Hi everyone,really enjoy watching the videos. I don’t normally post on the comments section. However I do think this is extremely important. After reading the Avian Vet comment I would quickly like to share this with you all. I contracted Avian Flu when I was 36.Back then I was super fit and strong.6ft 2” /200lbs. With in 2 days In was in hospital fighting for my life.Pumping me full of those Super Antibiotics, changing veins every hour because they were being shredded to pieces. I bought a compressor from a clearance sale at an old farm house covered in Pigeon shit having inhaled the dust while cleaning it. I was off work for 12 months convalescing. Please you do need to be very careful with the wind and dust.
As an avian vet, the fact that this bloke walks into places like this without a mask astounds me lol. The amount of disease in all that pigeon crap that can be caught by simply breathing it in terrifies me.
Thanks to you I am out wondering around Australia looking at interestng old buildings instead of stuck indoors looking out the window at a dark chilly, wet, windy U.K. Thankyou for making such an option possible. A breath of fresh air!
I once lived in an early nineteen hundreds symmetrical villa in rural South Australia that had two windows on either wall in the front two rooms. Used to get nice breezes when they were both opened. Loved living there.
I would take that as a late 1800s home from what I have learnt from you. The pressed tin ceilings, the smaller stones in the walls... it would have been a beautiful home back in the day. Thanks for sharing Paul.
Hi Anita :-) Yes good call, it does certainly have late 1800`s features so sometimes when these home get an add on or extension they re do the whole roof, perhaps this is the case as the louvre roof style cam in early 1900`s or just on. The chimney at the rear was different suggesting its an add on. Cheers :-)
@7:44 - that's not a vacuum cleaner. It's an electric floor polisher. I'll take a guess at vintage and make (based on the design), and say it was probably made in Australia by STC in the late 1940s or 50s. STC started as a British telecommunications company (Standard Telephones and Cables Pty Ltd), but their Australian operation diversified into other home appliances. Another brand that disappeared when the tariffs that protected our manufacturing sector were removed. What remained of the business was bought out by Alcatel in the 1980s.
Nice find mate yer mother peahen looked quite cosey there sitting on eggs wow those chicks sure look cute. So many old nick nacks in there too mate, and never seen bees like that before cheers Paul for another cool old find.
27:07 A broken shell ahead of the peahen tells me that this isn't her first rodeo and notice the two of clubs behind her, maybe that was a gift from her mate? Thanks for the tour Paul! 🤠👍
🌟Oh my gosh what an absolute beautiful old gem sitting lonely in the countryside, full of history, memories I love the six over six windows and the beautiful brick facade would have been a perfect home back in the day rural Australia 🇦🇺 working the land a grand reminder of the past. Hope the cut on your hand wasn’t too nasty. Thank you for the tour.❤😊x
Hi Megan :-) Yes this one would have been awesome to see in her prime, I bet it was grand. Big family working the land for sure. Glad you enjoyed again! :-)
Thanks for the explore of the old farm house 🏠. I loved seeing the mother peacock 🦚. She is so pretty. Good luck to her and her babies. Happy New Year 🎉🎉🎉🎉❤
Another quite large farmhouse falling to bits. Taken over by nature and the widelife. Was not expecting to see that nesting bird taking up residence on the kitchen bench. Thanks for sharing. Cheers, MM :)
Bonjour d'Occitanie (France) Merci pour la visite. Pour les fenêtres obstruées si vous aviez été en France j'aurais sut pourquoi, il y a eut une époque où il avait un impôt sur les ouvertures, beaucoup de fenêtres furent condamnées (la France royaume des impôts absurdes). J'ai aussi pensé que ces ouvertures condamnées était sur le plan d'origine et donc non ouverte d'origine c'est les même pierres que le reste du mur. Pour la femelle paon, s'il y a une femelle il y a un mâle . L'oiseau ne couvait pas d’œufs pour le moment. Le femelle du paon pond quatre à cinq œufs dans un nid dissimulé au sol, dans des herbes hautes ou des buissons. Mais c'est une rencontre plus agréable que celle des abeilles Bonne fête de fin d'année
What a beautiful old home in a beautiful country setting. I hope you had a great Christmas, with best wishes for the new year! Thank you so much, Paul, for your videos that I devour x
With your videos your are the rock in the sea of urban exploring, always down-to-earth, interesting, sensitive and human. Actually it is my oldest channel here. Thanks for your steady supply.
I love this channel,love paul he's cool calm and collected ,no special effects or weird music n outrageous fanfare,(which to me just cheapens a look into the past)just the real deal
Those large wooden ? painted panels along the front hallway walls are remarkable. Have you seen that aesthetic in other old homes ? Thank you for your hard work, knowledge & passion to share & record the past . Just wow.
That was a grand old home. The scale in the room where you saw what you said was another scale was really a clock with a timer underneath the clock face. I love your explorations. ❤❤👍👍🤠🤠
Thank you so much for respecting Mrs. Peahen.... I have a question- why, with hay prices through the roof, would anyone leave that hay? I realize it wouldn't be any good for horses, but cattle eat anything, and even if it wasn't good for that, it would be good bedding, or silage. It floors me that it just sits there wasting away.... Thanks for such a great explore!!!!!-SDK
Hello Paul another beautiful old farmhouse I always enjoy your videos great job yes that was a peacock🦚🐝 I'm glad you found that egg before you found the peacock take care love from upstate New York❤😊
These old farmhouses always have a lot things left behind in the houses and the barns on the property in a very rural area there and a lot of pigeons making it their home now but it was an interesting place to explore and I really enjoyed it as always Thanks for another wonderful find in this place Thank You and until next time take care.🇦🇺🇦🇺🏘🏘🏘🏘🇦🇺🇦🇺
This house looked very similar in design to one you visited recently, with the apex design on top of the roof. That peahen wasn't a bit bothered by you being there, so she must have felt safe by the way you carefully moved around. When you left by the back door and directly to your left, there was a curved corrugated piece of metal. I was hoping you would venture past it as I was reminded of the house I grew up in that had an Anderson shelter in the garden (an arched air raid shelter, but then used as a shed). I rewound and realised that it was probably a circular tube lying on the ground, as well as realising that Australia probably didn't have Anderson shelters!
My late mother grew up in the parts of Australia Paul shows us. Mum was a young girl during the 2nd World War. I know she talked about homes and properties haveng Air Raid Shelters but not sure if they were Anderson.
What a surprise to find the peahen! The house building materials seem to be a bit of a mixture. The chimneys didn't match and noticed red bricks on the corners of the house, but then a patch of bricks on the wall towards the back. Perhaps they ran out of stone or patched it up sometime?
Urbex Indigo thanks for sharing this video with me about Huge old mysterious farm house with stuff left behind plus a nesting Peahen! it was a really interesting video and i really enjoyed it and i am from the U.S.A and i will always show your channel support and God Bless and thanks again.
Hi paul, another great find, love the old girl,love the hallway.what treasures you discover. I think you are a very caring man paul,you can see it with any living thing. Cheers deb
Another great find, thanks for sharing once again! Would of been a beautiful home back in the day. Can't believe there was a Peahen nesting on the kitchen bench!
Paul.... Here ua a piece if some of my useless bains over flow of useless informatiom. The ceiling worling things thingd as tou called them..... I agree 100% Actually named the Veredeace Device for well..... Getting out cooking smells etc. And Probably the remains of baked bean night smells. (Ill just leave that hete).
On one of the farms we lease. I went to do some maintenance in the old farm house. Bee's.the bastards attacked. Now when I see a new hive in any buildings I get rid of them.
Hi Greg 🙂 yeah I got stung by 3 at an old home when I first started these videos. I was very cautious after that even not going in some rooms that they were in 👍
Amazing old farm house, I love seeing these homes on Restoration Australia being lovingly restored. Strange place to see a Peacock/hen, they aren’t native to Australia. The Brits brought them over here from India during colonisation. Cool Vid, stay safe. :)
Yes it peacock hen if there egg ground who feeding poor being way out by it self no water around that got suck it hopefully it gets out old find place food and water birdy
Got that exact stereo/ turntable and speakers for Christmas in 1976
Hi everyone,really enjoy watching the videos. I don’t normally post on the comments section. However I do think this is extremely important. After reading the Avian Vet comment I would quickly like to share this with you all. I contracted Avian Flu when I was 36.Back then I was super fit and strong.6ft 2” /200lbs. With in 2 days In was in hospital fighting for my life.Pumping me full of those Super Antibiotics, changing veins every hour because they were being shredded to pieces. I bought a compressor from a clearance sale at an old farm house covered in Pigeon shit having inhaled the dust while cleaning it. I was off work for 12 months convalescing. Please you do need to be very careful with the wind and dust.
As an avian vet, the fact that this bloke walks into places like this without a mask astounds me lol. The amount of disease in all that pigeon crap that can be caught by simply breathing it in terrifies me.
Thank you for sharing that with us as most of us would not have known that.🙏🏻
That has always been a concern for the welfare of the videographer for me too!🦘🇦🇺😬
Love how the peahen was just nonchalantly sitting on the bench top! Love how animals are so adaptable.
Bathrooms often near the kitchen, easier to keep an eye on the kids in the bath while dinner was being prepared.
That's a good idea! 👍😊
Thanks to you I am out wondering around Australia looking at interestng old buildings instead of stuck indoors looking out the window at a dark chilly, wet, windy U.K. Thankyou for making such an option possible. A breath of fresh air!
I once lived in an early nineteen hundreds symmetrical villa in rural South Australia that had two windows on either wall in the front two rooms. Used to get nice breezes when they were both opened. Loved living there.
I would take that as a late 1800s home from what I have learnt from you. The pressed tin ceilings, the smaller stones in the walls... it would have been a beautiful home back in the day. Thanks for sharing Paul.
Hi Anita :-) Yes good call, it does certainly have late 1800`s features so sometimes when these home get an add on or extension they re do the whole roof, perhaps this is the case as the louvre roof style cam in early 1900`s or just on. The chimney at the rear was different suggesting its an add on. Cheers :-)
@7:44 - that's not a vacuum cleaner. It's an electric floor polisher. I'll take a guess at vintage and make (based on the design), and say it was probably made in Australia by STC in the late 1940s or 50s. STC started as a British telecommunications company (Standard Telephones and Cables Pty Ltd), but their Australian operation diversified into other home appliances. Another brand that disappeared when the tariffs that protected our manufacturing sector were removed. What remained of the business was bought out by Alcatel in the 1980s.
Seeing all of these beautiful homes abandoned with pictures left behind breaks my heart! Awesome video mate! ❤️😘💪
Thank you Paul for a fascinating explore of an old stone house, filled with vintage household items and also occupied by a beautiful Peahen.
Happy New Year 😊
16:28 Paul's unwitting Steve Irwin imitation.
🤪👍 🇺🇸
RIP Steve.
Nice find mate yer mother peahen looked quite cosey there sitting on eggs wow those chicks sure look cute. So many old nick nacks in there too mate, and never seen bees like that before cheers Paul for another cool old find.
Cheers Werner, yeah thats a first for me finding a Peahen! :-) Would have been a grand old home back in the day! Cheers for watching :-)
27:07 A broken shell ahead of the peahen tells me that this isn't her first rodeo and notice the two of clubs behind her, maybe that was a gift from her mate?
Thanks for the tour Paul!
🤠👍
great explore of a wonderful large old house, it is touching to see your concern for animals during your explores, bless you
Pressed tin is such a cool look
Picture all those rooms ceilings in it`s prime and all the ornate details. :-)
I was going to say thats a first for you coming across a peahen with eggs wow what a surprise well at least the old home is being put to use
🌟Oh my gosh what an absolute beautiful old gem sitting lonely in the countryside, full of history, memories I love the six over six windows and the beautiful brick facade would have been a perfect home back in the day rural Australia 🇦🇺 working the land a grand reminder of the past. Hope the cut on your hand wasn’t too nasty. Thank you for the tour.❤😊x
Hi Megan :-) Yes this one would have been awesome to see in her prime, I bet it was grand. Big family working the land for sure. Glad you enjoyed again! :-)
Beautiful, stunning old home, with plenty of history, if only the walls could talk, one of your best finds,Cheers Bevan 🤠🦘🇦🇺
Glad you enjoyed it Romeo! :-) Thanks for the support :-)
Definitely a Peahen -female peacock. How neat. Trying to imagine that home in its heyday, looks incredible.
Thanks, Paul. Sets the mind's eye working on how it would have looked 100 years ago.
Cheers Ken :-) Yep it would have been a grand old place
Thanks Paul for another awesome video.
Thanks for the explore of the old farm house 🏠. I loved seeing the mother peacock 🦚. She is so pretty. Good luck to her and her babies. Happy New Year 🎉🎉🎉🎉❤
Another quite large farmhouse falling to bits. Taken over by nature and the widelife. Was not expecting to see that nesting bird taking up residence on the kitchen bench. Thanks for sharing. Cheers, MM :)
Cheers MM :-) Yeah a first for me finding a Peahen lol :-)
I was hoping once outside you would see some peacocks and peahens. Surely she's got company nearby.
Probably not to far away the others may be out finding food :-) Cheers Shez!
Bonjour d'Occitanie (France)
Merci pour la visite. Pour les fenêtres obstruées si vous aviez été en France j'aurais sut pourquoi, il y a eut une époque où il avait un impôt sur les ouvertures, beaucoup de fenêtres furent condamnées (la France royaume des impôts absurdes). J'ai aussi pensé que ces ouvertures condamnées était sur le plan d'origine et donc non ouverte d'origine c'est les même pierres que le reste du mur.
Pour la femelle paon, s'il y a une femelle il y a un mâle . L'oiseau ne couvait pas d’œufs pour le moment. Le femelle du paon pond quatre à cinq œufs dans un nid dissimulé au sol, dans des herbes hautes ou des buissons. Mais c'est une rencontre plus agréable que celle des abeilles
Bonne fête de fin d'année
What a beautiful old home in a beautiful country setting.
I hope you had a great Christmas, with best wishes for the new year! Thank you so much, Paul, for your videos that I devour x
With your videos your are the rock in the sea of urban exploring, always down-to-earth, interesting, sensitive and human. Actually it is my oldest channel here.
Thanks for your steady supply.
Thanks heaps eyeballairvent 👍🙂 so glad you can enjoy these videos, I certainly love finding and filming them. Many more to come 🙂😊👍
I love this channel,love paul he's cool calm and collected ,no special effects or weird music n outrageous fanfare,(which to me just cheapens a look into the past)just the real deal
@@raindog428 Cheers to your support!!! 🙂
@@urbexindigo5164 no problemo paul..Why don't u get get super chat or buy me a coffee or something so we can donate xx
True, each word. @@raindog428
What the hell is that peacock doing in the kitchen ?!? 😂
Cool explore , thanks mate 😎👍
I love watching your channel. Such respect for the past. Like watching the Titanic on Land
Cheers Peter! :-) Glad you enjoy these oldies too, they are indeed like a history lesson every time! :-)
Sad to see these beautiful Old home's like this imagine what past this home had interesting from Nanna di in Mildura
Those large wooden ? painted panels along the front hallway walls are remarkable. Have you seen that aesthetic in other old homes ?
Thank you for your hard work, knowledge & passion to share & record the past . Just wow.
That was a grand old home. The scale in the room where you saw what you said was another scale was really a clock with a timer underneath the clock face. I love your explorations. ❤❤👍👍🤠🤠
I noticed the same.
11:19
Thank you so much for respecting Mrs. Peahen.... I have a question- why, with hay prices through the roof, would anyone leave that hay? I realize it wouldn't be any good for horses, but cattle eat anything, and even if it wasn't good for that, it would be good bedding, or silage. It floors me that it just sits there wasting away.... Thanks for such a great explore!!!!!-SDK
Ok, the peahen was REALLY cool!!
Amazing old home too. I love that you always leave things as you find them.
Hello Paul another beautiful old farmhouse I always enjoy your videos great job yes that was a peacock🦚🐝 I'm glad you found that egg before you found the peacock take care love from upstate New York❤😊
Love your finds these beautiful Old home's always thinking of the past and Think of The family's that lived There from Nanna di in Australia
Hi Di :-) Glad you enjoy these oldies! Cheers for watching :-)
These old farmhouses always have a lot things left behind in the houses and the barns on the property in a very rural area there and a lot of pigeons
making it their home now but it was an interesting place to explore and I
really enjoyed it as always Thanks for another wonderful find in this place
Thank You and until next time take care.🇦🇺🇦🇺🏘🏘🏘🏘🇦🇺🇦🇺
This house looked very similar in design to one you visited recently, with the apex design on top of the roof. That peahen wasn't a bit bothered by you being there, so she must have felt safe by the way you carefully moved around. When you left by the back door and directly to your left, there was a curved corrugated piece of metal. I was hoping you would venture past it as I was reminded of the house I grew up in that had an Anderson shelter in the garden (an arched air raid shelter, but then used as a shed). I rewound and realised that it was probably a circular tube lying on the ground, as well as realising that Australia probably didn't have Anderson shelters!
My late mother grew up in the parts of Australia Paul shows us. Mum was a young girl during the 2nd World War. I know she talked about homes and properties haveng Air Raid Shelters but not sure if they were Anderson.
What a surprise to find the peahen! The house building materials seem to be a bit of a mixture. The chimneys didn't match and noticed red bricks on the corners of the house, but then a patch of bricks on the wall towards the back. Perhaps they ran out of stone or patched it up sometime?
its amazing how nature takes over thanks paul for shareing this video
Super cool! Thanks!
What a gem 😊
Love this explore! Peacocks of all things! You really should be wearing a mask though...
Urbex Indigo thanks for sharing this video with me about Huge old mysterious farm house with stuff left behind plus a nesting Peahen! it was a really interesting video and i really enjoyed it and i am from the U.S.A and i will always show your channel support and God Bless and thanks again.
Apocalyptic!👍😎🇦🇺
Nice to see you this Thursday morning 🌄. Be careful out there.
That place must have been beautiful in it's hay day I wish we could have seen the mantels and the hallway but at least they were saved
Bravo 👍👍❤❤❤😺😺👋👋👋
That was a Peacock she
was sitting on her nest
good thing you didn’t scare her.
Hi👋Paul,couple of weird sounds when u opened the door
Hi raindog :-) Yes many weird noises in this place! A somewhat strange feeling to this one. But a great one also. :-)
@@urbexindigo5164 I thought the same thing
Hi paul, another great find, love the old girl,love the hallway.what treasures you discover. I think you are a very caring man paul,you can see it with any living thing. Cheers deb
Yes that was a peacock you saw but it was a peacock yes and I enjoyed the video as always
The cistern for the toilet was in the bath. So the flushing toilet probably was in the "new" bathroom. Thanks for the tour and the sitting hen!
That's a Peahen, Peacock have the huge tails with the eyes.
Cheers Roy, I did finally work it out later! :-)
Another great find, thanks for sharing once again! Would of been a beautiful home back in the day.
Can't believe there was a Peahen nesting on the kitchen bench!
Paul.... Here ua a piece if some of my useless bains over flow of useless informatiom.
The ceiling worling things thingd as tou called them..... I agree 100%
Actually named the Veredeace Device for well..... Getting out cooking smells etc. And Probably the remains of baked bean night smells. (Ill just leave that hete).
Merry Christmas hope you had a wonderful day ❤️🐈
Thanks for this
On one of the farms we lease. I went to do some maintenance in the old farm house. Bee's.the bastards attacked. Now when I see a new hive in any buildings I get rid of them.
Hi Greg 🙂 yeah I got stung by 3 at an old home when I first started these videos. I was very cautious after that even not going in some rooms that they were in 👍
Oh no.. not the bastard bees😁I'd be more worried about the wicked wasps..hurts more
Amazing old farm house, I love seeing these homes on Restoration Australia being lovingly restored. Strange place to see a Peacock/hen, they aren’t native to Australia. The Brits brought them over here from India during colonisation. Cool Vid, stay safe. :)
More than likely gone feral a couple of generations ago. Someone probably let them go. South Australia wasn't a penal colony.
@@bas4903yeah, I’d say so.
The guys man.
The bird is a peahen not peacock really a great old place very funny place for the bees once I have not heard you mention spider webs
Sad thought to think the birthday card owner could possibly be in his 60s by now if he was 21 in the 80s how time files, but the houses sits still.
If that's a nesting female peacock. I wonder where the male is? He wouldn't be hard to miss🇦🇺
👏👏👍👍😍
Glad you enjoyed it Ulrikevolke :-) Thanks for watching
I guess the kids grow up and move to the city?
Yes it peacock hen if there egg ground who feeding poor being way out by it self no water around that got suck it hopefully it gets out old find place food and water birdy
I am going to tell all subscripter that never really reads the comments,not does he answers any guestion asked of him .