End of first grazing rotation on new farm with bull and steer mob, Greg goes on a rant!

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  • Опубликовано: 30 апр 2024
  • End of first grazing rotation on new farm with bull and steer mob, Greg goes on a rant. With our recent 3-day rain total of 6.15", the forages have kicked into growing mode again. Nice to have surplus moisture to fill our ponds back up.
    If you want to set up your own grazing operation correctly for profitable grazing each year, check out our May grazing schools coming up by clicking here: greenpasturesfarm.net/grazing-...
    Spring is here and if you have any fence building projects, you can get a 10% one-time discount from Powerflex Fence products by clicking on this link to automatically receive your own one-time discount of 10%: powerflexfence.com/judy10

Комментарии • 48

  • @jeaniepartridge6701
    @jeaniepartridge6701 Месяц назад +13

    Following your example we are pleased with the progress on our farm. We knew it wouldn't happen overnight but in 18 months we can see the difference.

  • @AboveandBeyond44
    @AboveandBeyond44 Месяц назад +12

    Congratulations on the rain! Think of all the time that Youtibers spend editing their videos. You deliver a treasure trove of info on the first cut everytime. It is always a pleasure to listen to a natural teacher unload amazing tidbits of pure wisdom and knowledge from a lifetime of experience. You and Jan are just a blessing here on the tube. Hope you both ave a blessed day today Greg!

  • @StoneBasses
    @StoneBasses Месяц назад +8

    I always loved when you say that. The animals bought the farm.

  • @bryanblackburn7074
    @bryanblackburn7074 Месяц назад +6

    Nice group of bulls and steers. Greg you can rant all you want, I'm enjoying it!

  • @Will-No-Co
    @Will-No-Co Месяц назад +11

    Thanks for the rant Greg. I never knew that about horses. Very interesting. Always learn something listening to Greg.👍

    • @bryanblackburn7074
      @bryanblackburn7074 Месяц назад +4

      Yep you are never too old to learn something new Greg is a walking encyclopedia.

  • @unclelarry9138
    @unclelarry9138 Месяц назад +6

    We welcome the rant. I learn something new every video.

  • @quarrybrookfarms8156
    @quarrybrookfarms8156 Месяц назад +1

    Awesome work Greg. Glad you got that rain and saved that farm from development!

  • @nevinkuser9892
    @nevinkuser9892 Месяц назад +10

    It's still so common to hear farmers griping about feed costs. What a beautiful sight it is out on your solar powered grazing land.

    • @dallasburgess5329
      @dallasburgess5329 Месяц назад +1

      Yep, I still gripe. I have pigs, their feed costs soooo much, and it's snow here 7-8 months a year, limiting the natural feed source for my other animals.

    • @C.Hawkshaw
      @C.Hawkshaw Месяц назад +1

      @@dallasburgess5329 Wow, where do you live?

    • @dallasburgess5329
      @dallasburgess5329 Месяц назад +1

      @@C.Hawkshaw Canada (of course 🤣) Interior of BC.

    • @nevinkuser9892
      @nevinkuser9892 Месяц назад +1

      @@dallasburgess5329 My favorite idea I've heard about pig farming is collecting food waste from restaurants.

    • @dallasburgess5329
      @dallasburgess5329 Месяц назад +1

      @@nevinkuser9892 There are programs here for that. But, the list is full. Previously established farmers get it all.

  • @diastemarex9697
    @diastemarex9697 Месяц назад +4

    good to know about the horses...

  • @petereldracher5660
    @petereldracher5660 Месяц назад +4

    Greg is epic.👍💪 Thank you for everything.

  • @shinklehomestead6962
    @shinklehomestead6962 Месяц назад

    Preach it Greg! Grass is the best food for ruminants, and ruminants are the best food for me.

  • @DarrinsDaffs
    @DarrinsDaffs Месяц назад +2

    Greg, I am amazed at how fast the guys are losing their hair coats. The bull you pointed out at 1:40 looks like an early June coat!

  • @arg6193
    @arg6193 Месяц назад +3

    I learn so much from you! Thank you!

  • @marvinbaier3627
    @marvinbaier3627 Месяц назад

    Thanks for the video! Those bulls look great. I’ve been working a lot so I’m a little behind watching videos. I can’t wait to see my farm look like that. The pasture looks awesome! Since we made our land into pasture, the animals is doing a great job making it thicker. There is also more animals coming onto our property. I’m thinking the deer enjoy our property too.

  • @jeremylaufenberg8091
    @jeremylaufenberg8091 Месяц назад +2

    I love the rants and when you get on that soap box. My favorite parts of your videos!

  • @jrisnerny
    @jrisnerny Месяц назад

    All true! The only thing missing from this rant was the classic GJ "DON'T DO THAT!"

  • @jeffboothe2102
    @jeffboothe2102 Месяц назад

    Those cows look amazing.

  • @kkeenan536
    @kkeenan536 Месяц назад

    Thankful for all you do & it’s encouraging to see so many waking up to the truth of regen ag

  • @goatsdoingstuff
    @goatsdoingstuff Месяц назад

    No lies were told in that rant Greg...none! hehe. You are one of the main reasons I barely mow anymore. Can't stand to be on that thing for more than an hour at a time nowadays. Dare I say I almost hate riding on that tractor and mowing! It's much more satisfying walking in the pasture with the goats and watching/hearing them munch away on forage. Every year more forage, more birds, more species of birds, more bugs and more worms show up. It's a beautiful thing and the icing on the cake is nutrient dense meat in the freezer! 🐐🐐🐐

  • @chaddewitt2836
    @chaddewitt2836 Месяц назад +2

    Greg, when you hook the pond to them waterers could you show then process? Specifically, how you install a water line in an existing pond.

  • @brianhoxworth3881
    @brianhoxworth3881 Месяц назад +3

    My grandfather always said, " if you ain't a cowboy don't get a horse " only get animals you can eat.

  • @andreasherzog2222
    @andreasherzog2222 Месяц назад

    I can fully understand your rant. Your whole life is proof that the method works *and is profitable*. So why in hell do so few (%) ranchers get it???

  • @tommybounds3220
    @tommybounds3220 Месяц назад +1

    Thank you for the video.

  • @AudrieCarter
    @AudrieCarter Месяц назад +1

    Interesting you mentioned some points about horses at the end. I was really curious this morning about how horses would be managed within this system.

  • @dombakuring16
    @dombakuring16 Месяц назад

    Nice ❤

  • @tatepierson4626
    @tatepierson4626 Месяц назад

    Eat this! 😂❤

  • @user-og5cg6or6g
    @user-og5cg6or6g Месяц назад +1

    Will the sheep be grazing this awesome pasture?

  • @Thylacine1
    @Thylacine1 Месяц назад

    How do you even price beef raised like this compared to it's factory farmed counterpart? These are orders of magnitudes better. It's really weird people try to argue AGAINST this...

  • @jaymecurry9350
    @jaymecurry9350 Месяц назад

    Greg, what time of the day do you move your cows? Thank you

  • @Pepper-rn4hh
    @Pepper-rn4hh Месяц назад

    QUESTION HERE...
    I'm more of a dog and horse person, my question is this; do cows (cattle) lie down and roll on their backs to itch and scratch, like horses do?

  • @alterityregenerativeranchi7947
    @alterityregenerativeranchi7947 Месяц назад +1

    Do you check all your ponds and water tanks every day?

    • @charleswalters5284
      @charleswalters5284 Месяц назад

      No, most have valves that are turned off most of the time

  • @robinsonjohn4975
    @robinsonjohn4975 Месяц назад +1

    Love your videos Greg! Just do me a favor and try not to swing that camera so much and so fast. I almost got nauseous watching. 😎

  • @ronaldharmon9891
    @ronaldharmon9891 Месяц назад +1

    Greg if you use old Horse manure to fertilize a former crop farm would it still have Ivermectin in it? Thanks

    • @leelindsay5618
      @leelindsay5618 Месяц назад +2

      If its used on the horses...yep. If you compost it, you will break up most of it, but if you get it from regeneratively grazed horses that don't need the poisons, then you skip all that.

    • @ronaldharmon9891
      @ronaldharmon9891 Месяц назад +1

      @@leelindsay5618 I don't know your experience but your thoughts sound logical thanks for the input.

  • @Ironrodpower
    @Ironrodpower Месяц назад

    More sheep vids

  • @Sevenmilecattleco
    @Sevenmilecattleco Месяц назад

    Glad you guys caught some rain Greg! What resources would you recommend to get a functional understanding of your line breeding program? Looking to start getting our cow size down and would like to know how to get started.

  • @paulcallicoat7597
    @paulcallicoat7597 Месяц назад +2

    Humans evolved to eat large animals. Some of the scientists even blame us for mass extinctions for hunting them into oblivion. I don't think that is true but we did develop a larger brain by eating all that good fat and therefore were able to make tools to harvest those huge grazers much more effectively and increased our numbers. This evolution took over 2 million years and it wasn't a clear and easy path to get there. Our ancestors were larger and had bigger brains than us later humans that started agriculture and this happened within a few thousand years by evidence found in excavations in Europe and Turkey going back 15 k years and more.
    Those cavemen were big and smart. 5 to 7 ton mastodon or a 10 ton mammoth was just so many days of feasting and clothing to a tribe of bipedal carnivores. No way did we eat plants to any large amounts which is now proven as far back as 100 K years on skeletons showing that 80% of the diet was meat and fats.The condition of the farmers clearly shows how they suffered for eating that way with arthritis,poor teeth formation and reduced height and mass of the skeletons. Many of the infants remain showing that the mothers were not getting nutrition of the caliber required to support a good supply of milk to feed them as well. Was it a conscience choice by humans to grow plants to eat or was it forced on them because of climate change or increasing populations of humans reducing the wild animal populations?
    I suggest anyone suffering from diabetes,arthritis,poor sleep and obesity to eat nothing but beef,water and a lot of salt for just 30 days. Don't ever trim any fat off of that beef,either. I eat it all and if it is lean get out the suet tub and add about 40% of the weight of the beef to it.I am now 73 years young and have eaten mostly beef,butter,eggs and bacon for just about 2 years. For the last 50 years I have not used or bought anything with veg oils.I kept trying to get along with my family who are clearly overweight and sugar addicted but I have now went full on carnivore and never felt better. I am down to what my weight was before I left the farm in 1970 at the age of 19. I have a 28 inch waist and weigh 132 lbs at 5'6". Lard,tallow,butter are actually healthy and what humans evolved to thrive on. Sugar,grains are just as bad for our health as it would be to feed cattle with. Would anyone feed their animals a diet composed of high sugar and veg oils and expect them to thrive and produce a usable product for our consumption? Why do cattle get fat marbled meat on grain? It is the lipids and natural sugars that cause a rise in blood sugar and the insulin will rise to take that sugar to convert to lipids and put it into the meat at a much higher rate than nature intended. It is this same reason why humans get obese. The fat made by good grass is not even 10 % of what is contained in grain.The grain fat has to be stored between the fibers of the muscles which is defined as marbling.A grass fed cow will have the majority of the fats on the surface of the muscles and around the internal organs.With a much higher ratio of omega 3 to omega 6 lipids. Keep on with that regenerative ranching Greg because this country needs you and a few million others to get our health on track. Humans around the world are suffering from poor nutrition caused by plant base diets and our brains are suffering which is reflected by the high rates of mental illness along with cancer and obesity.

  • @tireddad6541
    @tireddad6541 Месяц назад +1

    Are deer herbivores?
    Sheep, goats, elk, moose....., oh, and cattle. Lamaas?