Buckwheat: Best for lysine and protein you can grow for the least amount of effort

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  • Опубликовано: 10 июл 2024
  • In this video, we delve into the amazing benefits of buckwheat, an easy-to-grow superfood that's packed with lysine and protein as natural forage for your livestock. Discover why buckwheat is the best crop you can cultivate with minimal effort and how it can boost your animals diet and health.
    Join us as we explore the world of buckwheat and unlock its potential for your cows, pigs, and pollinators. Don't forget to like, comment, and subscribe for more about regenerative agriculture.
    #Buckwheat #Superfood #cattle #Lysine #Protein #regenerativeagriculture #HealthyEating #SustainableLiving #GrowYourOwnFood #pigs

Комментарии • 13

  • @linalitafarm
    @linalitafarm 12 дней назад +8

    I decided to plant a small plot of buckwheat this year as an experiment to see how well it would do. We are in mountains in Nicaragua, so I waited until the wet season to plant it, when temperatures are a little lower and there would not be as much stress on the plants. So far, it has been doing great. I am very impressed. When we bought this farm, it was inundated with a variety of switchgrass that grows in clumps, which can become huge over time. It also has an allelopathic quality that prevents other things from growing around it. This means that the diversity of forage material for our small flock of sheep is inadequate, and I have been slowly trying to dig up the switchgrass and replace it with some other things that will increase diversity. Right now, buckwheat is looking like a good option. As you say, it is not adequate on its own but seems like a good option for a diverse forage pasture.

  • @chriskoch1241
    @chriskoch1241 11 дней назад +6

    We have grown and used this. It matures super-fast, so you can get at least 2 crops in a season. Just know that if you get a heavy rain during pollination, there will be almost no grain. But at least, if turned under, it make a decent green manure.

  • @homesteadknowhow
    @homesteadknowhow 11 дней назад +5

    I've almost got the trees and logs cleared out of the new pig pasture. We'll be planting buckwheat in one quadrant early next spring. I can't wait.

    • @brycehess6708
      @brycehess6708 11 дней назад

      We plant buckwheat,cereal rye and kale behind our pigs and it thrives..pigs love it

  • @donHooligan
    @donHooligan 10 дней назад +4

    Comfrey: I exist

  • @benjamindejonge3624
    @benjamindejonge3624 6 дней назад +2

    Pancakes, buckwheat honey

  • @carolewarner101
    @carolewarner101 10 дней назад +1

    Wow... I've always enjoyed buckwheat; not sure why I don't eat it more often in fact. But I had no idea how high in minerals it is or how easy it is to grow! We're in an area that sounds like the perfect place to grow it, so I'm going to try putting in a patch of the perennial kind. Thanks for sharing!

  • @jesseherbert2585
    @jesseherbert2585 11 дней назад +4

    Just watch out if you have kidney stones, as it is sort of high in oxalates. All of us could probably benefit from reducing intake. I'm interested in it as rabbits feed...thanks for the video.

    • @ajb.822
      @ajb.822 10 дней назад +1

      Probably, most Americans trying to eat healthy need to be aware of it anyway, as they tend to eat a lot of foods high in oxalates and without cooking them in water which u then discard, either. Which brings us to that : reducing oxalate content by doing that or sprouting, rinsing well & etc. . Also, this isn't just about kidney stones but a variety of symptoms. For kidney stones, I have to wonder if the vit. K in animal foods helps with this too, or only with helping prevent Vit. D supplementation from, along with the calcium it's helping absorb (?), go to kidney stones vrs. your bones etc. ( my Dr. told me this about that).

    • @fiffihoneyblossom5891
      @fiffihoneyblossom5891 3 дня назад

      Rabbits do great on buckwheat

  • @brycehess6708
    @brycehess6708 11 дней назад +3

    Buckwheat is definitely NOT cheap anymore lol...huge demand for cover cropping so not enough supply...2$ a lb in sw washington IF you can find it

    • @mikhailkutsyy
      @mikhailkutsyy 4 часа назад

      we can supply, including organic