Making Hay In The HEAT DOME

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  • Опубликовано: 5 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 40

  • @stevebiddle8912
    @stevebiddle8912 Год назад +2

    The Sudan grass looks fantastic! Looking forward to seeing you get it put up.

  • @frankdaywalt9281
    @frankdaywalt9281 Год назад +5

    Thank y'all for sharing , enjoyed seeing your new calf and hearing bout the twins . I've heard that Praying Mantis is good luck lol idk.
    God bless y'all and your family ! Beautiful children !

  • @mikkimichele51014
    @mikkimichele51014 Год назад +2

    Twin calves, how exciting!!! Love the drone footage of the harvesting. So cool!!! God bless your family. Keep filming we'll keep watching from the east coast in CT.

  • @paulyork2347
    @paulyork2347 Год назад +3

    I love farming we have blood tractor reform too on 20 acres.

  • @davidkimmel4216
    @davidkimmel4216 Год назад

    Thank you so much for sharing your family with us. God Bless

  • @AlphaRomeoOneFive
    @AlphaRomeoOneFive Год назад

    I'm up in NW Kansas and we've been baking up here too. We haven't had a drop of rain since August 7th. Crops are looking worse every day now. Praying that God will cool things down and open up the heavens and bring some badly needed moisture.

  • @DoubleD.
    @DoubleD. Год назад

    I just love watching the drone videos.

  • @jeromeellis668
    @jeromeellis668 Год назад +3

    Thanks for the information. I have lived in Kansas my whole life. Done some farm help as a youth. Appreciate the way you trying to be good stewards of the land that God created. Thanks for your hard work. We really like to go to Chicago also. Thank again Jerome Manhattan Ks. Go Cats!

    • @druewilson1079
      @druewilson1079 Год назад +1

      Those are the kind of people that tries to dictate how you should live I got a lot of money and they think they’re smarter than everybody else my daddy used to say if it ain’t broke don’t fix it and it ain’t broke I hate it

  • @theda850two
    @theda850two Год назад

    Yup, For those that don't know, the plugging occurs in nozzles In drops closer to the center of the pivot,,, typically plug first because they are the smaller diameter of orifices.
    Also there is an electrical switch to throw for the drive motors to make the pivot, "Pivot" 💥

  • @steveneal2706
    @steveneal2706 Год назад +3

    Great video guys. Awesome job.. thank y'all very much

  • @Masonthegoat
    @Masonthegoat Год назад +3

    Sweet crop of mine or This is how we farm. Guns and roses or Florida Georgia line.

  • @davidziebell1693
    @davidziebell1693 Год назад

    I’ll be mowing some forage wheat early next week here on the Darling Downs in South East Queensland Australia looking forward to it and we run a CaseIH DC103 mower conditioner we’ve had a pretty decent season this year and some of our winter crops are waist high so we are hoping for a good harvest in the coming months

  • @lesterhertel2945
    @lesterhertel2945 Год назад +2

    Another very interesting video Thank you 😊😊

  • @JanetLavoie
    @JanetLavoie Год назад

    Oh my those blond baby girls!!!❤

  • @karljacobson1575
    @karljacobson1575 Год назад

    Ya I planted Sudan after wheat and it made real good hay. We are so dry up here and still made hay!!!

  • @randy6650
    @randy6650 Год назад +1

    Enjoyed watching the video CRAIG 😊

  • @Bookworm_N5
    @Bookworm_N5 Год назад

    Have you guys ever preformed in Kirksville Missouri at the Nemo fair

  • @maeganmisenheimer6403
    @maeganmisenheimer6403 Год назад +2

    You are the best

  • @dominikpiskoric9649
    @dominikpiskoric9649 Год назад

    We are making silage out of sudan grass for our dairy heard and they love it after fermentation smells like corn silage

  • @brittblanton8342
    @brittblanton8342 Год назад +2

    Great video and drone footage guys. Quick question did you guys lose any cattle due to this heat? I seen on Double G and L Farms you tube video that they lost some cattle due to the heat I believe they are located in North Central Kansas.

    • @frankdaywalt9281
      @frankdaywalt9281 Год назад +1

      Thank you for asking this question , we need to know and hear the truth from folks like these . Thank you and God bless

    • @PetersonFarmBros
      @PetersonFarmBros  Год назад +2

      Not really, but it's been a little hard on them for sure.

  • @nathanrobinson7715
    @nathanrobinson7715 Год назад

    I love seeing big farms. I would like to do that but have disability

  • @tabortollefson
    @tabortollefson Год назад

    I happen to be in Manhattan helping Mom post surgery. I live in Tucson. Last week when it was 115° in Manhattan, it was 89° in Tucson.

  • @joanbarber5384
    @joanbarber5384 Год назад +1

    If you put a big copper pipe in your water tanks the algae will die and not come back. It’s true it works!

  • @wcox4
    @wcox4 Год назад

    How does the center pivot work on that cutter? Is it hydraulic that you control from the cab, or does it do it on its own?? Anyway, keep up the great videos.

  • @Jan-Boer
    @Jan-Boer Год назад

    Thanks for the video, wouldn't you rather put the tractor on a wider track for the mower and not travel with the wheels on the swath?

  • @druewilson1079
    @druewilson1079 Год назад +2

    If u buying a cow to raise for ur freezer wt is best to buy without the most expensive bread

    • @FarmFreshIB
      @FarmFreshIB Год назад

      Personally I look for a young beef breed cow... Holstein or Angus. I prefer my freezer beef to be a long yearling, often sold as a feeder calf, that weighs around 600 to 800 pounds live weight. These cattle are cheaper because they are not "finished" on grain. Not so much extra fat, a bit smaller, but still delicious and tender because they are young. Often cattle around this weight are newly weaned and just started on grain. Often they have also not been "worked" which means they have no hormone implants yet and sometimes no shots. They are smaller than usual beef, which finishes at around 1,200 to 1,300 pounds, but since you end up with about 50% of the live weight as meat in the freezer that is fine with me. I end up with around 300 pounds of delicious beef out of a 600 pound cow and that is plenty for our family for around a year! I have also eaten dairy breed cattle and they are also delicious, but you need to pay less for them because they typically butcher out at less percentage of finished meat due to being a less muscled animal. Hope that helps!

  • @8110deere
    @8110deere Год назад +1

    did you get rain last weekend

  • @timsuiter9397
    @timsuiter9397 Год назад

    Was this on a Thursday

  • @shealy265
    @shealy265 Год назад +1

    You mentioned that had really good second crop sorghum. Was it a new hybrid for your farm/the one you could spray? Or did you only use that on the full season Sorghum.

    • @PetersonFarmBros
      @PetersonFarmBros  Год назад +1

      All of our double crop sorghum looks pretty good, and yes we have one field that is a new hybrid for us. Sorghum all looks good, beans all look pretty rough except the irrigated.

  • @leesdairyfarm
    @leesdairyfarm Год назад +11

    what do you guys think of this lab grown meat??? I think they should STOP CALLING IT MEAT!!!!!!

  • @clairemiller1420
    @clairemiller1420 Год назад

    Then one day needed jacket on