As someone who comes from a family of farmers and ranchers, my thanks for clearing those racks. Most people don't understand the unending labor that ag work entails, even with heavy machinery.
My 9 yr old grandson loves to watch all of your videos with me !!! You've helped me instill a bigger love of nature than I could've done on my own !! As well as his LOVE of all your food opening videos !!!! And he loves your camping videos !! He's been waiting for winter so he can try to build his own igloo !!! We're both excited to go camping this winter, even if we're not able to build our own igloo lol !!! Thank you from the bottom of my heart !! I'm not in very good health, but watching you and all of your adventures and your love of outdoors- it feels like I'm on your hike - climbing those mountains - looking for spider friends - listening for tail smacks from angered beaver friends - clearing those drains - trying to unclog those culverts to make the roads safer for everyone, I'll never be able to do all of the amazingly wonderful outdoorsy adventurous things you can do. . . . But I'm extremely grateful that you always take me and Elijah with you ! ! ! Thank you for all of the adventures !!!!
Tiffany, what a lovely story @ your 9-year-old grandson following 💙 in this lovely manno's f😍😍t steps. P.S. sorry to read about your current experiencing health issues, my prayers for your healing to newly restored health, and your 9-year-old grandson's upbringing to blossom into a productive, beautiful, gracious man with an appreciation for nature. 🙏🏽
Rather than a butterfly net, I'd recommend a Pool pole and surface skimmer. it's basically a squarish frame with a mesh stretched across it. They're specifically designed for removing things that are floating on water. They're pretty cheap, and pool poles are typically extendable. They're much more durable than a butterfly net too.
It's a potato rake, and I think it does work better for what he is doing. Hopefully it doesn't break down a lot. Not long ago the head of it came loose and he had to fix it.
This is just west of me. Irrigation and checking the ditches near my weirs is my job(since I farm). I wish more people were like you and cleaned the ditches. It makes the world a better place if we clean up. Part of the reason that the ditches look especially dirty this year is that they had to replace most of the workers(There was a strike because of pay). Because of that most of the ditch riders(what the job is called colloquially) are new and inexperienced/lazy/uninvested in the job.
I wish you were passing through Boise. I have a trash rack rake that I salvaged out of an irrigation canal. They actually make a rake specially for this purpose. The rake head looks very similar to the narrow long toothed rake you are using, but the handle is like 12’ long. Most trash racks are way larger, that long handle gives the ditch rider the extra reach, without danger of falling into canal. At some point, probably while burning ditch banks and cleaning the ditches, the ditch riders will simply make sure it is safe and just light the pile of dried accumulated trash, plastic and all. Much of the plastic will get blown back into the ditch, wind generally is blowing in the high Snake River Plain. If those “full bottles” have yellow liquid in them. That is not Mt Dew! 😂 There is a very good chance that melted plastic suffered a range fire, OR was partly burned during annual ditch cleaning/burning. Some of what you are pulling off the racks is koshia, a common weed. True tumble weeds (Russian Thistle) are round and very full if stickers. Much of the Russian thistle is red, unless sun bleached. After watching the rest of video, seeing all the water still in the ditches, AND seeing the coal train, you are in central to eastern WA. BTW, much of the coal on those rails is from Montana and headed to China. About 1 train per hour crosses WA every day. And most of those coal trains are way larger. They need all the locomotives to get over the mountain passes between Montana and Portland.
That trash rack design is a great piece of engineering - effective, easy to clean, and they look built to last for several years. it is a shame they didn't continue the rack to the edges of the drainage ditch to prevent all of those plastic bottles from going around the rack.
Here is a tip that most people do not know.. and your mention of cattails is what reminded me of it.. If your in need of a natural soap.. especially for cleaning your hair or clothing... You can use the inside of cattails. Of course it still needs to be green and alive. Just chop off a stalk close to the bottom... Mash up the stalk to get the plants inside product out and squeeze it out.. it lathers up nicely , and is not just natural but is an excellent to clean and break down body dirt's and oils.. it has a decent smell .. You will be surprised how well it cleans. It is a little tougher to use on skin because the skin is so smooth.. it takes a bit of friction and agitation to get it lathering up.. which is why washing the hair or clothing is easier.. because your doing it by hand.. But it strips and cleans hair nice..it is healthy and natural for the hair.. Weird tip... And useful should you ever find yourself in a place and situation where you need something and have cattails available. Being it is 100% natural..it is environmentally safe as well. The guts inside is a milky like substance something like Aloe Vera .
They are a good source of food as well, the roots that is. Full of starch, and as you said, they too have to be mashed up. (The book, Clan of the Cave Bear is my source of knowledge, Cattails are mentioned hundreds of times over the book series). One day I will go full on paleolithic and collect some, trouble is wherever I've seen them growing they are rather inaccessible, lots of mud.
As with any foraged wild edible, ensure that the cattail is not growing by a roadside, since there is a high concentration of heavy metals wherever vehicles roam. Also, the water source it grows in should be good smelling and unpolluted. Cattails are great for our waterways because they filter out contaminants. This also means they can be contaminated.
your videos are so enjoyable to watch and educational to those who have no knowledge of america even children can watch. keep up the videos regardes from england
As an American I am proud of what you do. Cleaning culverts and States that you don't live in driving out West and continuing your good work. Do you have family outwest or is this just a planned trip that you made? I totally enjoy listening and watching you do what you do from culverts to wildlife whatever it may be, thank you. I think you need to get some hats that say have rake will travel lol.
I see so many plastic bottles all over the landscape. I have been using the same two 1 liter bottles for portable water for over a year, and now that I have a couple of good travel bottles, I won't be buying any more plastic water bottles after the two I have go brittle. - As a pre-teen (back in the 1970's) I had a job cleaning the lots of strip malls and shopping plazas out in the Phoenix area, and since then I refuse to litter. If I have trash and I am not near the right place to put it, it goes in my pocket until I am. The only thing I throw out of my car are apple cores (for the critters!).
it's not freight per se. It is filthy polluting coal going to Portland OR and Everett WA. Sent to SE Asia because they are over there arguing about prices and politics. (Australia has Coal). The burning of. mill in years old sequestered carbon affects you and me no matter who or where it is being burned. I thought maybe I was off point but post 10 is helping us think about the hydrologic cycle and such. I like this channel.
Those open country areas with patches of green and irrigation channels remind me of my home and country in which my ancestors and generations that followed settled and farmed. Thanks for the journey and the trains Post 10.
Your videos are so enjoyable! I love that you show rural infrastructure and help along the way. Your zest for life about simple every day things is amazing! Trains, ships, farming and oh yea 💧 water!! Your so knowledgeable as well. Thanks again for filming. Enjoy!!
Your having great fun out there travelling around and removing trash and well impressed in how you do it + bonus of trains of which you love. Great stuff again
i AM ASHAMED OF ALL THOSE WHO VIEWED AND DID NOT HIT THE THUMBS UP TO HELP HIM KEEP DOING SO MUCH TO HELP SO MANY COMMUNITIES. HE DOES NOT GET PAID TO DO THIS WORK.
I admire Post 10. I grew up and live in the Southern San Joaquin Valley of California. In the 1960s Kern County lpoked just like this. Ming Avenue had irrigation ditches and canals running all up and down along the side of it and Stein Road
It's the simple pleasures in life....a clean culvert, a tumbling waterflow, a heavy-loaded train - for you. Simple pleasures like fresh cut grass, baked bread and lavender - for me.
Our boy in our part of the woods, or fields I should say! lol Glad you got to see how cool our systems are just as you've done for us showing us east coast infrastructure :)
For floating debris in those small pools, a pool skimmer net would work better than a potato rake. The skimmer net would not take much space at all in a truck or wagon. TY for this video Post.
Not only do you provide ASMR through your travels, for a railfan such as me, you provide eye candy as well. Thanks for all you do! If you were to start up a membership program with perks for your viewers I would probably be your first member. I'd like to see emojis of a rake and a spider friend. 🥇
Omg I love your vids, always makes me look at the drainage systems in my community and surrounding communities. I love your explanation when you're working on clogs
this was so interesting! glad you took us along to see. had no idea how they irrigated crops like that. Where I live in MI. they grow potatoes, onions and radishes. County south of me has apples, blueberries.
I genuinely want to spend my time hanging out with this guy and clearing trash racks and drainage ditches. I’ll bring my own rake and everything. Only problem is I’m on the other side of the Atlantic😢
Hey Post how far away from your home area have you travelled? love seeing the different scenery (the plastic waste is horrid tho) thanks for taking us with you xx from England
When I see the amount of plastic and general waste just dumped anywhere, it makes me quite depressed. I don't have a huge problem with the plastic we use, but deal with it responsibly. Just don't dump it wherever you want 🤬 /rant Another great video, your road trip looks amazing. Could you do a short video of where you traveled to, distance traveled etc?
Post 10 what you need to get is a pond skimmer you get them at Walmart they're really cheap I use them for my duckpond get their feathers out hope you have a good day and you're doing a great job hugs
Post! Awesome video!! As usual, giving a good hand of help to the people and farmers! You are the best. Maybe next time, like you said, it could be handy have a butterfly net or a pool cleaner net. Maybe they can help you to remove some debries and leaves that float in the surface. Anyway you rock mate! Keep unclogging the racks and culverts and giving a hand to people. Also, keep exploring!! Take care! and greetings from Argentina!
With regard to the trash you've been seeing, I don't think it's because the area has a lot more slobs, rather it's an enormous flat, dry and very windy plain, so what trash there is tends to fetch up in places like ditches or along fence lines.
When I was young the irrigation ditch ran in front of our house. We had a sump pump in it and when our well dried up we used it. It was free at the time from the feather river project. Sadly it doesn’t run in front of that house anymore. It would be regularly tested. Was more pure than the well water.
Sense you like trains. On your way back, you might want to go to North Plate, Nebraska. There is the Bailey Yard. LARGEST RAIL YARD IN THE COUNTRY!! 300 tracks wide!! At the West end of the yard is the Golden Spike Tower. It is 8 stores tall over looking the yard. 150 trains a day go through it! I have done it. AND WOW!! There is also people that work on the top floor that know what you are looking at. Steven Sipes
hey bro if you love trains so much come live in nw Indiana where i do and u will start to hate them always blocking the roads for hours and hours seeing one every couple of hours it sucks but keep on enjoying them i guess God bless you and your family my friend
Hey, Twin Falls, Idaho!! You're in my home state :) The trash doesn't surprise me, in all honesty. It's just as bad here in the panhandle. So thank you for helping out!
As someone who comes from a family of farmers and ranchers, my thanks for clearing those racks. Most people don't understand the unending labor that ag work entails, even with heavy machinery.
It's a lot easier when you're not trying to grow stuff in the desert.
@@S4B3R117 The problem will eventually solve itself. I know. 😱🤣
@@S4B3R117 Check out Lind and Ritzville, Wa. The Volga settled there and grew winter wheat way back when and still going.?
I forgot to mention without irrigation!
@@S4B3R117 FR thats why the west is losing water bc of AG wasteful practices
You are a special young man...not only talking about the environment but willing to help.
he certainly is :)
My 9 yr old grandson loves to watch all of your videos with me !!! You've helped me instill a bigger love of nature than I could've done on my own !! As well as his LOVE of all your food opening videos !!!! And he loves your camping videos !! He's been waiting for winter so he can try to build his own igloo !!! We're both excited to go camping this winter, even if we're not able to build our own igloo lol !!!
Thank you from the bottom of my heart !! I'm not in very good health, but watching you and all of your adventures and your love of outdoors- it feels like I'm on your hike - climbing those mountains - looking for spider friends - listening for tail smacks from angered beaver friends - clearing those drains - trying to unclog those culverts to make the roads safer for everyone, I'll never be able to do all of the amazingly wonderful outdoorsy adventurous things you can do. . . . But I'm extremely grateful that you always take me and Elijah with you ! ! ! Thank you for all of the adventures !!!!
What a lovely post! xx
@@marionmclean3749 thank you
Tiffany, what a lovely story @ your 9-year-old grandson following 💙 in this lovely manno's f😍😍t steps.
P.S. sorry to read about your current experiencing health issues, my prayers for your healing to newly restored health, and your 9-year-old grandson's upbringing to blossom into a productive, beautiful, gracious man with an appreciation for nature. 🙏🏽
@@cobaltmidnightoilamp6748 thank you for such a beautiful comment, thank you for the prayers as well ...😉
Rather than a butterfly net, I'd recommend a Pool pole and surface skimmer. it's basically a squarish frame with a mesh stretched across it. They're specifically designed for removing things that are floating on water. They're pretty cheap, and pool poles are typically extendable. They're much more durable than a butterfly net too.
Yeah a skimmer would work perfectly.
I basically just posted the same thing!
Had not seen your comment yet.
Great minds...
Exactly what I was thinking shame we are even having to think about this
This guy ROCKS! The world needs so many more people like you! Keep on doing what you do!
I never thought I would say this but…I like the new rake better than the old one 👍
It's a potato rake, and I think it does work better for what he is doing. Hopefully it doesn't break down a lot. Not long ago the head of it came loose and he had to fix it.
The beauty of TH-cam... I'm sitting in Ireland getting a tour of American states I will probably never travel to. Thank you.
Best Wishes, Brendan.
Cross country trip clearing culverts....only Post 10💯This guy is an ABSOLUTE LEGEND!!
This is just west of me. Irrigation and checking the ditches near my weirs is my job(since I farm). I wish more people were like you and cleaned the ditches. It makes the world a better place if we clean up. Part of the reason that the ditches look especially dirty this year is that they had to replace most of the workers(There was a strike because of pay). Because of that most of the ditch riders(what the job is called colloquially) are new and inexperienced/lazy/uninvested in the job.
I wish you were passing through Boise. I have a trash rack rake that I salvaged out of an irrigation canal. They actually make a rake specially for this purpose. The rake head looks very similar to the narrow long toothed rake you are using, but the handle is like 12’ long. Most trash racks are way larger, that long handle gives the ditch rider the extra reach, without danger of falling into canal.
At some point, probably while burning ditch banks and cleaning the ditches, the ditch riders will simply make sure it is safe and just light the pile of dried accumulated trash, plastic and all.
Much of the plastic will get blown back into the ditch, wind generally is blowing in the high Snake River Plain.
If those “full bottles” have yellow liquid in them. That is not Mt Dew! 😂
There is a very good chance that melted plastic suffered a range fire, OR was partly burned during annual ditch cleaning/burning.
Some of what you are pulling off the racks is koshia, a common weed. True tumble weeds (Russian Thistle) are round and very full if stickers. Much of the Russian thistle is red, unless sun bleached.
After watching the rest of video, seeing all the water still in the ditches, AND seeing the coal train, you are in central to eastern WA. BTW, much of the coal on those rails is from Montana and headed to China. About 1 train per hour crosses WA every day. And most of those coal trains are way larger. They need all the locomotives to get over the mountain passes between Montana and Portland.
That trash rack design is a great piece of engineering - effective, easy to clean, and they look built to last for several years. it is a shame they didn't continue the rack to the edges of the drainage ditch to prevent all of those plastic bottles from going around the rack.
Here is a tip that most people do not know.. and your mention of cattails is what reminded me of it..
If your in need of a natural soap.. especially for cleaning your hair or clothing... You can use the inside of cattails.
Of course it still needs to be green and alive. Just chop off a stalk close to the bottom... Mash up the stalk to get the plants inside product out and squeeze it out..
it lathers up nicely , and is not just natural but is an excellent to clean and break down body dirt's and oils.. it has a decent smell ..
You will be surprised how well it cleans. It is a little tougher to use on skin because the skin is so smooth.. it takes a bit of friction and agitation to get it lathering up.. which is why washing the hair or clothing is easier.. because your doing it by hand..
But it strips and cleans hair nice..it is healthy and natural for the hair..
Weird tip... And useful should you ever find yourself in a place and situation where you need something and have cattails available.
Being it is 100% natural..it is environmentally safe as well. The guts inside is a milky like substance something like Aloe Vera .
They are a good source of food as well, the roots that is. Full of starch, and as you said, they too have to be mashed up.
(The book, Clan of the Cave Bear is my source of knowledge, Cattails are mentioned hundreds of times over the book series). One day I will go full on paleolithic and collect some, trouble is wherever I've seen them growing they are rather inaccessible, lots of mud.
As with any foraged wild edible, ensure that the cattail is not growing by a roadside, since there is a high concentration of heavy metals wherever vehicles roam. Also, the water source it grows in should be good smelling and unpolluted. Cattails are great for our waterways because they filter out contaminants. This also means they can be contaminated.
your videos are so enjoyable to watch and educational to those who have no knowledge of america even children can watch. keep up the videos regardes from england
I love how you pick up trash as well as clearing up debris. You really go above and beyond
As an American I am proud of what you do. Cleaning culverts and States that you don't live in driving out West and continuing your good work.
Do you have family outwest or is this just a planned trip that you made?
I totally enjoy listening and watching you do what you do from culverts to wildlife whatever it may be, thank you.
I think you need to get some hats that say have rake will travel lol.
“Have rake, will travel” 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
Traveled cross country many times. The insight you share has been unknown but truly interesting. Thank you Post! ♥️👍♥️
The trash is a disgrace isn’t it …
I see so many plastic bottles all over the landscape.
I have been using the same two 1 liter bottles for portable water for over a year, and now that I have a couple of good travel bottles, I won't be buying any more plastic water bottles after the two I have go brittle.
-
As a pre-teen (back in the 1970's) I had a job cleaning the lots of strip malls and shopping plazas out in the Phoenix area, and since then I refuse to litter.
If I have trash and I am not near the right place to put it, it goes in my pocket until I am.
The only thing I throw out of my car are apple cores (for the critters!).
Don't worry, when I throw away my plastic bottles on the side of the road, it gives a bit of pride for those who will pick it up later.
👍
@@Reth_Hard 😄
We have a 10 cent deposit on most drink bottles and cans, and you'd be surprised how many people still throw them out. 😅
Jeremy Smith, it's also an EYE👁SORE as well, I wish people would take better care of what our Heavenly Father God has given us.
I hope your enjoying your travels. Thanks for taking us along.
The length of those freight trains is astounding!
it's not freight per se. It is filthy polluting coal going to Portland OR and Everett WA. Sent to SE Asia because they are over there arguing about prices and politics. (Australia has Coal). The burning of. mill in years old sequestered carbon affects you and me no matter who or where it is being burned. I thought maybe I was off point but post 10 is helping us think about the hydrologic cycle and such. I like this channel.
I love that your out in Montana just doing your own thing, in your own world, being a super hero
You really deserve a swimming pool skimmer always with you!
Great vid. Reminds me so much of the Central Valley of California
Fantastic job very interesting and entertaining thanks. Chris from England
Those open country areas with patches of green and irrigation channels remind me of my home and country in which my ancestors and generations that followed settled and farmed. Thanks for the journey and the trains Post 10.
It's nice to watch from the uk, we get to see bits of the USA xx
I love this video, I lived in Spain for 11years and could never understand the irrigation system there, thanks for explaining this one.
Your videos are so enjoyable! I love that you show rural infrastructure and help along the way. Your zest for life about simple every day things is amazing! Trains, ships, farming and oh yea 💧 water!! Your so knowledgeable as well. Thanks again for filming. Enjoy!!
Your having great fun out there travelling around and removing trash and well impressed in how you do it + bonus of trains of which you love. Great stuff again
i AM ASHAMED OF ALL THOSE WHO VIEWED AND DID NOT HIT THE THUMBS UP TO HELP HIM KEEP DOING SO MUCH TO HELP SO MANY COMMUNITIES. HE DOES NOT GET PAID TO DO THIS WORK.
This is one of my all time favorites!! I learned so much in such a short amount of time. Well done sir!
Love how he just plunges his hand into filthy water and grabs even filthier stuff within no gloves love that
I wouldn't call that water filthy, it just has some debris floating in it it's just river water
Its not filthy unless you are draining a beaver pond with moose poop floating straight to you
Brilliant trash rack design! Trains! Miles of rr track!
Mystery boat.
Thank you for more adventures! Beautiful scenery! 🖖
I'm always blown away by the length of those trains!
That is definitely a cool trash rack and interesting irrigation system they have there!
The canals are open to the air. It was built without considering drought. Pipes are better, libya knew what they were doing.
A nice tour today. Thanks!
Hey Post. Thanks for taking us with you on your travels. What have you seen that surprised you? Things that are different in the west vs. the east?
Tragic to see so much trash in the middle of nowhere. Good to see someone doing something to battle the situation! Every bit helps.
Amazing train spotting. Rail Car full of rails. That was awesome. Thanks!
I admire Post 10. I grew up and live in the Southern San Joaquin Valley of California. In the 1960s Kern County lpoked just like this. Ming Avenue had irrigation ditches and canals running all up and down along the side of it and Stein Road
Your videos are amazing. With your knowledge and walking with the camera, it's like I'm their with you on a field trip. Another amazing video
It's the simple pleasures in life....a clean culvert, a tumbling waterflow, a heavy-loaded train - for you. Simple pleasures like fresh cut grass, baked bread and lavender - for me.
Our boy in our part of the woods, or fields I should say! lol Glad you got to see how cool our systems are just as you've done for us showing us east coast infrastructure :)
Thank you so much for sharing your adventures and for reminding us that good, hard-working people still exist. 😎❤👏
this was a great episode! ty so much for sharing your journey with us. also those trains are super long!
For floating debris in those small pools, a pool skimmer net would work better than a potato rake. The skimmer net would not take much space at all in a truck or wagon. TY for this video Post.
Yes. My dad irrigated his grapes and cotton years ago with these siphon tubes exactly as you explained. I helped him occasionally.
Nice job for someone who cares. i love these odd videos of your travels doing many things.
Something so simple yet with big results. Another great video
Not only do you provide ASMR through your travels, for a railfan such as me, you provide eye candy as well. Thanks for all you do!
If you were to start up a membership program with perks for your viewers I would probably be your first member. I'd like to see emojis of a rake and a spider friend. 🥇
I do have that with perks on patreon.com youtube takes most of the money
@@post.10 That sux!
Omg I love your vids, always makes me look at the drainage systems in my community and surrounding communities. I love your explanation when you're working on clogs
I always wondered how the water way worked. Thanks again..
this was so interesting! glad you took us along to see. had no idea how they irrigated crops like that. Where I live in MI. they grow potatoes, onions and radishes. County south of me has apples, blueberries.
Fantastic trains. Great to watch. So long and fast. 👍👍👍👍👍. Also the man with the rake, just awesome.........💥💥
Get this man a net to collect the rubbish. Good job 👍
Hey Post, you favorite valve expert guy here. A sluice valve is pronounced as if it rhymes with moose not mice.
Enjoying this channel here in Australia 🇦🇺
I genuinely want to spend my time hanging out with this guy and clearing trash racks and drainage ditches. I’ll bring my own rake and everything. Only problem is I’m on the other side of the Atlantic😢
That just means you give it a try in his honor.😊
You should get a pool net that is used for pulling junk for swimming pools.. That would work really well.
Great video. I have never seen a train with 5 locomotives before, that was so neat. Love to see rushing water. A very interesting video.
Dammit Postie, you sped it up again! 😁 I wanted to count how many carriages were on that second train!
Go to settings at the bottom of the screen.... you can go to slow motion
Such vastness is amazing to see ty so much for sharing ❤
Hey Post how far away from your home area have you travelled? love seeing the different scenery (the plastic waste is horrid tho) thanks for taking us with you xx from England
Almost 3000 miles
@@post.10 looks like OK from here, or somewhere close
@@post.10 thank you! xx
Uncloging Hoover dam next. :)
Hey @post 10 are you going back to New England to unclogging or beaver dam removals any time soon ?
It's like the worlds worst fair game but in the end everyone is in fact a winner.
Yes, the full water bottles fly farther when thrown out of a moving vehicles than empty ones
thanks for all that you do..... you are like a ninja with that rake.!!!!
Thanks for cleaning up the plastic before it breaks and gets smaller.
Fascinating stuff. They sure need that water there. Another job well done.
When I see the amount of plastic and general waste just dumped anywhere, it makes me quite depressed.
I don't have a huge problem with the plastic we use, but deal with it responsibly. Just don't dump it wherever you want 🤬
/rant
Another great video, your road trip looks amazing. Could you do a short video of where you traveled to, distance traveled etc?
Thank you so much Post. Enjoy your videos 😊
"sluice" rhymes with juice. Another great video!
Your doing an awesome job Post. A net used for cleaning pools would work great for the small bits. Extra long handle for reaching.
You're a good man, post! Cheers brother!
Your travels take us to some amazing places. .. 👍👍
I can obviously tell you are still in eastern Washington... I grew up there. Have fun 🙂
Post 10 what you need to get is a pond skimmer you get them at Walmart they're really cheap I use them for my duckpond get their feathers out hope you have a good day and you're doing a great job hugs
Post! Awesome video!! As usual, giving a good hand of help to the people and farmers! You are the best. Maybe next time, like you said, it could be handy have a butterfly net or a pool cleaner net. Maybe they can help you to remove some debries and leaves that float in the surface. Anyway you rock mate! Keep unclogging the racks and culverts and giving a hand to people. Also, keep exploring!!
Take care! and greetings from Argentina!
Yes, it’s beautiful flowing water 2nd covert..
When you enjoy your job you have the best job in the world.
the scenery is amazing there
With regard to the trash you've been seeing, I don't think it's because the area has a lot more slobs, rather it's an enormous flat, dry and very windy plain, so what trash there is tends to fetch up in places like ditches or along fence lines.
Great video! Thanks! I get so excited when I see you’ve posted a new video, but I’m an old person! LOL
A pool skimmer would be great to use for it for that small stuff
Also check out pool skimmer nets. They're deliberately made for removing debris from the surface of water.
Welcome to Quincy!
Nice to see wide open spaces.
Great guy. Need a lot more like that
When I was young the irrigation ditch ran in front of our house. We had a sump pump in it and when our well dried up we used it. It was free at the time from the feather river project. Sadly it doesn’t run in front of that house anymore. It would be regularly tested. Was more pure than the well water.
I wonder if our pal Post10 played hockey as a kid, excellent stick handler!
Damn, should have brought a pool skimmer with ya this time.
Sense you like trains. On your way back, you might want to go to North Plate, Nebraska. There is the Bailey Yard. LARGEST RAIL YARD IN THE COUNTRY!! 300 tracks wide!! At the West end of the yard is the Golden Spike Tower. It is 8 stores tall over looking the yard. 150 trains a day go through it! I have done it. AND WOW!! There is also people that work on the top floor that know what you are looking at. Steven Sipes
hey bro if you love trains so much come live in nw Indiana where i do and u will start to hate them always blocking the roads for hours and hours seeing one every couple of hours it sucks but keep on enjoying them i guess God bless you and your family my friend
Wow that was one heck of a long train❤
I've been catching up on my post videos . brilliant
Post10.
Another thing you could keep in the car is an inner tube, then you can go through places like that culvert. 😆👍
Hey, Twin Falls, Idaho!! You're in my home state :) The trash doesn't surprise me, in all honesty. It's just as bad here in the panhandle. So thank you for helping out!
It's Washington..... close to Grand Coulee
I really enjoyed your road trip
Never a boring video
Thank you, post! 💜
Thank you for filming the trains :)
We call them sluice gates in the UK; it's funny to hear the variations.
Most of us call them that here in North America too, lol
@@lindastent-campbell5130 you say slice as in slice of cake its said like loose as in you have a screw loose
nobody says slice gate. I have lived in both countries
That 2nd train was awesome. Lol