I just turned 64, have been a butcher for 40 yrs. After 2 rounds of covid and the life changes things it left in my life, my digging days are done. Beautiful finds, thanks for a very enjoyable video
You drove me crazy with how rough you shoved the shovel. That green vase or bowl was so beautiful but you yanked on it which broke it more. Take your time and preserve
i felt this too. like he really is just looking for the bottles. but then maybe he has done this so much, he just knows that most of the pottery ware is already cracked or broken.
He could have released a whole lot of his finds in complete form if he was more careful with his digging methods. Half of those plates may have been in pristine condition before he shattered them by forcefully stabbing his trowel into the surrounding medium to retrieve something else. Brushes, picks, and slowing down would amount to a better overall condition of the finds. And a much higher $$ value.
Hit that like! drop a comment, and check out our patreon and our facebook pages. Links in the description! sorry the video is so short, THERE WILL BE ANOTHER NEW ONE OUT TOMORROW AT 3 PM CENTRAL! thanks for watching everyone, hope you have/are having a great weekend
I truly appreciate your content. It's bizarrely fascinating. My poor students who get to my class extra early.... one day they arrive, I'm watching someone digging up old outhouses, other days I have a lawyer commentating on Items of Interest (Steve Lehto) other days they see me watching the latest Aviationthing, (74 Gear or Mentour Pilot or VASaviation) or I'm watching sheep videos (Sheepishly Me or Ewetopia) or I'm watching politics (Midas Touch) or dashcams (Dashcam Lessons) or my own content (audio books in the Romantasy genre) or sheep videos of my barn animals. I truly cherish the creators who make non controversial yet entertaining videos I can watch without worrying that it'll be school inappropriate.
AAAAHHHH! i fucking love steve lehto.. he reminds me of every middle aged man in north dakota. i know hes from Michigan but he really gives me MN/ND vibes. haha i watch midas touch too sometimes! but my home news channel has to be majority report. love them so much. they are live every weekday at 11 AM central... if you like midas touch, you;'re gonna love them. i think we are like minded people, but ill just leave it at that lol
@@LadyLithias May I suggest another channel to be watching it's all about mud larking I love the UK and I think the history factor is what catches me and this mudlark show is full of history now, when you type in mud larking, it'll bring up numerous people that are doing it one name to watch for Nicola. She finds some most fascinating things from the 17,18 and 1900s. And the other one I watch is called, Sifinds another mudlarker. Check it out and see if you like it.
So fun! My grandparents lived in rural Wheatland, ND. But watching this makes me wonder whether my garden is on a old trash pile as I often find little bottles, broken dishes and even a serving bowl with bones in it!
Great fun! In the 60's my buddy and I found the garbage dump for the old "Fort Custer" (1877 - 1898)...We lived nearby. We found bottles, uniform buttons, uniform scraps and a couple "US" Belt Buckles. We also found hundreds of spent cartridges, slugs and occasionally an unspent round. "Whole" bottles were hard to find....there were literally thousands of broken bottles.
Years ago I had a job reading meters for the town I live in while I was walking from meter to meter I noticed a small blue piece of glass buried in the dirt road I dug it up and it was the tiniest Vicks bottle I had ever seen still have that little blue bottle that started my love for old bottles and glass I love your channel
That brings back many fine memories of digging such sites as a kid literally a lifetime ago. And it's just as interesting watching you pull pieces of history out of their earthen time capsule.
No matter how short it is, I'll watch it all. Thank you for taking us all with you. As always, informative and very interesting! I love all the tiny bottles and tiny jars. I'm also very interested in the different China patterns, especially transfer ware. the spit room was beautiful !
Hi 👋 Tom and 👋 jake another historic bottles dig 👌 you both bring history to life well done 👏 ✔ 👍 a good collection 👍 of bottles 🍼 all the best always looking forward to watching your channel 😀 👍 Andrew south wales uk 👌 👍 👏 😀 🇬🇧
Loved this short but real interesting video. Do you ever wonder what the people who started the Outhouse at this area looked like, what their lives were like. Thanks for this x
I love digging around! But it's fascinating to see history like this. I'm moving back to South Dakota soon and seeing the history of the plains states from this perspective is amazing to me in ways I can't even find words for. You have my deepest thanks.
haha yeah... it usually takes just as long to find the pit and just at long to make the video as it does to dig. its been kind of a chill winter tho, eager to get back out there. thanks for watching!
Cool video. It reminds me of my childhood when my brother and I found dozens of old bottles after a hurricane knocked down some giant trees by a mill that dated back to the 1600s. Our parents neighbor saw them and said how much he likes collecting those and conned them all off of us. Didn’t even offer us a dime. Oh well
I absolutely love your channel! I've tried watching other similar channels and they just don't hit the same way. I'm curious with all the ornate dinnerware you found this dig, if you've ever considered repairing them with the Kintsugi technique? I know it's culturally different from the pottery that you're finding, but it's truly beautiful. The gold seams also leave a bit of wiggle room to make it a complete piece if you're missing a tiny shard that's forever lost. Either way, I love watching what you do!
Speech lol, your vids are unique and intresting to watch, but I realize now it's your incredible preparation and documentation of it, we all await the super rare highly valuable find but your entire approach is top notch, we thank you for all your hard work
This is incredible and insulators are my main thing! I love to dig dumps but haven't done so for many years. I am an insulator collector, but very much enjoy digging bottles. When they replaced the UDF in Delaware Ohio, they dug up a spot along a local creek that was an old homestead dump. I found a few nice medicine corkers and ketchup bottles here, but I am sure many more are buried under blacktop and buildings. More great historic bottles and insulators are still underground then above!
Interesting thanks from a great grandmother from the north uk liverpool now living in australia we had plates like the blue belonging to my great grandmother.
My older sister when she was 5 had to go on Scott's Emolsion for her bad allergies. That was in 1964 and she was on it for years, and I remember as I got older, how awful it smelt. By all the broken dishes, I would say they fought a lot because that's a lot of dishes to find in a hole.
Those pieces of dinnerware would look nice in a mosaic of ceramic/China pieces. I like seeing the stamp at the bottom. Have you ever thought of making a bundle of those pieces and selling them? I would buy one. I live in a house that was built in 1908. In the back yard, in the perfect distance away from the house, there is a dip in the yard, about where their outhouse would have been. My daughter was playing with a slender, long pipe and was able to push it through the ground and it slid very easily down about three feet. That’s when we figured it could have been where their outhouse used to be. I would love to have it dug up, now that I know, from you, that back in the day, they would throw things like what you dig up into those pits. Ever get out to northwest Ohio, let me know. I’ll help you dig. :-)
Be careful. It could also be an old well that's been filled in, but not filled entirely to the bottom, creating a bridge of surface material with nothing below. When my uncle was 3 years old he fell through the ground into an old well that had been covered with dirt fill and waste junk materials. He actually drowned. My great grandmother (a nurse) fished him out with barbed wire fence and recesitated him. That was in the late 60's on a farm site in southern Minnesota.
haha., we dont generally. idk... there are a lot of reason why, but when we put a dollar value on the stuff, it... idk what the right word is... it feels immoral... it feels like we are doing it for money. there's that reason, and then a few other ones. other people who dig dont like us putting values out there because it could effect the price of their collection. Also there are a ton of factors on what a bottle could be worth. ill just give one example. Last year we found a bottle that wasnt known to exist. it was a soda from Dakota Territory era.. We could set the price to whatever we wanted, but realistically it was between $7k - 6k... so super valuable for a bottle. Then an hour later in the same pit, we found a second one. That meant the first one wasnt the only one anymore. probably cut like 20% of the value. so then we had 2 bottles that were more like $5k - 4.5k. so basically i could write the value in a video, and then the next day, some guy could find 10 of them, and then all the sudden, the price i had in the previous video is no kind of ludicrous. i know that was a super long winded response. but its a complicated answer. but id have to say, its mainly that i just dont like how it makes us look. it makes the whole thing seem more money driven, and of course i want to find the highest value items, but i usually dont end up selling the best stuff anyways. well.. hope you liked the video. thanks for watching. we got a video coming out tomorrow at 3pm central! its gonna be a good one
I just found your channel this evening and have been binge watching. So very fascinating. I have a couple of questions that have probably been asked a thousand times but I have not found the answers. 1. What do you do with all of the bottles and stuffs you find? 2. Do you need a license to excavate these sites? I would love to do some of this work here in Texas and do not exactly know how to start. I do know you have a wealth of knowledge of the types of bottles you find and that can be obtained through research and repetition. Watching you go through the process is very exciting for this old man. Thanks for your channel.
Short one but I still loved it. We would dig those Lydia pinkham's here in California also. Great dig. I'll let you slide on this short video. Lol.😊 hope you're doing well.
Below the Plains , My friend was a grave digger in a Cemetery that was over a very old city dump that dates back to 1700's . Blob tops. whiskeys, poison bottles everywhere , you cant dig a cemetery, ( like he did) but this dump is huge probably 20 acres. There are some vacant private properties nearby that is on top of the same dump, how do I get permission or do I just buy the property ? There is an old layer of bottles 2-5 ft deep. I got a spot . Love your channel
HAHAHA its usually right in the morning! but yeah, i always tel that to tom when we are filming, but usually im also too tired to care... we usually have to cram videos in for a week or two, and then head back home and work on editing
Hi Jack, what got you into digging up old bottles and artefacts. Are you aloud to keep what you find? Is digging a hobby or full time work. I enjoy watching your videos and thanks for sharing.
I ALWAYS ENJOY YOUR VLOGS. SORTA LIKE A BOXA CHOCKLETS. YOU NEVER KNOW WHATCHA GUNNA GET NEXT!! KEEP ON DIGGING, FRIEND! YOU HAVE YET TO DISAPPOINT! AND I ABSOLUTELY LOVE THAT FLAT TOP BOX PICKING!!!!!
You gotta get in and out quickly , and the ceramics aren't thrown in there intact. The things he'll likely dig up will withstand a trowel.. I love watching these. I get all excited wondering what will come up next... **hopefully not a human skull.. 😱😱😱😱😱
Nice little video 😊. While you were digging and commenting about the abundance of dinnerware and that some where high end I thought about why would soooo many dishes be disposed of? Perhaps the home experience a traumatic event (theft, vandalism, or something else) that could have led to a multitude of dishes being broken. I have an active imagination perhaps 😂 Minnesota winters are long so you gotta find some way to pass the time 😂
@@BelowthePlains looks like those long Dakota winters have a similar effect 😂. I think your hypothesis is even more interesting to imagine 😁. I bet you run scenarios through your mind all the time while digging! I would! Amazing how much information can be gleaned from trash (turned treasure 😉)
Loved this short but very interesting video. Do you ever wonder what the families looked liked who lived in these home, that created the outhouse pit. Thanks for this x
The answer may have been in the pit. The china doll piece says children. Children and breakable dishes means broken dishes. Modern households don't have to give breakable dishes to children, but they didn't have a lot of options back in 1905.
JUST finished a MN video. its up on my patreon now, should be out on my channel within a month, 2 at the most. maybe next week! but the audio is a little spicy, because we got water in the mic. but it's actually a good dig, otherwise i would have probably scrapped it! hoping to get some more MN videos this year
I just turned 64, have been a butcher for 40 yrs. After 2 rounds of covid and the life changes things it left in my life, my digging days are done. Beautiful finds, thanks for a very enjoyable video
You drove me crazy with how rough you shoved the shovel. That green vase or bowl was so beautiful but you yanked on it which broke it more. Take your time and preserve
Don’t tell him what to do.
@@RAJohnsshe's just a snowflake who's crying over a video 😆
I thought the same thing
i felt this too. like he really is just looking for the bottles. but then maybe he has done this so much, he just knows that most of the pottery ware is already cracked or broken.
He could have released a whole lot of his finds in complete form if he was more careful with his digging methods. Half of those plates may have been in pristine condition before he shattered them by forcefully stabbing his trowel into the surrounding medium to retrieve something else.
Brushes, picks, and slowing down would amount to a better overall condition of the finds. And a much higher $$ value.
Hit that like! drop a comment, and check out our patreon and our facebook pages. Links in the description! sorry the video is so short, THERE WILL BE ANOTHER NEW ONE OUT TOMORROW AT 3 PM CENTRAL! thanks for watching everyone, hope you have/are having a great weekend
Thank you.
I truly appreciate your content. It's bizarrely fascinating. My poor students who get to my class extra early.... one day they arrive, I'm watching someone digging up old outhouses, other days I have a lawyer commentating on Items of Interest (Steve Lehto) other days they see me watching the latest Aviationthing, (74 Gear or Mentour Pilot or VASaviation) or I'm watching sheep videos (Sheepishly Me or Ewetopia) or I'm watching politics (Midas Touch) or dashcams (Dashcam Lessons) or my own content (audio books in the Romantasy genre) or sheep videos of my barn animals.
I truly cherish the creators who make non controversial yet entertaining videos I can watch without worrying that it'll be school inappropriate.
AAAAHHHH! i fucking love steve lehto.. he reminds me of every middle aged man in north dakota. i know hes from Michigan but he really gives me MN/ND vibes. haha i watch midas touch too sometimes! but my home news channel has to be majority report. love them so much. they are live every weekday at 11 AM central... if you like midas touch, you;'re gonna love them. i think we are like minded people, but ill just leave it at that lol
of course!
@@LadyLithias May I suggest another channel to be watching it's all about mud larking I love the UK and I think the history factor is what catches me and this mudlark show is full of history now, when you type in mud larking, it'll bring up numerous people that are doing it one name to watch for Nicola. She finds some most fascinating things from the 17,18 and 1900s. And the other one I watch is called, Sifinds another mudlarker. Check it out and see if you like it.
I appreciate that you tell about the items you find.
haha thank you!
I really enjoy watching you.I learn so much! 😊
So fun! My grandparents lived in rural Wheatland, ND. But watching this makes me wonder whether my garden is on a old trash pile as I often find little bottles, broken dishes and even a serving bowl with bones in it!
Great fun!
In the 60's my buddy and I found the garbage dump for the old "Fort Custer" (1877 - 1898)...We lived nearby. We found bottles, uniform buttons, uniform scraps and a couple "US" Belt Buckles. We also found hundreds of spent cartridges, slugs and occasionally an unspent round. "Whole" bottles were hard to find....there were literally thousands of broken bottles.
Years ago I had a job reading meters for the town I live in while I was walking from meter to meter I noticed a small blue piece of glass buried in the dirt road I dug it up and it was the tiniest Vicks bottle I had ever seen still have that little blue bottle that started my love for old bottles and glass I love your channel
Thanks, Tom. I can feel my blood pressure level out while watching your videos.
His vids are good therapy.
Great finds. Thanks for the effort it takes to bring these vlogs to us. I thoroughly enjoy the uploads.
Small pit but nice finds, the bowls beautiful. Thank you for the photos of them complete, love them.
Interesting stuff. Thanks for taking us along. Enjoyed it. See ya next time!😊
That brings back many fine memories of digging such sites as a kid literally a lifetime ago. And it's just as interesting watching you pull pieces of history out of their earthen time capsule.
yeah, im honestly surprised at some of the amazing stuff i come across. i feel very blessed to be able to do what i do. thank you for watching
Awesome dig, I loved it!!!
Thank you for showing the ceramics. I love digging bottles and love the ceramics too. I take the larger pieces home and put them in my garden.
No matter how short it is, I'll watch it all. Thank you for taking us all with you. As always, informative and very interesting! I love all the tiny bottles and tiny jars. I'm also very interested in the different China patterns, especially transfer ware. the spit room was beautiful !
Cool, I sat down for lunch and take a break from working outside, and I get to watch you dig.
haha awesome! if you are outside tomorrow at the same time, we have another short one coming out. thanks for watching!!!
Hi 👋 Tom and 👋 jake another historic bottles dig 👌 you both bring history to life well done 👏 ✔ 👍 a good collection 👍 of bottles 🍼 all the best always looking forward to watching your channel 😀 👍 Andrew south wales uk 👌 👍 👏 😀 🇬🇧
Awesome as always Tom!!!
Thanks Tom!
Great finds, great video!
Great little dig! Take care guys! and thank you
THANK YOU! will do.. you take care too!!!!
Thanks for the adventure!
Loved this short but real interesting video. Do you ever wonder what the people who started the Outhouse at this area looked like, what their lives were like. Thanks for this x
❤beautiful bottles Tom. The plate was awesome. ❤your videos
Thanks for taking us along. Much love. Afriend.
Thank you! new short video out tomorrow. thanks for watching. sorry it was so short mr Afriend! have a great rest of your weekend!
I love digging around! But it's fascinating to see history like this. I'm moving back to South Dakota soon and seeing the history of the plains states from this perspective is amazing to me in ways I can't even find words for.
You have my deepest thanks.
You are so knowledgeable of your finds. Thanks for sharing. Helping us learn while enjoying your finds.
Another awesome dig Tom. Congrats on your finds. Loved the blue Flo ware dishes.👍👏😀
Those Lydia pinkhams are so nice! Nice dig!
Looter8! i try to respond to a decent chunk of the comments but i havent seen yours in awhile! that name always makes me laugh! thanks for watching!
Love the Lydia Pinkham bottles! ♥
Nice finds!! Love that Lydia Pinkhams color!
A yes.....Lydia Pinkhams....when ladies were ladies.....😊👍
I love the crickets….summer.
Great dig !!
Thanks!
The white jar was Musterol, a competitor of Vicks. Rubbed on the chest to relieve congestion. Good video, thanks.
You have to do a lot of work for what you find. Sometimes extra special items. Always stay safe. Thanks for all you do.
haha yeah... it usually takes just as long to find the pit and just at long to make the video as it does to dig. its been kind of a chill winter tho, eager to get back out there. thanks for watching!
Your videos are so interesting. You never know whats gonna show up! UK.
Is this what is called "breaking up housekeeping" never see so much broken items...never dissappointed with your videos...see you guys tomorrow...🥰🥰
Cool video. It reminds me of my childhood when my brother and I found dozens of old bottles after a hurricane knocked down some giant trees by a mill that dated back to the 1600s. Our parents neighbor saw them and said how much he likes collecting those and conned them all off of us. Didn’t even offer us a dime. Oh well
Do you metal detect the soil you dig out? Might find a coin or two amongst the broken dishes! Great video
No way! I dug up that exact Pinkhams bottle 3 days ago. I agree I love the color. 👍I also thought it was super early looking.
I absolutely love your channel! I've tried watching other similar channels and they just don't hit the same way.
I'm curious with all the ornate dinnerware you found this dig, if you've ever considered repairing them with the Kintsugi technique? I know it's culturally different from the pottery that you're finding, but it's truly beautiful. The gold seams also leave a bit of wiggle room to make it a complete piece if you're missing a tiny shard that's forever lost. Either way, I love watching what you do!
It would be great if you would make a short video on how you identify different bottle types. Like what is an applied top ext…
A lot of outhouses were used to dispose of this type material . Fill it up and move it.
Speech lol, your vids are unique and intresting to watch, but I realize now it's your incredible preparation and documentation of it, we all await the super rare highly valuable find but your entire approach is top notch, we thank you for all your hard work
I don't mind the shorter videos. They keep my attention span longer 😂.. and I love hearing the crickets in the background! Great video, Tom and Jake!
This is incredible and insulators are my main thing! I love to dig dumps but haven't done so for many years. I am an insulator collector, but very much enjoy digging bottles. When they replaced the UDF in Delaware Ohio, they dug up a spot along a local creek that was an old homestead dump. I found a few nice medicine corkers and ketchup bottles here, but I am sure many more are buried under blacktop and buildings.
More great historic bottles and insulators are still underground then above!
Love your videos
THANK YOU!
Interesting thanks from a great grandmother from the north uk liverpool now living in australia we had plates like the blue belonging to my great grandmother.
Just a visitor here, the Lydia stuff for women sure must have been helpful having 20% of alcohol and all
I look forward to seeing your videos
My older sister when she was 5 had to go on Scott's Emolsion for her bad allergies. That was in 1964 and she was on it for years, and I remember as I got older, how awful it smelt.
By all the broken dishes, I would say they fought a lot because that's a lot of dishes to find in a hole.
😂😂😂😂😂
I’d say that’s the hotels dump because the broken plates are from an inn.
Those pieces of dinnerware would look nice in a mosaic of ceramic/China pieces. I like seeing the stamp at the bottom. Have you ever thought of making a bundle of those pieces and selling them? I would buy one. I live in a house that was built in 1908. In the back yard, in the perfect distance away from the house, there is a dip in the yard, about where their outhouse would have been. My daughter was playing with a slender, long pipe and was able to push it through the ground and it slid very easily down about three feet. That’s when we figured it could have been where their outhouse used to be. I would love to have it dug up, now that I know, from you, that back in the day, they would throw things like what you dig up into those pits. Ever get out to northwest Ohio, let me know. I’ll help you dig. :-)
Be careful. It could also be an old well that's been filled in, but not filled entirely to the bottom, creating a bridge of surface material with nothing below.
When my uncle was 3 years old he fell through the ground into an old well that had been covered with dirt fill and waste junk materials.
He actually drowned. My great grandmother (a nurse) fished him out with barbed wire fence and recesitated him. That was in the late 60's on a farm site in southern Minnesota.
@@kentneumann5209What a very sad story! Poor little boy and his family! Good warning!
Soo informational Tom, Rockin all things as always. N.t
I gave you a Abo for the detailed information of all parts.
1st video of yours I stumbled across… really liked it. I’ll definitely watch more. Do you ever give value estimates on the discovered items?
haha., we dont generally. idk... there are a lot of reason why, but when we put a dollar value on the stuff, it... idk what the right word is... it feels immoral... it feels like we are doing it for money. there's that reason, and then a few other ones. other people who dig dont like us putting values out there because it could effect the price of their collection. Also there are a ton of factors on what a bottle could be worth. ill just give one example. Last year we found a bottle that wasnt known to exist. it was a soda from Dakota Territory era.. We could set the price to whatever we wanted, but realistically it was between $7k - 6k... so super valuable for a bottle. Then an hour later in the same pit, we found a second one. That meant the first one wasnt the only one anymore. probably cut like 20% of the value. so then we had 2 bottles that were more like $5k - 4.5k. so basically i could write the value in a video, and then the next day, some guy could find 10 of them, and then all the sudden, the price i had in the previous video is no kind of ludicrous.
i know that was a super long winded response. but its a complicated answer. but id have to say, its mainly that i just dont like how it makes us look. it makes the whole thing seem more money driven, and of course i want to find the highest value items, but i usually dont end up selling the best stuff anyways.
well.. hope you liked the video. thanks for watching. we got a video coming out tomorrow at 3pm central! its gonna be a good one
Those are great reasons! Thanks for taking time to explain. New subscriber!
I think I missed the part about the map in the attic 😏😏😏
Awesome video Tom!
Almost at 100,000 subscribers. well done guys.
I just found your channel this evening and have been binge watching. So very fascinating. I have a couple of questions that have probably been asked a thousand times but I have not found the answers. 1. What do you do with all of the bottles and stuffs you find? 2. Do you need a license to excavate these sites? I would love to do some of this work here in Texas and do not exactly know how to start. I do know you have a wealth of knowledge of the types of bottles you find and that can be obtained through research and repetition. Watching you go through the process is very exciting for this old man. Thanks for your channel.
Me too....subscribed last night❤
Nice job I enjoyed watching
really enjoy your video
The soil in that pit appears to be incredibly loose for being there a century..and the bottles are nearly pristine
I've heard of Scott' s Emulsion mentioned in a song. Good to have something to relate to that reference.
Tom, you look like you just woke up!!!!
HAHAHA thats basically what happened. This wasnt far from home! thanks for watching!
Great job!
Oh heck YES!!!
So much broken dinner ware. Not a residence, but a dining hotel. Your are probably excavating one of the outhouses closest to the hotel.
Love your videos!
Love how deadpan he is at the beginning of the videos.
I always hope I'll come across something while digging in my flower beds.
Wow. Too bad there was so much broken stuff. Butter fingers in the family? Really pretty stuff that you did find, especially the Majolica pot
.
Short one but I still loved it. We would dig those Lydia pinkham's here in California also. Great dig. I'll let you slide on this short video. Lol.😊 hope you're doing well.
Below the Plains ,
My friend was a grave digger in a Cemetery that was over a very old city dump that dates back to 1700's .
Blob tops. whiskeys, poison bottles everywhere , you cant dig a cemetery, ( like he did) but this dump is huge probably 20 acres.
There are some vacant private properties nearby that is on top of the same dump, how do I get permission or do I just buy the property ?
There is an old layer of bottles 2-5 ft deep.
I got a spot .
Love your channel
Contact your county tax assessor and get the addresses of the owners, then write them a letter.
Thanks
thank YOU!
I have watched a lot of your videos, only thing have to say is, you need to be happier in your opening commentary.
HAHAHA its usually right in the morning! but yeah, i always tel that to tom when we are filming, but usually im also too tired to care... we usually have to cram videos in for a week or two, and then head back home and work on editing
Apparently lumberjacks weren't dainty on the dinnerware😮
Nice saves as always.
Would love to see these bottles cleaned up!
My husband and i waited for a cold front come through which took the tide out. Found so many bottles.
Hi Jack, what got you into digging up old bottles and artefacts. Are you aloud to keep what you find? Is digging a hobby or full time work. I enjoy watching your videos and thanks for sharing.
I always wondered where the idea for 1960s song Lily the Pink sung by the Scaffold came from and thanks to your video, I now know. Thank you.
Man I wish they still made Lydia pinkhams and with the original recipe.. Sounds like it would've worked wonders 😁
Great finds
I ALWAYS ENJOY YOUR VLOGS. SORTA LIKE A BOXA CHOCKLETS. YOU NEVER KNOW WHATCHA GUNNA GET NEXT!! KEEP ON DIGGING, FRIEND! YOU HAVE YET TO DISAPPOINT! AND I ABSOLUTELY LOVE THAT FLAT TOP BOX PICKING!!!!!
Very interesting dig and history lesson. What do you do with the finds?
Nice finds!
I was expecting a "One Eyed Willie" treasure.
One man’s trash, and you do have to find the dump, is another man’s treasure! 👍
4:26 Why break stuff instead of digging them out?
You gotta get in and out quickly , and the ceramics aren't thrown in there intact. The things he'll likely dig up will withstand a trowel.. I love watching these. I get all excited wondering what will come up next... **hopefully not a human skull.. 😱😱😱😱😱
Nice little video 😊. While you were digging and commenting about the abundance of dinnerware and that some where high end I thought about why would soooo many dishes be disposed of? Perhaps the home experience a traumatic event (theft, vandalism, or something else) that could have led to a multitude of dishes being broken. I have an active imagination perhaps 😂 Minnesota winters are long so you gotta find some way to pass the time 😂
hahah yeah i always like to assume they were just raging alcoholics and they just kept breaking them! lol thanks for watching!
@@BelowthePlains looks like those long Dakota winters have a similar effect 😂. I think your hypothesis is even more interesting to imagine 😁. I bet you run scenarios through your mind all the time while digging! I would! Amazing how much information can be gleaned from trash (turned treasure 😉)
Loved this short but very interesting video. Do you ever wonder what the families looked liked who lived in these home, that created the outhouse pit. Thanks for this x
The answer may have been in the pit. The china doll piece says children. Children and breakable dishes means broken dishes. Modern households don't have to give breakable dishes to children, but they didn't have a lot of options back in 1905.
@@PeppieP YES! 😁 definitely
Nice finds.
How do you determine exactly where a privy pit was?
Nice little pit!
Your doll is a "Frozen Charlotte " made in STL. Missouri . Interesting story behind her .
Those plate pieces would look nice put on top stepping stones when done
I love your channel
Hope to see you boys in MN soon!
JUST finished a MN video. its up on my patreon now, should be out on my channel within a month, 2 at the most. maybe next week! but the audio is a little spicy, because we got water in the mic. but it's actually a good dig, otherwise i would have probably scrapped it! hoping to get some more MN videos this year
@@BelowthePlains I just watched it this morning and hope you'll do more out here.
Can you make a video on your collection at home? Or a video that shows the bottles after they are cleaned up? 😊
Would love to hear from the land owners.