very cool find ....looks like they pulled the head to rebuild it but never came back ..... second Bunkhouse with windows intact ....wow and an old stove too ......what a find ....did you see that Biscuit cutter by the sink ..... its in great shape and no vandals too .....keep that one hidden ..... Gold also wears an Iron Hat ( Gossan ) ...you really should start sampling the mines as you explore as we have seen multiple places for deposition....
Pretty sure Justin has said he has no interest in staking claims, nor collecting artifacts, just documenting them before time, or BLM, makes them inaccessible. Nice to see you commenting here as much as you do. Say hi to Slim for me!
Very nice explore of the 2 adits and the support facilities. Thank you very much for sharing this with us Justin. Keep up the great work. Stay safe and healthy please!
Kalamazoo Stove company, Kalamazoo MI. what a cool site, looks like its rarely visited. That Miners cabin was next level, a fireplace, kitchen, running water, screened patio, and a soaking tub, these miners were living pretty comfortably, I mean aside from being miners lol.
I can understand leaving the structures behind but the equipment and that old stake body. This might be one of my favorite videos so far. Plus the scenery is perfect. Awesome find, Justin!
Thanks again Justin another good one, Miners they really did go to some extraordinary lengths to get gear into some impossible looking places even as late as the sixties- seventies a lot of the machinery we take for granted now was just on the market or it hadn't been invented . That truck brought me back, I drove an old 48 International flatbed with four forward and two back no sincro, you put your foot on the gear stick to hold in gear it was fun driving it around a big mine site. I started work in 62 and where no such things as Backhoes or Bobcats most machines where tracked a bit like that old converted steam shovel you found up in the Sierras a year or so back. Thanks for the video I still enjoy watching them. Cheers.
During the war years, the military trucks were produced by the hundreds of thousands in Detroit by various manufacturers. All being the same basic truck just being a Chevy or a Dodge etc...
I am amazed at how much equipment is in and near these old mines. Jeez, the time and effort to bring all that up there. Mind is blown again. Great old truck, and the bunkhouse/home was nice!
Pretty cool! Loved the truck and the house was amazingly intact. Good to see lots of artifacts, and not vandalism. Amazing that old truck still had its glass in place. Sketchy mine!
I really appreciate it when you say it doesn't look like it goes anywhere but I'm going to check it out. The explorers on other channels don't check it out, which, as a viewer is disappointing and leaves me wanting more. Keep up the good work.
I am amazed they already had pressure resistant flexible tube (2:43) in those years. Though it is often quite amazing what kind of tech already is being used on a pro level long before general public has ever heard of it.. I would think that there's quite a few things among what we got to take a look at early on in this video that would still be worth something for collectors, to restore, maybe some museums would love to have some of that.. (although at the moment it has been a difficult time ~ let's hope it quickly will become better times again!)
Amazing, not unlike what we used to find in the Big Sur area before it was made a protected wilderness and more people decided to explore. Prior, unknown and untouched. What a great find. Hope it survives to age and crumble gracefully.
39:15 Plastic 5 gallon buckets were first made in 1967. My mind is confused, seeing that bucket, but I did see some white PVC pipe out on the waste pile! Cool find!
Justin - did you notice @ 20:08 that a decent-sized pine tree is growing up in the center of the hitch on that old truck! I'd say that's pretty good evidence it hasn't been moved for a while!
It seems a lot of the mines you've been in have spay paint markings, even though most mines don't look like they have been worked after spray paint became a thing in 1949
I sat down and pressed play and before I knew it, 43 minutes had gone by. Very interesting video. Enjoyable to watch, and a cool mining site you've discovered.
Hi Justin, so many old parts of machinery rolling down the hill, it's kind of naughty really that they just left it all there to rust. That first adit wasn't sketchy at all was it 😁, jeez that has to be one of the worst adit's condition wise that you've filmed. That old stove at 23:30 had the words "Kalamazoo Stove (K)", then below it had "Kalamazoo Mich", that was one cool old stove resting there, a shame it was left to rot though. The second adit was way more interesting, although I did like the rusty stalactites in the 1st one, this 2nd one was better in a way because of all of the quartz that was in it. A very interesting explore all told with lots going on and tons of artefacts everywhere, very cool. Thank you for sharing, much love. xx 🙏💖
At 40:45 there was a square piece of quartz laying broken off on a timber that had color in it as well as iron..... I would just about have to backpack that one out and essay that one... :) did you notice the magneto ignition on the big Chicago air tool compressor engine. Man good ole days right there huh? Awesome vid as usual that last mine was at the end of entrance I would venture, too many chunks just hanging there waiting for that right voice vibration just to let go, be safe man, who would be my fav insane mine mole then?
Don't apologize for spending a lot of time on the mine sights. Many times they are more interesting than the mines. In fact, what a great mine sight and all the great stuff there it such a beautiful setting. Great job!
@16:25 " gold rides an Iron horse " there is a highgrade ore mine! TY Justin for another document. Your work preserving (REAL) History will be remembered for eternity! I watch all the adds for ya cause im to poor to give your great cause.
@TVR Exploring -- Justin , @11:57 - that's what I call "Rock Snot" , it's dissolved organic matter from the forest floor above the mine that has percolated down through the soil and is now dripping into the mine . If you touch it , it is soft and squishy and will easily break off of the Back and go splat when it hits the floor . @25:11 - inside the Fireplace , that's a Double-Walled sheetmetal Sheep Herders Stove . In A&FP - Ep. 23 - the Cabin that I show to Gly originally had a cast-iron Pot Belly Stove which got stolen and replaced with one of those Sheep Herders Stoves , and eventually that was stolen . @34:14 - that narrow 4-5 inch wide Stope may have had a thick seam of Clay Gouge that contained finely divided Gold particles ; that might explain why that part of the Stope is so tall and narrow . I've seen occurances like that in several mines (Clay Gouge containing Gold) . --- < Doc > .
Wanted to fill that 5 gallon bucket with Rusty Quartz. Today's Times appealing Setting to live and work old mine. Satellite internet just like out at Ranch. Great Job just remember you cant do everything. But you do a Great Job Documenting remote pieces of History. Thanks for the Tour.
The way the hard packed road is all mossed over and the black bark on the trees reminds me of the good times I got to spend on the old mines on the upper part of Wolf Creek in southern oregon.
almost 45 years ago i worked for a guy who had a collection of WW2 vehicles including a little Chevy like that . it would have been ideal for that type of work but the very best would have been a GMC 6x6 2 ton with a winch. The grill and front fenders were designed to be made by outside contractors with little or no automotive experience during WW2.
Another awesome find guys!!! I know my work week is half over when i got your notification. The lawnmower is kind of weird, guessing they thought they could use something off of it or they actually had a grass issue. The Chevy truck is from WW2, the original deuce and a half (two and a half ton) early 40s. From the looks of the different stuff/junk layin around those mines were worked multiple times throu the years. Yall stay safe out there.
That old Chevy was very interesting. Probably safe to say a lot of the materials for that facility came down there on it's back, the old stovebolt 6 chugging away. The odometer looked to read 30ish thousand miles. That cab was essentially unchanged from about 35 til 39 in the civilian world, but the military could have used it longer. Sad to see it sitting there. The car looked like a mid 30's sedan...could be newer, not older though. That was a large operation at one time, at some point, the boss said to the lowest guy on the seniority list, "I had a lawn mower brought down here, do something with the damn weeds around the buildings will ya? " To be able to worry about the weeds ya have to be living pretty good. The CP compressor in that building was very cool. Sad to think today people only know Chicago Pneumatic as a cheapo harbor freight brand when it has such a storied past. Fascinating place. makes a guy wonder what shut them down, the crummy rock making it too expensive to recover or did the gold peter out?
the newspapers you can see the years 1925(something about a loan) and then the year 1945.. so maybe it was a family operation after the war given they recycled damn near everything they possibly could.
Beautiful colours throughout and those alien-like formations are always awesome! Super sketchy, but I guess seeing stalactites like that is a little reassuring. Awesome relics! Looks like maybe they took the engine out of that truck to use in a piece of mine equipment. Tons of fungus in that wood, bet it smelled interesting... 33:36 looks like that junction had cart tracks so maybe it was a passing place for carts? Seems a bit too developed for a mistake, but just big enough to shove a cart into. Wow, so much in this place! So many different textures, so much nature bursting through the old equipment. Really beautiful! Could probably spend a few days just picking through all those piles, too!
No disappoints here at all. Some museums would love those OLD compressors. Maybe leave a plaques. And some details of the mine. I would like 80 ft of that rail.
Awesome video and incredible buildings! You can see a large spider on the diagonal beam near the center of the screen at 27:17 it looks like maybe a wolf spider
It's impressive to see the effort and expense they go to for what they know or assume will be a big payoff. All that concrete and equipment hauled in. And those living quarters are no simple lean to.
Sitting on the bed of the truck is the cowl and front axle for an even older Chevy truck, I believe. 1929-1932 or so. The cowl is sitting firewall down on the bed. Identifiable by the oval dash insert shape and the hump for the inline six. As many have said, the military truck was built civilian and converted to military.
That tin circle with the green wooden handle near the sink in the bunkhouse was a biscuit cutter. I've got a similar one of the same vintage we use in our kitchen.
Have not left a comment in a while but I watch all your vids . I really wish you could document the mines in Gold Hill Calif. that I explored as a kid in the '70's . They are just south of Coloma towards Placerville , I think they built houses on the hill the mines are under, door knocking ?
I've looked into that area and couldn't find any mines that were still accessible. Like you said, everything has houses on it now... Thanks for watching the videos!
That's not a hitch on the old truck, its just the 40's version of the "club". Back in the day you would lock that around the nearest tree so nobody could steal the vehicle😂 man that thing sat there so long a tree grew inside that hitch! that's crazy! Lol
Nice! Very cool mine site. The little piece of newspaper you had in your hand in the house with the Jan 29 date does mention the year 1925. I agree with Ask Jeff you guys should be prospecting . Many of these old miners just high graded for the most part. I was superintendent in my twenties for a custom gold mill just a few miles outside Yosemite back in the eighties. We strictly ran old tailing piles from surrounding mines some of that ore assayed at 6 oz. a ton. Do enjoy the video's keep up the good work!! would like to chat with you guys sometime
The attic looks empty, the area you see in your time stamped pic is due to the sloped ground on the lowest edge, its just a walled in crawlspace. Keeps the critters and wind out.
Nice formations in that, almost looks like an English mine whne you get to the wet section. I love a wet, falling to bits mine, very dramatic. Love how the tree has grown infront of the truck. Waders? Just get wet :) Wow, that 5 inch stope is amazing, imagine the effort that took to remove.
"Cell me crazy", but this is another one that I would have to come back to. I would have to do more exploring for other Adits. With the layout like it is, with the Mill and Bunkhouse and all, it was an awful big operation for just those two Adits. Unless the second one was really huge just cut short with that cave-in. Another great one, thanks!
Thanks. There were other adits there... I talk about it in the description below the video. What was in the video were the main adits though and who knows how far that caved one kept running?
Looks like a vintage caretakers cabin to look over the mine while it was closed as a nonessential mineral working. Those in the Foresthill, Ca, often had seniors who had mined to run some trap lines for spare money during the war.
What state was this in? I live in north idaho, this is what our abandoned mines look like. All buried in dense forest and forgotten. Hard to imagine the lives and character created by these hidden gems
For the amount of infrastructure, it looks like there should be more adits or something ... maybe that flooded winze went somewhere... awesome explore in nasty ground... thanks for sharing!
Did I just see that tyre on the Chicago machine still holding air !? Truly an amazing mine heaps, to see [ thanks to you] outside and in. But where I see you guys go at times, and this is one of them, I have to ask myself. Are these guys crazy, or just fearless? lol. That old ex Army? Chevy suggests this mine was alive and working in the late forties / early 50's
What a awesome site you found here! That ground they were mining sure does look bad though. Some nice colourful formations to look at, you don't get them in the desert mines, you just need to find a copper mine in this climate and see the colours in there! Love all the outside buildings and vehicles/machines, could quite easily poke around in there for hours!
Wow! This one has it all, plenty of age, it's off the chart w/ relics and considerable sketch factor too! 10/10
very cool find ....looks like they pulled the head to rebuild it but never came back ..... second Bunkhouse with windows intact ....wow and an old stove too ......what a find ....did you see that Biscuit cutter by the sink ..... its in great shape and no vandals too .....keep that one hidden ..... Gold also wears an Iron Hat ( Gossan ) ...you really should start sampling the mines as you explore as we have seen multiple places for deposition....
Pretty sure Justin has said he has no interest in staking claims, nor collecting artifacts, just documenting them before time, or BLM, makes them inaccessible.
Nice to see you commenting here as much as you do. Say hi to Slim for me!
Mr Jeff Williams you should join them and start sampling the area and find some gold
I see you also saw that biscuit cutter!
Thats a new one Jeffrey ....
I always heard from oldtimers " gold rides an Iron Horse " .
FYI In the kitchen to the left of sink is a square die for cutting threads on a pipe or round stock.
That’s a Kalamazoo Stove Company stove. Company was founded in 1902 and went out of business in 1952.
Came here just to say that. The top of the stove says "Kalamazoo Stove Co," and the bottom says "Kalamazoo, Mich" where is was manufactured.
@@jroysdon Awww .. you came here just to show your an A**
@@SteveandSusiesHomestead Your comment makes zero sense. Also, it's "you're", genius.
@@thatportlandguy8593 your
You have been finding some gems lately. Thanks for the detailed rock shots.
Very nice explore of the 2 adits and the support facilities. Thank you very much for sharing this with us Justin. Keep up the great work. Stay safe and healthy please!
Kalamazoo Stove company, Kalamazoo MI. what a cool site, looks like its rarely visited. That Miners cabin was next level, a fireplace, kitchen, running water, screened patio, and a soaking tub, these miners were living pretty comfortably, I mean aside from being miners lol.
Exactly! It looked like a pretty good life to me!
I can understand leaving the structures behind but the equipment and that old stake body. This might be one of my favorite videos so far. Plus the scenery is perfect. Awesome find, Justin!
Maybe it is far enough from civilization too.
Yes, this is a special one, to be sure!
Thanks again Justin another good one, Miners they really did go to some extraordinary lengths to get gear into some impossible looking places even as late as the sixties- seventies a lot of the machinery we take for granted now was just on the market or it hadn't been invented . That truck brought me back, I drove an old 48 International flatbed with four forward and two back no sincro, you put your foot on the gear stick to hold in gear it was fun driving it around a big mine site. I started work in 62 and where no such things as Backhoes or Bobcats most machines where tracked a bit like that old converted steam shovel you found up in the Sierras a year or so back. Thanks for the video I still enjoy watching them. Cheers.
Thank you. Sounds like it would have been quite an experience to drive that truck!
That little home could have been a Sears house kit. Circa 1904-1940.
Thanks again .
Thats a G506 1 1/2 ton Chevrolet military truck made back in the 40s
During the war years, the military trucks were produced by the hundreds of thousands in Detroit by various manufacturers. All being the same basic truck just being a Chevy or a Dodge etc...
That's very cool. thank you andrew for posting this information.
Stovrs from way back are worth hesps these days just saying
@@johntbrusklll727 They had all kinds of uses; fire trucks, light duty tow trucks, etc, etc..
Flow stone or septic system Uric Acid salts from the house above?
The newspaper scrap at 28:20 , "Several Meetings For Dividends Set" is from the San Francisco Examiner, 29 Jan 1933
I am amazed at how much equipment is in and near these old mines. Jeez, the time and effort to bring all that up there. Mind is blown again. Great old truck, and the bunkhouse/home was nice!
Forgotten and rotting away history gone forever
Thank you for documenting this fading away mines
Take care greetings from Germany
Yours Frank Galetzka
Pretty cool! Loved the truck and the house was amazingly intact. Good to see lots of artifacts, and not vandalism. Amazing that old truck still had its glass in place. Sketchy mine!
I really appreciate it when you say it doesn't look like it goes anywhere but I'm going to check it out. The explorers on other channels don't check it out, which, as a viewer is disappointing and leaves me wanting more. Keep up the good work.
Justin is the best, safest, and most thorough documenting our lost history the government is destroying under the guise of "safety" .
We the people are not allowed to work a mine because the oligarchy doesn't want us to prosper , they want it all for the wealthy pigs of the world
I am amazed they already had pressure resistant flexible tube (2:43) in those years. Though it is often quite amazing what kind of tech already is being used on a pro level long before general public has ever heard of it.. I would think that there's quite a few things among what we got to take a look at early on in this video that would still be worth something for collectors, to restore, maybe some museums would love to have some of that.. (although at the moment it has been a difficult time ~ let's hope it quickly will become better times again!)
Amazing, not unlike what we used to find in the Big Sur area before it was made a protected wilderness and more people decided to explore. Prior, unknown and untouched. What a great find. Hope it survives to age and crumble gracefully.
39:15 Plastic 5 gallon buckets were first made in 1967. My mind is confused, seeing that bucket, but I did see some white PVC pipe out on the waste pile! Cool find!
Looks to me like this mine has been operated, then shut down, a few distinct times in the past.
@@gtfkt Yes, exactly right. That's very common with these old mines...
also the plastic milk jug in the truck cab
Justin - did you notice @ 20:08 that a decent-sized pine tree is growing up in the center of the hitch on that old truck! I'd say that's pretty good evidence it hasn't been moved for a while!
It seems a lot of the mines you've been in have spay paint markings, even though most mines don't look like they have been worked after spray paint became a thing in 1949
Somebody plans to come back. Survey marks. See them a lot in Justin’s vids. That plastic bucket says someone’s been picking around the quartz seam
Amazing find! Never before have I seen the outside of a mine so well preserved and the inside crumbling. Usually it's quite the opposite.
Yes, the outside was better than the inside on this occasion!
Thanks for spending some time with the various mineralizations.
I do try...
I sat down and pressed play and before I knew it, 43 minutes had gone by. Very interesting video. Enjoyable to watch, and a cool mining site you've discovered.
Thank you. Yes, this was a special one, to be sure!
Hi Justin, so many old parts of machinery rolling down the hill, it's kind of naughty really that they just left it all there to rust. That first adit wasn't sketchy at all was it 😁, jeez that has to be one of the worst adit's condition wise that you've filmed. That old stove at 23:30 had the words "Kalamazoo Stove (K)", then below it had "Kalamazoo Mich", that was one cool old stove resting there, a shame it was left to rot though. The second adit was way more interesting, although I did like the rusty stalactites in the 1st one, this 2nd one was better in a way because of all of the quartz that was in it. A very interesting explore all told with lots going on and tons of artefacts everywhere, very cool. Thank you for sharing, much love. xx 🙏💖
At 40:45 there was a square piece of quartz laying broken off on a timber that had color in it as well as iron..... I would just about have to backpack that one out and essay that one... :) did you notice the magneto ignition on the big Chicago air tool compressor engine. Man good ole days right there huh? Awesome vid as usual that last mine was at the end of entrance I would venture, too many chunks just hanging there waiting for that right voice vibration just to let go, be safe man, who would be my fav insane mine mole then?
Nice find :) I like this episode!
The building looks very similar to many of the old houses i used to paint in Morenci Arizona in my youth.
Hey, that's one hell of a mine you got over there!
Don't apologize for spending a lot of time on the mine sights. Many times they are more interesting than the mines. In fact, what a great mine sight and all the great stuff there it such a beautiful setting. Great job!
Thank you.
@16:25 " gold rides an Iron horse " there is a highgrade ore mine!
TY Justin for another document. Your work preserving (REAL) History will be remembered for eternity!
I watch all the adds for ya cause im to poor to give your great cause.
Hey, man, I appreciate it!
This is your best yet. Wish I had been with you, but your video is the next best thing
Thank you. Wish you could've been along as well... Good company is always welcome!
Kalamazoo stove!
100% and clearly readable
Those stoves can sell for $25,000 restored
It is amazing how nature just takes over... Awesome vidy as always my friend
Always a pleasure
@TVR Exploring -- Justin , @11:57 - that's what I call "Rock Snot" , it's dissolved organic matter from the forest floor above the mine that has percolated down through the soil and is now dripping into the mine . If you touch it , it is soft and squishy and will easily break off of the Back and go splat when it hits the floor . @25:11 - inside the Fireplace , that's a Double-Walled sheetmetal Sheep Herders Stove . In A&FP - Ep. 23 - the Cabin that I show to Gly originally had a cast-iron Pot Belly Stove which got stolen and replaced with one of those Sheep Herders Stoves , and eventually that was stolen . @34:14 - that narrow 4-5 inch wide Stope may have had a thick seam of Clay Gouge that contained finely divided Gold particles ; that might explain why that part of the Stope is so tall and narrow . I've seen occurances like that in several mines (Clay Gouge containing Gold) . --- < Doc > .
You sure struck artifact gold! That was phenomenal!
Yes, this was a special one, for sure...
Thanks for this explore! Love that Chevrolet truck with 60k on it, you geeked out on it like an old car buff!
The mountain is reclaiming its territory, Thank you Justin!
Thank you
Just officially hooked two dear friends on your channel. As always amazing video work. Stay safe and keep on keeping on!
Awesome! Thank you very much.
Absolutely beautiful artifacts. Thanks for sowing this.
Wanted to fill that 5 gallon bucket with
Rusty Quartz. Today's Times appealing
Setting to live and work old mine.
Satellite internet just like out at Ranch.
Great Job just remember you cant do everything. But you do a Great Job Documenting remote pieces of History.
Thanks for the Tour.
Thanks for showing the vein!
that was real fun am glad you let me see it too thanx
Real awesome explore! Stay safe keep the adventures coming!!!
Great Video!
The way the hard packed road is all mossed over and the black bark on the trees reminds me of the good times I got to spend on the old mines on the upper part of Wolf Creek in southern oregon.
Oh that shale and the quartz. Even more reminders. Digging chunks of quarts out of that material the size of a cat 380 bucket. Good times.
That stove is a Kalamazoo Monarch model from about 1907. Made by the Kalamazoo Stove Company, Michigan. "Kalamazoo Direct to you"
almost 45 years ago i worked for a guy who had a collection of WW2 vehicles including a little Chevy like that . it would have been ideal for that type of work but the very best would have been a GMC 6x6 2 ton with a winch.
The grill and front fenders were designed to be made by outside contractors with little or no automotive experience during WW2.
I was almost disappointed you found an adit to explore! Thanks so much for letting us hang out with you for a bit.
Fantastic love that old truck and the bunk house👌
That was interesting to watch. Thanks for looking at the walls and explaining about the different colouring and showing gold vanes.
Another awesome find guys!!! I know my work week is half over when i got your notification. The lawnmower is kind of weird, guessing they thought they could use something off of it or they actually had a grass issue. The Chevy truck is from WW2, the original deuce and a half (two and a half ton) early 40s. From the looks of the different stuff/junk layin around those mines were worked multiple times throu the years. Yall stay safe out there.
Yes, many abandoned mines are worked off and on over the decades as owners, technology and commodity prices change...
Beautiful colors. Not ugly.
The red spray paint says to me someone plans to re visit that claim
That old Chevy was very interesting. Probably safe to say a lot of the materials for that facility came down there on it's back, the old stovebolt 6 chugging away. The odometer looked to read 30ish thousand miles. That cab was essentially unchanged from about 35 til 39 in the civilian world, but the military could have used it longer. Sad to see it sitting there.
The car looked like a mid 30's sedan...could be newer, not older though.
That was a large operation at one time, at some point, the boss said to the lowest guy on the seniority list, "I had a lawn mower brought down here, do something with the damn weeds around the buildings will ya? " To be able to worry about the weeds ya have to be living pretty good.
The CP compressor in that building was very cool. Sad to think today people only know Chicago Pneumatic as a cheapo harbor freight brand when it has such a storied past.
Fascinating place. makes a guy wonder what shut them down, the crummy rock making it too expensive to recover or did the gold peter out?
the newspapers you can see the years 1925(something about a loan) and then the year 1945.. so maybe it was a family operation after the war given they recycled damn near everything they possibly could.
My theory for the lawn mower is they brough it up there for the blacksmithing operation they had going on.
4:03 bedframe on the left. I used to have one just like it.
Beautiful colours throughout and those alien-like formations are always awesome! Super sketchy, but I guess seeing stalactites like that is a little reassuring.
Awesome relics! Looks like maybe they took the engine out of that truck to use in a piece of mine equipment. Tons of fungus in that wood, bet it smelled interesting...
33:36 looks like that junction had cart tracks so maybe it was a passing place for carts? Seems a bit too developed for a mistake, but just big enough to shove a cart into.
Wow, so much in this place! So many different textures, so much nature bursting through the old equipment. Really beautiful! Could probably spend a few days just picking through all those piles, too!
Thank you. Yes, this was a special one...
No disappoints here at all. Some museums would love those OLD compressors. Maybe leave a plaques. And some details of the mine.
I would like 80 ft of that rail.
Great videos. Thank you for taking the time to show us everything. Thank you.
Thank you for coming along... This was a special one.
At 9;45 I would call those Sierra Mine Moths ? That was a Nice House at one time ,and yes i liked that Truck . Thank you for the video .
Awesome video and incredible buildings! You can see a large spider on the diagonal beam near the center of the screen at 27:17 it looks like maybe a wolf spider
It's impressive to see the effort and expense they go to for what they know or assume will be a big payoff. All that concrete and equipment hauled in. And those living quarters are no simple lean to.
Great video as always! Thanks for inspiring me here in North Georgia.
The crunble gold mine. Great artifacts and nice explore.
Awesome video !!! Great Job !!! Thanks for sharing !
Oh and P.S. you and your friends have huge ball bags going into some of the places I've watched you go ! Vids are great
When you were in the bunkhouse you panned over an old biscuit cutter in the kitchen! I would love to have found that beauty!!
There was a LOT in there!
What a cool mine site!!
Sitting on the bed of the truck is the cowl and front axle for an even older Chevy truck, I believe. 1929-1932 or so. The cowl is sitting firewall down on the bed. Identifiable by the oval dash insert shape and the hump for the inline six. As many have said, the military truck was built civilian and converted to military.
That tin circle with the green wooden handle near the sink in the bunkhouse was a biscuit cutter. I've got a similar one of the same vintage we use in our kitchen.
Have not left a comment in a while but I watch all your vids . I really wish you could document the mines in Gold Hill Calif. that I explored as a kid in the '70's . They are just south of Coloma towards Placerville , I think they built houses on the hill the mines are under, door knocking ?
I've looked into that area and couldn't find any mines that were still accessible. Like you said, everything has houses on it now... Thanks for watching the videos!
That's not a hitch on the old truck, its just the 40's version of the "club". Back in the day you would lock that around the nearest tree so nobody could steal the vehicle😂 man that thing sat there so long a tree grew inside that hitch! that's crazy! Lol
Great find fellers! Thanks for the vids, you do a great job.
Newspaper looked like it said "Monkey Jockeys" so I googled that. Turns out they had monkeys ride racing greyhounds back in the 1930s. Huh.
That's awesome...
Great video, thanx for quartz vein shots
Nice! Very cool mine site. The little piece of newspaper you had in your hand in the house with the Jan 29 date does mention the year 1925. I agree with Ask Jeff you guys should be prospecting . Many of these old miners just high graded for the most part. I was superintendent in my twenties for a custom gold mill just a few miles outside Yosemite back in the eighties. We strictly ran old tailing piles from surrounding mines some of that ore assayed at 6 oz. a ton. Do enjoy the video's keep up the good work!! would like to chat with you guys sometime
Stunning
great interesting video.love that
Crazy cool seeing the vehicles as well
In Boston we call those "cah pahts"! I would be sampling the heck out of that place given the extensiveness of it.
'...Or Sporty' LMAO you are bonkers! stay safe!
What was on the second floor of the house. Go to 29:20, sure looks like 2 stories.
The attic looks empty, the area you see in your time stamped pic is due to the sloped ground on the lowest edge, its just a walled in crawlspace. Keeps the critters and wind out.
Lot of iron, equipment and junk still there! Impressive.
Nice formations in that, almost looks like an English mine whne you get to the wet section. I love a wet, falling to bits mine, very dramatic. Love how the tree has grown infront of the truck. Waders? Just get wet :) Wow, that 5 inch stope is amazing, imagine the effort that took to remove.
Haha, yes, the wet and uncomfortable mines is definitely something that we share! I can't imagine working in that 5 inch stope.
"Cell me crazy", but this is another one that I would have to come back to. I would have to do more exploring for other Adits. With the layout like it is, with the Mill and Bunkhouse and all, it was an awful big operation for just those two Adits. Unless the second one was really huge just cut short with that cave-in. Another great one, thanks!
Thanks. There were other adits there... I talk about it in the description below the video. What was in the video were the main adits though and who knows how far that caved one kept running?
Looks like the 1902 Kalamazoo wood cook stove. very nice.
A great explore, amazing finds outside, still in reasonable shape, except the bunkhouse and the first part of the mine, but still a very nice find.
Looks like a vintage caretakers cabin to look over the mine while it was closed as a nonessential mineral working. Those in the Foresthill, Ca, often had seniors who had mined to run some trap lines for spare money during the war.
I agree that looked like a forge hood. I wonder how much further that second adit went that was a lot of infrastructure for those bores.
Yes, I wonder about that as well! There was also that winze though and a couple of smaller adits up the hill...
What state was this in? I live in north idaho, this is what our abandoned mines look like. All buried in dense forest and forgotten. Hard to imagine the lives and character created by these hidden gems
thats a deadmans mine ,you are def.dedicated bro
23:06 looks like a biscuit cutter. Great old truck, Im guessing wwii surplus
For the amount of infrastructure, it looks like there should be more adits or something ... maybe that flooded winze went somewhere... awesome explore in nasty ground... thanks for sharing!
Well, yes, there's the winze and who knows how far that other adit went past the collapse?
Old 5 gallon "jeep" cans (at 4:05) usually have a mfg date stamped on the bottom. Sometimes under the handle on top. Did you look?
Some of the old oil drums had the date code on them too. Last two digits of the year.
Wow!! Great ingenuity
Did I just see that tyre on the Chicago machine still holding air !? Truly an amazing mine heaps, to see [ thanks to you] outside and in.
But where I see you guys go at times, and this is one of them, I have to ask myself. Are these guys crazy, or just fearless? lol. That old ex Army? Chevy suggests this mine was alive and working in the late forties / early 50's
Ever look at the rock for gold. I know I would.
Great video
The Flathead engine is interesting
What a awesome site you found here! That ground they were mining sure does look bad though. Some nice colourful formations to look at, you don't get them in the desert mines, you just need to find a copper mine in this climate and see the colours in there! Love all the outside buildings and vehicles/machines, could quite easily poke around in there for hours!
Yes, this was a special one, to be sure! I actually found the outside more interesting than the underground gold mine on this one!
Good find. So interesting to see.