Does anyone do it like this?

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 11 окт 2024

Комментарии • 2,8 тыс.

  • @idahotim4083
    @idahotim4083 Год назад +10459

    I feel your pain rocks breed more rocks it is a never ending battle

    • @familyfarmlife
      @familyfarmlife  Год назад +541

      Ya…. I wish they’d just stop😂

    • @micahsattler1268
      @micahsattler1268 Год назад +27

      @@familyfarmlife what part of Texas?

    • @Bowfinger6383
      @Bowfinger6383 Год назад +264

      @@micahsattler1268 the rocky part, obviously 😜

    • @sina892
      @sina892 Год назад +26

      ​@@Bowfinger6383 🤭

    • @mcduck5
      @mcduck5 Год назад +104

      Thats because you are loosing soil to erosion, if you sort that the rocks will stop

  • @silentmayan5427
    @silentmayan5427 Год назад +2068

    The reason there always seems to be rocks is because you dont take them far enough away. They just follow their pheromone trails back to their home by next season.

    • @khaleddoudechnumber1473
      @khaleddoudechnumber1473 Год назад +4

      pheromone???

    • @silentmayan5427
      @silentmayan5427 Год назад +94

      @khaleddoudechnumber1473 Yes, that's how a lot of wild life navigate their environment and find their way back to their nest

    • @khaleddoudechnumber1473
      @khaleddoudechnumber1473 Год назад +5

      @@silentmayan5427 a rock isnt alive. A pheremone is released by a living being

    • @dangerm52
      @dangerm52 Год назад +123

      ​@@khaleddoudechnumber1473 r/whoosh

    • @silentmayan5427
      @silentmayan5427 Год назад +83

      @@khaleddoudechnumber1473 ah, the naivety of youth. I'm jealous.

  • @everestfalls
    @everestfalls Год назад +2377

    The rock harvest seems great this year.

  • @CashisKingtrucking
    @CashisKingtrucking Год назад +1225

    You got to pick up the little rocks too. That's the ones that grow up to be the big rocks.

    • @murkyturkey5238
      @murkyturkey5238 Год назад +23

      Exactly 😂

    • @cowmann3555
      @cowmann3555 Год назад +57

      make sure to cut it by the root so they dont grow back

    • @JosephBallinin313
      @JosephBallinin313 9 месяцев назад +8

      ​@@cowmann3555 yeah, that's how they getcha 😂

    • @ddoubleg
      @ddoubleg 9 месяцев назад +2

      Fr 😂😂😅……

    • @lauraparker6301
      @lauraparker6301 7 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@cowmann3555😂😂😂 exactly

  • @Mani_lift
    @Mani_lift Год назад +174

    8500 acres is like a whole damn county 😭😭

    • @thegreenerthemeaner
      @thegreenerthemeaner 8 месяцев назад +8

      Far from it. 8500 acres around here is getting almost average. Farming 18-20,000, thats getting up there.

    • @chriscarter5846
      @chriscarter5846 7 месяцев назад +2

      That's the average grain farm in Saskatchewan Canada then there are farms like Monette with 150,000 acres

    • @deadknuckles6346
      @deadknuckles6346 5 месяцев назад +2

      @PequenoPipo22 million acres it’s the Mudanjiang City Mega Farm in Heilongjiang China

    • @nathanholy
      @nathanholy 5 месяцев назад +1

      13 square miles is huge ion care what any of you say

    • @gawdlike4075
      @gawdlike4075 4 месяца назад

      @@thegreenerthemeaneryou’re fuckin delusional

  • @wasntme3651
    @wasntme3651 Год назад +3612

    Damn, 8500 acres is massive.

    • @gagegriffith3308
      @gagegriffith3308 Год назад +117

      Yeah ridding that much land of rocks would be impossible

    • @Adamu98
      @Adamu98 Год назад +82

      Crazy thing theres bigger farms in the great plains states.

    • @mikebastiat
      @mikebastiat Год назад +209

      Lots of rich rural folk who dress like they're poor

    • @lyndahammond8883
      @lyndahammond8883 Год назад +17

      Wasn't Me: yeah, well, that's Texas, and don't you ever forget it!

    • @sheldonsimon4484
      @sheldonsimon4484 Год назад +137

      @@mikebastiat huh? They are farmers, so they dress like farmers

  • @Lakeman3211
    @Lakeman3211 Год назад +706

    I’m nearly 60, I’ll bet I’ve moved 2-3 million lbs of stone in my lifetime, sometimes a 12 ton truck in 1 day…and still at it!

    • @RealAthrey
      @RealAthrey Год назад +7

      12 ton truck in a day !!
      💀

    • @tjsbbi
      @tjsbbi Год назад +2

      Keep at it. You'll get all of them.

    • @bluntly-
      @bluntly- Год назад +1

      @@RealAthrey Lobster buyer here , we buy the lobster and will take out lobsters until the crate weighs 107 pounds , so picture a ship out of 200+ crates that just came out of the water , most I ever done was the exact 200 mark and that adds up too 21,400 pounds i lifted within just a couple hours , don’t underestimate yourself nor anybody else !

    • @danielp4507
      @danielp4507 Год назад

      We would fill a payloader bucket 12 or 15 times a day for a week

    • @spartoiss488
      @spartoiss488 Год назад +1

      Its because of tornado ? We don't have rocks falling from the sky in france

  • @robtaylor6806
    @robtaylor6806 Год назад +760

    Rocks reproduce faster in a planted field than bunnies do in the middle of spring

    • @lilsteroids619
      @lilsteroids619 Год назад

      Why though??

    • @DTux5249
      @DTux5249 Год назад +32

      ​@@lilsteroids619rocks heat and cool differently from soil. This means that over the course of the year, they'll slowly creep out of the dirt.

    • @lilsteroids619
      @lilsteroids619 Год назад +3

      @@DTux5249 that's crazy but what's crazier is how did you see my comment through all these other ones

    • @icantgetdubs2433
      @icantgetdubs2433 Год назад

      Maybe cuz u got 500+ likes dumb ahhh

    • @kitsune.u4ea
      @kitsune.u4ea Год назад +3

      @@DTux5249 thank you so much. This confused me so much. I was wondering how the rocks keep coming back. I thought someone littered rocks across fields nation wide every year.

  • @lyndseyfifield
    @lyndseyfifield Год назад +110

    We had an 80 acre farm that I thought was too massive to handle. I am... shooketh at the idea of THOUSANDS of acres!

    • @paxundpeace9970
      @paxundpeace9970 Год назад +2

      For sure they are not without season workers

  • @sebastianjohansen2142
    @sebastianjohansen2142 Год назад +373

    This is the kind of job that slowly consumes your soul because it never ends.

    • @matthunt7390
      @matthunt7390 Год назад +20

      Wrong. It feeds the soul and makes true character!!

    • @griffithwes0074
      @griffithwes0074 Год назад +8

      One must imagine Sisyphus happy

    • @tomsfruitstand6821
      @tomsfruitstand6821 Год назад +2

      @@matthunt7390Especially getting to spend time and make memories with the old man

    • @thelonelystankmuncher8879
      @thelonelystankmuncher8879 Год назад +5

      I'd rather have a manual labor job than a job that makes me sit in a cubicle

    • @rexx2338
      @rexx2338 Год назад +1

      ​@@thelonelystankmuncher8879what's your job

  • @larryrunnels1190
    @larryrunnels1190 Год назад +341

    Rocks heat and cool at a different rate than the soil around them so they will "crawl" to the surface. They make attachments for tractors to pickup rocks.

    • @ImpetuousPorkus
      @ImpetuousPorkus Год назад +64

      Oooh thank you for this info. I kept wondering how rocks seemingly appear out of nowhere every year after picking them up.

    • @larryrunnels1190
      @larryrunnels1190 Год назад +17

      @@ImpetuousPorkus most people with pipelines crossing their property include regular rock removal from leased right of ways.

    • @calebverdu3091
      @calebverdu3091 Год назад +19

      So long as there are nephews and cousins, they ain't buying a rock picker though 💀

    • @larryrunnels1190
      @larryrunnels1190 Год назад +1

      @@calebverdu3091 rocks will be crawling out long after neices and nephews are not around.

    • @calebverdu3091
      @calebverdu3091 Год назад

      @@larryrunnels1190 Oh for sure.

  • @troyrosenbaugh9935
    @troyrosenbaugh9935 Год назад +579

    Did that growing up on our farm. It sucked, and yes never-ending.

    • @erbewayne6868
      @erbewayne6868 Год назад +4

      I started helping pick up rocks when I was six on my grandparents farm.

    • @FastHouseracing
      @FastHouseracing Год назад +2

      Yeah same we had to do that because it was cattle ground and there was a lot of rocks

    • @woozii.capalot
      @woozii.capalot Год назад +2

      How do they get there?

    • @FastHouseracing
      @FastHouseracing Год назад +4

      @@woozii.capalot For me the reason was it was right next to a mountain

    • @FastHouseracing
      @FastHouseracing Год назад +1

      @@woozii.capalot I guess he just has a lot of rocks in his ground

  • @themrchrister08
    @themrchrister08 Год назад +239

    As a Texan I can confirm, the rocks are in fact never ending…

    • @thcall6441
      @thcall6441 Год назад

      I think they multiply or earth burps them up. It’s like the little Dutch boy sticking his finger in the dike. 😊😊

    • @bfuryy
      @bfuryy Год назад +2

      We live on a big rock

    • @shelleyoxenhorn833
      @shelleyoxenhorn833 Год назад +1

      Philadelphia too

    • @rongray4118
      @rongray4118 Год назад

      Northern Nevada... 1975 MB 406 and the rake and blade (windrows)...

    • @rotunda57
      @rotunda57 Год назад +1

      They fall from the sky at night

  • @michellehaley3060
    @michellehaley3060 Год назад +8

    I just want to give a great BIG SHOUT OUT to ALL of our farmers in America...THANK YOU ALL VERY MUCH FOR your hard labors and delicious foods!! God Bless ALL of You!!❤❤❤❤

  • @samgraham6628
    @samgraham6628 Год назад +22

    Old Man I knew who had made a good life and was able to retire would still take his gator out and pick up rocks like that almost every day. They only had cattle but I guess it was just habit for him and something to do. He was 86, half stooped over, deaf, his hands had those giant knuckles from arthritis and he would STILL go get rocks in the field all by himself. Even though he had the money to have somebody completely cater him he still wanted to work. Born and raised hard working Texas man💪

  • @jimzimprich6969
    @jimzimprich6969 Год назад +485

    Rock pickin.
    Oh my.
    My childhood in North Idaho
    If if falls through a pitchfork... It stays.

    • @darnelljackson2160
      @darnelljackson2160 Год назад +24

      I used to pick rocks from my Grandpa's fields in up state NY. I was amazed how they always grew back year after year. LOL

    • @DirtbikesAndMore
      @DirtbikesAndMore Год назад +7

      Hey I found another North Idaho farm boy!

    • @darnelljackson2160
      @darnelljackson2160 Год назад +3

      @@DirtbikesAndMore I grew up just over the line in NW Montana. Sanders County. I miss that neck of the woods.

    • @jimzimprich6969
      @jimzimprich6969 Год назад

      @@DirtbikesAndMore
      P.F. ?
      You ?

    • @20102010b
      @20102010b Год назад +3

      Yoo N Idaho represent. I grew up on a farm just south of bonners

  • @stevecourville199
    @stevecourville199 Год назад +274

    We say in Massachusetts here that they’re our winter crop. We build walls out of them.

    • @ameliaestrada8023
      @ameliaestrada8023 Год назад +1

      Where do they come from

    • @couchpotatoes5158
      @couchpotatoes5158 Год назад +1

      Ikr, there are these stone walls all around, we have one in our back yard from god knows how long ago

    • @kaedensokay
      @kaedensokay Год назад +2

      MA farmers represent!

    • @cjd2275
      @cjd2275 Год назад +1

      I live in Massachusetts where the hell u picking rock potato at

    • @kgw100
      @kgw100 Год назад +1

      Northeast is a different story. Waaay more rocks and less top soil. All that glacial till and river rocks. More rocks than soil usually 😂

  • @WillInWestPalm
    @WillInWestPalm Год назад +151

    My grandpa used to call these "Easter Rocks" to get free labor from my brother and I. His story was that the Easter bunny put rocks out for us every year to pick up. And we were more than happy to pick them up.

  • @tomgates316
    @tomgates316 Год назад +10

    Current method is to fly a drone over the fields, it/they map all the surface rocks by size.
    You take the tractor with the rock picker attachment to the fields and follow the “shortest path” map it generates to drive around and get them with the rock picker. When full, the picker just dumps at edge of the fields in your existing rock piles. No hands ever need to touch a rock.

  • @davidh9897
    @davidh9897 Год назад +3

    I remember doing that on our PA farmed. I told my Grandpa, I think the Groundhogs are really Rockhogs. He laughed really hard. I miss him. Thanks for bringing back great memories with him. God Bless

  • @ItsJustGravy
    @ItsJustGravy Год назад +133

    Had to do this every year as a kid. Good times ❤

    • @kitsune.u4ea
      @kitsune.u4ea Год назад +6

      What do you mean every year? How do the rocks keep getting back into the field? Who keeps replacing your rock pests? Did the migrate there over the winter?

    • @dubb5508
      @dubb5508 Год назад +5

      ​@Kitsùne it's something to do with the ground freezing in the winter.

    • @ItsJustGravy
      @ItsJustGravy Год назад +1

      @Kitsùne they appear out of nowhere I swear 😆

    • @skylaninaction
      @skylaninaction Год назад

      I did this too. terrible times. I do not miss it one bit

    • @ItsJustGravy
      @ItsJustGravy Год назад +1

      @@skylaninaction builds character.

  • @azaradog1804
    @azaradog1804 Год назад +47

    Only 8 acres and a wheelbarrow. I swear they come from the center of the earth!

    • @ozzy_fromhell
      @ozzy_fromhell Год назад

      8 acres sounds like a lot brother

    • @liebendeinsam
      @liebendeinsam Год назад

      ​@@ozzy_fromhell sounds like only. 😂

  • @richardnott9587
    @richardnott9587 Год назад +31

    I thought only we grew them in Kansas. Guess they grow that abundantly everywhere.

    • @matthewcullen1298
      @matthewcullen1298 Год назад +2

      My dad lives on a mountain that is volcanic soil. You literally can't walk 3 feet before the next one. He had to get an excavator in two have a small house yard..i feel your pain Mate 😊

    • @retardationnation869
      @retardationnation869 Год назад

      This happens almost everywhere people farm

  • @DJG184
    @DJG184 Год назад +6

    You can put a "free rocks" sign on the pile. City folks love rocks in their gardens.

  • @idontwannaidontwanna7307
    @idontwannaidontwanna7307 Год назад

    Yup!!! Same here in Queensland 🤜🏾🤜🏾🤜🏾

  • @Skribbles
    @Skribbles Год назад +51

    Farmers are the real heros this Nation needs 🥰

  • @lockraptor13
    @lockraptor13 Год назад +52

    Bro this was my childhood

    • @scotmandel6699
      @scotmandel6699 Год назад +2

      Same here in South Dakota. Milking cows was worse.

  • @MichelleRougier
    @MichelleRougier Год назад +8

    So lucky to own so much land. What a blessing. U could help so many people that have nothing.

    • @cooper8318
      @cooper8318 Год назад +14

      They are. By feeding them

    • @garettdoornwaard4822
      @garettdoornwaard4822 Год назад +4

      You dont get blessed with land. You take out a loan from the bank for it.

    • @MichelleRougier
      @MichelleRougier Год назад +2

      @@garettdoornwaard4822 who do you think led them to the land to begin with and made it possible for the purchase of the land? It was a blessing from the creator.

    • @mrsavagemans
      @mrsavagemans Год назад +6

      @@MichelleRougierland was for sale they bought land with money ooh ohh ah ah

    • @lanceholder4131
      @lanceholder4131 Год назад +2

      @MichelleRougler must be poor to be subtlety trying to guilt in the YT shorts comments… how sad haha

  • @JDCIncAccount
    @JDCIncAccount Год назад +5

    “These rocks keep becoming more *sedimentary than the wheat we grow each year.”*

  • @UMMrealLoud
    @UMMrealLoud Год назад +91

    It's like the rock gnome keeps putting more out there for you, it's never ending!

  • @petek6522
    @petek6522 Год назад +30

    Flashbacks of my childhood... we only had 5 acres of that and hand planting, weeding, fertilize and
    troy built tilling

  • @normferguson2769
    @normferguson2769 Год назад +44

    I ran the mechanical rock picker up and down a field that was littered with 1’ diameter rocks. I dumped the rocks neatly in a pile at the edge of a swamp. At the end of the day they asked “did you actually get any rocks picked up”. I went back often as those rocks popped up faster than onions.

    • @Dontsiponbleach
      @Dontsiponbleach Год назад

      Only a Ferguson could find the rock grabber….

    • @benp3485
      @benp3485 Год назад +1

      Where are these rocks coming from? 😮

  • @dougkalmbach5192
    @dougkalmbach5192 28 дней назад

    Thank you for working so hard. You are great Americans

  • @betsypennock3954
    @betsypennock3954 Год назад +1

    Rocking picking! We did that on the farm in Missouri!

  • @garymurt9112
    @garymurt9112 Год назад +41

    Try that here in Southern Missouri, you can pick that little bed full without moving and without having to move your feet either. You plow a field then pick rock for days in a little 5 acre field.

    • @nothingnothing1799
      @nothingnothing1799 Год назад +1

      The ground is like ¼ clay and the rest is rock cant go down more then an inch or 2 without finding some

    • @garymurt9112
      @garymurt9112 Год назад

      @Nothing Nothing sounds like southern Missouri

    • @juleshunter9214
      @juleshunter9214 Год назад

      Yeah, same here. I'm from northern Lower Austria in Austria.

    • @garymurt9112
      @garymurt9112 Год назад

      @@juleshunter9214 guess if everyone had lush loamy topsoil, we wouldn't know what hard work was

  • @EnriqueReyesJrREALTOR
    @EnriqueReyesJrREALTOR Год назад +10

    Honestly to me that looks like fun! It definitely keeps you strong and healthier than most people get after years of sitting behind a computer.

  • @foxrun3768
    @foxrun3768 Год назад +16

    We did a lot of rock picking years ago. I understand the pain.

  • @Archk1
    @Archk1 Год назад

    My son needs to spend a few summers with your family. God bless you and your family.

  • @Хоумлендер_это_я
    @Хоумлендер_это_я Месяц назад +1

    Just so you know, rocks can severely damage equipment, so it’s a good idea to remove them. Smaller ones are usually okay.

  • @whocanitbenow5368
    @whocanitbenow5368 Год назад +42

    Eight THOUSAND five hundred acre FAMILY FARM? Congratulations on keeping it! That's dedication, EXCRUCIATINGLY HARD work, family loyalty, and determination!That's beautiful! 🙏❤️

    • @toddman22410
      @toddman22410 Год назад

      Looks pretty fucking easy lmfao. Must be nice being rich.

  • @Bowfinger6383
    @Bowfinger6383 Год назад +8

    Ah yes, the annual harvesting of melon boulders. Looks like a good crop this year.

  • @MarkWilliams-vp7xw
    @MarkWilliams-vp7xw Год назад +20

    We use to set the tractor straight in low gear running by itself with no driver while we all walked in front of it and picked rocks throwing them in the bucket

    • @georgemartin4963
      @georgemartin4963 Год назад

      We did the same with our pick-up letting it go alone in granny gear.

    • @electrocanman
      @electrocanman Год назад

      I picked bales out of the field doing that with our old flatbed.

  • @satishkanuri
    @satishkanuri 8 месяцев назад

    I would love to visit your farm one day hopefully.

  • @danw.7935
    @danw.7935 Год назад +5

    My grandfather had to do this while walking uphill to and from school every day.

    • @bobstark4020
      @bobstark4020 Год назад +1

      In the snow, after milking the cows,with cardboard in his shoes. Did i forget anything?? Lol

    • @timwenell63
      @timwenell63 Год назад +1

      Against the wind!

    • @bobstark4020
      @bobstark4020 Год назад

      @Tim Wenell oh yeah, forgot that one.

    • @winkfinkerstien1957
      @winkfinkerstien1957 Год назад

      And it was uphill... Both ways! 😆

  • @Wade-1
    @Wade-1 Год назад +105

    What a blessing

  • @user-NO_ONE840
    @user-NO_ONE840 Год назад +4

    Here in Minnesota, rocks are our second crop pick them in the spring, fall is for the grain crop lol 😂

  • @adrianjesaitis4068
    @adrianjesaitis4068 Год назад

    This was my father’s favorite project to give us kids. I feel your pain.

  • @charlesbaril3038
    @charlesbaril3038 8 месяцев назад

    We do that at least once a year too, (sometimes twice) we also pick up smaller rocks, it takes so long!

  • @Glipsnarp
    @Glipsnarp Год назад +5

    Where I am from we pull up petrified wood that was burried since early 1800s. Frost pushes it up to the surface

  • @colincrew1857
    @colincrew1857 Год назад +4

    America really got family farms bigger than whole countries

  • @loganreed6679
    @loganreed6679 Год назад +4

    Dude I had to do that on the ranch I work on and let me tell you it's 11500 acres in west Texas and the rocks are just the same. Keep on ranchin

  • @LindaKimble-np9gx
    @LindaKimble-np9gx Год назад +5

    Thank you for your hard work God bless you in Jesus name Amen

  • @Will-lh5yg
    @Will-lh5yg Год назад

    Yes, reminds me of the good ol' days growing up on a farm outside Hico. Never worked harder building 5 strand barb wire fence and rock picking only we used a truck.

  • @DVANCEK9
    @DVANCEK9 Год назад +5

    Only a can am would last long enough to get the job done. I’m saying this as a former dealer of both brands. If a can am defender tears up, you did something stupid! If a Ranger tears up you simply looked at it wrong.

    • @nickelkins2434
      @nickelkins2434 Год назад +1

      Deere all the way

    • @chrisnoname2725
      @chrisnoname2725 Год назад

      But why do people use these in a field and not just get a ute (truck) with a tipper tray?

  • @mgdwj
    @mgdwj Год назад +6

    I spent many hours of my childhood doing this same thing. We didn’t have a fancy side by side though. We had a stick shift ford. 7-8 years old I would put it in granny gear and then get out and walk beside the truck tossing rocks in the bed. All for .25 cents an hour. Don’t get me started on chopping cotton.

    • @starchaser1437
      @starchaser1437 Год назад

      What years were you picking stones and cotton? I'm 21 did it back in like 2008-2015 roughly

    • @mgdwj
      @mgdwj Год назад

      @@starchaser1437 this would have been back in the early to mid 90’s.

  • @sidewaysaction9983
    @sidewaysaction9983 Год назад +9

    We built dry stone walls with the rocks in Yorkshire

  • @FS_RopingandRodeo
    @FS_RopingandRodeo 6 месяцев назад +1

    You could also get a stone picker that could be pulled by a tractor. That would make that job a whole lot easier

  • @yarnybart5911
    @yarnybart5911 Год назад

    In Europe they use the rocks to build walls around the fields. Looks great and created partitions and clears the land.

  • @dontmakememad6759
    @dontmakememad6759 Год назад +5

    Wish I grew up in a family that had even an acre of land. Enjoy that freedom and god bless you brothas

    • @angelicamichelle1646
      @angelicamichelle1646 Год назад +1

      That's terribly sad cuz my mom worked 3 jobs for years many years so all of the girls in the family can have one acre of land and the brother of the family wants to piss it away and the girls don't care except for me that bought her own place to live here

  • @sydclark5581
    @sydclark5581 Год назад +5

    Loved that job as a kid. Good money and kept fit

  • @andyburkinshaw2623
    @andyburkinshaw2623 Год назад +5

    Wait wait wait every year??? How the rocks get back 🤔🤔🧐🧐🧐

  • @Ryan-um8ug
    @Ryan-um8ug Год назад

    Ha! I used to pick rocks as a kid every summer for money. Loved it! Insane how many rocks there were.

  • @wowitspj6224
    @wowitspj6224 Год назад

    Uncle was right ! John did farm rocks 😂😂

    • @carbro476
      @carbro476 Месяц назад

      John, the rock farmer

  • @hambuga69
    @hambuga69 Год назад +11

    What kind of seeds do you buy to grow rocks?

  • @daftnord4957
    @daftnord4957 Год назад +4

    this is me and my cousins' childhhod. got 10 bucks a day lol

  • @Svendskommentar
    @Svendskommentar Год назад

    I've done that too. so many times. Our farm was not that big and we used a tractor. :)

  • @the_farmerYT
    @the_farmerYT 8 месяцев назад

    We do the same thing, i swear it rains rocks 😂

  • @duanelappe9767
    @duanelappe9767 Год назад

    Brings back all kinds of memories

  • @richardbird5697
    @richardbird5697 Год назад

    Oh the weekend and school holiday fun as a kid

  • @The-Boys-911help
    @The-Boys-911help Месяц назад +1

    Man sometimes the rock harvest is better than the actual harvest 😂😂

  • @laurawalsh3743
    @laurawalsh3743 4 месяца назад +1

    Normal annual task here in Michigan too

  • @demagchevy
    @demagchevy Год назад

    You ain't seen rocks like we got in Connecticut! We got rocks!

  • @onlyflylikeabeetv
    @onlyflylikeabeetv Год назад

    The rock fields are bountiful as ever, have a blessed harvest

  • @camohawk6703
    @camohawk6703 Год назад

    The never ending struggle of farmers.

  • @ralphbuschman3364
    @ralphbuschman3364 9 месяцев назад

    I remember doing for a friend on his 800 acres. He did actually sell some to landscaping contractors.

  • @shelbyoffrink4424
    @shelbyoffrink4424 Год назад

    We do the same on our farm. Last year our side by side’s front end was nearly off the ground!

  • @CharlesFlanagan-s7w
    @CharlesFlanagan-s7w Год назад +1

    This was a summer job for us kids ,while growing up in potato country,of Northern Maine. And Picking Mustard.

  • @brettkowalski
    @brettkowalski 11 месяцев назад

    Picking stones and rocks was a hobby of my grandpa. We used a backhoe and loader tractor. Every spring. Grandpa loved thunderstorms. His thinking was the thunder "vibrated the stones to the surface and hard rain washed them clean to make them easier to spot".

  • @australisfishing
    @australisfishing Год назад

    I spent countless hours picking up rocks on my grand patents and family's farms. It's good character building work

  • @Fierriel
    @Fierriel 7 месяцев назад

    I have 1 acre of pasture in AZ and have to do this constantly. It’s amazing how many rocks just show up!

  • @nanettewhite3093
    @nanettewhite3093 Год назад

    I and hubby lived on 5 acres in N.W.Arkansas. I would pull up big rocks to make room for planting perineal bulbs and flowers at the edge of pathways or edges of lawn. But I would need to pick out smaller or bigger rocks that seemed to come up to surface. At least every to every other year.
    Limited my green thumb at times.
    Had to dig out flower beds I made near our house. Our dogs would dig up the dirt, with the plants being ruined.
    I finally got 5 gallon buckets. Filled them with the dirt, plants and bulbs. Dogs were too big to be comfortable laying across plastic edges of the buckets.
    Finally had nice flower beds. Never was into growing vegetables, too intimidated by their needs for insect control and forest animal prevention.❤

  • @fritzpipkin792
    @fritzpipkin792 Год назад

    Wow I remember doing this after plowing, we would ride in the tractor bucket field after field before planting beans great memories and taught us how to work

  • @sharonwilbourne7256
    @sharonwilbourne7256 Год назад

    Interesting.
    Michigan field stones are mostly smooth and rounded. More of them surface every year. We pick them up every year too because if a harvester pucks one up it can irreparably harm the equipment as it shoots through. We do the same things with our picked rocks.
    Our rocks can be different kinds and variously colored depending on their source material.
    Our rocks were ground down smooth by the 1-2 mile thick glaciers that once moved across our lands. When the glaciers moved they would pick up rocks and boulders as they moved across the lands. The bottom most part of the glaciers is churned up, picking up rocks, then dropping the rocks as the glacied moved or when they melted.
    The glaciers ground down everything that they crossed over including mountains. Because of the glacier movements, large boulders, called erratics, are found everywhere. Some are buried, while others are fully exposed. The buried ones can cause harm to equipment.
    We have machines called rock pickers which are run through the fields to pick up smaller stones.

  • @Beautaylor12
    @Beautaylor12 3 месяца назад

    We do it like that too!!

  • @KF1_KARTING
    @KF1_KARTING Год назад

    Mate you could build some cool as stone walls around farm where you need them.

  • @michaelfrench3396
    @michaelfrench3396 Год назад

    We grow two crops in Maine. Potatoes and rocks. And I'm pretty sure we harvest far more rocks every year

  • @dougwilliams8602
    @dougwilliams8602 Год назад +1

    Build a stone fence with all the rocks you pick up like we do in Kentucky

  • @rationalexistence
    @rationalexistence Год назад

    Bro owns a whole continent!

  • @sumakwelvictoria5635
    @sumakwelvictoria5635 Год назад

    That's free rocks. Good building material.
    They look like limestone or marble?
    If you guys start building a dug-out hut, root cellar, cistern or a pond - those rocks will be really handy.

  • @thesunnycmoreno8463
    @thesunnycmoreno8463 Месяц назад

    But the best advantage is being told as a kid to go outside and play and have an 8500 acres to go play on it was also mighty nice knowing that we were going to have a home cooked meal, a nice warm bath, and a clean bed for sleeping.

  • @RachelLaws612
    @RachelLaws612 Год назад

    I hate doing that so much. I live in Texas too

  • @deedeewoodard4728
    @deedeewoodard4728 Год назад

    There were so many at my horse barn I started bringing them suckers home and using them for landscaping they look really awesome in a Texas yard LOL

  • @goochi5544
    @goochi5544 Год назад

    Farmers are really unsung heroes.

  • @brandysears3546
    @brandysears3546 Год назад

    Michigan farms are a great place for collecting the newly sprouted rocks from Spring Thaw. However, our rocks look a lot different.

  • @karlatycholiz2284
    @karlatycholiz2284 Год назад

    Those rocks look just as heavy as when we picked 50 years ago what a great work lesson thanks dony

  • @karenpatrech4346
    @karenpatrech4346 Год назад

    When I was young, I asked my Father to bring home rocks in the Tractor's Carry-all Bin. On my days off I would build Garden Edges out of the Rocks, until I had Finished all the Gardens. My Parents had no time to make pretty Flower Gardens so I did that, and also the Home Vegie Garden. At the end of each day on the Farm when Dad had the Carry-all on, it was quick for himnto just collect that amount, rather than spend hours doing it all at once.. But we only had 5 acres on the HomenFarm and 22 Acres on the leased Farm, 2 kms up the road. It belonged to a Widow. She had a Pension so she just leased it to my Parents for $5 a week. This was from the early 70's.

  • @ubcts
    @ubcts Год назад

    I live in West Rockhill township, PA. That ain't rocks, we have rocks.

  • @FinlandGuy747
    @FinlandGuy747 Год назад

    Must be fun during hot Texas summer.

  • @joedunbarjr
    @joedunbarjr Год назад

    Now that's what I call rock and roll.

  • @radroofer
    @radroofer Год назад

    Missouri grows rocks every time it rains