It am still amazed at how powerful flowing water really is. All that equipment is run simply by flowing or falling water. No air pollution. No water pollution. No insane noise pollution. Love everything about it.
This old mill is actually high tech, it harnesses Earth’s gravity as a non-polluting source of power; beats fancy modern rigs any day since it is powered by clean, renewable and free energy; a despicable concept in the eyes of « the system ».
@@gilleslebrun7779 Oh yes ! The oil industry wants them to pay a monthly bill TO THEM, for the gas or diesel or electricity ! They can get "Fracked" ! lol.
Pleased to see a team of knowledgeable people operating an old mill. So important that we keep this on record, it may not be passed on to the next generation.
My respect to the sawman! He is a bit older and has problems with walking. But he knows the machine and moves the trees like a young man. In front of him I pull my hat. Thanks for the video and many greetings from Germany.
@@davidoickle1778 Thanks for the hint. I do not speak English, so the wrong word. In German language he would be called Saegemeister. (Sawmaster? Or Master of the Saw?) That would be more or less true because it honors his achievement. Greetings to you, somewhere in the world from Ger.
My respect for the sawmill man. I am from Bulgaria,my people back in 1950 had sawmill like this bit the communist people disassemble it and made sure does not exist no more around village. I have been dreaming to see a sawmill like that and eventually build one in the mountain of Pirin in Bulgaria.
Man, I'll bet that place smells *great* when it's rolling. All that pine, water, and old iron? That's gonna be a really good smell. Seriously cool video, guys!
Probably smells like how my grandparent's woodshed did when they were still alive. I split and ricked quite a few cords of wood in there by hand with a nice sharp axe.👍
Thanks for showing, local timber prosessed on a local mill powered with (ever) running water. Can't possibly be more enviromentally right. The fact that these old masters knows how to run it brings back good childhood memories
i could virtually smell that pine just like I could when I was younger and we were sawing. I got real calm all of a sudden. I miss those days.thanks for the great video! And when the sawyer first pulls the carriage back, it makes a tiny squeal or little chirp. there's no other sound like that I've ever heard.
What a wonderful video. I was lucky enough to have a father that made sure I saw the shipyards in Lunenburg. Wooden ships carved out by hand. God Bless
What a treat to see!! Thank you for the great video. This really is amazing how they were able to harness the power of moving water. That blade showed no sign of struggle to cut that pine. It must cost just peanuts to run. So efficient and cheap!!
A great video. I learned more about how a traditional water powered mill works watching this than I have in reading a half dozen books. Congrats to Mr. Corkum for preserving and sharing his knowledge and wonderful mill. Appreciate the nicely paced video.
I grew up in a sawmill i Denmark in the -50's - 60's , Although our saws were electrically powered, the saws and other machines in this old water-powered sawmill are much more advanced than ours.
These are the real national treasures ,the mill and the man ,this is the type of operation that should be fully documented and preserved in working order as is ,the shame is there's countless different industries that were built by men and women ,when it was a matter of ,make what you need with what you have ,and that is completely lost on recent generations .And I'd bet the person that designed and built this mill never went to college or even high school. Thanks for the great video mate ,Cheers from down under.
I'm just old enough to remember 2 or 3 of these still running in the 50s as well as one that ran one steam that I worked in during 70s. Also my grandfather ran a Frick that was powered by a model T in Michigan back in the 50s some of the mill is still there today. I owned and operated a small firewood business for over 40 years and would come across these old sawmills in the woods and always wanted to take one and bring it back to life but sadly never did.
Pleased to see a team of knowledgeable people operating an old mill. So important that we keep this on record, it may not be passed on to the next generation,
If I can turn back time and think the way these men thought back in the day I would have low blood pressure and a life that only few could ever wish for
Ah, maybe not, given that large numbers of people starving to death and lynching of people who went to a different church than you were also just the way things were when this mill was built. A broken bone or gash was often a literal death sentence, not solely due to infection but also through not being employable for longer than whatever savings you may have lasted.
Every man at OSHAs' head would explode if they saw this. What a tribute to our forefathers ingenuity and dedication to get work done. You wouldn't have found them in an unemployment line! Great video, thanks!
Really make you respect what it took when our forefathers started to build America and Nova Scotia at the turn of the century and even before that. This is what they need to teach in schools!!!
What inspection? MARKETING greedy for money retards inspection? these mills worked for centuries.. without any fucking inspections and regulations..and people were happy. OFC sometimes accidents hapend..but when accidents do not hapend? Even today with all the regulations and inspections accidents still hapend.. Morrons working in dangerous places will end up as a meat cannon just because they are idiots and ignore some basic rules when you working with spinning blades equipement.
@Mister Sir There would have been a lot of gruesome injuries back in the real early days of mechanisation. Just found this the other day, www.rustyiron.com/literature/Flywheel_Explosions.pdf article counts at least 60 major flywheel explosions a year.
The most amazing part is that I can imagine how many of these places that are in operation today, because someone see's the value and some probably produce for the stores. Old machinery is just the same as modern equipment, just have to keep the maintenance going to preserve
The astonishing complexity of these machines reveal the best of human creativity. Similar water and wind-powered sawmills were common in Europe and North American since the 1700's. IQ is real.
this is insane. the speed that the machine carries the logs into the blade is so fast, and the blade doesnt complain one bit. the things you could do to a human body in this shop is wild.
Omg you could charge people to work your sawmill. I would be 1 of the first to sign up. It’s amazing how quiet it was in the mill. I could spend hours just looking at the gears and belts The engineering that went into it is awesome
a helical gear set cut from timber!….un…be..f….n..lievable…just when i thought i’d seen it all..respect to you sir…thank you for taking me with you on that tour.
I've seen a similar mill. It ran on a duplex drive system. If the river did not have enough volume, as the river was very seasonal, it ran off a steam engine. All the offcuts and sawdust became the fuel for the engine. Almost no smoke it was so clean burning. The smell was incredible with the engine and mill going full tilt. Pine, steam, smokey air, steam oil and old style machine grease. Strong but not unpleasant.
very interesting for sure My great great grandfather owned and operated a water power saw mill in Fairfield Vermont in the late 1800 hundreds . All i have is a coule pictures of the mill buildings where it was .
Just found this - my father was a carpenter and I remember him getting some lumber from some mills like this when I was a child (not this one). One was water powered, one was powered by a gasoline engine. The water powered one however had a misalignment in the saw carriage so the rough sawn lumber was often a bit thicker on one end than the other (like a wedge) and Dad would often curse it when trying to run it through his workshop planer as some of the boards would jam if the thinner end went in first. If this is the Ivan Corkum I think he is, then we are 4th cousins twice removed.
1 thousand and one ways to get chewed up in machinery. Step into the maw of a greatly toothed creature and experience being a heartbeat away from certain death
I love when you have the stupid fucking background music volume up just enough so these old masters of the trades can't be heard! And thanks for showing the workings of the machinery.
That's quite elaborate and the energy for it is just sitting right there waiting to be harvested. It seems very effective. I get that electricity and engines have the ability to be used anywhere but it seems, where there is water power available, you'd think they'd still use it.
I watched this three times. Up at 3:30 am cup of coffee wife gets up and I said honey you have to watch this video. She looked at me like I was crazy and said I have to eat h up on the news no time for that video. I started laughing and figured it would be like her asking me to watch a home and garden video with her. Nope.
Great to see this mill still in operation and training new people in how to work it. That skittering on the return suggests either bumps or twists in your track, or that it isn't properly level. Your blade sounds like the teeth have been nicely sharpened.
This province has been logged out three times since Europeans arrived. Everything is third or fourth growth. And the white pine that remains is descended from the trees that were too crooked to interest the first loggers.
Yes, in those days you'd see plenty of 10" and 12" wide boards in the loads, occasionally an even wider one. I remember my father, a carpenter, would buy truck loads of lumber from mills in the 50's & 60's and it was not like today when a pile of lumber is all exact same length and width. In those days, you'd buy a specified quantity of board feet and it was all mixed lengths and widths. (A "board foot" measurement is one square foot by 1" thick, so an 8-ft board 6" wide is 4 board feet. Or if a 2" thick plank, then 8 board feet, etc. You calculate all the lengths and widths in the load to get the total board feet. Boards would be marked with a lumber crayon for length and width as they came off the saw and were trimmed up.)
It am still amazed at how powerful flowing water really is. All that equipment is run simply by flowing or falling water. No air pollution. No water pollution. No insane noise pollution. Love everything about it.
This old mill is actually high tech, it harnesses Earth’s gravity as a non-polluting source of power; beats fancy modern rigs any day since it is powered by clean, renewable and free energy; a despicable concept in the eyes of « the system ».
@@gilleslebrun7779 Oh yes ! The oil industry wants them to pay a monthly bill TO THEM, for the gas or diesel or electricity ! They can get "Fracked" ! lol.
Pleased to see a team of knowledgeable people operating an old mill. So important that we keep this on record, it may not be passed on to the next generation.
That sawmill should be preserved by a historical society, lots of people would be interested in learning how it used to be done
My respect to the sawman! He is a bit older and has problems with walking. But he knows the machine and moves the trees like a young man. In front of him I pull my hat. Thanks for the video and many greetings from Germany.
Zimmor The man who feeds the saw (operates the carriage) is called a "SAWYER." In sawmill terms, "He's 'the man'." The boss.
@@davidoickle1778 Thanks for the hint. I do not speak English, so the wrong word. In German language he would be called Saegemeister. (Sawmaster? Or Master of the Saw?) That would be more or less true because it honors his achievement. Greetings to you, somewhere in the world from Ger.
Zimmor great observations and well said!
My respect for the sawmill man. I am from Bulgaria,my people back in 1950 had sawmill like this bit the communist people disassemble it and made sure does not exist no more around village. I have been dreaming to see a sawmill like that and eventually build one in the mountain of Pirin in Bulgaria.
The engineering behind this is amazing, and God bless those workers
Man, I'll bet that place smells *great* when it's rolling. All that pine, water, and old iron? That's gonna be a really good smell. Seriously cool video, guys!
Smells like good old times...Tks!
Probably smells like how my grandparent's woodshed did when they were still alive. I split and ricked quite a few cords of wood in there by hand with a nice sharp axe.👍
Smelled like money to the sawmill owner...lol
And all that bitchmade aka you
Thanks for showing, local timber prosessed on a local mill powered with (ever) running water. Can't possibly be more enviromentally right. The fact that these old masters knows how to run it brings back good childhood memories
Hats off to Mr Corkum and the crew. Stay safe guys!
This is fantastic! Human ingenuity to harness the power of water for mechanical applications is so inspiring.
i could virtually smell that pine just like I could when I was younger and we were sawing. I got real calm all of a sudden. I miss those days.thanks for the great video! And when the sawyer first pulls the carriage back, it makes a tiny squeal or little chirp. there's no other sound like that I've ever heard.
What a wonderful video. I was lucky enough to have a father that made sure I saw the shipyards in Lunenburg. Wooden ships carved out by hand. God Bless
A wonderful piece of history that needs to be preserved.
The technology needs to be revived, especially now.
Wow, this is amazing! As a daughter of a logger, wife to a head saw filer, now retired, I enjoyed this. Thank you for the effort to share!
Could watch this for hours in finest detail . .
Greetings from Australia & thankyou . .
AMAZING WOODWORKER. Thanks!
This place should be kept working as a live museum for human invention capability and humanity legacy.
What a treat to see!! Thank you for the great video. This really is amazing how they were able to harness the power of moving water. That blade showed no sign of struggle to cut that pine. It must cost just peanuts to run. So efficient and cheap!!
A great video. I learned more about how a traditional water powered mill works watching this than I have in reading a half dozen books. Congrats to Mr. Corkum for preserving and sharing his knowledge and wonderful mill. Appreciate the nicely paced video.
I grew up in a sawmill i Denmark in the -50's - 60's ,
Although our saws were electrically powered, the saws and other machines in this old water-powered sawmill are much more advanced than ours.
Talk about muscle memory. The man could do that work blindfolded. Amazing work and thankyou fopr the video
This was very interesting, thank you for putting this on TH-cam for us to enjoy.
These are the real national treasures ,the mill and the man ,this is the type of operation that should be fully documented and preserved in working order as is ,the shame is there's countless different industries that were built by men and women ,when it was a matter of ,make what you need with what you have ,and that is completely lost on recent generations .And I'd bet the person that designed and built this mill never went to college or even high school. Thanks for the great video mate ,Cheers from down under.
I'm just old enough to remember 2 or 3 of these still running in the 50s as well as one that ran one steam that I worked in during 70s. Also my grandfather ran a Frick that was powered by a model T in Michigan back in the 50s some of the mill is still there today. I owned and operated a small firewood business for over 40 years and would come across these old sawmills in the woods and always wanted to take one and bring it back to life but sadly never did.
Amazing to watch! Thank you for sharing the history. Sawyer looks like he could operate that mill with his eyes closed.
I love visiting old mills. Old Americana rich history has always intrigued me. Thank you
old mills are amazing
I Love this, thank You so much for keeping this lumber mill alive.
Great running headsaw. That shim cut was impressive. Saw has a nice tickle on the way back.
Pleased to see a team of knowledgeable people operating an old mill. So important that we keep this on record, it may not be passed on to the next generation,
If I can turn back time and think the way these men thought back in the day I would have low blood pressure and a life that only few could ever wish for
Ah, maybe not, given that large numbers of people starving to death and lynching of people who went to a different church than you were also just the way things were when this mill was built. A broken bone or gash was often a literal death sentence, not solely due to infection but also through not being employable for longer than whatever savings you may have lasted.
And all those complex gears and machinery still works generations down the road. Different breed back then💯👍
I like how quiet it is, rock maple on steel! Very smart idea - a nice piece of history, keep it running!!
I love that old mill, amazing what they had in years past think better than today.
Every man at OSHAs' head would explode if they saw this. What a tribute to our forefathers ingenuity and dedication to get work done. You wouldn't have found them in an unemployment line! Great video, thanks!
Government regulation has forced people into unemployment lines!
@@andrewu2480 I cannot argue with that! Thanks for your comment!
Yet the people they work for traffic kids for fun…..the irony
This was fascinating to watch. Great job by the operators and filming, too. Many thanks from Portland Maine.
Wowww.... still working at this moment I love this old stuff.
Wow look at all those moving parts, I could watch this for 45 minutes. Old-school technology, I love the ingenuity! 🇨🇦
Would love to spend a month sawing with him and learning. That is a rare individual not many guys like him around. So much knowledge!!!
Everything from father to son, to the power of water... fascinating.
Simply fantastic! Thank you so much for showing taping editing uploading and sharing.
All the best luck to all involved people.
I'm only 32 years old and I have loved watching that show and now that machine and the runner might be old but they both still got it
I would have easily watched a 45 minute documentary on this.
Just awesome to see this running like the day it was built .
Really make you respect what it took when our forefathers started to build America and Nova Scotia at the turn of the century and even before that. This is what they need to teach in schools!!!
I wish the music wasn't playing over top of the man speaking.
Great video love all old technology and the people who still run them cheers from Australia
Slaps mill, 'Now this wouldnt pass inspection',
Starts mill up.
A minute later, "And it tore the ribs right off his backbone"
@@enwri To shreds you say?
What inspection? MARKETING greedy for money retards inspection? these mills worked for centuries.. without any fucking inspections and regulations..and people were happy. OFC sometimes accidents hapend..but when accidents do not hapend? Even today with all the regulations and inspections accidents still hapend.. Morrons working in dangerous places will end up as a meat cannon just because they are idiots and ignore some basic rules when you working with spinning blades equipement.
@Mister Sir There would have been a lot of gruesome injuries back in the real early days of mechanisation. Just found this the other day, www.rustyiron.com/literature/Flywheel_Explosions.pdf
article counts at least 60 major flywheel explosions a year.
@@enwri iui
That dude has forgot more then most of us could ever hope to learn.
This whole operation is poetry at work. God save the Corkums and their mill!
What a great piece of machinery. Thank you for sharing this.
Fascinating! Thanks for the video. I'm interesting in water-powered mill but it's so rare to find these days.
We all know pops been running the mill since 1967. 😂😂 I love watching old sawmills in action. They don't make em like that anymore.
Thank you for sharing!!
The people of Nova Scotia are truly amazing.
thanks, we are
@@toxicated3622 modest too...LOL
The most amazing part is that I can imagine how many of these places that are in operation today, because someone see's the value and some probably produce for the stores. Old machinery is just the same as modern equipment, just have to keep the maintenance going to preserve
The astonishing complexity of these machines reveal the best of human creativity. Similar water and wind-powered sawmills were common in Europe and North American since the 1700's. IQ is real.
you can't get better than a great Nova Scotia man than this one...
this is insane. the speed that the machine carries the logs into the blade is so fast, and the blade doesnt complain one bit. the things you could do to a human body in this shop is wild.
Wow
Fantastic
Thank you for sharing
That was great view of how it was done
Impressive set-up. Well worth a repeat viewing.
Omg you could charge people to work your sawmill. I would be 1 of the first to sign up. It’s amazing how quiet it was in the mill. I could spend hours just looking at the gears and belts The engineering that went into it is awesome
Absolutely love this a treasure of a place! Thank you for posting!
Preserving not just an excellent mill but an excellent South Shore accent as well!
a helical gear set cut from timber!….un…be..f….n..lievable…just when i thought i’d seen it all..respect to you sir…thank you for taking me with you on that tour.
aren't people ingenious? Loved this! thanks for sharing.
"Tore the ribs right off his backbone...." Oh my. This was before guards were invented. (Still not used)
Matt DeMatt
hmm...let’s put a handle on that thing so you can start it without getting your coat caught...
That hasn't happened to ME before, but I can't imagine anything more painful. And I'm not going to try anymore.
Very cool!
So glad I found this...
So glad you took the time to share!
Cheers :)
many thanks for posting this wonderful film.
I've seen a similar mill. It ran on a duplex drive system. If the river did not have enough volume, as the river was very seasonal, it ran off a steam engine. All the offcuts and sawdust became the fuel for the engine. Almost no smoke it was so clean burning. The smell was incredible with the engine and mill going full tilt.
Pine, steam, smokey air, steam oil and old style machine grease. Strong but not unpleasant.
One of the best things ive seen on youtube thank you
You just don't see stuff like this anymore awesome video
Out of this world fantastically beautiful!
Such a Beautiful piece of history thank you for sharing !
brilliant bit of history. hope it still remains for the future. cheers
Next time im in Lunenburg i got to have a look for it. Its awesome to see it in operation and would like to see it.
Amazing at the power they get from just a water wheel.
Very fun to watch but definitely a place to keep your wits about you.
Nothing like a happy story to start a video.
Who would dislike this video ?? Great video and great name 👍👍👍
Thank you for your video recording woodwork
Ivan is some cool man...I worked with many like him at Sydney Steel Plant...I wish him great health...
Love to see that fully restored.
very interesting for sure My great great grandfather owned and operated a water power saw mill in Fairfield Vermont in the late 1800 hundreds . All i have is a coule pictures of the mill buildings where it was .
Thanks this was fun to watch. With every pass of the saw you could hear a tree-hugger scream.
Just found this - my father was a carpenter and I remember him getting some lumber from some mills like this when I was a child (not this one). One was water powered, one was powered by a gasoline engine. The water powered one however had a misalignment in the saw carriage so the rough sawn lumber was often a bit thicker on one end than the other (like a wedge) and Dad would often curse it when trying to run it through his workshop planer as some of the boards would jam if the thinner end went in first. If this is the Ivan Corkum I think he is, then we are 4th cousins twice removed.
The world needs more places like this. No OSHA, just Darwin.
1 thousand and one ways to get chewed up in machinery.
Step into the maw of a greatly toothed creature and experience being a heartbeat away from certain death
absolute genius from beginning to end, beautiful
Beautiful set up there guys...Oh to have a creek to cut lumber with.. great video!
Amazing that this is water-powered.
Wow! Fantastic, One of the best things I've seen on TH-cam, thank you.
That is really nice antique equipment, but still in good working conditions.
I love when you have the stupid fucking background music volume up just enough so these old masters of the trades can't be heard! And thanks for showing the workings of the machinery.
anything built in Nova Scotia is just first rate...just proud of them men...
That's quite elaborate and the energy for it is just sitting right there waiting to be harvested. It seems very effective. I get that electricity and engines have the ability to be used anywhere but it seems, where there is water power available, you'd think they'd still use it.
Very cool. Now I've seen sawmills powered by water in both liquid and gaseous state. Water turbine and steam.
The music is an Irish reel called "Bird in the Bush" if anyone was wondering. And yea they should cut it after the intro.
I watched this three times. Up at 3:30 am cup of coffee wife gets up and I said honey you have to watch this video. She looked at me like I was crazy and said I have to eat h up on the news no time for that video. I started laughing and figured it would be like her asking me to watch a home and garden video with her. Nope.
Just what I needed this morning.
A great video and lesson on a local water-powered mill.
Great to see this mill still in operation and training new people in how to work it.
That skittering on the return suggests either bumps or twists in your track, or that it isn't properly level.
Your blade sounds like the teeth have been nicely sharpened.
Nothing short of amazing!
Cool stuff, thanks for sharing.
I’d bet the logs were a bit bigger when that mill was built!
This province has been logged out three times since Europeans arrived. Everything is third or fourth growth. And the white pine that remains is descended from the trees that were too crooked to interest the first loggers.
@@davidolie8392 logged out unsustainably?
Yes, in those days you'd see plenty of 10" and 12" wide boards in the loads, occasionally an even wider one. I remember my father, a carpenter, would buy truck loads of lumber from mills in the 50's & 60's and it was not like today when a pile of lumber is all exact same length and width. In those days, you'd buy a specified quantity of board feet and it was all mixed lengths and widths. (A "board foot" measurement is one square foot by 1" thick, so an 8-ft board 6" wide is 4 board feet. Or if a 2" thick plank, then 8 board feet, etc. You calculate all the lengths and widths in the load to get the total board feet. Boards would be marked with a lumber crayon for length and width as they came off the saw and were trimmed up.)
Great music! Great video!