The first house was made out of Adobe. Great way of using natural resources to make your home. Too bad it isn't done much these days. Great video Man!
Very intriguing. It seems these houses are from the 50's
We would like to live as we once lived 🏚
Hello Dave sure happy you do these explores.Looking at the buildings makes me look further back i see the bare land and the workers clearing and planing and building and the people who worked and lived in these areas and then we see for what ever reasons the areas are left as we see them thru YOU thank you for the explore and adventures 🤔🇺🇸🏆
The adobe was a common building material - basically sun dried mud bricks. Where my ancestors settled in central Utah as soon as a rail line was built they would be able to bring proper bricks in and would put a veneer over them. Some people when Portland cement became available in the 1920s would put chicken wire over the adobe and then stucco it against the weather.
The green paint on the walls and wainscoting date from about 1920 - lots of oak trim and moulding got covered by that gawd awful color.
One last thing is most of the ruins you go to don't have furnaces but rather wood or coal burning stoves so the correct term for the flue is stove pipe - hopefully you aren't insulted when I correct you. 🤔👍
I would like to visit a place like this one day.
Totally doable. There are a lot of old ghost towns and places to explore all over.
Looks to me like they built with Adobe
🥳🤩Woohoo!!! 🎉💥I did it! I've watched all of Dave's videos! 💥⚡Yessss!🎊🎉!!! ... ... ... ... Come on, Dave! Where's the next video?😮😢
@@DaveSuzukiExploration Sunday? And today is Tuesday..... Gosh! Will Lee be slinging a camera?
Wonder how the snakes 🐍 survive not saw any wildlife around
Hadn’t heard of this one. Thanks for the tour Dave
Thanks!