Farmer Reacts to Dangerous Horns vs Baby Calf: Help or Harm intended??

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 5 окт 2024
  • The cycle of life: One cow gets processed on the farm and a new calf arrives. The bull is pushing the calf with the horns and I chose to separate the mom and it's newborn from the herd.
    We are also getting a new feeder and the building up process turned out to be quite funny... the instructions were in French.
    Website: www.thesoundfarmer.net
    📞 Consultations: me.volley.app/...
    🖥️ Video course: The Life-Changing Power of Holistic Management:
    thesoundfarmer...
    👍 Facebook: / swedishhomestead
    📸 Instagram: / simeonandalex
    📲 Twitter: @realsoundfarmer
    🎶 Music by Epidemic Sound (www.epidemicsou...)
    ____________________________________________________________________
    If you want to help us out you can do so by shopping on Amazon via one of the links below. The links are affiliate links which means we receive a small commission from Amazon while you shop without any extra cost for you:
    US Amazon Store: amzn.to/2zk5VXW
    ____________________________________________________________________
    Support us and become a Patron:
    / swehomestead

Комментарии • 46

  • @lynnclark4208
    @lynnclark4208 Год назад +2

    Work smarter, not harder ! The opening was great!

  • @californiadreaming567
    @californiadreaming567 Год назад +1

    The view is amazing

  • @Tony-ip7hj
    @Tony-ip7hj Год назад +1

    Svårt att slå den utsikten. Otroligt.

  • @TURBOSAWMILL
    @TURBOSAWMILL Год назад

    we have some white faced highlands and there crossed Hereford

  • @mandyleaguemamaleague6968
    @mandyleaguemamaleague6968 Год назад

    I am really enjoying having you back regularly ! This was such a great video in every way!! Thanks for all your hard work and bringing us along. !!

  • @benst5371
    @benst5371 Год назад +1

    very cool!

  • @dennieolson1953
    @dennieolson1953 Год назад +7

    Loved the video - the new-born calf, construction of the cow feeder, the laughter, the hay jumping and sibling fun, the meat slicing, and the beautiful scenery.

  • @anpo6716
    @anpo6716 Год назад +5

    You two always do lovely music. It makes it even more of a pleasure to watch your videos.

  • @lindasalas7828
    @lindasalas7828 Год назад

    Great video y'all 👍👍👍

  • @rodneywroten2994
    @rodneywroten2994 Год назад +3

    thanks for sharing

  • @LEMBUAGENG8
    @LEMBUAGENG8 Год назад

    Hallo. Salam dari indonesia

  • @maristermcsorley4203
    @maristermcsorley4203 Год назад +3

    She is beautiful God bless 😊

  • @mariadi1069
    @mariadi1069 Год назад +2

    Thank you.

  • @valrummel7215
    @valrummel7215 Год назад +4

    Had me chuckling. So much fun and a wonderful way to raise children.

  • @claudiaborchardt-wagner8446
    @claudiaborchardt-wagner8446 Год назад

    About time you gave them some alone time. Goodness.

    • @simeonandalex
      @simeonandalex  Год назад

      Because in the wild or on a large ranch evey cow gets alone time??

  • @cynthiafisher9907
    @cynthiafisher9907 Год назад +6

    Beautiful little calf. It’s great that you can process the beef yourself. I’m sure it’s a lot of work.

  • @eldongarner787
    @eldongarner787 Год назад +1

    I thought it was an aluminum bed frame.

  • @SadullahDemirkaya
    @SadullahDemirkaya Год назад +1

    👋🏻🐮🇹🇷🇹🇷

  • @flossybeans4714
    @flossybeans4714 Год назад +3

    That looks to be some rich and nutritious meat!

  • @jeeps7913
    @jeeps7913 Год назад +8

    Really enjoyed this post very much! Good to see your family interactions, the new calf and all the good beef processing! Your’re looking healthier & in better shape. The bit longer hair on top looks good on you, as well! 🤗

  • @kerryl4031
    @kerryl4031 Год назад +10

    She may not be pure, but she's still pretty and fluffy. An amazing feeder! Did laugh at the instructions - worse are Japanese instructions with funny translations into English! Always gets an "eh???!" Lovely to see the children having such fun in the hay too. Oh to be young again! Thank you for the fun video - good to see you all laughing.

  • @airportnurse3380
    @airportnurse3380 Год назад +3

    Looking good Simeon and Alex! The mountain views don't even look real! Your farmer hit the jack pot with you as his farm sitters! Are you sure you want to move to TN??? ;)

    • @simeonandalex
      @simeonandalex  Год назад +1

      We are sure we want to move closer to family and friends in the US. It is pretty here but it is pretty at a lot of places. Thanks!

  • @joanneganon7157
    @joanneganon7157 Год назад +1

    Cool feeder Great Job putting it together with no instructions LMBO xxz.
    The Highland Coos are Darling ❤️
    JO JO IN VT 💞💨❄️☃️

  • @WendyK656
    @WendyK656 Год назад +3

    Simeon is the lentil screw green, red or brown! LOLO🤣🤣 I just love you sense of humor. Nice feeder for the cows. Awe that calf is so cute, even though it is not a pure breed. It is also nice you have a heifer. Wow that Highlander beef looks amazing with all that yellow marbling. I kind of reminds me of a Jersey cow!

  • @zaidsapi
    @zaidsapi Год назад

    Salam cow indonesia

  • @HomesteadWyoming
    @HomesteadWyoming Год назад

    Our Irish Dexter bull will nudge calves until they stand, then he leaves them alone with their moms. It may be that the Highland bull was doing the same. It always amazes me that they are usually good fathers. Where I live, no one keeps their bull in with the cows and calves. I find that everyone is much happier, together. Plus, the bull protects the herd, so it's a "win" for everyone.

  • @LeahDycksports
    @LeahDycksports Год назад

    Why was the bull trying to harm the calf?

  • @gelwood99
    @gelwood99 Год назад +1

    Looks like a better fence is needed between the 2 pastures to prevent the mixing of bloodlines. Cute calf but not the genetics the owner wants, wasting a whole calving season for that cow since they don't readily rebreed like other breeds.

  • @davidpritchett855
    @davidpritchett855 Год назад +2

    Looks like a great little calf and I love how dark red that meat is. A quick tip for you and others when putting together stuff like the shelter. A set of deep sockets, an impact driver(not impact wrench) and one of the drill to socket converter can make very quick work of projects like the feeder. I personally prefer to just use it to set the nut then hand tighten the last bit to avoid over tightening.

  • @florinman265
    @florinman265 Год назад +2

    Exact what you said, the bull is great... He just wants the calf to get up.

    • @simeonandalex
      @simeonandalex  Год назад +1

      Well, I know that can be like that sometimes but later, off screen, he kept pushing the calf over when it was standing and didn't leave it alone. That's why I separated the mom and calf from the rest of the herd later.

  • @dhansonranch
    @dhansonranch Год назад

    Good call on separating the cow and calf. Sometimes it is possible that the bull or stallion will kill a newborn so that the female comes into heat faster....he was not being super aggressive but enough so that the cow would eventually abandon. Good job on the feeder.

    • @hillockfarm8404
      @hillockfarm8404 Год назад +2

      Possible, and that is usually due to weak calf or not his offspring. And going by the white mark it has another dad.

  • @judyengland2615
    @judyengland2615 Год назад +2

    I enjoyed the video. It is a pretty calf even though it is quite obvious that it isn't pure bred. Looking forward to you coming to the USA. I'm from northern Michigan. We have hills not mountains like there.

  • @zaidsapi
    @zaidsapi Год назад

    Am yees

  • @flossybeans4714
    @flossybeans4714 Год назад +2

    ❤️

  • @skrtskit1521
    @skrtskit1521 Год назад

    💖💖🎶🎶

  • @suttonbogedain5874
    @suttonbogedain5874 Год назад +1

    Simeon, after you have made bone broth, do you grind the bones for other uses like the chickens? If so, how do you do that? God be with ye.

    • @simeonandalex
      @simeonandalex  Год назад +3

      I ha e never done that because I don‘t have a tool for that. I would like to do it, also for bone meal as fertilizer.