Everything is a learning process. Nearly any subject can be fascinating if you're listening/speaking to a dedicated, passionate, enthusiast! I've been an (amateur) whitesmith for pushing on 15 years now and I'm still learning new old things!
Serious respect for his approach to building barrels ! As a 40+years custom woodworker when you build multiples with quality in mind small refinements in the process take it from a craft to an art. It’s nice to see modern equipment and traditional values blended so well.
This is probably one of the more concise explanations, done in a minimal amount of time, on any subject, on UA-cam. I can honestly say, I've enjoyed it very much. It's nice, to not only see the process, have a brief, yet thorough explanation in its entirety. It is these types of people, that take such great pride in creating something of beauty, value, and integrity, that continues to give me hope in the future of this country. If you're going to do something, do it as best you can. Excellent work, both at the cooperage and on the video shoot.
Working at a cooperage myself it's always interesting to see how other cooperages operate, enjoyed seeing all the things they do differently, and the things they do the same way as us.
@@SordidandSalted Well my dad is a master cooper so it was kinda easy to get into the craft. There are so many different tasks that you can't really educate yourself to it. Just try to get an apprenticeship and show that you're capable of doing a wide variety of things.
@@ginger_nosoul almost exactly the same I'd say, they make the cask heads exactly as we do, they raise the barrels a bit differently but still the same principle. No one pays a cooper to stand and make a barrels by hand using axes etc, when you can make an as good barrel 20x faster with machines.
My last name is Cooper. I've always loved learning about this craft and appreciate you making this video. I have followed my family line to before we existed here in the U.S and my family was indeed working in this craft just a couple hundred years ago. I've also been a woodworker for the last 20+ years and worked building homes to put myself through college. So cool to see someone with similar background picking up this awesome craft!
I came here strictly for the content of how a barrel is made but was consumed by the editing between live action shots, sit down interviews, the history facts, machinery vs manpower as well as the entire assembly explanations. This video was complete and thorough and a true pleasure to watch. Extremely well done.
I have spent a lot of time in KY studying the whisky making processes. My visits include a large volume cooperage. As a woodworker, all I can say is WOW! This barrel is an awesome product and I am betting makes a fantastic bourbon. I want one of these barrels. Well made video by the way, congratulations to Adirondack Barrel Cooperage on promoting their brand so well.
I'm a fine trim carpenter and custom cabinet maker, been to the Jameson factory in Ireland , watched them make Whiskey barrels , this video was far more informative and fulfilling to watch, real American craftsmanship, second to none.
@@josephblazosky7069 i believe hes making a reference to avatar, not actual fire- bending but the type that allows you to shoot magic fire out of your hands
I also like how says that "Every piece is hand-delivered...to that machine". WHOOOOOOOOOA. BECAUSE PLACING A PLANK IN A MACHINE RESULTS IN A POORER STAVE.
Thanks for showinghow involved barrel making. Your work is simply beautiful. I had no idea how complex the process is. After I retired, a buddy of mine and I started building wooden boats. That stack of white oak looked beautiful. I have retired again because of age related problems. I just couldn’t allow a fellow craftsman to slip without say hello and remember how oak looks, smells, feels, and behaves as you tame it. Thank you for your time.
Wow! This is amazing! When I was 17 I started my very first business buying and selling crates and barrels and it wasnt long after that I started to make barrel furniture. I would have an idea in my head on Monday and in a few days the idea was out of my head and became 3d and in the real world. It was a glorious feeling. I did not have UA-cam but rather only pencil and paper and then Viola! Done! I made bars, tables, fishtanks, lamps, you name it. Your video has inspired to create again. Thank you!
What a pleasure to listen to a man who knows his work from A to Z, and truly loves what he does. He respects his job and the materials that go into it, and by extension, he respects his consumers. That's old school, if I ever saw it. Great video.
Yea scotch is generally better than bourbon. I don't often tell people though, because I don't want the millenials who discovered bourbon and ruined the market a few years ago to do the same thing to single malt. Fortunately a lot of their pallets can't handle peat...and to a lot of them looking cool is more important than flavor
Think about how this was done in say prohibition days one of the main reasons prohibition was repealed was the depression and jobs were needed there were hundreds of thousands of jobs created in these types of industries id personal love to see how it was done before machines though during prohibition im sure machines were still in use then though
It's a weird sentence, yes, but I guess he's saying that it could have been completely automated where a conveyor belt drops them into the machine and an extractor could send it to another conveyor belt. It's much more personal and there's way more quality control for variables when you put each piece individually by hand.
Knowing this team personally I cannot say enough about the craftsmanship, care, and passion they bring to the table! Take a look at Cooperstown Distilling, Brothers Cut Bourbon, 1911 Bourbon, and Iron Smoke Bourbon all made in the barrels. The product is next level, and all spirit brands need to take a close look at Adirondack Barrel
I tried coopering. My barrels (small ones) leaked like a sieve! I asked a cooper in New England how he did it. He said "Make a couple of thousand and likety split you get good"! My cooperage career was over. Lol! Glad your wife was on board. Much respect to you and yours.
Very interesting how you make barrels as you say there is various methods your cooperage is very modern and efficient ,well done I’m impressed old jimmy ,west australia
Sooo informative! The process of barrelmaking is complex and requires a lot of skill. This video is excellent. I take my hat off to the artisans in the video and the artists making it.
I used to stack those staves in morganton GA and it was one of the most backache laborious jobs i have ever worked, terrible conditions Osha would flip out the particulates in the air was unimaginable but nobody would call so not all glam and glory, thats why they showed you the barrel makers not the stave makers.
I have seen a factory that reconditions barrels before but have never seen one built from scratch. It's a lot more involved than I thought. I figured you could bang one out in an hour.
Always inspirational to see art blending with science - and being pursued by a team that has a love and passion for what they do. While I am not a fan of American whiskeys (Scotch is my beat), the dedication to creating a perfect product is always appreciated.
Thanks for sharing. In the USA the barrels are used once. Then they are bought by Scottish distillers and they get several more reuses. I visited several of the distillers and looked at their warehouses too. You can see the "angels portion" - - little white deposits on the roof beams where evaporated spirit lightly settled....
My father was a Cooper and his father🤩 They always had the angels share🙄🤣 It’s now a dying trade here in Scotland 🏴 Keep it up these trades need to keep going👍🏻
It is enormously gratifying, and reassuring, to see this ancient art living on in our modern age. Hats off to the law makers for defining Bourbon as aged on new oak barrels thus helping to ensure the survival of the cooperage as an entity.
Wow! Incredible! You all are amazing! 100 years from now antique lovers will be fighting over your stunning barrels! Great video! I feel privileged to get to see you all work your craft.
thats the reason why they are so big. its not cost effective to make the big ones, and its super super wasteful if u spend all that time on a barrel that cant hold liquor
I know they do small barrels but you have to buy in quantities! I would reach out, as I know they work closely with their distillers and wineries through the life cycle of the barrels.
Thanks for sharing your skills and the interesting programme. I visited a Cooper who was making barrels as part of Youngmans Brewery in London. Brewing beer in the traditional way. I did it as a college project in the 70’s. He was sad it was a dying art, and I captured it in photographs. I feel privileged to have seen the operation. Seeing your program has revived my memory of the event, so thank you for that and I wish you great success in keeping this skill alive.👍
@@BiggMo That is true for a premium 59-gallon wine barrel. However, mass-produced 53-gallon bourbon/whiskey barrels are closer to $200-225 and quality barrels can be had for under $300.
One of the best you tube videos I have even come upon. We are grateful for people like this to carry on true craftsmanship in an economy that doesn't value artisans.
I'm impressed with how any nuance of the manufacturing process is spun into a marketing ploy. "our workers are often injured on the job, we like to think their blood imparts a mellow flavor, along with their life force.
So fascinating to see craftsmanship alive and well. The passion of this couple to build a business of this caliber...truly impressive...cheers! I couldn't help but wonder what a barrel like this would cost to buy$$$
same here bro......thats what happens every time i watch these types of videos. i think next i'm going to dream about owning a metal shop and creating cast iron cookware as thats the next video at the top of my recommendations
That's a beautiful making process looks so satisfying to make. I really, in my mid age enjoy building things and fixing things. Gives me a deep satisfaction and helps me mellow out. Plus love learning how things are done
Then little boy in me giggled at "we bung bore it". The chemist and whiskey drinker in me loves the the chemistry of temperature of volatility and how it affects flavour.
I kind of want to bung bore some thermocouples into a barrel, seeing how deep the heat actually penetrates and the temperature profile inside a stave would be pretty damn interesting.
You can get used barrels for $100 or less. Once spirits and wine have been aged and the oak has nothing left to give, it can be turned into furniture or a planter. Just look for used barrels online. barrelsonline.com is one place.
I can REALLY admire the stringent adherence to a process. A process where every step seems to have a legitimate reason for existing. And most importantly I'm just so pleased to see corners not being cut. Taking pride in the final product. I bet they fetch a solid premium price for their barrels and just don't bother with the lesser barrels. That's the way you build a business. I just wish my family's business could find solid labor like this guy appears to have.
The white oak used in barrels is quarter spawn. I work for a company that makes barrel staves and heads. I live in Missouri and we have several cooperages in the state.
What's your favorite barrel-aged spirit?
Laphroaig!
@@RyokoX37 AMEN
Bourbon of course.
Two, Bourbon (Maker's Mark) and Irish Whisky (Jameson)
Whiskey.... and I'm learning to appreciate Bourbon.... which is relatively new to me, as an European.
It's always fun listening to someone who truly understands the process. Never thought it was so involved. Great video. More like these.
How do you know he understands it, if you don't?
Sounded more like bragging
@@AndrewMellor-darkphoton Sounds more like jealousy from you
Do not mistake pride for bragging, for one is positive and one is negative.
Everything is a learning process.
Nearly any subject can be fascinating if you're listening/speaking to a dedicated, passionate, enthusiast!
I've been an (amateur) whitesmith for pushing on 15 years now and I'm still learning new old things!
@@drivestowork That is well said! I too find that listening to an enthusiast....a happy enthusiast..on almost ANY subject...can be interesting!
Serious respect for his approach to building barrels ! As a 40+years custom woodworker when you build multiples with quality in mind small refinements in the process take it from a craft to an art. It’s nice to see modern equipment and traditional values blended so well.
The care that is put into making these barrels is amazing
Now I know why whiskey is so damned expensive.
I’d like to buy one because they’re a perfect American success story.
That's nothing, watch the videos on how to make a piano or guitar.
😮
I don't even drink and I find this absolutely fascinating!
Congrats don't start or stay sober 👍🏻 Lord knows I'm drinking whiskey right now though.
Interesting...
You can always just taste it.
absolutely nobody cares if you don’t drink
@@Pumpkinking64 I care that he doesn't drink because I, too don't drink
"We are one of the few in the whiskey and spirit business that firebend."
Has a cooler sentence ever been said? Damn!
Learned it from the dragons.
hahahaha
Everything changed when the fire nation attacked
Agreed - hadn't thought about that - but hell yeah - what a cool sentence :)
Hate to be a downer, but it's probably just the distinction between using steam heating to bend the wood as opposed to fire heating.
This is probably one of the more concise explanations, done in a minimal amount of time, on any subject, on UA-cam. I can honestly say, I've enjoyed it very much. It's nice, to not only see the process, have a brief, yet thorough explanation in its entirety. It is these types of people, that take such great pride in creating something of beauty, value, and integrity, that continues to give me hope in the future of this country. If you're going to do something, do it as best you can. Excellent work, both at the cooperage and on the video shoot.
Working at a cooperage myself it's always interesting to see how other cooperages operate, enjoyed seeing all the things they do differently, and the things they do the same way as us.
How'd you get into that? I've done some traditional style cooperage for the local historical society but I'd love to get into the industry
Would you call this more or less "handmade" than how you do it your cooperage?
@@SordidandSalted Well my dad is a master cooper so it was kinda easy to get into the craft. There are so many different tasks that you can't really educate yourself to it. Just try to get an apprenticeship and show that you're capable of doing a wide variety of things.
@@ginger_nosoul almost exactly the same I'd say, they make the cask heads exactly as we do, they raise the barrels a bit differently but still the same principle. No one pays a cooper to stand and make a barrels by hand using axes etc, when you can make an as good barrel 20x faster with machines.
@@PunschRS How much do these barrels cost, roughly?
I like how he's honest and says generally no leaks instead of just lying and saying our products are 100% perfect.
The production quality of both the barrels and this video is quite literally amazing.
My last name is Cooper. I've always loved learning about this craft and appreciate you making this video. I have followed my family line to before we existed here in the U.S and my family was indeed working in this craft just a couple hundred years ago. I've also been a woodworker for the last 20+ years and worked building homes to put myself through college. So cool to see someone with similar background picking up this awesome craft!
I came here strictly for the content of how a barrel is made but was consumed by the editing between live action shots, sit down interviews, the history facts, machinery vs manpower as well as the entire assembly explanations. This video was complete and thorough and a true pleasure to watch. Extremely well done.
I have spent a lot of time in KY studying the whisky making processes. My visits include a large volume cooperage. As a woodworker, all I can say is WOW! This barrel is an awesome product and I am betting makes a fantastic bourbon. I want one of these barrels. Well made video by the way, congratulations to Adirondack Barrel Cooperage on promoting their brand so well.
Hi
I love listening to people who understand their job. No matter what job it is
I'm a fine trim carpenter and custom cabinet maker, been to the Jameson factory in Ireland , watched them make Whiskey barrels , this video was far more informative and fulfilling to watch, real American craftsmanship, second to none.
These sorts of videos are my absolute favorite from Eater. I love seeing a master craftsman talk about what they do.
I really love how organized and clean his work area is. It's very pleasing.
“Only cooperage that firebend” wuuuut 😳
Cooperage- the last firebender.
Didn't say we were the only, said we are one of a few that fire bend to make spirit barrels. There are other cooperages fire bend as well.
@@josephblazosky7069 i believe hes making a reference to avatar, not actual fire- bending but the type that allows you to shoot magic fire out of your hands
Well played
I also like how says that "Every piece is hand-delivered...to that machine". WHOOOOOOOOOA. BECAUSE PLACING A PLANK IN A MACHINE RESULTS IN A POORER STAVE.
Thanks for showinghow involved barrel making. Your work is simply beautiful. I had no idea how complex the process is. After I retired, a buddy of mine and I started building wooden boats. That stack of white oak looked beautiful. I have retired again because of age related problems. I just couldn’t allow a fellow craftsman to slip without say hello and remember how oak looks, smells, feels, and behaves as you tame it. Thank you for your time.
This is american quality and workmanship at its best.It's good to see people still take pride in their work.
what about guns
@@infinite_pi amen to that
Then the "Made in China" attacked. Haha
@@GeorgeEstregan828 just like everything Chinese made, it will break right away.
@@danieln9909 same goes for iphones. worst phones money can buy
Wow! This is amazing! When I was 17 I started my very first business buying and selling crates
and barrels and it wasnt long after that I started to make barrel furniture. I would have an idea in my head on Monday and in a few days the idea was out of my head and became 3d and in the real world. It was a glorious feeling. I did not have UA-cam but rather only pencil and paper and then Viola! Done! I made bars, tables, fishtanks, lamps, you name it. Your video has inspired to
create again. Thank you!
What a pleasure to listen to a man who knows his work from A to Z, and truly loves what he does. He respects his job and the materials that go into it, and by extension, he respects his consumers. That's old school, if I ever saw it. Great video.
Best whisky for me is aged in barrels that have already been used, but the barrels have to start somewhere, I appreciate their work
This is for making bourbon specifically. Its a protected product or whatever they're called so it has to be made a certain way in the us
Yea scotch is generally better than bourbon. I don't often tell people though, because I don't want the millenials who discovered bourbon and ruined the market a few years ago to do the same thing to single malt. Fortunately a lot of their pallets can't handle peat...and to a lot of them looking cool is more important than flavor
@@judgeholden849 bourbon taste good. Scotch is great but damn I love a simple Jim Beam and coke sometimes.
@@judgeholden849 congratulations on having an opinion
"This wood is hand delivered to that one machine" this is how far machines have taken us.
Boy yep. That sure is a sentence.
@Asura Code but the liquid controls us both...
The modern day definition of handmade lol
Think about how this was done in say prohibition days one of the main reasons prohibition was repealed was the depression and jobs were needed there were hundreds of thousands of jobs created in these types of industries id personal love to see how it was done before machines though during prohibition im sure machines were still in use then though
It's a weird sentence, yes, but I guess he's saying that it could have been completely automated where a conveyor belt drops them into the machine and an extractor could send it to another conveyor belt. It's much more personal and there's way more quality control for variables when you put each piece individually by hand.
Look how beautifully done his barrels are. Truly an art form than just a job I say. This takes passion and serious skill!
So these are the dudes who made donkey kong suffer...
Under rated comment lol
Suffer or gave him purpose?
@@markserrano4586 this is getting a little philosophical
Kong threw the barrels tho
Hey man, he started it.
Beautiful finished piece.
Very interesting clip.
I wouldn't mind working there.
These barrels are a work of art.
🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥👌👌👌
We hand char every episode of *Messy Times* as well. So we're almost the same! ua-cam.com/users/messytimes
This is, by far, the best coopering video I have ever seen. Thanks
3:57 "we're one of the few cooperages in the country that firebend"
Fire nation cooperages: 👁️👄👁️
haha
Was looking for this comment! 🤣
This guy makes absolutely beautiful barrels. Each one is a work of art.
Knowing this team personally I cannot say enough about the craftsmanship, care, and passion they bring to the table! Take a look at Cooperstown Distilling, Brothers Cut Bourbon, 1911 Bourbon, and Iron Smoke Bourbon all made in the barrels.
The product is next level, and all spirit brands need to take a close look at Adirondack Barrel
Better than taking a look, I'll be taking a tipple!
Probably the coolest thing I have seen on UA-cam !
Listening to someone who truly knows the process is always so damn wonderful.
I tried coopering. My barrels (small ones) leaked like a sieve! I asked a cooper in New England how he did it. He said "Make a couple of thousand and likety split you get good"! My cooperage career was over. Lol! Glad your wife was on board. Much respect to you and yours.
The crazy thing I thought while watching this was imagine. How much skill it took to make barrels without power tools.
Very interesting how you make barrels as you say there is various methods your cooperage is very modern and efficient ,well done I’m impressed old jimmy ,west australia
4:00 Everything changed when the bourbon makers attacked.
Only the Woodworker, master of all 4 liquor barrels could stop them.
@@vincentnguyen3068 but when the world needed him most....he vanished
we need a new series of the "Woodworker"
@@TeibokChyneakaTei we sure do
Respect for the cooper craft 👍🙏👌🥃😊
This dude was laying down a CLINIC in cooper-ing. Damn I'm glad to have witnessed
So nice of you Sir for explaining with such a minute details. Thanks a lot.
Sooo informative! The process of barrelmaking is complex and requires a lot of skill. This video is excellent. I take my hat off to the artisans in the video and the artists making it.
I used to stack those staves in morganton GA and it was one of the most backache laborious jobs i have ever worked, terrible conditions Osha would flip out the particulates in the air was unimaginable but nobody would call so not all glam and glory, thats why they showed you the barrel makers not the stave makers.
Amazing as this is, it's almost unbelievable to think that coopers used to do this all by hand without the machinery.
I agree. Thinking of the things that were done in my field before there were computers just blows me away.
I have seen a factory that reconditions barrels before but have never seen one built from scratch. It's a lot more involved than I thought. I figured you could bang one out in an hour.
This dude knows his stuff, kudos to him and his team
Damn it's good to listen to an expert !
Always inspirational to see art blending with science - and being pursued by a team that has a love and passion for what they do. While I am not a fan of American whiskeys (Scotch is my beat), the dedication to creating a perfect product is always appreciated.
You learned well, and your hearts in it. You can tell by the beautiful barrels when your done.
Badass George Lucas
Big difference, this barrel maker has honor and sincerity
👌👌👌
Thanks for sharing. In the USA the barrels are used once. Then they are bought by Scottish distillers and they get several more reuses. I visited several of the distillers and looked at their warehouses too. You can see the "angels portion" - - little white deposits on the roof beams where evaporated spirit lightly settled....
My father was a Cooper and his father🤩
They always had the angels share🙄🤣
It’s now a dying trade here in Scotland 🏴
Keep it up these trades need to keep going👍🏻
The care that is put into making these barrels is amazing. That facility is impressive. Clean and organized. Quality work..
3:50 I love when they start fire bending the barrels and "The light of the Seven"ish music starts playing in the background.
a pleasure and a privilege to watch barrels made well.
Such a beautiful, painstaking process
6:30 Great music, great cut. My highlight of this amazing Video! Thanks for creating this clip.
It is enormously gratifying, and reassuring, to see this ancient art living on in our modern age. Hats off to the law makers for defining Bourbon as aged on new oak barrels thus helping to ensure the survival of the cooperage as an entity.
Incredible craftsmanship
Very interesting and real attention to quality, well done.
Wow! Incredible! You all are amazing! 100 years from now antique lovers will be fighting over your stunning barrels! Great video! I feel privileged to get to see you all work your craft.
What an amazing and interessant Video. Never excpeted Barrel making would be so cool.
Comment ça intéressant...but you are french?!
@@geromesmith7767 no I am german
@@ganjaraucher4203 kuck dir swr handwerkskunst wie man ein Fass baut an
@@simonneuhold5681 Danke nochmal für den Tipp hab mir die Doku grad angeschaut und ist sehr geil.
new song here ua-cam.com/video/KofjQAQ3abk/v-deo.html
Absolutely loved hearing you both talk about the process. Your passion comes thru loudly. As a whisky and Bourbon, Thank you!
I just looked up their site. I wish they were at the stage where they had mini barrels for cocktail aging or home wine aging.
thats the reason why they are so big. its not cost effective to make the big ones, and its super super wasteful if u spend all that time on a barrel that cant hold liquor
You can buy second hand ones from wineries...but they'll be big ofc and less flavour imparting than when they were new
I know they do small barrels but you have to buy in quantities! I would reach out, as I know they work closely with their distillers and wineries through the life cycle of the barrels.
Thanks for sharing your skills and the interesting programme. I visited a Cooper who was making barrels as part of Youngmans Brewery in London. Brewing beer in the traditional way. I did it as a college project in the 70’s. He was sad it was a dying art, and I captured it in photographs. I feel privileged to have seen the operation. Seeing your program has revived my memory of the event, so thank you for that and I wish you great success in keeping this skill alive.👍
👌👌👌
The guy is an artist. I want one 👌🏻 Even an empty one 🥃
New barrels sell for about $1000 each
Very expensive stuff when new.
@@BiggMo That is true for a premium 59-gallon wine barrel. However, mass-produced 53-gallon bourbon/whiskey barrels are closer to $200-225 and quality barrels can be had for under $300.
new song here ua-cam.com/video/KofjQAQ3abk/v-deo.html
@@michaelstormoen very interesting
One of the best you tube videos I have even come upon. We are grateful for people like this to carry on true craftsmanship in an economy that doesn't value artisans.
Amazing stuff! Long may you continue producing quality barrels for us folk who enjoy having some liquid gold
What a nice video. So informative and interesting.
the staff look like they really take pride in their work.
Really well produced video, relaxed, interesting, easy to listen to and to understand. Thank you.
After all the process to make the flavor, then you drink that whiskey with Cola.
A travesty!!
Speak for yourself, not me.
Maybe the cola is aged in fine barrels as well.
It taste good.
@Daniel M jack and coke? Jim and coke?
Amazing! Impressive and much appreciated...
“Each piece is hand delivered to the machine”, WOW, that’s real a real talent!!
Ok, but that's what the world calls for nowadays. What's your lazy ass doing?
@@poob2372 fr these people so quick to judge when they would do the exact same thing
@@filthycasual8074 yeah, and the thing is, the machines still need to be operated
Both a technical skill AND an artform! Very interesting process to watch!
Woodn't you know, I've really *grained* so much knowledge here!
Your puns are on fire today.
@grogdizzy Oh now you're getting me *fired up!*
new song here ua-cam.com/video/KofjQAQ3abk/v-deo.html
Truly fascinating to see the level of skill and attention to detail in making these barrels. I learned a lot.
I'm impressed with how any nuance of the manufacturing process is spun into a marketing ploy. "our workers are often injured on the job, we like to think their blood imparts a mellow flavor, along with their life force.
Very enlightening. And what a wonderful back story! Thanks for sharing.
So fascinating to see craftsmanship alive and well. The passion of this couple to build a business of this caliber...truly impressive...cheers!
I couldn't help but wonder what a barrel like this would cost to buy$$$
The love between the couple is awesome. Wow
For a whole 16 minutes, 23 seconds longer than the video, I wanted to build barrels.
Then I remembered I have a day job and no time for dreams :'(
you have a job? wow
same here bro......thats what happens every time i watch these types of videos. i think next i'm going to dream about owning a metal shop and creating cast iron cookware as thats the next video at the top of my recommendations
I bought a sawmill with no one to sell lumber to. Just want to cut wood. No I have a huge pile of lumber
Awesome video, craftsmanship at its finest!
4:30 The background music reminds me of the Game of thrones music.
It sounds like light of the seven
That is one of the most rewarding videos I have ever seen on YT. Love the couples ingenuity and pioneer spirit. 😊👍👍👍👍👍
no ones giving a shoutout to the amazing wife that gave him the idea to start a cooperage? thats a woman right there
Roommate.
Add time or?
Adam or half
Calling her now? Bar tend and break stand
ERS edit typed not Heard
From the Bible Eve?
In the television Eve instead.
Great watch- absolutely fascinated...
as a cooper myself this is a fun watch
You make barrels?
is your operation similar
That's a beautiful making process looks so satisfying to make.
I really, in my mid age enjoy building things and fixing things. Gives me a deep satisfaction and helps me mellow out.
Plus love learning how things are done
That lady is a top tier entrepeneur
Amazing process for a premium product
Then little boy in me giggled at "we bung bore it".
The chemist and whiskey drinker in me loves the the chemistry of temperature of volatility and how it affects flavour.
I kind of want to bung bore some thermocouples into a barrel, seeing how deep the heat actually penetrates and the temperature profile inside a stave would be pretty damn interesting.
A work of Art pure and simple.
Anyone know the song at 6:30?
The missing
Magnificent craftsmanship.
Also, I'd love one of those as a table on my balcony.
You can get used barrels for $100 or less. Once spirits and wine have been aged and the oak has nothing left to give, it can be turned into furniture or a planter. Just look for used barrels online. barrelsonline.com is one place.
@@BrianKelsay Hey Brian, thanks for taking the time to reply, mate. Having a look at those barrels via your link right now. Merry Christmas!
No problem
I can REALLY admire the stringent adherence to a process. A process where every step seems to have a legitimate reason for existing. And most importantly I'm just so pleased to see corners not being cut. Taking pride in the final product. I bet they fetch a solid premium price for their barrels and just don't bother with the lesser barrels. That's the way you build a business. I just wish my family's business could find solid labor like this guy appears to have.
Not me
Always amased me how the great craftsman can make barrels leak proof. Nice untetesting vid.
damn I never realised how much it took to make barrels, it really is a work of art!
The white oak used in barrels is quarter spawn. I work for a company that makes barrel staves and heads. I live in Missouri and we have several cooperages in the state.
You heard it here folks. They're firebenders