My chest swells with so much emotion when I see something like this. Living and or working on a ranch has been a dream of mine since the days of Roy Rogers, Gene Autry and all the other TV cowboys of the 1950's. I was never able to make that wish come true and at 75 can only continue to dream of what might have been. I am so happy to see that life goes on even with all the so called moderization of electronics that fills the minds of kids and many adults. Although I have lived in cities most of my life I still find being away from people and in the mountains of places like Montana, Idaho and Wyoming a pure joy. Thank you for bringing that hard but wonderful life to those of us that can only dream.
You aren't too old to go on a ranch vacation, there are many to choose from. Ask for information at the travel agents or inquire on line in a search.I bet they have a mild mannered horse for you. They feed you and I'm sure they adapt the trails for all types. You can even sleep out in the open on the trails with everyone. Trinity should do a series on ranches that do that type of thing.
@@maggiedoor6093 Thanks for the encouragement. My dream was to live and work on a ranch in places like Montana and Wyoming. I've been around horses a lot in my life. I rode in rodeos and had my own boarding stables. I had my own horses but all was in California and in the S F Bayarea which is a far cry from where I wanted to be. Actually, I have looked into dude ranches just to get away but they are way too expensive for me so now I just sit back and remember my animals.
I use to live on a farm many years ago. It was my Grandmother's farm and we lived in the hired man's house. I lived there until I was 8 and then my parents moved to town. Those 8 years were the best years of my life. I loved it there. Seeing that old barn I was right back there. I loved the smell of the wood in that old barn. Nanny use to keep turnips in one end of the barn for feed. Everytime I smell a turnip I am right back there.
I, too, lived on my grandfather's farm in Ontario, Wisconsin. Best years of my life. Fondest memories. Like a magical world full of sounds and smells, sights and tastes long past. The squeak of a leather saddle, the smell of cut hay, the herds of sheep and cows, the crow of the roosters, the taste of molasses cookies and rhubarb pie. The sound of the screen door slamming. So many things.
@@KeepUSAFree4real I don't really have a "side of the story" other than what was passed on to me. It's a complicated and tragic saga all the way around. I did laugh at the comment about Cook's relatives tarnishing the Cook name, as I didn't realize it was "tarnished". I have shared what I know with Trinity. Perhaps he'll do more videos about AB Cook in the future.
A very interesting story. It brings back many memories of my youth staying with my grandparents and crawling around the hay lofts. They have a unique smell to them and this video brought. back those long forgotten memories. Thank you for that. God Bless.
This is so interesting. I love the history of the ranches out west. That barn is beautiful and how it was built with drains and slots for dividing cattle is so clever for the time.
So beautiful and so awesome to know A.B. Cook took so much pride and extra care to have the absolute Best Herd and the Best Barn for the Best Herd!!!! Truly Amazing to see such high quality workmanship!!!! I’m so sorry about your injury, Trinity!!!! I hope everything healed properly for you to get back at it!!!! Trinity, You Sir, are an amazing man and I wish I could have worked with you when I had my big Quarter Horse “Max” in my photo. The people I bought him from were up in Conrad, MT and they said he was from Nebraska and didn’t know anything about climbing mountains. He wasn’t registered, but he was all Quarter Horse. I put him on some good feed and I rode him straight up a mountain and he never hesitated!!!! By the way, that’s the Grand Teton right behind us in our photo!!!! I live in Idaho Falls now. After I took him up that first mountain and never had a problem, whenever people would ask me about his bloodlines, I just said “He’s out of Nebraska by Truck”!!!! It always got a good laugh, sometimes quicker than others!!!! I hope you can keep doing what you are doing with your videos for a long time!!!! Today’s young people just have no idea what it’s like to be a Cowboy, let alone a Rancher!!!! They need to know what you are teaching!!!! Thank You Sir for doing it!!!! SALUTE!!!! Terry Thornock 100% Total and Permanent Disabled USAF Veteran & Above Knee Amputee P.S. After losing my left leg in 2005 due to serious trauma and breaking my back at L-5 & S-1 vertebrae, plus 3 broken ribs, I had to sell my horses. A few years later, I even sold all my tack. That’s when ya know you’re done riding horses. Now I ride my Japanese Quarter Horse in the mountains. It’s a Yamaha Rhino side-by-side. I sure miss my horse, Max though!!!! Take care and may you have all the success and happiness you and Kandahar can carry!!!!
Absolutely, beautifully done. A walk through history on a very famous Montana Hereford Ranch. Oh my only if that incredibly built barn could talk. Thank you for sharing.
Wow. This was a gem of a video. I've dreamed of living out in Montana since I was 15. Silly dream for a city girl from Florida who's family has nothing to do with this way of life but I've yet to give up on that dream. This video & the history you shared further reenforces my dream. Thank you. Every shot showing the landscape truly takes my breath away that it's possible.
Thank you for sharing such a wonderful story of ranching in Montana. I really enjoy all of your videos and your research on this ranch. Such a beautiful state Montana and thank you and all the ranchers who do one of the hardest jobs in the world. God Bless!!
I lived on the Chief Joseph Ranch for about a year1961 where I started school in Darby. The barns on the place had a similar construction and I believe they might be a bit older than the one shown here. On other ranches in Idaho and Eastern Oregon I stacked hay both long hay and hand bales in barn lofts using platforms and a trolley for the hand bales. Outside stacks we hada Jackson fork picked the hay up using a Mormon Derrick. We hoisted the hay and fork with cable and pulley system. My Dad was a Scots immigrant that showed purebred Herfords. pulled by a tractor. I quit the Cowboy life at 30 years oldbecause the kids needed shoes and doctors sometimes at the same time. Still miss the life, however at 67 there are days I'm glad I don't have to get up to feed the livestock before sunup or chop ice in the water trough.
My Grandpa and his family built barns up and down the Red River Valley ( ND/MN) some are still around! The few that have been maintained they're beautiful!
Incredible very professional history videography documentary story telling video. Exceptional work on every detail and explanation. Thank you so much for sharing all your very interesting intriguing historical discovery findings. Old barns have fabulous histories of people and things kept and protected in them. Videography and photography work, along with the cowboy manager sharing was exceptional and interesting. Mucho Gracias. Great old west tour. Hope to see many more.
I'm really impressed with your channel! I want to thank you for your informative and relaxed style. I started watching one of your short vids on horse handling, being an old horseman myself. Too late I realized I was hooked and have since subscribed! I watched the one one what it takes to run a ranch with gross and net profits. I hope people realize when they buy a tri-tip, what goes into the final price. I wish you and your family many blessings and pray that our current political clime and rising fuel, feed, and property costs and taxes get corrected soon for our ranchers and farmers. God Bless all of your true Americans who feed us, and live a way of life that is vanishing!
My heart leapt so many times Trinity, I and little sister spent every summer with my Aunt and Uncle as a kid,took the train from Wenatchee,WA to Whitefish,MO Mom and Dad and brother would come pick us up and we would vacation our way home. What I wouldn't give to live there now, so much beautiful land.More please,of this type of vids. Congratulations on a superior job.
I grew up in Billings, Montana, but my wife and I left in our 20s during the mid 60s. My maternal grandfather came to MT as a mule skinner in the 1890s and eventually founded the Bickle Ranch in SE Montana and had a house also in Ismay. My paternal grandfather immigrated around 1905 to Norrh Dakota and then moved to Plevna where he had the hardware store as well as a farm outside of town. My wife's father grew up in the Wibaux area and eventually had a ranch in the Shields valley near Wilsal, but later moved to a ranch outside St Ignatius. I enjoy your videos very much. I grew up in the city,, but enjoy remembering my encounters with ranch life with my uncles and my wife's family.
Beautiful, so enjoyed this. The importance of good design. Configure the materials so that the most-frequently-required, difficult tasks are made easy ("form follows function"). Handsome, durable, efficient, that horse barn adds more than the sum of its parts to the landscape. Minor note: the bull barn, I believe, has a gambrel design roof. Its structure encloses enormous volume while providing much-needed strength against the elements. Thank you for featuring these gems 💎 Excellent tour.
O man, this brings back memories! Have seen those barns a time or two, when we used to visit my grandparents, in White Sulpher. Chokecherry picking and a trip to see Ringling, were always in the books. O yea and the hot springs. Thanks for the memories. 🌿💙
When I was real young we still put up loose hay for a few years and we had a pulley system like that in our barn. We used a Jackson Fork on the pulley to lift hay up into the barn and then you pulled it to the far end of the barn and then dumped it using a rope on the bottom back side of the fork. Later we went to small bales and we had a bale elevator run off a tractor pto that would dump them up there and then you had to grab them and run them to the far end and stack them. By the time I was a tween we put our alfalfa hay for cows into silage in silos and then my cousin died cleaning one of them on spring and we switched to ag bags stuffed with silage. When we switched to mainly doing silage as well as some round bales we converted the top of the barn into a basketball court and my uncles would practice and play farm league basketball games up there in the winter. Now days I think it just gets used for storage. I'm not sure how old that barn is but I am guessing probably the main part of it was built in the 1940s or 1950s so not as old as this one but in the 1970s we were still putting up loose hay in it.
One thing that I noticed was the beautiful handwriting from back in the day, I haven't seen handwriting that nice in a long time. This was a great video and very entertaining. It is nice to see how they would do things back in the day.
Wow wow wow...another beautiful video!! I always enjoy seeing historical pictures and imagination what it would have been like to live in those days. It's very fascinating to me. There are books that I've looked at showing how Kansas City Missouri use to look back in the days. I like to go back in time and just imagine how it would have been like. That was so kind of the Fryers to allow you to film this. The drone did an amazing job in showing us the land and buildings. Thank you again for an amazing video! Please tell the Fryers "thank you " for your viewers. Happy trails! God bless
Man this is the most beautiful thing that I had ever seem this is my dream in someone life 100 years ago ,I have seen your videos on and off I follow many of you guys , I would like to live a month with you guys I pay all the expenses
I live in Ontario Vanada my Family bought our Farm back in 1908 , no cattle anymore as my dad's in his 80's but been in the family for 3 generations , sadly so hard to make money off farming here and we we known for our holstien cattle as my grand father use to show them and win trophy's ect !!! i so love your Video's Amen to you for bringing us Amazing Content's !!! God bless You and your Family !!!
When you panned out from the barn at the end, you could see an impression of an arch around the doors. I wonder if there was an arched opening there originally, being changed later on. It would have been big enough for large wagons and later on, trucks.
LOVE this video and all of the content. Top notch stuff. My ONLY gripe would be the VOLUME of the music during the barn scenes. I didn't mind the music..... it was just SO LOUD compared to the voices during rest of video. Thanks for the video!
The hay was done with a big hay fork 2' by 3' or so on a rope it dropped in the loose hay squeezed together a horse walked forward pulling it straight upin the hay mow then it had a rope on that a guy grabbed and pulled it down the track and when he got to the area he wanted to drop it he jerked the rope and it triggered a release to open the fork and the hay dropped on the floor we had one in our old barn in upstate new York!!
I live in south Carolina and been preparing my future of going to Alaska or Montana one day soon the seclusion of being away from society Is what I'm working to do especially the way our country is headed but anyway I just found your UA-cam channel a few days ago and it's awesome and the way you do your videos telling history from the old days it's all great
You totally missed how the hay was put in this barn. The track in the peak of the barn was used in conjunction with a fork to raise the hay up then it was pulled along the track to where they wanted it then the fork was tripped to drop the hay. They could drop the hay any place along the track that way facilitating filling the whole barn almost to the top. Very efficient and not a lot of hand work until it came time to feed. That was work.
Fantastic! I often wondered how Old Days Ranchers kept a herd alice througn 6-7 month winters Apparently Cook had Engineers design this 300+ ft long barn.
I’m not sure, but those pieces where they could put the partitions boards in were to slide boards into to keep them tight. It would allow them to slide up and into the channel then let them down keeping a tight fit to keep strength and security without nails or fasteners.
I feel like AB Cook thought more of his livestock than probably most people he had contact with.. The Barn was & is an engineering marvel which would be hard to replicate in theses modern times..
I used to live in Checkerboard or what I think was called Glendale mabey, was in 1st and second grades ,went to the little 1 room school 1st-12 grade We lived on the Big Elk and Buffalo Ranch owned by Loyd Richards what a great place to grow up and raise a family
THEY used forks and slings The forks you just pushed them down into the load and hoisted the load up to the track and dolly. The fork had little tangs on them that hooked on a lever so the fork woudn't pull out of the hay when you are hoisting. When the load reached the dolly or car you could pull the load to the end of the barn of your choice. Now you could pull a lever and release the little hooks at the end of the fork and drop the hay in your preferred spot in the barn. The slings worked the same way only you placed the slings on the bottom of your wagon rack put your load on. When you got to the barn you hooked the slings to your hoisting cable or rope and hoisted your load. I sure enjoyed your film thanks for sharing Our Mininites still use this system if you wanted to watch it in action.Thanks again.
I’ll second the motion on the music. I had to mute it in places to avoid the slop that you called music. Also, you should read up on hay barns and how they were constructed and utilized. You missed it completely.
So what do you use this for? Usually there was a door on each end that would open up and you would have a hay fork that would grip the hay. Horses were used to raise the hay. Doubtful that the hay wagon drove inside due to height restrictions.
It certainly appears that this barn was designed to drive a wagon load of hay through the center of the barn and then hoist it up into the loft. There are the drag rakes to move it to either end. Definitely confused me at first. And yes, you would have to be careful how high you stacked the hay on the wagon. The doors were roughly 16’ tall, which is 3’ taller than a semi trailer.
@@LifeintheWest There would have to be a way for the drag ropes from the trolley to the horses if that were true which would be fairly long. Was there a way?
My chest swells with so much emotion when I see something like this. Living and or working on a ranch has been a dream of mine since the days of Roy Rogers, Gene Autry and all the other TV cowboys of the 1950's. I was never able to make that wish come true and at 75 can only continue to dream of what might have been. I am so happy to see that life goes on even with all the so called moderization of electronics that fills the minds of kids and many adults. Although I have lived in cities most of my life I still find being away from people and in the mountains of places like Montana, Idaho and Wyoming a pure joy. Thank you for bringing that hard but wonderful life to those of us that can only dream.
You aren't too old to go on a ranch vacation, there are many to choose from. Ask for information at the travel agents or inquire on line in a search.I bet they have a mild mannered horse for you. They feed you and I'm sure they adapt the trails for all types. You can even sleep out in the open on the trails with everyone. Trinity should do a series on ranches that do that type of thing.
@@maggiedoor6093 Thanks for the encouragement. My dream was to live and work on a ranch in places like Montana and Wyoming. I've been around horses a lot in my life. I rode in rodeos and had my own boarding stables. I had my own horses but all was in California and in the S F Bayarea which is a far cry from where I wanted to be. Actually, I have looked into dude ranches just to get away but they are way too expensive for me so now I just sit back and remember my animals.
That barn warms my heart.
Wish people understood just how important a good ranch manager is.
I use to live on a farm many years ago. It was my Grandmother's farm and we lived in the hired man's house. I lived there until I was 8 and then my parents moved to town. Those 8 years were the best years of my life. I loved it there. Seeing that old barn I was right back there. I loved the smell of the wood in that old barn. Nanny use to keep turnips in one end of the barn for feed. Everytime I smell a turnip I am right back there.
I, too, lived on my grandfather's farm in Ontario, Wisconsin. Best years of my life. Fondest memories. Like a magical world full of sounds and smells, sights and tastes long past. The squeak of a leather saddle, the smell of cut hay, the herds of sheep and cows, the crow of the roosters, the taste of molasses cookies and rhubarb pie. The sound of the screen door slamming. So many things.
Happy you were gifted with those 8 years, I know it guided your life in one way or another.
Really enjoyed this, Trinity! As AB's great-granddaughter, and the end of HIS line, it's so nice to see someone keeping his story alive.
We need to hear your side of the story!
@@KeepUSAFree4real I don't really have a "side of the story" other than what was passed on to me. It's a complicated and tragic saga all the way around. I did laugh at the comment about Cook's relatives tarnishing the Cook name, as I didn't realize it was "tarnished". I have shared what I know with Trinity. Perhaps he'll do more videos about AB Cook in the future.
What a cool legacy 😎 🤠👍
A very interesting story. It brings back many memories of my youth staying with my grandparents and crawling around the hay lofts. They have a unique smell to them and this video brought. back those long forgotten memories. Thank you for that. God Bless.
This is so interesting. I love the history of the ranches out west. That barn is beautiful and how it was built with drains and slots for dividing cattle is so clever for the time.
So beautiful and so awesome to know A.B. Cook took so much pride and extra care to have the absolute Best Herd and the Best Barn for the Best Herd!!!! Truly Amazing to see such high quality workmanship!!!!
I’m so sorry about your injury, Trinity!!!! I hope everything healed properly for you to get back at it!!!!
Trinity, You Sir, are an amazing man and I wish I could have worked with you when I had my big Quarter Horse “Max” in my photo.
The people I bought him from were up in Conrad, MT and they said he was from Nebraska and didn’t know anything about climbing mountains.
He wasn’t registered, but he was all Quarter Horse. I put him on some good feed and I rode him straight up a mountain and he never hesitated!!!! By the way, that’s the Grand Teton right behind us in our photo!!!! I live in Idaho Falls now.
After I took him up that first mountain and never had a problem, whenever people would ask me about his bloodlines, I just said “He’s out of Nebraska by Truck”!!!! It always got a good laugh, sometimes quicker than others!!!!
I hope you can keep doing what you are doing with your videos for a long time!!!! Today’s young people just have no idea what it’s like to be a Cowboy, let alone a Rancher!!!! They need to know what you are teaching!!!! Thank You Sir for doing it!!!!
SALUTE!!!!
Terry Thornock
100% Total and Permanent
Disabled USAF Veteran &
Above Knee Amputee
P.S. After losing my left leg in 2005 due to serious trauma and breaking my back at L-5 & S-1 vertebrae, plus 3 broken ribs, I had to sell my horses. A few years later, I even sold all my tack. That’s when ya know you’re done riding horses.
Now I ride my Japanese Quarter Horse in the mountains. It’s a Yamaha Rhino side-by-side. I sure miss my horse, Max though!!!!
Take care and may you have all the success and happiness you and Kandahar can carry!!!!
Absolutely, beautifully done. A walk through history on a very famous Montana Hereford Ranch. Oh my only if that incredibly built barn could talk. Thank you for sharing.
Really enjoyed your Montana history videos, and the AB Cook story especially. Please consider doing more historical videos. You have a talent!
Wow. This was a gem of a video. I've dreamed of living out in Montana since I was 15. Silly dream for a city girl from Florida who's family has nothing to do with this way of life but I've yet to give up on that dream. This video & the history you shared further reenforces my dream. Thank you. Every shot showing the landscape truly takes my breath away that it's possible.
Even your pick of music is great...thanks for all you give us.
What a well put together history video of the ranch and barns thank you so much Sir.
Thank you for sharing such a wonderful story of ranching in Montana. I really enjoy all of your videos and your research on this ranch. Such a beautiful state Montana and thank you and all the ranchers who do one of the hardest jobs in the world. God Bless!!
I lived on the Chief Joseph Ranch for about a year1961 where I started school in Darby. The barns on the place had a similar construction and I believe they might be a bit older than the one shown here. On other ranches in Idaho and Eastern Oregon I stacked hay both long hay and hand bales in barn lofts using platforms and a trolley for the hand bales. Outside stacks we hada Jackson fork picked the hay up using a Mormon Derrick. We hoisted the hay and fork with cable and pulley system. My Dad was a Scots immigrant that showed purebred Herfords.
pulled by a tractor. I quit the Cowboy life at 30 years oldbecause the kids needed shoes and doctors sometimes at the same time. Still miss the life, however at 67 there are days I'm glad I don't have to get up to feed the livestock before sunup or chop ice in the water trough.
You said alot there for certain! It’s awesome and harder than most at the same time. Hard to choose sometimes.
I lived in the bitterroot valley for 8 years I was born and raised in Idaho I delivered a lot of furniture in Darby! 😂
@@gooooooootooooooo3825 a lot more people than there used to be.
My Grandpa and his family built barns up and down the Red River Valley ( ND/MN) some are still around! The few that have been maintained they're beautiful!
Keep these videos coming, it brings back so much of my youthful history growing up in Montana, wish now I had never left 😢
That stallion stall was awesome. The tack is still nice, I know people that would be able to use it today. Excellent video Trinity.
Incredible very professional history videography documentary story telling video. Exceptional work on every detail and explanation. Thank you so much for sharing all your very interesting intriguing historical discovery findings. Old barns have fabulous histories of people and things kept and protected in them. Videography and photography work, along with the cowboy manager sharing was exceptional and interesting. Mucho Gracias. Great old west tour. Hope to see many more.
I'm really impressed with your channel! I want to thank you for your informative and relaxed style. I started watching one of your short vids on horse handling, being an old horseman myself. Too late I realized I was hooked and have since subscribed! I watched the one one what it takes to run a ranch with gross and net profits. I hope people realize when they buy a tri-tip, what goes into the final price. I wish you and your family many blessings and pray that our current political clime and rising fuel, feed, and property costs and taxes get corrected soon for our ranchers and farmers. God Bless all of your true Americans who feed us, and live a way of life that is vanishing!
The building of both barns is so innovative. Mr Cook was truly well before his time. Thank you for sharing with us.
Some serious craftsmanship there
You can tell that it is a horse barn and corral. Nice. Thank you for the tour. I enjoyed that.
What a beautiful barn ,and country. I could live there
My heart leapt so many times Trinity, I and little sister spent every summer with my Aunt and Uncle as a kid,took the train from Wenatchee,WA to Whitefish,MO Mom and Dad and brother would come pick us up and we would vacation our way home. What I wouldn't give to live there now, so much beautiful land.More please,of this type of vids. Congratulations on a superior job.
Thanks for the video! I enjoyed hearing about the Cook history, & found the different construction options in the barns rather fascinating.
Thank you for watching. Im glad you enjoyed it.
Another wonderful & interesting video Trinity. Thank you.
I grew up in Billings, Montana, but my wife and I left in our 20s during the mid 60s. My maternal grandfather came to MT as a mule skinner in the 1890s and eventually founded the Bickle Ranch in SE Montana and had a house also in Ismay. My paternal grandfather immigrated around 1905 to Norrh Dakota and then moved to Plevna where he had the hardware store as well as a farm outside of town. My wife's father grew up in the Wibaux area and eventually had a ranch in the Shields valley near Wilsal, but later moved to a ranch outside St Ignatius. I enjoy your videos very much. I grew up in the city,, but enjoy remembering my encounters with ranch life with my uncles and my wife's family.
Beautiful, so enjoyed this.
The importance of good design. Configure the materials so that the most-frequently-required, difficult tasks are made easy ("form follows function").
Handsome, durable, efficient, that horse barn adds more than the sum of its parts to the landscape.
Minor note: the bull barn, I believe, has a gambrel design roof. Its structure encloses enormous volume while providing much-needed strength against the elements.
Thank you for featuring these gems 💎 Excellent tour.
O man, this brings back memories! Have seen those barns a time or two, when we used to visit my grandparents, in White Sulpher. Chokecherry picking and a trip to see Ringling, were always in the books. O yea and the hot springs. Thanks for the memories. 🌿💙
Thanks for telling your story.
Thank you for showing the real Montana and not the tourist Montana very beautiful
When I was real young we still put up loose hay for a few years and we had a pulley system like that in our barn. We used a Jackson Fork on the pulley to lift hay up into the barn and then you pulled it to the far end of the barn and then dumped it using a rope on the bottom back side of the fork. Later we went to small bales and we had a bale elevator run off a tractor pto that would dump them up there and then you had to grab them and run them to the far end and stack them. By the time I was a tween we put our alfalfa hay for cows into silage in silos and then my cousin died cleaning one of them on spring and we switched to ag bags stuffed with silage. When we switched to mainly doing silage as well as some round bales we converted the top of the barn into a basketball court and my uncles would practice and play farm league basketball games up there in the winter. Now days I think it just gets used for storage. I'm not sure how old that barn is but I am guessing probably the main part of it was built in the 1940s or 1950s so not as old as this one but in the 1970s we were still putting up loose hay in it.
One thing that I noticed was the beautiful handwriting from back in the day, I haven't seen handwriting that nice in a long time. This was a great video and very entertaining. It is nice to see how they would do things back in the day.
I absolutely love the old barns I find on my trips! So many of these where better built and lasted longer then the homes they lived in
This was Awesome. Please do more love the history thank you
I really enjoyed the show.
You are getting really good at this
Enjoyed the video tour through the beautiful old barn. The history was very interesting to. Great drone shots. Y'all take care and God bless.
Thanks so much for watching and God Bless you as well!
Thanks, that was a great view inside the past.
Beautiful. It was a hard life. But healthier
Wow wow wow...another beautiful video!! I always enjoy seeing historical pictures and imagination what it would have been like to live in those days. It's very fascinating to me. There are books that I've looked at showing how Kansas City Missouri use to look back in the days. I like to go back in time and just imagine how it would have been like. That was so kind of the Fryers to allow you to film this. The drone did an amazing job in showing us the land and buildings.
Thank you again for an amazing video! Please tell the Fryers "thank you " for your viewers. Happy trails! God bless
Hey there Fella, thanks for this I came upon it by chance, what a great documentary!
Thank you, awesome video! Appreciate all the time and effort in gathering information.
Looks like they are keeping the barn up well with a new metal roof.
Wow that was extremely interesting stuff! Thank you
Man this is the most beautiful thing that I had ever seem this is my dream in someone life 100 years ago ,I have seen your videos on and off I follow many of you guys , I would like to live a month with you guys I pay all the expenses
Another very influential person in Montana was the Dalys and their copper mines.
That’s for certain!
Quite the history lesson
AMAZING! It's so fun to look back and see how they did it back in the day
I live in Ontario Vanada my Family bought our Farm back in 1908 , no cattle anymore as my dad's in his 80's but been in the family for 3 generations , sadly so hard to make money off farming here and we we known for our holstien cattle as my grand father use to show them and win trophy's ect !!! i so love your Video's Amen to you for bringing us Amazing Content's !!! God bless You and your Family !!!
Amazing!
When you panned out from the barn at the end, you could see an impression of an arch around the doors. I wonder if there was an arched opening there originally, being changed later on. It would have been big enough for large wagons and later on, trucks.
It looked to me like it had a covered area attached to the front. Not sure though.
LOVE this video and all of the content. Top notch stuff. My ONLY gripe would be the VOLUME of the music during the barn scenes. I didn't mind the music..... it was just SO LOUD compared to the voices during rest of video. Thanks for the video!
Thank work ethic of doing things right. Has long since been forgotten. And what a shame that is.
Wow, that is amazing. My brother has a hip roof burn that is 94 years old.
Absolutely love BARNS.
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
Fascinating history. Thank you.
Love your channel!
By the way...Please do more videos like this! I love history!
What great craftsmanship.
The hay was done with a big hay fork 2' by 3' or so on a rope it dropped in the loose hay squeezed together a horse walked forward pulling it straight upin the hay mow then it had a rope on that a guy grabbed and pulled it down the track and when he got to the area he wanted to drop it he jerked the rope and it triggered a release to open the fork and the hay dropped on the floor we had one in our old barn in upstate new York!!
So beautiful
I live in south Carolina and been preparing my future of going to Alaska or Montana one day soon the seclusion of being away from society Is what I'm working to do especially the way our country is headed but anyway I just found your UA-cam channel a few days ago and it's awesome and the way you do your videos telling history from the old days it's all great
Amazing history, thank you
Very interesting, thank you!
Really nice big barn 100year old great video , thanks to share , EU
Has anyone written a book about this ranch? Fascinating!
Not that i know of. As far as I know, I’ve done more research than anyone.
@@LifeintheWest well, there ya go!
It amazing how all that land and building seam to be just sitting there and not being used.
You totally missed how the hay was put in this barn. The track in the peak of the barn was used in conjunction with a fork to raise the hay up then it was pulled along the track to where they wanted it then the fork was tripped to drop the hay. They could drop the hay any place along the track that way facilitating filling the whole barn almost to the top. Very efficient and not a lot of hand work until it came time to feed. That was work.
Thank You for giving us the $100 dollar tour. Really Really enjoyed it 🤗👍👍
I discovered you from your video with Peter, on his Raching series. I'm enjoying your channel.
Fantastic! I often wondered how Old Days Ranchers kept a herd alice througn 6-7 month winters Apparently Cook had Engineers design this 300+ ft long barn.
BEAUTIFUL
Amazing video. Well done!
Thank you so much.
I’m not sure, but those pieces where they could put the partitions boards in were to slide boards into to keep them tight. It would allow them to slide up and into the channel then let them down keeping a tight fit to keep strength and security without nails or fasteners.
Great video! Thank you! Subscribed 🥰
I appreciate that. Hope to bring you more.
Thanks for this
Was good to learn about that I was raised on a purebred polled Herefords till I was 25 and sold and showed them as well
Really. We still use Herefords in Montana quite a bit, but mostly for cross breeding to get black baldy calves.
Very interesting, thanks for sharing
Interesting and great music.
I feel like AB Cook thought more of his livestock than probably most people he had contact with.. The Barn was & is an engineering marvel which would be hard to replicate in theses modern times..
Wow thank you God bless sincerely Everett Washington State 👍😁🙏🇺🇸❤️👍
Great stuff! Ty
Did not recognize you without your cowboy hat on . LOL
Perfect dream ranch.
I used to live in Checkerboard or what I think was called Glendale mabey, was in 1st and second grades ,went to the little 1 room school 1st-12 grade
We lived on the Big Elk and Buffalo Ranch owned by Loyd Richards what a great place to grow up and raise a family
@ 22:10... Would that be "wool" from sheep being sheared? His l and d's are very distinctive
It IS why we live in Montana. 👍🏼. Great work. Now be careful! Question: What is the song at the end?
I get my music from Artlist.io. I really like the song but I think that is the only place you can get it.
THEY used forks and slings
The forks you just pushed them down into the load and hoisted the load up to the track and dolly. The fork had little tangs on them that hooked on a lever so the fork woudn't pull out of the hay when you are hoisting. When the load reached the dolly or car you could pull the load to the end of the barn of your choice. Now you could pull a lever and release the little hooks at the end of the fork and drop the hay in your preferred spot in the barn. The slings worked the same way only you placed the slings on the bottom of your wagon rack put your load on. When you got to the barn you hooked the slings to your hoisting cable or rope and hoisted your load. I sure enjoyed your film thanks for sharing Our Mininites still use this system if you wanted to watch it in action.Thanks again.
Thank you
What kind of wood did they use on the barn. It is well made.
Great video. Got to wonder if one of the feeding compartments wasn't for water?
I just subscribed. Like your channel.
Very cool
Trini even walks like a cowboy...😂😂
Thank you....so interesting
Enjoyed looking at these barns, but if there could be less music, or not as loud. There is nothing wrong with admiring beauty in silence
I’ll second the motion on the music. I had to mute it in places to avoid the slop that you called music. Also, you should read up on hay barns and how they were constructed and utilized. You missed it completely.
Such a cool video
Thank you Arianna!
Could you please mention the songs that you edit in the background?
I couldn't find it anywhere
Thanks!
Montana is sooo pretty. :)
Not in the middle of winter. Everyone is welcome to visit, but please consider our extremely harsh winters.
So what do you use this for? Usually there was a door on each end that would open up and you would have a hay fork that would grip the hay. Horses were used to raise the hay. Doubtful that the hay wagon drove inside due to height restrictions.
It certainly appears that this barn was designed to drive a wagon load of hay through the center of the barn and then hoist it up into the loft. There are the drag rakes to move it to either end.
Definitely confused me at first. And yes, you would have to be careful how high you stacked the hay on the wagon. The doors were roughly 16’ tall, which is 3’ taller than a semi trailer.
@@LifeintheWest There would have to be a way for the drag ropes from the trolley to the horses if that were true which would be fairly long. Was there a way?
You know, I didn’t look for that. So I’m not sure.