Cows, Carbon and Climate | Joel Salatin | TEDxCharlottesville

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  • Опубликовано: 19 май 2024
  • Joel Salatin, an organic farmer located in the Shanendoah Valley in Virginia, loves his grass - and so do his cows. In this talk Salatin outlines the role that this often unsung hero of the plant world plays in sustainable farming, and the effects that its efficient utilization can have on the world around us.
    Joel Salatin is a third generation beyond organic farmer and author whose family owns and operates Polyface Farm in Virginia's Shenandoah Valley. The farm produces salad bar beef, pigaerator pork, pastured poultry, forage-based rabbits and direct markets everything to 5,000 families, 50 restaurants, and 10 retail outlets. A prolific author, Salatin's nine books to date include both how-to and big picture themes. The farm features prominently in Michael Pollan's NYT bestseller Omnivore's Dilemma and the award-winning documentary, Food Inc.
    This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at ted.com/tedx

Комментарии • 614

  • @arielamejeiras8677
    @arielamejeiras8677 2 года назад +8

    'Concentration Camp Meat' - That's the best way of putting it.

  • @KenDBerryMD
    @KenDBerryMD 3 года назад +137

    A society that doesn't respect the cow-ness of the cow will soon lose respect for the human-ness of you.

    • @lizardgeek1658
      @lizardgeek1658 3 года назад +7

      Interesting to see you here to recently. Isn't it crazy how much soil effects health?

    • @marlonstonewell9210
      @marlonstonewell9210 2 года назад +2

      Excellent

  • @samlair3342
    @samlair3342 4 года назад +263

    When the headlines started beefing about beef, I told my wife, “A bunch of city slickers equating grass fed beef with feed lot beef”. For years, we raised cattle using multiple cross fencing. I’d laid out the pastures of our hundred acres so that they intersected in the middle where the corral and windmill were. Changing pastures was easy. There’s not a prettier sight than cows in belly high grass.

    • @minsh5675
      @minsh5675 4 года назад +6

      Yes

    • @dreinhard52
      @dreinhard52 4 года назад +3

      Once the grass has reached belly height. the nutritional value is way past optional. ME value has dropped markedly

    • @4TIMESAYEAR
      @4TIMESAYEAR 3 года назад +6

      And what the cows don't eat (weeds), sheep will.

    • @alexandrawhitelock6195
      @alexandrawhitelock6195 3 года назад +8

      Agree! Weary of the move to force us to be vegans...

    • @Mrchayse42
      @Mrchayse42 3 года назад +4

      @@alexandrawhitelock6195 you know than you can pasturise animals without eating them

  • @alwaysthelight
    @alwaysthelight 6 лет назад +177

    Joel expresses the most basic concepts of land and animal husbandry in ways that everyone can appreciate.

    • @alexd3693
      @alexd3693 5 лет назад

      Sunbeams are not "esoteric", they are electromagnetic and can be absorbed with solar panels.
      I like chicken somewhat and I don't eat beef very much anymore.

    • @allenbabcock5522
      @allenbabcock5522 4 года назад

      Number File y

    • @allenbabcock5522
      @allenbabcock5522 4 года назад

      Number File hi

    • @AnitaClue
      @AnitaClue 4 года назад +11

      @@alexd3693 sunbeams are not just electromagnetic. You can't capture the feeling of their warmth on your face with a solar panel. You can't bottle the lift it gives someone's spirits to see them after a week of gray skies. Diminishing things to just one aspect of them misses everything else and wastes our ability to see the big picture. Take time to appreciate the whole, and you'll start to feel the beauty whether it ever comes to actual poetry or not, you'll even see the beauty in the electromagnetic quality of sunbeams.

    • @lendalennuk2484
      @lendalennuk2484 2 года назад

      @@alexd3693 Why not to eat grass-fed beef, raised as Salatin teaches?

  • @YVM3311
    @YVM3311 Год назад +3

    I wish this had a million views instead of one thousand . This is so important . Regenerative agriculture with both vegetables and live stock working in synchronicity just as they do in Nature is the way toward to sustainable food supply and indeed a healthier soil and Mother Nature across the globe

  • @steezymiyagi
    @steezymiyagi 4 года назад +22

    it’s amazing how simple something like this could have such a big impact. simply amazing.

    • @wiezyczkowata
      @wiezyczkowata 6 месяцев назад

      it's amazing that it was done by our ancestors for years and years, many still does it because they were taught by their fathers and grandfathers, but many stopped because all they cared about was profit, so mny peopl now rediscover it as if it was something new....

  • @mowtivatedmechanic1172
    @mowtivatedmechanic1172 3 года назад +8

    Great presentation sir. If we don’t go back to the old ways humanity will pay dearly!!!

  • @smeargut1809
    @smeargut1809 Год назад +2

    Grass has become a useful source of nutrition, shade, moisture and tool for helping build my farm.

  • @pilkyish
    @pilkyish 5 лет назад +27

    Love Joel.
    The most passionate man I’ve ever heard speak.

  • @hamiltopiafarms1649
    @hamiltopiafarms1649 3 года назад +11

    Joel Salatin is such an impressive human! We met him this Summer at his farm and it was like talking to an old friend. He is definitely our first go to whenever we start thinking about, anything really, with our new farm!

  • @PeterSedesse
    @PeterSedesse 4 года назад +78

    Salatin only briefly mentioned it, but the secret to all of this is solar powered lightweight mobile electric fencing. It could go down as the most important agricultural invention in a century. The ability to move herds daily makes this all possible.

    • @ianbatey3425
      @ianbatey3425 3 года назад +6

      Electric fences are important for rotating small herds, but you can still do it with large groups of cattle and large pastures.
      You can even simulate migratory grazing without fences. Look up Bud Williams. His goal was to utilize the entirety of pastures by keeping cattle more tightly grouped and moving and settling them on less desirable parts of large pastures. The cattle will do it almost naturally if you handle the right. It's in their nature to be gregarious and have a tight herd!

    • @xyzsame4081
      @xyzsame4081 3 года назад

      @@ianbatey3425 fences are certainly important for goats and pigs and poultry. As one travelling goat herder said that used to raise cattle in his former stationary life. When i leave a herd of cows in one place and come 5 days later I will find them. Goats cover a LOT of ground, I'll probably get a phone call from the Canadian mounties.
      ** that was a PBS Wyoming documentary about goats and their short term grazing of weeds and undergrowth. To restore pasture or to help with fire hazards. Highly recommeded to watch btw.

    • @xyzsame4081
      @xyzsame4081 3 года назад

      @@ianbatey3425 Cattle may have had the instinct to stay together when they knew to be afraid of predators, but I think they unlearned that instinct. So without at least a pair of good dogs ..... (Will check out Bud Williams, sounds interesting).

  • @marcneilladio1147
    @marcneilladio1147 3 года назад +23

    The best concept I have seen so far in sustainable farming. The "cowness of a cow" was sometimes seen as a problem in climate change but could be the solution to sequest carbon by pruning grass. After all, they are one of nature's gardeners. Can't wait to apply this in my farm. Thank you sir.

  • @jahentsai
    @jahentsai 4 года назад +43

    Joel made a excellent speech! Can you please turn on the community contribution? I would like to submit a subtitle (traditional Chinese) so that more people in my country can better understand this video.

    • @fangyuteng
      @fangyuteng 6 месяцев назад

      I’m actually thinking of the same thing!

  • @nl4064
    @nl4064 5 лет назад +19

    this guy is brilliant

  • @sking2173
    @sking2173 2 года назад +4

    Cattle is a marvel of nature. Put grass and water in one end, and fertilizer comes out the other.
    Then after a couple of years, you can dress out 300 kg of the world’s favorite meat!
    It’s almost a miracle ...

  • @LifeLaunchwithJackC
    @LifeLaunchwithJackC 6 лет назад +10

    My man, Joel, pulls through again. Keep up the good work

  • @Yo_uj
    @Yo_uj 5 лет назад +31

    He talks about nature's choreography and presents solutions which are so simple but exactly exactly exact, only wisdom and experience can make such solutions possible. He not just saw but noticed the most obvious things that are very Easy to be ignored.

  • @g.anthonis49
    @g.anthonis49 6 лет назад +108

    I'm impressed! Not a big meat eater but now I want a cow. He is so right. Let the herbivore do its job and build the soil.

    • @strauchdieb7628
      @strauchdieb7628 4 года назад +8

      Unfortunately swapping wildlife for livestock doesn't work. This man is neither ecologist, nor agriculturist and shouldn't be regarded as an expert, as his views are ideology-driven.

    • @TomHaws
      @TomHaws 4 года назад +7

      @@strauchdieb7628 Can you explain what you mean by "doesn't work"?

    • @strauchdieb7628
      @strauchdieb7628 4 года назад +6

      @@TomHaws For the most part livestock takes up different ecological niches than wildlife (nutritional habits, migrational patterns, symbiotic circles, predatory pressure...) - without going into too much detail.

    • @robinlecocq7065
      @robinlecocq7065 4 года назад +6

      @@strauchdieb7628 your what are your alternative solutions? As the ipcc has the petty much back his ideas and recommendations integration of grass and live in arable rotoation to mitigate climate change and soil degradation.

    • @strauchdieb7628
      @strauchdieb7628 4 года назад

      @@robinlecocq7065 Can you provide a source for that claim? I doubt they even know of him. The IPCC presents several ways for combating climate change, which I won't go into detail about, because they are widely available. In short, we have to "clean up our act". There is no one-size-fits-all formula and especially no magic pill as Salatin claims. As I said, he's mostly ideology driven and possibly also a grifter.

  • @theapplesfoodforestfarmacy1233
    @theapplesfoodforestfarmacy1233 4 года назад +3

    Amazing MAN! Thank you 🙏 Mr. Salatin.

  • @guffmanissoft1
    @guffmanissoft1 5 лет назад +8

    I LOVE THIS MAN

  • @rowdyhoo
    @rowdyhoo 4 года назад +3

    Love this guy! Sorry I missed this presentation knowing now that it was just across the mountains from me.

  • @oskar_2114
    @oskar_2114 3 года назад +3

    Best presentation about grass ive ever seen, and ive seen documentaries about weed.

  • @jordanmaerz7852
    @jordanmaerz7852 2 года назад

    I am super happy that Joel was around on the day of the youtube and free information

  • @susanlangguth955
    @susanlangguth955 4 года назад +7

    Farmers are the best!!

  • @CM-lb9eh
    @CM-lb9eh 5 лет назад +5

    What a great presentation!

  •  2 года назад +5

    Je découvre Joël Salatin, il est passionné et, de fait, passionnant ! Son approche écologique et économique de l'élevage est une véritable école pour qui s'intéresse à l'autonomie alimentaire.

  • @galentine09
    @galentine09 Год назад +1

    I have watched this video several times throughout the years and each time, I always click "like" but for some reason it goes away, every year, I have to re-click.... interesting....

  • @shahbazmuhammad9026
    @shahbazmuhammad9026 2 года назад

    amazing, thanks for guidiing us back to life cycle

  • @petertuson5606
    @petertuson5606 3 года назад +4

    Very interesting. I often find that people who put science into practice have a much better grasp of the subject & can explain complex systems far better than academics as this lecture demonstrates.

  • @anneliseailagomeslobo4263
    @anneliseailagomeslobo4263 Год назад +1

    Simple and Perfect definition

  • @Inspiringeverydaymum
    @Inspiringeverydaymum 3 года назад +3

    His is an amazing individual, I just hope big corporations will learn something from him...

  • @juliamarple3058
    @juliamarple3058 4 года назад +23

    👏👏👏 Great talk. See also Allan Savory ✊👍

  • @RobertoLhopital
    @RobertoLhopital 6 лет назад +18

    One correction on grass production, the spanish lang subtitles reads "hectares", when actually Salatin says "acres". 1ha = 2.47 acres

  • @syandakhanyile5611
    @syandakhanyile5611 Год назад +1

    what a go ahead I've leant so much today thank you

  • @jordanmaerz7852
    @jordanmaerz7852 2 года назад +1

    Thats awesome 👌, i never thought id find a Joel ted talk

  • @mikeharrington5593
    @mikeharrington5593 6 лет назад +5

    Joel is da man.

  • @benfrench8827
    @benfrench8827 3 года назад +3

    Go Joel!

  • @todspeerii7498
    @todspeerii7498 4 года назад +7

    This guy is really good at talking

  • @eannatiernan705
    @eannatiernan705 6 лет назад +7

    Everyone needs to visit Ireland and New Zealand to see optimum grassland management for dairy cows, beef cattle and sheep. The top farmers can produce up to 17 tonnes per hectare or 15,000 lbs per acre.

    • @xyzsame4081
      @xyzsame4081 3 года назад

      Likely the higher rainfall (also during the warm season summer) makes that possible.

    • @michaelcatherwood4088
      @michaelcatherwood4088 Год назад

      In NZ we call it rotational grazing. When low impedance electric fence technology developed in NZ during the 1970s it became possible to economically move livestock to a new area each day. Most NZ farms have used this farming system for 30 or more years. What beggars belief is our own government doesn't recognise or understand these natural principles and want us to follow a flawed regrenerative farming practice that doesn't include grazing ruminants. The lack of scientific reason from our politicians in the bid to be realected will be the down fall of us all.
      .
      Z

  • @toxyfree
    @toxyfree 7 лет назад +20

    iLOVE Joel Salatin!!! "The Blessed Way!" Inspiring/informative! #genius #SuperFan

  • @TheSwamppilot
    @TheSwamppilot 2 года назад +2

    Brilliant!

  • @thomascallaghan5988
    @thomascallaghan5988 3 года назад +2

    That was brilliant

  • @CarlosSilva-fz7we
    @CarlosSilva-fz7we 4 года назад +1

    excelente sin desperdicios

  • @marieheleneboone7718
    @marieheleneboone7718 2 года назад +1

    beautiful!

  • @annehurly2235
    @annehurly2235 7 лет назад +125

    New Zealand still grows all its beef on pastures (we call them paddocks here).

    • @Jefferdaughter
      @Jefferdaughter 7 лет назад +6

      In the USA, pastures used to mean large fenced areas, and paddocks were smaller, sometimes divisions of pastures. But Americans seem to be using any word to mean 'whatever'...

    • @FireRupee
      @FireRupee 7 лет назад +2

      Anne Hurly And with the rising rate of droughts and higher corn prices, some farmers in America have been feeding their cows more of other grains, and even sugar cookies, gummy bears, and ice cream sprinkles mixed in. Dunno how common that is elsewhere.

    • @kazzana9013
      @kazzana9013 6 лет назад +20

      Yes, NZ does raise it's beef on pasture, but it is not mob grazing, so we here have the same problem of over grazing, not allowing enough time for grass to regenerate. Our dairy herds, would come closer to what could be described as mob grazing, but are grazed on younger grass than beef cattle for milk fat. Mono-culture type farming is also the norm here.
      NZ farmers are also farming with chemicals, which kill soil life, so are in this nasty cycle of having to add fertility in an ever degrading system.
      Everything a plant needs to grow is already in the soil, and if we would just nurture our soil life, and actually get off our backsides and manage our animals, we would have a healthy regenerative system.
      Another thing NZ does badly, is a dehydrating infrastructure, in which our plentiful rainfall, is directed to the nearest drain, stream, river and out to sea. Every year farmers will moan about drought in summer, yet make no attempt to keep that rainfall on the land longer, to absorb into the soil.
      It is true, that us New Zealanders find cattle lots abhorrent, hence they are rare here, but we as a nation, still have a long way to go, to overcome the chemical corporations influence on our farming practices.

    • @b_uppy
      @b_uppy 6 лет назад

      Anne Hurly
      Here, paddocks could be small spaces also.

    • @homiegibiotch7915
      @homiegibiotch7915 5 лет назад +1

      we call them paddocks here too !!

  • @ferlazzari
    @ferlazzari Год назад +1

    Fantastic!

  • @robertfoertsch
    @robertfoertsch 2 года назад +2

    Excellent Analysis, Deployed Worldwide Through My Deep Learning AI Research Library…Thank You

  • @justme1195
    @justme1195 4 года назад +20

    He's a mad farm scientist

  • @htinaungshien6384
    @htinaungshien6384 4 года назад +1

    We never forget our planet without soil and crops correlation for long term Sustainable Agriculture.

  • @putin88100
    @putin88100 8 лет назад +17

    Please come to Guelph, Ontario- They have one of the largest agricultural colleges in North America! They just built a multi-million Dollar research facility for dairy and beef. Conentration-camp style and pasture is only used to park cars on it.... Researching for the future of agriculture/livestock and not a single animal in their research facility ever sees the light of day. except the horses of course....

    • @beverlybkerr
      @beverlybkerr 8 лет назад +1

      +putin88100 sad situation

    • @RetroRider1967
      @RetroRider1967 7 лет назад

      employ a scientific mind - sceptically interrogate until you've distilled to the Truth ... I wonder about the ultimate source(s) of the funding for such a massive project, and - further - for the department that administers it.

    • @Jefferdaughter
      @Jefferdaughter 7 лет назад +4

      The current world power structure is built on petroleum and petrochemicals. Since WWII, the push in America and Canada has been toward industrialization of what is a biological process: the production of food. This industrialization benefits the petrochemical industry almost exclusively.

    • @johngoudge5916
      @johngoudge5916 7 лет назад +2

      Nonsense. Look at all the good union brothers and sisters at Dow and Monsanto(fertilizer, pesticides and herbicides) , John Deere and Case (machinery) and the ethanol producers plus their shareholders. Don't forget the trucking companies that haul all the above plus the produce and animals. You salad fixing might well be more widely traveled than you. Likewise your steak may have been born in Texas moved to a feed operation in Georgia to graze and be backgrounded on grain and then sent to an Iowa feedlot for finishing and finished off at a nearby packing operation.

    • @putin88100
      @putin88100 7 лет назад +4

      you are right John. There is just more money to be made of a
      centralized, industrialized agriculture with high tech and science to it
      than from someone like Salatin who simlply produces food from soil.
      Even a single concentration camp farm enterprize that displaces 100
      small scale farmers moves more bucks around than these 100 small scale
      farms would have. But, fortunately in a democracy the ultimate power
      comes with numbers and I know for sure that more people are unhappy with
      concentration camp farming than are happy with it. Joel Salatins
      popularity confirms that.

  • @321gasa
    @321gasa Год назад +1

    Beautiful

  • @ReefHeater
    @ReefHeater 5 лет назад +1

    Awesome

  • @CAMacKenzie
    @CAMacKenzie 4 года назад +2

    Holy Cow!

  • @b2bomber45
    @b2bomber45 Год назад +1

    Who would have thought that we needed taught how grass works and what God's intent for it was.

  • @matthiashahn5420
    @matthiashahn5420 Год назад +1

    This great talk from a brilliant systemic mind has waaaay to few views

  • @nancyfahey7518
    @nancyfahey7518 4 года назад +1

    I was watching a Wyoming channel on RUclips. I loved it, took such great care of their cattle, mowed their own hay when they could, help with birthing when needed, grew the babies all grass fed... then they sold to feed lots. I gave them a piece of my mind then quit the channel. Its so sad, all that great work and I'll never see it on my table.

  • @dedsi8848
    @dedsi8848 5 лет назад +28

    It's called holistic management

  • @Will-zg4ur
    @Will-zg4ur 5 лет назад +39

    The funny part is he didn't even mention all the health benefits that come along with eating grass fed animals they are the ultimate alchemists turning undigestible, to humans, grass into the most nutrient dense food on the planet, and as he did say nurturing the planet and the animals, so they don't have to live a terrible life.

    • @waynebow-gu7wr
      @waynebow-gu7wr 4 года назад +4

      I've already commented that grass fed cows etc. produce vitamin K2-7 in their meat... which is essential to every cell in the human body !

    • @Troy-Moses
      @Troy-Moses 2 года назад

      11:30

    • @marduk6836
      @marduk6836 Год назад +1

      @@pawsscience1020 that's a dangerous misinformation.

  • @juneisnumber1
    @juneisnumber1 5 лет назад +36

    I seriously cannot believe that this was not titled, Respecting the Cowness of the Cow. Smh!!

    • @leelindsay5618
      @leelindsay5618 4 года назад +1

      Its not titled that because that is just a byproduct of following the process. Those pesky morals don't get in everyone's way so the title is about more about carbon. 😁

  • @stephendaniel168
    @stephendaniel168 Год назад +1

    As we approach this time in history there will be people that are set aside merely for drawing back to the land and reactivating their innate system that has been dead for years. The good news is there is still the opportunity to do this for yourself and start your journey. I see it happening to people from all backgrounds living in both city and country.

  • @ritamariekelley4077
    @ritamariekelley4077 3 года назад +4

    Facts? Fine, but Monsanto will not let go of the profits. That's where we, the Peeps need to put the pressure by not buying any corn or soy products. But this is all wonderfully exciting and so logical. Gives us all hope for the future and we can all contribute even if we don't have acreage, doing kitchen composting.

    • @kabbythedog9409
      @kabbythedog9409 Год назад

      Patents grass

    • @kabbythedog9409
      @kabbythedog9409 Год назад

      👩‍🌾 s need to money up and double pay for seed to get off contracts
      Can’t afford it? Ive never met a rich farmer 😂 I kid of course most of them are big enough they can afford it
      I will do it on family farm eventually

  • @nicholasnapier2684
    @nicholasnapier2684 4 года назад

    Listen to his videos because they make a better place for us in this world and for our food or animal or livestock rather he is the most valid points I've seen out of anyone I don't think I believe much anyone besides him I've looked at many different kinds of data on what he's talking about and even in South America they're starting to do this in their own countries and they know of him even in Colombia and Ecuador Peru all these countries there are we doing when he's talking about they're talking about feeding their own people first we used to be the breadbasket of the world why we not that again.... we do these simple things like he's saying in this video it would make a difference in the world....

  • @tamaking7104
    @tamaking7104 4 года назад +7

    without the grazing herbivores the grasslands would turn into brushland in dry areas or forest in wetter areas. .

  • @abigailcaitlyn2225
    @abigailcaitlyn2225 3 года назад +10

    “The cowness of the cow” very well put 😂

  • @MuseInThought
    @MuseInThought 4 года назад

    This talk was okay. I I enjoyed it i guess 🙃🥳🙈🙉🙊

  • @thatoneguyc8312
    @thatoneguyc8312 4 года назад +12

    Im glad we are seeing the other side of the argument I'm for helping the environment but I don't agree with most of the ways people are trying too

    • @strauchdieb7628
      @strauchdieb7628 3 года назад +5

      No argument. The less meat we consume, the better for our health and the environment.

    • @psicologamarcelacollado5863
      @psicologamarcelacollado5863 3 года назад +5

      Strauch Dieb obviously you didn’t understand what he was saying. Sad.

    • @thatoneguyc8312
      @thatoneguyc8312 3 года назад +4

      @@strauchdieb7628 well I would disagree but that's not the point of my argument but if you could explain how eating less meat helps I might be open to understanding your points and the facts about health are still debatable and might have to do more with vegans being more focused on what they eat rather than the fact that they aren't eating meat.

    • @thatoneguyc8312
      @thatoneguyc8312 3 года назад +4

      @@strauchdieb7628 also over farming is a serious problem and cattle can help restore nutrients back to the soil avoiding soil erosion and increasing crop yield.

    • @strauchdieb7628
      @strauchdieb7628 3 года назад

      @@thatoneguyc8312 just read any article about the environmental impact of the meat industry.
      Consumption by far exceeds health experts´ recommendations, ergo not debatable.

  • @rtcodypr
    @rtcodypr 6 лет назад +30

    this stuff is so simple is astonishing people dont understand that all that grass eaten turns into more fertilizer and then the grass grows back fixing more carbon and the world goes round, pruning almost any plant will result in increased growth, wonder why? because the plant assumes it was just eaten completely above ground so wants to bounce back to maintain its own existence, and we can take advantage of this . I blame the fertilizer industries for disconnecting farmers from the land

    • @osco4311
      @osco4311 3 года назад

      They missed that part of The Lion King where Mufassa explains the Circle of Life

  • @loganbutler1016
    @loganbutler1016 4 года назад +1

    People forget that before settlement by Europeans, North American Bison numbers were almost as high as the current number of cattle we now have in this country. As we were killing off the bison (to near extinction), we were in effect replacing them with cattle. Bison also produce more greenhouse gasses than cattle. Cattle are not the problem.

  • @reroan2670
    @reroan2670 2 года назад +2

    Whenever someone brings up climate and meat consumption, I have to redirect them to the historical 30 million bison that used to live in the US.

  • @FearIsaLiar
    @FearIsaLiar 4 года назад

    Awsome

  • @robmarkovitch
    @robmarkovitch 2 года назад +2

    Isn't life amazing ❤️

  • @jacquelinehowden6432
    @jacquelinehowden6432 5 лет назад +37

    All you need to do is come to new zealand and see our grass based farming systems

    • @oliverbyrne508
      @oliverbyrne508 4 года назад +4

      Nz still dosent let the grass get out of diaper stage.

    • @hughM9
      @hughM9 4 года назад

      Europe is largely grass fed too. Having said that, it’s often an intensely managed ryegrass monoculture.

    • @frederiksmees5503
      @frederiksmees5503 4 года назад

      Oliver Byrne and also grazed way to short especially when cows are dry in winter time.

  • @ugtitto2654
    @ugtitto2654 3 года назад +1

    I've just chatted with the farmer's curious and friendly cows across the fence as part of my evening ritual only to come back inside and find this video among the recommended )) Last week I was standing on my elevated decking and watched how the local vet was performing a C-section on a pregnant cow in the field. These cows greet me when I leave for college in the morning and they gather by the gates when they see me pulling down my driveway. We chat and they lick my hands. And still, I continue to eat beef. I feel like one big selfish parasite, secretly admiring and envying the willpower of vegetarians and especially vegans. These are the people who delay our civilization from extinction as a result of our self-indulgence and inability to face uncomfortable truths about the climate crisis.

    • @jirusjirus9322
      @jirusjirus9322 Год назад

      I was a vegetarian for 40+ years
      We were lied to in the 70s when they told us that wheat/corn/soy etc was better than meat. Telling us that cheese and eggs are bad. Well the science has been out now for a while that these crops have been genetically modified and hybridized to the point that they transfer glyphosphate directly into our bodies causing harmful reactions. And the meat industry pumped more hormones and antibiotics into the animals that it also caused health issues.
      Grass fed cows and free range chickens are way more happy animals than those in cramped cages and feed lots. We must be kind to animals so they be sustainable for the environment. Ecology teaches these things. Mandatory study for the world. ♻️🌱💚

  • @dreinhard52
    @dreinhard52 7 лет назад +26

    go to New Zealand and learn about rotational grazing !!

    • @frederiksmees5503
      @frederiksmees5503 4 года назад +2

      Yep but they don’t grow it long enough to put carbon in the soil and graze it to short often

    • @frederiksmees5503
      @frederiksmees5503 4 года назад +1

      And often ruin what has been gain with chemical fertilisers

    • @dreinhard52
      @dreinhard52 4 года назад

      @@frederiksmees5503 Sorry I disagree .....

    • @frederiksmees5503
      @frederiksmees5503 4 года назад

      Dan Reinhard that is your full right to do so. I am totally not against farming. But chemical industry and the fertiliser industry are doing the damage. If you listen properly what this man has to say. Grass in nz doesn’t come out of the diaper stage as he calls it.

    • @frederiksmees5503
      @frederiksmees5503 4 года назад

      Dan Reinhard if you look at episode 7 2020 on country calendar you see a very interesting way of holistic farming where carbon is put back to the soil.

  • @joycejean-baptiste4355
    @joycejean-baptiste4355 11 месяцев назад +1

    I'm not a scientist but it's interesting how small animals like squirrels and rodents are ending up in the attics of many homes in my area. So the home owners have to get exterminators to put a product to get rid of the rodents. I noticed that they're cutting down trees to build more and more of these homes. Less trees and grass for these rodents to live. The asphalt and concrete are heating up the ground making them look for shelter. So inadvertently they become pests, voila, the need for pest control and pesticides. These animals aren't trying to become pests on purpose for sure. Thanks for the information.

  • @brettmelton09
    @brettmelton09 3 года назад

    Very good talk. However, there would not have been any pheasant in the Shanendoah Valley in the early 1700's. They were introduced in the late 1700's.

  • @winnipegnick
    @winnipegnick 4 года назад +1

    Can we grow wild grass, plants and weeds in the forest in between trees? He was saying that grass captures the most CO2.
    Or do the trees stop the sun from reaching the grass on the ground??

    • @BottomDollarOutdoors
      @BottomDollarOutdoors 2 года назад

      Managed forestry does just that. It looks horrid at the end and beginning. But the cycles between are beautiful to watch. However, we need both wild and managed forests to keep the balance between human needs/safety and environmental replenishment in check. Money and greed is where it all falls apart.

  • @dantewilliams6096
    @dantewilliams6096 2 года назад +1

    There is a HUGE difference between commercial feed lots and local ranchers giving cattle the best life they could ever have. Don't lump them together

  • @muhammadsiddiq2745
    @muhammadsiddiq2745 2 года назад

    Nice

  • @frequentlycynical642
    @frequentlycynical642 4 года назад +52

    I can't believe it. TED actually had a meat favorable presentation. They have plenty of vegan and vegetarian propaganda. I've read of paleo/primal heavy hitters trying to get an audience and they were ignored.

    • @waynebow-gu7wr
      @waynebow-gu7wr 4 года назад +12

      @@kellymcgowan3547 They understand alright.... but it goes against the agenda.....Agenda 21 !

    • @kinky_Z
      @kinky_Z 4 года назад +8

      I'm a little shocked too! It's rare to hear someone who isn't a neoliberal!

    • @geronimosilveira7349
      @geronimosilveira7349 3 года назад +4

      "Propaganda" aka "people with arguments who I don't wanna hear because it put my retrograde behaviours in question"

    • @geronimosilveira7349
      @geronimosilveira7349 3 года назад +3

      @@kellymcgowan3547 yeah sure, 1.500 millon cows on the world and all the land deforestation for meat consumtion are super eco-friendly

    • @geronimosilveira7349
      @geronimosilveira7349 3 года назад +2

      @@kellymcgowan3547 "livestock activity being literally the first enviromental issue" also livestock culture "we gonna keep on but now is gonna be diferent, we promese"

  • @cjallison8362
    @cjallison8362 8 лет назад +5

    Oh....That's Tai Lopez's first mentor❤

  • @NCIcaucus
    @NCIcaucus 8 лет назад +109

    Won't see this kind of truth on the mass media or making it's way into the class room too much.

    • @bolivianbillionaire1349
      @bolivianbillionaire1349 8 лет назад +5

      +NCIcaucus talking thru his ass........how much water does it take to produce this dairy produce? unsustainable

    • @lindsayglover906
      @lindsayglover906 8 лет назад +22

      +brendon smith where do you think the water goes? If a cow is on pasture and urinates, that water is put back into the natural cycle. just like when you pee out side

    • @punkyroo
      @punkyroo 8 лет назад +31

      His process for raising animals is actually very water efficient. The largest waste of water in traditional livestock raising is to hose down and clean the shit off the floor (and other uses) in containment housing. Salatin's ways don't require all that water use. He also uses automatic waterers and other technology to be extremely efficient in the water use.

    • @Jefferdaughter
      @Jefferdaughter 7 лет назад +37

      Actually, Salatin relies mostly on spring-fed ponds to water his livestock. Under this style of management, his land and the land he leases from others has been building soil, increasing in organic matter, with deep roots, and layers of vegetation- which all help that soil to absorb rainfall, and to soak it in, replenishing groundwater, springs, and deeper aquifers.
      Do people ever stop to think how much water is soaked into their urban or suburban yards? Or on their favorite shopping mall and parking lot? Industrial agriculture, including CAFOs, is not a good idea for many reasons, but when talking about water waste (lawns?) and the broken water cycle, why do people point their fingers at ag, instead of urban sprawl?

    • @johngoudge5916
      @johngoudge5916 7 лет назад +1

      None. He only produces meat and eggs.

  • @petkish
    @petkish Год назад +1

    We have known this so long ago, in this light how ridiculous are the modern attempts to reduce the carbon and methane emissions by reducing the numbers of cows... Look at Netherlands these days, in 2022 it is a tragedy...

  • @jaredmummert2813
    @jaredmummert2813 7 лет назад +12

    Now I'm not exactly sure how the chemistry works out, but I've heard that grass fed cows produce less greenhouse gasses than grain fed cows. My logic is that since the cow's stomach is meant to ferment the grass so that it can be broken down easier, when you give it grain you get a higher concentration of methane, or methanol. Think about it, grain is very easily fermented into alcohol (beer), but have you ever heard of a grass alcohol? I'm assuming that since the grass is easier to digest for the cow they don't end up burping up as much methane as they do when eating grain. Again, I'm not sure on how the chemistry works out.

    • @David-kd5mf
      @David-kd5mf 5 лет назад +2

      Methane eating bacteria emerge in soil once organic matter gets up to certain level. Pastures build soil carbon faster than forests. Intensive grazing builds soil which creates sequestered carbon and digested methane via soil biology.

    • @waynebow-gu7wr
      @waynebow-gu7wr 4 года назад

      Good point makes sense !

    • @wandaacat
      @wandaacat 4 года назад

      ...and feeding cows corn is like feeding them junk food - apparently, it burns holes in their stomach... don't know about you but I would suggest that would affect their digestion... I think that the idea of corn beer sounds pretty accurate.

    • @dappiduck
      @dappiduck 3 года назад

      Agree with David, but apparently its the other way round. Corn fed cows produce less methane - probably because it buggers their natural digestion process, which has now become a key argument against roaming cows 😪

  • @brockobama257
    @brockobama257 2 года назад

    He lives "over the mountain" CLEVER

  • @przybyla420
    @przybyla420 4 года назад +2

    Why does no one ever talk about composting? If you composted the richest 1000 people you’d sink literally tons of carbon and create a rich soil amendment, which can go on crops, meanwhile you’ve saved all the carbon from the global economy because now everyone only has to do 1/100th of the amount of labor they had to before (to subsidize the ultra-rich). A real positive feedback loop!!!

  • @johnchristiansen9095
    @johnchristiansen9095 5 лет назад +26

    People need to quit bagging their grass when mowing also...

    • @sweetvuvuzela4634
      @sweetvuvuzela4634 4 года назад +5

      John Christiansen for sure and applying fertiliser on top of it contaminating rain water supplies

    • @priley817
      @priley817 2 года назад

      @@sweetvuvuzela4634 going to try this out… everything seems inverted in this dam world right now.

    • @blackbeard1988
      @blackbeard1988 Год назад

      Just let it sit or?

  • @grahamt5924
    @grahamt5924 5 лет назад +6

    Alan savory gives a much better presentation on a ted talk called holistic animal management.

    • @NoExitLoveNow
      @NoExitLoveNow 5 лет назад +2

      Alan Savory is a fraudulent crank.

    • @grahamt5924
      @grahamt5924 5 лет назад +1

      @@NoExitLoveNow His methods are being used to great success by farmers and you can go and see what he does at his farm.
      Its basic biology of plants and grasses that have a symbiotic relationship to the animals that live on them and with them

    • @sdoylie
      @sdoylie 4 года назад +1

      NoExitLoveNow hahah. How can you say such things about Savory when this guy is using the exact same principals of migratory grazing. SMH.

  • @SuperOlds88
    @SuperOlds88 2 года назад

    Probably just a small point but Pheasants weren't introduced into North America until the 1770's

  • @lindokuhlexolanidlamini4141
    @lindokuhlexolanidlamini4141 5 лет назад +4

    What about natural grazing lawns?

  • @dontpanicthistime
    @dontpanicthistime 7 лет назад

    What if American farmers grew grass mowed it at the "right time" and fed it to their cows? Would the carbon sink equate to the deisel used?

    • @jim6584
      @jim6584 7 лет назад +16

      Why not just let the cows mow it for you'? Why use a mower? Did you miss the part about the high tech electric fencing he was talking about. He keeps the cows penned in a very small pasture for a day or 2 then he moves them. The cow dung fertilizes the soil, he moves chickens back into the same pastures at after the cows to eat the bugs and to help spread the cow dung.

    • @itsmeagain7246
      @itsmeagain7246 7 лет назад +5

      use your cows legs

    • @xyzsame4081
      @xyzsame4081 3 года назад

      @@jim6584 no high tech electric fence can keep in a scared animal, prevent a stampede, contain a _determined_ curious smart animal (like some goat individuals) or prevent a feral dog or mean human to get to the animals or to scare them into a stampede. Salatin lives in a rural area if one of his cows escapes or they have a stampede (let's say a feral dog would make it on the property), there can be damage done to the animals, but there will not be devastating accidents and liability claims. (at worst they would have to slaughter 1 or 2 cows or calves earlier).
      If such a dog does not intend to harm, he just has fun scaring the cattle they will run a while and then stop (still on the property and w/o meeting a human or vehicle). At worst the predator(s) would attack and harm (but cows and bulls that live outdoors and in a more natural way, are well able to defend themselves and their young.

  • @isabellaramos7953
    @isabellaramos7953 4 года назад +1

    Could someone please help me summarize this process!!!!

    • @TheAvsouto
      @TheAvsouto 3 года назад +4

      Grass grow into stage one(20 days)
      Grass grows into stage two(10 days)
      Grass stops growing and starts oxydating
      Or
      Grass grow into stage one
      Grass grows into stage two
      Cow eat the grass back into stage 0-1
      Grass regrows to stage two while the cow is away.
      Basically, if the herbivore do not consume the biomass that the plant has made from atmosféric carbon and UV rays the plant stops growing and oxidizes. And without large mammals to fertilize the soil with their waste and to soften the soil with their weight, the soil will degrade and became infertile. Then the grass will stop being able do grow and will start to desertifie

  • @davidsflooringco
    @davidsflooringco 4 года назад +7

    Why do I feel like his words fall on deaf ears

  • @ub2bn
    @ub2bn 4 года назад +1

    Cows got a bad wrap... until subway came out with chipotle steak wraps

  • @wallacewimmer5191
    @wallacewimmer5191 2 года назад +1

    👍👍

  • @momdoan
    @momdoan 6 лет назад

    I think he meant sunbeam's ubiquitous not esoteric....I think anyway

  • @kinky_Z
    @kinky_Z 4 года назад +2

    1:30 - When I hear "GRASS", being a 70 yr old California hippy, I think nickel-bag mexi-green. A minute in and I'm already disconnected. But really - Joel is right and we need a RUMINANT REVOLUTION!!

  • @ArnoldvanKampen
    @ArnoldvanKampen 6 лет назад +2

    As a way to stop desertification, it could work.
    But what if you start taking beef off the land and eating it a 1000 km further down.
    It would break the cycle.
    Nutrients would leak out of the system and would have to be replenished somehow.

    • @patte4702
      @patte4702 4 года назад

      I don't quite understand your point. "eating it 1000km further down" ?
      Does that mean transportation of the meat?

  • @toniroberts8117
    @toniroberts8117 4 года назад

    He means well, but isn’t the best at what he’s trying to explain (in my opinion). But love his message

  • @giwrgoskatranas6587
    @giwrgoskatranas6587 4 года назад +8

    SHAME to all of those who didnt laugh at his wonderful jokes they lack his great humor