Top 5 Questions Answered About Regenerative Agriculture - Allen Williams

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  • Опубликовано: 25 окт 2024

Комментарии • 5

  • @timothyboyd5548
    @timothyboyd5548 4 месяца назад

    Very informative 👏

  • @LtColDaddy71
    @LtColDaddy71 Год назад

    I would love to see this catch on more around me. Me and one other farm go pretty far with it. I’m full no till organic, the other is full no till regen, he is down to about 15% of the inputs he used to use. I will say, all ag has come a long way.
    I’ve stopped and talked to a few who have cattle on corn stalks, they know about me, and I’ve been surprised by how receptive they have been to my input. Isn’t it crazy that it’s like walking on glass to discuss freedom from the bondage pit on all farms?

  • @sheepcamp3793
    @sheepcamp3793 3 года назад

    This was all very abstract. Provided no specifics of what “Regenerative Agriculture” is or does. I think Noble’s credibility is tanking.

    • @NobleResearchInstitute
      @NobleResearchInstitute  3 года назад +2

      This video addresses some of the most frequently asked questions about regenerative agriculture, most of which are quite general. For more in-depth information about regenerative ag, we would direct you to our website (www.noble.org) or urge you to subscribe to Noble Rancher, our weekly email newsletter about regenerative agriculture, at www.noble.org/subscribe

    • @LtColDaddy71
      @LtColDaddy71 Год назад

      @@NobleResearchInstitute I think the more people talking about it, the better. I wasn’t always so supportive. UA, and other organizations didn’t exist when I started, and when they did come to be, I always felt like they were ripping off material I learned at my public library back when one had to know the Dewey decimal system.
      It’s good that the topic is being refreshed. It’s catching on. I know 20-30 young guys who get it, but dad, grandpa and uncles are against it. Hey, those people against it have examples they can name of some very bad outcomes. They are not bad people. Regen has to be done carefully.
      It was accidental for me. I had a lot of livestock and wanted to provide my own feed. But I didn’t want to put out money for inputs. I planted bin corn in July after a failed crop my 2nd year. It was so,e what successful. By year 5 I bought the farm next to me, which was two whole sections. I’d become a real farmer.
      I would either be the best, or the worse speaker you ever had.because “net return” means very little to me. But farming on MY terms is priceless. The only yield I care about is the livestock under the ground. Yet in reality, I’m paying cash for 1/4 sections every year, so I’m not hurting.
      Thank you for all that you do.