Note the black and wite Masonic floor tiles on the way in to the biggest house.jo matter were you go there's sings that that type of agenda lived there... only those that understand what I mean will get that! anyway awesome share..loads of creepy triangler shaped wall paper aswell....
I have watched several videos on this place, but you see things no one else notices and your flicks are fantastic. Thank you so much. You have a marvelous creative awareness. 🎉 great job.
You work hard to put out so much content and so much variety! We’ve gotten a lot of entertainment from them. I’ve put out a few videos and never realized what was involved before that. YT Critics should try to make just one before ever saying anything negative.
One of your very best. Note to self: Close the doors and windows when in sandy areas! at 16:00 over your right shoulder looked like Electricity Meters. Thanks for keeping the music low. Glad you got your desert Fix there.........
Now that was really cool. I used to live near an abandoned mental hospital in NJ, and the hallways looked just like that. I always try imagine people walking those halls.But that has to be the most remote spot for a hospital anywhere. Your adventures are so cool. Just finished Your Mt Whitney climb. Wow
abandoned house are my favorite since I was a kid. Mom & Great Aunt would take us for Sunday drives, inthe country where they were raised. What fun times. I even have my grandpa and Great Aunts old school books.What awesome find, and times.
I'm fairly certain I'll never make it to Namibia ... But, I'm very happy you got to and you share with us. Can't ask for much more than that. Thanks WH. We love ya girl.
Thanks for sharing WH. Those are the most photogenic abandoned Buildings you have shown. Really neat visuals. Way to go your own way and get those shots without the cluttered look of a tour group.
There is nothing better that walking through an abandon desert town with a beautiful gracious lady! That's why I support you as much as I can. Why do you have a coiled rope on your shoulder? It's not something you do in the US. I also didn't see human caused destruction in the town. That's amazing! Not as amazing as you but still amazing. I really enjoyed the video and also enjoyed your company as we traveled through. Figuratively speaking of course.. Thanks for the adventure Sarah.. Your the best!
Sarah Jane the reason for a furnace in an old icehouse, is to heat ammonia in an enclosed piping system it will freeze water easily. When you heat ammonia it gets very cold. Most rv's still use ammonia in the refrigerator. Love your videos.
I suppose the missing floor boards were stolen to use for other projects...like we use old barn lumber here. that weird thing about 11:40 - 11:50 was probably part of the water heater for that bath tub. I remember your Cantil (don't remember how it's spelled though) video...sand and tumble weeds. Stripper pole(8-). Well, you've heard the term "Boom Town" in the US...with all those sand filled building you're poking through...that must be a "Dune Town". Honey...I was hoping I wouldn't have to tell you this, but the ice house was the reason the town was abandoned...it wasn't diamond prices. Things were going so well until they had to shut the ice plant down...all because Franz lots the recipe.(8-( Just kiddin'(8-) Supercharged excellent video, Lovely Lass(8-).
Sadly,most missing floor boards was cut out by a international film company that was given permission to shoot a movie there. That was before Kolmanskuppe was turned into a tourist attraction and better control was applied.
I get a real Andrew Wyeth vibe from your surroundings. Pose yourself like Christina in the foreground with one of those beautiful buildings in the background would be an awesome shot!
“Gly”: New Subscriber!! Very cool! Sure is nice to explore an abandoned place without all the modern trash and spray paint. That would be my Disneyland too!
What an amazing place to explore Sarah. You made me laugh out loud with the stripper pole comment out on that balcony. Seems to me that was a missed photo shoot that could have been quite amazing 😉.
Not a single 🌴 tree within 100 miles. It's.neat how the sand reclaims the property. The structures look pretty good for being 50 to 100 years old. Thanks for sharing.
I chuckled at your "Jack Nippleson" moment. The state of preservation is wonderful. I'll bet you were a'throb when you heard about it. I lived in Germany for several years and this decor is very typical. The women were certainly responsible for any flourishes. Great video. Thanks.
Hello Ted from Texas here. I'll say one excellent thing about those ghost towns. They're clean. As supposed to ghost towns of the u.s. . .. I know we have ghost towns that are similar to that but not with that many buildings. I think the weather is just too hard in some places for them. You did an excellent job in videotaping and sharing your experience with us, your fans. See you in the next video. Which I see that you've already downloaded onto TH-cam. I will check it out tonight. Thanks again from Texas.
The ice plant was most likely used ammonia. Very poplar and dangerous. It was outlawed in the us in residential buildings because an ammonia leak could kill the occupants. It’s still used for industrial applications today.
@@desertchild3550 True. And the part she showed was a tank holding brine cooled by the ammonia, in which those vertical molds were hanging containing fresh water to be frozen to ice bars.
If you like abandoned hospitals you should come to Gooding, Idaho. We have the TB hospital and then there's the haunted mansions of Albion. They turn it into an attraction in October for Halloween but it was a medical campus and all the buildings have interesting stuff.
Thank you to the Friend that took you on a Great Urban Exploration...That"s Vegas in a Hundred Years... It would make a Good Nude Photo Shoot in some of those Places...Really Interesting Place...
Substantial buildings, well built. Wonder what happened to all of the contents? Did they move with them? Or they were later scavenged? Thanks for bring us here.
Hi Hussy, nice place. Evidence of high winds, means sand storms. Frequently, would be my guess. Youre there on a calm day. WoW, completely abandoned! Wonder how far to the diamond mines? Be cool to find one. Nice video, have fun always, revved up yooprr
In the olden days they actually mined all around Kolmanskuppe, but today only at Elizabeth bay, some 20 km south of Kolmanskuppe which also is the security entry gate to the mine. No underground operations. All above ground ,sort of open pit but with max blasting depth of 2.5 meters on average.
Hi Lydia, l hope hussy takes you up on your invitation. It would be great fun and exciteing to go explore abandoned places. You can do it yourself. Just go for it. Plan it out, do a little research first. Be careful. Wonder Hussey just uses her phones camera. Go shoot some stuff, and practice. You can do it!!; from Mi. revved up yooper
International Wonderhussy! You’ve out-done yourself with this exploration! An amazing site with our German guide! I wish they would repair the roofs. I think over time the weight of the sand will collapse the structures! I was hoping you would find a diamond! 💎 German’s are great builders! I wonder if you might explore some of the abandoned German enclaves in South America? Thanks Sarah!
No wells. Fresh Water was brought in by train and they used condensers to make fresh water from seawater which was pumped from Elizabeth bay some 20 km down south of Kolmanskuppe.. But it was also water that brought misery. One of the reasons for the X-ray machine which Dr Krantzel brought in from Germany in 1925. At various time frames Luderitz had to make use of only condensed water and condensed water is known as aggressive water. Unlike today where desalinated water is treated to put minerals back, the water was supplied in its raw condensed form.
Another point I will make. In Nevada old wood lasts a long time. Because it loses almost all moister content, so it cannot rot. It just gets harder that concrete. I have about 30 old 2x4's that are 20 years old at my house here in southern Nevada. You could not drive a nail in one to save your life. Even nail guns poop out. Gotta love the desert air for preserving things. When I die I want my body hung out to dry. I figure that is the closest I will get to eternity!
Love the vids, there is a town in the USA that is crazy, blocks of homes with no one around, and was abandoned not too long ago, not much furniture at all but still kinda looks like people live there. I am not remembering where but I will try to find the video of the place. This isn't the place that was an abandoned military place, or centralia, this is a town that had to be abandoned.
Nah, if it was Detroit I would have said Detroit, what I said was a bunch of homes almost untouched, lol, what homes in Detroit haven't been wrecked or destroyed, or torn down, lol, these homes were almost untouched. I already msg wonderhussy the info.
It wasn’t there either, wasn’t because of the underground coal fire, there are a couple towns that had to be evacuated, even the coal burning place most homes are gone. I’m sure Google and abandoned towns would show it. These are homes still standing, streets with no one and a bunch of empty homes, and it’s not too far from homes with people in them.
Minenverwalter is mine manager. These houses were mainly from managers, supervisors and the like. And you know the germans. Built to last! Deutsche Gründlichkeit 😉
Glassed in porches are called Conservatories in those mansions. These houses probably also served as offices too. Wonder why the hospital had a toilet, and the mansion had an outhouse?
The attention to videography and editing this video was superb Sarah. One can say it was over the top including the
adventure itself.
.....What a WONDERFUL, mind-blowing experience.....!!
Definitely!😄
Note the black and wite Masonic floor tiles on the way in to the biggest house.jo matter were you go there's sings that that type of agenda lived there... only those that understand what I mean will get that! anyway awesome share..loads of creepy triangler shaped wall paper aswell....
I so love who you are, your sense of adventure and humor...
The attention to detail in the architecture was amazing. That was no ordinary mining town.
I have watched several videos on this place, but you see things no one else notices and your flicks are fantastic. Thank you so much. You have a marvelous creative awareness. 🎉 great job.
By far the best explore video of this old mining town I’ve ever seen! Love you Wonderhussy! Keep it up!
What a fascinating history that location has. Thanks for taking us along!
You work hard to put out so much content and so much variety! We’ve gotten a lot of entertainment from them. I’ve put out a few videos and never realized what was involved before that. YT Critics should try to make just one before ever saying anything negative.
One of your very best. Note to self: Close the doors and windows when in sandy areas!
at 16:00 over your right shoulder looked like Electricity Meters. Thanks for keeping the music low.
Glad you got your desert Fix there.........
Now that was really cool. I used to live near an abandoned mental hospital in NJ, and the hallways looked just like that. I always try imagine people walking those halls.But that has to be the most remote spot for a hospital anywhere. Your adventures are so cool. Just finished Your Mt Whitney climb. Wow
abandoned house are my favorite since I was a kid. Mom & Great Aunt would take us for Sunday drives, inthe country where they were raised. What fun times. I even have my grandpa and Great Aunts old school books.What awesome find, and times.
My Dad was in South Africa for 5 years during WW2 Thanks for a great video
Love you wonderhussy love your videos and your Ventures I feel like I'm right there with you
I'm fairly certain I'll never make it to Namibia ... But, I'm very happy you got to and you share with us. Can't ask for much more than that. Thanks WH. We love ya girl.
A blast from your past hussy! Well done I say and thanks for sharing your exotic journey.❤️
Fascinating. Very dry climate. Will take longer for buildings to decay.
I love watching your videos and find them interesting. Hello from Adelaide south Australia.
Excellent show!
Thanks for sharing WH. Those are the most photogenic abandoned
Buildings you have shown. Really neat visuals. Way to go your own way and get those shots without the cluttered look of a tour group.
Great Video, Sarah Jane! That whole town is cool! The hospital is great !
1:28 , that house is used for the exterior shot of Lochear Field Ranch in Exmortis 2!
The large Minenverwalter building was for the ‘mine managers’ .. pretty fancy 😊
awesome trip Sarah !!
WOW AMAZING. Wish I was there. Would love to explore with you.
I bet that place is amazing at night for dark sky and star viewing. You go everywhere!
There is nothing better that walking through an abandon desert town with a beautiful gracious lady! That's why I support you as much as I can. Why do you have a coiled rope on your shoulder? It's not something you do in the US. I also didn't see human caused destruction in the town. That's amazing! Not as amazing as you but still amazing. I really enjoyed the video and also enjoyed your company as we traveled through. Figuratively speaking of course.. Thanks for the adventure Sarah.. Your the best!
Sarah Jane the reason for a furnace in an old icehouse, is to heat ammonia in an enclosed piping system it will freeze water easily. When you heat ammonia it gets very cold. Most rv's still use ammonia in the refrigerator. Love your videos.
I suppose the missing floor boards were stolen to use for other projects...like we use old barn lumber here. that weird thing about 11:40 - 11:50 was probably part of the
water heater for that bath tub. I remember your Cantil (don't remember how it's spelled though) video...sand and tumble weeds. Stripper pole(8-). Well, you've heard the
term "Boom Town" in the US...with all those sand filled building you're poking through...that must be a "Dune Town". Honey...I was hoping I wouldn't have to tell you this,
but the ice house was the reason the town was abandoned...it wasn't diamond prices. Things were going so well until they had to shut the ice plant down...all because
Franz lots the recipe.(8-( Just kiddin'(8-) Supercharged excellent video, Lovely Lass(8-).
Sadly,most missing floor boards was cut out by a international film company that was given permission to shoot a movie there. That was before Kolmanskuppe was turned into a tourist attraction and better control was applied.
You always bring to the nice's places that one home was so gorgeous it just needed some needed TLC😍
Great work Sarah, what a trip. But there was no pole dance at 20:36, an opportunity missed for the Hussy! Hah! Stay safe!
Amazing place, bet you would like to go again, maybe see the mine and mining equipment, I would like to go look.
Love your modeling pictures, mmhmm
Its very impressive how these buildings are still standing, that hospital hallway is eerie!
Very well done!
Hi Sarah. This is a great video. Have a great day my friend 👍
Great video! It was just a great joy to just be able to see the video! You “Stay-safe” and keep-up the “Awesomeness” within you!🧧🤙🌺
Keep up the great work! I love watching your videos!
Another awesome wonderhussy adventure...I love em her adventures and the way she is always cheer's me up 😄💙 thank you for sharing
I get a real Andrew Wyeth vibe from your surroundings. Pose yourself like Christina in the foreground with one of those beautiful buildings in the background would be an awesome shot!
A reference to White Rabbit by Jefferson Airplane? My most favorite Grace Slick song ever.
So neat!! Thank you very much for sharing!
You are the coolest explorer ever.
“Gly”: New Subscriber!! Very cool! Sure is nice to explore an abandoned place without all the modern trash and spray paint. That would be my Disneyland too!
Amazing video. I knew that you did more on that African video. Love you Wonder Hussy. You are educational Awesome. 🤗😘😍
What an amazing place to explore Sarah. You made me laugh out loud with the stripper pole comment out on that balcony. Seems to me that was a missed photo shoot that could have been quite amazing 😉.
Ha! The wind driven sand must kick up something fierce to have scoured the mortar from between the bricks of the outhouse. great vid. Thanks, Huss!
Not a single 🌴 tree within 100 miles. It's.neat how the sand reclaims the property. The structures look pretty good for being 50 to 100 years old. Thanks for sharing.
I will always and forever love ghost towns and haunted houses! I would jump at the chance to explore with The Hussy.
PEACE 👽💀🎸🎵🎶
Good video Sarah! Enjoy!
good job enjoyed
Very cool , Wonder ...
Too purty for words 💜✌😇
All right another great video! Thanks for your views, of something I’ll neve see.
That was fun. Thanks.
I chuckled at your "Jack Nippleson" moment. The state of preservation is wonderful. I'll bet you were a'throb when you heard about it. I lived in Germany for several years and this decor is very typical. The women were certainly responsible for any flourishes. Great video. Thanks.
Hello Ted from Texas here. I'll say one excellent thing about those ghost towns. They're clean. As supposed to ghost towns of the u.s. . .. I know we have ghost towns that are similar to that but not with that many buildings. I think the weather is just too hard in some places for them. You did an excellent job in videotaping and sharing your experience with us, your fans. See you in the next video. Which I see that you've already downloaded onto TH-cam. I will check it out tonight. Thanks again from Texas.
"Here's Hussy!!"" Classic!!!
Again this looks like a movie set, lolol nice thanks BigAl California.
Love You WonderHottie
WHAT AN AMAZING VIDEO MY LITTLE FRIEND. SO ENJOYED IT. HOPE YOU HAVE MORE VIDEOS ON YOUR VACATION. SWAMP HUGS FROM LOUISIANA
The ice plant was most likely used ammonia. Very poplar and dangerous. It was outlawed in the us in residential buildings because an ammonia leak could kill the occupants. It’s still used for industrial applications today.
Correct. Was a ammonia plant.
@@desertchild3550 True. And the part she showed was a tank holding brine cooled by the ammonia, in which those vertical molds were hanging containing fresh water to be frozen to ice bars.
Bet theres a cemetery some where under all that sand
Love the vids keep em coming watching in the UK.
Eine ausgezeichnete Tour durch die alter Deutscher stadt. Das alte Krankenhaus hat mir am besten gefallen. Alles liebe.
Another great video this ghost town is so cool.
Thank you Sarah,,Very cool
Gawd, incredible stuff - who'd a thunk. Village that nice in the Mid O No Where. Africa. Ballsy WH.
If you like abandoned hospitals you should come to Gooding, Idaho. We have the TB hospital and then there's the haunted mansions of Albion. They turn it into an attraction in October for Halloween but it was a medical campus and all the buildings have interesting stuff.
True to form Wonderhussy never ceases to Amaze us 👍
That's
Way out there@!!!
Sarah Thank you . Please Stay safe !
Very cool video I wish I could be there 😀👍🤗🤔🤩😏🙄
Thank you to the Friend that took you on a Great Urban Exploration...That"s Vegas in a Hundred Years... It would make a Good Nude Photo Shoot in some of those Places...Really Interesting Place...
Nice job kid
Awesome video!
Did ya get to eat some shrooms at all in Namibia? Looks like the perfect spot
Substantial buildings, well built. Wonder what happened to all of the contents? Did they move with them? Or they were later scavenged? Thanks for bring us here.
It was called Kolmanskop, or Kolman’s Knoll, after a worker who had abandoned his ox cart there during a sandstorm years before the town’s founding.
Hi Hussy, nice place. Evidence of high winds, means sand storms. Frequently, would be my guess. Youre there on a calm day. WoW, completely abandoned! Wonder how far to the diamond mines? Be cool to find one. Nice video, have fun always, revved up yooprr
In the olden days they actually mined all around Kolmanskuppe, but today only at Elizabeth bay, some 20 km south of Kolmanskuppe which also is the security entry gate to the mine. No underground operations. All above ground ,sort of open pit but with max blasting depth of 2.5 meters on average.
Wow nice video....little creepy but it was cool.. man✌😜
How cool! Love your African adventure! Please take me on one of your adventures! I have a rigged up 4runner too we could have a blast!!!
Hi Lydia, l hope hussy takes you up on your invitation. It would be great fun and exciteing to go explore abandoned places. You can do it yourself. Just go for it. Plan it out, do a little research first. Be careful. Wonder Hussey just uses her phones camera. Go shoot some stuff, and practice. You can do it!!; from Mi. revved up yooper
@@waynegouin939 hey thank you!! I just might have to go explore on my own sometime soon!
Hi again, i forgot to add, if you do go exploring, dont go alone, always bring a companion.
Did you see any mining equipment or shafts in the area? or I've missed that part in the vid.
It's alluvial deposits close to the surface so no shafts. These days most of the mining is on the ocean floor, diamond diving is a thing there.
I cannot believe you went to Kolmanskop! Unbelievable!
Nice vid wh
International Wonderhussy! You’ve out-done yourself with this exploration! An amazing site with our German guide! I wish they would repair the roofs. I think over time the weight of the sand will collapse the structures! I was hoping you would find a diamond! 💎 German’s are great builders! I wonder if you might explore some of the abandoned German enclaves in South America? Thanks Sarah!
Nearest water? Maybe a well thanks for sharing :)
No wells. Fresh Water was brought in by train and they used condensers to make fresh water from seawater which was pumped from Elizabeth bay some 20 km down south of Kolmanskuppe.. But it was also water that brought misery. One of the reasons for the X-ray machine which Dr Krantzel brought in from Germany in 1925. At various time frames Luderitz had to make use of only condensed water and condensed water is known as aggressive water. Unlike today where desalinated water is treated to put minerals back, the water was supplied in its raw condensed form.
You make the best vids :D love them!!
Needs a Hollywood movie made there, or something before it’s gone. And, sorta glad you kept your clothes on. Damn sand gets in everywhere.
Very nice again Wonderhussy abandoned diamond town in Namibia mostley German people👌✌😎
And I thought Florida was hot,wow. All love, XXxxOOoo
Water must have been like gold they're Great video Thanks
As Artie Johnson use to say on Laugh In “Very Interesting”😂
Cool 😀
Another point I will make. In Nevada old wood lasts a long time. Because it loses almost all moister content, so it cannot rot. It just gets harder that concrete. I have about 30 old 2x4's that are 20 years old at my house here in southern Nevada. You could not drive a nail in one to save your life. Even nail guns poop out. Gotta love the desert air for preserving things. When I die I want my body hung out to dry. I figure that is the closest I will get to eternity!
Love the vids, there is a town in the USA that is crazy, blocks of homes with no one around, and was abandoned not too long ago, not much furniture at all but still kinda looks like people live there. I am not remembering where but I will try to find the video of the place. This isn't the place that was an abandoned military place, or centralia, this is a town that had to be abandoned.
It is called Detroit.
Nah, if it was Detroit I would have said Detroit, what I said was a bunch of homes almost untouched, lol, what homes in Detroit haven't been wrecked or destroyed, or torn down, lol, these homes were almost untouched. I already msg wonderhussy the info.
The town with underround coal fire. Ground caving and giving off toxic fumes.
It wasn’t there either, wasn’t because of the underground coal fire, there are a couple towns that had to be evacuated, even the coal burning place most homes are gone. I’m sure Google and abandoned towns would show it. These are homes still standing, streets with no one and a bunch of empty homes, and it’s not too far from homes with people in them.
Awesome girl! You get around! 😊💕✌
Another great vid
Minenverwalter is mine manager. These houses were mainly from managers, supervisors and the like. And you know the germans. Built to last! Deutsche Gründlichkeit 😉
Glassed in porches are called Conservatories in those mansions. These houses probably also served as offices too. Wonder why the hospital had a toilet, and the mansion had an outhouse?
Nice
This was on my list of places to see along with sossusvlei in Namibia. You think like me