Jordan that was a great clean up at the farm enjoyed it and thank you for sharing and your time was really great never miss a video and can't wait for next video.
Thumbs up … very entertaining video … 100 year old barn .. fire control with 5 gallon buckets and a 100 gallon pressure washer tank … while wearing flip flops and shorts …. Best video so far!!!💪🏻💪🏻💪🏻
@Humble Acres Loved the video of the house burning and this one but a few suggestions to help make a burn like this even safer. 1. Clear a 30-40-foot fire line around the structure. All trees, grass, and brush cut down and removed. 2. Pick a day with high humidity, no storms/rain, and little to no wind. Rainy days are a double-edged sword. When you have a Rain Cloud or a storm cloud system, there's a pressure shift in the atmosphere in your area. Which in turn means a higher chance of higher winds. 3. Contact your local fire department and see if they are willing to do a practice fire for free. These are great opportunities for firefighters to learn and watch how a structure burns. Along with learning different firefighting strategies. Lastly, it allows them to get real-time practice entering a burning structure while it's still stable (if relatively stable still). Yes, you burned when the vegetation was green which is extremely helpful but doesn't eliminate the chance of vegetation burning.
The sequel to I burnt my house down. None of us deserved this.
Jordan that was a great clean up at the farm enjoyed it and thank you for sharing and your time was really great never miss a video and can't wait for next video.
Thumbs up … very entertaining video … 100 year old barn .. fire control with 5 gallon buckets and a 100 gallon pressure washer tank … while wearing flip flops and shorts …. Best video so far!!!💪🏻💪🏻💪🏻
Glad your wearing your fire fighting flip flops....
Do the gas barrels have anything in them? They needed to stay cool too
hot? Sun is hot!
it can sunburn you from 150.000.000kms!😂
I'll bet it's a relief to have that old barn down and burnt.
Dig a hole and bury the leftovers.(Metal, nails etc. Don't puncture a tire with a nail)
Nice job
Running out of things to burn.
A very satisfying barn burn. Yup.
Did you warn the fire dept you were burning so they don't get calls from unknowing neighbors thinking the fire needed put out?
No concern about those fuel tanks ? -- Full or empty --- Who knows ?
@Humble Acres Loved the video of the house burning and this one but a few suggestions to help make a burn like this even safer.
1. Clear a 30-40-foot fire line around the structure. All trees, grass, and brush cut down and removed.
2. Pick a day with high humidity, no storms/rain, and little to no wind. Rainy days are a double-edged sword. When you have a Rain Cloud or a storm cloud system, there's a pressure shift in the atmosphere in your area. Which in turn means a higher chance of higher winds.
3. Contact your local fire department and see if they are willing to do a practice fire for free.
These are great opportunities for firefighters to learn and watch how a structure burns. Along with learning different firefighting strategies. Lastly, it allows them to get real-time practice entering a burning structure while it's still stable (if relatively stable still).
Yes, you burned when the vegetation was green which is extremely helpful but doesn't eliminate the chance of vegetation burning.
I’m curious what you do for a living, it takes a lot of time to make videos.
Need more FJ40 content please
😂