Hi Rob To slow the erosion on the entry face of your dam you can place rocks and old timber in a line across the front of the entry point, and up the paddock. This will allow the soil to adhere to the timber You can also run an interceptor culvit across on an angle that will slow the water and soil running down the hill.
Greetings from Central Texas, USA! Very exciting place with lots of opportunity! I'm glad you're not too intimidated by the existing dam challenges. Even on those gentle slopes, some cross-cuts and/or cross-planting to slow the slope flow would reduce your erosion and surge flowrate into your ponds, increasing your infiltration to store water in the soil as well. It depends on the rain patterns andnyour soil type as to whether that will be helpful, and observing for the turn of the year is a great first step. I'm so excited for y'all! Cheers.
Hey Jonathan. We have a rough idea on some of the earthworks needed & have a list of plants we'd like to use. This is the first time We've worked with sandy loam soil type so need to do a bit more investigation on what's the nest way to move forward before we make any mistakes we'll regret later.
Thers's a bore already there & only 10M / 30ft deep. We still haven't had the time to check it out properly yet but it's near the top of the jobbies list. 👍
Better throw a few vetiver grass plants in some root pouches. Will need a lot of plant stock to help control that erosion. Was going to recommend Green Harvest but looks like they've decided to retire.
Oh wow they have too, I had no idea! They had such a wide variety of things too, are there any other places that provide similar heirloom seeds like they used to? I'm still working towards my garden (not yet ready to buy seeds) so I guess I will have to look elsewhere now when the time comes.
Half a bottle of plain household bleach in those tanks isn't a bad idea too (totally safe to do as a semi regular maintenance item too). Thanks for the vid!
Love the new place, it must be like Christmas Can I suggest to move the water tanks to the house it will be easier then you can clean them out on the move
You can use a dropped inlet pipe through the wall to take the pressure off the spillway. It's set just a few inches below the spillway level The walls of the dams look to have too step a batter. You may be able to use bentonite to stop wall leakage. Like the concrete mats you can use stones or rocks with weldmesh over the top of them to stop them moving.
Cheers for that David. It's going to be a steep learning curve for us but have picked out a few issues like the steep inflows. Thanks for the weldmesh suggestion. I haven't seen that done myself.
Im a permaculture practitioner and a professional excavator driver from germany. If you get Geoff L.,who shouldn't be be living too far away, for directions, i'll fly over and do the digging for you ...
Thanks for the offer Stan. I did my PDC with Geoff a few years back. We are contemplating getting his son Danial to come out to do a consultation as he specialises in earthworks. daniallawton.com/ We will be tackling the water & earthworks issues once we tidy up the house & move in so it may be a while before we get cracking on the fixes. Thanks again for the offer mate.
As has been said, vetiver grass is the go for those erosion areas. It's pretty drought tolerant once established and will send roots down metres. It's easy to propagate too, I just keep half a dozen pots of it and when I want to plant a heap I just split it into as many as I can. let grow for a month or two, split them all again, quite prolific. Your local landcare should stock it, ours at Gin Gin does. Maryborough I know has a good landcare. If you buy from them you'll get the sterile variety too, so you know it won't spread and become weedy. You've got lots of work ahead of you but that's all part of the fun of it. Hope you're getting a bit of this beautiful rain.
Cheers for that DPF. 👍 We gathered loads of lomandra seeds down the back the other week so will be learning how to get them started too. In think we might visit the Gin Gin Landcare as there isn't any local in Isis or Childers areas that I could find. Sorry it took so long to respond as well. Thought I was all caught up on this channel but apparently not. Cheers & have a top one.
@@BitsOutTheBackFarm no worries. I know Maryborough has a decent Landcare, as well as Bundy, but Gin Gin is highly regarded in the area. If Ray is there, he's a wonderful, knowledgable old fella and doesn't mind a chat.
Something I saw on another channel to help stop erosion was the use of 3-4” lengths of 6” plastic tube placed inside a shallow trench and filled with gravel. It seems to allow the distribution of weight of a vehicle very well and also stops puddles forming and keeping the ground underneath stable.
You could always whack down a bit of geotech fabric and some 150 ballast over the top as opposed to the concrete mat. It often did the trick when we'd put in spillways.
Hi Rob, i guarantee all those dams are dodgy, at least the small one holds water, i would put the pipe in the spillway and fill it in and make a new spillway wider and further out from the dam and wall. and where the erosion is i would put a collection drain around and a concrete inlet tim thompson style to the dam. and lift those tanks and see if a rat has eaten a hole into them, or the pipe.
I keep thinking that the suspended pipe is going to experience the same problems repeatedly. Between solar degredation from u/v light, thermal variations and that tree swaying in the wind, burying the pipe keeps becoming a better solution in my mind. If you plan to move the 2 water tanks closer to the house, partially burying them might be something you consider as well. Anyway, you're planning to live with what is for a cycle of seasons, so you're likely to have lots of time to think about many alternatives. Good luck and God bless.
They've been up for a good number years according to the old owners. Not sure quite how long but their days are numbered. 😉 We have a few ideas in mind about moving or installing new tanks closer to the house. Will sit & stew on it for a while though before outlaying too much time, effort & funds. Thanks Rob & have a top one mate.
Thanks for the up date Rob.. Ahhhhh the joys of farm life..😂😂 Not sure if you have had chance to look at country view acres yet? But Evan has a 3 1/2 acre pond which has a spill pipe at tbe end.. works an absolute treat.. With a couple of the watering holes I can see duck ponics and geese ponics in your future lol... Those concrete blanket pads look fantastic.. but do agree with the swales are definitely needed.. And I would definitely get the tank water tested.. would even think about drinking from it until you have.. You are going to be a very busy lad for awhile there buddy.. think you may need a farm hand and a camera man with all the work you have. Cheers my friend.. chat soon... Hello Bianca and Jack....
You wanting the job mate? 😉 We did check out one or two of CVA videos but none on the pond as of yet. Hope to get the water tested next week & will be getting some filters added as well regardless of the results. B just said "HI". Cheers mate & all the best to you both.
Looking forward to getting stuck into the dams OGAP. Not too happy about digging up all the irrigation lines around the different yards though. 😅 BTW, I'll be putting "AS SEEN ON BOTB" on the thumbnails for the other channel now so you'll know if you've already downloaded it here first. Hope you're having a great week.
It should be starting very soon Michael. We're supposed to be in drought for the next few years but I can guarantee you that we'll still get smashed with summer thunderstorms.
Why not do a symphony system for the water from house to tanks as long as inlet to tanks is lower than house spouting ( it only has to be a few centre metres. Have use this system on many properties. A first flush can be installed On way down from spouting 😊
Hi Rob , looks like a bit of work ahead mate, lol nothing a bulldozer can't fix ! Maybe make some pink flamingos out of those types 😎😎😎have a good one Rob and B 😊😊😊
🤣🤣 Cheers Marc. The house is cleaning up pretty good now there's a few coats of fresh paint in some of the rooms. Hope to have the rest of upstairs finished this week. Hope your still enjoying the new digs.
The "hitchhiker" shed full of freezers sure seems like something the police might be interested in in the future. But with all the earthworks probably necessary on the dams (honestly, sounds to me like you're at the level where, ideally, you'd want to learn driving an excavator) surely there must be better opportunities to hide them?
🤣 There's about another 120 acres with feral pigs & dogs so I'm not sure they'd last long out the back either. 😉 & yarp, I will be getting some hours up on a excavator as soon as we can source a suitable one to match our budget.
B has a good job & I have a few irons in the fire. 😉We're also looking at getting some investors for major projects once we get the house yard, gardens & aquaponics sorted.
If the founds were available I’d just leave those tanks there find some decent 2nd hand ones or new ones for off the house and put them close to that carport give it sort of a wall/windbreak
The shed has about the same surface area as the house so would like to collect off that as well. We have a few ideas but will wait a while before we make any drastic changes.
Ooof, those dams and that erosion might be a difficult one to fix. The fact that they used boulders in their dam wall tells me there is a big likelihood they didn't key in their dam correctly.... I have a client with a rather badly degraded and incised landscape. In order to help him do as many small changes as possible I made this playlist on youtube about the different erosion control structures that you can use. Check it out, it has some great resources inthere! ua-cam.com/video/PEwTYpCo8Qg/v-deo.html
Many thanks for the link. 👍 I'll suss it out when I've caught up on a few more comments. We had Danial Lawton out & while it looks bad he thinks they all can be fixed fairly easily. Will be adding in a few swales to get the flow into the dams to be a bit more gentle & also some proper spillways as well. Cheers FD & have a top one.
It could be. 👍We'll be isolating it from the other so we can level it out while still being able to collect some water until it can be sorted out. Cheers mate.
Have you any plans for the ponds if you can rectify the leakage & erosion problem as it looks like some would make good fish pond, Might make for some fishing for your farm stays, But i think you have a lot of work on your hands, Are you going to make a larger Aquaponic system under a like big hoop house with larger fish tanks so you grow & sell off what you don't eat ( don't know your regulations for that there in OZ here in UK its a right pain but in my soon to be new home Thailand no problems) & good luck with everything
Hey Gary. We will be using the hoop hoses after I modify them a bit. Would like to ass a few feet on the base to make them more serviceable for raised grow beds. I'm leaning towards spice crops like ginger & cardamom at the moment. Cheers mate.
Nice of you to provide conversions for the imperialist, shame they cant do same . The world does revolve around them doesn't it? Looks like you'll need to buy an excavator.
Hi Rob
To slow the erosion on the entry face of your dam you can place rocks and old timber in a line across the front of the entry point, and up the paddock.
This will allow the soil to adhere to the timber
You can also run an interceptor culvit across on an angle that will slow the water and soil running down the hill.
Cheers mate. We can see a few swales & water calming structures being constructed in the near future.
Vetiver grass for berms and swales might sort many issues. Plus it'd grow well in your area, and you'd be growing your own biomass/mulch.
We have it on the list. 👍
Cheers Liv.
Greetings from Central Texas, USA!
Very exciting place with lots of opportunity! I'm glad you're not too intimidated by the existing dam challenges.
Even on those gentle slopes, some cross-cuts and/or cross-planting to slow the slope flow would reduce your erosion and surge flowrate into your ponds, increasing your infiltration to store water in the soil as well.
It depends on the rain patterns andnyour soil type as to whether that will be helpful, and observing for the turn of the year is a great first step. I'm so excited for y'all!
Cheers.
Hey Jonathan. We have a rough idea on some of the earthworks needed & have a list of plants we'd like to use. This is the first time We've worked with sandy loam soil type so need to do a bit more investigation on what's the nest way to move forward before we make any mistakes we'll regret later.
Looks like you could use some Vetiver grass to stabilise banks and slow water flow. We could give you some slips to start you off.
That would be great. 😁 Looking at setting up a plant nursery along with gardens & new chook house as soon as we settle into the house.
You are a brave couple, we are already busy with just keeping 1000m2 growing.
I think we can manage it. We won't be working the whole property, just the front 60 or so acres & mainly with livestock. .
Every time I think I have all our pipes and hose lines mapped out (that we put in over many years) I get a big surprise.
I'm hoping we don't get too many Niamh.
Cheers & have a great one.
artesian water deep down is a vital resource but may be deep and expensive to drill to and set up
Thers's a bore already there & only 10M / 30ft deep. We still haven't had the time to check it out properly yet but it's near the top of the jobbies list. 👍
Better throw a few vetiver grass plants in some root pouches. Will need a lot of plant stock to help control that erosion.
Was going to recommend Green Harvest but looks like they've decided to retire.
Oh wow they have too, I had no idea! They had such a wide variety of things too, are there any other places that provide similar heirloom seeds like they used to? I'm still working towards my garden (not yet ready to buy seeds) so I guess I will have to look elsewhere now when the time comes.
I saw that they closed their doors the other day HH. I think I should be able to source some from the different folks I know that we can propagate.
😂😂Mick Taylors (John Jarrett) hitchhikers accomodation😂😂
🤣 B want's to put a plaque over the door. 🤣
Looking forward to the progress you will make
Cheers Kerry.👍
Swales to control water speed and vetiver grass to hold banks and dam face😊
Both are already on the list. 😉
Cheers Pru & have a top one.
Half a bottle of plain household bleach in those tanks isn't a bad idea too (totally safe to do as a semi regular maintenance item too). Thanks for the vid!
I know a few folks that add a bit after it rains Ben. 👍
Good day mate. Enjoy the content
Thanks Oscar. Have a top one mate.
Good to see you bud
Thanks for shareing we can all learn from your Dam problems.
No problem 👍😅
I’ve been thinking of putting a pond on my property but I agree with you that an expert consultation is needed.
Will save a load of issues down the line if we can sort it out from the get go Jennifer.
Looks like the pasture around the ponds and pasture need grass or small plants with deep roots to keep erosion down.
Yeah, it looks like it might have been overgrazed. They'll probably see a lot of bounce back if the area isn't being grazed for a while.
@@spirituallyinsane It was very overgrazed. 🫤
Yep. Have a few varieties in mind. Vetiver, lemongrass & bamboo are a few we're thinking about.
Love the new place, it must be like Christmas
Can I suggest to move the water tanks to the house it will be easier then you can clean them out on the move
That's one of the ideas we have. I'm leaning towards buying some more & connecting them to the house so we can expand our total volume.
You can use a dropped inlet pipe through the wall to take the pressure off the spillway. It's set just a few inches below the spillway level
The walls of the dams look to have too step a batter.
You may be able to use bentonite to stop wall leakage.
Like the concrete mats you can use stones or rocks with weldmesh over the top of them to stop them moving.
Cheers for that David. It's going to be a steep learning curve for us but have picked out a few issues like the steep inflows.
Thanks for the weldmesh suggestion. I haven't seen that done myself.
Cheers legend loving this project
Thanks RM. 😁👍
Im a permaculture practitioner and a professional excavator driver from germany. If you get Geoff L.,who shouldn't be be living too far away, for directions, i'll fly over and do the digging for you ...
Thanks for the offer Stan. I did my PDC with Geoff a few years back. We are contemplating getting his son Danial to come out to do a consultation as he specialises in earthworks.
daniallawton.com/
We will be tackling the water & earthworks issues once we tidy up the house & move in so it may be a while before we get cracking on the fixes.
Thanks again for the offer mate.
Hi there Stan, I'd be interested to speak with you about doing work like this in Greece.
Be interesting to see the results with testing the tank water
Yes I'm looking forward to that too, whether the water is clean or not it'll still be interesting to find out.
Hope to be sending the water off next week. 👍👍
Beautiful place ❤❤❤❤❤
It really is Rahila. 😁We've very fortunate. 😁
It has a lot of potential.
We're really looking forward to making a decent plan once we get moved in & settled Gary. 👍👍
As has been said, vetiver grass is the go for those erosion areas. It's pretty drought tolerant once established and will send roots down metres. It's easy to propagate too, I just keep half a dozen pots of it and when I want to plant a heap I just split it into as many as I can. let grow for a month or two, split them all again, quite prolific. Your local landcare should stock it, ours at Gin Gin does. Maryborough I know has a good landcare. If you buy from them you'll get the sterile variety too, so you know it won't spread and become weedy. You've got lots of work ahead of you but that's all part of the fun of it. Hope you're getting a bit of this beautiful rain.
Cheers for that DPF. 👍 We gathered loads of lomandra seeds down the back the other week so will be learning how to get them started too.
In think we might visit the Gin Gin Landcare as there isn't any local in Isis or Childers areas that I could find.
Sorry it took so long to respond as well. Thought I was all caught up on this channel but apparently not.
Cheers & have a top one.
@@BitsOutTheBackFarm no worries. I know Maryborough has a decent Landcare, as well as Bundy, but Gin Gin is highly regarded in the area. If Ray is there, he's a wonderful, knowledgable old fella and doesn't mind a chat.
Thanks for the heads up. I know they're closed today but if it's too wet tomorrow to work we might pop up to Gin Gin to check it out.
@BitsOutTheBackFarm think they close at 1 pm tomorrow
Something I saw on another channel to help stop erosion was the use of 3-4” lengths of 6” plastic tube placed inside a shallow trench and filled with gravel. It seems to allow the distribution of weight of a vehicle very well and also stops puddles forming and keeping the ground underneath stable.
Have seen similar used Ian. 👍 Still not 100% sure what we'll be doing down there.
You could always whack down a bit of geotech fabric and some 150 ballast over the top as opposed to the concrete mat. It often did the trick when we'd put in spillways.
Cheers for that Link. I haven't had any experience with this style of earthworks so it will be a large learning curve.
Seek out Bood Hickson. He's cut from the same cloth and is on the Atherton Tableland. He'll have some ideas which should guide and gel with you.
Thanks Cynthia. I'll have a search for him.
Cheers & have a fantastic week.
Hi Rob, i guarantee all those dams are dodgy, at least the small one holds water, i would put the pipe in the spillway and fill it in and make a new spillway wider and further out from the dam and wall. and where the erosion is i would put a collection drain around and a concrete inlet tim thompson style to the dam. and lift those tanks and see if a rat has eaten a hole into them, or the pipe.
Cheers Shane. It will all come down to what slows the erosion the best for the funds we have available in the end.
Nice!
Thanks Sally. 😁👍
Came here from your other channel, from your announcement that youd be spending more time on this channel 😊 Happy to follow your new adventure!
Exciting times. Can't wait to see the progress.
Cheers Folks. 😁😁👍
I keep thinking that the suspended pipe is going to experience the same problems repeatedly. Between solar degredation from u/v light, thermal variations and that tree swaying in the wind, burying the pipe keeps becoming a better solution in my mind. If you plan to move the 2 water tanks closer to the house, partially burying them might be something you consider as well. Anyway, you're planning to live with what is for a cycle of seasons, so you're likely to have lots of time to think about many alternatives. Good luck and God bless.
They've been up for a good number years according to the old owners. Not sure quite how long but their days are numbered. 😉
We have a few ideas in mind about moving or installing new tanks closer to the house. Will sit & stew on it for a while though before outlaying too much time, effort & funds.
Thanks Rob & have a top one mate.
Also you should try and invest in a tracktor with a backhoe. Youd probably save a heap of money and good experience.
It's on the list. 😉👍
Cheers Dan & have a top one mate.
Thanks for the up date Rob..
Ahhhhh the joys of farm life..😂😂
Not sure if you have had chance to look at country view acres yet? But Evan has a 3 1/2 acre pond which has a spill pipe at tbe end.. works an absolute treat..
With a couple of the watering holes I can see duck ponics and geese ponics in your future lol...
Those concrete blanket pads look fantastic.. but do agree with the swales are definitely needed..
And I would definitely get the tank water tested.. would even think about drinking from it until you have..
You are going to be a very busy lad for awhile there buddy.. think you may need a farm hand and a camera man with all the work you have.
Cheers my friend.. chat soon...
Hello Bianca and Jack....
You wanting the job mate? 😉
We did check out one or two of CVA videos but none on the pond as of yet.
Hope to get the water tested next week & will be getting some filters added as well regardless of the results.
B just said "HI".
Cheers mate & all the best to you both.
You two are going to be really busy on your farm. Those old freezers and fridge are creepy, dump them :)
Might keep a few for stock feed Mary. Will locate them to a more secure shed though. That one is crawling with mice.
Didn't know how I missed this one
Hope you enjoyed it Rogè. 👍
gotta love ripping into plumbing repairs on the farm, ur making me jealos..lol
Looking forward to getting stuck into the dams OGAP. Not too happy about digging up all the irrigation lines around the different yards though. 😅
BTW, I'll be putting "AS SEEN ON BOTB" on the thumbnails for the other channel now so you'll know if you've already downloaded it here first.
Hope you're having a great week.
You guys are just round the corner from us now! 😊 We are up near Gin Gin
Nice one folks. Hope to meet a few locals once we get set up. 👍
When is your wet season? Hopefully, soon from the looks of it
It should be starting very soon Michael. We're supposed to be in drought for the next few years but I can guarantee you that we'll still get smashed with summer thunderstorms.
Why not do a symphony system for the water from house to tanks as long as inlet to tanks is lower than house spouting ( it only has to be a few centre metres. Have use this system on many properties. A first flush can be installed On way down from spouting 😊
I'll look into the Symphony package Pru. I haven't heard of it before. Thanks.
Hi Rob , looks like a bit of work ahead mate, lol nothing a bulldozer can't fix ! Maybe make some pink flamingos out of those types 😎😎😎have a good one Rob and B 😊😊😊
🤣🤣 Cheers Marc. The house is cleaning up pretty good now there's a few coats of fresh paint in some of the rooms.
Hope to have the rest of upstairs finished this week.
Hope your still enjoying the new digs.
Not sure where your grey water goes but have you considered a filter bed running down to the ponds?
It's in a soak field at the moment feeding the grass. Not sure what we'll end up doing with it in the end.
The "hitchhiker" shed full of freezers sure seems like something the police might be interested in in the future. But with all the earthworks probably necessary on the dams (honestly, sounds to me like you're at the level where, ideally, you'd want to learn driving an excavator) surely there must be better opportunities to hide them?
😂the old fridges are freezers are used for stock feeds to keep rodents out
🤣 There's about another 120 acres with feral pigs & dogs so I'm not sure they'd last long out the back either. 😉
& yarp, I will be getting some hours up on a excavator as soon as we can source a suitable one to match our budget.
Not trying to be intruding but what do u do for a job, besides UA-cam. Just getting ideas on how to finance a huge project.
B has a good job & I have a few irons in the fire. 😉We're also looking at getting some investors for major projects once we get the house yard, gardens & aquaponics sorted.
So you got a shedload of fridges and tires with the property
& they didn't charge us a cent extra. 😉😅
Have a chat with Ari from Polyculture farms! He has a channel here on YT and is based in QLD. Collaboration vid would be awesome :)
Thanks for the suggestion. I just subbed to his channel.
Have a top one.
If the founds were available I’d just leave those tanks there find some decent 2nd hand ones or new ones for off the house and put them close to that carport give it sort of a wall/windbreak
That's one of the ideas we have SM. 👍 Might have to move some soil around first.
Have a top one.
Moving those tanks closer to the house seems a way more logical way. Get those tanks filled up.
The shed has about the same surface area as the house so would like to collect off that as well. We have a few ideas but will wait a while before we make any drastic changes.
Ooof, those dams and that erosion might be a difficult one to fix. The fact that they used boulders in their dam wall tells me there is a big likelihood they didn't key in their dam correctly.... I have a client with a rather badly degraded and incised landscape. In order to help him do as many small changes as possible I made this playlist on youtube about the different erosion control structures that you can use. Check it out, it has some great resources inthere!
ua-cam.com/video/PEwTYpCo8Qg/v-deo.html
Many thanks for the link. 👍 I'll suss it out when I've caught up on a few more comments.
We had Danial Lawton out & while it looks bad he thinks they all can be fixed fairly easily. Will be adding in a few swales to get the flow into the dams to be a bit more gentle & also some proper spillways as well.
Cheers FD & have a top one.
The leak is probably in the tank thats leaning
It could be. 👍We'll be isolating it from the other so we can level it out while still being able to collect some water until it can be sorted out.
Cheers mate.
Have you any plans for the ponds if you can rectify the leakage & erosion problem as it looks like some would make good fish pond, Might make for some fishing for your farm stays, But i think you have a lot of work on your hands, Are you going to make a larger Aquaponic system under a like big hoop house with larger fish tanks so you grow & sell off what you don't eat ( don't know your regulations for that there in OZ here in UK its a right pain but in my soon to be new home Thailand no problems) & good luck with everything
Hey Gary. We will be using the hoop hoses after I modify them a bit. Would like to ass a few feet on the base to make them more serviceable for raised grow beds. I'm leaning towards spice crops like ginger & cardamom at the moment.
Cheers mate.
sounds like a plan good luck @@BitsOutTheBackFarm
Your electric useage must be enormous with all those freezers in an uninsulated metal shed. 😮
He did say they weren’t plugged in
😂it’ll be dearer once they’re filled with hitchhikers
@@kateymateymusic1 But they're still there. It seems they do intend to use them. Perhaps they were only trying to assess their resale value.
They've only been there a couple of weeks. Junk removal can take a frustrating amount of time.
Non of them work. They were all used for dry feed storage by the look of it.
Why not move a tank closer to house. Isolated from all the others. Look a lot better.
We will be changing things up a bit but not for a while. Want to work out a suitable plan before we move too much dirt around.
Cheers.
Ìm serious. Might have to bring my 4 year old son 😂
😃 We have no problems with small humans. 😉👍
Beavers would fix it for free
Might get in trouble trying to smuggle them into the country. 🤔
Cheers mate.
@@BitsOutTheBackFarm yeah, I know.. is ironic though, but I still hope the best for you
EVIDENTLY HAVING DUCKS SEALS LEAKY DAMS NATURALLY
I'll have to look into that. Thanks. :)
Nice of you to provide conversions for the imperialist, shame they cant do same . The world does revolve around them doesn't it? Looks like you'll need to buy an excavator.
Just waiting for the right one that fit's our budget & needs to pop up Wayne.
Cheers mate & have a top one.
never heard you cuss and so much. using that D word frequently. lol
🤣🤣
You ain't heard nothing yet. 😉🤔
Ive never heard some much damn cursing in one single video
😅 I'll try to tone it down a bit in future ones.
Like, comment, and ring the bell, please
😃Thanks 👍