Hi guys, we now have a patreon that you can go to and sign up to donate to support the channel. As of now there is no bonus content for signing up, but in the future there will be exclusive content and extended cuts of out videos for signing up. if you cannot afford to sign up, then we appreciate you all the same, and we thank you for watching the channel. heres a link for anyone who wants to check it out: www.patreon.com/belowtheplains link will also be in the description. thank you!
Hey everyone! Sorry if the video looks a little strange, we accidentally recorded it in 24 frames per second, instead of our usual 60fps.. just this one video, thought if let u know! It was just too good of a pit to not release. Thanks everyone. Be sure to like and comment to help us out!
Your video's are done so well, with the history and company images of the bottles you find. Very educational and makes them much more enjoyable. I know that must take you quite a bit of time to find those and embed them into your videos but for us viewers it makes your digging videos the best there is.
omg thanks! yeah you have no idea how long it took me to edit this video,.. ive been getting pretty fast but i probably put like.. maybe 40-50 hours into editing this video and then tom spent like 4 hours researching for it.. but thank you. i know its the quality that's gonna help our channel, and we are both pretty determined to do things the best that we can, even if its a ton of extra work. we both really appreciate you saying that! thank you, comments like really make this job worth while!
@@BelowthePlains maybe less time for you as your obviously more dedicated to your craft then your counterparts... I.e. enjoy your experience and everyone else enjoys your journey!!!💯
First time watching this channel! Awesome places and even awesomer finds!!! The bottle at 2:45 from a company in Millville, NJ, immediately caught my eye. Whitall Tatum Company began in 1806 and was one of the earliest glass companies in that area of New Jersey. The sand in that area is ideal for glassmaking. They made a lot of electrical insulators, which we find often here in the Colorado mountains. Millville and neighboring Vineland, NJ, still have many glass companies operating today. I know this because I am a scientific glassblower. In my early years, we purchased most of our glass and flask blanks from companies there. I recently retired after 44 years, so I have cut way back on working. Now, I work out of my garage.
I used to dig bottles in old cellar holes and in the woods. You guys are fast and your identifications are right on! I can smell the dirt! Such fun and a way to know history and treasure hunt at the same time. People have no idea.
Wow I genuinely love what y’all do! I live in an area full of history from the American revolution and so forth… I constantly find myself looking at old trees wondering about all of the people who have passed by the very same tree or sat against it in the last 200 years. I would love to dig out an area like this and find old glass pieces and what not. It really makes me reflect on the time period and what it really was like for all of those who came before us and paved the way…. To all of whom I know I am forever grateful for ♥️ this truly is amazing!
My great uncles used to dig for bottles back in the 1960's. When the last one died one whole side of his basement was stacked with boxes of old bottles. Hundreds of cool bottles.
oh wow! i hope they ended up somewhere safe! yeah the 60s are when this hobby took off.. i wish i could go back in time, when everything wasnt cemented over and id have first pick! but i guess we have the internet, so doing research is a million times easier. thanks for watching and commenting!
I’ve just discovered this channel and I was glued to my seat watching all those fabulous bottles and jars come out. I love the commentary and the pace of the video: find after find with the description. Utterly riveting! I’m intrigued; how do you know which area to dig? I’m going to drink my cold coffee now….
I have no idea why I find your videos so entertaining. I just watch one right after the other. I am going to watch Ever one of them from beginning to now
And imagine how disappointed will be to dig ours up in 100 years...still the same shape plastic, huge wastes of resources etc! These bottles could be sterilised and reused after 100+ years in the ground.
Great finds as usual! Just so you are aware, the Chamberlain & Co bottle fragment is actually older than shown here. Chamberlain & Company switched their name to Chamberlain Medicine Company in 1892, only keeping the old “Chamberlain & Co” name on their bitters products. All other bottles (as far as anyone knows) post-1892 had the “Chamberlain Med Co”, thus making this fragment date to 1892 at the latest.
oh wow. ah i had some suspicions that some of the bottles in the pit seemed to be earlier than the rest.. yeah there were a few in there that were like a decade older than everything else.. theres probably another pit on that property too.. well thanks for letting us know, all these companies are kinda hard to research. thanks for watching!
I just discovered your channel and I love it. My dad collected old bottles. He did not go on digs but he always looked for them when he was out in the woods hunting. He managed to find quite a few. I inherited his small collection when he passed away. Your videos take me on an adventure each time I watch one. You are knowledgeable about what you find. Thank you!
wow thank you! glad you found the channel. yeah im actually blown away by all the people who seem to have collected bottles. i was hoping that my channel would grow to the point where it gets more young people enthused about these old bottles, bc for now its such a niche hobby. well thanks for watching and leaving us a comment!
haha yeah we actually found 2 of them but the video was so long that we had to cut a bunch of it down.. it shows it at the end tho.. it was a slightly different shade, and the fact that we had a pair that were different brought the value of them up.. really cool bottles tho, not super rare, but fairly uncommon.. yeah this was probably the best residential pit ive ever dug from this particular era.. they arent all this good! maybe like 1 in 20 comes close. well im glad you found our videos! hope you enjoy the rest of our content.. just be warned, the further you go back, the rougher the video is.. we've just been figuring this out as we go over the past year. well thanks for watching and commenting!
Your doing a great job! I’ve watched all the videos now. That cobalt blue is one of the colors in my kitchen (total girl thing i know😂) But I’ve also always enjoyed things from the old days. You’ve got yourself a nice little niche going, best of luck to y’all!
This is my favorite video so far: the Yukon Rainier sample beer, the Ayers WITH STOPPER(!), and the snuff bottle are all so very unique as well as pristine. The fact that you found an intact lantern and teapot is amazing. Cool beans!!!
Great video! I used to dig old bottles back in the early 1960's. The place I live at in a remote valley in the Death Valley Park system has a 150 year old dump where everyone dumped their trash. Ive taken out some pretty cool stuff. Theres another old dump at a very remote old gold mine cabin tbat was built in 1872. The cabin still has the wood burning Sunshine Bread Oven brought to the cabin in 1882. The dump has dozens of old Log Cabin Syrup cans in the shape of a log cabin with the chimney pour spout. I havent dug in that dump yet, but I'm sure there's buried treasures to be discovered!
You don't talk about how much reaserch and talking to people to be permitted to dig a spot... Your knowledge of the old glass containers is a learned skill that separates the amateur and the true pros.... Enjoy your success and unusual finds... Thanks again for the adventure.... 🌼🌼🌼
I love the ones with writing and identification; I wonder if they realized their bottles would survive this long!!!! I'm sure they were just getting them into the hands of buyers, but some of those were sturdy buggers. Perhaps thicker glass? Perscriptions, medications, snake oils of all variety. My last doctor had a HUGE collection, and they were fascinating!
oh thats really cool that a doctor had those old medicines.. thats one of the things i collect. i like the snake oils and the "cures" ..theres just something about them that just screams wild wild west. yeah i always think about that too, if they had any idea that someday their trash would be sought out and treasured. makes me wonder what we throw away today, that people in a 100 years will find interesting. thanks for watching! and leaving a comment
I have dug places like this in Chicago. In 2011, right across the street from Oprah's Winfrey studios they were putting in an apartment building and a friend and I decided to check it out. We dug 2 - 30 gallon coolers full of blob tops and a full crock that was in perfect condition. We started pulling out bottles on an angle and got scared that the hole might collapse on us and had to quit.
hahah yeah i know exactly what you mean. Yeah Chicago would be a great place to dig, if all the best spots werent cemented over! sounds fun tho.. we dont find a ton of blobs around here so when we do, especially a soda, then its a damn good day. Thanks for watching and commenting!
Just so you know, those nurser bottles can be embossed from local drug stores. Also that trial Rainier is a great bottle! The only ones I ever dug was in Tacoma! He is a long way from home! Those Ayers are a great bottle as well! Hard to find too! Great stuff!
yeah we had to look up that little beer bottle. that thing is so unbelievably cool, i was pretty excited about that one. ive dug a few ayers bottles before but theyre usually just quite simple bottles compared to the ones we found in this pit. and i did not know that about the nurser bottles. good to know, ill have to keep a look out for that, hopefully i didnt miss one before. thanks for leaving us a comment! and thanks for watching
I always seem to find embalming supplies. I haven't searched in a while because of it. But... that beautiful blue bottle, makes me want to dig again. Thank you.
ahh well thank you! yeah its a lot of extra work, but i feel like it really rounds out the videos. to get sense of how the product was marketed back in its day. well im glad you liked it. thanks for watching and leaving a comment!
You amaze me how you continue to find these locations from old maps to what is there now. Incredible bottles, mostly intact. Favorite was the blue hair tonic with stopper. Great video😀👍
haha yeah.. we actually found this one on accident.. it was right next to that green brick house in yankton.. its that video of ours that got 200k views,. it was a different property and we wouldnt have even looked there, but we couldnt find the old pit on the other property. yeah we got really lucky finding this one. Yeah that pit had some amazing finds.. we actually had to cut a bunch of clips bc the run time was just getting too long. thanks man, we appreciate the comment!
So refreshing to see treasures being unearthed with a wooden stick. You are an impressive archeologist, doing research on possible sites and offering spot on information about your finds. I was surprised to see how young you are. Good work! I am subscribing.
Happy coincidence. Just happening to have them at the ready, each time a beer bottle came out I took a drink of beer and every time a whiskey bottle came out, I took a sip of whiskey. I enjoyed this video considerably.
ah thank you! well glad you like the channel. its a TON of work so im hoping it begins to pick up a little bit. well thank you for watching and leaving us a comment!
yeah we ended up with 2 of them by the end of it.. it was in the end scene.. we had a lot more footage but the runtime was getting a little crazy. thanks for watching and leaving us a comment. take care!
Just found your channel and I must say, you guys have some of the best bottle digging videos out there. Very good camera work, nice history info, and very calming. You don't freak out like a lot of other channels I watch. Keep up the good work!
yeah that cobalts a cool color. probably the rarest color (other than bromoseltzers).. we actually spent aboutt 5 years in south dakota trying to find a cobalt blob soda thats probably the rarest bottle in the dakotas, only 3 known and they arent in great condition.. we found a piece of one, but we didnt even find 20% of the bottle in the entire pit, but i think tom still has it.. and yeah those aye's are super cool, we found a third one but it was in pieces. well thank you for watching and leaving us a comment!
I was looking over a few bottles I have and came across tiny blue Vicks bottle an inch tall half inch wide an a little over a quarter inch thick. I have a few nice blue bottles a 2 inch round, a 3 inch tall 6 sided one and a tall thin-necked one about 4 inches tall, I have three green 6 sided bottles marked "not to be taken" and a round one also some amber also a slecton of ink wells.Must say I love the blues.
Nice finds boys. Wow that pen is actually pretty cool. I come across the occasional bakelite piece, but it's usually just a stem to a tobacco pipe. Keep up the good work and keep the videos rolling out
yeah it was probably one of my favorite things from that site.. but it was overall just a really good dig site. thanks for watching, and yeah we intend to keep them coming. take care
well thanks! yeah it took some time to figure out with the editing and it takes FOREVER but.. ya gotta stand out somehow so i think the extra work is worth it. thanks for leaving us a comment
Just Amazing, I'm running around my house showing everyone in my house what your pulling out lol Fantastic haul, great bottles some I got so so excited about Thanks for sharing 👍
So i want to know how I can start doing this. I am so very intrigued. I recently found a stash of vintage dishes just lying in the woods when I was walking my dog. 2 jadeite plates, a milk glass plate, a 1930s home Laughlin serving bowl. An anchor hocking mixing bowl, and in the back yard of where I am staying, I found a jadeite bowl sticking out of the dirt, just the most bizarre and random thing ever. I just think it's amazing. And what you are doing I can only imagine to be so exciting and exhilarating. It's a treasure hunt. Fantastic!
I thoroughly enjoyed this video. So very interesting. I loved the information you gave on the Companies. The blue Cold Cream bottles are blue milk glass. Will you sell me the first perfume bottle you dug up? I collect those.
Curious, how or what do you use to get the inside of the bottles so clean? I have used powdered efferent/denture cleaning tabs and nearly boiling hot h2o and let the bottles sit over night, to loosen grime and remove hard water scale. Is there a more effective method, you Gents prefer to clean your finds? Enjoyed your show! At 61 years young, one of my favorite pastimes is digging for treasures... I used to beg my Daddy to take me with him when it was time to make a dump run. He thought it strange his 9yr old daughter loved digging around our old local area dump site.. Daddy didn't see his daughter as part tomboy & part pirate! He knew it wasn't ladylike, but he always let me ride shotgun and go digging anyways! My best pirate plunder found, just a few years ago...was at the bottom of an old 20' high burn pile of remodeling scrap in the lower acreage at our mobile home park... beams, 2×4s, wooden doors, trim, old cabinets, picket fence sections etc my hubby & I sorted through & stacked it all on pallets pulled from the pile, shared with our neighbors, and together we repurposed nearly everything in that burn pile, instead of burning it up. In the last foot of that pile I found an old, rusty, black powder pistol that hubby has salvaged and is restoring.
yes it is! well thanks, i was kinda stressed out about it. seems like we just have technical problem after technical problem and this one was just a dumb mistake. take care and have a great summer yourself!
I absolutely enjoy watching you find antique bottles, etc. A great addition to your channel would be to show your “finds” before and after they’re cleaned. Fascinating.
I love watching you pull treasures out of the ground! But I never get to see them cleaned up. I would really like to see how those things are cleaned and how they can be used again, or not, and how theyare displayed. Maybe you could do a video on that ? To see if you can put pieces back together, and if and how they can have a use again for another hundred years. In the meantime I'll keep watching you dig! ❤❤❤😂😂😂
Tips for good digging from an old girl (in my 70's) ... beside railways when in the day they simply dumped all along the tracks, in rivers and lakes. Old cellar holes and at bargaps along the stone walls where the farms would dump their trash. Burned out old homesteads and places along trails. ALWAYS have permission from landowners and leave no open digs when done. Enjoy and RESPECT THE LAND.
Only made it 6 minutes in the vid so far, and I absolutely love that sample beer bottle. Very cool find, never expected to see so many intact bottles come out of the ground. 👍😎👍
well enjoy i hope you enjoyed the rest of the video! and yeah, ive found quite a few sample beer bottles on them, but never anything with embossing on it like that.. well thank you for watching and leaving us a comment!
Yeah that was one of my favorites! i collect small bottles and that one was something i had never seen before. well thank you. we appreciate you leaving us a comment!
Wow! Those ayers and raineer mini beer are amazing. Not a bad dig guys! Its always nice to see a longer video and this one did not disappoint. Thanks for taking us along
Sweet........ That was definitely a pit that just kept on giving. And surprising how much of it was all intact yet. My favorites of course the colored Ayers bottles. And the lamp base, as well as the pitcher. When I saw that crock at first I was thinking please, please let it be intact.............. But alas.......... Super video today guys. As always I loved it. :)
yeah we find a ton of crocks.. it always seems like 99% of the time they're broken but when we find a pit with a fully intact one, we usually find at least 1 or 2 more. idk why but all the unbroken ones we get seem to come in bulk.. most of them arent like super rare or valuable but there are ones from up here that have "redwing" stamped on them (from redwing minnesota) and those ones are super collectable. yeah that was a really awesome pit, we actually had a bunch more footage of it but the video was getting a little long. well im glad you liked the video, and we really do appreciate you leaving us a comment again. take care
@@BelowthePlains Yeah, back in the day my grandparents had a couple of the Redwing. Think they got them at farm auctions over time. I know they was a highly desired name. Sadly time took it's toll and no longer in the family. Still got some old ones, but no Redwings. Anyhow, as always I loved the video. Great content seeing our past come to surface again. Some of the videos, if they get too long.......... but have more interesting finds then maybe make a part 2. I know I wouldn't mind a part 2 and I bet your other followers would agree. :)
The history you share is really great and so are the things you are finding. How did you know where to dig at that house? Glass doesn't show up on a metal detector or does it?
oh i know right.. it honestly doesnt look like its over 100 years old.. and that glass was just so clean looking. idk why but some bottles were made with a certain type of glass that when you pull it out of the ground, it looks like it was put there yesterday.. the mud just falls off and it doesnt get that ground iridescence.. thanks for watching and commenting!
Really enjoying watching you find all these different bottles. Their all awesome finds. Some rarer then others I suspect. Glad I found your stream. Thks👍
Well im glad you found our channel too! yeah obviously the liquor bottles are super common, as you can see by the way we found about 50 of them in 1 pit, but yeah, there was a few bottles in that pit that neither of us had come across before. like that little amber sample beer bottle. Well thanks for watching and leaving us a comment!
I love your channel. My dad was a bottle digger too. Once he “dug” at the site of a high rise building excavation in downtown Houston Texas. We drove down there with him. He was so excited because it had once been garbage done for the whole city. He found some beautiful bottles that were oxidized and amazing. He would’ve gotten more at security chase him off. Luckily he had his own badge that he didn’t flash it Tuesday. Those bottles are probably the one thing my children will fight over when I’m gone lol. I would like to pick up more bottles. I know you look in public records by the side of the pits. Do you need a permit? I find what you do fascinating and love the videos again I will always watch.
Thanks bruv! thats awesome, thank you. its always great to get some reassurance that the quality of our videos is good enough to get people to come back. thanks for watching and leaving us a comment!
hahaha yeah it was! i only wish they could all be that full. we almost didnt even dig it because when we probed it for some reason, we didnt hit very much glass. might have to go back to that site and look for an earlier pit. well thanks for watching and commenting!
ahh thank you. yeah thats what it was.. we were just kinda running out of ideas for titles bc we basically do the same thing in every video and theres only so many ways to say the same thing. thanks for the comment!
hahaha ah mostly a bad back, but yeah.. this one was filmed at the beginning of the year and i remember at the end of this trip when i got back home to north dakota i slept for like 3 days. it was a really good trip/dig tho. thanks for watching and leaving us a comment
Im new. I just found you today. I love small bottles.I like the 1915 bottles.I also love the colored bottles also. Im PatriciaPierce from Lewisville Ohio. Im 66 ys. And cant walk now due to bad hip bones. I ll be watching and learning from you. Thanks
haha thank you! yeah that amber one is super rare, i think theres only 3-4.. we had a video of us pulling it out, but it got deleted on accident when we were transferring clips for the camera to the computer. Well thanks for watching and leaving us a comment!
I just found your channel. I live in Illinois and have found some things in the backyard of my 1910 home. Thanks for what you do! So much fun to watch.
It's interesting to see what they find. Lots of broken glass and china pieces. Digging in the dirt sounds like fun. The only dirt I've ever dug in is potato dirt.
Somehow this was in my recommendations & I was thrilled to see it was in Yankton. I’ve lived all over SD, which made the video even more fun to watch. Great finds!
Most likely had been an outhouse. I grew up in upstate NY, outside of NYC in an area that had been settled by the Dutch in the mid 17th century. It wasn't all that uncommon in the 1960's to find caches such as this when doing any type of digging on the older properties. Outhouses are amazing time capsules.
Im just blown away that you found all that in a relatively small pit. must have been someone with a few bucks to spend! what an awesome video. hardly noticed the frame rate, it actually looked pretty good. great dig guys, that was really a blast to watch
Well thank you! glad you enjoyed it.. yeah it was a pretty good dig.. tons of bottles but most of them were unembossed liquor and medicines.. which is par for the course so i cant complain. had some really unique finds. thanks for watching
Guys if u put a brush in the hole u can get a lot more dirt off by brushing them clean! Arsenic seems to be in every hole! It was used to treat syphilis! A wide spread problem for many in this era!
oh i know! and we found 2 of them.. second one was at the very end but we didnt add some of the bottles we dug out bc the runtime was getting a little crazy. thanks for watching and commenting!
Hello ! Awesomeness. I'm impressed with the 3 bottles you showed at the end of the video. But when you got your lamp pulled it truly surprised me too.👍👍👍👍👍👍
really wonderful finds, and not all that deep. Sixty some years ago my husband had a carpenter job miles from where we lived and the person who employed him let us stay at his home that had been his grandmothers. No elec. no water, and no garbage. so it was roughing it but we made it work. We did have a gas cook stove so I could cook but he told me to bury the garbage in the back yard. When my husband would come home in the evening he would take a shovel and dig a pit and throw in the garbage. Looking back it makes me wonder.
Hi guys, we now have a patreon that you can go to and sign up to donate to support the channel. As of now there is no bonus content for signing up, but in the future there will be exclusive content and extended cuts of out videos for signing up. if you cannot afford to sign up, then we appreciate you all the same, and we thank you for watching the channel.
heres a link for anyone who wants to check it out:
www.patreon.com/belowtheplains
link will also be in the description. thank you!
Hi tom
Hey everyone! Sorry if the video looks a little strange, we accidentally recorded it in 24 frames per second, instead of our usual 60fps.. just this one video, thought if let u know! It was just too good of a pit to not release. Thanks everyone. Be sure to like and comment to help us out!
Would have never noticed. If you didn't worry yourself to death 💀
Looks perfect on my end! Thanks for sharing it
Do you sell these finds? I am very interested in a couple of them. I was born in St Joseph, MO.
It's fine!!
@@tappel9019 I think I have a few from your area
Your video's are done so well, with the history and company images of the bottles you find. Very educational and makes them much more enjoyable. I know that must take you quite a bit of time to find those and embed them into your videos but for us viewers it makes your digging videos the best there is.
omg thanks! yeah you have no idea how long it took me to edit this video,.. ive been getting pretty fast but i probably put like.. maybe 40-50 hours into editing this video and then tom spent like 4 hours researching for it.. but thank you. i know its the quality that's gonna help our channel, and we are both pretty determined to do things the best that we can, even if its a ton of extra work. we both really appreciate you saying that! thank you, comments like really make this job worth while!
@@BelowthePlains maybe less time for you as your obviously more dedicated to your craft then your counterparts... I.e. enjoy your experience and everyone else enjoys your journey!!!💯
Highly agree!
@@BelowthePlains 1qqqq121111eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeerrerweeeeeewereeeeeeeeweeeereeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee33ereeeeeereeeeeeerreeeeerrreeeererreerrerwereeeerrrewreerwewreeerwrrereerrwreee4weeererwrrrrrrrewrweweee2
Agree 100%
First time watching this channel! Awesome places and even awesomer finds!!! The bottle at 2:45 from a company in Millville, NJ, immediately caught my eye. Whitall Tatum Company began in 1806 and was one of the earliest glass companies in that area of New Jersey. The sand in that area is ideal for glassmaking. They made a lot of electrical insulators, which we find often here in the Colorado mountains. Millville and neighboring Vineland, NJ, still have many glass companies operating today. I know this because I am a scientific glassblower. In my early years, we purchased most of our glass and flask blanks from companies there. I recently retired after 44 years, so I have cut way back on working. Now, I work out of my garage.
I used to dig bottles in old cellar holes and in the woods. You guys are fast and your identifications are right on! I can smell the dirt! Such fun and a way to know history and treasure hunt at the same time. People have no idea.
Wow I genuinely love what y’all do! I live in an area full of history from the American revolution and so forth… I constantly find myself looking at old trees wondering about all of the people who have passed by the very same tree or sat against it in the last 200 years. I would love to dig out an area like this and find old glass pieces and what not. It really makes me reflect on the time period and what it really was like for all of those who came before us and paved the way…. To all of whom I know I am forever grateful for ♥️ this truly is amazing!
My great uncles used to dig for bottles back in the 1960's. When the last one died one whole side of his basement was stacked with boxes of old bottles. Hundreds of cool bottles.
oh wow! i hope they ended up somewhere safe! yeah the 60s are when this hobby took off.. i wish i could go back in time, when everything wasnt cemented over and id have first pick! but i guess we have the internet, so doing research is a million times easier. thanks for watching and commenting!
I’ve just discovered this channel and I was glued to my seat watching all those fabulous bottles and jars come out. I love the commentary and the pace of the video: find after find with the description. Utterly riveting!
I’m intrigued; how do you know which area to dig?
I’m going to drink my cold coffee now….
So much better than the other historical excavation adventure podcasts.
I have no idea why I find your videos so entertaining. I just watch one right after the other. I am going to watch Ever one of them from beginning to now
Just imagine what the people who pitched all these bottles in the hole 100+ years ago would be saying if they could see you digging it all up!!
I have a feeling they would be laughing and pointing. "Ewu I'm a 21st century baby look at me digging for your trash ewu"
And imagine how disappointed will be to dig ours up in 100 years...still the same shape plastic, huge wastes of resources etc! These bottles could be sterilised and reused after 100+ years in the ground.
Yea finding disposable diapers and razors.
@@pattym307 we are a generous society xD
Great finds as usual! Just so you are aware, the Chamberlain & Co bottle fragment is actually older than shown here. Chamberlain & Company switched their name to Chamberlain Medicine Company in 1892, only keeping the old “Chamberlain & Co” name on their bitters products. All other bottles (as far as anyone knows) post-1892 had the “Chamberlain Med Co”, thus making this fragment date to 1892 at the latest.
oh wow. ah i had some suspicions that some of the bottles in the pit seemed to be earlier than the rest.. yeah there were a few in there that were like a decade older than everything else.. theres probably another pit on that property too.. well thanks for letting us know, all these companies are kinda hard to research. thanks for watching!
I just discovered your channel and I love it. My dad collected old bottles. He did not go on digs but he always looked for them when he was out in the woods hunting. He managed to find quite a few. I inherited his small collection when he passed away. Your videos take me on an adventure each time I watch one. You are knowledgeable about what you find. Thank you!
wow thank you! glad you found the channel. yeah im actually blown away by all the people who seem to have collected bottles. i was hoping that my channel would grow to the point where it gets more young people enthused about these old bottles, bc for now its such a niche hobby. well thanks for watching and leaving us a comment!
I’m so sad I’m just finding your videos. I’m absolutely in love with that blue bottle!!
haha yeah we actually found 2 of them but the video was so long that we had to cut a bunch of it down.. it shows it at the end tho.. it was a slightly different shade, and the fact that we had a pair that were different brought the value of them up.. really cool bottles tho, not super rare, but fairly uncommon.. yeah this was probably the best residential pit ive ever dug from this particular era.. they arent all this good! maybe like 1 in 20 comes close. well im glad you found our videos! hope you enjoy the rest of our content.. just be warned, the further you go back, the rougher the video is.. we've just been figuring this out as we go over the past year. well thanks for watching and commenting!
Your doing a great job! I’ve watched all the videos now. That cobalt blue is one of the colors in my kitchen (total girl thing i know😂) But I’ve also always enjoyed things from the old days. You’ve got yourself a nice little niche going, best of luck to y’all!
I like the bowl with the fruit on it the most. Beautiful.
This is my favorite video so far: the Yukon Rainier sample beer, the Ayers WITH STOPPER(!), and the snuff bottle are all so very unique as well as pristine. The fact that you found an intact lantern and teapot is amazing. Cool beans!!!
You guys do a great job of making these videos. Very educational. I especially like how each find is described on the screen.
Great video! I used to dig old bottles back in the early 1960's. The place I live at in a remote valley in the Death Valley Park system has a 150 year old dump where everyone dumped their trash. Ive taken out some pretty cool stuff. Theres another old dump at a very remote old gold mine cabin tbat was built in 1872. The cabin still has the wood burning Sunshine Bread Oven brought to the cabin in 1882. The dump has dozens of old Log Cabin Syrup cans in the shape of a log cabin with the chimney pour spout. I havent dug in that dump yet, but I'm sure there's buried treasures to be discovered!
You don't talk about how much reaserch and talking to people to be permitted to dig a spot... Your knowledge of the old glass containers is a learned skill that separates the amateur and the true pros.... Enjoy your success and unusual finds... Thanks again for the adventure.... 🌼🌼🌼
That Rainier Beer was Great, I used to live in Seattle, that whole factory is apartments now,
I love the ones with writing and identification; I wonder if they realized their bottles would survive this long!!!! I'm sure they were just getting them into the hands of buyers, but some of those were sturdy buggers. Perhaps thicker glass? Perscriptions, medications, snake oils of all variety. My last doctor had a HUGE collection, and they were fascinating!
oh thats really cool that a doctor had those old medicines.. thats one of the things i collect. i like the snake oils and the "cures" ..theres just something about them that just screams wild wild west. yeah i always think about that too, if they had any idea that someday their trash would be sought out and treasured. makes me wonder what we throw away today, that people in a 100 years will find interesting. thanks for watching! and leaving a comment
I have dug places like this in Chicago. In 2011, right across the street from Oprah's Winfrey studios they were putting in an apartment building and a friend and I decided to check it out. We dug 2 - 30 gallon coolers full of blob tops and a full crock that was in perfect condition. We started pulling out bottles on an angle and got scared that the hole might collapse on us and had to quit.
hahah yeah i know exactly what you mean. Yeah Chicago would be a great place to dig, if all the best spots werent cemented over! sounds fun tho.. we dont find a ton of blobs around here so when we do, especially a soda, then its a damn good day. Thanks for watching and commenting!
@@BelowthePlains not just cemented over,downtown has thirty feet of fill over the 1840's.
Rainier beer is still made. You should send the company a picture of that little beer bottle.
As someone who is from Washington and grew up with all the Rainier Beer commercials, I'm jealous of the bottle find!! So very cool!!
Me too! I’m in Olympia.
Just so you know, those nurser bottles can be embossed from local drug stores. Also that trial Rainier is a great bottle! The only ones I ever dug was in Tacoma! He is a long way from home! Those Ayers are a great bottle as well! Hard to find too! Great stuff!
yeah we had to look up that little beer bottle. that thing is so unbelievably cool, i was pretty excited about that one. ive dug a few ayers bottles before but theyre usually just quite simple bottles compared to the ones we found in this pit. and i did not know that about the nurser bottles. good to know, ill have to keep a look out for that, hopefully i didnt miss one before. thanks for leaving us a comment! and thanks for watching
I always seem to find embalming supplies. I haven't searched in a while because of it. But... that beautiful blue bottle, makes me want to dig again. Thank you.
i like the presentation... the advertisements shown with the bottles. and they way you laid them out at the end
ahh well thank you! yeah its a lot of extra work, but i feel like it really rounds out the videos. to get sense of how the product was marketed back in its day. well im glad you liked it. thanks for watching and leaving a comment!
You amaze me how you continue to find these locations from old maps to what is there now. Incredible bottles, mostly intact. Favorite was the blue hair tonic with stopper. Great video😀👍
haha yeah.. we actually found this one on accident.. it was right next to that green brick house in yankton.. its that video of ours that got 200k views,. it was a different property and we wouldnt have even looked there, but we couldnt find the old pit on the other property. yeah we got really lucky finding this one. Yeah that pit had some amazing finds.. we actually had to cut a bunch of clips bc the run time was just getting too long. thanks man, we appreciate the comment!
This was an epic dig !!!! Had my son and me on the edge of our seats..... jelly
hahaha awesome! glad you were entertained! Thanks for leaving us a comment!
This is a GREAT video, Thank you guys. You guys are awesome !!
omg thanks! that's awesome, thank you very much. glad you liked the video! you're awesome, thanks for watching and commenting!
So refreshing to see treasures being unearthed with a wooden stick. You are an impressive archeologist, doing research on possible sites and offering spot on information about your finds. I was surprised to see how young you are. Good work! I am subscribing.
Love that your using wood to dig so you dont break the treasure and remove the dirt as you go💖
Happy coincidence. Just happening to have them at the ready, each time a beer bottle came out I took a drink of beer and every time a whiskey bottle came out, I took a sip of whiskey. I enjoyed this video considerably.
oh wow, im only half way in so far and this pit already seems to be a jackpot! great video, thanks for sharing. stay safe out there
well thank you! yeah we're being careful out there but i appreciate the concern. thanks for leaving us a comment
Nice - Thanks ! - Luc / Brussels
Amazing finds! Love the channel, and description details!!! Keep it up!
ah thank you! well glad you like the channel. its a TON of work so im hoping it begins to pick up a little bit. well thank you for watching and leaving us a comment!
That hair tonic bottle was beautiful so amazed that came out whole ♥️👍👍👍👍🗝️🙂
yeah we ended up with 2 of them by the end of it.. it was in the end scene.. we had a lot more footage but the runtime was getting a little crazy. thanks for watching and leaving us a comment. take care!
Just found your channel and I must say, you guys have some of the best bottle digging videos out there. Very good camera work, nice history info, and very calming. You don't freak out like a lot of other channels I watch. Keep up the good work!
Love your style of filming, digging, editing, everything.
Great dig. That Ayer’s bottle was fantastic. I collect cobalt glass so I’m partial to that.
yeah that cobalts a cool color. probably the rarest color (other than bromoseltzers).. we actually spent aboutt 5 years in south dakota trying to find a cobalt blob soda thats probably the rarest bottle in the dakotas, only 3 known and they arent in great condition.. we found a piece of one, but we didnt even find 20% of the bottle in the entire pit, but i think tom still has it.. and yeah those aye's are super cool, we found a third one but it was in pieces. well thank you for watching and leaving us a comment!
I was looking over a few bottles I have and came across tiny blue Vicks bottle an inch tall half inch wide an a little over a quarter inch thick. I have a few nice blue bottles a 2 inch round, a 3 inch tall 6 sided one and a tall thin-necked one about 4 inches tall, I have three green 6 sided bottles marked "not to be taken" and a round one also some amber also a slecton of ink wells.Must say I love the blues.
Nice finds boys. Wow that pen is actually pretty cool. I come across the occasional bakelite piece, but it's usually just a stem to a tobacco pipe. Keep up the good work and keep the videos rolling out
yeah it was probably one of my favorite things from that site.. but it was overall just a really good dig site. thanks for watching, and yeah we intend to keep them coming. take care
Good job adding the old adds to your finds.
well thanks! yeah it took some time to figure out with the editing and it takes FOREVER but.. ya gotta stand out somehow so i think the extra work is worth it. thanks for leaving us a comment
Just Amazing, I'm running around my house showing everyone in my house what your pulling out lol Fantastic haul, great bottles some I got so so excited about Thanks for sharing 👍
haha wow thats awesome! glad to hear you liked the video! thanks for leaving us a comment!
So i want to know how I can start doing this. I am so very intrigued. I recently found a stash of vintage dishes just lying in the woods when I was walking my dog. 2 jadeite plates, a milk glass plate, a 1930s home Laughlin serving bowl. An anchor hocking mixing bowl, and in the back yard of where I am staying, I found a jadeite bowl sticking out of the dirt, just the most bizarre and random thing ever. I just think it's amazing. And what you are doing I can only imagine to be so exciting and exhilarating. It's a treasure hunt. Fantastic!
I thoroughly enjoyed this video. So very interesting. I loved the information you gave on the Companies. The blue Cold Cream bottles are blue milk glass. Will you sell me the first perfume bottle you dug up? I collect those.
Curious, how or what do you use to get the inside of the bottles so clean?
I have used powdered efferent/denture cleaning tabs and nearly boiling hot h2o and let the bottles sit over night, to loosen grime and remove hard water scale. Is there a more effective method, you Gents prefer to clean your finds?
Enjoyed your show! At 61 years young, one of my favorite pastimes is digging for treasures... I used to beg my Daddy to take me with him when it was time to make a dump run. He thought it strange his 9yr old daughter loved digging around our old local area dump site.. Daddy didn't see his daughter as part tomboy & part pirate! He knew it wasn't ladylike, but he always let me ride shotgun and go digging anyways!
My best pirate plunder found, just a few years ago...was at the bottom of an old 20' high burn pile of remodeling scrap in the lower acreage at our mobile home park... beams, 2×4s, wooden doors, trim, old cabinets, picket fence sections etc my hubby & I sorted through & stacked it all on pallets pulled from the pile, shared with our neighbors, and together we repurposed nearly everything in that burn pile, instead of burning it up. In the last foot of that pile I found an old, rusty, black powder pistol that hubby has salvaged and is restoring.
Answers?
@@michaelallen2971 ☝️what he said.
Video just fine. Glad to see such history being preserved. Hope your summer is going well.
yes it is! well thanks, i was kinda stressed out about it. seems like we just have technical problem after technical problem and this one was just a dumb mistake. take care and have a great summer yourself!
I absolutely enjoy watching you find antique bottles, etc.
A great addition to your channel would be to show your “finds” before and after they’re cleaned. Fascinating.
I love watching you pull treasures out of the ground! But I never get to see them cleaned up. I would really like to see how those things are cleaned and how they can be used again, or not, and how theyare displayed. Maybe you could do a video on that ? To see if you can put pieces back together, and if and how they can have a use again for another hundred years. In the meantime I'll keep watching you dig! ❤❤❤😂😂😂
Tips for good digging from an old girl (in my 70's) ... beside railways when in the day they simply dumped all along the tracks, in rivers and lakes. Old cellar holes and at bargaps along the stone walls where the farms would dump their trash. Burned out old homesteads and places along trails. ALWAYS have permission from landowners and leave no open digs when done. Enjoy and RESPECT THE LAND.
Only made it 6 minutes in the vid so far, and I absolutely love that sample beer bottle. Very cool find, never expected to see so many intact bottles come out of the ground. 👍😎👍
well enjoy i hope you enjoyed the rest of the video! and yeah, ive found quite a few sample beer bottles on them, but never anything with embossing on it like that.. well thank you for watching and leaving us a comment!
You just amaze me.
You're just a kid and you are so knowledgeable about everything you pull out of the ground.
I am so very impressed.
Great dig with some beautiful pieces of different items. Thank you for sharing 👍👏💖
Great job! Your guy’s enthusiasm for the whole thing really comes through.
Love seeing you have a great dig!
hahah yeah me too! i appreciate that. thanks for watching
@@BelowthePlains You are welcome!
What a great dig! I would love to have taken the broken china to use in projects.
I was thinking the same thing. You could bag it up and sell it per pond, maybe.. or something like that…
Awesome bottle pit🖤🤎💜💙💚💛🍾🍾🍾🍾🍾🍾🍾🍾🍾🍾
yeah i know, that was a really good one! thanks for leaving us a comment!
47 min!? Hell yeah.. awesome video guys!
haha glad you're excited. hope you enjoyed. thanks for commenting
Wow, what a load of nice finds ! I love the little beer bottle, great vidio !
Yeah that was one of my favorites! i collect small bottles and that one was something i had never seen before. well thank you. we appreciate you leaving us a comment!
Wow! Those ayers and raineer mini beer are amazing. Not a bad dig guys! Its always nice to see a longer video and this one did not disappoint. Thanks for taking us along
well thank you! glad you liked the finds. thanks for commenting
Sweet........ That was definitely a pit that just kept on giving. And surprising how much of it was all intact yet. My favorites of course the colored Ayers bottles. And the lamp base, as well as the pitcher. When I saw that crock at first I was thinking please, please let it be intact.............. But alas..........
Super video today guys. As always I loved it. :)
yeah we find a ton of crocks.. it always seems like 99% of the time they're broken but when we find a pit with a fully intact one, we usually find at least 1 or 2 more. idk why but all the unbroken ones we get seem to come in bulk.. most of them arent like super rare or valuable but there are ones from up here that have "redwing" stamped on them (from redwing minnesota) and those ones are super collectable. yeah that was a really awesome pit, we actually had a bunch more footage of it but the video was getting a little long. well im glad you liked the video, and we really do appreciate you leaving us a comment again. take care
@@BelowthePlains Yeah, back in the day my grandparents had a couple of the Redwing. Think they got them at farm auctions over time. I know they was a highly desired name. Sadly time took it's toll and no longer in the family. Still got some old ones, but no Redwings. Anyhow, as always I loved the video. Great content seeing our past come to surface again.
Some of the videos, if they get too long.......... but have more interesting finds then maybe make a part 2.
I know I wouldn't mind a part 2 and I bet your other followers would agree. :)
The history you share is really great and so are the things you are finding. How did you know where to dig at that house? Glass doesn't show up on a metal detector or does it?
Blue bottle is gorgeous
oh i know right.. it honestly doesnt look like its over 100 years old.. and that glass was just so clean looking. idk why but some bottles were made with a certain type of glass that when you pull it out of the ground, it looks like it was put there yesterday.. the mud just falls off and it doesnt get that ground iridescence.. thanks for watching and commenting!
I really like that you are using wooden probes and digging sticks since the bottles and so on will not be damaged .
Loved the blue bottle with stopper...omg...you guys are so knowlegable...thanks for videos.
Really enjoying watching you find all these different bottles. Their all awesome finds. Some rarer then others I suspect. Glad I found your stream. Thks👍
Well im glad you found our channel too! yeah obviously the liquor bottles are super common, as you can see by the way we found about 50 of them in 1 pit, but yeah, there was a few bottles in that pit that neither of us had come across before. like that little amber sample beer bottle. Well thanks for watching and leaving us a comment!
I love your channel. My dad was a bottle digger too. Once he “dug” at the site of a high rise building excavation in downtown Houston Texas. We drove down there with him. He was so excited because it had once been garbage done for the whole city. He found some beautiful bottles that were oxidized and amazing. He would’ve gotten more at security chase him off. Luckily he had his own badge that he didn’t flash it Tuesday. Those bottles are probably the one thing my children will fight over when I’m gone lol.
I would like to pick up more bottles. I know you look in public records by the side of the pits. Do you need a permit? I find what you do fascinating and love the videos again I will always watch.
Very impressive. You guys amaze me more with every video. Thank you for taking me with you. From Ohio.
ah thank you man! thats so nice. it always makes my night going thru my comments bc everyone is so kind! well thank you, and have a great day!
Pop's here. You are a good teacher. I'm beginning to be able to ID bottles a bit.
Absolutely insane awesome bottle dig. Great job guys! 👍🇨🇦✌️
Just found this today!! I’m in awe! Definitely a channel that needs to be shared!
Excelent film,your presentation is great. Uk fan
Thanks bruv! thats awesome, thank you. its always great to get some reassurance that the quality of our videos is good enough to get people to come back. thanks for watching and leaving us a comment!
The blue Hair Vigor bottle WITH STOPPER is gorgeous!! Nice find!
That blue lamp and soap dish was cool. Surprises me how many of these pits you find, just full, Wild!
Yee-Haa!! Great video. Wonderful old finds. That looked like a good haul to me.
hahaha yeah it was! i only wish they could all be that full. we almost didnt even dig it because when we probed it for some reason, we didnt hit very much glass. might have to go back to that site and look for an earlier pit. well thanks for watching and commenting!
Omg that darker blue bottle is beautiful I love stuff like that ❤️❤️❤️
Your secret chamber looks like an old back in the day dump site. That's why so many in one spot. Cool finds.
ahh thank you. yeah thats what it was.. we were just kinda running out of ideas for titles bc we basically do the same thing in every video and theres only so many ways to say the same thing. thanks for the comment!
So good to see, really enjoyed that. Glad you had some great finds wow! Beautiful bottles. Thank you.
Chef Annie would LOVE to have that teal Ayers hair vigor !!
That Raineer bottle is really awesome and unusual
yeah i know!
Another great video with bottles with every dig, hardly any broken, you must have sore arms with all that work... thanks..🦾
hahaha ah mostly a bad back, but yeah.. this one was filmed at the beginning of the year and i remember at the end of this trip when i got back home to north dakota i slept for like 3 days. it was a really good trip/dig tho. thanks for watching and leaving us a comment
@@BelowthePlains I always enjoy your videos
enjoyed your video thanks
no, thank you! and thanks for commenting, it helps our channel grow!
Some lovely bottles recovered well done on the finds
Im new. I just found you today. I love small bottles.I like the 1915 bottles.I also love the colored bottles also. Im PatriciaPierce from Lewisville Ohio. Im 66 ys. And cant walk now due to bad hip bones. I ll be watching and learning from you. Thanks
Great cache. My favorite was the olive oil bottle. Thank you.
WOW! BEST find on TH-cam!
hahah thanks man! appreciate you always commenting. take care dude
@@BelowthePlains when will there be another guest appearance of the long-haired homeless guy?
Love the dig, great job fellas and the Yankton drug store bottles are incredible. Great job saving history
haha thank you! yeah that amber one is super rare, i think theres only 3-4.. we had a video of us pulling it out, but it got deleted on accident when we were transferring clips for the camera to the computer. Well thanks for watching and leaving us a comment!
I just found your channel. I live in Illinois and have found some things in the backyard of my 1910 home. Thanks for what you do! So much fun to watch.
It's interesting to see what they find. Lots of broken glass and china pieces. Digging in the dirt sounds like fun. The only dirt I've ever dug in is potato dirt.
Somehow this was in my recommendations & I was thrilled to see it was in Yankton. I’ve lived all over SD, which made the video even more fun to watch. Great finds!
I'm amazed at how much you found in that relatively small area. Very cool.
Most likely had been an outhouse. I grew up in upstate NY, outside of NYC in an area that had been settled by the Dutch in the mid 17th century. It wasn't all that uncommon in the 1960's to find caches such as this when doing any type of digging on the older properties. Outhouses are amazing time capsules.
That pit was loaded with some nice bottles ! Great job guys
Thank you! we appreciate you always commenting
Im just blown away that you found all that in a relatively small pit. must have been someone with a few bucks to spend! what an awesome video. hardly noticed the frame rate, it actually looked pretty good. great dig guys, that was really a blast to watch
Well thank you! glad you enjoyed it.. yeah it was a pretty good dig.. tons of bottles but most of them were unembossed liquor and medicines.. which is par for the course so i cant complain. had some really unique finds. thanks for watching
Guys if u put a brush in the hole u can get a lot more dirt off by brushing them clean! Arsenic seems to be in every hole! It was used to treat syphilis! A wide spread problem for many in this era!
Incredible Ayers bottle.
oh i know! and we found 2 of them.. second one was at the very end but we didnt add some of the bottles we dug out bc the runtime was getting a little crazy. thanks for watching and commenting!
Love blue hair bottle ! Sweet
oh i know. its so cool!!
Hello ! Awesomeness. I'm impressed with the 3 bottles you showed at the end of the video. But when you got your lamp pulled it truly surprised me too.👍👍👍👍👍👍
Awesome finds congratulations have a great day brother
That poison was nice, the St Joseph's has a neat finish. Wow this hole has a nice assortment of bottles. Ayers are both a nice color too. Thanks Tom.
A Great Escape watching you guys digging up some history! Best of luck to you!!
really wonderful finds, and not all that deep. Sixty some years ago my husband had a carpenter job miles from where we lived and the person who employed him let us stay at his home that had been his grandmothers. No elec. no water, and no garbage. so it was roughing it but we made it work. We did have a gas cook stove so I could cook but he told me to bury the garbage in the back yard. When my husband would come home in the evening he would take a shovel and dig a pit and throw in the garbage. Looking back it makes me wonder.