Wow Jesse I love your videos.I like the way you take the time to explain everything you do makes you feel like you’re part of the team.Thank you for making my day go by with such good entertainment.I truly believe that there isn’t anything you can’t do .I would love to meet you one day
It’s great to see you teaching the kids . They did a real good job as each year passes there going to learn so much from you. From being a builder to a mechanic, if only more parents took the time to teach there kids, Nice work even mum getting into it, it’s looking great,
Great video! Not very many youtubers go into the detail you go into, i can only imagine the time spent outside your work to edit and create these videos! Definitely one of my top go to videos, thank you for the journey! Cant wait for the next video
Build is coming out nice. Really enjoyed seeing your kids getting to drive the roller. Sure, brought back great memories of working with my dad. He would toss me the keys to anything in the yard where he worked at, except the cranes! Only down part about is, I had to teach my older sister how to drive s stick!
It may have been a lot more stone, and a lot more work than hoped for, but getting the foundations right is the key to the life of any building. Enjoying all the detailed content you put out. Hope the weather gives you a break for the concrete pour.
You are certainly a very hard working man Jesse and over the years of watching your videos I can tell you are all about family, I have a lot f respect for that. Glad to see the youngen wearing some cloths albeit no shoes (yet) and I love hearing the rooster crowing here and there, just like at my home. All five of my boys have their own families now but I have grandkids :).
I've done this kind of site work for the last 40 years, in both the UK and France. For those who haven't been involved in jobs of this nature, its hard to appreciate the need to execute things in the right order, and you're battling the weather all the time. Well done, an efficient use of plant and materials, and you cover each step of the video enough to keep the interest, without getting bored. Thanks for putting in the effort to share, I enjoyed it very much.
What a good father, Jesse. I always took my son with me on the wheel loader or excavator when I had to work on the weekend. He always had a lot of fun doing it. I like your videos and haven't missed any of them yet, including the ones of your father. Greetings from the southernmost part of Europe, Malta
Thanks for the video mate, not only are you working building your shed, your also filming then editing the videos to share with us, that’s a lot of work that people probably don’t realise. Cheers from down under.
As usual, straight up MASSIVE amount of work. Its mind boggling to me how much this would cost if you were charging a customer. Love these videos, can't wait to see this take shape.
Really enjoy watching you work on projects , can’t wait until next year when you and Andrew team up again. You two are a dynamic duo,able to tackle any problem. Didn’t want to leave out your dad.
Jesse I love how you roll with the punches and can alter your plan to fit the circumstances. Dealing with sun and then hail the next day is certainly something. Can’t wait to see the house and garage finished up!
My brother drove concrete truck for 8 years with two different companies. They very much appreciate your effort. He's been to sites where they didn't even have the forms up.
Another brilliant video, Jesse. Nice to see the latest roller helping to bring the job along. The skidsteer version has been nothing short of a letdown from day one, and it's like it was designed to fail from your initial video. Keep up the incredible work and bringing honest, humble content to RU-vid, mate. Austin 🇬🇧
It's amazing as too how valuable your skid steer and your new to your fleet of equipment, your vibrating roller, helped you in this project. Look forward to the pouring of the concrete slab, in the next vedio!
Great video! 👍 I really enjoyed when you eldest son run the roller. It gave him great skills and also something he will never forget. As always, your videos are very educational and enlightening. Thank you for sharing 👌 😊 You and your team have worked very hard and great job on getting your platform done for your shop
Love these long videos, it is like those mini series from the 70s snd 80s. Plus you can pause it and make some popcorn and get a soda or whatever. Also great content. Andrew just made a very long video on his rock crushing and road building .between you two i never run out of good 🎉hings to watch.
Jesse, I just started to watch you and am very pleased to see the quality you put into your work. If you live there for a long time it will save you money. I hope you get the garage built before the heavy winter snows set in. I will be waiting for the next video.
This will serve as a good lesson for your next slab for the 75'x150' main building you realized you needed after looking at how small the 40'x60' slab was after you poured it. 😄
Jesse, once again during all this, to make time to show both adian and Noah how to run the roller, and then watch as adian runs it is awesome. He is learning first hand, and all that he is learning here at home, is NOTHING taught in any school at his age, and to have them so interesed, just make you very proud! look forward to the next video and watch the continuation of this, and watch this build. Is this garage for the heavy equiptment?? or for your house??
1:10:50 you got to love Noah, the attitude from such a little boy, he is amazing, funny, cheeky, and so inquisitive, he is a typical boy, loves machines, and using his imagination, not to mention the look on his face while going 'what' so funny. 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 Love the fact that you get your family involved in driving the roller, I bet your son was very happy to do that, shows what a good dad you are allowing your son to drive it, but staying within easy reach incase anything goes wrong to make sure he is safe. Then Noah has a go, I could clearly see the smile on his face, amazing work Jessie cant wait for your next video. 1:30:35 Funniest part of the video Jessie "Noah what is your cow doing over here?", Noah "he went that way, this way, and I dont know what to do".
Jesse my wife and I love the extra work. You're putting into your intros and your videos on the whole. We love watching your content. Keep up the great work
wow, that is very Beautiful .Jesse . yes a good foundation is the corner stone of everything , such as love relationships, business and building of any kind of construction, great work there , good luck .
Jesse, Nice work as always. I have a recommendation. I think diverting, even temporarily, water down to the front of your shop is a mistake. The 4" drain for future gutter runoff is barely adequate for the square area of your future shop roof (2,400 ft2). Given the electric services you ran there, you basically never want water to pool there. I thought earlier in the video when you said you were going to make a swale around the shop, you were going to divert the water that runs down the hill from the road out and around your shop and machine area over to the pond on the downside to the road slope. At 1:36:00 where you had the Ex parked and your SS working looks like the right place for that. Remember when you made your equipment parking, the water carved a culvert of its own there, given it responds to gravity and forms it's path to the lowest point on its own. I think when you filled that storm water runoff, it plays a big role in why your equipment area is always muck. Looking out ahead, it will always be good to have a loop around from your 16' wide (really good idea) access road to your shop front, around the right side of the shop (between the shop and where you temporarily parked the junk cars), around the back side of the shop and through your equipment parking back to the 16' road. Later, maybe even use that junk car "road" as the loop. This will allow you to use the semi-lowboy to pick-up/drop off equipment at the front door of the shop, or get equipment out for a job and loop around back out to the 16' access road. Instead of hogging out the two feet of dirt on the back corner of the shop, I would make a culvert just on the down side of the road runoff. For now I would just dig a three foot deep trench and route all the water to the pond until you can make a more permanent swale with rip-rap. Think about a good hard rain that is 1"/hr, and calculate the square area of all the property out back there down from the road. It looks like at least an acre. In a hard rain like that, you will have over 3,000 gallons an hour running through. It will flood the front of your shop and overwhelm your gutter pipe. Doing that storm water runoff will keep the water well away from the shop and your utilities. Just my thoughts, and I hope it is helpful.
digging that new stream all the way around to my backmost pond is the key to everything. and remember only the one side of my garage gutters will drain into that 4" pipe right now. I will have a loop around too, for 2 purposes. to create a loop around for the garage area, and it will also serve as a loop around for my house parking
Excellent share Jesse. Your videos are like a tutorial that is satisfying. Not sure about anyone else but, I learn a lot about how to make equipment, a job site and life's skills work together while increasing individual creative expertise. Looking forward to seeing the next video. Appreciate your attitude concerning accomplishing a finished project and working through obstacles along the way. Blessings to you, family and your crew. Happy Thanksgiving and a Merry Christmas. ☝️🙏🙌🇺🇸💪🎯
Drainage makes sense. Some youtubers built garages without proper French drains or swales. In storms and heavy rain, the buildings got water under the doors inside or worse. Some had expensive cars inside.
That was a lot of work! Nice to see you are taking the time to do all the prep work right so the slab will be a solid base for your shop for years to come.
Jesse U always look forward to your videos ..your perseverance, hard work, amazing abilities to repair and fix big projects are totally amazing. I love learning so many extra things from your channel...far as the piston hole goes ..Too hot of combustion temperature will cause it especially if its aluminum. So make sure the water TEMP is normal and sufficient oil level pressure.
What a project Jesse, great work ! Filter fabric over the foundation drain may not be needed - In time it may clog & prevent flow into the pipe. Instead use a pressure washer with a jetter tip and feed it into the pond outlet side (every few years?) if you think the corroborated pipe may be filling with silt. A pressure washer jetter will self feed itself into drain pipe and clean it out.
merci camarade pour le temps que tu nous donne et passer un bon moment a te regarder bon travail je te souhaite tous ce que tu as envie dans ce bas monde au plaisir de te regarder
Such well thought out drainage, which was not part of your original project. You are the master. It was lovely the see the boys having fun and Noah saying he didn’t know what to do about the calf.😂😂😂😂😂😂.once again a great job and everything looks amazing.👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰
You're my family hero when I was growing up it was the walton's. I'm 53 years old. So I think I'm older than you. But I look up to you in a major way bro.BLEZZ#KEEP DA CHANGE
"But I would not feel so all alone, if everybody must get stoned". . . . . Sorry, I'm a child of the sixties. A few hundred tons! Wow! That's a lot of stone but it sure came out nice. Great job Jesse and crew. Nice planning and utilization of materials & equipment. Looking forward to the pour.
That looks perfect !! Honestly, I thought all that stone would cost more than 7 grand. Money well spent. It's going to be there forever, holding expensive equipment.
Awesome planning and well made base Jesse, been watching this over last couple of days. Your brother is a big help to you, hope you bought him a few beers, LoL. Bob. NZ.