Raising Over a MILLION Chickens a Year | Pasturebird Farm Tour

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  • Опубликовано: 7 сен 2024

Комментарии • 52

  • @samnoble9587
    @samnoble9587 Месяц назад +7

    I’m always in awe of how Pasturebird has been able to transform their production! Can’t wait to be able to see the ARC’s in person.

  • @ashleyalexander7388
    @ashleyalexander7388 Месяц назад +8

    Great stuff. This should be the standard, I'm sure the birds are so much happier and healthier.

    • @johndoh5182
      @johndoh5182 Месяц назад +2

      It's more expensive. Plus, when a person goes to the grocery store and see something labeled "organic" or "pastured", you don't know the processes the grower used.
      This is an ideal situation for both the farmer and the chickens as much as possible. But it's not free range which SOME people seem to think is the best way to keep chickens. But free range is hard to deal with as a farmer and predators are going to get some of the animals. So personally I think this is the best way to raise chickens.

  • @gdelvalle22pr
    @gdelvalle22pr Месяц назад +9

    Do Pasturebird sells those mobile coops or anyway it can be acquired?

  • @AlgiereRanch
    @AlgiereRanch Месяц назад +2

    This is absolutely awesome!! What an amazing set up!!

  • @jlkkauffman7942
    @jlkkauffman7942 Месяц назад +4

    How do you anchor them in hurricanes or high winds?

  • @safffff1000
    @safffff1000 Месяц назад +1

    Free choice chickens, they decide where they want to me. Fantastic

  • @VashtiPerry
    @VashtiPerry Месяц назад +4

    I literally was just asking myself this question. Not that I'm interested in becoming a commercial farm😂😂 I'm just a person who's constantly interested in pasture raised or free-range animals. And what's the difference between all of them? And how do you raise enough to become sustainable in business but also keep them healthy without a bunch of antibiotics? Anyway, thank you for the video. I love this kind of information😂

    • @johndoh5182
      @johndoh5182 Месяц назад +4

      So a little bit of info.
      Free range isn't any better than this. It may SEEM more natural, but free range in the wrong environment means birds will be more stressed because they don't have the feeling of security and predators get part of the birds. So free range is more of a problem in trying to keep the bird safe and at the same time being able to easily get the birds or gather them up.
      Richard Perkins has some video on what I would say is ideal for free range. Every morning you let chickens out of a large coop that's mobile, and at night you have to get all the chickens back in. You DO have fencing around the area they will roam for that day. These housing units are necessarily larger since they have to be designed to let chickens out and in each day. Basically it's similar to this technique but I'd say it's probably better if you have nice pasture with protection, you have egg layers, and you're willing to spend another hour of time in moving the chickens because you have to deal with moving the fencing.
      For raising chicken for meat this is probably the best technique possible and the neat thing about this design is it scales to any size you want it to. This technique actually comes from small scale farming with much smaller houses, that you can simply pull yourself to move it. It also means if you want the birds to have more room you simply have a few less birds. These farmers use a density rating for the type of chickens they raise, and since they have to make money because it's their job, they're going to be close to maximum density. A person doing this for fun can do whatever they want.
      I can't tell you the ideal way to make one, but the structure that Joel Salatin uses is a starting point, or it may be ideal depending on your situation. I'd personally want something with wheels that lift up when you aren't moving the house. Justin Rhodes has some decent designs with wheels.

  • @laurensvackier2704
    @laurensvackier2704 12 дней назад

    I could have mist it in the video, but where do you get your elektrician from for the automatisation. With a battery? Second question if it heavy rains will you still move the bird in the water or do you switch to deep bedding or how do you deel with that? Very nice concept never seen it before! Lovely video!

  • @electrostatic1
    @electrostatic1 6 дней назад

    If there is one weak spot in this setup it's that you could have better plant cover if you went with more than just grasses.

    • @HeiferUSA
      @HeiferUSA  23 часа назад

      That's a great idea to try out!

  • @francocatalioti6274
    @francocatalioti6274 Месяц назад +4

    You didn't mention Joal Salatan once and he is the one who brought this sytem to lighton a smaller scale!

    • @HeiferUSA
      @HeiferUSA  Месяц назад +2

      We have several videos filmed at polyface farm coming soon!

    • @gardenersgraziers7261
      @gardenersgraziers7261 Месяц назад

      joel copied others = so what is your point ???

    • @RJ-ox8on
      @RJ-ox8on 26 дней назад

      but this is factory farming and joel salatin focuses more on multi species self sustaing farming

    • @Oak_Hollow
      @Oak_Hollow 5 дней назад

      @RJ-ox8on What is your definition of "factory farming"?

  • @Pl-qq4yl
    @Pl-qq4yl Месяц назад

    if this the future of pasture raised poultry , I will still keep my chickens .

  • @doanusa89
    @doanusa89 Месяц назад +1

    Your farm is very large and beautiful.

  • @stealthswim223
    @stealthswim223 9 дней назад

    This is crazy! I wonder how much each of those coops are

  • @EHSTexas
    @EHSTexas Месяц назад +2

    Do ya'll manufacture these? Sale them? What do they cost?

  • @promesasbiblicas2023
    @promesasbiblicas2023 Месяц назад +1

    So, how much does a chicken house like that cost?

  • @halilbalaban1056
    @halilbalaban1056 15 дней назад

    ARE TWO IMPORTANT TECHNICAL INFORMATION NEEDED?
    We learned that this chicken palace, which is an ultra all-inclusive holiday village for chickens, floating on the meadow grass in the pasture, moves at a speed of 15 meters in 7 minutes, or approximately 128 meters per hour.
    There is two subject I am curious about.
    1-) How many hours a day does this meadow schooner travel and how many meters a day does it cover? Therefore, how many square meters of salad bar land does this meadow schooner need to serve the chickens in a day?
    2-) When you look at it from here, how many acres of land are needed for a pasture schooner during the 5 weeks that the chickens will spend in the pasture after their incubation period at the age of 3 weeks.

  • @johndoh5182
    @johndoh5182 Месяц назад +1

    So, I always knew this was possible as soon as I saw the large prairie schooners. I knew that could be automated and put on wheels though I didn't think about having it motorized so they move themselves. Once you're at the scale of prairie schooner then the cost to automate makes sense.
    I'm REALLY happy to see this as it makes more sense than those large fixed coops that SMELL TERRIBLE and are environmental nightmares and the chickens aren't healthy IMO.

  • @CelestialBow
    @CelestialBow Месяц назад

    Great system! I wonder about using a bird with a slightly longer lifespan and better physical conformation may be a beneficial addition for quality of life and meat quality due to a few added weeks of more active foraging. I also wonder about the use of cloth perhaps made from bamboo for the roof and sides to use a biodegradable product. This system also looks excellent for ultra high density grazing that combined with long rest periods will give excellent results. The annual grain production to feed this system also rely on fossil fuel powered machines which likely is not a long term sustainable solution. Still a beautiful alternative to current large scale chicken farming practices.

  • @TheoneandonlyRAH
    @TheoneandonlyRAH 11 дней назад

    this is amazing!!

    • @HeiferUSA
      @HeiferUSA  7 дней назад

      It is!! They're doing a great job :D

  • @ngana8755
    @ngana8755 Месяц назад +1

    Is Pasture Bird selling these movable chicken coops?

  • @rickthelian2215
    @rickthelian2215 Месяц назад

    May I ask do the schooner move at night upsetting the birds sleep over 8 hours?
    Do the birds sleep on ground?
    Thank you, great work

    • @Oak_Hollow
      @Oak_Hollow 5 дней назад

      Cornish cross sleep on the ground. Even if they were inclined to use a low roost, there is a very high risk of broken legs hopping down even a few inches.

  • @halilbalaban1056
    @halilbalaban1056 Месяц назад

    What is the speed of these sailboats in meters per hour? Also, how many hours do the sailboats move during the day and how many meters do they travel during this time?

    • @HeiferUSA
      @HeiferUSA  Месяц назад

      the information is in the video around the 14 minute mark. ! thanks for watching :)

    • @halilbalaban1056
      @halilbalaban1056 Месяц назад

      @@HeiferUSA Thank you for your ansverd.

  • @pcl598
    @pcl598 Месяц назад

    Is this part of Will Harris?

  • @unabatshomatebesi8840
    @unabatshomatebesi8840 Месяц назад

    Is it safe from snakes 🐍?

  • @jsmfarms71263
    @jsmfarms71263 Месяц назад

    🎉🙏🙌

  • @gardenersgraziers7261
    @gardenersgraziers7261 Месяц назад

    DANGER = Cattle and Chickens are grazing toxic excess NITRATES

    • @Oak_Hollow
      @Oak_Hollow 5 дней назад

      You would have to test to be able to say that with any actual knowledge.

  • @wallacewimmer5191
    @wallacewimmer5191 Месяц назад

    If we as a nation 🇺🇸🇺🇸👍would apply this process to all the farmland converted to “solar scam” in the last administration….🤔🤔🤔🤔love the channel keep it coming 👍🎉🎉

    • @Chris_EE
      @Chris_EE Месяц назад +2

      @@wallacewimmer5191 you do realize most of the interior and Midwest of United States is an empty flat land. How is solar farm inhibiting farmland. Farming and energy independent are both important.

    • @johndoh5182
      @johndoh5182 Месяц назад +1

      What's a REAL scam is the fact the US has to GROW so much of its gasoline and the insane amount of acreage that's used for corn to GROW gasoline.
      There are excellent techniques of combining solar farms with ag. If some idiots did an installation on their land but didn't understand how to incorporate it into their farming practices, well, that's not an idiot govt. administration, it's an idiot farmer.
      Right now the US could solve the world's issues with grain if we weren't growing so much corn for ethanol. The US USED to be the major producer of wheat. Geez if only we still grew that much wheat, bread prices wouldn't be ridiculous right now.

  • @wjgoh653
    @wjgoh653 14 дней назад

    Very much an exaggeration about indians doing natural grazing techniques. First off, there is little evidence that they started farming like we understand today. Also, there is NO evidence of indigenous raising cattle before the spaniards show up. They had no domesticated buffalo either. So, let's just accept the evil european...as usual, was the impetus for any and all innovation that we see today. not to get on the soap box but these new ideas are really an answer to the 7-8 decades of industrialized farming methods that utilized chemical maturation and scaled yields. Like any technology, whether mechanically based or chemically based, it takes time to see the Benefit/Detriment scale. Unfortunately the scaling with chemicals cost us in lives as well as destroyed soils. Cancers, glandular malformity and even some birth defects are a result of post WW2 era industrialized farming practices. Add to that the advent of processed food products and humanities "Scientific better ideas" really have doomed many to a longevity on more chemical dependence via the pharmacueticals to combat the very practices used to feed them. Great farm, fantastic operation with innovation thats beneficial and great info. Thanks Heifer for another awesome archive video.

    • @HeiferUSA
      @HeiferUSA  6 дней назад

      Thanks for the reflexion! We love providing information that can help and also open the floor for perspective sharing❤️

  • @jerex112
    @jerex112 Месяц назад +1

    great way to raise chickens but this doesnt seem economical. these chicken houses are extremely high priced because of all the parts that can fail and the amount of electronics, you need absolutely flat ground to use those coops, the grass in those fields looks like its struggling to maintain the amount of chickens also. most people cant even afford garbage grocery prices let alone the rpices they charge for this chicken. i do agree this is the best way to raise them at this scale though and the healthiest way.

    • @HeiferUSA
      @HeiferUSA  Месяц назад +2

      It is certainly a point for conversation! Thanks for watching!

    • @jerex112
      @jerex112 Месяц назад

      @@HeiferUSA great videos !

    • @MrNardo1238
      @MrNardo1238 29 дней назад

      6000 birds per ARC. If the chickens were sold for $4/lb and the birds average 5lbs, that's $120,000 of revenue generated per batch.
      They are growing year round. Takes 8-10 weeks to grow out a 5lb bird. Let's use 9 weeks as the average.
      You could raise 5 batches in a year and still take 7 weeks off.
      $120,000 × 5 = $600,000 (revenue)
      I suspect the ARC pays for itself pretty quickly. Once it does, the maintenance is fractional compared to the initial purchase cost.
      And they're not writing checks for fertilizer. The grass helps reduce their feed costs. Automating moves reduces labor costs.
      I bet they're doing ok and I bet their chicken is safer to consume.

    • @jerex112
      @jerex112 28 дней назад +1

      @@MrNardo1238 once again most people are not paying that for chicken

    • @jerex112
      @jerex112 28 дней назад

      @@MrNardo1238 and the chicken is sold for twice that amount at least