Women in Heritage: Myrtle Pelley
1:36
Women in Heritage: Louise Simms
1:16
Women in Heritage: Naomi Burgess
1:17
Trouting trip - October 1928
1:56
St. John's Regatta - Summer 1929
2:49
Collis Building, Harbour Grace
0:51
Red Cliff Then and Now
6:46
8 ай бұрын
Пікірлер
@CoolCademMAnimates-fz1ui
@CoolCademMAnimates-fz1ui 2 ай бұрын
3:18 Was shot at or near the paper mills in GF.
@user-mx1yr4ce1t
@user-mx1yr4ce1t 2 ай бұрын
So great to hear these stories. My great grandfather (John Francis Richards) worked on the cable in the early 1900s and my grandmother (Noreen) grew up there (I think in the house that is now the museum) before the family moved to work at the other end of the cable in Valentia. They left some family behind in Newfoundland, in Ireland, and in Spain on their way back to England.
@newworldgirl
@newworldgirl 4 ай бұрын
Oh my you love hitting the side of any pan😂… but seriously I’ve been looking for that recipe for some long time!! thank you for simplifying it for me and I will be making it soon
@duanefitzsimons3335
@duanefitzsimons3335 5 ай бұрын
Joe was my Granny’s cousin!
@heatherrussell8255
@heatherrussell8255 5 ай бұрын
And much thanks for featuring St. Paul's Anglican Church in Trinity; it's one of my VERY favourite wooden churches in NL.
@heatherrussell8255
@heatherrussell8255 5 ай бұрын
Another treasure we lost was the concrete stone Anglican Church on Church Street in Bonavista (1925-1977). The building had structural issues and the Vestry of the time deemed it more economical to build a new church rather than effect repairs to the concrete one. However, beautiful stained glass windows from that church (which, architecturally, rivaled any cathedral in the British Isles) now live on in the current church, and several new businesses on Church Street. The Newfoundland Salt Company is one of these businesses.
@sallymiller9225
@sallymiller9225 6 ай бұрын
Do you sell them ?
@DB-gr7ch
@DB-gr7ch 6 ай бұрын
Since about 1975, NLers have re-clad or re-built virtually every outport house with white vinyl siding. Because it's cheap and doesn't ever need painting. Entire villages are nothing but plain, plastic, white boxes. Soul-crushingly, mind-numbingly ugly.
@doingfolklore
@doingfolklore 3 ай бұрын
affordable, less painting every year from salt water. True but not a sin
@DB-gr7ch
@DB-gr7ch 3 ай бұрын
@@doingfolklore But lying to tourists that they'll come and see a joyful land of rainbow coloured clapboard houses is a sin. A Top Ten commandment, in fact.
@candytoo3729
@candytoo3729 6 ай бұрын
FYI I know this house.
@craigpelley683
@craigpelley683 7 ай бұрын
It's " the maples " on water street .
@craigpelley683
@craigpelley683 7 ай бұрын
i recognize the bay windows and especially the stained glass in the front porch, i'll figure it out :)
@NortonsCove
@NortonsCove 8 ай бұрын
Lots of similar features in my house here in Brookfield, and in the Alphaeus Barbour House in Newtown. It was certainly well kept!
@eprohoda
@eprohoda 8 ай бұрын
Omg. stunning content, Heritage-
@N3gr0bitch
@N3gr0bitch 10 ай бұрын
What an amazing craft! Good job sir.
@victoriawalsh8423
@victoriawalsh8423 Жыл бұрын
The other company used as a send away mill was Condons Mills ....during the 60s and up,till the 80s ...and maybe even later, if you had sheep and no spinners locally.
@victoriawalsh8423
@victoriawalsh8423 Жыл бұрын
Thanks Dale for posting this ....I missed it , but now can watch it and knit along ....
@daval5563
@daval5563 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for your video. This is almost forgotten "ancient" knowledge. I swear to "god" that humanity is addicted to convenience to the point they have agreed to exchange their lives for a privately owned "for profit" road of convenience that has taken them so far from all that is natural and organic, like the ability to feed, clothe, and shelter themselves, that when this proven unsustainable road of eternal growth and profit collapses, humanity as we know it is finished. True story. Good luck.
@gbltheolechurch5acrehomestead
@gbltheolechurch5acrehomestead Жыл бұрын
Excellent! Very well done. Mrs. Dwyer is a natural!
@JoanLarocque
@JoanLarocque Жыл бұрын
I was raised with these foods as well, and still make them I have passed them on to my children, nothing like the old way of cooking food....I still refer to the old Lebanese terms....
@tektoms
@tektoms Жыл бұрын
It took me 3min to realise what he was doing! Hahaha.. amazing! I was searchin for the more 'conventional' birch brooms using branch ends as the broom..
@shelleym1311
@shelleym1311 Жыл бұрын
Does it matter what kind of birch you use?
@WildCraftedHome
@WildCraftedHome Жыл бұрын
Thank you for this video. I am not sure if it’s the kind of birch I have or the process but all my cuts peel off. Whether slow, fast, gentle, hard… any insight on the process? What species of birch is he using ? Thank tou
@shelleym1311
@shelleym1311 Жыл бұрын
Me too....Has to be a trick?
@WildCraftedHome
@WildCraftedHome Жыл бұрын
I'm quite sure its a specific kind of birch. I've tried with Birch here in Sweden, and know the midwest and east coast of the US has a handful of birches. I talked to some folks here who travelled there as children and were shown this skill and also believe its a specific kind of birch. I'm originally from california and don't think we have them there either. I do think it's possible with hazel too tho! I may try shortly.
@gailwarren5951
@gailwarren5951 9 ай бұрын
Looks like black birch here in New england@@WildCraftedHome
@lisaclark2044
@lisaclark2044 5 ай бұрын
Looks like a young white birch. Betula papyrifera
@patricialynn2464
@patricialynn2464 2 жыл бұрын
Well now in 2022 and this is exactly why you need a root cellar!
@stevel6939
@stevel6939 2 жыл бұрын
I thhink we are on the edge of needing these ahain. Im building one for my offf grid honestead. Getting ready for the coming food shortage.
@melissalambert7615
@melissalambert7615 2 жыл бұрын
Yum! My grandparents were from Corner Brook. As a child in Weymouth MA made this with my grandmother and siblings.
@piusduggan4899
@piusduggan4899 2 жыл бұрын
HAPPY ST. PATRICK'S DAY DOT AND LARA!! REALLY ENJOYED YOUR VIDEO OF SOUTHERN SHORE MOLASSES CANDY AS IT BROUGHT BACK ALOT OF MEMORIES GROWING UP IN CAPE BROYLE. OUR NANA( MRS. JOSE O'BRIEN OF FAIRY POND) MADE IT OFTEN FOR US KIDS. HAVE A GREAT ST. PADDY'S DAY! PIUS DUGGAN ST. JOHN'S
@glennledrew8347
@glennledrew8347 2 жыл бұрын
Not far from where I lived back in the 70s. I'm sensing a theme, with all those 'starbursts'. The joint sure is chock-a-block with bric-a-brac! I find such cluttered houses to be vaguely unsettling. Porcelain figures are particularly creepy.
@308dad8
@308dad8 2 жыл бұрын
I’m looking into getting a root cellar. Saw a video about using an old broken down freezer and putting it in a hole, and seen people build them from sandbags and people build them from ICF and poured cement and even cement blocks. No volume of natural stone where I live so that’s out unless it’s CHEAP but worried that Biden will get the lights cut off and we’ll still get hungry. Hey if I can safely store veggies in a cellar though that’s less clutter in the fridge so even if the lights stay on that’s still a win.
@308dad8
@308dad8 Жыл бұрын
@@jamesetal7088 “The R side”? Please explain. Listen squirt the Bible told us the order of operations for absolutely everything so I know if the rapture happens today we have another 1007 years on this earth, 7 with AntiChrist and 1000 years of Heaven on Earth prior to Heaven departing to Heaven and torching the earth for good. That’s the spiritual side of everything science can substantiate so far has aligned with the way the Bible told us thousands and thousands of years ago. Secondly, there is no reliable evidence that anything man has or ever will do has made any impact on global temperatures. The arguments about carbon and other “Greenhouse Gasses” are moot because mankind’s entire historical output has yet to surpass a single year’s own natural output from volcanoes so that means there is no manmade “climate change” it’s all made up. Yes there are heating and cooling trends but it’s natural and all due to the imperfect elliptical orbit around the sun. Nothing to do with what kind of car I drive today. Also, your electric car or the one you daydream about one day owning, uses a fuckton more coal or oil to power than mine gasoline vehicles. Each electric car is responsible for more “pollution” than 10 gas cars throughout their lifetimes if they all have their catalytic converters stolen and never replaced and they drive 1 million miles each. Follow the money kid, the entire “green” agenda is about putting more green into pockets of liberal politicians and the crooked previously failed business owners who decided to cook up and environmental scare to drive sales of impractical technology.
@308dad8
@308dad8 Жыл бұрын
@@jamesetal7088 This is about root cellars. Why would you attack people looking for practical ways to buy less power if you actually believe in that crap? Please explain. What’s wrong with me wanting a reliable opinion that’s independent of democrat politics?
@308dad8
@308dad8 Жыл бұрын
@@jamesetal7088 You don’t pay your bills do you son? Mom and Dad still paying your way? Ask them if their electricity has gone up. Mine has, over 40% and going to get higher still, all because of Biden. It ain’t because Putin told American energy companies to gouge as much as they like, that was Biden. Gas at the pump at its lowest is still 75% more than it was at its highest under Trump. That means Biden, not Putin who runs a separate country on a different Continent, but Biden causes fuel to increase over 100% but it’s now down to 175% the cost of the highest price paid under Trump. Food has been attacked by the feds all year because they want a mass die off and to get it they’re attacking food production, having burned down countless food processing plants in the US only, having used tax money to buy and export all our fertilizer to countries that aren’t us, for the purpose of causing shortages and paying farmers to not grow food, next year you might not exist to hold this conversation and you have the nerve to attack me for wanting to know more ways to preserve what food I have? I guess if I’m not all in democrat blind loyalty then me and my kids ought to starve plum to death?
@kellypaterson7627
@kellypaterson7627 2 жыл бұрын
This is my great grandfather artwork. My mom told me so many stories about her grandfather. The house was taken down around 2005 and the land was sold shortly after that. Thanks for sharing. I bet this brings alot of memories back to the ones who grew up in humber.
@BRAINWASHED79
@BRAINWASHED79 2 жыл бұрын
This was my great grandfathers house. As a kid we would bring him smooth stones and empty snail shells all he time and he would give us a dollar. Spent a lot of my childhood there
@mitpittman
@mitpittman 2 жыл бұрын
I remember this place. What amazed me was how much time he spent on this with ordinary objects like popsicle sticks, copper pennies etc.❤️
@rickershomesteadahobbyfarm3291
@rickershomesteadahobbyfarm3291 2 жыл бұрын
I am digging a small root cellar. It’s basically going to be a shallow hole in the ground that can be covered with a sheet of plywood. I’m trying to get 3 foot deep but the red clay is kicking my butt lol. I’ve already put about 12 hours in it and that clay is hard to dig in.
@308dad8
@308dad8 2 жыл бұрын
Where do you live? Somewhere you can use tannerite and shoot it from 100 yards off? Maybe you need a pick like the old miners used to free ore from the ground. Have access to a machine to dig it or a filler to break it loose?
@rickershomesteadahobbyfarm3291
@rickershomesteadahobbyfarm3291 2 жыл бұрын
@@308dad8 I have a pick ax. It doesn’t do much to the red clay. I also have a neck injury so I can’t shoot guns anymore without hurting myself. I’m still working on the hole.
@308dad8
@308dad8 2 жыл бұрын
@@rickershomesteadahobbyfarm3291 Have a neighbor with a digging implement? You know backhoe, even the small ones that attach to the back of a tractor. Even a trencher would break it up and allow you to shovel it out if you do it in a hurry. Even a rototiller attachment would power through breaking that clay up. Soil is clay here too and my cultivator in my tractor break the soil up plenty good enough to dig it by hand and I can break it up down to 2 1/2-3’. Tool rental and home improvement stores rent tools like trenchers and mini back hoes and the like that you can use. If the hole you want is small enough you could also use paddle bits on drums to break it in spots to allow you to shovel it out
@308dad8
@308dad8 2 жыл бұрын
Gas augers are another route too. Once you have a hole you have a place for material to fall into then just keep cleaning the hole out
@rickershomesteadahobbyfarm3291
@rickershomesteadahobbyfarm3291 2 жыл бұрын
@@308dad8 have you ever seen clay that’s so sticky and thick that it won’t come off the shovel or equipment? That’s what I’m digging in 😂
@earlethebutcher8947
@earlethebutcher8947 2 жыл бұрын
Oh they are coming back forsure
@checkingtube01
@checkingtube01 2 жыл бұрын
I just read a quote by "The Chautauquan" in a "Woodworking for Beginners" book from 1906 and couldn't figure out the process. This video is incredible. The book also mentioned that this indigenous invention was also made by boys on New England Farms in the Colonial days for 6 cents a piece
@TheGreatBigShow
@TheGreatBigShow 2 жыл бұрын
Great story
@tomarklie9885
@tomarklie9885 3 жыл бұрын
My dad recognized a few people in the video George Hicks, Lar McCarthy, Phillip Gruchy, Beaton Abbott
@Bjornarp
@Bjornarp 3 жыл бұрын
never seen that before! amazing :D thanks for sharing this
@JacobCoady
@JacobCoady 3 жыл бұрын
By idk about anyone else but i couldnt hear a word she said ya goofy newfies
@JulienWinter
@JulienWinter 3 жыл бұрын
If you want a laugh, turn on the closed captioning. People not fluent in English will be all the more befuddled.
@brendaalverson8077
@brendaalverson8077 3 жыл бұрын
Hi Dale Jarvis! The lady from Ontario who asked a question towards the end of this and mentioned that findagrave.com was owned by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints...I do not believe she is correct. Here is a current article I found... Does Ancestry Own FindAGrave? What You Need To Know October 19, 2020 by Margaret O'Brien The FindAGrave website has been around since 1995, but it is no longer owned by the original founder. As the new owner didn’t rename or rebrand the website, it’s not obvious that it changed hands. So who owns FindAGrave now? The answer is Ancestry.com, the genealogical giant. Ancestry purchased FindAGrave from founder James Tipton in 2013. Ancestry continues to operate FindAGrave.com as a free ad-supported website for burial and memorial information worldwide. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Billion Graves is a partner with familysearch.org! Hope that clarifies it! Brenda in Utah
@MrJohnthepotter
@MrJohnthepotter 3 жыл бұрын
Good video. Thank you.
@DaleGilbertJarvis
@DaleGilbertJarvis 3 жыл бұрын
Pro tip: Accession numbers are your friends! Make sure you label your log with the number/name of the sound file you are indexing!
@charlesmattingly6472
@charlesmattingly6472 3 жыл бұрын
I was reading Woodsburner by John Pipkin and there's a sentence in which one of the functional characters talks about stained glass being shipped in molasses. I had to look it up to see if it was true and I guess it is! So crazy and cool!
@shawnwilliams2773
@shawnwilliams2773 4 жыл бұрын
Good on Ian for getting his name out there. I am finding more and more blacksmith/bladesmith in Newfoundland and Labrador everyday. I started forging about a year and a half ago and started a group on Facebook for Newfoundland blacksmith and have found many people out there doing it and looking to start. It would be great if someone to run a course for as many people that I am finding. I have some but I am still looking for old blacksmith tool. I made a forge but I would love to start a full time forge in my home town area. I looked hard to fine coal here in Newfoundland and I did find one place still selling in downtown St. John's.
@NewfoundlandMetalSculptor
@NewfoundlandMetalSculptor 4 жыл бұрын
Very easy conversation, thank you. Here is a quick clip on the knife making, out of the old Newfoundland railway spike, you were asking about. kzbin.info/www/bejne/nKHEppdrbayUqsk
@tdmj2812
@tdmj2812 4 жыл бұрын
Awesome!
@roygriffin4476
@roygriffin4476 5 жыл бұрын
A
@lenhowl
@lenhowl 5 жыл бұрын
Beautiful memories, great little story
@jerrystark6766
@jerrystark6766 5 жыл бұрын
Great video! I love this guy. Thanks.
@mversantvoort
@mversantvoort 5 жыл бұрын
Very enjoyable and interesting video, thank you! The broom turned out great.