I've seen a few urban explorers doing their stuff, but yours is one of the only channels i can really bear to watch. I know a lot of people have commented on your respectful explorations, but whenever i see someone rummaging around in the homes and lives of people who are no longer there i cant help but imagine what i would feel about those strangers in my my house, looking at the things that i held dear, and i would hate it. You on the other hand are able to see the beauty in the houses and lives of those you visit. I think i would not mind if it was you. May you never change 😊. Best wishes from scotland, you deserve to be the king of urban explorers
I agree- I used to subscribe to a couple of other urban explorers but have subsequently unsubscribed to their channels. I like the more respectful and slower pace, as well as peaceful nature of Kappy’s videos.
@@timsfordovallove5689 Yall are too kind!! Couldn’t show these incredible old places without yalls support, thank you all so much for the kind words and watching!! :)
They can't be too many people unalived there, that's what is wrong with NYU, and why the students keep jumping to their deaths. They used to execute innocent people in Lower Manhattan. Under the parks, streets, and buildings are human remains.
So many eras represented on this house. My porch has fallen down but it is a beauty! Thanks for sharing Kappy! You never disappoint. As always, stay safe!😊
I watch a couple more urbex channels on here but Kappy you are the only one that I really enjoy. Thank you for sharing your journeys through these beautiful places ❤….and Happy Thanksgiving to you and your family ❤
Interesting place, i wish it had been cared for better over the years. At least no one stole the fireplace mantles. I wonder if it was always just two rooms downstairs. The General store must have carried a little bit of everything for everyone. Thanks Kappy, Happy Thankgiving to you and your family
I really enjoy waking up on saturday morning and enjoying Old empty houses from the past, I look forward to your videos every Saturday.Really enjoy everyone,
Sure can visualize what that place used to be, and always like how solid the roof joists look in the attics-what craftsmanship! A shame those bunkbeds couldn't have been donated to a children's home, or homeless shelter. Thanks, Kappy!
Great find Kappy!! The first house had 2 b nutty with all those hunters in the bunk bed area, lots of stories and farts flying everywhere! Eww! Love the second place , lots of history. The allied movers said they were the careful movers, so careful they never left! Tyvm 4 the great finds! Love ur vids!! Happy Thanksgiving 2 u and ur fam! Plz b safe out there 😊
Basically, three more years and that place will be 200 years old I hope they don't demolish it before then. It would be nice if they could restore it. Thank you for the video, Kappy. 😊👍
There's something romantic, to me, about general stores and old family-run gas stations. Everything is so corporate these days that the idea of being able to walk to a little general store and get the basics just feels cozy to me.
It's amazing how people back then took great pride In in what they did and the beautiful detailed work they put into building a home, the proof is look at this home that is still standing after ALL this time, a house built today would never still be standing, great explore and very interesting also to see. - ❤ 😊 HAPPY THANKSGIVING !🦃
This is another one of your explores that’s at the top of my favorites list. I bet under that white paint there’s a lot of folk Art grain painting as in the stairs and ‘mop’ boards in some bedrooms . It reminds me a lot of the historic rooms you see at MESDA in Winston-Salem, NC. What a dream it would be to restore a gem like this with so many early wonderful features. Thanks, Kappy!
If i were rich i'd go around the country buying and fixing up old plantation houses. Use them as my vacations spots when i traveled. They have a lot of character and history.
Thanks kappy for sharing this video with me i really enjoyed so much i also gave you a thumbs up and shared you out on my community tab my friend and i can't wait to see your next video and God Bless.
Very cool place. The old gas station was fantastic. It should be saved for history. It would be a great place for film location. If you didn't want to run a store.Great finds!!❤️🤍💙
I admire all of your great videos of these old houses im sure they bring back memories if walks could talk thank you for sharing these videos and happy thanksgiving to you and your family
I love 2fer's! The 1st place was definitely well loved. I can hear all those fella's reliving their successful, or not so successful, hunts. Just enjoying the "man" talk. I remember as a kid, going to a little station like that for gas and my Granny would always get hard coffee candy. Us old folks were easy to please back then. Another great video Mr Kappy! Thanks for taking me along! 😊 Hope you have a great Thanksgiving Mr Kappy!!!!
It looks like there was a fireplace on the second floor in that first room, that they boarded up. You can still see the bricks on the floor in front of the wall. Thanks for the great videos Kappy!
Boy that house made it from the 18 hundreds boy that sucker is old and still kinda solid in South Carolina huh an like I said before they will never build a house like they used to wow..
I have seen this hunting lodge before and it still in pretty good shape from what I can tell. Savable in other words but they will probably tear it down though. I find it weird that the bathroom is between the kitchen and the room with the freezers. That general store was interesting and quite a bit of stuff that can be saved too. Thanks for sharing and you have a great day
I remember that stove I fixed one before..that one couch in there against the wall is a mid century modern 1950's era worth like 300 bucks I'd love love love to have it..an ive never heard of that kinda gas back then thats old man
Great places as usual, Kappy! I love when they haven't been vandalized/ spray painted and you can see the real character of the house. I don't think the hunters club messed it up like some here are saying, it's just been abandoned for a long time and these things happen.
We have 5 or 6 of these little stores in a 10 mile radius of our home. Every one is closed. The county tried to enforce new regulations on the owners and they couldn’t afford to upgrade. So sad. I think that first one has seen a ton of living. And it’s tired. Thanks for the tours. Have a Happy Thanksgiving and stay safe.
I wish you could come to Washington state. They are getting ready to teardown the Landmark on the Sound buildings. What a great loss, and I would be so nice to have a video record of it before it is gone. Love your videos!!
Do any of you Kappy fans ever notice the high percentage of the explored homes having Christmas decorations left behind but still poised like the house was decorated for Christmas? It makes me wonder why. Any ideas?
Greatt to see you today,thats an old stove,i remember calling a refrigerator a calvinator,a girl said whats a calvinator i said you put stuff in it to keep cold ,i didnt realize when got older calvinator was the name of refrigerator my grandparents had ,so they would say get it out of the calvinator ,so funny now,ive known three old gas station that looked kinda like that one growing up ,they went out too with bigger companies,the owners lived on sight too ,it was everything to them ,home ,business really nice elderly people,i always patronized them later in life til thry weee gone
Looks like them hunters was using the upstairs as a deer stand with them chairs being by the windows like that. Probably baited the field with corn and waited . Lazy boys, that lot. Cool old house though !
Kap, you go into some of the MOST DILAPIDATED PLACES!!!! I really WORRY that you're gonna either catch something, or hurt yourself!!!! PLEASE BE CAREFUL and stay safe!!!!
I live in eastern North Carolina I see a lot of old homes they get boarded up for a couple years and then one day they're not there anymore they burnt to the ground
The outbuildings you are showing now look like barns and places of commerce, still nothing that says "slave quarters" to me. Again, most southerners couldn't afford slaves. and did the work themselves. That one building with the gas pumps and merchandise racks was probably a thriving concern back in the 40's, 50's and 60's. I remember going into places like that as a small child and buying an "Orange Crush" or a "Nehi grape soda".
I have to admit i'm easily distracted by stuff, and the fact that the stuff in this particular explore belonged to hunters......well. Kind of a slaughterhouse vibe. For me, but i'm not much of a meat eater. Let's clear it all out and maybe the house could be a shelter for the rural homeless!
I've seen a few urban explorers doing their stuff, but yours is one of the only channels i can really bear to watch. I know a lot of people have commented on your respectful explorations, but whenever i see someone rummaging around in the homes and lives of people who are no longer there i cant help but imagine what i would feel about those strangers in my my house, looking at the things that i held dear, and i would hate it. You on the other hand are able to see the beauty in the houses and lives of those you visit. I think i would not mind if it was you. May you never change 😊. Best wishes from scotland, you deserve to be the king of urban explorers
I agree- I used to subscribe to a couple of other urban explorers but have subsequently unsubscribed to their channels. I like the more respectful and slower pace, as well as peaceful nature of Kappy’s videos.
I agree! Nature and everyday sounds are the perfect backdrop!
What a well put, well deserved comment. I agree 100% Kappy you can explore anything I have when I’m gone!
@@timsfordovallove5689 Yall are too kind!! Couldn’t show these incredible old places without yalls support, thank you all so much for the kind words and watching!! :)
Kee@@urbanexploringwithkappy1773 keep all your great videos coming I enjoy watching them 😊😊
True testament for, "they don't build them like they used too! Almost 200 yrs old & still could be fixed up & lived in, I believe.
They can't be too many people unalived there, that's what is wrong with NYU, and why the students keep jumping to their deaths. They used to execute innocent people in Lower Manhattan. Under the parks, streets, and buildings are human remains.
@@joanneclose7041 Completely agreed! Thank you very much for watching!! :)
Love going along with you touring old houses !!!!! Thank you Kappy !!!!!
So many eras represented on this house. My porch has fallen down but it is a beauty! Thanks for sharing Kappy! You never disappoint. As always, stay safe!😊
@@melissaboggs5176 Luckily still have the porch on the side of the house haha! Thank you very much for watching and the kind words!! :)
Beautiful.
I watch a couple more urbex channels on here but Kappy you are the only one that I really enjoy. Thank you for sharing your journeys through these beautiful places ❤….and Happy Thanksgiving to you and your family ❤
@@MargaretFranklin-jy9wi That’s very kind of you to say! Thank you so much!! I really appreciate it! Happy thanksgiving to you and yours as well! :)
@@urbanexploringwithkappy1773 thank you so much Kappy….we will definitely 💯
Interesting place, i wish it had been cared for better over the years. At least no one stole the fireplace mantles. I wonder if it was always just two rooms downstairs. The General store must have carried a little bit of everything for everyone. Thanks Kappy, Happy Thankgiving to you and your family
This is a wonderful example of a Southern vernacular double-entry Hall and Parlor house... This must be saved...
Feel free to pay for that.
@@mikemanofleisure Gladly... especially since you can't...
@@WildwoodCastle Well said on the architectural terms!! Love this style of old homes! Much appreciated for watching!!
Indeed it shall be saved !
I really enjoy waking up on saturday morning and enjoying Old empty houses from the past, I look forward to your videos every Saturday.Really enjoy everyone,
Sure can visualize what that place used to be, and always like how solid the roof joists look in the attics-what craftsmanship! A shame those bunkbeds couldn't have been donated to a children's home, or homeless shelter. Thanks, Kappy!
Happy thanksgiving 🦃🦃🦃 kappy and stay safe.
@@tiffanyrose8810 Happy thanksgiving to you and yours as well! Thanks for watching!! :)
Great find Kappy!! The first house had 2 b nutty with all those hunters in the bunk bed area, lots of stories and farts flying everywhere! Eww! Love the second place , lots of history. The allied movers said they were the careful movers, so careful they never left! Tyvm 4 the great finds! Love ur vids!! Happy Thanksgiving 2 u and ur fam! Plz b safe out there 😊
Thanks Kappy for your hard work bringing us these amazing places. You’re the only exploration channel I watch.
Love your videos. I look forward to them every Saturday. Wishing everyone a Wonderful Thanksgiving!
@@justinetully6400 i really appreciate that thank you very much for the kind words and watching!! :)
Love looking through all these old houses! Thank you for taking us with you on an explorative walk through time…❤
Basically, three more years and that place will be 200 years old I hope they don't demolish it before then. It would be nice if they could restore it. Thank you for the video, Kappy. 😊👍
It looks beautiful by the structure style
There's something romantic, to me, about general stores and old family-run gas stations. Everything is so corporate these days that the idea of being able to walk to a little general store and get the basics just feels cozy to me.
Love looking back in time with you. Keep it up kappy. Great job you do
@@seethrucrew4092 Really appreciate that! Thank you very much for watching!! :)
It's amazing how people back then took great pride In in what they did and the beautiful detailed work they put into building a home, the proof is look at this home that is still standing after ALL this time, a house built today would never still be standing, great explore and very interesting also to see. - ❤ 😊 HAPPY THANKSGIVING !🦃
Kappy that place could be cleaned out and fixed up in no time.I love it ,shame on those hunters for leaving such a mess thank you👍❤️
This is another one of your explores that’s at the top of my favorites list. I bet under that white paint there’s a lot of folk Art grain painting as in the stairs and ‘mop’ boards in some bedrooms . It reminds me a lot of the historic rooms you see at MESDA in Winston-Salem, NC. What a dream it would be to restore a gem like this with so many early wonderful features. Thanks, Kappy!
If i were rich i'd go around the country buying and fixing up old plantation houses. Use them as my vacations spots when i traveled. They have a lot of character and history.
Thanks kappy for sharing this video with me i really enjoyed so much i also gave you a thumbs up and shared you out on my community tab my friend and i can't wait to see your next video and God Bless.
The voice change speed at 11:20 was cool but the ery dog bakr to follow was way cool lol nice vid thanks..:)
Thank you Kappy for another wonderful look at history.I can't wait for the next explore..
Beautiful house Kappy. Shame its been left to rot away. Pity. Neat old store. ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
Very cool place. The old gas station was fantastic. It should be saved for history. It would be a great place for film location. If you didn't want to run a store.Great finds!!❤️🤍💙
Fantástica aventura no tempo e na engenharia antiga, parabéns 🎉
I love it. Two chimney s, lovely. Can see the beauty it was
@@patriciarussell756 true!! Lots of chimneys and fireplaces! Thank you very much for watching!! :)
What a find!! Really enjoy your explores. Thanks Kappy!
Thanks for sharing Kappy. Interesting places! ❤
Your attention to details, down to the square nails is fascinating Kappy! 👍😊
Thank you Kappy!
What a beautiful place.. Happy Thanksgiving everyone
I would love to go through that general store!!! Cool find!😊😊😊
Another intriguing video Kappy! Thanks!
@@lonwaslien104 Thank you very much for watching!! :)
I admire all of your great videos of these old houses im sure they bring back memories if walks could talk thank you for sharing these videos and happy thanksgiving to you and your family
I love 2fer's! The 1st place was definitely well loved. I can hear all those fella's reliving their successful, or not so successful, hunts. Just enjoying the "man" talk.
I remember as a kid, going to a little station like that for gas and my Granny would always get hard coffee candy. Us old folks were easy to please back then.
Another great video Mr Kappy! Thanks for taking me along! 😊
Hope you have a great Thanksgiving Mr Kappy!!!!
I would love to go with you on one of your explores . I am just an elderly woman that loves old homes
Hello, from a Thoresen to a Toreson! Lol.
I’m older & used to urban explore before cells phones etc, now I enjoy exploring by proxy with Kappy!
@@1927su Yall come on along!! I could use the company lol! Extra pair of eyes never hurts!😅 thank ya very much for watching!! :)
It looks like there was a fireplace on the second floor in that first room, that they boarded up. You can still see the bricks on the floor in front of the wall. Thanks for the great videos Kappy!
Boy that house made it from the 18 hundreds boy that sucker is old and still kinda solid in South Carolina huh an like I said before they will never build a house like they used to wow..
Wow, what amazing places! Thanks so much for taking us along. At least it can be a neat memory for many- though I wish somehow it could stay standing
The house looks so much bigger from the outside
Awesome old home place!🙂
Hi Kappy 👍✌️
Nice place in its day. I think the hunters messed it up some. Thank you for the tour. Have a good TG.
And what exactly makes you say that? You have no idea what the house looked like, or what condition it was in prior to becoming a hunting club.
I have seen this hunting lodge before and it still in pretty good shape from what I can tell. Savable in other words but they will probably tear it down though. I find it weird that the bathroom is between the kitchen and the room with the freezers. That general store was interesting and quite a bit of stuff that can be saved too. Thanks for sharing and you have a great day
Top notch
I remember that stove I fixed one before..that one couch in there against the wall is a mid century modern 1950's era worth like 300 bucks I'd love love love to have it..an ive never heard of that kinda gas back then thats old man
COoooool places.
Ima bet there’s been a few good thick cut bologna sandwiches enjoyed in those old country store buildings! Thanks for another great video Kappy!
Nice
Hi Kappy, another great video 😊
I enjoy like watching all of your videos i am a fan u do a wonderful job the buildings is in good shape and conditions
Pretty brave lookin in that old deep freezer… GLAD you didn’t find body parts!!! Yikes!! Lol
Pretty cool is right! 😊
The store is pretty cool though 😊
I like how all the verticals lines are true, everything is level and square
Kappy, this is in my home state of South Carolina. Love watching your videos
I really like the gas station too,the store has a lot of good lumber.Hope it doesn't rot away.❤️👍🇺🇸
@@gaylewilliamson9183 Much appreciated for the kind words and watching!! :)
Great video as usual. I hope everyone has a wonderful and safe Thanksgiving.
Great places as usual, Kappy! I love when they haven't been vandalized/ spray painted and you can see the real character of the house. I don't think the hunters club messed it up like some here are saying, it's just been abandoned for a long time and these things happen.
Thanks again, wild man
We still have gas pumps like that in the little town I'm from. And yes they're working!
It makes me sad to see these old places neglected
We have 5 or 6 of these little stores in a 10 mile radius of our home. Every one is closed. The county tried to enforce new regulations on the owners and they couldn’t afford to upgrade. So sad. I think that first one has seen a ton of living. And it’s tired. Thanks for the tours. Have a Happy Thanksgiving and stay safe.
Yes I noticrd faux painting on stairs and upstairs.
Kappy please point that out
I wish you could come to Washington state. They are getting ready to teardown the Landmark on the Sound buildings. What a great loss, and I would be so nice to have a video record of it before it is gone.
Love your videos!!
@@coyotescallfarm3120 I’ve never been that far west! I’d love! I’m heading out west towards Texas next month!
@@coyotescallfarm3120 hopefully you can or someone else can document them!! I’d love to seem them!
Do any of you Kappy fans ever notice the high percentage of the explored homes having Christmas decorations left behind but still poised like the house was decorated for Christmas? It makes me wonder why. Any ideas?
It's still in decent shape for how old it is.
Greatt to see you today,thats an old stove,i remember calling a refrigerator a calvinator,a girl said whats a calvinator i said you put stuff in it to keep cold ,i didnt realize when got older calvinator was the name of refrigerator my grandparents had ,so they would say get it out of the calvinator ,so funny now,ive known three old gas station that looked kinda like that one growing up ,they went out too with bigger companies,the owners lived on sight too ,it was everything to them ,home ,business really nice elderly people,i always patronized them later in life til thry weee gone
Correct me if I'm wrong but wasn't it a Kelvinator?
Probably but we understood what she meant!@gillwyatt8103
Kelvinator
Yes you are right ,I don't know why I want to spell it with c
@ihave35cents95 it was just a slang southern expression of a fridge ,paper money was called folding money ,over yonder,I was raised by grandparents
I believe the building with the large scales was a feed store... The building with the pumps was most likely the general store...
Another beautiful find left to rot..Happy Thanksgiving Kappy!
Thank you for fabulous documentary on the plantation. I wonder what stories it would tell of the owners?
Happy Thanksgiving, Kappy!
❤❤❤❤❤
my father in law always called the refrigerator a Frididare
He was probably saying Frigidaire
I figured a Frigidaire was the first brand of refrigerator they had. bless his heart
@@jaclynalley809 Too funny! Thank you for watching!! :)
@@jaclynalley809 well you would never forget the name because you gotta figure in 1948 or Frigidaire was $400. That was a chunk of change.
@@ihave35cents95 For sure! He was born in 43
Looks like them hunters was using the upstairs as a deer stand with them chairs being by the windows like that. Probably baited the field with corn and waited .
Lazy boys, that lot.
Cool old house though !
Kap, you go into some of the MOST DILAPIDATED PLACES!!!! I really WORRY that you're gonna either catch something, or hurt yourself!!!! PLEASE BE CAREFUL and stay safe!!!!
Pretty cool place
Nice house
I can see Steve Martin sitting on the front porch now!
😂😂😂
I live in eastern North Carolina I see a lot of old homes they get boarded up for a couple years and then one day they're not there anymore they burnt to the ground
I was wondering if when you go into a nice old house, do you close windows and doors to stop further damage from the weather? If they can be closed?
2:11 check out all those keys on the wall.
Did anyone else notice how clean that roll of toilet paper was on the bathroom sink? Not even a speck of dust.
Still a magazine to read by to toilet!🤣
Looks like Georgia.
Good Lord. Last thing on my bucket list is to sleep in a room with 8 or 10 snoring hunters.
Maybe the outbuilding was the kitchen house.
That old store sold a lot of Coke , local Coke den .
This should be gutted and put back to it's original state. We should have respected these places .
It's as if one day then hunters decided not to go there anymore!
The gas station reminds me of something you would see in the Deep South.
@@susanbissell6319 Good call!! I am in the south! Don’t know if you’d consider it Deep South tho! Thanks for watching! :)
Looks like someone was using it as a base camp for hunting
That freezer is a Norge
The outbuildings you are showing now look like barns and places of commerce, still nothing that says "slave quarters" to me. Again, most southerners couldn't afford slaves. and did the work themselves. That one building with the gas pumps and merchandise racks was probably a thriving concern back in the 40's, 50's and 60's. I remember going into places like that as a small child and buying an "Orange Crush" or a "Nehi grape soda".
Anybody with an antebellum house like that had slaves. you couldn’t compete if you didn’t.
I have to admit i'm easily distracted by stuff, and the fact that the stuff in this particular explore belonged to hunters......well. Kind of a slaughterhouse vibe. For me, but i'm not much of a meat eater. Let's clear it all out and maybe the house could be a shelter for the rural homeless!
11:22 😂😂