I love working with horses with Jim and watch EVERY episode!!! Unfortunately, there was machinery running in the background of most of this video, so couldn't follow the conversation. I'm sure it is valuable and I am sorry to miss it. Keep up the great work!
🫣Concept ok but difficult to understand when I was younger my Gramps always said deef in one ear, hard of hearing in the other, 🤭 today I’m in the 87 bracket, Jim/ Brenda still one of my favorites 👍
Well, I know nada about logging except what I’ve learned from this channel and yes, they were hard to hear at the beginning before they shut that machine off, but I enjoyed it anyway. I wish more people had questions!
Watched video with no sound . Where did those Amish children get the balloons. Cold drink and ice cream vendors did good , I would think .Enjoyed .😊😊😊😊
Because it was. He is the leading authority managed logging and Suffolk horses. The greater point being there was a group of loggers with different ideas, yet all were engaged in the topic and able to speak their opinions without shouting. 😊
I realize that Jason Rutledge is passionate about his “worst first” approach and his healing harvest foundation but could it be that this has resulted in a tunnel vision that prevents him from seeing the real world we live in. It reminds me of the horseman who told me we the dairy industry would be better off if we had stuck with horse power and milked Jersey cows. It sound like a great idea until you realize how hungry we would be. I have logged on and off with horses for the past thirty years and the two things the landowners were interested in were a low impact clean job and a fair price for their timber. I am not sure how many jobs I would have gotten if I had offered thirty percent. It goes without saying that the logger needs to follow good forestry and treat the land as if it were his own. It was good to have a guy like Brant Ainsworth present who has seen this business from both sides. I think everyone can agree that to remove timber with least amount of damage to the forest, animal power is the way to go. I am doubtful we could keep the mills supplied without help from mechanization. Thats the real world. No secret formula or buzz word required!
Each person lives in their own "real world" which they have created. In the world as lived by Jim and Brenda, time is their money, and they never waste a minute. The horses work to make their own feed. Minimal fuel and machinery is used only where it seems more expedient to do so. Fertiliser is purely organic and comes out of the barn, not purchased. Lately there is a milch cow, and it is obviously not their first, but until 2020 or 21 Brenda worked as a nurse. Now she is full time on the farm. She keeps a fine kitchen garden. Logging is the business, the sawmill adds tremendous value to the raw product, firewood is rubbish and offcuts, heating and hot water, drying kiln for sawn timber. With the horses he has now, including Lady and her 2 fillies, he should never have to buy another horse, and there may be youngsters available for sale in coming years, worth many thousands of dollars each. He is almost over-horsed already. So this is Jim's real world as created by Jim and Brenda, and to each their own, your world is your own creation. I have never before seen such a hard-working basic lifestyle be so successful. Maybe they don't grow much human food for market, but certainly barter locally, and the lumber builds houses, very essential.
🫣Concept ok but difficult to understand when I was younger my Gramps always said deef in one ear, hard of hearing in the other, 🤭 today I’m in the 87 bracket, Jim/ Brenda still one of my favorites 👍
Thanks so much, Brenda, for the daily videos during Horse Progress Days! I'm really enjoying it!
Great panel discussion about logging with horses. Loved the mule stories! My family were 'horse people" even though some were stubborn as mules! ;)
I love working with horses with Jim and watch EVERY episode!!! Unfortunately, there was machinery running in the background of most of this video, so couldn't follow the conversation. I'm sure it is valuable and I am sorry to miss it. Keep up the great work!
Thank you! Very interesting!!
Thank so much for all your hard work posting every day, I’m really enjoying your videos!!!
Thanks Brenden and Jim for taking us along your tripe!🫏🫏
🫣Concept ok but difficult to understand when I was younger my Gramps always said deef in one ear, hard of hearing in the other, 🤭 today I’m in the 87 bracket, Jim/ Brenda still one of my favorites 👍
Well, I know nada about logging except what I’ve learned from this channel and yes, they were hard to hear at the beginning before they shut that machine off, but I enjoyed it anyway. I wish more people had questions!
Couldn't hear anything was disappointed 😊
Listening with ear buds, I can hear ok.
Sound clears up about 9:20
Wow, do I wish I went to this. Great talk fun listen to you both are doing great things. The ripple effect of your reach is awesome truly grateful.
Extreme heat warning (105 F).Good idea to get under that tent and drink lots of water .😊😊😊
Watched video with no sound . Where did those Amish children get the balloons. Cold drink and ice cream vendors did good , I would think .Enjoyed .😊😊😊😊
My late mother was Icelandic.
Some of the audio is good but some are not. I guess have voice that carries well on the mike
Sounded like the Jason Rutledge show.😊
Because it was. He is the leading authority managed logging and Suffolk horses. The greater point being there was a group of loggers with different ideas, yet all were engaged in the topic and able to speak their opinions without shouting. 😊
Unfortunately the background noise drowned out the speakers at the Logging Roundtable
I realize that Jason Rutledge is passionate about his “worst first” approach and his healing harvest foundation but could it be that this has resulted in a tunnel vision that prevents him from seeing the real world we live in. It reminds me of the horseman who told me we the dairy industry would be better off if we had stuck with horse power and milked Jersey cows. It sound like a great idea until you realize how hungry we would be. I have logged on and off with horses for the past thirty years and the two things the landowners were interested in were a low impact clean job and a fair price for their timber. I am not sure how many jobs I would have gotten if I had offered thirty percent. It goes without saying that the logger needs to follow good forestry and treat the land as if it were his own. It was good to have a guy like Brant Ainsworth present who has seen this business from both sides. I think everyone can agree that to remove timber with least amount of damage to the forest, animal power is the way to go. I am doubtful we could keep the mills supplied without help from mechanization. Thats the real world. No secret formula or buzz word required!
Each person lives in their own "real world" which they have created. In the world as lived by Jim and Brenda, time is their money, and they never waste a minute. The horses work to make their own feed. Minimal fuel and machinery is used only where it seems more expedient to do so. Fertiliser is purely organic and comes out of the barn, not purchased. Lately there is a milch cow, and it is obviously not their first, but until 2020 or 21 Brenda worked as a nurse. Now she is full time on the farm. She keeps a fine kitchen garden. Logging is the business, the sawmill adds tremendous value to the raw product, firewood is rubbish and offcuts, heating and hot water, drying kiln for sawn timber. With the horses he has now, including Lady and her 2 fillies, he should never have to buy another horse, and there may be youngsters available for sale in coming years, worth many thousands of dollars each. He is almost over-horsed already.
So this is Jim's real world as created by Jim and Brenda, and to each their own, your world is your own creation. I have never before seen such a hard-working basic lifestyle be so successful. Maybe they don't grow much human food for market, but certainly barter locally, and the lumber builds houses, very essential.
Sorry, very difficult to hear the conversations.
It was too bad the sound recording was poor , because it was difficult to follow the conversation
@@PeterDowd-r9bIf you click on “ more” then click on “Show Transcript” you can follow what they are saying🤠
jim did not have much to say
💖💖💖💖💖💖💖💖💖💖💖💖💖💖💝
Has there been any questions that wer good enough to make a video on?
👍🏽👍🏽
You can hear Jim and the guy to his left,the guy to the right you can't understand, to bad,
The guy standing you can't understand anything,
HE lOOKS LIKE HE NEEDS A LITTLE NAP. LOL
Have no idea what they where saying.
Poor sound , moved to another video !
I cut trees down so I didn't care for this one
Too bad, this was impossible to follow
amish dont watch utube
Not interested in a Climate Change sermon. I'm taking a powder on this vid.
All that hot fug in their sky is man-made.
How do you have a round table with no table? Typical BS.
🫣Concept ok but difficult to understand when I was younger my Gramps always said deef in one ear, hard of hearing in the other, 🤭 today I’m in the 87 bracket, Jim/ Brenda still one of my favorites 👍