I wonder if people realize how many man hours you folks put into this awesome project, I've worked around construction most of my life and sort of knew, but watching this makes me ask did I really understand the ginormous endeavor you people actually put into this project? The results is staggering to behold such a beautiful home and I do believe people in those days raised families in one room houses. Thank you all for restoring this homestead , by saving one wall I believe it is still the same home just simply revived. Salute to your family. ❤❤❤❤❤ God bless1
Thank you so much for the kind words and for understanding the massive amount of work it takes. (The building it & the filming it). It’s a labor of love to restore old homes. 🙏 Even the small & humble ones 🙃 You’ve been with us on the journey & we are so grateful! Thank you for watching this big long saga 🌲🌲🌲
Your rebuilding of this cabin takes me back to a time in my life when muscle power was more prevalent than money. I needed some kind of garage, and someone 15 miles away needed a very dilapidated single stall Model A garage removed from their back alley. Using a snowmobile trailer I disassembled the roof, split the corners with a chain saw, and laid the walls on the trailer to be hauled home, reassembled and repaired it, It didn't do much more than barely shelter a car through harsh winters, but it was free and lasted at least 10 yrs. What a fabulous documentary of a story that needed to be told. I hope you don't mind me including snippets of my life in my comments.
I LOVE your stories 🙌🏻🌲 In all honesty, looking back on this past year, it’s the shared stories with you and many others that have meant the most out of this filming project. Hearing the life memories of times that feel so different to the world today… back when men & women were very strong! It’s a treasure to me to learn. Keep telling stories! I know lots of others read them & are moved 🔥
Just waking up, a tear comes to my eye. I've got a documentary movie to watch. My morning is set. I'm hitting pause, I want to enjoy this in comfort in a couple of hours. First, my daily routine needs to be attended to. Shave, shower, and breakfast. Then maybe a spot of tea and settle into the recliner. I want to pay this experience the proper respect I'm confident it deserves. If you assume I'm a dedicated fan of this project and Western American history in general, you're right on the money. I'll check back later. 🤠👍
You are so good to us-thank you, friend ❤️ Enjoy it at your leisure; it’s a documentary, you’re right 😄 Hope you enjoy the new content and seeing the story of this humble house come together 🙌🏻 Cheers!
I respect your values and hard work. I love how the children will have lasting memories of the restored home. Intangible gifts that will last forever. Many blessings to you, your family, and friends.
Another well done vid with tons of educational background. I think it is just swell that your family has an interest in your family background and restore structures before they are gone forever, Marketing has done a real number on us to get us to spend money - new is better, everything has to be new. What a bummer - old can have new life - the whole while giving us a feel for how people made due with what they had. Many times - second hand was a blessing and fit just right. I will be watching for what your family is into down the road.
Your comment is beautiful-thank you for what you said 🙌🏻 It’s humble history, but there is so much authenticity to it. A thing lost in the modern world. Cheers to you from us here in Montana 🌲 🌲 🌲
I would play in an old milk 🥛 barn and grainy with on the side lento had horse drone items like to hitch 3 horses 🐎 for framing. Many of the buildings on the ranch are gone, and I am glad you guys save a bit of history.
We this year took down my great grandparent's old home at the ranch. I was looking around my nephew, showing me the firechimany had old brick that say the town's na.e it was build. I have some two bricks here in my home. Also, it had a clay pipe in the center. My home town stores and old homes are made from these bricks. My other brother has a brick mold with the letters saying the name of our town. Also on the ranch is a cave in dugout home, which a man lived in it taking care of a flock of sheep 🐑 in the summer. I can't wait for your next project you're going to do. Where my grandparents' home was first set at the ranch, my oldest brother found many things in the dirt. In the corner field is a routine old farm wagon. Our family has a lot of history here where I grew up.
Oh wow what history! I love hearing the stories of other homes/land/families that are built from the same stock as ours 🙌🏻 How wonderful that you have saved some archaeology-that brick is SO special! Lewistown had a special clay that made deep purple brick. Our local Catholic Church is built of it. Nothing made today comes close to its beauty.
History is fascinating. Old homes and buildings like this are seen on the prairies of North America. I've seen old structures built by homesteaders in rural Alberta. How they were built, without the modern tools we use now, is amazing. One of my older sisters was exploring next to our dad's farm in Alberta, and she found an abandoned farm house. She went inside and found a calendar from the 1930s, which she still has. Alberta, Saskatchewan, Montana, and North Dakota have a shared history that goes back to the fur trading days. It's pretty cool to learn about how people were living in these areas long ago. I like what you did with this cabin. It's beautiful. I wonder what it was used for. Interesting if it was a school. My parents, and their siblings went to a one room school in rural Alberta, in the 1920s, the 1930s, and in the 1940s. Cheers! ✌️
Cheers! I love hearing your stories about rural Alberta-it's fascinating how the homesteading/fur trading days connect us all. Robbie has always said he’d love to live in Alberta-good farm ground! The old days were physically harder, but so full of meaning. Families made it through together. Cheers from Montana!
Thank you making the time to compile it into a full commentary. (Might also be great to enter it into the country historical records like this?) This way it will be easier to share with friends and family as far as Europe. Your efforts - even if they will never compensate monetarily for all the hours spent in the production - are now a part of our Western history, much like Ken Burn’s “The West” and its story of the Love pioneer family.
I'm humbled by your comment-thank you for recognizing the work that went into this story. What a great idea on historical records. I’m going to talk to our local librarian; she will know how to go about preserving this.
Hi Jessie and Robie, This is great content with a lot of new elements. It's very interesting how your uncle restored Uncle Ben Aks. You brought up a lot more historical information about the Seadlers' early times in Montana. I Wish you all from here a Merry Christmas 2024 and a Great New Year 2025 with health & prosperity for your farming. I did make a special Christmas🎄💫 greeting for you guys over here In Montana🇺🇸 Greetings & Blessings to all of you Hubertus🇳🇴🇳🇱🙏🏻🎄💫☮🇺🇸Cheers.
Many thanks to you, Hubertus! You’ve been with us since early on-your support has meant a lot 🌲🌲🌲❤️❤️❤️ Cheers from Montana 🇺🇸 Thank you for watching & being a part of the journey. Your friends, The Jacksons
One suggestion for driving nail into wood, hammer blow on the nail, should be One short then One Big not vice versa and continue the process till it through!
Great tip-I will have to practice it! Thank you 🙌🏻😄 I was not prepared for the size of those square nails-whewwww they were sturdy. Impossible to pull out once in!
Great masterpiece!🎉 Congratulations for your dedication and perseverance💪 I restore an abandoned house and when I have time I am watching others people and their restoration. Happy new year!🎉
I just looked up your project! Subscribed 🙌🏻 If you decide to post videos about your journey I’d love to see! Thanks for your kind words about our work. It’s been a huge journey that we treasure. Happy New Year!
I wonder if people realize how many man hours you folks put into this awesome project, I've worked around construction most of my life and sort of knew, but watching this makes me ask did I really understand the ginormous endeavor you people actually put into this project? The results is staggering to behold such a beautiful home and I do believe people in those days raised families in one room houses. Thank you all for restoring this homestead , by saving one wall I believe it is still the same home just simply revived. Salute to your family. ❤❤❤❤❤ God bless1
Thank you so much for the kind words and for understanding the massive amount of work it takes. (The building it & the filming it). It’s a labor of love to restore old homes. 🙏 Even the small & humble ones 🙃 You’ve been with us on the journey & we are so grateful! Thank you for watching this big long saga 🌲🌲🌲
Your rebuilding of this cabin takes me back to a time in my life when muscle power was more prevalent than money. I needed some kind of garage, and someone 15 miles away needed a very dilapidated single stall Model A garage removed from their back alley. Using a snowmobile trailer I disassembled the roof, split the corners with a chain saw, and laid the walls on the trailer to be hauled home, reassembled and repaired it, It didn't do much more than barely shelter a car through harsh winters, but it was free and lasted at least 10 yrs.
What a fabulous documentary of a story that needed to be told. I hope you don't mind me including snippets of my life in my comments.
I LOVE your stories 🙌🏻🌲 In all honesty, looking back on this past year, it’s the shared stories with you and many others that have meant the most out of this filming project.
Hearing the life memories of times that feel so different to the world today… back when men & women were very strong! It’s a treasure to me to learn. Keep telling stories! I know lots of others read them & are moved 🔥
Just waking up, a tear comes to my eye. I've got a documentary movie to watch. My morning is set. I'm hitting pause, I want to enjoy this in comfort in a couple of hours. First, my daily routine needs to be attended to. Shave, shower, and breakfast. Then maybe a spot of tea and settle into the recliner. I want to pay this experience the proper respect I'm confident it deserves. If you assume I'm a dedicated fan of this project and Western American history in general, you're right on the money. I'll check back later. 🤠👍
You are so good to us-thank you, friend ❤️ Enjoy it at your leisure; it’s a documentary, you’re right 😄 Hope you enjoy the new content and seeing the story of this humble house come together 🙌🏻 Cheers!
I respect your values and hard work. I love how the children will have lasting memories of the restored home. Intangible gifts that will last forever. Many blessings to you, your family, and friends.
Your comment hits right to my heart-thank you ❤️ Thanks for being with us on this year long journey. God Bless you
Very very good thank you my friend ❤
Cheers 🙌🏻 Merry Christmas from us in Montana!
Another well done vid with tons of educational background. I think it is just swell that your family has an interest in your family background and restore structures before they are gone forever,
Marketing has done a real number on us to get us to spend money - new is better, everything has to be new. What a bummer - old can have new life - the whole while giving us a feel for how people made due with what they had. Many times - second hand was a blessing and fit just right. I will be watching for what your family is into down the road.
Your comment is beautiful-thank you for what you said 🙌🏻 It’s humble history, but there is so much authenticity to it. A thing lost in the modern world. Cheers to you from us here in Montana 🌲 🌲 🌲
Fascinating! So interesting!
Thank you! Means a lot
Awesome video, thank you.
Thank you so much for watching this big long saga!
I would play in an old milk 🥛 barn and grainy with on the side lento had horse drone items like to hitch 3 horses 🐎 for framing. Many of the buildings on the ranch are gone, and I am glad you guys save a bit of history.
I was thinking about how important horses once were-not that long ago! Now all those breeds and work horses are nearly gone... Lost knowledge.
We this year took down my great grandparent's old home at the ranch. I was looking around my nephew, showing me the firechimany had old brick that say the town's na.e it was build. I have some two bricks here in my home. Also, it had a clay pipe in the center. My home town stores and old homes are made from these bricks. My other brother has a brick mold with the letters saying the name of our town. Also on the ranch is a cave in dugout home, which a man lived in it taking care of a flock of sheep 🐑 in the summer. I can't wait for your next project you're going to do. Where my grandparents' home was first set at the ranch, my oldest brother found many things in the dirt. In the corner field is a routine old farm wagon. Our family has a lot of history here where I grew up.
Oh wow what history! I love hearing the stories of other homes/land/families that are built from the same stock as ours 🙌🏻
How wonderful that you have saved some archaeology-that brick is SO special! Lewistown had a special clay that made deep purple brick. Our local Catholic Church is built of it. Nothing made today comes close to its beauty.
History is fascinating. Old homes and buildings like this are seen on the prairies of North America. I've seen old structures built by homesteaders in rural Alberta. How they were built, without the modern tools we use now, is amazing.
One of my older sisters was exploring next to our dad's farm in Alberta, and she found an abandoned farm house. She went inside and found a calendar from the 1930s, which she still has.
Alberta, Saskatchewan, Montana, and North Dakota have a shared history that goes back to the fur trading days. It's pretty cool to learn about how people were living in these areas long ago.
I like what you did with this cabin. It's beautiful. I wonder what it was used for. Interesting if it was a school. My parents, and their siblings went to a one room school in rural Alberta, in the 1920s, the 1930s, and in the 1940s.
Cheers! ✌️
Cheers! I love hearing your stories about rural Alberta-it's fascinating how the homesteading/fur trading days connect us all. Robbie has always said he’d love to live in Alberta-good farm ground!
The old days were physically harder, but so full of meaning. Families made it through together. Cheers from Montana!
@@Montana_Ranch_Rescue I'd also like to visit Montana. I have relatives who have been there, and they said it was nice. Cheers!
Thank you making the time to compile it into a full commentary. (Might also be great to enter it into the country historical records like this?)
This way it will be easier to share with friends and family as far as Europe.
Your efforts - even if they will never compensate monetarily for all the hours spent in the production - are now a part of our Western history, much like Ken Burn’s “The West” and its story of the Love pioneer family.
I'm humbled by your comment-thank you for recognizing the work that went into this story. What a great idea on historical records. I’m going to talk to our local librarian; she will know how to go about preserving this.
Hi Jessie and Robie, This is great content with a lot of new elements. It's very interesting how your uncle restored Uncle Ben Aks. You brought up a lot more historical information about the Seadlers' early times in Montana. I Wish you all from here a Merry Christmas 2024 and a Great New Year 2025 with health & prosperity for your farming. I did make a special Christmas🎄💫 greeting for you guys over here In Montana🇺🇸 Greetings & Blessings to all of you Hubertus🇳🇴🇳🇱🙏🏻🎄💫☮🇺🇸Cheers.
Many thanks to you, Hubertus! You’ve been with us since early on-your support has meant a lot 🌲🌲🌲❤️❤️❤️ Cheers from Montana 🇺🇸 Thank you for watching & being a part of the journey. Your friends, The Jacksons
One suggestion for driving nail into wood, hammer blow on the nail, should be One short then One Big not vice versa and continue the process till it through!
Great tip-I will have to practice it! Thank you 🙌🏻😄 I was not prepared for the size of those square nails-whewwww they were sturdy. Impossible to pull out once in!
❤
Cheers 🙌🏻
Wooden butter knife? Available? ❤
Ahh it sold but I can absolutely get to the woodshop & make you another!
@@Montana_Ranch_Rescuewould love that!!
Great masterpiece!🎉 Congratulations for your dedication and perseverance💪 I restore an abandoned house and when I have time I am watching others people and their restoration. Happy new year!🎉
I just looked up your project! Subscribed 🙌🏻 If you decide to post videos about your journey I’d love to see!
Thanks for your kind words about our work. It’s been a huge journey that we treasure. Happy New Year!