Heavenly Farms
Heavenly Farms
  • Видео 117
  • Просмотров 206 128
Discover Greg Judy's #1 Mistake that Could Ruin Your Farm!
In this video, Greg Judy exposes my #1 mistake and points out the biggest mistake I am making in managing my cow herd. This video will help me to change my behavior and improve my herd management skills.
If you're looking for tips on how to manage your cow herd, then watch this video! Greg Judy has some great advice on how to deal with common problems in cow herd management and how to improve your herd's overall health. After watching this video, you'll be able to make better decisions when it comes to managing your cow herd!
So, watch till the end and you can ask or share your thoughts in the comments.
If you like the video, please SUBSCRIBE and don't forget to press the bell 🔔, 👍like, comm...
Просмотров: 49 538

Видео

Grazing the road at our farm. Nothing goes to waste!
Просмотров 687Год назад
In this video, we're sharing with you what happened when we decided to have the cows graze the roads at our farm. As you can see, nothing goes to waste! By having the cows graze the roads, we're able to prevent the grass from going to waste and using it to feed the cows instead. This video is a great way to learn about what happens when you have cows grazing the roads, and how it helps to impro...
Where are the babies?
Просмотров 156Год назад
In this video, we'll share an update on the heifers that have yet to give birth at the farm. It's been a little while since we've posted an update on the heifers that have yet to give birth, and we wanted to update you on what's been happening. As you might know, some heifers have yet to give birth, and we're trying our best to help them out. We're providing them with all the food and water the...
Starting a New Regenerative Grazing Operation in a Few Easy Steps
Просмотров 308Год назад
In this video, I'm sharing with you how to start a new regenerative grazing operation in a few easy steps. This farm will help improve the health of the planet and the livestock that live on it! We're a friend of the farmer setting up this operation, and we're here to give you all the help you need to get started. We'll walk you through the steps of setting up the farm, from fencing to starting...
How to instal a frost free water hydrant
Просмотров 3,3 тыс.Год назад
Are you looking for step-by-step instructions on how to install a frost free water hydrant in a few simple steps? Then you're in the right place! In this video, we'll show you how to install a frost free water hydrant in just a few simple steps. We'll cover everything from the necessary tools and supplies to installing the hydrant itself. After watching this video, you'll be equipped to install...
See What Happens When We Tag This Baby Bull Calve!
Просмотров 236Год назад
In this video, we're tagging our new baby bull calve. This will help us track its growth and movements over time. Watch as we tag our baby bull calve, and see what happens as we track its growth and movements over time. This will help us learn more about the animal and ensure that it is being treated ethically. By tagging our baby bull, we're helping to protect it and ensure its long-term welfa...
Meet Our Youngest Baby - 2023's Cutest Calf!
Просмотров 257Год назад
Meet Our Youngest Baby - 2023's Cutest Calf!
The Cutest Thing You've Ever Seen: Baby Goats
Просмотров 216Год назад
The Cutest Thing You've Ever Seen: Baby Goats
Where's the South Poll Steer Going? Hint...Freezer Camp!
Просмотров 152Год назад
Where's the South Poll Steer Going? Hint...Freezer Camp!
Reclaiming Unused Land: How We Transformed a Forest into a Grazing Pasture!
Просмотров 2,1 тыс.Год назад
Reclaiming Unused Land: How We Transformed a Forest into a Grazing Pasture!
We Said Goodbye to a Familiar Friend!
Просмотров 161Год назад
We Said Goodbye to a Familiar Friend!
DIY Concrete Slab - Pouring our Horse Barn Floor
Просмотров 1,9 тыс.Год назад
DIY Concrete Slab - Pouring our Horse Barn Floor
"Cows React to the First Signs of Spring - You WON'T Believe What Happens Next!"
Просмотров 3,9 тыс.Год назад
"Cows React to the First Signs of Spring - You WON'T Believe What Happens Next!"
A Day Training & Riding Our Horses
Просмотров 642Год назад
A Day Training & Riding Our Horses
Building our Dream Horse Barn! DIY Transformation!
Просмотров 11 тыс.Год назад
Building our Dream Horse Barn! DIY Transformation!
52 Truck Project: See What Comes Off the Trailer!
Просмотров 1,4 тыс.Год назад
52 Truck Project: See What Comes Off the Trailer!
What Life Is REALLY Like On a Small Farm in 2023?
Просмотров 651Год назад
What Life Is REALLY Like On a Small Farm in 2023?
"Unbelievable Barn Find - You Won't Believe What He Found"
Просмотров 960Год назад
"Unbelievable Barn Find - You Won't Believe What He Found"
FARMING VLOG 2023 | Life on a Family Farm | Our Big Comeback! 🌾
Просмотров 4,9 тыс.Год назад
FARMING VLOG 2023 | Life on a Family Farm | Our Big Comeback! 🌾
What Is Causing This Nationwide Drought?
Просмотров 2532 года назад
What Is Causing This Nationwide Drought?
Cattle Fly Control that WORKS!
Просмотров 1 тыс.2 года назад
Cattle Fly Control that WORKS!
Johnson Grass Is Taking Over
Просмотров 5312 года назад
Johnson Grass Is Taking Over
Importance of a good Bull with Greg Judy at Green Pastures Farms
Просмотров 4,3 тыс.2 года назад
Importance of a good Bull with Greg Judy at Green Pastures Farms
More Troubles Ahead for Farmers?
Просмотров 2502 года назад
More Troubles Ahead for Farmers?
The East Coast Needs Rain
Просмотров 1412 года назад
The East Coast Needs Rain
We almost lost her...
Просмотров 1712 года назад
We almost lost her...
Enjoy a Heavenly Sunset
Просмотров 892 года назад
Enjoy a Heavenly Sunset
Strip Grazing Cattle with Great Results
Просмотров 1,4 тыс.2 года назад
Strip Grazing Cattle with Great Results
Strip Grazing During the Spring Flush
Просмотров 4622 года назад
Strip Grazing During the Spring Flush
Did our farm get hit by a Tornado?
Просмотров 3592 года назад
Did our farm get hit by a Tornado?

Комментарии

  • @SamuelPhi
    @SamuelPhi 2 дня назад

    Hi, hope you're and your family are doing well. How big is your hers now, what advise for a beginner like me?

  • @jeremysanders5143
    @jeremysanders5143 2 месяца назад

    Very true That’s the hardest thing knowing proper paddock size

    • @user-tc3ou6sy5f
      @user-tc3ou6sy5f Месяц назад

      Been grazing cattle / milk cows for 45 years.... theres no rocket science to grazing.......put the cattle out......and when they talk to you......move them !

  • @markpennella
    @markpennella 2 месяца назад

    Pick the mans brain and then please let him talk. This was a great concept for a video with an expert. Let him do 90% of the talking.

  • @davidsymonds1955
    @davidsymonds1955 2 месяца назад

    Hi Greg my name is David Simons and I'm just getting started I need to know how to get rid of the blackberries out of the pasture

  • @andreasherzog2222
    @andreasherzog2222 3 месяца назад

    The crucial parameter is: how much forage per acre does that pasture have? Greg with his 500 years of experience just looks at it and 'feels' the value. But how can a beginner grazer estimate that value? The rest is just a simple line in a spreadscheet.

  • @bigalshouse3033
    @bigalshouse3033 3 месяца назад

    Just came across your channel about how many acres are you sitting on I am considering something like this with a 40 acre parcel

  • @troyandrus982
    @troyandrus982 3 месяца назад

    This is one of the best interviews I’ve seen. Thank you for using your farm as an example. Well done 👍

  • @user-en6yl3tg7k
    @user-en6yl3tg7k 3 месяца назад

    I have a terrible time figuring out paddock size and how much to leave behind

  • @TexarkanaPrepper
    @TexarkanaPrepper 4 месяца назад

    Greg Judy is great, however, a lot of his methods relate to the dryer climate in Missouri. And in East Texas my problem is that the grass grows too fast in recent years due to our heavier, rainfall and soil fertility. so as long as it is wet, I’m going to let them graze a little shorter, otherwise I have to mow even when I mow when I come back to that spot 45 days later, the grass is 2 foot tall

  • @johnwalker863
    @johnwalker863 4 месяца назад

    Not even close. Nice rig though

  • @BirdseyeVu
    @BirdseyeVu 4 месяца назад

    You are asking great questions, friend!

  • @garybalasa3158
    @garybalasa3158 4 месяца назад

    Very easy mistake to make (over grazing) we moved on to 20 acres, purchased 8 heifers very young, that was all fine when they were young but were down to 4 and strip grazing over 4 x 5 acre paddocks and I'm just hanging in there. Were in a good rain zone in Aussie but I suspect we will be having to buy some hay for winter, simply too wet and cold for the pasture to grow much, we can go a good month without sunshine which doesent help.

  • @AnimeDreamingEcchi
    @AnimeDreamingEcchi 4 месяца назад

    Can you please show us in step by step how to do this please

  • @AnimeDreamingEcchi
    @AnimeDreamingEcchi 4 месяца назад

    Cud weed is annoying How do we fix

  • @dogmacdonald8681
    @dogmacdonald8681 5 месяцев назад

    Look after your drill and it will look after you for a long time looking at a million dollars for a new one

  • @chipper6729
    @chipper6729 5 месяцев назад

    Squirrel!

  • @jimdrewty
    @jimdrewty 5 месяцев назад

    What state are you in

  • @kennethheern4896
    @kennethheern4896 5 месяцев назад

    I like what Greg does, not everyone can do it as efficiently. Greg’s advantage is he has a few thousand acres to graze.

  • @Bessie1021
    @Bessie1021 6 месяцев назад

    How do I figure out how much area to give my 4 cows on a 9 acre rotation consisting of primarily fescue during the summer and ryegrass during the winter months

    • @blackduckfarmcanada
      @blackduckfarmcanada 5 месяцев назад

      Only give what they eat in half a day. Move them twice a day

  • @user-sr8dl5wl1z
    @user-sr8dl5wl1z 6 месяцев назад

    Such great info on the calculations

  • @nelsonferris2606
    @nelsonferris2606 6 месяцев назад

    The spiders are your allies.

  • @galenhaugh3158
    @galenhaugh3158 6 месяцев назад

    Looks like a ranch to me.

  • @user-un3ml2qx6y
    @user-un3ml2qx6y 6 месяцев назад

    Can you give us your facts of numbers of livestock and total number of acres used in one year thank you greg

  • @Carpenter481
    @Carpenter481 7 месяцев назад

    You guys are awesome. What an experience that young man is getting, fantastic.

  • @tonyhudson8698
    @tonyhudson8698 7 месяцев назад

    LIES. Its a Modern rig compared to the Cable tool rigs.. Look up KEYSTONE DRILLING RIGS one glance will confirm my STATEMENT.

  • @bethakabetty
    @bethakabetty 8 месяцев назад

    How tall are the outside 6x6 posts?

  • @nicolem376
    @nicolem376 8 месяцев назад

    This was a great question & answer. I knew about rotation but not exactly how to know when to do it & still have grow back.

  • @derrickdavis2012
    @derrickdavis2012 8 месяцев назад

    Definitely not the oldest operating rig in America.. This model of drilling rig in the video which is either a TH-55 or TH60 was originally manufactured by Sanderson Cyclone approximately 50 years ago. Ingersol Rand bought out cyclone and produced it, and aince then Atlas Copvo bought Ingersol Rand and has produced it. Since its original production this top head rig model has been the one all other top head drilling rig manufacturers will have either made reference to or compared their equipment to when trying to sell you their product. I own a 1980 TH60 myself and drill with it in Wyoming. To buy a brand new TH-60 today it would cost you around a million dollars. So you can understand its not just as simple as going and buying a new one. Any piece of equipment will do the job if its sized or set up for the area, and it is maintained appropriately.

  • @JohnDoe2.01
    @JohnDoe2.01 8 месяцев назад

    Great father/son project! Kudos sir! Your son probably doesn't know how lucky he is now, but one day he will. Enjoy your time together and each other.

  • @schmuckpuppet4842
    @schmuckpuppet4842 9 месяцев назад

    But it's wrong!!!

  • @traviseuler9082
    @traviseuler9082 9 месяцев назад

    I operate a 1947 Bucyrus Erie 22w cable tool drilling rig. We drill every week with this rig to a depth of over 300 ft.

  • @chasewilliams3271
    @chasewilliams3271 9 месяцев назад

    Don’t like the title

  • @melvinrexwinkle1510
    @melvinrexwinkle1510 10 месяцев назад

    Your problem or your question at the end of the video has a simple answer. If you're not able to leave enough forage when you are done grazing a paddock because the next paddock you would move to has not regrown enough, then you have too many cattle, preg check your cows and sell the cows that should have been bred, but are open. On the other hand if you have too much grass, then as greg said it's like a savings account If you have too much grass maybe you could keep some calves after weaning, or it's always a good thing to have plenty of grass, when most other people in your area are short of grass, then you might be able to buy some younger cows, that are already bred and when it doesn't rain, sell older cows. The whole discussion falls under the heading of "adaptive grazing" You just never will be able to use a mathematic equation to determine the amount of cattle you should have, pretty much because you can't predict the weather. I will tell you this, one of the most profitable things in a cow herd you can measure is the percentage of cows bred back after calving. And that is really dependent upon the amount of nutrition that a cow receives after calving, so think about 2 cows for example one cow calves on march 1 and the other cow calves on march 22, thats heat cycle later. Most cowmen would say the calf 21 days older would weigh 45 lbs more at weaning. If the weaned calf is worth 2 bucks a pound that is 90 dollars difference, so how much grass would you want those cows to have the next time they have a calf? Then there is another item to consider too. The cattle being grazing animals, with a history of grazing since the beginning of time, how many generations is that? The fact that you should know is that they will eat tge most nutritous plant material 1st, so the more grass they have, the more particular they can be. As Greg said the grass they don't eat is not ever wasted, the grass shown in the video, is not wasted even if it goes dormant, falls to the ground, and becomes organic matter, and eventually carbon, it's not wasted! So, if you have too many cows, you dont have the option of keeping your calves past weaning, and you dont have the option of buying younger cows, and you don't have the option of keeping all the rain that falls, because more of it runs off, and you dont have the extra carbon going into your soil too

  • @borihernandez2948
    @borihernandez2948 10 месяцев назад

    Love and miss you guys so much !!!Que bellos estan mis primitos ❤ ❤❤

  • @maegardnermills4292
    @maegardnermills4292 10 месяцев назад

    I wonder do you plant rye grass?

  • @maegardnermills4292
    @maegardnermills4292 10 месяцев назад

    12 Heifers. I will estimate you will have increased cattle stock of five heifers and seven bulls. You have a nice farm.

  • @JustinHitt
    @JustinHitt 11 месяцев назад

    I like your stock tank skid. And second, the use of a float valve in a previous comment.

  • @brendascott4191
    @brendascott4191 11 месяцев назад

    Both of my ducks turned out to be boys

  • @asktodd2000
    @asktodd2000 11 месяцев назад

    Love to see the father-son collaboration

  • @bryanblackburn7074
    @bryanblackburn7074 Год назад

    Greg you had a video back in January 2023 where you calculated the needed amount of forage for your bull mob at the new bull farm. Now grant it, this was daily requirements of stockpile in the winter but you scribbled down your calculations on paper for us viewers to see how you figured it? I stopped the video and took pictures of the TV screen with my cell phone. Greg you walked off 54 feet wide (18 steps wide) x 366 feet long = 19,764 ft An acre is 42,560 ft. your grazing calculation was 5 inches to graze for that day. Your bull mob weighed 36,900 lbs x 2.5 body weight required = 922.5 lbs (400lbs/acre available x 5 inches graze) = (2000 lbs/acre available x .46 acre = 920 lbs available. I hope this calculation is right because I'm going strictly off Greg's pics and trying to make sense of it so you have a clearer understanding of it?

  • @Luvtallhorses
    @Luvtallhorses Год назад

    Lighten up 😊

  • @stevegagnon6602
    @stevegagnon6602 Год назад

    I would love to see Greg write a book with all of his best thoughts. I would like to have hard copies of Greg's vast experience that I could hand over to other learners.

  • @boltactionshooter
    @boltactionshooter Год назад

    Great advice. I grow hay only the sell but most buyers wait until they need hay in the winter to look for it! I am always sold out then. I even offer to store hay for a small fee if they pay for it, that way they are guaranteed quality hay that has been barn stored without having to worry or have a barn but most can't see that is a great deal for them.

  • @jimkurk5575
    @jimkurk5575 Год назад

    good stuff, who is doing the guitar music on the end that is real good wish i new who they were

  • @harvestvillage695
    @harvestvillage695 Год назад

    Great interview! I appreciate your teachable spirit. Thanks for sharing.

  • @anamariecameron7874
    @anamariecameron7874 Год назад

    💔💔💔💔💔💔💔💔💔

  • @KPVFarmer
    @KPVFarmer Год назад

    Great interview and info! Getting the right sized paddocks for various sizes of herds and animals is a constant learning experience 🇺🇸🦅🇺🇸

  • @Mothobius
    @Mothobius Год назад

    whyn s the snake dead? did you idiots kill it? y'all are teaching your son bad things. Don't teach children to kill snakes.

  • @robertduffy5805
    @robertduffy5805 Год назад

    great topic

  • @guillaumerebotton15
    @guillaumerebotton15 Год назад

    I'm in new Zealand here we measure our pasture in kg of Dry Mater per Hectares so (kg DM per Ha) The tools we use are plate meters that you would sample your pastures using the same number of samples per Hectares to get a good estimate of your grass. Total grass - expected residual grass = available grass Then you take the Total weight of your herd X 3% Exemple 3000 kgDM/ha - 1500kgDM/ha = 1500kgDM/Ha available (10 cow @ 550kg each) x 3% = 165kg needed (165x10000) / 1500 = 1100 m2 so 0.11 Ha per day

    • @markandrews6712
      @markandrews6712 Год назад

      The question now is what residual does Greg leave? That’s what I want to know.

    • @davemi00
      @davemi00 10 месяцев назад

      Very helpful measuring technique Simple and concise ! Basically what Greg is explaining.

    • @kalsprite
      @kalsprite 3 месяца назад

      @@markandrews6712 Rule of thumb is bottom 4" must stay, that is the bare minimum. You look at the grass, lets say it is 12" tall. Decide the residual you want, lets say its 6". So your consumption budget is 12-6=6". You then find the area that provides 6" worth of consumption. Its the same as the formulas above, just decide how much to use and how much to leave. (A useful rule of thumb is there is 260# dry matter per acre-inch on medium density pasture)

    • @richardmccrae5422
      @richardmccrae5422 20 дней назад

      I’m from New Zealand too and I usually work on kgdm(kilograms of dry matter) per cow per day. 10 cows x 18kg each = 180 kgdm/day 3000kg pregraze minus 1500 residul = 1500kgdm/ha available So 180kg / 1500kg = 0.12ha/day