How To Grow Your Own Pig Food On Pasture

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 23 июн 2022
  • We always get a lot of questions on how to grow your own pig food for your pasture raised pigs, Today we're doing a deep dive into how Mark raises Rye for the pigs
    The seeder in today's video
    www.amazon.com/dp/B000XS3EHA?...
    Join the Anyone Can Farm Tribe community
    www.theanyonecanfarmexperience.com
    Follow us on social media
    / the_anyone_can_farm_ex...
    / the-anyone-can-farm-ex...

Комментарии • 430

  • @CalfandCloverCreamery
    @CalfandCloverCreamery Год назад +60

    Is this video meaning to claim that mangalitsa pigs can survive on a diet of solely just rye cover crop grass and no other supplemental grains? I’ve been on farms that did a similar intensive rotational grazing system which involved not just planting rye but a whole variety of diverse nutrient dense high bio mass cover crops…this is actually not uncommon in pastured pork systems: they all still supplement with other feed grains, minerals and even compost scraps. This video makes it seem like they are raising not just feeders but birthing pregnant sows on solely rye grass? 🤷‍♂️

    • @TheAnyoneCanFarmExperience
      @TheAnyoneCanFarmExperience  Год назад +77

      No we didn't intend to make that claim BUT we forgot to mention it in the video, this is meant ONLY to supplement their diet!
      We also feed small grains they do great on rye and their feed consumption will go way down but we still make sure they have access to other feeds to balance their diet.
      Great comment thanks for helping us clarify our video!

    • @danielch6662
      @danielch6662 Год назад +3

      can they digest these stuff or does it just pass through? pigs are not cows.

    • @gpenicaud
      @gpenicaud Год назад +12

      ​@@danielch6662 it gets digested, just not very well (especially if they're eating a lot of it). In my opinion, the real potential is in protein.
      In dry mass, good quality green vegetation is about 1/3 the energy value of corn. That's in an ideal situation, with a quite immature plant that's also ideally not a grass (chicory and clovers for example).
      However, the protein in that same plant is going to be very digestible (~80% digestibility), which is especially nice considering fresh greens can be rich in essential amino acids (up to 0.8% (dry mass) digestible méthionine in dwarf white clover for example).
      But you're still dealing with a monogastric, so they won't deal well if too high a proportion of their diet is fibrous (I don't have a reference for pigs, but chickens can do well with up to 70% grain and 30% quality fresh greens by dry mass). When you go to a very high ingestion of green fibrous matter, not only are you going to lose digestibility on that green, but it's also going to reduce the global digestive efficiency, so you're losing value on the grain as well. And that's without considering the anti-nutritional factors that are found in crops (especially legumes, with high levels of saponins in alfalfa for example).

    • @sasquatchrosefarts
      @sasquatchrosefarts Год назад +5

      ​@@TheAnyoneCanFarmExperience buy a scythe and trim off a hundred square feet a day and do two cuts per year.

    • @cdjhyoung
      @cdjhyoung Год назад +5

      @@gpenicaud Your statement corresponds pretty much with my experiences. If you are putting bred sows on this pasture, you can probably make it work. For a growing pig, this free ranging grass supplement is going to slow their rate of gain down significantly. And, as you point out, if they indulge too heavily on the grass diet, it will have a negative impact on the uptake of nutrients from the grain portion of their diet.

  • @witheringliberal2794
    @witheringliberal2794 Год назад +204

    Imagine I’ve never owned a pig and never planted a crop - but I absolutely love learning these things. One day I’ll farm.❤

    • @TheAnyoneCanFarmExperience
      @TheAnyoneCanFarmExperience  Год назад +18

      #anyonecanfarm

    • @georgeparrault9945
      @georgeparrault9945 Год назад +14

      Hold on to The Dream. May GOD’s Will be Done.

    • @nicholasnapier2684
      @nicholasnapier2684 Год назад +4

      It’s easier than you think because you already have the one
      Want and desire.. Some people think it’s a lot of work but it’s not. a grew up like that! And there was a time when I didn’t do it all my life but wherever I traveled I always stayed in the countryside where I was close to that kind of thing given outside the country..

    • @TheKlink
      @TheKlink Год назад +5

      Same. It's calling to us for a reason and anything that resists consolidation in the wrong hands is a good thing.

    • @jessicacantrell5508
      @jessicacantrell5508 Год назад +9

      I heard Jess from roots and refuge once say, "Make your waiting room your class room" I feel like that's the best advice I've heard about farm/ homesteading. I would like to homestead someday and am researching and learning evry day until then.

  • @mrspeigle1
    @mrspeigle1 Год назад +35

    The details of farming are always interesting to me. I may watch hundreds of videos and read dozens of books on the subject but will proably never farm myself. It just scratches a itch in my brain.

  • @krm944
    @krm944 Год назад +6

    The hogs will work the manure into the ground in the existing pasture- minimum tillage is better than “rototiller” - a chain rake or chain link fence towed to break any clods/level ground. Add forage radishes, crimson clover and buckwheat to diversify the crop- its better than a mono crop

  • @andrassalfay5869
    @andrassalfay5869 Год назад +10

    I am hungarian and I found this randomly browsing pasture maintenence videos for farm animals :D
    Glad to see people are doing well with this magnificent animal on the smarter side of the planet! :) Learned almost everything I practice today from videos like this :)

  • @Billster1955
    @Billster1955 Год назад

    Thanks for sharing. I love learning anything farm related. Still hoping to have a hobby farm some day.

  • @chefevilee9377
    @chefevilee9377 6 месяцев назад

    Wow, the information in this video was truly amazing.

  • @patrickgrimes8964
    @patrickgrimes8964 Год назад +9

    Fantastic video. I have heard much about the uses and benefits of rye and you added one more positive take on this wonderful plant. I have never heard of the pig you mentioned so thank you for that recommendation and I will be sure and watch your pig video.

    • @ericfarrand5534
      @ericfarrand5534 Год назад +1

      pretty inefficient way to get pigs the water and bad for the environment. Once the pigs trample it or pull it out of the ground, the water evaporates.
      As far as nutrition, after the 66% water, 28% is hemi-cellulose and the remaining small fraction is calcium and phosphorus. For pigs, only 30 to 40% of the hemicellulose is digestible, because they have a simple, mono gastric stomach. Cows can digest better because they can ferment the cellulose and have the microbes to break it down.

  • @murraydelawski7496
    @murraydelawski7496 Год назад

    I have iron age pigs and they eat alot of alfalfa bails in winter and love it .

  • @jeffkiehne2545
    @jeffkiehne2545 Год назад +25

    Mulberry trees also grow very quickly if heavily prune and leaves can be eaten.

    • @TheAnyoneCanFarmExperience
      @TheAnyoneCanFarmExperience  Год назад +3

      The whole fodder system is rich, agreed. We have honey locust growing to add to our forage feeds. Mulberry is another great option. Thanks for your insight!

    • @deathpyre42
      @deathpyre42 Год назад

      @@TheAnyoneCanFarmExperience How about Natsugumi? It's fairly weather resistant and the roots naturally contain nitrogen fixing bacteria.

  • @ThatBritishHomestead
    @ThatBritishHomestead Год назад

    i love the idea about having pigs, i just love animals and spending time with them. We have had ducks, meat chickens.

  • @nancysmith-baker1813
    @nancysmith-baker1813 Год назад +1

    Thank you this is fascinating .
    Always liked pigs . I am a city slicker learning from you .

  • @UncleSamSpeaks
    @UncleSamSpeaks Год назад +2

    Thank you for explaining the cattle panel at the end and also thank you for the video!

    • @teebob21
      @teebob21 Год назад

      It's a simple and cheap drag harrow. :)

    • @newearthshamayin
      @newearthshamayin Год назад +1

      We call it harrowing up north here in Canada eh! Building highways we always use grass seed of course in the ditches. Quad pulls the harrow covers up the seed and makes everything blend in nice.
      All the best to everyone here.

  • @clairefarnell9489
    @clairefarnell9489 11 месяцев назад

    Just bought a 161 acre farm. Will be doing this for sure.

  • @fiveon40
    @fiveon40 Год назад +40

    I planted barley and oats for my pigs but I’m excited to add some field peas and rye. I love pastured pigs

    • @baddog9320
      @baddog9320 Год назад

      You love pasture pigs.
      THEN YOU ARE A FOOL!!!!
      Pasture pigs make Feral hogs.
      I can always tell people that have raised pigs for a minute. The pasture pigs.
      A hog needs a good sturdy pen..Like cement.
      Not doing this is irresponsible.
      NOTHING LESS.

    • @arthurboyd9713
      @arthurboyd9713 Год назад +19

      @@baddog9320 we raise our pigs in sturdy pens, but they are 50FT by 50ft with grass and trees in them there is nothing wrong with doing things differently your way make work for you but it's not the only way. Calling someone a fool that's just not right.

    • @fiveon40
      @fiveon40 Год назад +22

      @@baddog9320 my pasture pigs “ hogs” stay in with three strands of hot wire. Never had any get out. I train them young and I’ve been raising them for 3+ years 40+ pigs.
      I even do rotational grazing with them. It works out great and makes exceptional meat.
      My pigs are extremely friendly, and even the boar rolls over for a belly rub. Doesn’t sound too feral to me, but what do I know, I’m just a FOOL. 🤷‍♀️ 😂

    • @YawehthedragondogofEL
      @YawehthedragondogofEL Год назад +12

      @@baddog9320 I wish someone would pen up all the feral humans.

    • @racekrasser7869
      @racekrasser7869 Год назад +13

      @@baddog9320 animals shouldn't be raised on concrete for the benefit of a humans' laziness.

  • @MessyTimes
    @MessyTimes Год назад

    We at *Messy Times* use a broadcast spreader just like that on our back forty. It works a treat.

  • @motleyassortment5512
    @motleyassortment5512 4 месяца назад +1

    Watching all these interesting farming videos, makes me want to become a farmer.

  • @paoemantega8793
    @paoemantega8793 Год назад

    Good video, thankyou. Would like to see a chart of what you do and when and how many pigs you keep on what size ground.

  • @evegreenification
    @evegreenification Год назад

    Interesting. I'm going to add this knowledge to what I got from Gabe Brown's book

  • @nicholasnapier2684
    @nicholasnapier2684 Год назад +6

    You’re ahead of your time don’t stop I learned a lot from you I have chickens I like to raise animals and I need more land I don’t require as much with that but it is important Florida Tennessee

    • @TheAnyoneCanFarmExperience
      @TheAnyoneCanFarmExperience  Год назад

      Glad we could help you! good luck down there!

    • @nicholasnapier2684
      @nicholasnapier2684 Год назад

      @@TheAnyoneCanFarmExperience What kind of ryegrass is that I want to see how it grows in Florida and in Tennessee and see the difference

  • @jeremyjohnson8128
    @jeremyjohnson8128 Год назад +2

    This video is seven months old, but something got the algorithm to start promoting it. So many recent comments.
    Great video. I just subscribe to your channel.

  • @macromicrodragon
    @macromicrodragon Год назад +6

    Just pack in a bunch of biochar to get up to 9% even carbon per acre tilled in 1 time and done, then you can simply water in all the manure no-till. Better than that you can foliar with a nice vortex brew of compost tea, and then those microbes can reproduce from 12 cups of composted manure to equivalent to 10 tons worth within 24 hours, using some simple molasses and compost brewed in a tea.

    • @hughmarcus1
      @hughmarcus1 Год назад

      Interesting idea. Do you have a formula you can share?

  • @whathappened2230
    @whathappened2230 Год назад +1

    Thank you for this vid! I learned something👍

  • @kenolson3064
    @kenolson3064 Год назад +13

    I raise mangalitsa pigs. People tell me how intelligent and compassionate pigs are. I tell them pigs are as compassionate as a shark. I processed a five-month-old male yesterday, and his sisters were delighted to lap up his leftovers. Damned city Folk.

  • @braydencarlgren1904
    @braydencarlgren1904 Год назад +8

    Sounds impressive! Equates to around 2ton dry matter. Like the marketing and advertising! Keep it up.

    • @mikevinitsky8506
      @mikevinitsky8506 7 месяцев назад +1

      what is dry matter?

    • @braydencarlgren1904
      @braydencarlgren1904 7 месяцев назад

      @@mikevinitsky8506dry matter is a weight taken after you remove all of the moisture out of the sample.
      Dry matter is needed to calculate a stocking rate. (number of livestock or pounds of live animals per area of land for a given duration)
      Hope this helps! Ask away if there are further questions. Or I need to explain further.

  • @jimlee5626
    @jimlee5626 Год назад

    Wow! Great information, thanks!!!

  • @SouthWestIron
    @SouthWestIron Год назад

    Excellent information, channel looks good. Thank you.

  • @kerrypurcell6022
    @kerrypurcell6022 Год назад +1

    this rye deal, looks good,, going to try it,, thank you for the video,,

    • @ericfarrand5534
      @ericfarrand5534 Год назад

      pretty inefficient way to get pigs the water and bad for the environment. Once the pigs trample it or pull it out of the ground, the water evaporates.
      As far as nutrition, after the 66% water, 28% is hemi-cellulose and the remaining small fraction is calcium and phosphorus. For pigs, only 30 to 40% of the hemicellulose is digestible, because they have a simple, mono gastric stomach. Cows can digest better because they can ferment the cellulose and have the microbes to break it down.

    • @TheAnyoneCanFarmExperience
      @TheAnyoneCanFarmExperience  Год назад

      Life is a grand experiment and we should be ever learning and trying new things! Good for you. Our pleasure.

  • @jamesalanstephensmith7930
    @jamesalanstephensmith7930 Год назад

    Great advice!

  • @feedthepeoplefarms
    @feedthepeoplefarms Год назад +15

    2.03 lbs includes all the water in that forage. to get the dry matter (DM) weight, you gotta dry the sample out before weighing it. DM weight is more accurate when calculating forage. DM weight can also be found online for a lot of forages.

    • @TheAnyoneCanFarmExperience
      @TheAnyoneCanFarmExperience  Год назад +4

      yep you could use dry weight but since we're harvesting with the pigs we used the green weight

    • @feedthepeoplefarms
      @feedthepeoplefarms Год назад +4

      Most of the weight is water so using DM weight will give you the most accurate stocking rate.

    • @paulvandenberg5341
      @paulvandenberg5341 Год назад +6

      DM is the standard of comparison.
      Water sorta does not count.

  • @mindsprawl
    @mindsprawl Год назад

    wow this was in my feed? was thinking about this on the way home driving.

  • @andyzumwalt3632
    @andyzumwalt3632 2 года назад +2

    Great video Mark and Joe

  • @willowrushhomestead5078
    @willowrushhomestead5078 Год назад +4

    About how much purchased pig feed or other grain ration do you feed your pigs? Knowing the amount of other feed/minerals you have to purchase would be very helpful to me to see if this would be cost effective for me. thanks

  • @barryobee1544
    @barryobee1544 5 месяцев назад

    Very interesting. I just subscribed!

  • @AusTx5
    @AusTx5 Год назад +1

    Nice idea...

  • @newparksfarm
    @newparksfarm Год назад +5

    Great video, I planted some rye for my pigs first time in October not grazed them on it yet so this was well timed for me (I have diakon and phacilia also in that mix), I don't get snow in winter so can strip graze until March on turnips and then move to ryegrass/clover/chicory paddocks 7 day rotation. My pigs dig so I don't need to rotovate, and I keep them with one strand of hot wire, I have a few videos too, will subscribe, thanks, Dunk

    • @iincredibledible
      @iincredibledible 17 дней назад

      do they grub out the daikon? Daikon are so good for breaking up the soil and bringing up deep nutrients

  • @michaeldunagan8268
    @michaeldunagan8268 Год назад

    Interesting. I loved the financial breakdown.
    What is the names of the pig the WILL ear the eye? Do they bring going money at butchering time as the pig that do not eat the eye?

  • @1987Confused
    @1987Confused Год назад

    I see those push seed spreaders on craigslist free around me all the time if you want a broadcast spreader

  • @eastcorkcheeses6448
    @eastcorkcheeses6448 Год назад +5

    Tamworth pigs are bred from a variety known as the" Irish grazer "

  • @johncourtneidge
    @johncourtneidge Год назад +2

    Hurrah! Thank-you. I sow a grazing rye plus winter vetches cover crop in the Autumn on my allotment. The vetches fix nitrogen, so an extra benefit. We can't raise pigs there. I would!

  • @vukdjukic3499
    @vukdjukic3499 7 месяцев назад

    wonderful...
    except I have a bone to pick with the mispronunciation and naming of the pigs; they are actually called "mangulica" pigs :)
    glad to see Americans discovered this one, I hope they stay true to their roots.
    Cheers

  • @Oasis_Desert_Rose
    @Oasis_Desert_Rose Год назад +2

    Wild edibles like LambsQuarters and Palmers Amaranth are highly nutritious and are considered invasive species meaning they self propagate easily, which I love for easy of growing! Try adding that just once!

  • @louisbrentnell2551
    @louisbrentnell2551 Год назад +12

    My sorgram Sudan grass hit 9 feet tall. It makes lots of feed.

  • @MistressOP
    @MistressOP Год назад +1

    right area you can do a sunflower, mix with other things.

  • @dustindavy4319
    @dustindavy4319 Год назад +6

    Good info. We tried pigs for one year because we had problems with coyotes and bobcats when we had sheep. It was interesting. They eat so much, so growing some of our own food would be great. I wonder if there's something other breeds of pig, like basic Yorkshire, would eat that could be easily grown. Thanks for sharing!

    • @TheAnyoneCanFarmExperience
      @TheAnyoneCanFarmExperience  Год назад +9

      We've raised a lot of breeds of pigs over the years, all on pasture. The Yorkshire, landrace, and that group of breeds will eat the forages, but they don't convert it into pork efficiently. Heritage breeds like the Mangalitsa will. Mark will answer your question in greater detail on the live show on Tuesday, February 1st. Hope you can join us!

    • @dustindavy4319
      @dustindavy4319 Год назад

      @@TheAnyoneCanFarmExperience Good to know. Thanks for the reply!

    • @hughmarcus1
      @hughmarcus1 Год назад +1

      I don’t know if you can get Tamworths in America. They’re an English breed that are now on the rare breed list. They’re really hardy & will graze grass happily in summer, but will really churn up a paddock in winter. I’ve fed mine small quantities of grass silage & hay & they’ll happily eat that. I reckon they’d eat the rye like the Mangalitza.
      Interestingly rye is commonly grown as a forage crop in England & harvested at the green stage. It’s then Ensiled like grass or maize (corn) & fed to livestock, usually dairy cows. ​@@TheAnyoneCanFarmExperience

    • @vonmajor
      @vonmajor Год назад

      American Guinea hogs of mine are getting fat on winter hay feeding.

  • @basher92
    @basher92 Год назад

    great work guys! very cool! pigs and hogs eat literally anythang :'d

  • @TheTor1193
    @TheTor1193 Год назад +3

    does the mud on the roots count as part of the 2 lbs?

  • @OnSiteTrav
    @OnSiteTrav Год назад

    love it

  • @AgnesMariaL
    @AgnesMariaL Год назад +5

    I've seen a few comments asking about your stocking density, but haven't seen a reply to any.
    We raise pigs, but we're on a raw woodlot and using them to clear, till and level the land for us so we can sow pastures and gardens behind them. I'm curious how many full-grown sows you run on one quarter-acre paddock, and how long before they need to move again? This information will help me plan for next year ;)

    • @wagonwheel9426
      @wagonwheel9426 Год назад

      How many pigs per acre using this pasture set up?

  • @stephenburns3678
    @stephenburns3678 2 дня назад +1

    Interesting

  • @jeff-hh9mc
    @jeff-hh9mc Месяц назад

    So the end of the day use cereal rye for pasture food and supplement with grains.

  • @cwit8846
    @cwit8846 Год назад

    Thank you

  • @OneManRevolution223
    @OneManRevolution223 Год назад

    seriously, solid field rotation at its best. I've been looking at doing something similar for cattle but this guys efficiency is insane. doing this dwarfs the USDA statistics for necessary land allotments for per capita prediction.

  • @blissohyea
    @blissohyea 9 месяцев назад

    Good job

  • @LuisHernandez-yr6yo
    @LuisHernandez-yr6yo Год назад

    Subscribed!!! 🔥🔥👍🏼👍🏼

  • @kylebryan1
    @kylebryan1 Год назад

    Any idea what the “peas” he planted at the end were? Looks like some standard dry beans or peas from Costco.

  • @cdjhyoung
    @cdjhyoung 17 дней назад

    i want to address something implied in a couple of messages below. Pasture raising hogs is suggested to get more yield from the property you have. Pasture isn't like corn or bean growing in that you don't have a defined planting season or harvest season and you, the farmer, doesn't have the issues of distributing food or storing what you raised. Is that really true? Is the pasture land you are using capable of making more nutrients if it was planted to corn or beans? What are the expected yields in your area? Raising a hog to 300 lbs. that is heavy for a commercial hog, will take roughly 1000 lbs of feed made of corn and soybeans mixed in a 4:1 ratio. This is for the main commercial breeds: York, Hamp, Duroc, not the settler breeds like the mangalitsa. The rate of gain will be such that the commercial breed hog will reach that weight in 6-7 months. The settler breeds will take 12 moths or more. 1000 lbs of feed is roughly is roughly 16 bushels. Around where I live, the average corn yield is 180 bu and acre. That would be 11-12 hogs raised from the feed raised on one acre. Can pasture feeding produce 12 hogs per acre in a year? Unlikely. We raised commercial hogs on pasture lots feeding a commercial feed we ground and supplied from our own farm. We raised roughly 400 butcher hogs from 40 acres of land year round. We are in Michigan, so pasture forage isn't available at least four months a year. Lastly, hog health is an issue. Hogs collect parasites off of open ground. Our preventive measures included moving the hogs to fresh pasture every two months and only using that area to raise pigs every second year. Even so, we wormed those animals with chemicals every season. Trichinosis is the worse because it depends on a part of its life cycle for being ingested by the pig. It is also one of the most harmful pathogens an animal can pass to human by eating the hog's flesh. Going to concrete floors has for the most part broken that cycle making commercial hogs much safer for catching trichinosis. It is not the only parasite to look out for, Ring worm, round worm and tape worms all have a similar life cycle process and inflict a lot of lost yield in hogs that are infected. Look at all the issues before pursuing pasture raised and fed hogs.

  • @dantheman9135
    @dantheman9135 Год назад +1

    ThankQ

  • @Lithilic
    @Lithilic Год назад

    When people talk about rye, I don't know if they are talking about rye grass, or the type of rye that is used to grow the cereal grain. I'm assuming this is rye grass.

  • @ashleehouse5204
    @ashleehouse5204 4 месяца назад

    I have that in my yard but didn't know what it was!

  • @flavortown7652
    @flavortown7652 Год назад

    Bakers green acres got a video upgrade, nice

  • @larrysheetmetal
    @larrysheetmetal Год назад +5

    I was thinking of growing beets, turnips , peanuts etc an setting up pen size wire fencing and just letting then root them out ?

    • @TheAnyoneCanFarmExperience
      @TheAnyoneCanFarmExperience  Год назад +3

      try it out! pigs are great harvesters if something is eatable they'll find a way to get it.

    • @teebob21
      @teebob21 Год назад +1

      They'll do it. We plant mangels (giant beets) for winter forage here in Flyover Country.

  • @toddfraisure1747
    @toddfraisure1747 Год назад +1

    Sounds like good advice. What do you think about Kale?

    • @TheAnyoneCanFarmExperience
      @TheAnyoneCanFarmExperience  Год назад +2

      We have used kale in the mix on the fields. This video features rye, but we plant a lot of different forages throughout the year. Mark will be answering your question in the live stream show on Tuesday, February 1st if you'd like more information.

  • @ktj9367
    @ktj9367 4 месяца назад

    What kind of rye seed you planted? Can you put a link and let me know where to buy it. Thanks a lot.

  • @timberlinetactical
    @timberlinetactical Год назад +1

    Just found the channel nice work guys. Where are you located at? Sorry if you said that didn’t catch it

  • @chefevilee9377
    @chefevilee9377 6 месяцев назад

    Do you think that the iberico pig would be a forger like this one?

  • @magnumguy96
    @magnumguy96 Год назад

    What type of rye and when was it broadcast?

  • @rosewhite---
    @rosewhite--- Год назад

    You are basically using the Norman Three Field System that has ensured fields around my village have been continously croppoing for over 1,000 years.

  • @JeffGray
    @JeffGray Год назад

    20,000 lbs of fresh vegetation. Do you have numbers for DM (dry matter)? That's what calculations are usually based on when determining the amount of feed offset.

  • @kylebaker7523
    @kylebaker7523 Год назад

    Excellent video!

  • @nickdial8528
    @nickdial8528 Месяц назад

    I raise pigs in Northern Az.
    Would this grow at a 6000ft high desert environment?

  • @tickcreekranch
    @tickcreekranch 7 месяцев назад

    His estimated production is kind of misleading. What matters is the DM not the green weight. Most of what he weighed was water(about 80%). Annual Rye produces between 1 and 3 tons per acre not including roots. Just something to consider….Great vid none the less👍

  • @troywood7170
    @troywood7170 5 месяцев назад

    Are you talking about rye grass or cereal rye?

  • @geraldc5165
    @geraldc5165 5 месяцев назад

    You feed your pigs dirt? Most of the weight from the rye you weighed was dirt. How do you harvest rye with the roots on?

  • @DanielH-ih3by
    @DanielH-ih3by 4 месяца назад

    I was thinking of getting customers who want to buy pigs to prepay and later going to an auction and sell those pigs to clients. Maybe you guys can take that method. Best thing is to post ads online of pigs for sale and to test the market. Ive had farm toys since before i could walk and always dreamed of owning a farm. Maybe i can even get a contract with Farmer John or a beef company and they can pay me to raise their Product!!!! Dont tell me the sky is the limit when there is footsteps on the moon. Welcome to the University of RUclips, i will start a youtube channel soon of a rookie going for the American Dream

  • @BroqueCowgirlHomestead
    @BroqueCowgirlHomestead Год назад +2

    @YogiHollowFarm
    Something you might consider for your piggies.

    • @YogiHollowFarm
      @YogiHollowFarm Год назад

      Thank you! Will check it out!

    • @BroqueCowgirlHomestead
      @BroqueCowgirlHomestead Год назад

      @@YogiHollowFarm I typo'd your name, that's why you didn't see it lol 😆 (I fixed it tho)

  • @peterclark6290
    @peterclark6290 Год назад +4

    Suggestion: get some Regenerative Agriculture in your reading list. Roto-tilling loses a lot of essential elements, so rotate your animals in smaller paddocks (internal electric fencing is cheap, movable, you have control, animals teach themselves to stay away) and let microbiology deal with the manure where it fell. Get into making compost teas and spraying techniques to accelerate plant growth and the biology in the soil so it becomes even more productive. Add legumes, higher succession grasses, forbs to your seed mix (each extracts different airborne nutrients) to build up soil health. Include turnips, carrots, any tubers in that mix. Avoid leaving bare earth, leave a plant residue (humus) on your paddocks to protect, cool & retain water in the soil.

    • @cletushatfield8817
      @cletushatfield8817 Год назад

      I don't know their context but sometimes compromises are necessary. For example, I think a huge reason my neighbor moves the cattle to a nearby feedlot is because the road to the main pasture is only seasonally accessible. Tilling might just be a stand-in until they get chickens to do the work. Or maybe they don't want to mess with chickens. There are many approaches and lifestyle has to be included in the calculation.

    • @peterclark6290
      @peterclark6290 Год назад

      @@cletushatfield8817 Understood. But the soil, it's health, microbial activity, worm population, etc. is the main game in all farming. Hence the comment.

    • @cletushatfield8817
      @cletushatfield8817 Год назад +2

      @@peterclark6290 From what I understand (little) the depth of tilling matters. There's an enormous difference between a 1" depth and an 8". I suppose a compromise in this video might be to skip the tilling and just use the drag. Probably easier to just get a mobile chicken coop and 12 birds. Personally, I'd be avoiding bare dirt like the plague.

    • @peterclark6290
      @peterclark6290 Год назад +1

      @@cletushatfield8817 Sounds on track, let the soil do what it does best. It's worth your time taking in RUclips advice from Gabe Brown, Joel Salatin, Ray Archuleta, or Drs. Elaine Ingham, and David Johnson. Cheaper in the long run too.

    • @knoll9812
      @knoll9812 8 месяцев назад +1

      Ground is already churned up. I suspect he uses the rototiller because that is what he has. Probably only using to level the top few inches for the seed.

  • @dopamine-clothing92
    @dopamine-clothing92 Год назад

    Hey Joe

  • @randomjack477
    @randomjack477 2 месяца назад

    Is the meat flavour gamey or fishy compared to commercial fed feed pigs? If you have a comparison...

  • @bruceking5173
    @bruceking5173 Год назад

    green forage, like what you're weighing, is between 80 and 90% water. If you cut it and dried it to 15% moisture hay you'd have about a ton of hay off your quarter acre. Cut, baled and stacked on a buyers trailer, that ton of hay is worth about $150.
    Pigs do eat green grass, and a lot of folks claim to have raised their pigs on "pasture", and in fact some breeds of pigs do pretty well - american guinea hogs, for instance. kune kune hogs. But not mangalitsa. Feed 'em a complete ration and give them access to forage, super. Feed them on forage alone, particularly a quarter acre of forage, and you'll have bare ground and skinny pigs pretty quick.

    • @TheAnyoneCanFarmExperience
      @TheAnyoneCanFarmExperience  Год назад +1

      Hi Bruce, Thanks for sharing your experience. I recommend you view our other channel Baker's Green Acres - Our managlitsa pigs have lived off forgage for 10+ years. They do really good. We have 10+ years of documentation to support our theory.

    • @bruceking5173
      @bruceking5173 Год назад

      @@TheAnyoneCanFarmExperience So you feed your pigs nothing other than what is grown on the ground that you run them on? How many pigs are you stocking per acre? Looking at your growing season by zip code - 49665, it seems pretty short. Last frost is listed as june 2, first frost as sept 12.

  • @chucklucas8747
    @chucklucas8747 Год назад

    Black eye peas make great pig chow

  • @rodneyharouff5739
    @rodneyharouff5739 Год назад

    rye grows like weeds here too

  • @stevelong9328
    @stevelong9328 Год назад +1

    at first I thought you were a bs'er, then you revealed your sources from a mature man who appears to be successful at this.

    • @TheAnyoneCanFarmExperience
      @TheAnyoneCanFarmExperience  Год назад +1

      Thanks for watching. You can find more videos on the Bakers Green Acres RUclips page. We have been farming for few years. :)

  • @felixkangwa3315
    @felixkangwa3315 Год назад

    U can plant the magic plant... Moringa; plentiful nutrients.

  • @az55544
    @az55544 Год назад

    Have you tried seeding on top of the manure without turning under to avoid tillage?

    • @TheAnyoneCanFarmExperience
      @TheAnyoneCanFarmExperience  Год назад +1

      Sometimes it works to let the pigs do the tilling, and in the spring the frost will seed the rye into the ground. But sometimes they aren't as ambitious or leave the ground too pitted for good germination due to uneven water spots and so on. Thanks for a good question.

  • @thelittlethingskate9567
    @thelittlethingskate9567 5 месяцев назад

    What kind of rye does he plant?

  • @luisalfonso1517
    @luisalfonso1517 8 месяцев назад

    where do you relocated the pigs when you used their field with manure?

    • @TheAnyoneCanFarmExperience
      @TheAnyoneCanFarmExperience  7 месяцев назад

      The larger field is broken into 3 sub fields that the pigs rotate through. Thanks for watching!

  • @dqsj41
    @dqsj41 4 месяца назад

    Specifically, what type of ryegrass is that?. The ryegrass that we use only grows about five or 6 inches and never seeds. Any information would be helpful. Thank you.

    • @TheAnyoneCanFarmExperience
      @TheAnyoneCanFarmExperience  3 месяца назад

      Just plain winter rye from the feed store. Nothing special. Have you had your soil tested? Good luck to you!

  • @zuzannaleszczynska7425
    @zuzannaleszczynska7425 Год назад

    Howdy, mind if I ask, what camera do you use for your videos??

  • @hurtshaven952
    @hurtshaven952 Год назад +1

    Does he use any other crops besides the rye and field peas?

    • @TheAnyoneCanFarmExperience
      @TheAnyoneCanFarmExperience  Год назад +2

      Yes also use turnips. You can find additional videos on the Bakers Green Acres youtube channel.

  • @Muriuki218
    @Muriuki218 Год назад

    How many pigs can you keep with that quarter acre

  • @georgeparrault9945
    @georgeparrault9945 Год назад +2

    My Grandparents didn’t buy Commercial Feed, They Would Chop, and Pull Grass, and Weeds to feed Their Pigs as well a Hand full of Hardwood Stove ashes for Worming the Pigs. Then when Their Corn Was Mature they would Feed Their Corn to finish them.

    • @TheAnyoneCanFarmExperience
      @TheAnyoneCanFarmExperience  Год назад +1

      good old fashioned know how!

    • @TrickleCreekFarm
      @TrickleCreekFarm Год назад +1

      And the difference with GMO varieties available now and the heirlooms of decades ago. I’ve read many old accounts of how corn was a whole food with many livestock, unfortunately, corporate greed has radically changed the nutritional value & face of agriculture today.

  • @farnofamilyfarm
    @farnofamilyfarm Год назад +4

    Is rye for the Mangalica pigs only? Or can you feed to any pig?

    • @TheAnyoneCanFarmExperience
      @TheAnyoneCanFarmExperience  Год назад +2

      Mangalica pigs do really well on it and will utilize the rye better than most breeds but any pig will eat and enjoy the green grass

  • @nialmurray2568
    @nialmurray2568 Год назад

    Not knocking what you’re doing at all but measuring yield on a dry matter basis is a far better compass as you’re dry matter yield was probably closer to.06 pounds per square foot.

  • @YawehthedragondogofEL
    @YawehthedragondogofEL Год назад +10

    I've been spreading wild spinach (genopodium album) which is actually a type of quinoa on my little two acres for my AGH pigs. If you water it a little it grows 15 foot high. I pull from the lower parts of the plant to give to pigs and let it keep growing. I don't weigh it or anything but man its a lot of free nutritious chow for the pigs. I've never seen a plant that grows like genopodium. No tilling of any kind required to plant it. Just pull the seeds off in the summer and toss them on a somewhat sunny spot and wait till next spring. I live in Oklahoma by the way, with long hot summers. Genopo LOVES the heat.

    • @TheAnyoneCanFarmExperience
      @TheAnyoneCanFarmExperience  Год назад +2

      That's a great forage option! When one starts looking for these alternatives they are abundant in all ways. Thanks for sharing!

    • @mp77744
      @mp77744 Год назад +2

      we call that pigweed where I'm from. Maybe that explains why!

    • @rosewhite---
      @rosewhite--- Год назад

      Genopodium is actually called Fat Hen in Englnad and is teated as a weed!

  • @stevemilam466
    @stevemilam466 Год назад

    What kind of rye is it?

  • @shawnainslie1220
    @shawnainslie1220 Год назад +11

    So what else are fed to the pigs in their ration? Is this mainly their feed or are you feeding large amounts of grain too? Also what about stocking numbers and how often are they rotated?

    • @teebob21
      @teebob21 Год назад +3

      They absolutely have to get a supplementary ration. Swine cannot live on grazed grasses alone, just as humans cannot live on a diet of just lettuce or spinach. That said...the pigs LOVE their fresh vegetables and graze! Ours busted through an electric fence just to eat a bag of grass clippings that the neighbors dropped off to me.

    • @TheAnyoneCanFarmExperience
      @TheAnyoneCanFarmExperience  Год назад +2

      We also feed small grains in conjunction with the fresh rye, they love both!

    • @shawnainslie1220
      @shawnainslie1220 Год назад +3

      Thank you very much for the reply. I know there are a few farmers out there trying to feed their hogs without bought in grains and feed. One of the main problems most of them have is meeting the vitamin and mineral needs, more specifically lysine. So I've been asking around to find out other people's experiences.

  • @robbysreptiles
    @robbysreptiles Год назад

    That rye is nothing like the rye I spread this fall. Those look like the size of paintballs! Whaylt is the specific name of that seed

  • @infantryblack
    @infantryblack Год назад

    I made a "Turd Buster" to spread out the manure paddies for my cows and pigs. He could use that cattle pannel rig that was shown at the end of the video to knock the manure around and spread the nutrients.

    • @charleswalters5284
      @charleswalters5284 Год назад +1

      That's the job of the worms and dung beatles. What happened, you kill 'em with ivermectin or some other wormer?

  • @chrisshepherd8708
    @chrisshepherd8708 9 месяцев назад

    What about Maize and sorghum with full heads? What doesn't get eaten just gets planted again