I love watching your videos. Please keep it up. I’m a retired wood worker. I see you using finish sanders which take a lot of time. Get a 4””x24” electric belt sander. They are fast with very little left to finish sand. If you get a tractor get one with extra hydraulics on the front. After you cut brush, a grapple will pick up a whole pile and stack it out of the way. You can get a shredder that can turn 4” trees to compost. Last but not least get a Flailing attachment for the front. It can go right through heavy under brush and small trees and turn it all in to compost. They make them in Italy. Lastly they also make hand plainers that will smooth a board good enough to oil. I would add some diesel fuel to the oil that will make it absorb faster and deeper into the wood. Good luck
I enjoy hearing your updates but totally understand the need for a break. As the person who does all the editing I can say it does take a lot of time from the other projects that need doing 🧡🧡🧡 Have a great week Sarah x
The answers to some questions sadly made visible what I thought was the underlying problem in this project. I live here in central portugal for almost 15 years now, and until now, non of the projects that people started here actually turned out to be sustainable. When it's not possible to live of the land without income from sponsors, RU-vid revenue, Patreon and such, when "staff" only exists of volunteers, it's not sustainable, no matter how well the environmental part is taken care of. Lots of times I've seen people start something under the umbrella of "sustainable", biological farming etc. but in the end, they don't succeed without being very heavily visible on social media for the obvious reasons. You can't be an example or inspiration for others (especially younger Portuguese people), if the "living of the land" in fact is an unrealistic dream. Now don't get me wrong, I'm following this adventure from the start and had the impression that it was well thought over, even with the containers it all looked so well planned. (And I guess you are one of the few who actually got the permits to put some structures on the land, in contrast with a lot of people who believe the law and regulations don't apply to them, hence all the illegal dwellings). Sustainable doesn't mean living on gifts, doesn't mean having work done by volunteers (to many foreigners use so called volunteers, taking away work that a lot of Portuguese would do for you at a very reasonable rate). Sustainable also means there's profit made with the land to buy the things that don't come from the land. Sustainable also means taking responsibility for your dues to the community (for healthcare, for keeping your land accessible, and the roads that lead you from home to wherever. It's called tax and social premiums which are calculated by the profit you make with your business/property/land etc. So not exploiting it, but only using it as an experiment funded by gifts, sponsors, Patreon etc., is far from sustainable. It doesn't mean it has to be farming, it could be any business model that fits on the land. All my neighbours are farmers, and they make a living (not always without some poison or other less environmentally neutral ways, but it is a compromise that sometimes has to be made to have a farm that feeds a family. - and some neighbours as well -) I do believe we have to go back to traditional farming, but most farmers over here are still doing so, without any help, other than some locals during harvesting who are actually are getting paid with the same help in return or just plain old money. That's quite a sustainable community, far away from the mega scale farming companies. Your project seem to get along nicely, but with the answers on some of the questions I'm wondering whether you are walking in the same trap as all the other (well intended) experiments I have seen coming and go over the last 15 years... I wish you all the best with taking the right decisions!
Brilliant!. But maybe you (and me) are wrong! Living on and of the land is increasly dificult in a more and more regulated, competitive (global competition) and urban world, where lots of people can make vídeo editing easly, but are ignorant and bored by the daily chores of a homestead agricultural life. But those same people (for that reason) dream about a oniric "back to the land" "lazy Gardenning" "eco life'. Its another form of eternal return.... Looking for a paradaise in past, primitive past, "the origin". Anyway, most people only dream and see it on a screen. Many talk, comment, but Will never go and try. Maybe for a week, or weekend, "ecovacation", the experience... They pay for the experience and being Volunteer worker makes it more "autenthic"! Many not even that. They just watch. This is the point of this channels: entertainment, more then to be educational or inspiring... But they also are. By now Many already learn you should choose your land better. And have objectives and goals more defined...maybe next spring they learn that winter is when you prepper for spring... Maybe someone gets that being sustainable and Living the land is not a project, is a process, a full time never ending One. Its not a speed date, its a marriage and family kind of thing. Compromise, resiliência. In a "start up" instant pleasure kind of world its not easy to get and accept this .. They seem a litle bit lost and confused, but who dosent? All homesteaders are a bit lost sometimes, and need a break. Maybe they give up, or comeback more focused. At least they tried, and spended a year with no running water, electricity, swage...most wouldnt do it. Respect for that. Very few permaculturist live of agriculture. Many sell PDc and workshops, others survive on "ecoturism"...and now...many are semi professional vloggers. Good for them. " Whatever works". I like to watch it. Beats TV news, fb, Netflix crime series, etc.
Tenho 46 anos e vivo em Inglaterra desde ha 8 anos . Bem me lembro das dificuldades que os meus avos passavam a viverem so da terra , onde nem havia electricidade ou agua corrente , dai a razao da geracao dos meus pais sairem dali (Alentejo/Algarve) para procurar outra qualidade de vida .Hoje em dia tudo ao redor foi vendido a estranjeiros ,que arranjaram as casas velhas e vivem la a sua reforma , e ainda bem , traz vida a regiao , onde 1 dia tb quero me retirar . Mas nenhum deles vive sem o dinheiro da reforma , pois mesmo com a tecnologia hoje ao dispor torna-se complicado viver so de ajudas ou so da terra .Aplaudo eles ou quem quer que seja por tentarem e se esforcar ,e espero que nao dessistam , mas e complicado se nao houver um 'income' regular .
@@victorgoncalves2442 tem sido assim desde 1990, e em crescendo. Primeiro Alentejo e Algarve. Depois sudoeste, entretanto a geração boom está a fixar se no centro interior. E o resto está ir também, inclusive aqui no litoral centro e ilhas. Portugal está a transformar-se numa "Miami da Europa" (embora seja mais parecido coma Califórnia). O futuro são os reformados e neo hippies. Não sei quem vai trabalhar para cuidar da terra e dos homens e nos sustentarmos, mas pelo menos haverá paz e boa vibe!
Good comments. I suggest investigating regenerative gardening/ farming. Read “Dirt to Soil”. Exciting saga of one farmer’s journey from modern agriculture to natural regenerative growing and how it became financially as well as environmentally sustainable!!
You seem to recieve a lot of strange or demanding questions. I personally appreciate any updates you give and if you think there is a need for a season break then all the power to you, ill still be watching when season 2 begins! Have a cosy winter, maybe think about chai? mass amounts of hot chocolate will give you a tummy ache
Once you stop posting I will miss you guys dearly, but I absolutely agree that it's a necessity to stop, pause, reconnect and rewind and you're no doubt doing the right thing here. Enjoy your time away from RU-vid (and us, sigh) and don't worry: we will all still be here when you are back in April. If you have enough energy we would recommend an infrared panel in your place. We heat our stone barn in Mallorca with just two panels (60x80) and they heat the place up completely as well as dry it out.
Saying infrared panel could be an electric infrared heater. Any black body roof mounted collector, could use glycol to take that heat and let it radiate inside.
I would recommend going with a tractor and PTO chipper you could add other implements as you progress. Make sure you get a tractor with at least 40hp or it will struggle with chipping larger diameter wood and you have a lot of wood to chip there and your Mimosa trees will grow way to big to process if you don't get started. Nothing better than processing the trees into your soil for long term soil management and doing a food forest. Bigger tractor can also pull the tree stumps to get rid of all the punji sticks just waiting to impale people. Good job.
Head's up, things are going quite well. As always often hard to see progress, because the preparation is the longest part of any job, so I can understand the struggle and need for slowing down. Same time I would suggest, you could involve us in a form of short brainstorms, maybe weekly about thinking you research, so we can give our feedback and send some links and inspiration. For me the RU-vid is an important source for keeping up with you guys, because it's a bit intense to read and follow all the stuff what you and the community is posting. This is why I enjoy when you are sum up the things, so I can sort out the doable things, and I can check it out in details. We all are busy, so weekly breefing could make it easier to be in sinc and plan to work together. I would suggest to continue the weekly news, but more in a form of updates and brainstorming and announcements, what would give us time to plan and find time to help you. If you announce things in a short time it is often problem to find time and push things around to make it possible to help. Continues planning and working together might make it easier. :) Anyway, just keep up the good work, and buy a lot of hot chocolate ;)
I've been watching Project Kamp videos & am now realizing the connection to One Army and learning about the existence of Fixing Fashion. Thanks for bringing such value to YT and the world!
I guess I found your channel at the perfect time as you start off into your second season!!! I'd recommend a very basic greywater system from the kitchen, some use tiered filtration system, involving various stages of medium where sediments settle. I'd also recommend looking into a chicken deep liter system as it becomes a wonderful source of input for establishing gardens.
Thanks for the update and sharing a part of your life with us. I can appreciate that you need some time off screen as well and focus on reflection in the cold season. It‘ll give you time and space to look at what’s going on on the inside, in your minds, emotions, bodies, etc. and you can recharge your inner strength again. You put a lot of hard work into the project and it’s fascinating to see your swift progress.
Agreed. A brief 5 minute blog (one take, tell the camera what is happening) and quick walk around of what has changed. I would happily watch these to keep the algorithm happy:)
I hope you all continue to keep profit out of the equation :). It’s refreshing to know people are trying to help the environment without any ulterior motives
Going to missed the videos, but I understand your reasoning. Just a note on working seasonally, traditionally wintertime is the season for doing all your forestry work when the trees have lost their leaves and the undergrowth has died back its much easier to work in the woods. Its also cooler and the timber you're get out, be it for fire wood or turning into lumber is better quality as the sap isnt flowing.
Dave- as a media professional for over 30 years, believe me, I understand how difficult it can be to produce videos, especially one every week... it's exhausting! But at the same time, I love watching the things that go on at Project Kamp... please consider posting even short, 2-4 minute, simple (easy to make) videos during your off season. Even if it's just an unedited, Dave-and-a-piece-of-paper thoughts and plans for next season sort of thing. I was thinking similar thoughts watching your earlier videos clearing brambles... using garden shears to clear 100 hectares is unsustainable! Thanks for the work, we enjoy watching your progress & stay warm this winter!
I'm a huge fan of your channel. (I accept that creating content must be balanced against the actual labor required, which is substantial. Even if you don't post weekly, I'll still be watching.) The only things I see missing are the use of campfire or wood ash to prevent brambles from growing back, and maybe some content that describes your overarching organization system; I imagine something like a combination inventory and evergreen calendar that tracks personnel, projects, and all of the hundreds of details that need tracked to provide the data for your project. I think what you are doing is admirable, and I wish more people were doing this in the world. It's a fantastic experiment and I wish you all great success in your problem solving. Be well.
I support you guys 100% rest!!! I'm personally not going to forget you, I have my own homestead in the Blue Rdige Mountains in North Carolina. Rest is needed to be the best you that you can be.
Taking us all with you on your journey is your unique selling point... the idea of letting your space tell you how it wants to develop is so refreshing and it makes you open to new ideas and new applications for old ones too. Tractors are brilliant, my parents generation were there when farmers got their very first taste of what a tractor could do and how their lives were changed completely. Old machines seem to go on and on forever and a tractor from the 60s or 70s can do almost everything a modern one can. Making friends with local farmers will doubtless become your lifeline, they know where the old stuff is in dusty barns and when folk are clearing out There is always a community of mutual support in hard times among those who live on the land. I do think you need to be collecting materials for your future projects all the time, you have space not money, so grab it whenever you can. Having something you could sell at the local market would be a great way to meet people and bring in a small income, maybe some recycle plastic products.
Nice! Enjoy the autumn colors changing and over viewing all the work & result you've accomplished. i wish you all a jolly Winter Solstice ! i'm already looking forward to the first Spring PK update.
Good for you guys that you made this decision. Hope you will enjoy your off time. Maybe something to consider for next year is to extend your upload schedule until the end of the year. Add revenue (CPM) is the highest in Q4 due to the holiday season. That’s why a lot of RU-vidrs actually increase their upload frequency towards the end of the year. And of course we like the content during those rainy autumn days :-).
I really hope you will do one or two inter-season episodes (maybe just a similar Q&A with some shots of the land ) , I'm really curious what it looks like in winter.
This is an idea. Gives a chance to put forward some thoughts on the list of things to do, and gives viewers an input onstuff that might work better sort of deal.
DAVE, I've been DAVED (a fan) and following your content since Precious Plastics, Phonebloks and Frieda the chick. It's been such fun seeing how your projects change through the years. It's still a pleasure and a thrill to follow you and definitely will not forget about your channel my dude! Take care and have a smoooooth break. All the love from across the pond, Kamouraska, Québec!
Ik wil jullie bedanken! Ik heb de afgelopen dagen jullie serie over Project Kamp gezien en ik word daar vrolijk van! We gaan als mensheid zo slecht met onze wereld om en ik merk zoveel ongeïnteresseerdheid. Dat maakt mij heel wanhopig en verdrietig. Jullie bieden daar een goed tegenwicht aan en ik krijg daardoor weer wat hoop. Dank jullie wel!
I want to let you guys know that I am fully aware of the challenges that living and working in a rural environment and I appreciate all the effort you guys put into making the videos, I would love to be able to help you all out for a season, so thanks!
I am amazed at how engaged people are with your channel & your work. And so many of them have great, educated advice. I hope that the advice is proving to be helpful. Regards from 🇨🇦
I think you should reduce the effort spent on each video, or find a volunteer willing to take care of the bulk of the editing. Filming will always be a hassle, but plenty of channels have already proven that it's very well doable, you just need to figure out how to make it work for you. You can do a monthly 'high quality' video and a weekly 'vlog style' video, where you just give some quick updates in a 5-10 minute video every week and then a recap of that in the monthly video.
@@Soorganizator There are so many channels on RU-vid of single individuals building entire houses to modern standards and documenting every step. Especially if they have the money to get someone over for recording some footage there is absolutely no reason they can't do a video every week. The issue isn't the frequency of the videos, but the effort put into them. Less time spent editing by just cutting stuff down and doing a quick voice over where necessary can make it a 1-2 hour weekly job instead of an entire workday.
The off season of work, you could still upload a monthly video, even if it is just showing the different areas of the land, just to document how the land looks at the different times of the year.
Im happy to see you guys take proper breaks, everything is a human construct and that includes "needing" to post regularly. I follow channels that post once every month or two, I would rather see more "put together" content and happy creators over forced videos and creators getting stressed. Set the example it can be done :) I'll be here for season two!
I would not let your youtube channel go dark for months. You should still try to post 1 to 2 times a month during your "off season." Every bit of momentum your channel has gained will be lost if you stop producing videos for months.
yess you should post short video's, say hello not evry week but a 1or 2 a month is good! show our the winterlanschape say hello on the first day of 2022 and say happy newyear. make a video about your reflextions. do a live q&a. (and annouche it with a video) I know its a lot of work. but going dark its a risk!
Yeah, the algorithm punishes inactive channels heavily. It's not a good thing but it's true, a seasonal project channel should probably fill in the gaps with other content.
@@jayrideau Anyone who follows and understands the science correctly, can clearly see being plant-based should bring the best health. So it's people who do it for other reasons are the most likely to give up. What reason did you quit?
What you are doing is such hard work, and a person can only do so much in a day without succumbing to exhaustion & depression after awhile. The winter season will be challenging enough without trying to produce a video every week as well. So, we're glad you will be slowing down, taking time to transition into winter mode, and thinking about what's next for Project Kamp in 2022. We love you folks and what you are doing, so we'll always be patiently waiting for your next video update. We're not about to forget this very important project in sustainable living just because there won't be anymore weekly videos for awhile. (Still, we do hope that a videographer will show up soon so that Dave can be free of this time consuming task - his other skills will be needed more as this project continues to evolve.) A thought: the path to sustainable living is not going to come from the tradional socioeconomic system that is busy promoting compulsive consumption, the endless pursuit of profits, and the marketing of distant goals for carbon neutrality to placate environmentalists. This path must be created by people like you folks, who are creating this road as you go. There is no blueprint. This is an improvization based upon wise observation, deep caring for all the life on our planet, and a practical "hands on" intelligence that is skeptical of most "isms". Basing your core life support infrastructure on 20ft shipping containers was a brilliant use of a commodity resource that can be transported, stored, delivered and powered up with relative ease. Connecting with good hearted neighbors, mutual support, local sourcing, and knowing when to slow down & rejuvenate are all signs that Project Kamp has a couple of wise, exemplary leaders behind it. Much love & admiration from America.
Hey guys. Understandable decissions. Deep respect for the stuff you‘ve come up so far. It‘s one thing to watch this stuff and actually do it. Good luck and best wishes. And now my bell rings all the time.
Watching these video's on mondays has become one of my most pleasant routins. But I total understand that you need time. Will be waiting for the season two. Have a warm winter ☕
Dave, what a great video. I like videos like this where you are as candid as you can be. I have been a long time viewer (five years) and have learned a lot from you about plastics. I am excited to see where your Kamp project goes. You have inspired me to make RU-vid videos (Channel name: Bright Star Assemblies). Soon I will be starting another channel which is very close to what you are doing with Project Kamp. I am about to purchase 200 acres of raw land and build a runway, home, farm, large shop, and more on it. I am a Subscriber of yours and will continue to watch.
Get a tractor with a power take-off! They're super useful with a huge array of tools you can attach to them for all kinds of work around the land. If you get just a motorized wood chipper then you have a single-use tool. A tractor with a power take-off opens up so many possibilities in the future. Enjoy your well-deserved break for the rest of the season, and thanks for your great videos!
Hi Dave Sad to hear about the upcoming break, but I fully understand the reasoning behind it. I think, in some ways, you are a victim of your own success. I am interested in the project itself, but the main reason I have watched for months is you - I enjoy your personality and unusual view on things. I am sorry for being personal, but these last few weeks I have noticed a big change in your demeanour. You always have a dry sense of humour, but to me you have looked sad and somewhat deflated. Your energy levels could be low due to the long season and workload (including filming and editing), or it could be that this is not the right location/project for you. I hope you look after your long term health and maybe this break over the winter will do you the world of good. I will stay subscribed and give the new format in the Spring a chance, but it is you that is the main draw for me to the channel. Sending you best wishes from a UK mom living in rural Italy. 🌲
Wood chipper....I would forgo the wood chipper unless you are getting a professional sized wood chipper. I have a 75mm wood chipper with a gasoline engine. It takes so much work to get the wood into a size that can be chipped that it is almost more work than it is worth. I would let the goats and sheep eat all of the undergrowth then cut the trees and let them eat the tree leaves from the cut trees. Once they eat all of the trees and bark they want, I would collect the large branches and cut them into as many straight lengths as possible. If you can not use the trees for building something, then you can cut them up for firewood. (I got an old ten inch chop saw and set up a 450 mm stop. Then I cut the branches down to useable firewood sizes using the chop saw.) Then either sell the firewood or use it yourself in the winter to heat with or to cook with. If you have animals, then the big wood chipper becomes more desirable to make compost from the manure and over time for a garden.
What a presenting team! lots of fun to watch. Great editing job too Dave. I hope you get a videographer soon, but you're doing a great job with it for now.
Have you seen the trailers that has the air conditioner on one side. This would be good for a big Cooler for a lot of people. I'm a prepper in the United States, and we started out, we was concerned about where we were gonna to put our product? Our Pressure canning, water bath canning, and dehydrated and even adding stuff in the freezer. Consider thinking about a root cellar or a room that is dark and stays cool in the summer. And won't freeze your stuff in the winter. Just saying. I know different countries does things different but that's okay. We all have to learn from each other. God bless
Use winter to make a solar dehydrator, a solar oven, compost bays, a root cellar, prep a organic Market garden (ridgedale farm, zaytuna farm, Geoff lawton ) etc basically smaller projects that you guys can do with just yourselves. Look at kris harbours Channel. Plan water catchment swales..... this will help the property be sustainable year round long term see zaytuna farm.
I love your videos and your project. I really wish that I had been born about 30 years later than I was ... I would be there in a flash ... keep up the project and I look forward to the new season, but will miss you for a bit. I send you love and good vibes and hope you really enjoy all those hot chocolates and pizzas!!🍵🍕
Just wanna say that i really love what u guys are doing. Will miss this vídeos. Hope someday i can visit u guys and volunteer. Lots of Love from Brazil.
That was sad knowing I won't see you guys every week but you both work super hard and deserve a vacation. Hopefully somwhere warm!! This is the most I've seen Rita in a video and absolutely loved it! 😍😍😍
Instead using numbers for the season I would suggest to use the calander year e.g. Season 2021, Season 2022. That way it will be much easier to track over time what happened when. Additionally you could have identifiers for each month e.g. 2022.01. Thanks for all the videos so far!
I think its great that you have set some boundaries for yourselves. You cannot pour from an empty cup. I wish you well and hope you recharge yourselves. Look forward to your videos in season 2. :-)
I'm going to miss you both but I'm subscribed so just wait for another video to show up, enjoy your chill season and please be safe and have a great holiday, you've earned it.
If you are not doing a lot of projects during the winter I would like to see the occasional video about the wider area you live in. I would have thought that stopping the videos for an extended period would be detrimental to the project. However if RU-vid isn’t part of the main aim then obviously it doesn’t matter.
sad to hear also would like to suggest instead of having the winter season off have the summer off and post in the winter ,seeing more people are inside through the winter where as in the summer alot of people are outside and having less time to watch.
Would hate to lose you all for a few months. Have seen a few people on RU-vid with same challenge go to biweekly videos. Still a nice regular update, less editing, makes me look forward more. Either way, best of luck, really enjoy watching the project. Will keep following from California!
I would luv so much to get this job !!!! Unfortunately being in Spain as a foreigner they don't aloud me to live in other European countries with my visa :( But I hope I can visit some day
I totally understand the decision to slow down the video releases. As a subscriber of your other channels, this is the one I look most forward to watching. It's sad we won't have new content every week, but the amount of work you have in front of you is quite daunting to say the least. I wish you guys the best of luck!
You two are too cute! I enjoy these videos as much if not more than the Precious Plastics ones. I will miss you when you take a break but look forward to season two! Jeff from New Zealand
You guys have a really nice piece of land and its much larger than ours but we find that the late Autumn/Early Winter months are where most of the land maintenance work comes from. We are further South and West from you and not far away from Tamera. I would slow down, but not stop completely; and continue with the videos but maybe one every 2 weeks and editing in the long winter nights if your schedule allows.
You are gonna throw away what you just build up with RU-vid in my opinion. It's a real good channel you have always looking out to new episodes. We fans don't wanna miss yall that's all haha
Good decision! To stay creative take your time to slow down and get some power for the next season. Don’t worry about RU-vid and followers. The vibe spreads because of good ideas not because of frequent and filling videos 😉.
I do enjoy your vids... Totally get where your head is at regarding the vids. And it does makes sense that you would take time off in winter to strategize. Lastly you 2 make a nice team Frm🇿🇦
I would suggest a small tractor with a shovel on the front and then hookup the chipper on the back. Having a tractor will speed up your work a lot, leveling ground pulling out trees moving materials. Ofcourse the fuel is not very eco friendly.
You might want to make 6-8 videos through the winter. Maybe they are of trips you might take or places you may go. Being from America there are things you do everyday or see all the time that are quite interesting to me, for example grocery stores, antique shops, heck cooking a dinner. Even a couple tours of the land when maybe snow is on the ground. Some could be used to fill in weekly content when you get really busy during the warmer months. These videos would not even require editing, just impromptu filming at random times. Not sure going radio silent will grow the channel and increase your funding.
Try out one of the open source mini-tractor's, sugest an electric one, not that heavy and supper simple to repair and maintain (open source means mutch cheaper and more modular options and easyer to modify and create your own for your needs). Fantastic option for your needs.
I like this. Probably everybody asked , but curious as to how you came into this land? I have always thought it would be cool to find a cheap piece of land that was abandoned or ruined and bring it back, haha.
I hope you can find someone who won't make the videos too "professional". Part of the reason I'm subscribed is the relaxed feeling I get from the casual chats about how things are going. I have marked my calendar and look forward to seeing things progress next spring.
Maybe consider making a video once a month of what you get up to during the winter. The planning process of what you will be doing in season 2. That will keep the RU-vid logorythm happy.
04:34 You really, really, really need to fix that wall above your head in this video. This is a priority fix or it's just going to get more damaged and it is such a beautiful building so it will be so sad. You need to put some wood underneath to give it some support and it need to be properly repaired. It's not that high up and you don't need scaffolding for this. I don't understand why people are obsessed with having scaffolding and feel they can't do anything without it. Scaffolding is great as it can easily be put up and taken down and moved from building site to building site on the back of a truck but you don't need to be doing all that all the time. You could easily build a small wooden platform to stand on and you could re-use that platform and even take the screws out and reuse the wood in another project later on so the materials get plenty of use. This isn't even that high up and it needs repairing really badly.
Pleeeeease dont stop the videos :( I get what you said , and i do belive its a lot of work, but it doesent have to always be like that. I would love to just see someting, whatever it is that you guys are doing, maybe every two weeks or even monthly. It doesnt have to be as structured and complete as the usual videos , but just something while we wait for season two You could have two types os videos , main builds and advancements and just updates/vlogs/wearestillalive videos You guys realy are the best and i would hate to lose the videos for so long Keep being awesome!
One of the first subscribers here and I’m going nowhere. I hope you 2 are secretly a couple as you are both SUPERB people and work REALLY well together. But I respect your privacy. Take care and looking forward to seeing what future updates bring. Thoroughly enjoying watching it all come together. Enjoy your down time. - together!! ;-)
Maybe do a weekly video of a local property with land or buildings for sale to keep the algorithm going and rank each property with price and potential it might have
Well I'm gonna miss you this winter. Maybe if you do anything on the land before you go voyages for the winter you could take raw footage for who ever comes to help. If it's saved they could edit it when they come and more videos could come at the beginning of the season. I'm greedy I want more. 😊👍 Of course you will be saved and I'll be waiting for April.😊😊☺😉❤😃👍🌟