Underground mansion built in ancient cave maze has water spring inside

Jun 21, 2026Channel
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Video Details

Published3 weeks ago
Duration40:36
Video ID_k3q_KhCndE
Languageen
CategoryHowto & Style
PrivacyPublic
Made for KidsNo
Video TypeRegular Video

Performance Metrics

Views745.9K
Likes15.7K
Comments1.1K
Engagement Rate2.25%
Likes per 100 views2.10
Comments per 1K views1.50

Description

Deep in the Arkansas Ozarks, past a flooded creek crossing and down a long limestone driveway, a door opens into a mountain, and behind it is a 6,000-square-foot home that the cave is slowly, quietly reclaiming. Nate and Randee have lived here, on and off, for years. In the deepest part of winter, when the farmhouse on the property gets cold, they move into the cave where the temperature never wavers. The mountain holds steady at 65 degrees year-round, with or without a furnace. The home itself is unlike anything we've filmed. Stalactites hang from the ceiling, not as decoration, but because they were there first. Calcium deposits are still growing on the walls, in the showers, around the kitchen. Water that carved this cave millions of years ago still moves through it: dripping from formations above, pooling, flowing, and eventually tumbling down into a living room waterfall. Nate calls the drips from the stalactites being "blessed by the cave." It's hard to argue with that. But the real revelation is what's behind a door at the back of the house — what Nate calls the Narnia door. Step through it and you're inside the mountain itself: miles of passage following the same underground spring that runs through the living room, out through a cavern that feels straight out of The Goonies. These hills have their own outlaw mythology too. As Nate tells it: "Jesse James and his gang used to come through these hills, and the legend is he hid silver in one of these caves. So you know, we're looking for that — and the Goonies pirate ship. So one of these days." Previous owners once dammed the flow and generated their own hydroelectric power back here. Nineteenth-century graffiti marks the walls. Fossils from an ancient seabed are visible in the rock. The mountain has been holding all of this, quietly, for a very long time. Nate and Randee say that living here — in the cave, on this land — brings a kind of peace that's hard to explain but easy to feel. On *faircompanies: https://faircompanies.com/articles/underground-mansion-built-in-ancient-cave-maze-has-water-spring-inside/

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