I just got back after bringing a tour group from japan to tour the yuma area agriculture with a guide from the U Of A agricultural center and its truly amazing the amount of science that goes into growing everything there from broccoli to celery to citrus ...very interesting ,
My father work all is life picking up lettuce in California, Arizona, NM and Colorado this is a real job I work in the lettuce for 20 years this job is only for mexicanos is no joke all the jobs in the fields are for real.
Nice work. Lettuce is a finnicky crop. I grow it here in Texas in my back yard, usually 3 or 4 varieties, and I get about a 2 or 3 month window to grow it before it bolts. But fresh lettuce straight from harvest is so good. I grow leaf kettuce so I can keep harvesting.
I also love America farmers. Not only, America farmers in watching this video in the world of the people. Whatever, A lot of thanks on behalf of me. From Bangladesh.
Hello, thank you for watching this lovely video content. I hope you're doing great? I have a business proposition for you! So many persons saying that it is beautiful. If you're interested just give me a shot by sending me a direct message.
I've been through Yuma several times. They get those times where the dirt/dust is all in the air and have to get to watering constantly. How's this play in with the obvious water shortages in Arizona?
Mark Allen Channel great question. Almost all of the dust comes from the desert around Yuma. There is only 280 sq. miles of farm ground in Yuma County, but there is over 5,000 sq. miles of desert.
Good observation! All the weed were removed by people walking through the field and removing them with hoes. It's an age old farming practice to reduce weed pressure by eliminating weeds before they go to seed. Also, to respond to your other point, there are no gmo lettuce seeds available meaning that no, Roundup wasn't used in this field. If roundup would have been used here it would have killed the lettuce as well as the weeds. But, that is obviously not the case.
jason bachtel As stated before, there isn't any GMO lettuce, so you question isn't all that relevant to this field, or any field of lettuce. That being said, here is some info you might be interested in: Our cost of weeding an average acre of lettuce is appropriately $175per acre, per season. That includes having a crew of people who make about $10-11/hr. walk through the field removing weeds with hoes 2-3 different times throughout the 70-120 days were growing that crop. 1 acre is slightly smaller than a football field, not counting the end zones. That field that Rob is standing in is about 10 acres. It would cost about $20/acre to apply a pesticide application to the field, and Roundup costs about $10-20/acre depending on how much material is needed to effectively control your target weeds.
Anthony Gjolaj great question. Cut and transported to a cooler where the boxed lettuce is cooled to 35 degrees, within 1.5 hours of cutting in the field. Then loaded onto an over the road truck which is driven by one or two drivers across the US or Canada, straight to a supermarket or restaurant distribution center, and then on to your retail store or restaurant, all with in 5 or so days. All of that happens while maintaining the product cool at 35 degrees so the lettuce looks and eats its best, for you!
Only if you knew the hard work semi truck drivers do to get that fresh fruit and vegetables to the store from the farm warehouse. Pulling a refrigerated trailer is the worst and hardest job in trucking. Driving 750 miles a day, eating quick fast food and skipping a shower day when going to east coast and sleeping in a noisy ass truck stop. No excuses, loads needs to be delivered as soon as possible.
Mark Sky the Off-Grid RV Guy I appreciate your perspective Mark. However, no pollution is happening on our organic or conventional fields. These fields have been producing fresh fruits and vegetables for nearly 100 years, and our farming practices keep getting better. You should come out and see for yourself. I'd be glad to give you a tour.
+Luke Morrison Yuma is in the middle of the desert, yes. However, sediments deposited by the Colorado River here over the course of millions of years have made the soil around Yuma some of the most fertile in the world. Combine this with 91% sunshine year round (Because of this, the Guinness Book of World Records lists Yuma as the "Sunniest City in the World"), mild winters with little to no danger of frost, and the nearby Colorado River, and you have these results. Yuma is known as the "Winter Lettuce Capital of the World," as 90-95% of the lettuce consumed in the U.S. from October-April is grown here in/around Yuma.
It varies. During the summer, lows can stay in the high 80's to low 90's. Yeah, that's how hot it can get here. But 9 months out of the year, the lows can range from pleasant to pretty chilly. So from October to around mid May, temps at night can range from high 60's to mid/low 30's during the heart of winter.
Not in the least. NO SUCH THING AS CORN WITHOUT MAN. You will never find a field of corn growing wild. South American Indians invented Corn. Splicing or pollinating I do not recall which. Corn is entirely man made GMO.
I was surprised when I learned this in a college class. However, having doing some growing up around the stuff, it never occurs naturally. Do your own research, I did years ago. I passed. A or B.
People complaining about how they ‘throw away’ the outer leaves are the same people harping on about permaculture, people, you do realize that those leaves are falling on the soil in which crops are grown. Think about what happens to those leaves.
I planted 500 lettuce on soil(outdoor), but it did not come in a good condition due to insects and bacteria. What can I do to stop this problem please somebody help me :/
Cover your crop with hoop row covers to keep insects out organically. Know your water source. Water contamination is the primary source of bacteria contamination. No fresh manure! Location: No deer or wildlife feeding areas, no farmyard locations. Animal droppings contaminate veggies with E coli and salmonella.
h baker As far as ecoli all you can do is try your best. On a big commercial operation you test your irrigation wster, etc. And still birds can fly over and drop poop in the field and on crops or irrigation ditches. A worker may have stepped in some dog shit on the way to the fields. The govt as well as big customers sre tightening up regs and audits on all of this, especially for larger farm operstions. As to why the guy's lettuce doesn't grow well, could be many things. Most likely wrong climate, too hot, wrong varieties, leafhoppers and aphids vectoring disease, etc, etc.
Wearing hair net IN A FIELD is just hilarious! I'm interested if it was a film director's or the farmer's idea to pretend that the field is a sterile environment. It would be even better if they worn surgeon's scrubs there.
Don Montoya which then gets fed to the American ppl lol this farmer is such a joke. Just an exploitive guero trying to make a buck off of stupid Americans
Don Montoya Those aren't biotech suits, Don. The people harvesting the lettuce are wearing aprons and gloves for the same reason your dentist wears similar garments, to protect you. We don't want anything getting in the food you will be eating. Hairnets, gloves, aprons and the like are a logical step to prevent contamination and provocation of allergies.
Plants free of water deficit events more efficiently absorb available plant nutrients enabling plants to achieve their maximum genetic potential. SWRT membranes installed below plant root systems retain water where it falls, providing continuous delivery of drought-free periods up to 3 times longer than intensely irrigated control sands without root zone water retention membranes (Guber et al, 2016).
I love this video. What I did not like was this severe duty trucking commercial that shows up so unexpectantly before the Arizona lettuce video begins. That guy is the most unwanted personality in the entirety of North America. I cannot delete that damn commercial. Whoever you are stop imposing on my YT. Got that? Okay? I hope I made my point perfectly clear.
delusional rate figure. the owners would go broke paying that rate. most produce farmers pay their laborers based on unit. ie. box of lettuce and the rate is in pennies not dollars.
Ameican's Tuve la dicha de trabajar en Yuma Arizona en la lechuga de tierra y la de sin corazón y es un trabajo que asta hoy me gustó si uviera oportunidad de volver lo aria
The lettuce farm down the road in middle America has a hard to competing with immigrant labor and slave wage prices and substandard working conditions. Its a lie to say Americans wont do the job, they just wont do it for slave labor wages. Its my opinion that this hurts the economy overall and offers an inferior product to consumers, all because of politics and ignorance.
Theres only like 5 chemicals approved for organic use, and they all break down in 2 days or less, and aren't hazardous to human health if used properly.
Tippy B I'm not an "intensive GMO chap" sir. None of the vegetable I grow are GMO crops. I admire farmers who produce crops on small and large scales. We need all to feed the world.
Glenn Hunter I appreciate you weighing in Glenn, but that is not factually true. I'm the farmer featured in this show, and we produce certified organic crops in addition to our conventional crops.
Thank you for being a farmer and producing good quality food.
I like the fact that they still grew the lettuce and other salads under open sky, and not under plastic like many modern farmers do.
Never know about Yuma before. Such young farmers. Nice to be out there so beautiful farms.
We used to harvest wheat down in yuma. Was fun being down there in such high yielding wheat.
Much of it goes to Italy. If you have some pasta in Rome it might be from Yuma!
I just got back after bringing a tour group from japan to tour the yuma area agriculture with a guide from the U Of A agricultural center and its truly amazing the amount of science that goes into growing everything there from broccoli to celery to citrus ...very interesting ,
Three crops a year, even in the hot Summer seeds, alfalfa, Summer wheat & other crops grow in Yuma. Few places in the world can say that.
My father work all is life picking up lettuce in California, Arizona, NM and Colorado this is a real job I work in the lettuce for 20 years this job is only for mexicanos is no joke all the jobs in the fields are for real.
Thanks It's hard back breaking work. Workers should be paid more
I'm too a small time farmer. We produce lettuce here in the Highland north, Philippines.
Nice work. Lettuce is a finnicky crop. I grow it here in Texas in my back yard, usually 3 or 4 varieties, and I get about a 2 or 3 month window to grow it before it bolts. But fresh lettuce straight from harvest is so good. I grow leaf kettuce so I can keep harvesting.
Farmers are gods who keep people alive
j'Y AI PASSÉ 3MOIS ET DEMI EN 2009 AVEC PLEIN D'AMIS ET C'EST UN PAYS
MAGNIQUE.BONNE TEMPERATURE.LES LÉGUMES Y POUSSENT A UNE VITESSE FOLLE.
I also love America farmers. Not only, America farmers in watching this video in the world of the people. Whatever, A lot of thanks on behalf of me. From Bangladesh.
When he say "time for a picknick," I thought he was referring to the workers. Lol
Why did you spell picnic so wrong
EVEN I THOUGHT SO INITIALLY.
😂
@@owenwammes4052 its a non comical attempt at a racial joke.
AMEN AZ Farmer's blessing on ya'll!
Thanks for the information
I love yuma arizona
healthy foods... lovely.. i love it buy now appreciate...
and so
The 2nd MOST IMPORTANT thing is weather...the 1st most important thing is Colorado River water. Without irrigation, its just a bone dry desert.
yes support and play,,, merry christmas and happy new year.. good luck....boomm bb code jm...love you all,amen,,,
great farmer God bless america
gilberto nova Thank you Gilberto. May God bless you and your family as well. Thanks for watching!
love your video.
That looks delicious
Thank you for feeding us. I'm at Malaysia
The land gives us everything.....with a lot of work....
Hello, thank you for watching this lovely video content. I hope you're doing great? I have a business proposition for you! So many persons saying that it is beautiful. If you're interested just give me a shot by sending me a direct message.
Let's go #FARMERS#WORLDWIDE WE HAVE TO FIGHT AS ONE
Great job
Nice video
it would be interesting to know what the irrigation source for this farm
Roma P. We’re actually right next to the Colorado River
Simply amazing
I've been through Yuma several times. They get those times where the dirt/dust is all in the air and have to get to watering constantly. How's this play in with the obvious water shortages in Arizona?
Mark Allen Channel great question. Almost all of the dust comes from the desert around Yuma. There is only 280 sq. miles of farm ground in Yuma County, but there is over 5,000 sq. miles of desert.
Arizona is a mexican territory this is wrong, the slaves must be blond
H CB this area of arizona was purchased from Mexico in 1853. Stay in school kids.
@@hcb9724 Pretty stupid statement, HCB. If it belonged to Mexico there would be a minimal economy.
@@MrDannyrico1 purchased with guns, that's robery.
Hi.What`s the roman lettuce variety you cutting in the video called?I would like to get some seeds and plant it in my back garden.
What do you use as fertilizer ??? Name and type please
I’m Montagnard i love vegetables .
WOOO GO YUMA!!!! I LIVE THERE LOL
I can theoretically see my house from here.
There isn't a weed in that field. They must use roundup and roundup ready lettuce.
cruciferousvegetable
Good observation! All the weed were removed by people walking through the field and removing them with hoes. It's an age old farming practice to reduce weed pressure by eliminating weeds before they go to seed. Also, to respond to your other point, there are no gmo lettuce seeds available meaning that no, Roundup wasn't used in this field. If roundup would have been used here it would have killed the lettuce as well as the weeds. But, that is obviously not the case.
was thinking that it was weeded from farmers . you know how much round up would cost to do a field like that? $10,000.00 aday probly
jason bachtel As stated before, there isn't any GMO lettuce, so you question isn't all that relevant to this field, or any field of lettuce. That being said, here is some info you might be interested in: Our cost of weeding an average acre of lettuce is appropriately $175per acre, per season. That includes having a crew of people who make about $10-11/hr. walk through the field removing weeds with hoes 2-3 different times throughout the 70-120 days were growing that crop. 1 acre is slightly smaller than a football field, not counting the end zones. That field that Rob is standing in is about 10 acres. It would cost about $20/acre to apply a pesticide application to the field, and Roundup costs about $10-20/acre depending on how much material is needed to effectively control your target weeds.
jason bachtel :
Mateo 780 je odlican prikaz agrotehnike i njenog istorijata hvala vam
If its highly skilled labor, how much are you paying them?
They're only human. They aren't lizard people. They can't get lizard people wages or there will be trouble. That's how lizard people do.
can i grow lettuce in south Texas? already planted sweet corn ..still got a lot of room to play with.
You can grow lettuce anywhere
+Dustin The Ninja thanks
I loaded this food at Yuma once. When loading at warehouse, packers, Jet fighters taking off, bout 100 ft. Overmy head. Marine Air Base i think.
What a content dear
please explain to me this, how does lettuce from a huge lettuce farm in Southern California, end up in NYC?
Anthony Gjolaj there is something called 18 wheelers
Anthony Gjolaj great question. Cut and transported to a cooler where the boxed lettuce is cooled to 35 degrees, within 1.5 hours of cutting in the field. Then loaded onto an over the road truck which is driven by one or two drivers across the US or Canada, straight to a supermarket or restaurant distribution center, and then on to your retail store or restaurant, all with in 5 or so days. All of that happens while maintaining the product cool at 35 degrees so the lettuce looks and eats its best, for you!
thank you
Only if you knew the hard work semi truck drivers do to get that fresh fruit and vegetables to the store from the farm warehouse. Pulling a refrigerated trailer is the worst and hardest job in trucking. Driving 750 miles a day, eating quick fast food and skipping a shower day when going to east coast and sleeping in a noisy ass truck stop.
No excuses, loads needs to be delivered as soon as possible.
Dis Master dude that's nothing compared to the guys that cut That lettuce
What is the type of flat lettuce?
Good job, next step is seeing if you can salvage the land from being polluted from pesticides and try to get more organic lettuce.
Mark Sky the Off-Grid RV Guy I appreciate your perspective Mark. However, no pollution is happening on our organic or conventional fields. These fields have been producing fresh fruits and vegetables for nearly 100 years, and our farming practices keep getting better. You should come out and see for yourself. I'd be glad to give you a tour.
@@johnboelts1372 may I take a tour
Isn't this desert? how do they grow romaine in such hot conditions?
+Luke Morrison Yuma is in the middle of the desert, yes. However, sediments deposited by the Colorado River here over the course of millions of years have made the soil around Yuma some of the most fertile in the world. Combine this with 91% sunshine year round (Because of this, the Guinness Book of World Records lists Yuma as the "Sunniest City in the World"), mild winters with little to no danger of frost, and the nearby Colorado River, and you have these results. Yuma is known as the "Winter Lettuce Capital of the World," as 90-95% of the lettuce consumed in the U.S. from October-April is grown here in/around Yuma.
+Luke Morrison By depleting aquifers and the soil
Arizonan 2509 wow great answer. Are nights "cooler" in yuma? like around 60? I hear that's essential to growing crisp lettuce.
It varies. During the summer, lows can stay in the high 80's to low 90's. Yeah, that's how hot it can get here. But 9 months out of the year, the lows can range from pleasant to pretty chilly. So from October to around mid May, temps at night can range from high 60's to mid/low 30's during the heart of winter.
What do they grow in summer i wonder (assuming it is too hot to grow lettuce there).
I will save this video for any Vegetarian again start an argument with me.
Any of these crops GMO?
+papaike2 If you want to avoid GMO, stay away from Corn. Corn is entirely GMO. Man Made Hybrid from Day One.
+TheDustysix wow what a dumb statement
Not in the least. NO SUCH THING AS CORN WITHOUT MAN. You will never find a field of corn growing wild. South American Indians invented Corn. Splicing or pollinating I do not recall which. Corn is entirely man made GMO.
I was surprised when I learned this in a college class. However, having doing some growing up around the stuff, it never occurs naturally. Do your own research, I did years ago. I passed. A or B.
+TheDustysix Did the Indians put in Botulinum toxin, Antibiotic genes, Roundup-ready and terminator genes? Or did they just select for larger grains?
Which city is in America?
i love lettuce
Bela plantacao
contract workers ?
I can't imagine the pesticides sitting on those lettuce leaves, there isn't a bug or a weed in that field!
No problem they are wearing protective gear
There are minimal pests there and there are also no residues on the plants. They are tested before being harvested.
Whose water are they using?
Your moms 😊
if they could only get them to the market that green and fresh
Interesting.
It just blows my mind that we ever thought this was okay. This is why we are in a crisis
People complaining about how they ‘throw away’ the outer leaves are the same people harping on about permaculture, people, you do realize that those leaves are falling on the soil in which crops are grown. Think about what happens to those leaves.
I planted 500 lettuce on soil(outdoor), but it did not come in a good condition due to insects and bacteria. What can I do to stop this problem please somebody help me :/
Where are you growing?
Cover your crop with hoop row covers to keep insects out organically. Know your water source. Water contamination is the primary source of bacteria contamination. No fresh manure! Location: No deer or wildlife feeding areas, no farmyard locations. Animal droppings contaminate veggies with E coli and salmonella.
h baker As far as ecoli all you can do is try your best. On a big commercial operation you test your irrigation wster, etc. And still birds can fly over and drop poop in the field and on crops or irrigation ditches. A worker may have stepped in some dog shit on the way to the fields. The govt as well as big customers sre tightening up regs and audits on all of this, especially for larger farm operstions.
As to why the guy's lettuce doesn't grow well, could be many things. Most likely wrong climate, too hot, wrong varieties, leafhoppers and aphids vectoring disease, etc, etc.
Lettuce generally dont get hit hard by insects. Slugs may be a problem. Check out watch?v=_pgcvN6TuE8
3:57 is a paid actor
Wearing hair net IN A FIELD is just hilarious! I'm interested if it was a film director's or the farmer's idea to pretend that the field is a sterile environment. It would be even better if they worn surgeon's scrubs there.
Dont forget to wear biohazard suit
If everyone knew about how toxic sugar truly is then this guy would be a billionaire if he expands.
I've always said "Let us eat lettuce".
lettuce not let us let's let us let lettuce grow
I want the full green leaves, the hearts are junk.
Are they organic lettuces?
Nope this lettuces is full in chemicals ;(
Antreas Cy Wrong.
good bless those Mexicans
Omar Husseini mama
How many acres??
3,000
ustedes no contratan mano de obra mexicana,?en Chetumal quintana roo México,
I think he call the worker’s 😂 yahhh dreams
Is this where the E.coli came from?
columbusohio72
🤔Same reason why I'm here...
SoulRx lol. I think its contained now
You notice you did'nt see his family eat any!
Me too
Interesting pogram
The fact that he didn't start the video with "Lettuce talk about our main salad vegetable." Leaves me feeling really disappointed.
I leke work at farms and very good
Lettuce Pray.
My favorite vegetable...specialy eating with sweet meat.
3:10 to Yuma....lol
AMERICAN SALAD BOWL!!!
I was exited to watch this,then realized that all the workers are in biochemical outfits,TO PICK LETTUCE.
and thanks for all the hard workers that do this.
Don Montoya which then gets fed to the American ppl lol this farmer is such a joke. Just an exploitive guero trying to make a buck off of stupid Americans
Don Montoya Those aren't biotech suits, Don. The people harvesting the lettuce are wearing aprons and gloves for the same reason your dentist wears similar garments, to protect you. We don't want anything getting in the food you will be eating. Hairnets, gloves, aprons and the like are a logical step to prevent contamination and provocation of allergies.
@Alice Rabbit You're a disgusting human. I really hope you're not American!
@Alice Rabbit Damn. I'm embarrased to be American because of idiots like you. Shame.
Are these sprayed with poisons?
no just milk.
Plants free of water deficit events more efficiently absorb available plant nutrients enabling plants to achieve their maximum genetic potential. SWRT membranes installed below plant root systems retain water where it falls, providing continuous delivery of
drought-free periods up to 3 times longer than intensely irrigated control sands without root zone water retention membranes (Guber et al, 2016).
Huge E-coli outbreak nation wide right now. Thanks to lettuce coming form Yuma Arizona..wonder how that happened?
Hello
I love this video. What I did not like was this severe duty trucking commercial that shows up so unexpectantly before the Arizona lettuce video begins. That guy is the most unwanted personality in the entirety of North America. I cannot delete that damn commercial. Whoever you are stop imposing on my YT. Got that? Okay? I hope I made my point perfectly clear.
I live near arecers of farm
Why is a romaine heart desirable? That's the bitter part. Why is green leafy goodness bad and discarded? To me its the only part I want.
I know it's sad. The amount of veg that is trimmed off before shipping is insane.
But they still can't figure out how to grow it without contaminating it with Ecoli. Grow your own.
I am from india do me labor job
If you can do it so much better, then why don't you start a lettuce farming operation?
woooooooooooooooow
Thanks to Mexicans !!!
yes like they used to work in the good old days so they can make this country as it is now and to let those mexicans going with this job
+Ghkjdf Hbjhffh What are you saying I like to know where you work
who commute to the U.S daily
Good jop
Thumbs up for big produce companies that exploit their workers by paying them less than a living wage.
wonder what they get paid? hell I went to collage and still cant find a job. lol well a job that don't pay min wage.
Well some pay $12.65 an hr
delusional rate figure. the owners would go broke paying that rate. most produce farmers pay their laborers based on unit. ie. box of lettuce and the rate is in pennies not dollars.
Joey :3 my friend its less then that and they get not benfits no 401k or etc
well atless we get to eat
some pay below $3.50 an hour. Most, actually.
How come they don't talk about the people that do the harvesting there that ones that need to get more props..
Ameican's Tuve la dicha de trabajar en Yuma Arizona en la lechuga de tierra y la de sin corazón y es un trabajo que asta hoy me gustó si uviera oportunidad de volver lo aria
grow your own
The lettuce farm down the road in middle America has a hard to competing with immigrant labor and slave wage prices and substandard working conditions. Its a lie to say Americans wont do the job, they just wont do it for slave labor wages. Its my opinion that this hurts the economy overall and offers an inferior product to consumers, all because of politics and ignorance.
Like
Support smaller farmers and these intensive GMO chaps will have to change.
thanks
Organic farms also spray their crops with pesticide and chemicals, its all a lie and just marketing trick, do some research and get back to us !
Theres only like 5 chemicals approved for organic use, and they all break down in 2 days or less, and aren't hazardous to human health if used properly.
Tippy B I'm not an "intensive GMO chap" sir. None of the vegetable I grow are GMO crops. I admire farmers who produce crops on small and large scales. We need all to feed the world.
Glenn Hunter I appreciate you weighing in Glenn, but that is not factually true. I'm the farmer featured in this show, and we produce certified organic crops in addition to our conventional crops.