Part 4: How to rotate animals on newly fenced with installed water on your 5-acre farm.

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  • Опубликовано: 22 янв 2025

Комментарии • 167

  • @ReefHopper
    @ReefHopper Год назад +14

    Greg you just blew my mind about "not needing a barn!" I'd love to see a video about that. Thanks for all you do.

    • @CPLBSS88
      @CPLBSS88 Год назад +3

      Picking your breeds wisely for your AO goes a long way towards not needing a large barn. The whole "need a barn" theory mainly comes from commercial farms wanting to grow animals not meant for their climate and/or wanting to WAYYYYY over-stock their land for maximum profitability over sustainability. There are a few exceptions though. For example; if you live in cold climates (northern America) you will probably want a place to tend to animals, do milking, birthing, etc. during the winter months. Some of the "need a barn" group think seems to stem from people not having modern fencing like what Greg has architected for us.

    • @i_be_eternity
      @i_be_eternity Год назад +1

      Not much to make a video on. You need to watch all his other videos to learn the entire system. The MIG system is what keeps the animals healthy and the land healthy. Compared to industry standard which is medicine, chemicals, buildings, and tractors. With mig all you use is a fence and electricity. And maybe a bale unroller when you scale up enough to justify one.

  • @georgeheller2281
    @georgeheller2281 Год назад +11

    If a person watches this series and follows the steps, it would be hard to fail at grazing. Your clear and concise directions will boost anyones ability to be a grazier. My farm is an example of following simple instructions, and keeping things simple. No barns needed, deer, elk, moose, and bison have no barns. Thank you again Greg, and have a wonderful day.

  • @jvin248
    @jvin248 Год назад +15

    Along with "you don't need a barn!" -- how about adding "you don't need a brand new pickup truck!" since I see that way too often, those truck payments are like worming sheep.

    • @gregjudyregenerativerancher
      @gregjudyregenerativerancher  Год назад +15

      If your just starting out, a new truck is a sure fire way to lose your farm. Years later when you have cash flow and no debt, if you want a new truck, go write a check for it. You earned it!!

  • @markpiersall9815
    @markpiersall9815 Год назад +4

    Glad you broke these into four videos. I like the eight to ten minutes better than the plus twenties. If you want to back up and hear something again it is easier with shorter videos.

  • @Tiffany-iz5uy
    @Tiffany-iz5uy Год назад +12

    We appreciate you doing these series on small scale property 5 - 50+ acres. Thank you, Greg. Thumbs up on all four of these videos. saved right to our acct! Very helpful information.

  • @GratiaHomestead
    @GratiaHomestead Год назад +2

    As a reforming suburbanite who had moved to the country and is just getting started at sheep farming, I cannot express how grateful I am to have access to this wisdom before I invest money into infrastructure. Thank you Greg Judy!

  • @Poppy_love59
    @Poppy_love59 Год назад +2

    Obrien step in, 190 x 25 paddocks, Job Magna flow float valve , got it thanks !

  • @AaronMatthew
    @AaronMatthew Год назад

    Loved his voice in fox and the hound

  • @JCsBees
    @JCsBees Год назад +6

    Greg, you should have done a bend test on the poly stakes. The black one would have broke. I'm with you on the OBrien stakes. Best of the best.

  • @riverflyswatter
    @riverflyswatter Год назад +4

    Good morning

  • @coziii.1829
    @coziii.1829 Год назад +5

    God Bless. ….. Greg can you please put descriptions/ where etc you get your water supplies down below in your videos or a quick link . And any other equipment in future .
    I’m trying to find them

  • @charlesgrady5750
    @charlesgrady5750 Год назад +3

    Great video. Would like to hear more about not needing a barn at some point. Thanks for the education.

    • @gregjudyregenerativerancher
      @gregjudyregenerativerancher  Год назад +5

      Animals do not need barns. People believe that animals need barns, they are much healthier out in the pasture than stuck in a barn. If you want disease in your animals, then a barn will do that for you.

  • @KedeshFarm
    @KedeshFarm Год назад +3

    Love the breakdown of this process. Makes it so easy to digest. Thanks, Uncle Greg.

  • @wallacewimmer5191
    @wallacewimmer5191 Год назад +2

    Be subscriber and watch every video since day one; if folks only watch (1) of your videos. This is the one. It recaps the entire process. Excellent presentation 👍. Sounds like Jan had time to finish up supper dishes as well. Hope you two enjoy and glass of wine 🍷 and relax. All who watch LIKE & SUBSCRIBE to keep Greg’s algorithms running 👍

  • @watergrunt3694
    @watergrunt3694 Год назад +7

    I appreciate you, Greg. The information you give is so helpful. Thank you.

  • @andrewsackville-west1609
    @andrewsackville-west1609 7 месяцев назад

    I just hurned through all 4 parts. This is just great. It's exactly the thing an aspiring small sheep farmer needs. Thank you!

  • @cindyprickett7185
    @cindyprickett7185 8 месяцев назад +1

    Excellent explanation! Love your diagrams! Learning soooo much! Thank you Greg!!

  • @YHVHsBitha
    @YHVHsBitha Год назад +1

    This series has been so helpful! It has helped me get out of my paralysis of analysis. You make it sound so straightforward.
    Thank you, Gregg. You're a blessing.

  • @mourbonaventure7475
    @mourbonaventure7475 Год назад

    I've been putting sunscreen on my posts every day. Really helps with the UV!

  • @andrewjohnson6364
    @andrewjohnson6364 Год назад +1

    These series are the best videos you’ve ever done please keep them up!

  • @Andersonew
    @Andersonew Год назад +3

    Does rain wash parasites down a slope? Is it a concern to rotate up a slope to avoid contaminated runoff?

  • @cyndismith4939
    @cyndismith4939 Год назад +1

    I hope you're getting a nice check for your videos. I swear every time you took a breath they ran an ad.
    It's worth it but, dang, tested my patience greatly.
    Thanks for the information. Ag needs to change or we're going to go right back to the bust bowl days.

  • @andreasherzog2222
    @andreasherzog2222 Год назад +3

    Greg, a little hint for your presentation: You may want to use different colors in your drawings. Like blue for water, red for hot wire, black for title and fences ... you get the idea. It takes a little more thought and practice (as you are doing it live), but users will better understand what you are trying to show them. And that's what you want, right?

  • @mrcain6894
    @mrcain6894 Год назад +1

    Great series. It's easy to scale this to bigger acreage.

  • @marvinbaier3627
    @marvinbaier3627 Год назад +1

    Thanks for the advice! It’s great giving us all this free information and I hope everyone uses it wisely. I know I do. I also like how you use your time wisely. Before you start the calving season, you make all these videos so when calving season starts you are busy with calving and not busy making all these wonderful videos for us.
    I was working on my property today just a little bit because I’ve been working so much. I need to cut up a big (60’ fallen over) hickory nut tree because that’s where I need to put the fence at. I have a problem with one of our ewe lambs she wants to be on the other side of the green grass. It’s my son’s lamb, but I might have to replace her or break her to hot fence again. I did 2 other sheep earlier this year which took a few days. I put them in a corral with hot poly braid. At the same time, my new LGDs are in there too. They both got along great but I need to set up a protected dog food area like you have. I have off tomorrow so I’ll be working on more farm stuff.

  • @tealpaddles8664
    @tealpaddles8664 Год назад

    Good video folks, All the other folks out there, hope you paid attention !

  • @2daughtersfarm
    @2daughtersfarm Год назад +1

    I live in wny and I'm exploring my options with livestock bit we get 4+ feet of snow in the winter. Am I dreaming?

  • @the2012fad
    @the2012fad Год назад

    This is fantastic!
    Thank you SO much for sharing with all of us.
    It is greatly appreciated.

  • @dutch1999
    @dutch1999 Год назад +5

    Greg after watching your videos for the last couple years this is exactly what I've done on my place and just now getting going with my small flock and rotating daily. One question I'm hoping you might cover is on a small operation like this what do you do to get through winter?

    • @gregjudyregenerativerancher
      @gregjudyregenerativerancher  Год назад +1

      On a small operation or a large operation, you must adjust your stocking rate going into the winter to match how much grass you have available on your farm to take you through the winter with minimal hay feeding.

  • @mattdewhirst4075
    @mattdewhirst4075 Год назад +1

    Thank you for making this series!

  • @davemi00
    @davemi00 Год назад

    Always Enjoy your informative Vids.
    Keeping the Money in your Pockets
    that’s Always the Secret to Success!

  • @littlemogocreek
    @littlemogocreek Год назад

    What a fantastic series Greg, thank you so much for sharing your knowledge.
    Seeing all the theory on this small scale has been very helpful as I'm a small land owner looking into this.
    It's great seeing your large operation but having it all broken down into a simplified, small scale operation just helps that little bit more.
    Thanks again.
    Duncan.

  • @ruthmcbride3419
    @ruthmcbride3419 Год назад

    I need to watch your other videos just to see all your equipment
    Looks like it may solve several issues we are having

  • @C.Hawkshaw
    @C.Hawkshaw Год назад

    Hey, that was great! Went by in a flash.

  • @kindnessandseverityofgod9187
    @kindnessandseverityofgod9187 Год назад

    Looking at getting land in northeast Arizona. And have dorper sheep for meet and goats for milk. Thanks for the wonderful teaching and your love for farming and animals. New subscriber. Will be using that fence and piping system.

  • @olddirtfarmer1988
    @olddirtfarmer1988 Год назад

    Really enjoyed these four videos. Love learning from you!

  • @adamemerson1538
    @adamemerson1538 Год назад +1

    Love this man. Thank you.

  • @dougsoltesz
    @dougsoltesz Год назад +5

    Greg love this video series. Question on the Timeless posts, how fire resistant are they? I live in Texas and we do have the occasional brush fires around here, especially with the drought last year. Is there a thickness that would be okay if a grass fire moved through or would it most likely be a total loss?

  • @kyleallen6653
    @kyleallen6653 Год назад +1

    These are outstanding videos Greg

  • @elizebethparker5412
    @elizebethparker5412 Год назад +1

    I love rotating the sheep!

  • @lokes2
    @lokes2 Год назад

    There’s one more video I’d like to suggest in the series. A cost analysis on the fencing and irrigation hardware for the 5acre scenario. Thanx for sharing. Now I just need 5 acres to lease. That would be another good video, how to find land to lease.

  • @jeaniepartridge6701
    @jeaniepartridge6701 Год назад +1

    We have timeless posts and see evidence that deer have hit the top wire without knocking a wire loose.

  • @paulcelona8442
    @paulcelona8442 Год назад +5

    Hi Greg, How do I supply water on a leased field where I don't have installed water/well?
    Also, my leased field is 100% cleared and we have strong summer sun and strong winter rain/winds. What do you suggest for shelter from the elements?

    • @miraclefarm1927
      @miraclefarm1927 Год назад +3

      Great questions! Ihope he covers some of these.

  • @mattsfarmstead
    @mattsfarmstead Год назад +1

    Sir, great content as always. I may have missed it in a prior video, but could you provide any comments on shade. I understand it maybe more geographically dependent, but you may have an idea of what glaziers due more south of you where their paddocks are open.

  • @pbjfarms9349
    @pbjfarms9349 Год назад

    Can you make this a play list so we can find video 1-3?

  • @AaronMatthew
    @AaronMatthew Год назад

    Anybody got a ball park figure on cost for this type of 5acre infrastructure for fencing barbed, poly, high tension, water ?

  • @normangilden3453
    @normangilden3453 Год назад +1

    Thank you this is great.

  • @evanpax8585
    @evanpax8585 Год назад

    Just ordered one of your books! Thank you for sharing your knowledge. Do you have any videos or books on converting timber land to pasture? I live in East TN, so half of my property is timber. I would like to one day scale up and lease an acreage, but I imagine whatever I find will be covered in trees.

  • @rockfarmer8095
    @rockfarmer8095 Год назад

    I love your style, but in north east lower Michigan we are a “tb” zone state makes it very hard to graze cattle now

  • @Sunhoneysage
    @Sunhoneysage Год назад +2

    Greg have you thought about teaching how to build pasture from bare dirt or freshly logged land with sheep? or how to know how much stock pile you need for your small flock on lets say 10 acres. im always stressing numbers and paddock sizes and how much for what.

    • @Sunhoneysage
      @Sunhoneysage Год назад +2

      @@tedbastwock3810 thank you :D

  • @colleen4628
    @colleen4628 8 месяцев назад

    Thank you! What a Teacher!

  • @michaelhansen6977
    @michaelhansen6977 Год назад +2

    So does each paddock have a water barrel or are you draining it and moving it?

  • @johnpeterson4868
    @johnpeterson4868 Год назад

    Why not closer to the bobwire like three inches

  • @patrickmcginnis6898
    @patrickmcginnis6898 Год назад +1

    Thanks again Greg.
    Understanding they are only in for a short period, what is the most that you would suggest in the theoretical 36'x16' coral w/ hot wire? We have a little more than the 5 acres. May start with 20 sheep.
    Also would love to hear how you might manage this farm assuming it has no trees for shade or shelter.

  • @phillipshipman6765
    @phillipshipman6765 5 месяцев назад

    Is there a reason why you don't go closer than 6 inches

  • @ismailkale7737
    @ismailkale7737 Год назад +1

    paylaşım için teşekkür ediyorum.

  • @bobbychappell929
    @bobbychappell929 Год назад +2

    Hi Greg , in this 5 acre rotation , is there shade in every paddock, I'm trying new things , and trying to get out of the habit of sheep needing to be able to go to a barn for protection . Thank you for your videos, I look forward to them each day.

    • @gregjudyregenerativerancher
      @gregjudyregenerativerancher  Год назад +2

      On a small farm like this, it would be easy to make a portable shade structure on a steel frame with sled feet. Just drag it to your next paddock.

    • @bobbychappell929
      @bobbychappell929 Год назад

      Thanks Greg

  • @FantaLaStrada
    @FantaLaStrada Год назад +1

    Greg, I agree that timeless fence is pretty good, but her in southern Missouri we have a lot of rocks and sunguard fence posts from powerflex are a good alternative. We predrill the holes with a smaller diameter hammer drill bit. It moves all the rocks out of the way and then driving in the post is easy and your post always goes in straight because I can predrill the hole straight. Timelsess just doesn't work for us. I saw that you used fiberglass rods in some of your videos and you said they lasted 20 years so they are probably good enough. We also use the gallagher reels for our polywire. They are a lot more expensive, but they are a lot better than the o'brein reels.

    • @gregjudyregenerativerancher
      @gregjudyregenerativerancher  Год назад +1

      I’ve never been in an area that harder soil then Cochise County Arizona. After using a water pick to blast a starter hole, the Timeless posts went in like a snap.

    • @chivociso3887
      @chivociso3887 Год назад

      Hi Jander, would you be interested in a summer volunteer?

    • @FantaLaStrada
      @FantaLaStrada Год назад

      @@chivociso3887 Not this year, but maybe in the future.

    • @FantaLaStrada
      @FantaLaStrada Год назад

      @@gregjudyregenerativerancher Oh yeah a water pick. I saw that in a video before, maybe yours. We might use that on our other more flat property! I'll research that more. By the way my wife and I were just watching your Arizona video about setting up a water line and it helped us out a lot. We are going to set up the livestock watering system and even use it for irrigation. I just got a 500 foot length of 1 inch hdpe line with the proper attachments. Thanks for the great videos. We really appreciate your hard work and you sharing your great knowledge.

    • @chivociso3887
      @chivociso3887 Год назад

      No worries, thank you for replying and God Bless you and your wife in your regenerative journey

  • @danielb1877
    @danielb1877 Год назад

    My property came with a nice-sized barn (40'x120'). 5 horse stalls. Not sure what to do with it...

  • @stevecobb7844
    @stevecobb7844 Год назад

    I have always been skeptical about electric fence energizer claims.
    100 miles of fence, 200 acres etc.etc.
    I recently saw a energizer ad.
    The solar energizer has 100 acres / 30 miles marked on it. The listing/ad/ description is more realistic. It states the energizer will efficiently cover a half mile /.5 miles.
    Explaining this in one of your videos would be interesting.

  • @ruudfamily9770
    @ruudfamily9770 Год назад

    What was the timeless discount code?

  • @hammbone1612
    @hammbone1612 Год назад

    Thanks Greg

  • @vindictii
    @vindictii Год назад +1

    You mentioned someone in Minnesota puts his sheep in the woods when its 40 below. Does this same concept apply whether your land is all pasture or has a mix of woods?

    • @gregjudyregenerativerancher
      @gregjudyregenerativerancher  Год назад +1

      When it’s brutal cold, it’s nice to have a stand of trees or a deep draw that they can escape the wind.

  • @terrellherrin1661
    @terrellherrin1661 Год назад +2

    Thank you for your help, these are great videos, could you address multi species grazing, I have horses and am looking to add cows or possibly sheep to my ranch (10 acres in NF Florida) as of now I rotate my horses in paddock divisions. Appreciate it. Terrell

    • @gregjudyregenerativerancher
      @gregjudyregenerativerancher  Год назад

      If you have 10 acres with horses, you don't have enough grass for cows or sheep. 1 horse will eat what 3 cows do each day. On that small of an acreage, you better be careful or those horses will destroy your grass stand. Horses have teeth on the top and bottom of their mouth which allows them to bite the grass off flush with the ground, which destroys the ability of the grass to grow back quickly. The horses take off to much of the solar collector.

    • @terrellherrin1661
      @terrellherrin1661 Год назад

      Do you think it feasible to divide the acres in half and use the cows to build up one half and rotate them off to rented acreage and replace them with the horses and allow the other half to recover? I am very grateful for your help, thank you.

  • @VillelaHN
    @VillelaHN 10 месяцев назад

    Thank you Greg.

  • @pablobertello66
    @pablobertello66 6 месяцев назад

    Thanks for the video. Very useful. I was surprised at the last part if the video when you said: "no barn". Does it work in could rainy seasson?

  • @robbielynnhowle
    @robbielynnhowle Год назад +2

    So instead of the reels we could use our electric netting the same way? We only have 5 sheep at this time

    • @HaystackGardens
      @HaystackGardens Год назад +1

      Sheep netting works and is way easier than chicken netting but it is a beast to move or keep hot. Often have to weed ear or mow under the netting but the poly wire doesn’t require any mowing. Netting does give better peace of mind but polybraid also doesn’t break as easily as the netting. If you listen to Greg and don’t buy animals until fence and water are done then polybraid will be all you need. If you don’t listen and you get animals before having fence then the netting is a life saver but it slows down progress so much your really better off waiting to get animals until after setting up fence and water.

    • @georgeheller2281
      @georgeheller2281 Год назад +2

      Yes you can use the netting. When we first brought our animals to the new farm, all we had was sheep netting. We move two times a day for 3 months before we graduated up to polybraid. Netting works great, but don't skip the perimeter. We ran 14 ewes and two gaurd dogs, and all the lambs as well.

  • @chrisethridge2348
    @chrisethridge2348 Год назад

    This guy is awesome.

  • @tracypowell3473
    @tracypowell3473 Год назад +1

    Did I hear you right about making the paddock smaller during the summer?

    • @gregjudyregenerativerancher
      @gregjudyregenerativerancher  Год назад +1

      When your grass growth slows down, you have to slow down your rotation speed. Smaller paddocks and reducing your stocking rate will allow you to give your grass more time to grow back in the summer.

    • @tracypowell3473
      @tracypowell3473 Год назад

      How would you handle a pasture that has already put out seed heads ?

    • @gregjudyregenerativerancher
      @gregjudyregenerativerancher  Год назад

      Make long narrow strips with polywire and trample it onto the ground.

  • @mlauntube
    @mlauntube Год назад +1

    hog panels or other wire mesh added to perimeter barbwire fence: put it on outside or inside for predator protection?

  • @GasparNunez63
    @GasparNunez63 Год назад

    One question do you watered 300 sheep’s in 5 acres

  • @billmartin2564
    @billmartin2564 Год назад +1

    Thanks teach

  • @kentuckysustainableliving3583
    @kentuckysustainableliving3583 Год назад

    Great information really like this series

  • @matta4913
    @matta4913 11 месяцев назад

    If you have 50-100 ft between quick couplers and a 6ft hose, how do you reach each temporary paddock? Are your temporary paddocks always big enough that there is a coupler within 6 feet?

  • @jasonkelley4672
    @jasonkelley4672 Год назад

    Fantastic video series mr Judy. How do you think the timeless step in posts compare to O’Brien step in?

  • @bluewhistlerfarm2049
    @bluewhistlerfarm2049 Год назад

    Hey Greg! Happy to see these videos! I’m curious as to if you think that I’ll be able to stockpile enough forage for my 6 dairy ewes (ranging between 100-150lbs each) and 2 rams on my 5 acres here in MO (KC) using these methods for winter grazing! Would love to hear back!
    I know that this may not be the case year one, or even two, but with the small amount of land we have, and how mild our winters have been the last few years, I’d love to stop feeding hay, and keep them moving!

    • @gregjudyregenerativerancher
      @gregjudyregenerativerancher  Год назад

      It all depends on how fertile your soil is. Good soil allows you to grow more grass than poor soil.

  • @gkelley091
    @gkelley091 Год назад +1

    I was thinking…if you have water lines ran with connection points…after moving the animals, why couldn’t you run a tall garden sprinkler to help the pastures in the slower growing summer months?

  • @CPLBSS88
    @CPLBSS88 Год назад

    Pretty sure Krylon makes a spray paint meant to increase the UV resistance of plastics.

  • @QuecoJones1776
    @QuecoJones1776 Год назад

    I know pricing has changed with inflation going crazy and all. What would be an estimated ranch for starting capital for an operation like this?

  • @ReubenBen
    @ReubenBen Год назад

    Has anyone found hdpe 3/4 pipe in Texas that works with these fittings? Shipping was crazy from powerflex to North Texas.

  • @ismailkale7737
    @ismailkale7737 Год назад

    hayranlarınızı otlattiginiz toprağınıza hangi bitkileri ekiyorsunuz

  • @tb1401
    @tb1401 11 месяцев назад

    I love your videos

  • @LaidBackHomesteader
    @LaidBackHomesteader 6 месяцев назад

    Hi Greg. I live in Northern Ireland. I have 4.25 acres, pretty much as you've drawing on your 4 videos. Over the last 2 years I have placed a hot wire around the boundary, strip grazing a total of 13 sheep 5 of which are lambs, on 2 strands of poly wire. During summer I cant keep up with grass growth. I have no machinery except for a quad and a roller I've just purchased.
    Question is can I crimp the grass enough by rolling it to stop it going to seed, in turn feeding the soil? perhaps I should I add angle irons to the roller to impersonate the hoof prints?
    I will buy more livestock (weened lambs) next summer. I'm new to this and don't want to over stock by moving too fast. Thanks Peter.

    • @gregjudyregenerativerancher
      @gregjudyregenerativerancher  6 месяцев назад +1

      Patience is a virtue. Keep going with what your doing. Having extra grass is not a bad thing if you get in a drought or enter winter.

    • @LaidBackHomesteader
      @LaidBackHomesteader 6 месяцев назад

      @@gregjudyregenerativerancher I will do, thanks for getting back to me. See you in the field!

  • @earl0fBronze
    @earl0fBronze Год назад

    We aren't on land yet, but I'm trying to plan so that when we move, I will know exactly what we're going to do with our fencing to try to speed up the process to getting livestock. I plan for us to start small, with a few St. Croix sheep. They would be on "approximately" 3-4 acres, I had planned on dividing the section into four separate rotational grazing pastures in the hope of doing regenerative farming because the land is going to need it. Your method seems much more intensive though effective. Do you think that four rotational pastures would be doomed to failure, or might it work as well?

    • @gregjudyregenerativerancher
      @gregjudyregenerativerancher  Год назад +1

      It will be better than the Columbus Method, “turn them out in the spring, discover them in the fall. In your rotation, you need enough time for the plants to grow back after they’ve been grazed.

  • @savageairsoft9259
    @savageairsoft9259 Год назад +2

    Thank you! On a lease these particular owners not open to all of this, is there a minimum number of paddocks a person could get by with. It has good web wire perimeter. Would dividing this 25 acres only in half be doable or not?

    • @gregjudyregenerativerancher
      @gregjudyregenerativerancher  Год назад +2

      Get your stocking rate right, do not be overstocked. Then make sure your rest period is long enough to let your grass grow back fully between grazings. It could be done with 8-10 paddocks if you do it right.

    • @savageairsoft9259
      @savageairsoft9259 Год назад

      @Greg Judy Regenerative Rancher Thank you Greg!

  • @yeldesi9449
    @yeldesi9449 Год назад

    Sir, assuming these 5 acres are out in the country - what AC source is used to power the energizers? (I don't recall seeing power meters randomly placed in ag fields). Thanks for your wisdom!

  • @nicodeath3353
    @nicodeath3353 Год назад

    We in South Africa dont have that blue post. Wish we had that black ones is waist of money en time they brake like that. Worst money i spend on electric fence.

  • @danielmatthews6321
    @danielmatthews6321 Год назад +1

    What about if you have all field and no trees or woods.. Do u need a mobile shelter in the summer? For cows

    • @gregjudyregenerativerancher
      @gregjudyregenerativerancher  Год назад

      Our cows are red hided and slick haired. They can take the heat. But you could build a shade structure that could be towed around.

    • @paulcelona8442
      @paulcelona8442 Год назад

      @@gregjudyregenerativerancher have you come across any plans for a simple inexpensive mobile structure? I've only seen ones using corral gates ($$$) and they don't seem to work well. Maybe something using cattle panels that can be pulled easily and doesn't get blown away in a storm.

  • @GeauxBig007
    @GeauxBig007 Год назад

    Do you suggest different places to get your high tensile and poly wire from?

    • @gregjudyregenerativerancher
      @gregjudyregenerativerancher  Год назад

      Powerflex mixed metal polybraid is the best braid made. Timeless Fence carry’s good high tensile wire.

  • @lisasmith3175
    @lisasmith3175 Год назад

    This information is just priceless! Thank you for taking the time!
    We started grazing with a portable solar powered energizer and it doesn’t deliver enough of a shock to keep the cows in very reliably. What energizer do you use for your fence?

  • @ILuvBigos
    @ILuvBigos Год назад

    Thanks for all the great info! Just a quick question… for a three stranded temporary fence, do you just serpentine the braided wire to create three strands?

  • @robscott553
    @robscott553 9 месяцев назад

    What size sewer pipe is that? 8”??

    • @gregjudyregenerativerancher
      @gregjudyregenerativerancher  9 месяцев назад +1

      You can make 6” work fine if you have a normal size arm. Big arm folks should use 8” diameter pipe.

  • @brianoc7824
    @brianoc7824 10 месяцев назад

    Do you sell ewe lambs? Looking for maybe 50

  • @jaybreeden8388
    @jaybreeden8388 Год назад

    Greg, thank you for this series. We have a new 6 acre pasture we will be doing exactly as you have layed out here. One question, do you need to make the cattle panel corral electric?

  • @dannyc9784
    @dannyc9784 Год назад

    Hey Greg, thanks for all the helpful videos, I really enjoy learning the proper way to raise healthy animals. One question how do you move the heavy when full water tank, from paddock to paddock?

    • @gregjudyregenerativerancher
      @gregjudyregenerativerancher  Год назад +2

      We only use a 50-60 gallon tank most of the time, dump it and move it to the next quick coupler water point.

    • @dannyc9784
      @dannyc9784 Год назад

      @@gregjudyregenerativerancher Thanks so much :)

  • @davidmorley523
    @davidmorley523 Год назад

    I went to the farm supply store and got a bit of a surprise. I was looking at the high tensile wire and saw that there is steel and aluminum.
    Do you have a preference?
    Reasons?

  • @bobbyfoster1417
    @bobbyfoster1417 Год назад

    Hey Greg,
    Is your main income from the sheep weaned lambs or do you sell growers? Do you take them to process and sell the meat. I'm just trying to figure out my end game and what is profitable for my area.

    • @gregjudyregenerativerancher
      @gregjudyregenerativerancher  Год назад +1

      Our marketing of sheep includes everything you mentioned. The cull ewes usually get sold at the local auction. We direct market all the good stock directly to customers.

    • @bobbyfoster1417
      @bobbyfoster1417 Год назад

      @@gregjudyregenerativerancher thank you sir

  • @txdouglas68
    @txdouglas68 3 месяца назад

    3 reels and 1 water tank, And move 1 reel and water tank each day?

    • @gregjudyregenerativerancher
      @gregjudyregenerativerancher  3 месяца назад +1

      If you set your water tank on the temporary paddock division, you only move the water every other day. With the water positioned in the center of the polybraid paddock division, it serves both paddocks with water.

    • @txdouglas68
      @txdouglas68 3 месяца назад

      10-4 I bet one doesn’t do that too long before adding water tanks but yes be affordable to start. Thanks for the info now just need to find time. My rule there is just do something no mater how little everyday

    • @gregjudyregenerativerancher
      @gregjudyregenerativerancher  3 месяца назад +1

      @txdouglas68 with pressure fed water and Plasson quick couplers we use 1 water tank for the whole farm. You’re only dumping 30-40 gallons of water every other day to set up into the next two paddocks.

    • @txdouglas68
      @txdouglas68 3 месяца назад

      Nice a little extra water on the ground when it doesnt rain for 3 + months might be nice too lol. (have to love Texas summers) Thank you sir!

  • @WaltWomack-zh9ek
    @WaltWomack-zh9ek Год назад

    Other than the added labor, is there a reason to leave the barbed wire fence up?

  • @azurebapiaries6730
    @azurebapiaries6730 8 месяцев назад

    Greg Judy for US dept of Agriculture head!