Your farm looks just fine. Not everything has to be the newest or shiniest. Thanks for the tour. It reminds me of our farm when I was growing up. Great memories.
This video made me so homesick for the Midwest. I grew up in Nebraska and Kansas. This is a beautiful, working farm. My grandpa and grandma had their original sod house on their dairy farm when I was a kid. They weren’t running the dairy any longer back then, and the sod house was used for storage after they built (literally) their new house in the early 70s late 60s, I can’t remember. Anyway, watching this tour made me nostalgic and I sure miss living in the country. 😁
Have you boys fully taken over for your dad? You are so blessed to have 3 boys in the family to do all the work💟✝️☮️. There are some tricks to planting trees I learned from a commercial landscaper here in CA. You put in French drain pvc before setting tree in prepared with good soil .... dig a big hole to start. The pvc is a way to water and give fertilizer. The tree will grow bigger and faster.
Nathan has taken over managing the cropping, Kendal the livestock, and Greg the communication, but our farm still relies on Dad for a lot of expertise, management decisions, and of course labor! It is a lot different than it was 10 years ago that's for sure, but we are all working together.
Thank you for the farm tour. Enjoyed the machine shop, it did remind me of my uncle's shop. His was smaller but everything did have its spot too. He had winter wheat inside at the end, in a small bin, and I would always grab a handful as the door was always open. I'd put a bit in my mouth, suck on it for a while, and then started chewing it like gum. It was pretty good stuff. It was his farm after the grandparents, I do miss them all. I remember how quiet it was out there in the country. The drone tour was pretty good and gave a better perspective on your operation. Congrats to all the new arrivals and to your sister's engagement. I bet mom and dad are proud parents. I'm just down the way in Olathe so take care neighbor.
My grandparents owned a farm 3 miles due west of Salemsborg and I spent my entire childhood with them and absolutely loved it. I live in KC now but really enjoy your videos because of all the great memories I have of them. Watching your videos is almost like going back to visit the old farmstead.
Congratulations to up coming birth & to the Engagement & prayers for your families. Very good idea on seperatring Round bales, another young rancher I follow, had a neighbor, accidentally start a fire bushhogging, that wiped out 100+ bales, that he had just baled. Enjoying the Tour & telling of your old ways & New & possible future uses. Raised up in South& west Texas, windmills were fairly common & had noticed on trips to your country, that there wer No windmills. Your Farm is Solid Family, no apologies, for not being fancy needed. Thanks
Thank you so much for the tour. Love watching your videos. Your farm is nothing to be ashamed of. It does its well and has provided for each of your families.
Great farm tour! Congrats on everything you guys do to promote agriculture and farm safety. Since farming is ONE of the most dangerous or hazardous professions, that’s so important to share. Also, it’s so unique to see and learn about a 5th generation Kansas real farm. As an Agricultural Engineer, I’m always interested in the machinery & irrigation aspects. As a retired Agricultural Research scientist kudos on promoting no-till farming. Although, I loved to moldboard plow, its JUST so wrong! One of my early career mentors was an early no-till advocate on the Texas High Plains that’s so similar to your area of NC Kansas. He believed in building soil carbon. He used the analogy of a fireplace that tillage just stoked the burning of soil carbon. One question from your farm tour video. If your farm had NO groundwater, what was the domestic water supply source for your great grandparents? When my family moved back to our family ranch in 1963 into a new house, we were unsuccessful in finding groundwater and relied mostly on farm pond water with cooking and drinking water hauled from the nearby town until a rural water supply finally reached our ranch. Rural water systems were nearly as important as rural electricity, imo. Thanks again for you guys being honest, open, and most importantly openly sharing your Christian faith! I’m fixin (that’s Texan for fixing) to subscribe to your family farm channel!
I subscribe to both your channels and have for quite awhile now! Love them both. My maternal great grandparents had a farm in Athena, Oregon where they raised my grandpa and his 4 older sisters. When grandpa married my grandma they were only teenagers, 18 and 19, back in 1917 and moved to Western Oregon where they had a small farm raising chickens, had fruit trees like cherries, plums, apples and nut trees like hazelnuts and walnuts. They planted corn, strawberries, and other veggies, and had a grape arbor. They had flower gardens and climbing sweet peas and rhododendrons. I grew up in Milwaukie, Oregon next door to my grandparents' home. I loved their property. Congrats on the upcoming new baby next month and the newly announced sister's nuptials! I bet the other babies a year old and under are doing great too! Loved seeing the layout of your farm and where everything and everybody resides!! It's so nice to keep a farm in the family for generations!!
Great vid thanks bros . In England were starting harvest today and looking forward to using new Combines. Great hear how exciting life is getting all the best.
YOUNG MAN IM SO PROUD OF YOUR WHOLE FAMILY. GOD IS SO GOOD. WE ARE IN THE HAY BUSINESS SOUTHERN CA. AND YES DRAUGHT IS REALLY HARD ON US ALL. LIKE YOU FOLKS, WE DO OUR OWN MECHANICS AND JUST ABOUT EVERYTHING ELSE. WE LOVE YOUR FAMILY, THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR THE TOUR AND LETTING US KNOW WHATS UP. GOD IS SO GOOD EVEN IN THE ROUGH TIMES. AND A THANK YOU TO SHELL ROTELLA HEAVEY DUTY ENGINE OIL. IT'S GOOD STUFF WE ARE GOING TO CHECK OUT ((THE PETERSON FAMILY FARM))
Thank you so much for this video. I loved getting to see your entire family farm. I loved that you explained the different areas and showed it all from up above too. Fantastic video Greg!
I choose to give up my nice shop to make it in to a mill and value add to our production, so until this year, I’ve been working in the gravel. I’ve done amazing work in the dirt if I don’t say so myself. It didn’t make sense to put 30+ year old equipment in a fancy heated shop. We’re pretty well updated and upgraded for the next 20 yrs. Hence I’m back in a great shop. Not dicking with augers and 2500-3500 bushel bins (had a lot of them) anymore, put up a grain system. My way of blowing my head off with leveraging is land. I have a lot of kids, so their will be many fingers in the pie when the day comes. It needs to be worth their while.
Hey brothers!! We met in Trotwood Ohio at Sycamore Farm three years ago. All farmers are not perfect and we also have used equipment. Be very proud of your farm and its 150 years of existence
Thanks very much for the wonderful video. Was very informative and interesting. Really appreciate you giving us a tour of the farm and the places you live. Proud of the fact that your home farm has been in the family since the 1800’s. That is great. Once again thanks for the tour. Will make sure I have the Peterson family farm channel pulled up. Your farm and equipment is just fine. Your are comfortable with it and that is what is important. Would not worry about some of the replies you get. Thanks for the tour. Looking forward to the next video. You all take care and be safe. God bless all of you. Thanks. The Iowa farm boy from years ago.
Hi there Steve here. You boys have really been an inspiration. So much fun you have while doing your music videos. I have appreciate your tour and history and videos.
You all have the most amazing videos. I don't know how you all feel about doing reviews but we have a great flashlight we would love to send you if you're interested.
Tell your sister congratulations I hope she made a good Wise choice do it with a prayerful heart it has to last a lifetime and congratulations to you and your baby coming in September love old lady Lucy can't wait to see the toddler doing things helping out
thank you for the your family farm tour look good my family farm is same way it a old farm 100 years old in woodston ,ks and live on the farm all my 52 life and dad and i stell work on our family farm may God be with you on family farm pray for rain shawn mcreynolds
Love your family channel because you guys are God first, family second, farming third. Plus your farm looks a lot like most of our equipment. State of the art $0 payment equipment!
I am wondering about the silo, if you could dry the corn you harvest first you could use the silo for storage. Its not ideal but i have seen it done before.
Do ypur water ponds ever go dry like during a severe drought? With no well that is what I would worry about but I do not know how it works in KS. Thanks
@@PetersonFarmBros thats awesome. I know are ponds have gone dry. Like right now your looking dry but your ponds stay filled? Is that from a natural ground aquifer or does it rely on rain water?
Thank you for the interesting farm tour. It looks like an old 730 John Deere near the irrigation pond. Do you use it for pumping or is it just resting there? They are very nice restorable tractors.
Hi Greg! I am from Bismarck North Dakota. Was raised in West Central Minnesota, sort of near the Millennial Farmer! I’ve got a question for you, do you guys feed custom beef cattle? 🧐🤔 Sincerely, Sam Hanson 👍😎
Nothing wrong with your farm. I would love to take a tour but it’s a long way from South Georgia (14 miles from Florida line 35 miles northeast of Tallahassee). I was born raised on farm. We grew some row crops but mainly raised hogs. Grady county was the 3 largest swine production in Ga and we were one of the largest producers in the county. That’s was during 70’s through 90’s. We now rent out farm out to beef cattle production. We have some shelters that need to be torn down too.
Look into Morton Buildings. They are awesome. They will build you a new shop within your budget. They commit to making your project a reality - and will do what it takes. Marketing wise it's a great investment. It tells people your farm is progressive and doing well when they see new buildings. I'd also put in a little time on the landscaping - you can do that yourself at a low cost, just be creative. Y For example: You can turn a wheel barrel into a cool planter and feature attraction at the entry to your farm.
Why not tell us some of the costs of running the farm. How many acres you own or lease. The price you get from selling cattle, etc. Not after your private incomes but just an overall picture. How much is land worth per acre in your area. Thanks.
Without getting too specific...operating costs are in the millions. Acres we farm are in the thousands. Cattle checks are in the hundreds of thousands. Land is worth about $3,000/acre.
I was thinkin'...why not turn the topless silo into a farm swimmin' hole????....a d why not park the unverferth in that (mostly) empty silo motor shed?
Farming simulator has done millennial farmer's farm as a map as well as the top gear star's farm. I wonder if anyone would ever do your area so they could recreate your music video? Lol
Yours is a family working farm………not a big corporation farm that waste money by replacing almost everything every couple of years. Like you said the farm supports four families. That’s food on the table, roof over your heads, cloths, medical, education and everything else that comes up. Save some for needed farm upgrades and the emergency repairs to equipment.heck in the last fourth something years I haven’t traded in a vehicle until it was at least twelve years old and still looking good and in running conditions.
A banker is the worst partner you’ll ever find. So those nice farms are at risk of losing everything & since history always repeats itself. In our lifetime we will see some of these really nice farms get taken from them. So in that sense you have a very nice farm. Old is usually paid for & still paying you back & leaving you flexible on where you want to invest.
Your farm looks just fine. Not everything has to be the newest or shiniest. Thanks for the tour. It reminds me of our farm when I was growing up. Great memories.
Thanks for posting Very interesting on
Seeing how other folks get er dun
Thanks very much for sharing your farm!
Thanks for the tour. 👍
This video made me so homesick for the Midwest. I grew up in Nebraska and Kansas. This is a beautiful, working farm. My grandpa and grandma had their original sod house on their dairy farm when I was a kid. They weren’t running the dairy any longer back then, and the sod house was used for storage after they built (literally) their new house in the early 70s late 60s, I can’t remember. Anyway, watching this tour made me nostalgic and I sure miss living in the country. 😁
Awesome finally real music 🎶
Have you boys fully taken over for your dad? You are so blessed to have 3 boys in the family to do all the work💟✝️☮️. There are some tricks to planting trees I learned from a commercial landscaper here in CA. You put in French drain pvc before setting tree in prepared with good soil .... dig a big hole to start. The pvc is a way to water and give fertilizer. The tree will grow bigger and faster.
Nathan has taken over managing the cropping, Kendal the livestock, and Greg the communication, but our farm still relies on Dad for a lot of expertise, management decisions, and of course labor! It is a lot different than it was 10 years ago that's for sure, but we are all working together.
Thanks for the reply!
I didn't know about the other Peterson Farm Family Channel. I have subscribed to it now.
Thank you for the farm tour. Enjoyed the machine shop, it did remind me of my uncle's shop. His was smaller but everything did have its spot too. He had winter wheat inside at the end, in a small bin, and I would always grab a handful as the door was always open. I'd put a bit in my mouth, suck on it for a while, and then started chewing it like gum. It was pretty good stuff. It was his farm after the grandparents, I do miss them all. I remember how quiet it was out there in the country. The drone tour was pretty good and gave a better perspective on your operation. Congrats to all the new arrivals and to your sister's engagement. I bet mom and dad are proud parents. I'm just down the way in Olathe so take care neighbor.
You guys are doing a lot right, so keep at it.
I love your shop! There’s a lot of history in it I’m sure.
We have the same type of shop situation. So you’re not alone.
Excellent video loved it 👍
Love that farming and the babies
My grandparents owned a farm 3 miles due west of Salemsborg and I spent my entire childhood with them and absolutely loved it. I live in KC now but really enjoy your videos because of all the great memories I have of them. Watching your videos is almost like going back to visit the old farmstead.
A thoroughly enjoyable video. A wonderful history and it's great you could keep your ancestors dreams alive. Your farmstead is an inspiration.
Congratulations to up coming birth & to the Engagement & prayers for your families. Very good idea on seperatring Round bales, another young rancher I follow, had a neighbor, accidentally start a fire bushhogging, that wiped out 100+ bales, that he had just baled. Enjoying the Tour & telling of your old ways & New & possible future uses. Raised up in South& west Texas, windmills were fairly common & had noticed on trips to your country, that there wer No windmills. Your Farm is Solid Family, no apologies, for not being fancy needed. Thanks
Wow... Lots of History! Cool.
Family First!
This was a well set out video. Explains everything well.
Love to come and see it one day.
It’s realistic family farm!! We have one very similar!! It’s used and that makes it ‘real’!! #alwaysooptimisticallylookingforward
Thank you for the tour. This puts the pieces of the farm in place.
Thank you so much for the tour. Love watching your videos. Your farm is nothing to be ashamed of. It does its well and has provided for each of your families.
Great farm tour! Congrats on everything you guys do to promote agriculture and farm safety. Since farming is ONE of the most dangerous or hazardous professions, that’s so important to share. Also, it’s so unique to see and learn about a 5th generation Kansas real farm. As an Agricultural Engineer, I’m always interested in the machinery & irrigation aspects. As a retired Agricultural Research scientist kudos on promoting no-till farming. Although, I loved to moldboard plow, its JUST so wrong! One of my early career mentors was an early no-till advocate on the Texas High Plains that’s so similar to your area of NC Kansas. He believed in building soil carbon. He used the analogy of a fireplace that tillage just stoked the burning of soil carbon.
One question from your farm tour video. If your farm had NO groundwater, what was the domestic water supply source for your great grandparents? When my family moved back to our family ranch in 1963 into a new house, we were unsuccessful in finding groundwater and relied mostly on farm pond water with cooking and drinking water hauled from the nearby town until a rural water supply finally reached our ranch. Rural water systems were nearly as important as rural electricity, imo. Thanks again for you guys being honest, open, and most importantly openly sharing your Christian faith!
I’m fixin (that’s Texan for fixing) to subscribe to your family farm channel!
I believe they had to haul water! But I might have to check on that.
They prolly hauled some water from the nearby crick/river???
I subscribe to both your channels and have for quite awhile now! Love them both. My maternal great grandparents had a farm in Athena, Oregon where they raised my grandpa and his 4 older sisters. When grandpa married my grandma they were only teenagers, 18 and 19, back in 1917 and moved to Western Oregon where they had a small farm raising chickens, had fruit trees like cherries, plums, apples and nut trees like hazelnuts and walnuts. They planted corn, strawberries, and other veggies, and had a grape arbor. They had flower gardens and climbing sweet peas and rhododendrons. I grew up in Milwaukie, Oregon next door to my grandparents' home. I loved their property. Congrats on the upcoming new baby next month and the newly announced sister's nuptials! I bet the other babies a year old and under are doing great too! Loved seeing the layout of your farm and where everything and everybody resides!! It's so nice to keep a farm in the family for generations!!
Great vid thanks bros . In England were starting harvest today and looking forward to using new Combines. Great hear how exciting life is getting all the best.
YOUNG MAN IM SO PROUD OF YOUR WHOLE FAMILY. GOD IS SO GOOD. WE ARE IN THE HAY BUSINESS SOUTHERN CA. AND YES DRAUGHT IS REALLY HARD ON US ALL. LIKE YOU FOLKS, WE DO OUR OWN MECHANICS AND JUST ABOUT EVERYTHING ELSE. WE LOVE YOUR FAMILY, THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR THE TOUR AND LETTING US KNOW WHATS UP. GOD IS SO GOOD EVEN IN THE ROUGH TIMES. AND A THANK YOU TO SHELL ROTELLA HEAVEY DUTY ENGINE OIL. IT'S GOOD STUFF WE ARE GOING TO CHECK OUT ((THE PETERSON FAMILY FARM))
Thank you so much for this video. I loved getting to see your entire family farm. I loved that you explained the different areas and showed it all from up above too. Fantastic video Greg!
... love the reason hind your sunflower planting ... you and yours are blessed ...
I choose to give up my nice shop to make it in to a mill and value add to our production, so until this year, I’ve been working in the gravel. I’ve done amazing work in the dirt
if I don’t say so myself. It didn’t make sense to put 30+ year old equipment in a fancy heated shop.
We’re pretty well updated and upgraded for the next 20 yrs. Hence I’m back in a great shop. Not dicking with augers and 2500-3500 bushel bins (had a lot of them) anymore, put up a grain system.
My way of blowing my head off with leveraging is land. I have a lot of kids, so their will be many fingers in the pie when the day comes. It needs to be worth their while.
Hey brothers!! We met in Trotwood Ohio at Sycamore Farm three years ago. All farmers are not perfect and we also have used equipment. Be very proud of your farm and its 150 years of existence
It gets harsh in Kansas when it gets hot and humid. When we farmed it was pretty bad during harvest but we still love Kansas.
And I love your videos.
Can’t wait for fun crops
Great tour your farm looks just fine
Loved the tour. We watch both channels. You guys are all great. Love your honesty with your channel.
Thanks very much for the wonderful video. Was very informative and interesting. Really appreciate you giving us a tour of the farm and the places you live. Proud of the fact that your home farm has been in the family since the 1800’s. That is great. Once again thanks for the tour. Will make sure I have the Peterson family farm channel pulled up. Your farm and equipment is just fine. Your are comfortable with it and that is what is important. Would not worry about some of the replies you get. Thanks for the tour. Looking forward to the next video. You all take care and be safe. God bless all of you. Thanks. The Iowa farm boy from years ago.
👍👍 great tour. Thanks
Hi there Steve here. You boys have really been an inspiration. So much fun you have while doing your music videos. I have appreciate your tour and history and videos.
Love the shop, be proud of your roots
Thank you for posting this!
You all have the most amazing videos. I don't know how you all feel about doing reviews but we have a great flashlight we would love to send you if you're interested.
Its been raining 8 days a week up in eastern Canada 😂😂 almost too mutch. Hard to jeep up with bailing and wraping!!!
I enjoy your family. I was just wondering if the farm is supporting all 4 families? Keep up the great work
I love it, it’s a wonderful working farm
Love the barn quilt
Everything takes time
Tell your sister congratulations I hope she made a good Wise choice do it with a prayerful heart it has to last a lifetime and congratulations to you and your baby coming in September love old lady Lucy can't wait to see the toddler doing things helping out
thank you for the your family farm tour look good my family farm is same way it a old farm 100 years old in woodston ,ks and live on the farm all my 52 life and dad and i stell work on our family farm may God be with you on family farm pray for rain
shawn mcreynolds
Be proud of what you have a lot of us would love to have it
Enjoyed your tour!
Love your family channel because you guys are God first, family second, farming third.
Plus your farm looks a lot like most of our equipment. State of the art $0 payment equipment!
Hey thanks for the tour man! I’m gonna Sub. Looks like you guys have a really nice set up!
Nice farm dude!
Me Nicholas and I love tractors.
I am wondering about the silo, if you could dry the corn you harvest first you could use the silo for storage. Its not ideal but i have seen it done before.
I think you have a beautiful working farm, not a hobby farm. Thank you for sharing all the videos!
If you did put a well in for irgation or livestock water, how deep would you have to go?
Y'all sure do got a nice farm and farm operation there Greg
PS my wife maiden name was Peterson here in Texas
Do ypur water ponds ever go dry like during a severe drought? With no well that is what I would worry about but I do not know how it works in KS. Thanks
If the ponds go dry we switch to water district but that rarely happens!
@@PetersonFarmBros thats awesome. I know are ponds have gone dry. Like right now your looking dry but your ponds stay filled? Is that from a natural ground aquifer or does it rely on rain water?
Thank you for the interesting farm tour. It looks like an old 730 John Deere near the irrigation pond. Do you use it for pumping or is it just resting there? They are very nice restorable tractors.
Yes still functions great to back the pump in to the pond and hold it there!
Thanks for the tour! (I watched the ads) to pay.....
Wow 👍 I didn't know you had another channel 🤷♀️
Looks like you are doing well. I won’t mention the cost of the tour you gave us in 2018! Hope you get some rain soon.
Hi Greg! I am from Bismarck North Dakota. Was raised in West Central Minnesota, sort of near the Millennial Farmer!
I’ve got a question for you, do you guys feed custom beef cattle? 🧐🤔 Sincerely, Sam Hanson 👍😎
Nothing wrong with your farm. I would love to take a tour but it’s a long way from South Georgia (14 miles from Florida line 35 miles northeast of Tallahassee). I was born raised on farm. We grew some row crops but mainly raised hogs. Grady county was the 3 largest swine production in Ga and we were one of the largest producers in the county. That’s was during 70’s through 90’s. We now rent out farm out to beef cattle production. We have some shelters that need to be torn down too.
Is your sister and husband going to be a part of your family farm business. I live in south central Kansas and it dry here. Thanks for the video.
Would be super interested in hearing (on either channel) about your family farm during the Dust Bowl of the 1930s.
Hold your horses....Sweden? Now I start be interested....... :)
John deere is simply the best
❤️
cool
You should do a parody of Houston we got a problem
my family started our family farm in 1882 also.
Our shop is a 1920s farm barn. In the 1950s it was converted into a shop.
Still wondering how many acres you farm in total, thanks and greetings from a Dutch dairyfarmer
You can find out lots more about us on our website www.petersonfarmbrothers.com
Look into Morton Buildings. They are awesome. They will build you a new shop within your budget. They commit to making your project a reality - and will do what it takes. Marketing wise it's a great investment. It tells people your farm is progressive and doing well when they see new buildings. I'd also put in a little time on the landscaping - you can do that yourself at a low cost, just be creative. Y For example: You can turn a wheel barrel into a cool planter and feature attraction at the entry to your farm.
Hi, How many acres do you farm?
When I see new and shiny ,I see lots of debt . I don't care if its a rust bucket if I can get it running and working , its money saved.
Do you have farm work with housing provided
Why not tell us some of the costs of running the farm. How many acres you own or lease. The price you get from selling cattle, etc. Not after your private incomes but just an overall picture. How much is land worth per acre in your area. Thanks.
Without getting too specific...operating costs are in the millions. Acres we farm are in the thousands. Cattle checks are in the hundreds of thousands. Land is worth about $3,000/acre.
@@PetersonFarmBros Thanks for the reply mate. Love your video's. Cheers from down Under
Is there Square Dancing in your area? How about your extended family, do any of you square dance?
To the chopper in the best arnalond voice
Wait a minute! Are you Guys a small percent swedish? I am from sweden
Ps: you guys are the best
We are 75 percent Swedish, so a large percent!
questin i thought you guys use to have a 4440 and a 4455 what happend to them i never see them
If you don't mind me asking how many acres do u guys have at your grandparents farm for your cattle from upstate new York brother in CHRIST
Congratulations on baby marriages and all that stuff
Hey
You might be able to sell that silo to some Mennonites or maybe give for free. They took the one down for How Farms Work
I was thinkin'...why not turn the topless silo into a farm swimmin' hole????....a d why not park the unverferth in that (mostly) empty silo motor shed?
Farming simulator has done millennial farmer's farm as a map as well as the top gear star's farm. I wonder if anyone would ever do your area so they could recreate your music video? Lol
You should see my farm. I have pigs. Well some call them 'kids' but whatevs
I knew you ran a lot of cattle, but I didn’t think it was as much as 1400 head
Use cen-pec-co oil it is expensive but a lot better then shell.
I mod for farming simulator I would love to make this map for players to enjoy is that ok
If a farmer’s grass is dying, I don’t feel so bad about my front yard.
Yours is a family working farm………not a big corporation farm that waste money by replacing almost everything every couple of years. Like you said the farm supports four families. That’s food on the table, roof over your heads, cloths, medical, education and everything else that comes up. Save some for needed farm upgrades and the emergency repairs to equipment.heck in the last fourth something years I haven’t traded in a vehicle until it was at least twelve years old and still looking good and in running conditions.
GREG,
Some Girls? Some Cows?
What's the difference?
!
My farm arwana farms please look it up fucking construction
A banker is the worst partner you’ll ever find. So those nice farms are at risk of losing everything & since history always repeats itself. In our lifetime we will see some of these really nice farms get taken from them.
So in that sense you have a very nice farm.
Old is usually paid for & still paying you back & leaving you flexible on where you want to invest.