This is really sad. My husband and some of my family members farm. This dairy farm was a huge operation once. It usually takes a few generations to build such a large farm. It's so much work, hard work. Long hours 7 days a week. 12 to 16 hour days. It breaks my heart to see how this dairy farm has been left to rot. I think of all the family dinners, wives cooking so much more food during harvest, the cost of good winter clothes that will last. The children who grew up here and eventually inherited the operation. The hours of teaching new generations how to work, take care of the animals, repair equipment, use the equipment and so on. It really makes me cry to see what has happened to this farm. 😢
Dairy complex got built somewhere between 1978 and 1989 replacing older milking facilities. likely housed 60 plus lactating cows. definetly a a state of art operation at the time and looks abdoned somewhere between 2008 to 2012. I was told the former owners are still farming but out in westren Canada. Thanks for the video
We need our farms up and running ! This happens when a farmer passes and his family either isn't interested in farming or can no longer make a living doing so. Very sad :(
JO MAMMA. You are totally correct and now the people from the city are buying up all the farmland around my farm. We can’t afford to pay a million dollars for 100 acres of vacant farm land, no house or barn. We tried to buy our neighbours farm when we heard he was selling. It was 100 acres right beside us, so I went to talk to him and the realtor told us he will get well over a million. Well the farm sold for 1.8 million to a city it that told us he wants it to be just natural with walking trails and stuff. The couple that bought are a young couple from Toronto with 2 kids and it’s a weekend/ holiday home. They have been up a half a dozen times in 3 months of owning it and refuses to rent it to us or any other farmer. THIS IS THE REAL PROBLEM, BUY A FARM FARM IT. People don’t understand all our food will soon be coming from China because all our farms are being bought up by developers or people like my new neighbours. Sorry about my rant but I’m a very upset farmer!!!!!!!
So so sad! Just to think, someone loved this place, and now it is rubbish. I cannot believe that there r so many abandoned properties in Canada, and yet there r people that do not have a place to stay. Makes me so sad. One day, we will speak for a reason all this is happening. Thank u for sharing Brent. Luv ur work, at times it must leave u with way more questions than answers. Keep up the good work.
Its a huge house with big rooms, once the roof leaks it ruins a house its hard to tell how far in the walls the water has gone. Also I love watching your videos you take your time so we can see everything and you go in the basement. I've watched other explorer videos yours are my favorite.
Isla Furey actually you’ll find a good percent of dairy farmers treat their cattle excellent.. they are the source of income, we rely on our cattle to make a living, and with that comes a huge amount of respect for the animals. I spend more on my cattle feeding them, getting them vet care and proper living conditions then I do on my self.
@@jilliand.1616 no they dont Karen. Maybe you shluld do some research on dairy farmers before assuming you know everything. Dairy farmers actually love their cows. Its vegans like you who give humanity a bad name.
I can say with confidence that this is not 176 years old. Maybe the house and 1 or 2 of the outbuildings. As suggested on another comment the dairy barn is newer as well as the Harvester silos and I noticed a TMR mixer that is from late 90's early 2000. Definitely a cool discovery thanks for sharing!
I agree, that dairy barn wasn’t any older than the late 1960’s. Harvestor silos, Patz stable cleaner and manure storage structure match up with the dairy facility not being much over 50 years old. Looked like about 100 cow barn. And from the size of the trees growing around the buildings 25-30 years empty. This was once the most modern and advanced prosperous dairy farms wanted to be like
This video and the video of the animal shelter are my favorites. They bring back wonderful memories for me. Thank you for being so respectful to all places that you explore and share with us. I enjoy how you film your videos; the music, lighting, the way you comment on what we are seeing. Be safe and keep exploring.
Very interesting. They must have updated their pipeline not long ago. That's a good size vacuum line. Beautiful feeding system. My guess the 20 x80 Harvestore's are for haylage. The shorter one is for high moisture grain. That red piece of equipment you walked by going into the feed room is TMR. Haylage and grain and minerals were precisely weighed out then fed to the cattle. Thank you for the video.
I didn't live on a farm but I grew up in a town of 100 people and at the end our alley there was a dairy farm and at 6yrs old I would walk down and help him milk his cows by hand and that had to every 12 hrs or their utters may break. It was fun and from there I loved to farm.
Wow Brent my favourite animals are cow's this would be a piece of heaven for me. I always told my mum "I'm going to marry a farmer" alas i didn't. I can just imagine the sights and sounds of this place and the cow's mooing,kid's playing, dog's barking etc its huge. Blissful out in the countryside. I can dream i guess. Amazing find and worthwhile explore.The history of this place is great and interesting into the bargain.POOR RACCOON so cute like little bandits.
Wow that was a very large family dairy operation. Those blue silos are Harvestores. Big big money. Such a shame. Do you have any history on when/why abandoned? Wallpaper looked like early 90's when banks foreclosing on farms big-time here in the States. Guessing there too? House was huge, beautiful wood floors in many rooms. I noticed the trim had been removed throughout much of the house, too, repurposed by someone? Oh, just a suggestion you tone down your music a tad. I like to listen to the insects and birds out in the country and found it disconcerting. Although looked fun, I definitely wouldn't have walked up that ramp over that manure lagoon, good call stopping. That lagoon looked nasty. Be careful and thanks for the great tour! Very intriguing place. Would love some history on it. I live on a farm in Michigan (not dairy, lol, they work too hard). Thanks again for the lovely tour of your countryside.
Leslie's LowPretzel Leslie's LowPretzel thanks so much for watching. Thanks for letting me know about the Harvestores I looked them up and yes some are worth $175,000! I didn’t realize that was a manure lagoon as I’m not that educated on farming. If I known that I don’t think I would climb up that! Lol. Farms out here don’t usually foreclose developers usually buy them up and build subdivisions. There is a lot of history on this place and I put it in the description. Thanks for the positive comments and thanks again for watching!
@@AbandonedUrbexCanada Egads, I missed that. Color me stupid!!! Thanks! Usually the history is expanded, not realize it was there. Thanks so much for all the detail. Great! 👍
Wow, so there is a deep history with this place. It should have been part of the historical society. I hate to see places like this abandoned and then destroyed.
That used to be quite an operation, could almost hear the cows. You really gave me the chills when you climbed up those steel beams. Wouldn't want to fall into that muck.
Always makes me think what happened that people just walked away from all this. Nobody sold it off nothing. Just weird. Where are the kids or families that could’ve sold out off??
This place was very scary. 😱 There was a creepy vibe from beginning to end. When you started down the steps to the basement I freaked! I’m afraid of heights like that over the green slime water. Eeeeewwwww OMG!!!!
This was an awesome explore! Brought me back to growing up on my dads dairy farm and milking cows. We had a stanchion barn also, hard on the knees. Sadly he no longer is dairying either. I suppose his barn will look that some day too. Thanks for sharing!
That was a big operation at one time. We have one dairy farm in our area maybe that size. So many are gone. The condition of the house seemed out of sync with the barns. Wonder if it was leased out like so many old home places. I’m sure it was very nice but it’s had some hard years. I love wide hallways and the one upstairs was neat. Now the big tub was just so out of place. And I am also glad you didn’t dive into the manure pit. Thoroughly enjoying your videos. ❤️
The Bathroom wallpaper 'big yellow flowers' was every bit my late Mothers style, God rest her very much missed soul, she'd of Loved it, and I can undoubtedly say I'm sure we even had that paper at some point. I Love your video's for more then the awesome properties, you also bring back floods of wonderful memories of life Once upon a time. Thanks there Hottie Ontarian xo
curious as to why the Harvestore silos weren't sold when they shut down operations. as weird as it might seem they are sellable because the silos my family farm have are used ones. the mixer could of been sold too. the pipeline in the barn is the air suction line and the stainless steel pipeline, milk tank, milkers, and any other equipment from the milkhouse would of been sold off when they shutdown
So that's where the dead racoon in all intros came from !!! Finally 😂 Cool place, great explore ! They obviously took care of this huge farm house. Evidently some organization did not care about the info you shared in the description. Should be heritage. Can't wait for your next vid. Keep up the great work and stay safe 👍
That was a large dairy farm. I think the algae would have held you up had you called in 🙃. Huge house. With its place in local history, looks like so preservation group would have stepped in to preserve. Lovely explore. Thanks for taking us with you. Be careful and stay safe!! ~~Deb from VA
Such a cool place and house to be bought up in as a kid, I always try to imagine these houses full of life in there heyday, another cool video, Paul still watching in the UK
Wow! One ginormous farm. Shame it's been left like this. A pool lagoon. Gross! Glad you didn't fall in it. Wonder if the pla've had a pool? Thought I saw a flash of blue through the Windows. Take care Ok?
I lived at one of those farmhouses years ago. We rented half of a huge house when I was a child. Those cows lived in their spots all winter. They each had a shackle around the neck and they could either stand up or lie down. They'd give birth in a separate room and go right back to their spot. That's how they got them started. To give milk. My little brother was three and he was forbidden to go into that barn alone. But he did. And he came back to the house to tell my mother that a cow had licked him. Poor thing. Missing her little calf. She licked my little brother instead. The bull was huge. He was kept in a tiny area at the end of the room. It was a solid cement enclosure with iron bars along the top. He'd climb up and look through the bars at all the cows being milked. He was frightening. We weren't farming people at all. It was fascinating but that bull. Another poor creature fenced in with a ring through his nose. The cows were all free to roam during the summer to eat grass and wander about. But they were called in at night for milking. And they came willingly.
goldkhw Ya I guess we need milk but I never agreed on how they are treated. I think farmers are getting better now and are being forced to be more better. Thanks for sharing your cool story I liked that. 👍😁
They don't have choice. If given a choice no animal would ask to be force eably impregnated, babies taken away, shackled and breast milk taken to feed humans?? Babies killed...mothers reduced to hamburger when their "production" slows down. Time to wake up folks. Do some research on the environmental cost of animal ag. Hope these people found a more compassionate and ethical livelihood. Love farms where people are growing food for people. That makes sense.
I don't know what that structure was called, but I wouldn't have walked on it. Oh, no. I got scared then thought, you posted the video so this meant you were okay. I would have lost my balance. "Bye bye, Joh!" - Johanne
has anyone noticed the whispers in the audio especially right after when he walked into the bathroom and commented on the wallpaper? or is it just me or maybe the soundtrack ?
The large blue structure are silos, for storing feed wet without spoiling. The milk holding tank had been removed with the rest of the milking equipment. (scrap stainless steel is valuable).
Hey Brent. I love your videos! You do sure a great job, treat the places with respect. But I beg you, please do not start putting music in the background. I am at minute 11:24 and I had to stop it to take a break-which I never have to do with you. If the place wasn't so interesting and your filming of it so excellent, I would just move on. ❤❤ P.S. I like the music at intro and end. Just not all the way thru.
I like you ur videos and sad abandon houses you taking all views one request to you please take care do wear gloves and mask 😷 protect yourself mouldy virus 👍🇦🇺
@@AbandonedUrbexCanada That's a shame. I grew up in ON and we explored as teens, minus the theft and grafiti. I have since moved away. Its nice to see. Keep up the awesome videos! Hopefully you can find an exploring companion.
having trouble with the 176 yr. old thing. This place has plumbing and HVAC system and semi-modern electric, which is run inside the walls, not outside on conduit. Where does the 176 yr. old factor come into play?
@@AbandonedUrbexCanada right, I already addressed that in my comment, but that still does not explain the discrepancy. Title is a bit misleading. I am a restoration specialist. Most of the structures in this video are not 176 years old. Nice video anyway... was just looking for some clarification. Cheers.
that would be a monster of a house to heat! Starting and keeping a dairy farm is no easy feat. The price of your milk quota is insane. One mistake and POOF! There goes your license to ship milk! Only takes one bad year and you have the bank crawling up your butt!
This is really sad. My husband and some of my family members farm. This dairy farm was a huge operation once. It usually takes a few generations to build such a large farm. It's so much work, hard work. Long hours 7 days a week. 12 to 16 hour days. It breaks my heart to see how this dairy farm has been left to rot. I think of all the family dinners, wives cooking so much more food during harvest, the cost of good winter clothes that will last. The children who grew up here and eventually inherited the operation. The hours of teaching new generations how to work, take care of the animals, repair equipment, use the equipment and so on. It really makes me cry to see what has happened to this farm. 😢
This had me crying also. We were dairyfarmers. What you said is so true. It is a life. This was a huge , very nice setup.
@@lindakrumenauer1099 this place was loved and well maintained by someone.
Dairy complex got built somewhere between 1978 and 1989 replacing older milking facilities. likely housed 60 plus lactating cows. definetly a a state of art operation at the time and looks abdoned somewhere between 2008 to 2012. I was told the former owners are still farming but out in westren Canada. Thanks for the video
We need our farms up and running ! This happens when a farmer passes and his family either isn't interested in farming or can no longer make a living doing so. Very sad :(
JO MAMMA. You are totally correct and now the people from the city are buying up all the farmland around my farm. We can’t afford to pay a million dollars for 100 acres of vacant farm land, no house or barn. We tried to buy our neighbours farm when we heard he was selling. It was 100 acres right beside us, so I went to talk to him and the realtor told us he will get well over a million. Well the farm sold for 1.8 million to a city it that told us he wants it to be just natural with walking trails and stuff. The couple that bought are a young couple from Toronto with 2 kids and it’s a weekend/ holiday home. They have been up a half a dozen times in 3 months of owning it and refuses to rent it to us or any other farmer. THIS IS THE REAL PROBLEM, BUY A FARM FARM IT. People don’t understand all our food will soon be coming from China because all our farms are being bought up by developers or people like my new neighbours. Sorry about my rant but I’m a very upset farmer!!!!!!!
So so sad! Just to think, someone loved this place, and now it is rubbish. I cannot believe that there r so many abandoned properties in Canada, and yet there r people that do not have a place to stay. Makes me so sad. One day, we will speak for a reason all this is happening. Thank u for sharing Brent. Luv ur work, at times it must leave u with way more questions than answers. Keep up the good work.
Sad to see that big farm sitting idle!
It must've been heck of a operation at one time.
Its a huge house with big rooms, once the roof leaks it ruins a house its hard to tell how far in the walls the water has gone. Also I love watching your videos you take your time so we can see everything and you go in the basement. I've watched other explorer videos yours are my favorite.
Thanks Rosemary your the best! Glad you enjoy my videos😁❤️
So sad.... The loss of another multi generational family farm...
Not sad they abuse the cows
@@jilliand.1616 No offense, but in all your wisdom could you explain the proper care for a milk cow.
Isla Furey actually you’ll find a good percent of dairy farmers treat their cattle excellent.. they are the source of income, we rely on our cattle to make a living, and with that comes a huge amount of respect for the animals. I spend more on my cattle feeding them, getting them vet care and proper living conditions then I do on my self.
@@jilliand.1616 what your talking about are the massive corporation owned farms.
@@jilliand.1616 no they dont Karen. Maybe you shluld do some research on dairy farmers before assuming you know everything. Dairy farmers actually love their cows. Its vegans like you who give humanity a bad name.
I can say with confidence that this is not 176 years old. Maybe the house and 1 or 2 of the outbuildings. As suggested on another comment the dairy barn is newer as well as the Harvester silos and I noticed a TMR mixer that is from late 90's early 2000. Definitely a cool discovery thanks for sharing!
There is a plaque on the front lawn stating this and I also have the heritage documents 😁👍
I agree, that dairy barn wasn’t any older than the late 1960’s. Harvestor silos, Patz stable cleaner and manure storage structure match up with the dairy facility not being much over 50 years old. Looked like about 100 cow barn. And from the size of the trees growing around the buildings 25-30 years empty. This was once the most modern and advanced prosperous dairy farms wanted to be like
This video and the video of the animal shelter are my favorites. They bring back wonderful memories for me. Thank you for being so respectful to all places that you explore and share with us. I enjoy how you film your videos; the music, lighting, the way you comment on what we are seeing. Be safe and keep exploring.
Thank you very much!
Ok this one just makes me sad. Too many dairy farms are closing.. Such a beautiful place
Would loved to have seen this one in its prime. Loved all the colors in the rooms.....made it a bright, happy place!
Sarah Mcleod Yes great history here. Hope you read the description😁
Very interesting. They must have updated their pipeline not long ago. That's a good size vacuum line. Beautiful feeding system. My guess the 20 x80 Harvestore's are for haylage. The shorter one is for high moisture grain. That red piece of equipment you walked by going into the feed room is TMR. Haylage and grain and minerals were precisely weighed out then fed to the cattle. Thank you for the video.
Hey Brent thanks for sharing this! I just added this abandoned farm a few days ago th-cam.com/video/OSL7q6GjkU0/w-d-xo.html
What a big, beautiful house! It almost seems like you can still feel life in it. 😕
I didn't live on a farm but I grew up in a town of 100 people and at the end our alley there was a dairy farm and at 6yrs old I would walk down and help him milk his cows by hand and that had to every 12 hrs or their utters may break. It was fun and from there I loved to farm.
Wow Brent my favourite animals are cow's this would be a piece of heaven for me. I always told my mum "I'm going to marry a farmer" alas i didn't. I can just imagine the sights and sounds of this place and the cow's mooing,kid's playing, dog's barking etc its huge. Blissful out in the countryside. I can dream i guess. Amazing find and worthwhile explore.The history of this place is great and interesting into the bargain.POOR RACCOON so cute like little bandits.
Wow that was a very large family dairy operation. Those blue silos are Harvestores. Big big money. Such a shame. Do you have any history on when/why abandoned? Wallpaper looked like early 90's when banks foreclosing on farms big-time here in the States. Guessing there too? House was huge, beautiful wood floors in many rooms. I noticed the trim had been removed throughout much of the house, too, repurposed by someone? Oh, just a suggestion you tone down your music a tad. I like to listen to the insects and birds out in the country and found it disconcerting. Although looked fun, I definitely wouldn't have walked up that ramp over that manure lagoon, good call stopping. That lagoon looked nasty. Be careful and thanks for the great tour! Very intriguing place. Would love some history on it. I live on a farm in Michigan (not dairy, lol, they work too hard). Thanks again for the lovely tour of your countryside.
Leslie's LowPretzel Leslie's LowPretzel thanks so much for watching. Thanks for letting me know about the Harvestores I looked them up and yes some are worth $175,000! I didn’t realize that was a manure lagoon as I’m not that educated on farming. If I known that I don’t think I would climb up that! Lol. Farms out here don’t usually foreclose developers usually buy them up and build subdivisions. There is a lot of history on this place and I put it in the description. Thanks for the positive comments and thanks again for watching!
@@AbandonedUrbexCanada Egads, I missed that. Color me stupid!!! Thanks! Usually the history is expanded, not realize it was there. Thanks so much for all the detail. Great! 👍
HA.HA... I LOVE THE MUSIC!! ITS GETS YOU INTERESTED IN WHAT he's about to show!! Keep up the music..love it
Wow. Amazing history. Such a terrible pity when developers have no conscience about allowing this needless waste.
Wow, so there is a deep history with this place. It should have been part of the historical society. I hate to see places like this abandoned and then destroyed.
Yes should be on the heritage list this place
I am all too familiar with this scene..brought back great memories..thanks for sharing...❤
With some big bucks it could be put back in operation
That used to be quite an operation, could almost hear the cows. You really gave me the chills when you climbed up those steel beams. Wouldn't want to fall into that muck.
Ya the 💩 lagoon 🤣
Love your story on how you got started. This farm house is amazing. Thank you so much for so many great videos.
Susan Dilts thanks Susan for you comments I appreciate it. Thanks for watching 😁
Always makes me think what happened that people just walked away from all this. Nobody sold it off nothing. Just weird. Where are the kids or families that could’ve sold out off??
Really cool find. Old farms are really neat to explore. You were braver than I would have been walking in those beams lol
Urbexy Thanks my friend! I seen the opportunity and had to do it.
Quite right :-)
You would not have made it out of the poop lagoon if you fell in.
🤪 ya that would have been a bad day
Where exactly???
This place was very scary. 😱 There was a creepy vibe from beginning to end. When you started down the steps to the basement I freaked! I’m afraid of heights like that over the green slime water. Eeeeewwwww OMG!!!!
This was an awesome explore! Brought me back to growing up on my dads dairy farm and milking cows. We had a stanchion barn also, hard on the knees. Sadly he no longer is dairying either. I suppose his barn will look that some day too. Thanks for sharing!
Your welcome hope I brought back happy memories 😁
This house has so many different styles. From the 30s, 70s, 80s and what look like 90s doors lying around.
That was a big operation at one time. We have one dairy farm in our area maybe that size. So many are gone. The condition of the house seemed out of sync with the barns. Wonder if it was leased out like so many old home places. I’m sure it was very nice but it’s had some hard years. I love wide hallways and the one upstairs was neat. Now the big tub was just so out of place. And I am also glad you didn’t dive into the manure pit. Thoroughly enjoying your videos. ❤️
Thanks Susan! Yes this place was massive!
The Bathroom wallpaper 'big yellow flowers' was every bit my late Mothers style, God rest her very much missed soul, she'd of Loved it, and I can undoubtedly say I'm sure we even had that paper at some point. I Love your video's for more then the awesome properties, you also bring back floods of wonderful memories of life Once upon a time. Thanks there Hottie Ontarian xo
It's crazy all of the investment there,just abandoned!
curious as to why the Harvestore silos weren't sold when they shut down operations. as weird as it might seem they are sellable because the silos my family farm have are used ones. the mixer could of been sold too. the pipeline in the barn is the air suction line and the stainless steel pipeline, milk tank, milkers, and any other equipment from the milkhouse would of been sold off when they shutdown
Looks like the farm was abandoned by the 90s with the farmhouse getting a partial remodel in the 80s
Dairy shed and covered walk look like a set from Handmaid’s Tale!
Manure pit I believe is what your standing on
He was standing on the framework for the barncleaner, over the pit. I sure wouldnt!
So that's where the dead racoon in all intros came from !!! Finally 😂 Cool place, great explore ! They obviously took care of this huge farm house. Evidently some organization did not care about the info you shared in the description. Should be heritage.
Can't wait for your next vid. Keep up the great work and stay safe 👍
Thank you Adriana
Very interesting video! What a great old house. Pretty imaginative paint and wallpaper choices. Lol
Thank you for the explore!
Your welcome Tammie
Don't drink and drive - park and spark! Classic! Too funny! Great video 👍
What a shame that it came to this!
Sad and depressing as this is now the way of the world....I have seen many places become like this in the US...
Like how hidden the house is, the paint peeling adds a creepy effect. Another good job covering this place.
NOW.nature COMES BACK and takes back .
That was a large dairy farm. I think the algae would have held you up had you called in 🙃. Huge house. With its place in local history, looks like so preservation group would have stepped in to preserve. Lovely explore. Thanks for taking us with you. Be careful and stay safe!! ~~Deb from VA
Fallen in, not called in. 🙄
Hi. Ashley turned me on to your channel. Great explore and thank you for sharing.
Ronna Kelly Your welcome and Thank you for coming!
Beautiful farm and surrounding land such a shame it was left to the elements.
My g-g uncle Robert Dearing of West Gwillimbury, was the man who built the original brick house for the Dinwoodys.
I would keep the original doors and have them brought back to the wood.
Such a cool place and house to be bought up in as a kid, I always try to imagine these houses full of life in there heyday, another cool video, Paul still watching in the UK
Thank Paul 😁👍
Creepy place. Please explore with a friend. Big house. Stay safe
Thank you❤️😁
Why do people do this type of damage to other people's property. Sad. What an awesome place to see.
Thanks for the tour.
Man it's to bad that place got let go it's awsome
Love this place! The stairway is great.
Oh man that made me nervous! You're brave brent!
Scary music and the round angle lens gave me the creeps on this one. Good job!
Wao, amazing and lovely
Wow! One ginormous farm. Shame it's been left like this. A pool lagoon. Gross! Glad you didn't fall in it. Wonder if the pla've had a pool? Thought I saw a flash of blue through the Windows. Take care Ok?
2nd floor bathroom with the corner tub I totally get rid of that.
WOW this is one of ur best ones yet
Thank you! Your the best
It's sad to see a once-thriving farm in this condition.
Oh ya this was a big operation at one point. Now it just sits rotting away
That big area on right was where the bulk tank was at. With the window knocked out
Nice big house wow
Still a nice house, just cost fortune to update. Hope you did not go far on that 'ramp'. Got chill's should it break & you fall..
I lived at one of those farmhouses years ago. We rented half of a huge house when I was a child. Those cows lived in their spots all winter. They each had a shackle around the neck and they could either stand up or lie down. They'd give birth in a separate room and go right back to their spot. That's how they got them started. To give milk. My little brother was three and he was forbidden to go into that barn alone. But he did. And he came back to the house to tell my mother that a cow had licked him. Poor thing. Missing her little calf. She licked my little brother instead. The bull was huge. He was kept in a tiny area at the end of the room. It was a solid cement enclosure with iron bars along the top. He'd climb up and look through the bars at all the cows being milked. He was frightening. We weren't farming people at all. It was fascinating but that bull. Another poor creature fenced in with a ring through his nose. The cows were all free to roam during the summer to eat grass and wander about. But they were called in at night for milking. And they came willingly.
goldkhw Ya I guess we need milk but I never agreed on how they are treated. I think farmers are getting better now and are being forced to be more better. Thanks for sharing your cool story I liked that. 👍😁
Thank you for sharing. Sad to hear this is where milk comes from. Why do humans think we need milk from another species anyways?
Your right, they are taking it out of the food guide. Milk as a baby is excellent from the mother but after that its not not necessary
@@KatChanelb12 Check out: RAKESH GROUP MODERN DAIRY FARM on video here. Now, those cows are being pampered compared to long ago.
They don't have choice. If given a choice no animal would ask to be force eably impregnated, babies taken away, shackled and breast milk taken to feed humans?? Babies killed...mothers reduced to hamburger when their "production" slows down. Time to wake up folks. Do some research on the environmental cost of animal ag. Hope these people found a more compassionate and ethical livelihood. Love farms where people are growing food for people. That makes sense.
Really sad seeing this probably was a very good operation in the 70s and 80s almost feel like getting it and starting it up
Nice old well
Very nice 👍.
That’s where the poop went sir.....do not jump...lol.
😂 I heard this after lol
When you said ... check out the wall paper ... you or something said very nice ... creapy
👻🤪
Ohhh I thought it was him !!! I heard " so nice " a whisper 😕
I don't know what that structure was called, but I wouldn't have walked on it. Oh, no. I got scared then thought, you posted the video so this meant you were okay. I would have lost my balance. "Bye bye, Joh!" - Johanne
has anyone noticed the whispers in the audio especially right after when he walked into the bathroom and commented on the wallpaper? or is it just me or maybe the soundtrack ?
I’m surprised this place isn’t preserved by a historical society. ..Really cool
Nick P Was Here I’m surprised to
Those tanks😮it's hard to imagine having that many cows to fill them with milk
The large blue structure are silos, for storing feed wet without spoiling. The milk holding tank had been removed with the rest of the milking equipment. (scrap stainless steel is valuable).
@@haweater1555 wouldn't of been sold of scrap would of been sold to another dairy
Damn that is, or was a bloody BIG dairy farm but what made it like it is now?. It had to have thrived back in the day.
chaosdemonwolf1 No idea why it’s just sitting abandoned. But yes this was a big operation back in the day. This place was fun to explore 😁
The price of milk has dropped so low that farmers can't sustain themselves anymore. You can thank large companies like Wal-Mart for it.
chaosdemonwolf1 they probably got offered good $ for the farm
@@johncampsall8138 That's entirely possible
@@PhoenixXFeatherz it's not Wal Mart, it's you. How much will you pay for milk?
Nice custom music. Do you see the paint peeling off yet the base paint is not peeling?? Latex paint ove roil based paint will do that.!
Yup😁👍
Funny such a new front door
Don’t drink & drive, park & spark! Sage advice!(First useful graffiti I’ve seen in awhile)
Wishing well awesome
Hey Brent. I love your videos! You do sure a great job, treat the places with respect. But I beg you, please do not start putting music in the background. I am at minute 11:24 and I had to stop it to take a break-which I never have to do with you. If the place wasn't so interesting and your filming of it so excellent, I would just move on. ❤❤ P.S. I like the music at intro and end. Just not all the way thru.
Is that a piano in the corner of the basement at around 11:26?
I don’t think so but maybe
I was thinking Mike Myers
I like you ur videos and sad abandon houses you taking all views one request to you please take care do wear gloves and mask 😷 protect yourself mouldy virus 👍🇦🇺
At least their was nothing for people too steal or damage on the property
Neat house!
They could have at least pumped lagoon out lol
Chris Bennett I wasn’t sure what that was until a subscriber told me what it was lol glad I didn’t fall.
@@AbandonedUrbexCanada I know that's right lol that would be a crapy situation lmao
Looked like poo was pumped out to me or else it would have been a solid crust. Looked full of rainwater.💦
Why do you explore by yourself dude? Totally unsafe and more fun with a friend!
Not always by myself. I don’t know many people that enjoy it 😁👍
Abandoned Urbex Canada I love it, just exploring, but I agree it's tough to find the right type of person for these adventures..good luck!
@@AbandonedUrbexCanada That's a shame. I grew up in ON and we explored as teens, minus the theft and grafiti. I have since moved away. Its nice to see. Keep up the awesome videos! Hopefully you can find an exploring companion.
Omg … no way would i ever have climbed up there lol
So far the first floor I see a lot that could be gutted.
Big place
Must have been a 200 cow barn.
Could be restored love the layout
Sad that the land and barn just wasted
So old farm house big
Yes very big😁👍
Yes Right
Que lugar maravilhoso amei bjs
having trouble with the 176 yr. old thing. This place has plumbing and HVAC system and semi-modern electric, which is run inside the walls, not outside on conduit. Where does the 176 yr. old factor come into play?
House was built 176 years ago. Obviously houses have upgrades over the years
@@AbandonedUrbexCanada right, I already addressed that in my comment, but that still does not explain the discrepancy. Title is a bit misleading. I am a restoration specialist. Most of the structures in this video are not 176 years old. Nice video anyway... was just looking for some clarification. Cheers.
I'd fix the well up
Man that music in the back ground had me thinking we was in a horror movie 😳😳😳
You sure don’t want to fall in that green water
it’s loaded with worms & other stuff you would
end up in the ER!! 🙀 YIKES!!
that would be a monster of a house to heat! Starting and keeping a dairy farm is no easy feat. The price of your milk quota is insane. One mistake and POOF! There goes your license to ship milk! Only takes one bad year and you have the bank crawling up your butt!