Plenty of those types of machines over here in the Uk where I live. Not so many Grimme machines, but plenty of Vervaet, Agrifac, ROPA and Holmer self propelled models. Most farms have a contractor come and lift their beet. 6 row machines like this most common due to road width limits but there are 9 and 12 rows around. There used to be conversions built mainly I think in the 60s and 70s of tractors as the power unit sat on top of a harvester- quite odd looking but if you Google standen solobeet you’ll see what I mean. There are four factories for beet in the UK, mainly in the eastern part north of London.
"Industrial agriculture is witnessing awe-inspiring innovation, and modern machinery is truly at its core. Thank you for bringing such informative content!"
A contractor near me runs ropa beet harvesters. Some years ago they had holmer harvesters, sometimes three machines worked in one field. Almost every farm around me make silage from the 'trash' that is left over, when the beets get processed, it makes great feed for the dairy cows. Nice video again, hopefully we'll see more beet harvest videos from you😉👍Greetings from germany👍
I buy the sugar beet pulp for the beef cattle and feed that along with hay in the winter months it's a good feed and you can't keep the deer out of it either
There's a Dutch company that uses a harvester to collect the leaves before the roots are harvested. I think it's still quite a new idea they are trialling but they create protein powder from the leaves because they are 1-3% protein by weight. The leaves are collected similar to how you would for leafy green like spinach.
@@bunnywarren interesting over here they just use a rotobeeter and flail the tops and it just goes back on the ground and gets tillid back in the soil after the harvest when they do fall tilling
@bunnywarren this is a really old use from the leafs. In east Germany it was normal harwest first 1 machine taking the leavs from the beets into a trailer or truck. I have seen machines like the rexor in German videos with a belt in the front for the leav silage.
The reason the Grimme has that ‘kink’ in its ‘tail’ is to spread the load for less compaction and better grip in wet soil. The selfpropelled harvester has also the advantage, that it doesn’t stomp the beets in the ground in wet conditions, so the quality and yield is better.
The front toppers have steering sensors, bit like GPS, it steers to the rows, also you see the wheels crabbing, this is to spread the machines weight to prevent compaction, each wheel is running on fresh ground, we have had these machines quite a few years now in the UK.
Very nice to see german machinery on big American fields showing their true potential. Beet harvest is in full swing here in Germany, and maybe next week I get to drive the Maus some time... Stock piling is common here as well, when the temperatures get below freezing the piles are covered with wheat straw or cloth for frost protection. Yields here are quite good this year due to rain, but sugar content is not perfect because not enough sunlight.
Thanks for the great video and aerial footage. Sugar beets are grown in Western Minnesota as well. There is a processing plant near Renville, MN. In that area, there is typically a separate topper and a lifter pulled by tractors. The lifter typically is dumping directly into tractor trailers and the trucks then head to the beat dumps in the area. Great to see different equipment. Thanks Mike.
I wanna drive the big red monster! I just learned of the beet harvest. Seems like a rewarding way to stay on the road. I like travel and I like sugar. It's a win win.
Hi Mike Less me and my son ❤️ watching your videos every morning you have done a great job with the machinery and explaining how they work on the farm thanks Mike Less
I used to live in Michigan (Frankenmuth). My neighbor used two Amity lifters and a topper. A topper removes the foliage off the beet and the lifter moves the beet from the ground to a trailer.
We have them here in western Nebraska. My neighbor has a Ropa sell propelled digger. He was the first around here to have one. Has run one for 10 to 15 years. They have a beet cart them made themselves. I would like to compare the Ropa to the machine you have shown here. Beets are a major crop here. I get the beet pulp that is left our from the processing plant and pack it like silage. Then feed cows in the winter. I enjoy watching the beet harvest. I just don't like all the truck traffic. Back in the 40s they used to load the piles on trains to haul to the factory. A lot of moves parts for sure.
Forget can corn .. when you get can beets, you have problems. Lol. This video is among my favorites. The drone shot from above the harvester might be the coolest thing yet. Thanks for sharing Mike. Great stuff.
Hey mike, I farm sugar beets in the southern red river valley in Minnesota. We use a combination of trucks and carts with a tractor pulling a lifter and another one pulling a topper. Nice footage of harvesting in Michigan.
Awesome cto see how they load the sugar beets in no-time! 😮 Thanks a lot for the video! 😊👍🏻 Btw.: Holmer and Ropa also build great sugar-beet-harvesters as well.
That harvester is quite a special piece of equipment! Some people must have had many sleepless nights thinking about different ideas how to come up with that thing!
I work in the thumb of Michigan at pioneer sugar. Thank you for the video. Those are called mouse beets that are pilled in the wind row. We are in full swing at the processing plant. I’m a full time year around employee. Thanks again for your visit to the thumb of Michigan.
Seeing that "centipede" I wondered: What makes it necessary to have that many axles? Doesn't the long contact area impede maneuverability and increase tire wear? Why not use dual tires but less axles? I'm sure there is a reason for it, but it's not obvious to me. Also, at 18:12 you can see that the axles aren't completely parallel as some tires appear to be shiftet to either side. Any explanations?
Amazing video Mike. Seeing the sugar beet being harvested makes me nostalgic for when sugar beet was harvested in Ireland till mid 2000s when the government ended national sugar production. That was the only way you'd see different types of tractors (Mercedes-Benz, Ford TW-35 etc) hauling the beet to the loading yards and then by lorry to railway and then onto the sugar factory.
You are accurate in your comments, I am a subscriber and your shots well done. I am surprised to see your US beet harvesting yards quite archaic compared to our Europe. The growers have less surface than in America, but they group together to have a common harvesting machine, or else a service provider. The comments you received from my compatriots are complete (like Al Ward). I have nothing to add except: how much are beets paid in the USA? Daniel frenchfarm retired. France.
I am in ND in Wahpeton for college and have been helping with beet harvest and was running cart this weekend we are about done only 10,000 acers left in the valley.
Great video Mike! That machine and the offset while harvesting are interesting. There is cab corn, cab wheat, cab kernals, now we have hood beets. Good stuff Mike.
The offset is for protecting the soil against comparison. The Holmer Company is having an self Propelled system for liquid manure or as spray and also having an beet implement or for corn and wheat. Working the same way.
Interesting to see beats harvested with this system,seems better because you can get the beets out of the ground before it gets wet and muddy and not have to wait on the trucks to get back from the piling grounds,I drove beet trucks for a lot of years and it's no fun when it gets wet. You have to pull the semis around the fields with a tractor and then out on the road and we would dig and load trucks as late as the factory was open,usually midnight and then load trucks to take first thing in the morning at 7,makes for a l o n g day lol. Fortunately they have a piling grounds near Ruth so the farmers don't have to make the 80 mile round trip to the factory in Sebewaing ! Great video's,always enjoy seeing farming being done,keep up the good content !
There is still a lot grown in the thumb. But probably not as many as 20-30 years ago being All the dairy farms that have showed up in that time period. Much of the farm ground is now needed for cattle feed
My cousins farm about 3500 acres of edible beans in the thumb area...look up Bayside Best Beans. They also plant 800 -1200 acres of sugar beets, corn for cattle that is taken as earilge, wheat, rye, and soybeans are used for crop rotation...It is a very fertile area of the country and a climate suitable for beans and beets...cool nights.
@@bigt6359 I live in Eaton county Mi, there was a lot of navy beans raised in the area in the day and a lot of farmers from the thumb area use to haul beans to Minor Walton Bean Elevator, this would have been in the 70’s and early 80’s. Minor Walton is no longer there, Citizens Elevator has taken over that elevator.
Great awesome video mike, congratulations on 100000 subscribers, love sugar beat harvest , southern Alberta has tons of sugar beat farms , I use to haul tons of granular fertilizer in the spring
Mike... thanks for getting some sugar beet action. You are correct about Ohio back in the 50's-70's we did have a lot of sugar beets. Back in the day we used straight trucks and a few semi's. They closed the processing plant in Findlay, Ohio. I think because the processers have to have so many acres on contract to make it worth while. The times have changed in farming in Ohio...
Hi Mike, I live in Sandusky Michigan. I’m only 20 minutes away from Ruth but beats in the thumb of Michigan is a huge operation. I help out on a local farm in Sandusky Michigan, and they have a huge operation when they do sugar beats I have a couple short videos on my channel. The people I work for help out another farm with their sugar beats
I remember growing up in the thumb and riding alone as a kid in the truck and tractors. And some times having to run the topper tractor when needed to.
Harvest is a lot different in the Red River Valley of North Dakota and Minnesota. Mike you will have to plan a trip up there. The Harvest is North Dakota/Minnesota is nearly complete if not already complete. Thanks for the video.
My brother-in-law used to raise sugar beats by saverance Colorado We had a 2 row International beat digger pulled by 806 lnternational harvester tractor
Thanks Mike, I always wondered how they get these things out of the ground, as they are a few lbs/kg's each. It seems quite easily with machines like this. Great video, thanks again.
Really interesting to see how sugar beet is done over your side of the pond. We grow a lot of in over here and a couple of years ago our contractor had a Vervaet Beet Eater, if memory serves it was a 925 Evo, and I was lucky enough to be allowed to run it on a few rounds up and down the field. Like nothing I had ever operated and the speed it harvested at was crazy, it was either a six or nine row machine, boy did it eat up the acres.
Hi Mike! Here in Finland we tend to wait much longer before harvest. As the weather gets colder, the sugar% will rise in the beet. So maybe a few good frost before starting out the harvest. Atleast in here the farmer is payed per tonnage, but also by the sugar% that the beet has. And it really does not matter if snow comes early and the ground freezes totally. The machines can dig them up even from a frozen ground, if you can only find the beets under the snow :)
Hi Mike, 15-20 Mäuse (One Maus, Two Mäuse) are built every year. 90% builds Ropa. The other 10% is built by Holmer. This company also comes from Germany. Holmer doesn't call the machine Maus but "Terra Felis". Felis comes from Latin and means cat. Conicidence? I do not think so. If you have any questions about the Maus , feel free to get in touch. I drive one of these machines in Germany.
I grow sugar beets in germany. We use a two Step Step system because we had very heavy clay an so we are protecting the soll with the lower weights. This year the yialds are super.105t Clean beets/ha,with 17,5% pol sugar.nice to see These grimme maschinen in the US.its build next to my home town.we use also grimme potato harvesters
I worked around a Holmer in 1998 and it was terrible conditions that year in sweden, it just kept raining and raining the whole season. One of the big advantages of a selfpropelled machine compared to a pulltype is that it is going on ”virgin ground”. It was so wet that year that the tractor pulling the beetlifter mowed the rows sideways causing alot of problems. In the worst fields we were going with two tractors on one machine, do I need to say that it was not much fun?
Nice to see beat harvest in the Usa. I live not so far from a dutch beathavester factory Cold Vervaet. I see a film from them on you tube.they have sold a copple of them to the states. These are the most brands you see in the netherlands. Grimme Ropa Holmer Agrifac Vervaet.
The Treasure Valley region of Eastern Oregon and Western Idaho is another large beet growing area. There is a processing plant in Nyssa, Oregon and one in Nampa, Idaho. Been gone from the area for several years now, however I have grown and harvested a bunch of them.
Used to help a few farmers around the Perrysburg ohio area haul beets to fremont ohio which the silo and the warehouse is still used for storage it used to be a big deal it ended in the late 90s in the early 2000 they tired do a coop but didn't work so many harvester and equipment was for sale everywhere if you take a drive near fremont ohio you can still spot some harvesters sitting behind barns
Good video Mike! I am up in Warren MN(Red River Valley) between Grand Forks and Drayton ND. I’m sure you remember going by American Crystal Sugar factory by Drayton when your going up to Winnipeg. There are a few self propel machines in our area but still more pull type lifters. Most farmers are now running 12 row machines here. I hope to see you at a Big Iron in Fargo one year. Take Care.
I LOVE pickled red beets, well, MY pickled beets. I use an old fashioned recipe, ppl either love it or hate it, I’ll eat the full bushel I canned this year!
Lots of sugar beets grown in southern Idaho. Come around the end of September and you can catch dry bean, potato, sugar beet, silage, and alfalfa harvest.
🌱 Great to see unique crops like sugar beets featured. This is farming content at its finest-educational and visually stunning! 💚
Plenty of those types of machines over here in the Uk where I live. Not so many Grimme machines, but plenty of Vervaet, Agrifac, ROPA and Holmer self propelled models. Most farms have a contractor come and lift their beet. 6 row machines like this most common due to road width limits but there are 9 and 12 rows around. There used to be conversions built mainly I think in the 60s and 70s of tractors as the power unit sat on top of a harvester- quite odd looking but if you Google standen solobeet you’ll see what I mean. There are four factories for beet in the UK, mainly in the eastern part north of London.
The crab-steering always amazes me. Many thanks for the video!
Quite interesting beet harvesting process; great quality; the soundtrack has a nice beat. Thanks for posting.
I love seeing the ingenuity of different types of farming equipment.
"Industrial agriculture is witnessing awe-inspiring innovation, and modern machinery is truly at its core. Thank you for bringing such informative content!"
I love Sugarbeets Cool video and great Music Choice Buddy
Another well filmed and informative video - thank you Mike.
Good to see the use of tracks to reduce soil compaction.
A contractor near me runs ropa beet harvesters. Some years ago they had holmer harvesters, sometimes three machines worked in one field.
Almost every farm around me make silage from the 'trash' that is left over, when the beets get processed, it makes great feed for the dairy cows.
Nice video again, hopefully we'll see more beet harvest videos from you😉👍Greetings from germany👍
I buy the sugar beet pulp for the beef cattle and feed that along with hay in the winter months it's a good feed and you can't keep the deer out of it either
There's a Dutch company that uses a harvester to collect the leaves before the roots are harvested. I think it's still quite a new idea they are trialling but they create protein powder from the leaves because they are 1-3% protein by weight. The leaves are collected similar to how you would for leafy green like spinach.
@@bunnywarren interesting over here they just use a rotobeeter and flail the tops and it just goes back on the ground and gets tillid back in the soil after the harvest when they do fall tilling
@bunnywarren this is a really old use from the leafs. In east Germany it was normal harwest first 1 machine taking the leavs from the beets into a trailer or truck. I have seen machines like the rexor in German videos with a belt in the front for the leav silage.
The reason the Grimme has that ‘kink’ in its ‘tail’ is to spread the load for less compaction and better grip in wet soil.
The selfpropelled harvester has also the advantage, that it doesn’t stomp the beets in the ground in wet conditions, so the quality and yield is better.
The front toppers have steering sensors, bit like GPS, it steers to the rows, also you see the wheels crabbing, this is to spread the machines weight to prevent compaction, each wheel is running on fresh ground, we have had these machines quite a few years now in the UK.
Great video Mike nice to see something different to corn harvest what a massive machine thanks again 🏴👍👍
Very nice to see german machinery on big American fields showing their true potential. Beet harvest is in full swing here in Germany, and maybe next week I get to drive the Maus some time... Stock piling is common here as well, when the temperatures get below freezing the piles are covered with wheat straw or cloth for frost protection.
Yields here are quite good this year due to rain, but sugar content is not perfect because not enough sunlight.
Fendt is my favorite German tractor and I’m American lol
Thanks for the great video and aerial footage. Sugar beets are grown in Western Minnesota as well. There is a processing plant near Renville, MN. In that area, there is typically a separate topper and a lifter pulled by tractors. The lifter typically is dumping directly into tractor trailers and the trucks then head to the beat dumps in the area. Great to see different equipment. Thanks Mike.
I’m amazed at all the AG equipment ingenuity! I wonder what farmers from a 100 years ago would think.
That was very interesting 🤔 👌
I wanna drive the big red monster! I just learned of the beet harvest. Seems like a rewarding way to stay on the road. I like travel and I like sugar. It's a win win.
Hi Mike Less me and my son ❤️ watching your videos every morning you have done a great job with the machinery and explaining how they work on the farm thanks Mike Less
I used to live in Michigan (Frankenmuth). My neighbor used two Amity lifters and a topper. A topper removes the foliage off the beet and the lifter moves the beet from the ground to a trailer.
We have them here in western Nebraska. My neighbor has a Ropa sell propelled digger. He was the first around here to have one. Has run one for 10 to 15 years. They have a beet cart them made themselves. I would like to compare the Ropa to the machine you have shown here. Beets are a major crop here. I get the beet pulp that is left our from the processing plant and pack it like silage. Then feed cows in the winter. I enjoy watching the beet harvest. I just don't like all the truck traffic. Back in the 40s they used to load the piles on trains to haul to the factory. A lot of moves parts for sure.
That Beet Chaser trailer sure is a big beast.
You make living off the land look so fulfilling
Forget can corn .. when you get can beets, you have problems. Lol. This video is among my favorites. The drone shot from above the harvester might be the coolest thing yet. Thanks for sharing Mike. Great stuff.
Good lookin' tractor and beet cart.... hopefully you can get make/model of beet cart next trip....
Southern Alberta Canada sugar beet grower too! Maybe you can make a trip this way one day.
Definitely a another great video!! On harvesting of other crops. Thank you very much for sharing.
I've used these tools including the ropa at the end in farming simulator for many hours but its cool to see them be used in real life.
Hey mike,
I farm sugar beets in the southern red river valley in Minnesota. We use a combination of trucks and carts with a tractor pulling a lifter and another one pulling a topper.
Nice footage of harvesting in Michigan.
Awesome cto see how they load the sugar beets in no-time! 😮
Thanks a lot for the video! 😊👍🏻
Btw.: Holmer and Ropa also build great sugar-beet-harvesters as well.
Thanks for the awesome footage! 👍
Hey i worked the croswell pilling sites for 2 years now. Pretty cool seeing em pulled
over in the uk we call it foder beet
That was very cool to see. Peace and love from Wisconsin.
That harvester is quite a special piece of equipment! Some people must have had many sleepless nights thinking about different ideas how to come up with that thing!
I work in the thumb of Michigan at pioneer sugar. Thank you for the video. Those are called mouse beets that are pilled in the wind row. We are in full swing at the processing plant. I’m a full time year around employee. Thanks again for your visit to the thumb of Michigan.
In "Trucker" lingo, that 8 axle trailer is called a centipede. And that's where the rubber meets the road ;)
Seeing that "centipede" I wondered: What makes it necessary to have that many axles? Doesn't the long contact area impede maneuverability and increase tire wear? Why not use dual tires but less axles? I'm sure there is a reason for it, but it's not obvious to me. Also, at 18:12 you can see that the axles aren't completely parallel as some tires appear to be shiftet to either side. Any explanations?
Thanks Mike for another interesting video. This old Pennsylvania boy has never seen anything like this operation.
Amazing video Mike. Seeing the sugar beet being harvested makes me nostalgic for when sugar beet was harvested in Ireland till mid 2000s when the government ended national sugar production. That was the only way you'd see different types of tractors (Mercedes-Benz, Ford TW-35 etc) hauling the beet to the loading yards and then by lorry to railway and then onto the sugar factory.
Excellent video, God Bless You & Yours
You are accurate in your comments, I am a subscriber and your shots well done. I am surprised to see your US beet harvesting yards quite archaic compared to our Europe. The growers have less surface than in America, but they group together to have a common harvesting machine, or else a service provider. The comments you received from my compatriots are complete (like Al Ward). I have nothing to add except: how much are beets paid in the USA? Daniel frenchfarm retired. France.
Nice to see a Dutch machine roaming the world
I am in ND in Wahpeton for college and have been helping with beet harvest and was running cart this weekend we are about done only 10,000 acers left in the valley.
Now that's a great looking tractor and beet cart.
A lot of different industries go into the end game of the beet harvest. I,Pencil by Leonard E. Reed is great explanation.
That is one good looking tractor and sugar beet cart!
Very cool video. I laughed at the sugar beet version of "cab corn" where some beets had spilled onto the top of the engine compartment in the back.
Really enjoyed watching Mike. Thanks 👍
What beautiful farmland and pretty cool machinery.
Great video Mike! That machine and the offset while harvesting are interesting. There is cab corn, cab wheat, cab kernals, now we have hood beets. Good stuff Mike.
The offset is for protecting the soil against comparison. The Holmer Company is having an self Propelled system for liquid manure or as spray and also having an beet implement or for corn and wheat. Working the same way.
I grew up in the thumb area of michigan. I also worked at one of the sugar factories in croswell michigan
Interesting to see beats harvested with this system,seems better because you can get the beets out of the ground before it gets wet and muddy and not have to wait on the trucks to get back from the piling grounds,I drove beet trucks for a lot of years and it's no fun when it gets wet. You have to pull the semis around the fields with a tractor and then out on the road and we would dig and load trucks as late as the factory was open,usually midnight and then load trucks to take first thing in the morning at 7,makes for a l o n g day lol. Fortunately they have a piling grounds near Ruth so the farmers don't have to make the 80 mile round trip to the factory in Sebewaing ! Great video's,always enjoy seeing farming being done,keep up the good content !
There use to be a lot of edible beans raised in the thumb area but not sure how much any more.
Great video.
There is still a lot grown in the thumb. But probably not as many as 20-30 years ago being All the dairy farms that have showed up in that time period. Much of the farm ground is now needed for cattle feed
My cousins farm about 3500 acres of edible beans in the thumb area...look up Bayside Best Beans. They also plant 800 -1200 acres of sugar beets, corn for cattle that is taken as earilge, wheat, rye, and soybeans are used for crop rotation...It is a very fertile area of the country and a climate suitable for beans and beets...cool nights.
@@bigt6359 I live in Eaton county Mi, there was a lot of navy beans raised in the area in the day and a lot of farmers from the thumb area use to haul beans to Minor Walton Bean Elevator, this would have been in the 70’s and early 80’s. Minor Walton is no longer there, Citizens Elevator has taken over that elevator.
Great awesome video mike, congratulations on 100000 subscribers, love sugar beat harvest , southern Alberta has tons of sugar beat farms , I use to haul tons of granular fertilizer in the spring
🤩 what a great video. That beet harvester and loaders are a couple of impressive machines
One year I hauled Sugarbeets to an S&h sugar plant west of Goodland Kansas
Mike... thanks for getting some sugar beet action. You are correct about Ohio back in the 50's-70's we did have a lot of sugar beets. Back in the day we used straight trucks and a few semi's. They closed the processing plant in Findlay, Ohio. I think because the processers have to have so many acres on contract to make it worth while. The times have changed in farming in Ohio...
In Germany a few farmers starting to loading trains with beets about 2000 tones one run with end station in Austria.
Hi Mike, I live in Sandusky Michigan. I’m only 20 minutes away from Ruth but beats in the thumb of Michigan is a huge operation. I help out on a local farm in Sandusky Michigan, and they have a huge operation when they do sugar beats I have a couple short videos on my channel. The people I work for help out another farm with their sugar beats
I remember growing up in the thumb and riding alone as a kid in the truck and tractors. And some times having to run the topper tractor when needed to.
Very informative! Thank you for your time! 👍
Harvest is a lot different in the Red River Valley of North Dakota and Minnesota. Mike you will have to plan a trip up there. The Harvest is North Dakota/Minnesota is nearly complete if not already complete. Thanks for the video.
My brother-in-law used to raise sugar beats by saverance Colorado We had a 2 row International beat digger pulled by 806 lnternational harvester tractor
Thank you. Yet another crop that I have now seen harvested.
Southern Idaho has sugar beets too.
Thanks Mike, I always wondered how they get these things out of the ground, as they are a few lbs/kg's each. It seems quite easily with machines like this. Great video, thanks again.
Great video Mike👍
Really interesting to see how sugar beet is done over your side of the pond. We grow a lot of in over here and a couple of years ago our contractor had a Vervaet Beet Eater, if memory serves it was a 925 Evo, and I was lucky enough to be allowed to run it on a few rounds up and down the field. Like nothing I had ever operated and the speed it harvested at was crazy, it was either a six or nine row machine, boy did it eat up the acres.
very interesting video. sure enjoyed it.
Hi Mike! Here in Finland we tend to wait much longer before harvest. As the weather gets colder, the sugar% will rise in the beet. So maybe a few good frost before starting out the harvest. Atleast in here the farmer is payed per tonnage, but also by the sugar% that the beet has. And it really does not matter if snow comes early and the ground freezes totally. The machines can dig them up even from a frozen ground, if you can only find the beets under the snow :)
as always another great video. Thanks again Mike
Hi Mike,
15-20 Mäuse (One Maus, Two Mäuse) are built every year. 90% builds Ropa. The other 10% is built by Holmer. This company also comes from Germany. Holmer doesn't call the machine Maus but "Terra Felis". Felis comes from Latin and means cat. Conicidence? I do not think so.
If you have any questions about the Maus , feel free to get in touch. I drive one of these machines in Germany.
German machines are awesome 👍
I grow sugar beets in germany. We use a two Step Step system because we had very heavy clay an so we are protecting the soll with the lower weights. This year the yialds are super.105t Clean beets/ha,with 17,5% pol sugar.nice to see These grimme maschinen in the US.its build next to my home town.we use also grimme potato harvesters
Here is Idaho we grow a lot of sugar beets! We have several large processing plant!
is there a reason why its rear wheels dog track like that? maybe soil compaction perhaps? be interesting to know
The 4th area for sugarbeets is SW Ont. We have 10,000 acres contracted to Michigan Sugar.
I do grow sugar beets in France and my contractor own the same Grimme Rexxor.
I worked around a Holmer in 1998 and it was terrible conditions that year in sweden, it just kept raining and raining the whole season. One of the big advantages of a selfpropelled machine compared to a pulltype is that it is going on ”virgin ground”. It was so wet that year that the tractor pulling the beetlifter mowed the rows sideways causing alot of problems. In the worst fields we were going with two tractors on one machine, do I need to say that it was not much fun?
Close to me Mike! Beet Harvest just seems like any other normal fall to us mid Michigan folks!
been interesting to see the mechanism that does the actual digging and lifting out of the ground how it does it
Nice to see beat harvest in the Usa. I live not so far from a dutch beathavester factory Cold Vervaet. I see a film from them on you tube.they have sold a copple of them to the states.
These are the most brands you see in the netherlands.
Grimme
Ropa
Holmer
Agrifac
Vervaet.
Crookston, MN in the Red River Valley. We run amity 12 row beet lifter and amity 12 row topper!
My dad was running that maus
Hi greetings from Austria, my uncle grwos sugarbeets and he harvests the beets with a Ropa panther - 6 row harvester
Amazing machinery Mike!!!! Thanx
This is one very sweet video😁
The Treasure Valley region of Eastern Oregon and Western Idaho is another large beet growing area. There is a processing plant in Nyssa, Oregon and one in Nampa, Idaho. Been gone from the area for several years now, however I have grown and harvested a bunch of them.
Another great video Mike .
Used to help a few farmers around the Perrysburg ohio area haul beets to fremont ohio which the silo and the warehouse is still used for storage it used to be a big deal it ended in the late 90s in the early 2000 they tired do a coop but didn't work so many harvester and equipment was for sale everywhere if you take a drive near fremont ohio you can still spot some harvesters sitting behind barns
Yes I remember seeing sugar beets off of the turnpike in those areas many years ago
Good video Mike! I am up in Warren MN(Red River Valley) between Grand Forks and Drayton ND. I’m sure you remember going by American Crystal Sugar factory by Drayton when your going up to Winnipeg. There are a few self propel machines in our area but still more pull type lifters. Most farmers are now running 12 row machines here. I hope to see you at a Big Iron in Fargo one year. Take Care.
Very nice video, greetings Johan
Mike you should come down to south Louisiana for sugar cane harvest in October November or December
Great vídeo Mike.
I LOVE pickled red beets, well, MY pickled beets. I use an old fashioned recipe, ppl either love it or hate it, I’ll eat the full bushel I canned this year!
My uncle used to grow them a lot near Winkler MB, they need heavy black dirt to grow the best
I remember seeing the sugar beets many years ago in Washington state.
Lots of sugar beets grown in southern Idaho. Come around the end of September and you can catch dry bean, potato, sugar beet, silage, and alfalfa harvest.
love those two mashinesin Farming sim 19..
What a difference sixty years make.
man I can smell this video....15 years we had close to a 100 ha of sugarbeets in Veneto, Italy
Hi mike yea we grow sugar beets here in idaho