a force to be reckoned with in the world. Good job well done. Cannot wait to see it finished and in action. Michelle
Nothing like a family working together. Worth watching for the pure joy. Blessings to you all.
Wow a whole family with such a positive attitude! Great job!
Hi just subscribed to your channel. I have been watching a few of your uploads with a big happy grin on my face. A lovely way of life and a lovely family. Thanks
New sub, wow so glad that I did, when I saw the big culvert standing on end, I thought at first you were converting a metal grain bin, because I completed my metal grain bin conversion a year ago. Totally insulated, and is just a very large yurt, I put in a circular stairway for the upper left bedroom, been living in it fulltime for a year now, 👍❤🇨🇦
I dont know if it works, I like the attitude, and I know God blesses the working hands!!
I sure hope that you reinforced the corrugated metal culvert (walls) in a manner that'll support the ceiling... I've seen too many street & driveway culverts that didn't come close to 1% of expected life.
Wish you all the best.
No matter what, or how you do this job,those girls are getting some good experiance,experience, good memories.
ROFL, really enjoyed this video. Seeing everyone pitch in was actually heart warming, you have an amazing family. Best wishes
I watched this 4 years ago when your first posted and and it came up on my feed becasue I watched other root cellar vids... I just have to say that I think it's awesome that you are giving your children these opportunities?
Yup, my first wheelbarrow load went over the side too. She managed to dump it on targe, so it should still count. Great family!!!
Good job that thing will stand the test of time and what a cute hard working crew👍👍
I have been following this on IG and waiting for a video on this build. These young ladies are amazing as are their parents. This is family building not just a root cellar but a loving sharing bonding family. This is just so awesome to watch and listen to them having fun doing back breaking work! Also happy anniversary to Jeff and Rose you guys are are raising very beautiful family. You folks take care and continue to enjoy your off grid lives to the fullest.
My wife and I love your videos. You have a great attitude and a wonderful family! God Bless!
You guys are a huge inspiration!! Thank you for what you do. I hope to have our own place very soon!!
You have a great family that works together and not afraid to get dirty.
Loved watching this video. Keep them coming.
While I agree with the posts pointing out the lack of structural integrity this building has, I applaud you and your wife for encouraging your daughters to develop life skills many women wish they had. And most would be envious of.
Thanks for the video, made my day. Your girls are so blessed, to you have parents like you. You and Rose are giving them memories that will last a lifetime, and then some.
Great idea. However I’m unsure of that suspended slab being held by just the culvert. As well as the position of the rebar. Because it would want to sag in the center, the tensile strength would need to be on the bottom and compressive on top. I would also question the bag mix you used. Freeze thaw environments require air entrained concrete. I’m a concrete finisher for 30 years.
It gonna catch air in a big way, not in the too far distant future.
I was thinking the same thing with cement as roof.
EXACTLY, some of my concerns!!!🤔😲
Ive poured similar, never had issue the tube stock welded yowards bottom helps to support. I would have left wood in to dampon and encase sides in concrete, but as long as packed about every 12 inches should old nicely.
He must be trying to off his family. I’m a builder for over 26 years and a union rep and i did concrete for over two years and this thing will come down it will all leaning to one side and it will all come down including the roof
Be very proud of your family, good works.
Awesome girls! Awesome parents! Awesome root cellar! I'm so envious of how you are living your life. ( Watching you from drought stricken Warwick, in Queensland, Australia)
Hope your weather changes soon, but knowing Qld, your next test will be a flood? Greetings from Tasmania, I used to live in Withcott, bottom of Toowomba Range, I was so tired of drought. Nature has had the last laugh, East coast of Tas has been in drought for last two years.
I’m watching in longreach Queensland. Hi. 🌻
@@gmac4157 6
All due respect, Australians talk with a mouth full of marbles, in this video see how people talk very clearly.
I just started watching your channel and I have to say this, 'am I the only one who sees Jack Blacks twin"?
Team work, great job everyone.
100% love your enthusiasm and love the hard work the girls put in. I can tell a lot by this video that you are an excellent father. I am really concerned that the steel culvert will not be strong enough to hold that much concrete. I say this because the culvert is more structurally sound when laid perpendicular to its current position when surrounded by earth. My suggestion would be to reinstalled the posts all around the edges of the walls to help hold the weight. I am just afraid that when it fails (and it will) it may hurt someone in the process. Please don't take this as a criticism, I love the project. I really just don't want to see anyone get hurt.
Hi Reality Survival. I agree with you. I wish these folks the best of luck. Great human interest video but I have serious doubts about the structure itself. Corrugated materials derive their load strength perpendicular to the corrugation as in a Quonset hut. I fear that the structure in this video will rust and suffer a catastrophic collapse.
Very braveheart family....i love to watch all seasons.......maybe i want to spend time with yours family......hunting seasoning 😊
I have worked with grown men that were not half as competent as those young ladies your raising. Good work!
These ladies are going to grow up to be wonderful women! Good going mom and dad!
Fascinating build. I'm surprised the metal culvert shell has enough strength to hold up such a thick cement slab. I didn't see any reinforcement along the walls or more importantly, the door openings.
I was thinking the same thing. Love to see an update and how it's going.
it isn’t. he must be very stupid or he is trying to hurt his family. This will come down and hurt someone or a lot worse. I been a builder for over 27 years and i own my own company for over 17 years
That look at 3:16 is the most human response ever! Great job all around!!
Nice to see the kids work . I had my son at 10 mix concrete on the ground a d help me stucco and lay block.
Proud of your girls! Hard working.....this is a rarity now a days.
The girls are hard workers....hell, I give them an A+ just for spoiling the goats! LOL :))
This is the first video I watched all those years ago still absolutely LOVE the vibe 2023!! ❤🎉😊
That looks great! We made ours a few years ago using a c-can. We strung tires over it for air pockets, then covered with sawdust and dirt. Ours has three rooms and we're wanting to make one room into a freezer room for summer. Those canned peaches will sure be good!
Girls, you're so special and beautiful. Each one of you.
OMG, great build and team work. I can tell you are one PROUD Father. Good to see that your daughters love to help out with things that really matter in life. I have a daughter myself and she is the same way. We aren't off the grid or anything but we are fixing to sale this home and buy land somewhere to build us a home and go somewhat off grid. Always best to learn them at a early age cause life is short. I'm a single father and lost my wife back in 2016, so we do everything together and I try to teach her everything I know.
Keep up the great work and tell the family I said live free and soak up all the knowledge they can now. Y'all keep up the great work and keep them videos coming.
think you should add some vertical supports under that slab. theres no way that culvert can support that load. its a cool idea and bet it will be nice and cool once back fild.
Don’t need to it’s full of steel rebar
Key word “Vertical”. Thats a lot of weight for the door frames to be holding up lol. Had to go to the comments to see if I was the only one.
@@trollslayer2116 I did the same
@News Now Adirondacks Exactly
Awww, that's cute that the girls were in there learning, and that concentration . . . good to see a family work together.
Danger Danger Will Robinson: "Suspended Slab on a Culvert"
What exactly is the slab suspended on ???? The edge of the culvert is about 1/8-1/4" thick. You poured concrete right to the edge of the culvert so the most that is holding up that slab is a thin line of steel. The culvert is galvanized the cut edge is not so it will rust faster than the side. Your side showed voids in the concrete. There is nothing holding that much concrete up, if the steel edge doesn't fail, the thin sliver of concrete the edge is resting on is not strong enough to not shear off over time. The steel will spread and fail, the concrete will shrink, the concrete edge will break, water will come in, and the plug will head to the bottom.
The culvert was designed for compression around the outside with equal pressure on all sides. It will take some compression on the ends, not like what you are trying to do.
You should have done one of two things. If you had made the slab a rectangle with 1' overlap on 2 sides then back filled tightly under the overhang the slab would have been self supporting. Now the only option is internal supports to hold up the slab.
Congrats on the girls you have. People that are willing to work and have a good time doing it are far and few between.
I had the same thought, not to mention the added weight of planned soil on top of it. This design is going to fail, possibly with deadly results. I take it this was built without a building permit?
These are the same concerns that I have. I have built many structures over the years and torn more down, this whole project fails basic engineering.
@Perfect in Weakness You missed my point, that point being this would never pass building code regulations, nor should it pass. It is a death trap.
Hope he don't get them hurt
I agree. He made a death trap that will fail. And he ignorantly put his family at risk. He should fill that death trap with soul and start the heck over so nobody gets killed.
He had good intentions, and he lives his family, but he did not research on the structural integrity of that very thin steel
Very Nice family guys! Not even sarcastic. It’s too bad we don’t see this everywhere. Families together - working together. Children are a direct reflection of the parents.
Is there an updated video on this buried culvert/storage cache? That shows what it looks like now, and what you've put inside of it (shelves, food storage like canning jars?). Thanks 👍☺️
Hot Dave is such added value to any video. He's like a coupon or a box with extra.
Your family is amazing👏👏
This is probably the best video I have seen on UA-cam. Memories are built this way...and unless you have had a couple two or three young girls that have something to do besides punching away at a phone, you are teaching them to do things and be self sufficient. God I miss these jobs. At 75, I can easily recall the looks on my daughter's faces as we worked on home and vehicles. Then I trained my grandson on mechanics and he is a wiz. BTW, in case you hadn't noticed, your wife and you built some awesome daughters...
I implore you to support the structure ,,, it's not safe especially with soil and snow on top,,,, add a bit of rust over time and ,,,,,,,
Your girls are such hard workers. They deserve all the ice cream they want! Now go get them some ice cream for their hard work. Thanks for sharing.
Today is our anniversary! 35 years with my best friend! Congratulations sweet people!
You guys are really developing your girls into some can do, never quit, well rounded, power house young ladies. Great job on your root cellar and parenting skills.
You really should frame that with additional support.
I was thinking the same. I'm sending a friend who's a structural engineer this video. I imagine he's gonna freak out like I did when I saw him cut the pine log supports out. Absolutely not safe. I'd use the same unistrut as he did for the bridging as uprights every 2' on the perimeter on the inside, it would eliminate the issue and give him shelving attachment points at the same time. I'd hate to see all their canned peaches crushed.
Please do this before someone killed.
A friend of mine converted three grain silos to housing. It took a lot of work but they produced beautiful housing. They recycled all the wood from the inside silo walls. Spray foam was put into the walls for insulation. Ac/heating was about 1/3 the cost of a new home today.
Seriously man when u cut the wood supports I thought u were going to get crushed.
Pls put vertical supports around the edges. B4 1 of ur kids get hurt.
This is how families should be. Working together. Had to subscribe after watching this video. Great job!
Them ladies makes the video Rock !! the goat part is the best !!!