you can contact us at coyotesden2000@gmail.com and PO box 134 Grays Knob KY 40829
КОМЕНТАРІ: 48
@allenelswick696111 місяців тому
As a coal miner in Eastern Kentucky you have a great video on what's involved before shipping the coal out by rail and truck.
@IgnitedCoyote11 місяців тому
Thank you sir, coming from a coal miner that means a lot.
@littlepaddy744410 місяців тому
Great tour, thank you. Coal is good.
@maryfuqua331411 місяців тому
Greetings from Western KENTUCKY....Thank ❤
@IgnitedCoyote11 місяців тому
Thanks for watching Mary!
@davidcaskey706211 місяців тому
It don't get much more American than That! Greetigs and thanks from NW PA! God bless
@johnduke321511 місяців тому
God Bless them!
@anitahamlin241111 місяців тому
Thanks. You did a great job of showing how it is done.
@IgnitedCoyote11 місяців тому
Thank you
@whitetiger86525 місяців тому
Great video! I hauled coal in the late 80's early 90's in WV, OH, Pa. Driver in the red KW is an experienced coal hauler.
@kellymichaels255711 місяців тому
Hands down one of my favorite UKpostsrs. I was honored to speak about fire and heater safety in a video back last Christmas.
@IgnitedCoyote10 місяців тому
Thanks Kelly! Hope we can do another video together soon.
@amyheltonwalker9 місяців тому
Enjoyed watching the coal! Dad told us storing of when he used to run a loader.
@stonecoal2811 місяців тому
Great video ❤
@IgnitedCoyote11 місяців тому
Thanks
@johnathanlewis204911 місяців тому
Hi Ignited & Mrs Coyote! Greetings from Southwest Pennsylvania! Great video! Glad to see coal moving in Kentucky! BTW - I think I’ve mentioned to you my mother was from Irvine in Estill County. Irvine was the headquarters for the now defunct SouthEast Coal Company. Along the Kentucky River is the now shuttered coal wash. There were pits full of the slush I guess you call it from the coal wash. Ugliest and most smelly stuff I have ever seen in my life. The wash and pits are still there.
@IgnitedCoyote11 місяців тому
Thanks Jonathan
@susanwillis918411 місяців тому
My brother lived at Totz for a while before he moved to Cumberland. He lived everywhere. 😂😊
@scottthomas379211 місяців тому
That used to be a fairly common sight in the '70s, but it's getting rare now....
@IgnitedCoyote10 місяців тому
True, changing times.
@susanwillis918411 місяців тому
My daddy sold mining equipment for almost 40 years. 😊
@danfitzwater122911 місяців тому
Really good video please make some more of these of the coal and logging in your area loved it promote promote !!!!!!!
@stanblanton779811 місяців тому
Reminds me so much of my younger days. Lot of this country survived off of Harlan Coal.
@IgnitedCoyote11 місяців тому
If you lived near the tracks seems like there was always a coal train to rock you to sleep at night
@JohnSmith-bp1er10 місяців тому
Love the video, thank you
@IgnitedCoyote10 місяців тому
You are so welcome!
@rayjaypaulsen11 місяців тому
I'm enjoying your videos on the coal, We never stop learning! Ray from Long Island, New York
@IgnitedCoyote11 місяців тому
Thanks Ray!
@johnnyeversole757511 місяців тому
hi my sister lives right down the road from there her name is Wilma her son name is Jess thank you for sharing this God bless you
@IgnitedCoyote11 місяців тому
Thanks Johnny
@susanwillis918411 місяців тому
Wish I was there.
@markrhodes744611 місяців тому
Keep promoting ky coal and America coal!
@gailfrakes920511 місяців тому
I didn't see or hear Mrs Coyote in this video and you didn't say "BYE"😂 Good video, I look forward to every one.
@IgnitedCoyote11 місяців тому
I said bye at the end, but you're right it's just not the same without her!
@curtis-thebicentennialist177611 місяців тому
How about a follow-up video interviewing the mine owner explaining where that Harlan coal ends up and what it's used for...electricity? steel? solar panels? computer processor chips?
@musclecarmitch90811 місяців тому
Awesome video Coyote! Thanks for sharing!
@IgnitedCoyote11 місяців тому
Thank you Mitch
@maggieklara588411 місяців тому
Neat.
@jboney693811 місяців тому
Raylan & Boyd.....they dug coal together....
@susanwillis918411 місяців тому
Go ride the Scrambler for me at the carnival. 😅
@IgnitedCoyote11 місяців тому
I'll see if I can talk my wife into it
@pamkammann117611 місяців тому
My Grampa and at least two of his brothers worked in coal mines around there , but I have zero idea where . One of his brothers died from black lung in fact .😢
@gpt46511 місяців тому
Sad that sure be happening to help run this country!Shouldn't have to depend on other countries!❤❤❤❤
@jacobhendrickson893514 днів тому
Is this 119 off 75?? I go to 116 on my motorcycle when I’m up that way and cross where I come out at some prison on the other end.
@supercuda195011 місяців тому
Being from Ohio, I can appreciate coal from harlan as I went to Harlan last year and rode the trails. It ashamed that the powers that be have determined coal to be a polluter. Sad thing is we have enough coal for at least another 100 years and now they want to go back to nuke power. We know how that worked out last time. Think of all the jobs this backward think has cost. Tell me what part of nuclear is green, except maybe the glow from it when something goes wrong!
@pamkammann117611 місяців тому
They are pushing solar and wind farms all around me here in Illinois . We had a coal fired nuclear plant but after just a few years they closed it .
@dougclem771110 місяців тому
As a kid, the hollows of Harlan was covered with the smell of burning coal. It was the cheapest heat available. Then here comes oil, it was cheaper, cleaner. Then electric was available, much cleaner, a little cheaper but the heat was a dry heat like West Texas, Arizona. Steel has been replaced by several types of plastics. From guns, plumbing, aircraft, etc. OBSOLESCENCE is occurring. The rock that remains, that is filling all those beautiful hollows, forever entombing the salamanders, turtles, frogs, not to mention all that 'sang,, ginsing, ferns, never to grow in those filled branches. I've never seen ginsing grow on spoil banks. There was a plan to fill abandoned mines with that spoil, too expensive I guess. It was easy to roll that rock off that hill, it is hell to roll it back up. I've contacted a lot of people and agencies with the idea of rail transportation of this rock down to Louisiana, Florida to stop shoreline erosion. One entire train of rock dumped. We could reclaimed all that oilfield damage to all those marshes and swamps. It would save our beautiful hollows, establish another revenue stream for miners, coal companies, railroads, etc. WHAT DO YOU THINK GRAYS KNOB?