let me take this method to voice my opinion: i follow and have followed many utube videos, homestead and construction. of all of these i treasure yalls the highest. while all i have selected are interesting to me, some are greater than others. i really liked some only to have them go bad, using profanity. before i am condemned by the trolls, i acknowledge the constitutional right of free speech. all i can do is leave the site when it happens. i am so thankful for you and ms. rebecca for being decent and respectful, not to mention, very entertaining. i hope all goes well for yall as yall form the homestead yall have dreamed about. thank yall from the bottom of my heart for all the hard work put out doing these videos........g
@@DieselRamcharger lmfao. Silicon valley, not International. Look up section 230, Google owns youtube. You might be surprised to find everything you stated to be false
Your equipment choices don't matter (at least it wasn't a hand spreader😂) you're living how many would love to live... keep up the entertaining videos😊
So impressed every video, you are truly a very hard worker along with your wife. Amazing what you have done in the few years you have lived there. Wonderful job.
I love how you work with what you have available to you. Your little spreader seems to have worked very well for you. Thank you for sharing, and I have been on a binge watching your videos. God Bless from Phoenix.
Good morning Evan, Great job on that neglected pasture. It is neglected no more. I bet it will fill in beautifully. The view from the drone is beautiful. I am happy for you both. The homestead is coming together really nicely. Hi to Rebekah for me.
I will follow this with interest. We have done several pastures over the years and never had any luck over seeding without even a minimal amount of tillage. We have a tractor mount whirlwind seeder, used one growing up on the farm, as well as one for an ATV. This has worked well for crimson clover if you catch the weather right. When seeding without a drill or planter, we follow with a cultipacker. Seed depth is often critical, so no real good one size fits all option. We had a lot of CRP land, so we sold our West Plains no-till drill with grass box a few years ago; wish we hadn't done that; sure need it now.
when every thing starts to grow next year try to mow to the pasture before the weeds start to flower it will take several mowing's to do this but if you prevent the weeds from going to seed you will have less and less weeds with each mowing as the weeds will use up their energy trying to grow and not be able to reproduce.
When I was a kid we grew up on a farm the land owner had a case tractor just like yours actually he had case equipment but it was in a little bit better shape than yours ...just reminds me of the good old times on the farm...I'm now 62...great video
Good luck on that Agrifab....bought one and the gear and assembly parts rusted through completely....used it once to spread fertilizer on my property, stored it in our pole barn over winter and the next Spring when I wanted to use it again, it had completely rusted through. The entire carriage parts were rusted through. I then purchased a new John Deere spreader, which I should have done to begin with, but the Agrifab was a bit cheaper. Two years into the John Deer spreader and we're still good.
Your goats will do a great job "mowing" where you can't. Check out Greg Judy's youtube before spending the money on pasture grass seed. He has been very successful at regenerating pasture, simply by good management..
Absolutely! Put up fence and let the animals in to clean it up. Goats eat weeds, chickens eat weed seed. Way less labor to just put in fence and no cost for seed.
Glade to see someone take interest in abandoned or neglected farm ground, instead of seeing Mother Nature reclaim it. Worse would be a strip mall or development
Hey buddy, I have the same seeder. It works well for an acre or two. Need to drop an few seeds, some fertilizer - it will do the job. Mine is getting quite old and I have bookmark their parts page. Now, as for your dam - get ride of any tree on the back side. Their roots are guaranteed to make leaks
Just an FYI, as I have had to do a similar task on my place. If you can find an old spring tooth harrow (I found a 3 section one for a song), these are great for dragging over the pasture after brush hogging to collect the thatch; everything will grow better once that is removed. Pile it up and let it compost in an unused corner... Get those potholes fixed; that's a good way to tear up a tractor wheel...also, try a 3-point cone spreader for fertilizing/liming/seeding...much easier (that coming from a 60 year old back)...planning to seed any clover (or Korean lespedeza) in? Hope that works out for you...
looks like you had what I had... we call it goldenrod. it grows taller than the clover and grasses and chokes it out. so, when you mow it, all you have left is stems and bare ground. I didn't seed mine. too much of it. I had it(but no longer) in a CRP program that only allowed me to mow 1/3 of it every year. now that I am out of that program and can do as I please, I am going to try to keep it mowed a lot more during the growing season in hopes grass will come back on its own and because it is getting sun, will choke out the goldenrod. first year of that now and so far, so good.
Great start, Evan! I'm excited to see more. If you should decide to get a milk cow, may I suggest a mini Jersey? Jerseys are the most adorable cow in the world, and a mini is even more adorable!💕😄
Great video Evan. Good progress on getting the farm back in shape as a working farm. Must be an earlier video, trees still are yet to turn to the fall colours.
Yeah trees haven't really changed color. But some were losing there leaves already. They should change color soon. We got our first frost the other night.
Keep the weeds mowed so they can't go to seed. It will take a few years but if weeds cant reseed they will eventually die out. It took five years to do this to my lawn as I bought a house with no proper lawn care for ten years. It's beautiful now without chemicals.
Ever seen a scythe? It would be indispensable for hard mowing area. I just got mine and now learning how to cute tall grass and weeds. I. No pro with this anciet tool ut woow it is great. Now heavy gas tri.mer or line to worry with. No barrtery tos needed. It is quiet and efficienct even in the ha ds of a novice 62 old gal.
Fertilize? Soil test? Ph very important too. Orchard and fescue responds well to fall fertilizer. K very important for root development. A roller is good to press seed into ground but the drag will do part of that.
You could, but that would be labor intensive. You would need temporary electric netting and charger. By the time the weeds come back next year hopefully we will have our perimeter fence installed and can let the goats into the pasture to control the weeds.
You did a good job on spreading the seed put some wire tie around at gearbox in a wire tie gate wire time you know where top fence up that works the best with what I found the work to best when I need like something like that small to tie up instead of a zip tie cuz sometimes it gets in a way
Evan it sure opened thing up at least you on what out there now! Great job! Your goats would take care if that field grass! Aren't you glad you keeper both trackor?
Keeping the dam clear of brush would discourage rodents from burrowing into the dam. Mowing more than once a year would help reduce weeds going to seed and give your grasses more sun & rain. Thanks for sharing.
5 head, electric cross fencing, solar powered (Gallagher, all the way, accept no immitations)......buy older, solid-mouth pregnant cows....and, let Stock be Stock....
@@CountryViewAcres splitting that into 2 to three pieces will improve the pasture substantially. Four head of cattle or 2 horses. If the brush was cleared off the land in front of the trees then 5 head. It needs ten bags of phosphate fertilizer, or 1,000 lbs if you have 5 head on it. If the brush isn't cleared back to the big trees then 6 or 7 bags.
I like to do my over-seeding on my "poor" lawn in early March when the soil is soft and damp. After over-seeding, I usually run over the lawn with my tractor tires to try to push the seed into the top layer of dirt. Seems to work pretty well from what I can tell; otherwise, over-seeding just did not yield very good new growth.
Kinda weird watching this video. I have been doing the exact same stuff clearing pastures here on our homestead -- except that the current pasture we are working on ( 2 1/2 acres) is pure orchard grass. With horses it is recommended that pastures have a single grass and single legume because horses are browsers and will waste more if given a choice. Our land is 100% hill so a ton of clearing was done with a brush cutter -- after we had a forestry mulcher come in and clear as many trees as possible. We girdled a lot of the bigger trees and are slowly removing them. Lots of work! We have that same Agra Fab spreader. It saves time, but is very flimsy! We did a one acre pasture with a push spreader (on very hilly land) and it was no fun at all, but if I had it to do again I would not by that same pull-behind spreader.
Eventually the Fescue will overtake the Orchard Grass. Your best bet in the Mid South and Lower Midwest is to just overseed with Legumes, particularly White Clover, if your Goal is to reduce the effects of the Endophytes in the typical Fescue Pasture. You've got the place looking good. Keep the Mice out of the leftover seed, Buddy!!
I have a 25% white, 75% red clover mix. I was going to frost seed it next year. Probably mix the left over orchard grass with it when I spread it. I spread that clover mix in the planting pasture grass video and it came up way better than the grass seed.
@@CountryViewAcres that's great to see! Buy some Breds or Pairs outta Kentucky..... they're Dry as a Popcorn Fart.....and them Cattle will do well on the Pasture you've got started.
Since a piece went missing after its first use, id return the spreader. You can find 3pt spreaders on craigslist for $400 -$500 and theyre much better built. Tractor supply sells them new for not much more. But i have to second what others have said, just fence around the pasture and let the goats have at it.
I wanted that 5 bushel style spreader, but the pull behind version. They are like $750 brand new. Couldn't find a used one. Ended up with the agra-fab. I hopefully I will get my money's worth out of it.
they also eat yoer new trees that you planted 3 years ago ... and they arent very fast unless you have a good size herd . they may eat all available food and and wander over to your nieghbors garden . i speak from experience ! still love em,,
since you are a new farmer I will say you have done a good job. I would have pushed all those trees from behind the dam back to the big trees. And run a chipper and chipped up especially the evergreens. Cattle like shade, which the larger trees provide, but smaller trees just steal pasture and acreage. Yes you would have had to use your powersaw a bunch more, but those evergreens poison pasture, and don't offer shade for cattle.
Thanks for the video of congrats to your Rehabilitation of your pasture. I guess my two cents for you would be maybe that's grass seeder was not designed to be towed at such a high rate of speed. I'm figuring that it's top speed was designed for that of a typical garden tractor and not a $3,000 four-wheeler like I believe you were using.
Someone may have mentioned this ( as I did not want to read all 100+ comments) If you have an agricultural extension office or a coop near by, they sometime have a seed drill you can barrow or rent. Using the seed drill will help germination a lot.
I'm buying 31 acres in NH soon. Part of it is a huge field that was used for cattle decades ago. The amount of ticks in there is epic. I'm looking for a way to take it back. I may invest in a flail mower for my ATV. What I really want to do is have the fire department do some training and do a controlled burn and start over.
I see mustard and ragweed that is like 7 feet tall, that’s nasty stuff. Break any sheer pins? The CRP program made us take weed wackers to get thistle off of rock piles. 3 quarters, did it, Suburban came back with 2 good tires.
Are kidding me, It just fell apart? We can't have nothing good. Your going to use the handheld spreader, until I feel you've learned a lesson. Good video sir.
You install some temporary electric fence and let loose the goats, they will clear any weeds in just 3-4 days; reduces your feeding costs and your goats will get some natural green/vegetation.
Two years in from this video, how's the pasture doing? what kind of a catch did you get on the broadcast seeding? Are you doing rotational grazing now?
You will find much more flexibility in using good quality electric netting and utilize your goats instead of feeding expensive hay. you have the power to run the netting from the barn or you can use solar. You should take some time and watch a few videos from Greg Judy. He runs cattle, sheep and chickens with electric netting with no trouble. I too, run my goats and sheep with netting and no trouble, I will be using double strand for cattle and pigs next year while implementing rotational grazing. Sheep, and cattle are grazers but goats are browsers and will knock down tall weeds and shrubs with no trouble, they will actually climb if they have a chance....
I enjoy Greg Judy's videos. I have binge watched several. But working full time I can't move animals daily. I weekly rotation would suit me better. Right now I need to get my perimeter fence installed before I can really let the goats out on pasture. Hopefully we will get the fence done this winter.
Check in your Extention Center my son takes care of the equipment they lone out to farmers and land owners needing help to reseed their land. They are a great resourceful center for each area covered by each area they are in. They also know what type of seeding is best in your area. They also have wonderful information for homesteaders and check valves and gauges on canners. They will also check water levels and safety for your wells and ponds. They have information on trees and restocking of ponds. Check them out they are such a wonderful resource few people use or know about.
How successful do you think the overseeding was? Do you think you got good germination and growth from that? We're in the process of buying 20 acres and will have pasture that needs reclaimed and revitalized.
Most county ag agents have connections to rental opportunities for farm equipment. A no till drill might have been a better choice for overseeding that grass. Just a thought. ;-)
Where the corrugated panels are on the back of the barn, is an addition and not the original barn. I plan on turning that area into a lean-to that is semi-open in the back. Use it to feed hay and for livestock to bed down in. Probably replace the metal with wood. Then paint the barn.
Nice job reclaiming that area. I just found your channel so this is the first vid of yours I've seen. Those agrifab seeders are junk. From what I'm reading in the comments you have goats...my opinion is you'd have been better off investing in some Premier one electric net and a charger and grazing that off in rotational sections, hand seed behind them as they rotate. With goats and other livestock on hand or coming onto the farm, you would have gotten much more use out of the portable fencing equipment than you'll get out of that crappy little seeder and those things are pricey for what they are. The livestock make efficient use of the forage, less wear and tear on equipment and safer in questionable areas. I keep sheep and operate 2800 acres so I have a little experience on a farm. I'd direct you towards Greg Judy's channel if you're getting into livestock. Greg Judy Regenerative Rancher.
Have you thought about having sheep on your land, because they will keep your grass at a good level and stop weeds as well. Then once the sheep have made your field have nice and even growth. You should be able to grow some Hay! Take care now.
Well hate to tell this to kill weeds with have to spray them once they have started, they come back next year but puts some goats on it the clean it up in a few months bush hog and rip it and resow with grass.
that was a waste of time and seed, long grass and un-broken sod, when I did mine I cut the grass really short and seeded it, it did nothing, so I bought more seed and cut the grass really short to were the blades were shaving the dirt again and put weight on my harrow tooth and dragged it around to cut slots in the sod, then seeded it with 15lbs to the acres and put down 300 Lbs of fertilized over 20 acers, then pulled my 500 Lb roller over it, and it came up good. just putting seed in long grass with out braking the sod up in lines it can not begin to sprout, and the more the steers and calve brake up the ground walking on it wet, helped make it spread out
I tried dragging the pasture with the chain harrow teeth down. But it clogged with all the grass clippings. I didnt have a good way to clear the grass from it without a lift for the chain drag. So I gave up on that. The ground was too soft to mow it back down. I only had 1 afternoon free and just ended up spreading the seed. I know only a small amount will germinate. But that is the nature of overseeding.
as long as you are aware only a very small amount will germinate. even if you had a small disk to pull over the ground once would do wonders to were the seed could wash into and grow, but it has to be cut as short as you can even kicking up dirt.. any time I have tried anything short of that, it has been a total fail.. and still a total fail trying to get alfalfa mixed in to grow, I have bough 2 50Lb bag of it a 2 different times at $390 cnd a bag, and nothing
let me take this method to voice my opinion: i follow and have followed many utube videos, homestead and construction. of all of these i treasure yalls the highest. while all i have selected are interesting to me, some are greater than others. i really liked some only to have them go bad, using profanity. before i am condemned by the trolls, i acknowledge the constitutional right of free speech. all i can do is leave the site when it happens. i am so thankful for you and ms. rebecca for being decent and respectful, not to mention, very entertaining. i hope all goes well for yall as yall form the homestead yall have dreamed about. thank yall from the bottom of my heart for all the hard work put out doing these videos........g
you can just block people you dont like. and there are no constitutional rights on an international privately held platform. just fyi.
@@DieselRamcharger lmfao. Silicon valley, not International. Look up section 230, Google owns youtube. You might be surprised to find everything you stated to be false
Let me add my support to this comment ... in this world of "let it loose," it is nice to see and hear down-to-earth, decency.
Your equipment choices don't matter (at least it wasn't a hand spreader😂) you're living how many would love to live... keep up the entertaining videos😊
its pretty amazing how quick nature takes over when left undisturbed
So impressed every video, you are truly a very hard worker along with your wife. Amazing what you have done in the few years you have lived there. Wonderful job.
You have a lovely farm. I look forward to watching you grow your homestead.
You obviously know what you're doing, combined with a great work ethic. Fantastic drone footage, too. Good job!! (:
Evan and Rebekah are indeed, hard working; and Evan has a great sense of camera shots and he works very hard to get them.
I love how you work with what you have available to you. Your little spreader seems to have worked very well for you. Thank you for sharing, and I have been on a binge watching your videos. God Bless from Phoenix.
Looks good Evan, it’s getting more like you folks want it to be ! Thanks for sharing with us.
I needed this as I am moving back home to the farm.
Drone up sky shows how beautiful small farm with small lake is!!
Have enjoyed these videos--binged viewed till I caught up--whatever you can afford at the time is YOUR choice not --Ours--ty for each one.
Hi..... Country View Acres, thank you for sharing your video homestead 👋 bye 👋 bye 👋 bye 👋 🎥👍👍👍
Good morning Evan, Great job on that neglected pasture. It is neglected no more. I bet it will fill in beautifully. The view from the drone is beautiful. I am happy for you both. The homestead is coming together really nicely. Hi to Rebekah for me.
We just bought our first farm and close escrow in about 3 weeks this video was helpful thank you
Man you have a beautiful piece of property.
I will follow this with interest. We have done several pastures over the years and never had any luck over seeding without even a minimal amount of tillage. We have a tractor mount whirlwind seeder, used one growing up on the farm, as well as one for an ATV. This has worked well for crimson clover if you catch the weather right. When seeding without a drill or planter, we follow with a cultipacker. Seed depth is often critical, so no real good one size fits all option. We had a lot of CRP land, so we sold our West Plains no-till drill with grass box a few years ago; wish we hadn't done that; sure need it now.
You have done a amazing job
when every thing starts to grow next year try to mow to the pasture before the weeds start to flower it will take several mowing's to do this but if you prevent the weeds from going to seed you will have less and less weeds with each mowing as the weeds will use up their energy trying to grow and not be able to reproduce.
Very nice. Your place is shaping up to be a VERY fine piece of property (not that it already wasn't).
When I was a kid we grew up on a farm the land owner had a case tractor just like yours actually he had case equipment but it was in a little bit better shape than yours ...just reminds me of the good old times on the farm...I'm now 62...great video
Good luck on that Agrifab....bought one and the gear and assembly parts rusted through completely....used it once to spread fertilizer on my property, stored it in our pole barn over winter and the next Spring when I wanted to use it again, it had completely rusted through. The entire carriage parts were rusted through. I then purchased a new John Deere spreader, which I should have done to begin with, but the Agrifab was a bit cheaper. Two years into the John Deer spreader and we're still good.
That seeder with work great on your small TYM tractor, it works great on my John Deere 1023e.
Great work done going to look good when grass grows.
Your goats will do a great job "mowing" where you can't. Check out Greg Judy's youtube before spending the money on pasture grass seed. He has been very successful at regenerating pasture, simply by good management..
Absolutely! Put up fence and let the animals in to clean it up. Goats eat weeds, chickens eat weed seed. Way less labor to just put in fence and no cost for seed.
Glade to see someone take interest in abandoned or neglected farm ground, instead of seeing Mother Nature reclaim it. Worse would be a strip mall or development
Hey buddy, I have the same seeder. It works well for an acre or two. Need to drop an few seeds, some fertilizer - it will do the job. Mine is getting quite old and I have bookmark their parts page. Now, as for your dam - get ride of any tree on the back side. Their roots are guaranteed to make leaks
Just an FYI, as I have had to do a similar task on my place. If you can find an old spring tooth harrow (I found a 3 section one for a song), these are great for dragging over the pasture after brush hogging to collect the thatch; everything will grow better once that is removed. Pile it up and let it compost in an unused corner...
Get those potholes fixed; that's a good way to tear up a tractor wheel...also, try a 3-point cone spreader for fertilizing/liming/seeding...much easier (that coming from a 60 year old back)...planning to seed any clover (or Korean lespedeza) in? Hope that works out for you...
Do you dig the Harrow in or just sweep the top to collect the thatch?
Great video! Thanks for sharing👍🏻
looks like you had what I had... we call it goldenrod. it grows taller than the clover and grasses and chokes it out. so, when you mow it, all you have left is stems and bare ground. I didn't seed mine. too much of it. I had it(but no longer) in a CRP program that only allowed me to mow 1/3 of it every year. now that I am out of that program and can do as I please, I am going to try to keep it mowed a lot more during the growing season in hopes grass will come back on its own and because it is getting sun, will choke out the goldenrod. first year of that now and so far, so good.
Great start, Evan! I'm excited to see more. If you should decide to get a milk cow, may I suggest a mini Jersey? Jerseys are the most adorable cow in the world, and a mini is even more adorable!💕😄
Nice video, great drone shots and go/pro shots, Illinois is sure pretty!!! You've got a beautiful place!
How did this project turn out? Is there a follow up video? Are you happy with the results of grass coming back and weeds being suppressed?
Great video Evan. Good progress on getting the farm back in shape as a working farm. Must be an earlier video, trees still are yet to turn to the fall colours.
Yeah trees haven't really changed color. But some were losing there leaves already. They should change color soon. We got our first frost the other night.
Best wishes, tthats a. lovely small farm
Keep the weeds mowed so they can't go to seed. It will take a few years but if weeds cant reseed they will eventually die out. It took five years to do this to my lawn as I bought a house with no proper lawn care for ten years. It's beautiful now without chemicals.
Ever seen a scythe? It would be indispensable for hard mowing area. I just got mine and now learning how to cute tall grass and weeds. I. No pro with this anciet tool ut woow it is great. Now heavy gas tri.mer or line to worry with. No barrtery tos needed. It is quiet and efficienct even in the ha ds of a novice 62 old gal.
Fertilize? Soil test? Ph very important too. Orchard and fescue responds well to fall fertilizer. K very important for root development. A roller is good to press seed into ground but the drag will do part of that.
Very nice pasture .
Nice video, I’ve cut weeds out of my pasture a few times this summer and I’m going to frost seed it heavy this spring, I subscribed
Looks great!
Love your videos sir! Keep up the great work...
Another great video from y'all hope your grass turn out great
Why didn't you just pen the goats in small sections and seed after they cleared it?
You could, but that would be labor intensive. You would need temporary electric netting and charger.
By the time the weeds come back next year hopefully we will have our perimeter fence installed and can let the goats into the pasture to control the weeds.
He has got the equipments to clear😊.
Good video. Look forward to the fencing project.
You did a good job on spreading the seed put some wire tie around at gearbox in a wire tie gate wire time you know where top fence up that works the best with what I found the work to best when I need like something like that small to tie up instead of a zip tie cuz sometimes it gets in a way
👍🏻enjoyed it!
Evan it sure opened thing up at least you on what out there now! Great job! Your goats would take care if that field grass! Aren't you glad you keeper both trackor?
Yes, I am glad I kept the tractor. It has been very handy this year.
Keeping the dam clear of brush would discourage rodents from burrowing into the dam.
Mowing more than once a year would help reduce weeds going to seed and give your grasses more sun & rain.
Thanks for sharing.
I am planning on clearing the backside of the dam this winter.
Perfect area for mob crazing a couple of head and section off into several paddocks. That would improve the pasture grass and soil health.
5 head, electric cross fencing, solar powered (Gallagher, all the way, accept no immitations)......buy older, solid-mouth pregnant cows....and, let Stock be Stock....
Once we install the perimeter fence, we will probably use electric fence to make paddocks for rotational grazing.
@@CountryViewAcres splitting that into 2 to three pieces will improve the pasture substantially. Four head of cattle or 2 horses. If the brush was cleared off the land in front of the trees then 5 head. It needs ten bags of phosphate fertilizer, or 1,000 lbs if you have 5 head on it. If the brush isn't cleared back to the big trees then 6 or 7 bags.
Paublus Americanus AMERICANUS what’s the fertilizer for
I did not know those Kasawaskis had GPS but it looks like it was working pretty good for ya!
I like to do my over-seeding on my "poor" lawn in early March when the soil is soft and damp. After over-seeding, I usually run over the lawn with my tractor tires to try to push the seed into the top layer of dirt. Seems to work pretty well from what I can tell; otherwise, over-seeding just did not yield very good new growth.
Kinda weird watching this video. I have been doing the exact same stuff clearing pastures here on our homestead -- except that the current pasture we are working on ( 2 1/2 acres) is pure orchard grass. With horses it is recommended that pastures have a single grass and single legume because horses are browsers and will waste more if given a choice. Our land is 100% hill so a ton of clearing was done with a brush cutter -- after we had a forestry mulcher come in and clear as many trees as possible. We girdled a lot of the bigger trees and are slowly removing them. Lots of work!
We have that same Agra Fab spreader. It saves time, but is very flimsy! We did a one acre pasture with a push spreader (on very hilly land) and it was no fun at all, but if I had it to do again I would not by that same pull-behind spreader.
Eventually the Fescue will overtake the Orchard Grass. Your best bet in the Mid South and Lower Midwest is to just overseed with Legumes, particularly White Clover, if your Goal is to reduce the effects of the Endophytes in the typical Fescue Pasture. You've got the place looking good. Keep the Mice out of the leftover seed, Buddy!!
I have a 25% white, 75% red clover mix. I was going to frost seed it next year. Probably mix the left over orchard grass with it when I spread it.
I spread that clover mix in the planting pasture grass video and it came up way better than the grass seed.
@@CountryViewAcres that's great to see! Buy some Breds or Pairs outta Kentucky..... they're Dry as a Popcorn Fart.....and them Cattle will do well on the Pasture you've got started.
Nice drone shots looking good
My other drone broke a while back. Finally broke down and bought a new one.
Since a piece went missing after its first use, id return the spreader. You can find 3pt spreaders on craigslist for $400 -$500 and theyre much better built. Tractor supply sells them new for not much more. But i have to second what others have said, just fence around the pasture and let the goats have at it.
I wanted that 5 bushel style spreader, but the pull behind version. They are like $750 brand new. Couldn't find a used one. Ended up with the agra-fab. I hopefully I will get my money's worth out of it.
Country View Acres plus it’s nice to be able to use the 4 wheeler instead of having to run the tractor over soft ground.
Your goats would do a great job of clearing the weeds out they love them.
Hopefully next year when it is fenced in the goats will keep the weeds under control.
Yes goats are the best option cause they chew up the seeds so weeds don’t grow much
they also eat yoer new trees that you planted 3 years ago ... and they arent very fast unless you have a good size herd . they may eat all available food and and wander over to your nieghbors garden . i speak from experience ! still love em,,
Nice video alot of work 👍
since you are a new farmer I will say you have done a good job. I would have pushed all those trees from behind the dam back to the big trees. And run a chipper and chipped up especially the evergreens. Cattle like shade, which the larger trees provide, but smaller trees just steal pasture and acreage. Yes you would have had to use your powersaw a bunch more, but those evergreens poison pasture, and don't offer shade for cattle.
Thanks for the video of congrats to your Rehabilitation of your pasture.
I guess my two cents for you would be maybe that's grass seeder was not designed to be towed at such a high rate of speed. I'm figuring that it's top speed was designed for that of a typical garden tractor and not a $3,000 four-wheeler like I believe you were using.
I hope you do an update on your grass out the back of your house. would love to see if you got grass to grow good
Yeah, I probably will in a week or two.
Someone may have mentioned this ( as I did not want to read all 100+ comments)
If you have an agricultural extension office or a coop near by, they sometime have a seed drill you can barrow or rent.
Using the seed drill will help germination a lot.
They do have a drill you can rent. I rented it in the spring. It didnt work very well. They dont keep them maintained.
I'm buying 31 acres in NH soon. Part of it is a huge field that was used for cattle decades ago. The amount of ticks in there is epic. I'm looking for a way to take it back. I may invest in a flail mower for my ATV. What I really want to do is have the fire department do some training and do a controlled burn and start over.
I see mustard and ragweed that is like 7 feet tall, that’s nasty stuff. Break any sheer pins? The CRP program made us take weed wackers to get thistle off of rock piles. 3 quarters, did it, Suburban came back with 2 good tires.
Are kidding me, It just fell apart? We can't have nothing good. Your going to use the handheld spreader, until I feel you've learned a lesson. Good video sir.
If it is that wet take that roller and make sure that the seed has contact with the soil, not sure why u didntseed the clover at the same time
that topper does a nice job and you kept the second tractor too
Yes, everyone convinced me to keep it. Glad I did.
You install some temporary electric fence and let loose the goats, they will clear any weeds in just 3-4 days; reduces your feeding costs and your goats will get some natural green/vegetation.
Looks like you’re missing a clip on that right side axle also. Thanks for all the great RUclips content.🇺🇸🐗🐐🐓🦆
Were you are farmer in another life or something? How do you know how to do all this stuff? Your place is beautiful. Janice
Two years in from this video, how's the pasture doing? what kind of a catch did you get on the broadcast seeding? Are you doing rotational grazing now?
You will find much more flexibility in using good quality electric netting and utilize your goats instead of feeding expensive hay. you have the power to run the netting from the barn or you can use solar. You should take some time and watch a few videos from Greg Judy. He runs cattle, sheep and chickens with electric netting with no trouble. I too, run my goats and sheep with netting and no trouble, I will be using double strand for cattle and pigs next year while implementing rotational grazing. Sheep, and cattle are grazers but goats are browsers and will knock down tall weeds and shrubs with no trouble, they will actually climb if they have a chance....
I enjoy Greg Judy's videos. I have binge watched several. But working full time I can't move animals daily. I weekly rotation would suit me better.
Right now I need to get my perimeter fence installed before I can really let the goats out on pasture. Hopefully we will get the fence done this winter.
Use your animals to clear the weeds. No fuel cost free fertiliser and ground disturbance win win!!!😎
Boy !!! haven't you learnt nothing, You got GOATS now !!
@Werner Voss . 20 minutes you can have a fence set up.. l wouldn't want to spread weed seeds around.
@Werner Voss .. LOL.. So you want ragweed and thistles in you pasture.. OK.
Hopefully once the pasture is fenced the goats will help control the weed problem.
Do you have plans to clear the saplings off the back of the dam? Thanks for getting a larger spreader!
Was going to ask the same as I have heard, trees on a dam are No good.
Yes, trees in a dam are no good. I am planning on clearing it this winter.
@@CountryViewAcres, Thanks !
That looks like good goat feed.
Check in your Extention Center my son takes care of the equipment they lone out to farmers and land owners needing help to reseed their land. They are a great resourceful center for each area covered by each area they are in. They also know what type of seeding is best in your area. They also have wonderful information for homesteaders and check valves and gauges on canners. They will also check water levels and safety for your wells and ponds. They have information on trees and restocking of ponds. Check them out they are such a wonderful resource few people use or know about.
Yes, our extension has a seed drill that you can rent.
Looking good. I understand trees growing on damns are not good.
Yes, I plan on clearing the back side of the dam this winter.
It didn't seem to be a very big area, you should have just disced the entire area, harrow, seed, and then use your cultipacker.
do you think it might have been beneficial to aerate the ground prior to over seeding? love you channel. Thanks
Yes, it probably would have. But I dont have an aerator. But I did search for some used, but without luck.
Next time try a cement mixer to mix the seed up, can do the same with fertilizer to make your blend.
How successful do you think the overseeding was? Do you think you got good germination and growth from that? We're in the process of buying 20 acres and will have pasture that needs reclaimed and revitalized.
15:00 Are you missing the pin for the RHS wheel on the inside? I see one on the left wheel and see a hole in the right wheel but no pin.
You insert a pin to engage the drive gear. Both wheels have the hole, but only one side of the axil has a hole. So it only takes one pin.
Most county ag agents have connections to rental opportunities for farm equipment. A no till drill might have been a better choice for overseeding that grass. Just a thought. ;-)
I rented the country extension drill in the spring. I didnt work very well. It isnt well maintained.
thx
Goats, goats, goats! Just keep rotating them
Hopefully when the weeds try to come back next year. We will have the fencing up and the goats will be eating the weeds down.
One project I would like to see you do is remove the corrugated panels on back of Barn & put them back on Vertically then Paint the Whole Barn
Where the corrugated panels are on the back of the barn, is an addition and not the original barn. I plan on turning that area into a lean-to that is semi-open in the back. Use it to feed hay and for livestock to bed down in. Probably replace the metal with wood. Then paint the barn.
thanks for a great video, how did the germination rates go
Goats, chickens, and pigs. Wait a week then rough up the ground and seed. Throwing seed on really long grass is pointless.
Rough it up how? Harrow it? You ever drink Baileys out of a shoe?
@@AnxiousCowboy you could disc it, till it or just use a drag rake. No I haven't but I feel like curly Jefferson every morning.
You could do with rolling the land to get rid of the ruts everywhere... Look bumpy
Nice job reclaiming that area. I just found your channel so this is the first vid of yours I've seen. Those agrifab seeders are junk. From what I'm reading in the comments you have goats...my opinion is you'd have been better off investing in some Premier one electric net and a charger and grazing that off in rotational sections, hand seed behind them as they rotate. With goats and other livestock on hand or coming onto the farm, you would have gotten much more use out of the portable fencing equipment than you'll get out of that crappy little seeder and those things are pricey for what they are. The livestock make efficient use of the forage, less wear and tear on equipment and safer in questionable areas.
I keep sheep and operate 2800 acres so I have a little experience on a farm. I'd direct you towards Greg Judy's channel if you're getting into livestock. Greg Judy Regenerative Rancher.
Once I get my perimeter fence up I will try rotational grazing.
Have you thought about having sheep on your land, because they will keep your grass at a good level and stop weeds as well. Then once the sheep
have made your field have nice and even growth. You should be able to grow some Hay! Take care now.
Yes sheep is something we are considering
Got the same seeder! That lever you set the amount of seed spread sucks!
Yes, it does.
Well hate to tell this to kill weeds with have to spray them once they have started, they come back next year but puts some goats on it the clean it up in a few months bush hog and rip it and resow with grass.
That is good news, now I will be able to sleep at nights.
Evan, is that the same pasture you burned off last year? If so, it sure greened up nicely.
Yes, I burned it off this spring.
How much of that seed do you think actually made it to the ground with the grass that long?
the weeds will take over.
Very good video man . By the way what's the name of the song at 10:32 thanks
Are you planning to just grow hay. I see no fences so assuming no grazing
that was a waste of time and seed, long grass and un-broken sod, when I did mine I cut the grass really short and seeded it, it did nothing, so I bought more seed and cut the grass really short to were the blades were shaving the dirt again and put weight on my harrow tooth and dragged it around to cut slots in the sod, then seeded it with 15lbs to the acres and put down 300 Lbs of fertilized over 20 acers, then pulled my 500 Lb roller over it, and it came up good. just putting seed in long grass with out braking the sod up in lines it can not begin to sprout, and the more the steers and calve brake up the ground walking on it wet, helped make it spread out
I tried dragging the pasture with the chain harrow teeth down. But it clogged with all the grass clippings. I didnt have a good way to clear the grass from it without a lift for the chain drag. So I gave up on that. The ground was too soft to mow it back down. I only had 1 afternoon free and just ended up spreading the seed. I know only a small amount will germinate. But that is the nature of overseeding.
as long as you are aware only a very small amount will germinate. even if you had a small disk to pull over the ground once would do wonders to were the seed could wash into and grow, but it has to be cut as short as you can even kicking up dirt.. any time I have tried anything short of that, it has been a total fail.. and still a total fail trying to get alfalfa mixed in to grow, I have bough 2 50Lb bag of it a 2 different times at $390 cnd a bag, and nothing