It still cracks me up the amount of comments I get with people saying that I don’t dig that I just watch…… believe it or not it’s next to impossible to dig with a shovel and hold a GoPro and get decent footage. I do at least 50% of all the digging and film. Adventure Archaeology is my channel and I keep the revenue from it therefore I do not expect my friends and fellow diggers to film me while I dig. Occasionally if they offer I get on the camera while digging the rest of the time I would need a tripod and it’s not practical to carry around with me as we are usually in rough terrain. This is a hobby for all of us but for me it’s a side business as well that helps support my family. My crew enjoys digging not film making. I hope this explains something that I thought was common sense but I would be lying if I said it wasn’t frustrating to continuously get critiqued for being Lazy or a freeloader. You can ask anyone who has ever dug with me and they will tell you. I sling dirt with the best of them, film/edit and usually let the guys ride with me to locations. Ok I’m off my soap box 😅
I love any old bottles. I dug a dump all one summer. Best summer I had ever. I have some great bottles and have them to this day. They make me happy. Lots of straight side cokes, ink wells and master inks. Fun.
Dont know if anybody yet mentioned it but oyster shells were often used to descale pots,pans and kettles from the build-up of limescale on inner surfaces due to the amount of limescale in 'hard' water areas.Certainly happened here in the UK at least.
Wow - what a nice old Bottle Dump and You Two found some real Great Bottles and some to be turned into Whiskey Glasses ! Hope that You return one Day and keep digging for more Treasures ! We love old Bottles ! Please Return - thanks ! Many Cheers from us in Australia !!!!
I dug the old Houston dump when I was a teenager and found hundreds of intact Dr. Price's Delicious Flavoring Extract' bottles. I found many pre-1860 bottles and 25 - 30 hippo bottles. I gave away most of them over the years and some of the hippo bottles were loaned to the Texas museum.
Great video Brandon I've got a question I was detecting a guy drove up showed me an Elk Park NC bottling company hutch have you heard of one ? He also said there was a gayola cola co. in the area thanks keep hunting
Cochran bottle, just cut off shoulder leaving embossing intact. Wood turn a deep holder (caster) for the bottle to sit in as a deep beer glass of 22+ oz capacity.
@@adventurearchaeology Just back from "Up the valley". The collapsed 1897 hydropower plant has been cleared away, probably by the City & County of Honolulu, whom have title of it since 1965 when the seized all water development from the Capital Investment Co. (Chinn Ho) whom bought out the Waianae Plantation Co, in 1947. Chinn Ho gave his name to a recurring villain on Hawaii 5-0, but his dreams of Waikiki II out here never panned out. I need to get an early start on and go up the hill again. I saw some potential for where the power plant superintendent's home was. It powered water pumps throughout the valley, as water supply was a recurring problem for the plantation. Something called a Pelton water wheel was hooked up to G.E. dynamos generating at least 600V. I first explored it in 1992 and the dynamos had already been stolen for copper. The steel plates had been thrown around like Ninja stars and stuck in the high beams.
Growing up here in Comanche County Texas I can remember the city having a shak at the dump and a guy who stayed there all day. EVERYONE knew that the dump was burnt Monday, Wednesday and Friday. I remember going out and shooting rats for target practice on those days with a 22 and using shorts
@@Eastwood69 I've been detecting for over 35 yrs, lots of history here. I grew up here and had access to a lot of places. The original owners are dead and gone and access gone as well.
@@Cutter-jx3xj Wow! Yeah there is a ton of history there. I'm hoping to pinpoint a house or two this weekend that should be from the early 1900s. I'm lucky that I have friends and family with land that they don't mind me stomping around on.
@@adventurearchaeology But remember south Alabama and Mississippi was Florida at one time. Someone had to give you gulf access lol. Have a great day Brandon
Very cool finds Brian. you save some good history. Really do enjoy watching them. Don't comment a lot cause I don't have the knowledge. Thanks for sharing brother.
The squat beer is a malt extract. They almost always come in that fat squatty shape. There are several embossed ones from all over the U.S. The little green blob wine is a little seltzer or mineral water. I have had four or five of those bottles with labels on them. They could also have been a general use bottle for many different types of drinks. Always loved those Crane extract bottles. Great stuff! Hope you go back, looks like a promising spot!
I have a question, I have become interested in finding bottles in the woods behind my house and I was wondering if I could have some tips on bottle finding.
oh how cool! i’m from the buffalo ny area and larkin company was a mail order catalog company back 120 years ago. started out with bar soap and branched out into other things, like furniture for one. think modern day Sears and Roebuck. their building was designed and built by Frank Lloyd Wright. the company owner, Darwin Martin had a few homes designed and built by FLW. they were long time friends. really cool history and stories about them both. Sadly, the Larkin building was demo’d, i think in the 1950’s.
Larkin Co Buffalo,NY produced soaps, do not thing they ever did booze. the Larkin building was designed by frank Lloyd wright the famous high end architect.the building I think is still standing. there are food truck that are in that area serving lunch during the week.
The colors of the doorknobs indicated who could enter that door. They came in white, black and brown. Brown meaning that both races could enter. I need to research this more to verify true or not.
People don't seem to understand its hard to keep a camera steady and dig simultaneously....... I know Im talented and all but that's something I haven't figured out..... LOL Honestly when we get to the good seam of bottles I enjoy watching people find the stuff. Ive been very blessed with tons of great finds and would rather someone else get some of the good bottles.
i just started a youtube chanel called wisconsin hobbies. i only have 3 videos but i am trying to get more subscribers. i think i am also the youngest bottle digger on youtube
Glycol-Thymoline dates back to the late 1800’s, when it was advertised as: An alkaline, antiseptic, non-irritating, cleaning solution for the treatment of diseased mucous membrane, especially nasal catarrh. The preparation had its roots with Oscar Kress, who, according to his January 3, 1895 obituary in the Pharmaceutical Record, was born in Germany and immigrated to the United States after graduating from the University of Munich. A medical paper entitled “Chronic Nasal Catarrh and what the General Practitioner Can Do for it,” presented in May, 1893, mentioned that Kress introduced Glyco-Thymoline to the medical profession around that time. Glycolic-thymoline is a preparation recently introduced to the profession by Mr. Oscar Kress, a pharmacist of this city. It is composed of glycerine (fat glycerine from slaughtered livestock hides), thymol (say thyme oil - like thymol listerine taste), sodium, borax, benzoin (incense with sweet vanillin flavor), salicylic acid (say willow bark aspirin), eucalyptol (eucalyptus oil), menthol (mint oil), gaultheria (american wintergreen with aspirin properties - say Ben-Gay smell), oleum pini pumillonia (dwarf pine oil, yeah pine sol !), and solvents, in proper proportions. Kress dies in 1894, and Samuel Owens associated with Kress becomes new owner and incorporates as Kress and Owens and continues manufacturing into the early 1900s. Product still manufactured today as a dental antiseptic and mouthwash solution.
It still cracks me up the amount of comments I get with people saying that I don’t dig that I just watch…… believe it or not it’s next to impossible to dig with a shovel and hold a GoPro and get decent footage. I do at least 50% of all the digging and film. Adventure Archaeology is my channel and I keep the revenue from it therefore I do not expect my friends and fellow diggers to film me while I dig. Occasionally if they offer I get on the camera while digging the rest of the time I would need a tripod and it’s not practical to carry around with me as we are usually in rough terrain. This is a hobby for all of us but for me it’s a side business as well that helps support my family. My crew enjoys digging not film making. I hope this explains something that I thought was common sense but I would be lying if I said it wasn’t frustrating to continuously get critiqued for being Lazy or a freeloader. You can ask anyone who has ever dug with me and they will tell you. I sling dirt with the best of them, film/edit and usually let the guys ride with me to locations. Ok I’m off my soap box 😅
People always have something to say don't they Brandon? Think about all the positive comments you receive!
That crane bottle is cool. In my opinion, any bottle with a pictorial scene is worth hanging on to as long as it makes you happy.
Couldn't agree more!
Larken and Co was a soap and toiletries company. Also made some nice emerald Smelling Salts bottles.
Larkin Co of Buffalo NY made perfumes and assorted other cosmetics and lotions.
The crock lid was a cool find. Many are wood with the center hole. So a real cover is unique.
The into music is fun,,your awesome thanks for the ride along ❤️
The crane bottle is an awesome find. I love a pictorial! The tiny horseshoe shaped item is a heeltap. Nice dig, Brandon!💖
Awesome thank you!
Nice treasures! Good for you! That was fun!!! Thanx.
I love any old bottles. I dug a dump all one summer. Best summer I had ever. I have some great bottles and have them to this day. They make me happy. Lots of straight side cokes, ink wells and master inks. Fun.
Sounds like you had a great spot!
Dont know if anybody yet mentioned it but oyster shells were often used to descale pots,pans and kettles from the build-up of limescale on inner surfaces due to the amount of limescale in 'hard' water areas.Certainly happened here in the UK at least.
Good to know, thanks for the info.!
1911 document - Eagle Flavoring Extract of Lemon . Manufacturer , Webb Manufacturing Company , Nashville , Tenn . , and Shreveport , La .
I agree the crane bottle is outstanding, love it
Crane bottle was sweet and the broken embossed round bottom was tear jerker. Nice job finding that spot.
Wow - what a nice old Bottle Dump and You Two found some real Great Bottles and some to be turned into Whiskey Glasses ! Hope that You return one Day and keep digging for more Treasures ! We love old Bottles ! Please Return - thanks ! Many Cheers from us in Australia !!!!
Great dig! More there for sure!
Thanks!
Thanks for letting me tag along. You always seem to find interesting things.
Nice finds
The crane pictorial bottle is so unique, we're excited you found it! :-)
Us too!
Crane Extract Co Dayton, Ohio, listings in 1899 up to 1918ish, makers of Vanillin extracts (said Worthpoint) scarce and rare bottles of this company.
love that crane bottle , stay safe
Yall found a great dump
Awesome finds , I appreciate your hard work getting there , thanks for sharing video
I dug the old Houston dump when I was a teenager and found hundreds of intact Dr. Price's Delicious Flavoring Extract' bottles. I found many pre-1860 bottles and 25 - 30 hippo bottles. I gave away most of them over the years and some of the hippo bottles were loaned to the Texas museum.
Thanks man that was cool.
Hi😊 Video very, very beautiful❤ My Big Like!)
Thanks for sharing another adventure 👍
Our pleasure!
This is so very cool! Just like a "treasure hunt"!!
Great video Brandon I've got a question I was detecting a guy drove up showed me an Elk Park NC bottling company hutch have you heard of one ? He also said there was a gayola cola co. in the area thanks keep hunting
Awesome finds 👏 👌 😎
Thanks 👍
Wow
Cochran & Co Belfast - some say soda bottle others say ginger ale bottle (1870s-1900s?) priced into the $40s.
Cochran bottle, just cut off shoulder leaving embossing intact. Wood turn a deep holder (caster) for the bottle to sit in as a deep beer glass of 22+ oz capacity.
Hated it was broke. Can't wait to get back down there
I love the wine bottle with the kick up. And the blob! Great finds! Thank you ! 💜
Those unembossed olive flat base "Wines" are common here and are probably beers. I've dug Cochrane & Co. Here too.
Id love to dig Hawaii one day haha!
@@adventurearchaeology Just back from "Up the valley". The collapsed 1897 hydropower plant has been cleared away, probably by the City & County of Honolulu, whom have title of it since 1965 when the seized all water development from the Capital Investment Co. (Chinn Ho) whom bought out the Waianae Plantation Co, in 1947. Chinn Ho gave his name to a recurring villain on Hawaii 5-0, but his dreams of Waikiki II out here never panned out. I need to get an early start on and go up the hill again. I saw some potential for where the power plant superintendent's home was. It powered water pumps throughout the valley, as water supply was a recurring problem for the plantation. Something called a Pelton water wheel was hooked up to G.E. dynamos generating at least 600V. I first explored it in 1992 and the dynamos had already been stolen for copper. The steel plates had been thrown around like Ninja stars and stuck in the high beams.
Wish I could go with you sometime so I could figure out what to look for.
I hope you don’t mind me saying you and your wife’s accents are just lovely! Such a beautiful Southern American accent, I love it.
Hay Brandon , it's been a while . Missed your video's .
Ive missed your comments! Hope all is well?
That “kick up” in the bottom of a wine bottle is properly referred to as a punt.
Growing up here in Comanche County Texas I can remember the city having a shak at the dump and a guy who stayed there all day. EVERYONE knew that the dump was burnt Monday, Wednesday and Friday. I remember going out and shooting rats for target practice on those days with a 22 and using shorts
Small world! I was surprised to see Comanche County mentioned. I'll be down that way doing some metal detecting this weekend.
@@Eastwood69 I've been detecting for over 35 yrs, lots of history here. I grew up here and had access to a lot of places. The original owners are dead and gone and access gone as well.
@@Cutter-jx3xj Wow! Yeah there is a ton of history there. I'm hoping to pinpoint a house or two this weekend that should be from the early 1900s. I'm lucky that I have friends and family with land that they don't mind me stomping around on.
Amazing finds Brandon! I'm glad the drive paid off considering how much gas costs right now!
Yah we are excited for a return trip!~
Some nice wine and beer bottles on the day. That crane bottle is a beauty Brandon. Happy hunting and be well
I thought you shaved your beard for the summer season. Strange place to look but worth it. Good work guys…..
They needed all of the medicine for all the beer And whiskey they drink
100% correct lol
That looked like a chamber put lid
That was my first thought
I am a Larkin. The Larkin name is big in the buffalo area. If you happened to keep the Larkin bottle I would buy it off of you
Almost thought you were in North Florida from the opening shots.
That Spanish moss appears in south alabama too haha!
@@adventurearchaeology But remember south Alabama and Mississippi was Florida at one time. Someone had to give you gulf access lol. Have a great day Brandon
♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️
Would have been cool to turn that mini bottle you thought was a whiskey into a shot glass. Another cool hunt. Thanks again
Awesome dig. Really enjoyed it 👍🤠⛏🍾🍾
Y'all sure work hard for your bottles!!
It’s great to see how much your channel grew. I hope you reach 1 mil someday
That would be insane! My ultimate goal is 100k some day!
3:04 that's a heel tap
That makes sense!
Great dig! That wine bottle is actually a mineral water bottle they are typically European.
Good to know! Thanks!
I know someone said heel tap and it probably is but I’ve got a donkey shoe that’s the same size.
Very cool finds Brian. you save some good history. Really do enjoy watching them. Don't comment a lot cause I don't have the knowledge. Thanks for sharing brother.
Awesome video
Great prospecting and discovery! Cheers to you both! ☺♥
Don’t be worried about finding the rest of the doll Brandon, it’s pretty ‘armless no doubt 🍻
😂😂😂 The new corny jokes sections are inspired by you…..
@@adventurearchaeology I always tell corny jokes in a husky voice 🌽🍻
Yonkers used to be a pretty rough place. Has it gotten a little more pleasant?
Thankfully I only deal with that company down here as they are moving haha!
The birches Belfast would need an awesome iced tea glass to be able to preserve the embossing!
It wouldn’t hurt if you helped Randy dig‼️‼️‼️
The squat beer is a malt extract. They almost always come in that fat squatty shape. There are several embossed ones from all over the U.S. The little green blob wine is a little seltzer or mineral water. I have had four or five of those bottles with labels on them. They could also have been a general use bottle for many different types of drinks. Always loved those Crane extract bottles. Great stuff! Hope you go back, looks like a promising spot!
Thanks Paul! If it’s green it’s wine and brown it’s beer 😂😂😂 Only Joking! And if it’s round with a big neck and panels it’s a pickle jar…. 😂
I may be wrong since these are antiques, however, the “kicked up” bottom you are seeing on these wine bottles is called “punt”.
8:15 I would say that could possibly be a rum bottle from the prohibition era
great hunt Brandon, nice to see you using that Excalibur 40", just had a couple day's on the beach with mine , very versatile tool 👍
You had me at Kimber
When you're digging in where there are a lot of roots, sharpen the shovel and it will slice right through them.
I have a question, I have become interested in finding bottles in the woods behind my house and I was wondering if I could have some tips on bottle finding.
Larkin was a perfume company so it was probably a perfume or toilet water. I drive through Troy, NY on my way to college from home!
The main reason they burned the dumps was for rat control. Those old dumps would get inundated with rats.
oh how cool! i’m from the buffalo ny area and larkin company was a mail order catalog company back 120 years ago. started out with bar soap and branched out into other things, like furniture for one. think modern day Sears and Roebuck. their building was designed and built by Frank Lloyd Wright. the company owner, Darwin Martin had a few homes designed and built by FLW. they were long time friends. really cool history and stories about them both. Sadly, the Larkin building was demo’d, i think in the 1950’s.
Be so careful,please‼️‼️‼️😊
Larkin was a soap company.
Brave fellows. Water moccasins are aggressive snakes.
There Was An Indian Camp Up On That Hill!
I was wondering the price of shovels you sale ,I’m new to your videos I like the small shovel head for metal detecting
From $90 up.
Larkin Co Buffalo,NY produced soaps, do not thing they ever did booze. the Larkin building
was designed by frank Lloyd wright the famous high end architect.the building I think is
still standing. there are food truck that are in that area serving lunch during the week.
The colors of the doorknobs indicated who could enter that door. They came in white, black and brown. Brown meaning that both races could enter. I need to research this more to verify true or not.
Do you guys ever find shards of clay pipes??? Or was that not a thing here in the US?
Brandon, do you have an ebay store where you sell some of your bottles ?
Sure do: www.ebay.com/usr/adventurearchaeology
I was just curious has anybody ever found a skeleton digging for bottles
I’m sure they have….. thankfully I haven’t haha!
They sure find a lot of bones , lol
"Oldtimers" in our club love scary & ghost stories. I've never seen human remains, but butchered bones.
😊😊😊😊😊😊
I WOULD RUN FAST FAR AWAY‼️‼️‼️
No sound?
How did you prep for those snakes?
Just kept our eyes wide open haha!
@@adventurearchaeology Ever catch sight of any?
How rare is a talladega mid script straight side coke?
Pretty rare.
Help Randy please‼️‼️‼️
Are you allergic to shovels
bahahahahaha!!
He dug. Filmed when I was digging. In fact he carried most of the load
People don't seem to understand its hard to keep a camera steady and dig simultaneously....... I know Im talented and all but that's something I haven't figured out..... LOL Honestly when we get to the good seam of bottles I enjoy watching people find the stuff. Ive been very blessed with tons of great finds and would rather someone else get some of the good bottles.
I'm sure I was just being a smartass
I'm sure after you were done digging you were soggy bottom boys
Definitely! Also love that movie and song haha!
i just started a youtube chanel called wisconsin hobbies. i only have 3 videos but i am trying to get more subscribers. i think i am also the youngest bottle digger on youtube
Glycol-Thymoline dates back to the late 1800’s, when it was advertised as:
An alkaline, antiseptic, non-irritating, cleaning solution for the treatment of diseased mucous membrane, especially nasal catarrh.
The preparation had its roots with Oscar Kress, who, according to his January 3, 1895 obituary in the Pharmaceutical Record, was born in Germany and immigrated to the United States after graduating from the University of Munich.
A medical paper entitled “Chronic Nasal Catarrh and what the General Practitioner Can Do for it,” presented in May, 1893, mentioned that Kress introduced Glyco-Thymoline to the medical profession around that time.
Glycolic-thymoline is a preparation recently introduced to the profession by Mr. Oscar Kress, a pharmacist of this city. It is composed of glycerine (fat glycerine from slaughtered livestock hides), thymol (say thyme oil - like thymol listerine taste), sodium, borax, benzoin (incense with sweet vanillin flavor), salicylic acid (say willow bark aspirin), eucalyptol (eucalyptus oil), menthol (mint oil), gaultheria (american wintergreen with aspirin properties - say Ben-Gay smell), oleum pini pumillonia (dwarf pine oil, yeah pine sol !), and solvents, in proper proportions.
Kress dies in 1894, and Samuel Owens associated with Kress becomes new owner and incorporates as Kress and Owens and continues manufacturing into the early 1900s.
Product still manufactured today as a dental antiseptic and mouthwash solution.