Y'all always think about other's,too, sharing and all. You teach and explain things, work hard, humor always, just really wonderful folks. God Bless Y'all!
I just started watching y'all and I gotta say farmers and ranchers are if not THE hardest working people in this country then for sure one of em. We appreciate y'all and all your hard work. Sincerely 🙏💪🤘🤘🇺🇲🇺🇲🇺🇲♥️
100% hard work from 2am till the work in done late into the night. We came into the house took shower, ate, did homework & went to bed then started all over again. No days off, animals have to be feed 2x aday. Fields have to be watered, crops planted, & harvest. I started working 6yrs old & last time I worked on Family Farm I got married 45yrs ago. I did go home & helped thru out the years. Now retired carrying for 6 Potbelly girls, 5 Nigerian Dwarf Girls Goats & 4 girl dogs & 1 Bearded Dragon (girl) LOL. I still love it.
Seeing you bring home boxes of beef, reminds me of my youth. During the '70s and very early '80s, my folks would buy a side of beef from a rural town locker (butcher), every couple of months. It was about an 80 mile round trip, from our farm to the locker and back.
If you can smile like that when talking about spendin 120 bucks on beef jerky ....You are my kinda person !!! I'd love to have a burger with this guy !!!
Me and my husband just started watching your channel and we ABSOLUTELY love it!!. We are first generation farmers but hoping to get to the ranchers status. Love your content please keep it coming we are learning lots from y’all!
If you get a chance check out the carcass hanging they usually have a lot of back and belly fat. We typically finish out to about 12-1300 for freezer beef sold direct. It produces a good finish overall which is what you end up having to shoot for. Anything heavier, the fat in the burger is too much, the ribeyes get to fatty as well as your chuck area, the NY strip is amazing on heavier weight. The heavy market is popular now because our US heavyweights get mixed with a lot of mediocre cattle coming from all over. In the end, cutting makes a difference and fat loss on back and belly for us isn't worth the extra time and money. Its all about what works for your operation for sure. We try to shoot for a 85/15 on burger and roast to have enough fat but not to much. If we could get a beef full of steaks we'd feed them longer as well 😂
Just found your channel. We found a cattleman that lives about 2 hours away that raises grass fed, grass finished. We got 1/2 a beef last May and will reorder. I prefer my steaks to be trimmed a lot more than you do.
Thank you for showing that. It was very interesting to see the process from pasture to plate! I think I might have to put that phrase on a t-shirt! LOL
I can definitely tell you that raising your own cows to butcher is definitely 220% way better than buying meat from the grocery store for sure!! Plus it’s much cheaper also!!! We have lived on are farm for the past 23 years and built are house back in 2000!! We have a buddy of mine that I went to school with back in the day we have his dad feed out are cow for butchering because it’s easier for us and he will usually feed out 6 or so!! After we had to buy a new freezer for are last butchered cow we figured out that for every pound of meat we got it cost us around 4.00$ a pound and actually just a little less with including the price of the freezer that we had to buy also!!! Heck at 4.00$ a that is cheaper than you can buy hamburger around us even!! But people say or think well 4.00$ a pound isn’t that much cheaper but then you tell them that is for every different cut of meat that we got also!! So even rib eyes, New York steaks, T bones, and for most of that stuff if baught at the grocery store usually cost well over 6.00$ a pound!! Now for next year when we have one butchered and we don’t have to buy a new freezer are meat should cost well under 3.00$ a pound!!! If you can afford to fork out a lump amount at once to buy a cow to butcher it’s definitely worth it for sure!!! Plus you No everything that has been done to it while raising it up and feeding it out also!! We had ares butchered out at just around when it was close to a 1000lbs!!! I definitely encourage others to do the same thing if possible for them!! I will almost guarantee you that if you have never tried it before and you do end up trying it will change your mind about buying meat from the store at all again!!! It’s just about like the chicken eggs that I had told you about!!! Any chicken eggs you buy from the store are guaranteed to be 30 days old or older by the time they even get to the store and stocked on the shelf ready to sell!!! I definitely can’t eat store bought chicken eggs because they tear me up really bad!! After raising chickens for the past 10 years or longer we can get eggs as fresh as being no older than a minute old!!! That is definitely a big difference and those eggs don’t bother me at all and don’t tear me up like store baught eggs do!!! Awesome video and remember to keep up all the hard work you all!!!!
NY Strip is my favorite cut, but when we started harvesting our own we got a bunch of random cuts. Denver Cut was so damn good, very similar to a Strip steak.
Damn, that freezer full of beef looks nice! Nothing like your own beef in the freezer! I would say that ribeye would grade prime. If not, damn high in choice. Ribeye is my favorite steak. Inch and a half thick. Salt, pepper, on the grill at 450 degrees, four minutes on the first side, flip it and three minutes on the second side, let it rest for 10 minutes. Perfect medium rare. Glass of Merlot. It doesn't get any better! I heard you say chuck roasts. That is my favorite roast. Best flavor out of all the roast cuts. You said you've never had New York strips. That's my second favorite steak. I'm sure you enjoy them. Do you keep short ribs? I love short ribs braised in a tomato and red wine sauce. Season them and brown them then put them in the sauce and in the oven at 300 for about 3.5 to 4 hours. Serve over garlic mashed potatoes. They are heavenly! Those critters must have been finished on a pretty hot ration. There was a lot of fat on those New Yorks! Processing costs a fortune nowadays. Man, they stuck it to you at a buck a patty for those burgers! Holy crap! We've done our own processing for many years. When I was a kid my dad cut it all up by hand, and then had a small grinder for the burger. We have all our own equipment. A band saw, a 1.75 horse grinder, an electric mixer, and commercial vacuum sealer. And we have a big sausage stuffer and a smokehouse for when we butcher pigs and make sausage. I usually pick out a couple open heifers when we PG, and lock them up by themselves and take them up to about 1300 lbs on a ration of cracked corn and rolled barley and all the grass hay they want. We don't have a cooler, so when we slaughter them we take the halfs to a local butcher shop and have them hang them for us 27 days, then we bring it home and do the processing. Then that all gets split between three families and my mom. That's what my mom, my sister and her family and my daughter and her family get for Christmas.... Thanks for sharing your video! Nice to see what other people do! We are up in the top of the country in ND.... oh, one more thing. My dads brand was -6. The ND Stockman's Association wouldn't let me take it over when he passed because it's to easy to alter. That was disappointing. But, my daughter has his irons hanging on the wall with a pair of his old leather gloves, his hat, his belt, and some rusty old barbed wire wrapped around an old diamond willow fence post, hanging on the wall in her living room. Looks pretty darn nice.
How long did y'all finish those steers? Did you use Corn/Oats/Barley (COB). I'm in Centex and am taking my first 2 highland steers to the processor Sep next year. Thanks!
@@Bar7Ranch wowzer ok great. Thank you for that insight. I think I will give that length a try, was originally thinking 90 day but if you can get a better result as you have demonstrated it seams like the way to go.
So we are waiting for our cattle to be delivered. Just getting three for beef for three families. Feeding them until time to butcher. Been around cows my whole Life but never raised one. 15-1600lbs is ideal for butchering?
When did you cut or Band? they almost have a Bulls Sheath. We finish on Barley at 18months of age around 1500 pounds and cut after 4 Months tops. We sell by hanging weight. We all move less desirable animals from our herd as others obviously do. some crippled steers or old cows are destined for 100% Hamburger and not a reflection of someone's herd or finishing program.
It will cost around $2,300 for a whole calf and about $500 processing a whole beef. You should have around $4-$4.25/# in. It’s way better than beef in the store.
@@fredbecker607 I know. I had 4 head fattened out. Only butchered 1. 3/4 for my family and sold a quarter. Most people don’t want to spend that much at one time. I thought I had them priced pretty low, $2.50/# hanging weight.
$125 for 4 lbs of jerky is just as outrageous. That works out to $1.95/oz. Jerky at Sam's Club is half that and you don't have to provide your own cow.
Great video! Feel free to deliver one of those beautiful steers, butchered of course, to me in North Idaho! I'll trade you some venison smokies and elk steaks...LOL
It’s surprising to hear you haven’t had New York strip or filets. I just would have always thought you having a ranch and getting a full cow , you would have for sure had those. I wonder what you had instead?
This is awesome, just found yall and I feel the need to point out im no city slicker, im from the country in CT town of 5,000 more farms and horses and cattle than people, BUT, the need to watch farmin after watchin that yellowstone show haha ill admit it got me, this is cool as heck thanks for posting it on youtube. Did you know there was country farms in Connecticut?
Y'all always think about other's,too, sharing and all. You teach and explain things, work hard, humor always, just really wonderful folks. God Bless Y'all!
Clancy those steers look really good! I think you did an excellent job feeding them out!
Seeing the little rancher follow his dad is so cool.
he is walking in his dad's foot steps, learning the trade, God Bless our Farmers.
I appreciate u passing along to your employees
Your goods
Your a good man
Cody you are an inspiration man. God Bless Your Family and ranch.
I just started watching y'all and I gotta say farmers and ranchers are if not THE hardest working people in this country then for sure one of em. We appreciate y'all and all your hard work. Sincerely 🙏💪🤘🤘🇺🇲🇺🇲🇺🇲♥️
Don’t forget about the butcher. Slaughtering a 1200lb cow is by no means easy either…
100% hard work from 2am till the work in done late into the night. We came into the house took shower, ate, did homework & went to bed then started all over again. No days off, animals have to be feed 2x aday. Fields have to be watered, crops planted, & harvest. I started working 6yrs old & last time I worked on Family Farm I got married 45yrs ago. I did go home & helped thru out the years. Now retired carrying for 6 Potbelly girls, 5 Nigerian Dwarf Girls Goats & 4 girl dogs & 1 Bearded Dragon (girl) LOL. I still love it.
Seeing you bring home boxes of beef, reminds me of my youth.
During the '70s and very early '80s, my folks would buy a side of beef from a rural town locker (butcher), every couple of months.
It was about an 80 mile round trip, from our farm to the locker and back.
More of this content please!!! Love your channel, very wholesome and meaningful.
Also nothing beats a ribeye.
@@werfuct
Yeeesssss my thoughts exactly
When you make the ny strips, all you need is salt fresh ground pepper and a olive oil. Cook on a grill or sear on a cast iron pan. 👌🏼
If you can smile like that when talking about spendin 120 bucks on beef jerky ....You are my kinda person !!! I'd love to have a burger with this guy !!!
Me and my husband just started watching your channel and we ABSOLUTELY love it!!. We are first generation farmers but hoping to get to the ranchers status.
Love your content please keep it coming we are learning lots from y’all!
If you get a chance check out the carcass hanging they usually have a lot of back and belly fat. We typically finish out to about 12-1300 for freezer beef sold direct. It produces a good finish overall which is what you end up having to shoot for. Anything heavier, the fat in the burger is too much, the ribeyes get to fatty as well as your chuck area, the NY strip is amazing on heavier weight. The heavy market is popular now because our US heavyweights get mixed with a lot of mediocre cattle coming from all over. In the end, cutting makes a difference and fat loss on back and belly for us isn't worth the extra time and money. Its all about what works for your operation for sure. We try to shoot for a 85/15 on burger and roast to have enough fat but not to much. If we could get a beef full of steaks we'd feed them longer as well 😂
Finally some decent education on RUclips. Wouldn’t trade my farm upbringing for anything!
im a city guy, i must admit i would have loved to be raised on a farm, i know alot of work but to see all this would have to be satisfying.
Great job Guys. Constantine is such a great Kid, and Smart as All Get Out. Thank u guys for sharing, Great Job!
Happiness is a freezer full of meat!
Bet he gets beef jerky again next time too!
110% ... This man is a Legend
Had to start making my own.
😂😂 " bout stroked out "... Absolute Bossanova 😂😅
Cody is so gosh dang chill and stylin’ with that mustache he probably doesn’t even realize it’s the 🐐
😅 riiight... Bossanova...
Its all the chuck Norris water
@@o0oTurtleo0o222 Ha! Yeah some CN water is all it takes 😂
@@BT1919😂😂😂😂😂
What a great genuine family!! w/awesome content.
We do our own too! Raise it, finish it, eat it!! Love it! Our bull is a Limousin! The meat is lean, well marbled and fantastic!!
Found y'all's channel a few days ago.
Watching you & your boy is like a replay of my growing up
Cherish these time, they'll be gone too soon
My heavens ... Thats some gorgeous marble on them cuts. ... Hats off to u sir
Just found your channel. We found a cattleman that lives about 2 hours away that raises grass fed, grass finished. We got 1/2 a beef last May and will reorder. I prefer my steaks to be trimmed a lot more than you do.
When he was going thru with the butcher picking it out they were trimming it better. Maybe he wanted the extra fat?
From one Cody to another. Love the content!! Go Hornets!!
I wish I had Cody's ranching skills
Y’all keep ranchin all the way from Columbus Ohio. Go Bucks!!!
Glad to see that you have a Bradford Built flatbed!
My favorite brand!
Their manufacturing headquarters are about 90 miles from where I live.😎
Thank you for showing that. It was very interesting to see the process from pasture to plate! I think I might have to put that phrase on a t-shirt! LOL
God bless Texas 🙌 from the smoky mountains of NC.
Right down the road foothills in S.C
#Cackalacky
@@factsmatter4030
Spurs up 🐓
Its good to see a couple that really is down to earth and loving. Im also a big fan of herfords
My brother Anthony pouridis loves your videos he showed me to you guys. We have a ranch too and we love the content you make ❤
Nice looking ribeye but you have some beautiful beef-did a great job raising them
I can definitely tell you that raising your own cows to butcher is definitely 220% way better than buying meat from the grocery store for sure!! Plus it’s much cheaper also!!! We have lived on are farm for the past 23 years and built are house back in 2000!! We have a buddy of mine that I went to school with back in the day we have his dad feed out are cow for butchering because it’s easier for us and he will usually feed out 6 or so!! After we had to buy a new freezer for are last butchered cow we figured out that for every pound of meat we got it cost us around 4.00$ a pound and actually just a little less with including the price of the freezer that we had to buy also!!! Heck at 4.00$ a that is cheaper than you can buy hamburger around us even!! But people say or think well 4.00$ a pound isn’t that much cheaper but then you tell them that is for every different cut of meat that we got also!! So even rib eyes, New York steaks, T bones, and for most of that stuff if baught at the grocery store usually cost well over 6.00$ a pound!! Now for next year when we have one butchered and we don’t have to buy a new freezer are meat should cost well under 3.00$ a pound!!! If you can afford to fork out a lump amount at once to buy a cow to butcher it’s definitely worth it for sure!!! Plus you No everything that has been done to it while raising it up and feeding it out also!! We had ares butchered out at just around when it was close to a 1000lbs!!! I definitely encourage others to do the same thing if possible for them!! I will almost guarantee you that if you have never tried it before and you do end up trying it will change your mind about buying meat from the store at all again!!! It’s just about like the chicken eggs that I had told you about!!! Any chicken eggs you buy from the store are guaranteed to be 30 days old or older by the time they even get to the store and stocked on the shelf ready to sell!!! I definitely can’t eat store bought chicken eggs because they tear me up really bad!! After raising chickens for the past 10 years or longer we can get eggs as fresh as being no older than a minute old!!! That is definitely a big difference and those eggs don’t bother me at all and don’t tear me up like store baught eggs do!!! Awesome video and remember to keep up all the hard work you all!!!!
Great Video! Thanks for sharing all. Yeah, jerky is too expensive! I make my own now using roasts. Love home grown beef, lamb & goat!
NY Strip is my favorite cut, but when we started harvesting our own we got a bunch of random cuts. Denver Cut was so damn good, very similar to a Strip steak.
I like the New York strips quite a bite but nothing beats the porterhouse. I like the variety of it
Cody you are always welcome to come hangout on the slaughter truck or if you want to see some good ole boys doing work let me know
Good quality beef, well packaged. Worth every nickel.
When Cody talks about the weight steers carry.. I believe him, my eyes work.. 🤭🤭😉
Some first class looking cuts of beef there!
True story
This is my ASMR 😌😌another lovely video.
530lb group of 45 charolais steers just sold for 395 per hundred weight here!!!
Fantastic Video!! Thanks for Sharing!!
Very nice u gave to ur employees. A little bonus for them way nice
By the look on his face about the beef jerky y'all will have it again next steer! 🤣
Let's see some cooked meat now!
@Bar 7 Ranch we need Mr Clance to give us a reaction to the cooked meat! Everyone loves honest opinions 🤣
Nowhere near prime.
100% choice 😂😂😂
Long live cody and the pancho!!!
Maybe I'm worng but I haven't seen a farm tour video yet? That would be cool, a tour of Bar-7 Ranch!
Interested to know your percentage from live weight, to hanging weight, to actual packaged weight?
Also, at what age do you put your steers up to feed out?
New to the channel!! She really boost and not doing nothing she must have a great moral support!!
How many days did they hang the beef before butchering?
You all are just Fantastic.
Those were great looking steers.
Who did you use for the processing? I’ve been looking for a butcher in our area.
As much as I LOVE Ribeyes I don't think I could do that without shedding a tear 😮
Hey dad::: you have a wonderful son. Hey son::: you have a wonderful dad:: Hey mom::: good job 👏🏻
That’s was awesome. Thanks for sharing!
What a great video showing your process of slaughtering to Freezer. Unfortunately for me, I’m allergic to red meat, so I can’t eat any🥴.
You tube is but hurt because someone knows more than there leftist brains....
Have you ever had your beef swapped at a locker plant before we have?
Chuck eye is my favorite cut
What do you guys feed out your steers with?
Great video, And I commend you on the clean ranch.
Damn, that freezer full of beef looks nice! Nothing like your own beef in the freezer! I would say that ribeye would grade prime. If not, damn high in choice. Ribeye is my favorite steak. Inch and a half thick. Salt, pepper, on the grill at 450 degrees, four minutes on the first side, flip it and three minutes on the second side, let it rest for 10 minutes. Perfect medium rare. Glass of Merlot. It doesn't get any better! I heard you say chuck roasts. That is my favorite roast. Best flavor out of all the roast cuts. You said you've never had New York strips. That's my second favorite steak. I'm sure you enjoy them. Do you keep short ribs? I love short ribs braised in a tomato and red wine sauce. Season them and brown them then put them in the sauce and in the oven at 300 for about 3.5 to 4 hours. Serve over garlic mashed potatoes. They are heavenly!
Those critters must have been finished on a pretty hot ration. There was a lot of fat on those New Yorks! Processing costs a fortune nowadays. Man, they stuck it to you at a buck a patty for those burgers! Holy crap! We've done our own processing for many years. When I was a kid my dad cut it all up by hand, and then had a small grinder for the burger. We have all our own equipment. A band saw, a 1.75 horse grinder, an electric mixer, and commercial vacuum sealer. And we have a big sausage stuffer and a smokehouse for when we butcher pigs and make sausage. I usually pick out a couple open heifers when we PG, and lock them up by themselves and take them up to about 1300 lbs on a ration of cracked corn and rolled barley and all the grass hay they want. We don't have a cooler, so when we slaughter them we take the halfs to a local butcher shop and have them hang them for us 27 days, then we bring it home and do the processing. Then that all gets split between three families and my mom.
That's what my mom, my sister and her family and my daughter and her family get for Christmas.... Thanks for sharing your video! Nice to see what other people do! We are up in the top of the country in ND.... oh, one more thing. My dads brand was -6. The ND Stockman's Association wouldn't let me take it over when he passed because it's to easy to alter. That was disappointing. But, my daughter has his irons hanging on the wall with a pair of his old leather gloves, his hat, his belt, and some rusty old barbed wire wrapped around an old diamond willow fence post, hanging on the wall in her living room. Looks pretty darn nice.
27 days hanging, wow! What does that add? Flavor?
How is the new law in June about the antibiotics and certain meds for animals having to be prescribed by a vet going to affect yall.
Peeps need to know those Vax if mnra, are not good for consumption ,can be passed into yer bodies ...like the Job , morbidity shita were "safe"! NOT!!
How many pounds of processed beef did y'all end up with??
@@Bar7Ranch Pretty dang good,Thank you for the quick response!👍🇺🇸👍
Saw Lefty is there a Right on the farm?
How long did y'all finish those steers? Did you use Corn/Oats/Barley (COB). I'm in Centex and am taking my first 2 highland steers to the processor Sep next year. Thanks!
@@Bar7Ranch wowzer ok great. Thank you for that insight. I think I will give that length a try, was originally thinking 90 day but if you can get a better result as you have demonstrated it seams like the way to go.
Do y’all sell beef to individual buyers? I’m in central Texas
Going to be some good beef they
A rich farmer. All i can say!
So we are waiting for our cattle to be delivered. Just getting three for beef for three families. Feeding them until time to butcher. Been around cows my whole
Life but never raised one. 15-1600lbs is ideal for butchering?
Do a video of Cody cooking some ribeyes!!
Beautiful animals!
What was the total processing cost per critter?
@@Bar7Ranch I'm a processor / beef producer in West Tennessee. That's why I was curious, lol.
$1 per Pattie to make hamburger into patties ?! I can make my own dang patties for $1 a piece, thank you very much! 😂🤦🏼♂️
Wow, there's a whole lotta fat cap on those cuts... Flavor!
When did you cut or Band? they almost have a Bulls Sheath. We finish on Barley at 18months of age around 1500 pounds and cut after 4 Months tops. We sell by hanging weight. We all move less desirable animals from our herd as others obviously do. some crippled steers or old cows are destined for 100% Hamburger and not a reflection of someone's herd or finishing program.
Just subscribed to your channel. Good content, keep ranchin and I'll keep pushin dirt from a fellow Texan.
I just got my beef a month ago and I bout had a stroke when I got the bill!! It’s ridiculous how much it’s went up
It will cost around $2,300 for a whole calf and about $500 processing a whole beef. You should have around $4-$4.25/# in. It’s way better than beef in the store.
@@kennethheern4896 I agree that’s all I get every year I do not buy store bought, haven’t for years there’s no comparison
Around here, they are now selling 1/8 beef bundles. The bigger packages are just too expensive for most of us.
@@fredbecker607 I know.
@@fredbecker607 I know. I had 4 head fattened out. Only butchered 1. 3/4 for my family and sold a quarter. Most people don’t want to spend that much at one time. I thought I had them priced pretty low, $2.50/# hanging weight.
Where do y’all get your beef butchered at? We are in West Texas and our butcher limits our beef at 1100lbs.
Thank you!
It only cost $.50/# to have patties made where I get my calves processed. So $1.00/patty is outrageous.
$125 for 4 lbs of jerky is just as outrageous. That works out to $1.95/oz. Jerky at Sam's Club is half that and you don't have to provide your own cow.
Great video! Feel free to deliver one of those beautiful steers, butchered of course, to me in North Idaho! I'll trade you some venison smokies and elk steaks...LOL
Was that Igor (Marty Feldman) at 8:49 ??
How old were those steers?
What was the hanging weight and how many pounds of beef did you bring home per animal ?
Nothing like having your own beef ,I don’t have it any more ,sure miss it
I love animals❤️ They are SO tasty!
I'm interested in the costs. I was surprised to hear you pay 3/lb for burgers
What parts don't you request back? Do you get back the organ meats (heart, liver) or the "oxtails"?
Absolutely awesome video very interesting
Wow that rib eye looks so delicious 😊
It’s surprising to hear you haven’t had New York strip or filets. I just would have always thought you having a ranch and getting a full cow , you would have for sure had those. I wonder what you had instead?
Where yall located? All of west Texas looks the same, I'm in the big country.
Do y’all work your land by y’all’s self or do y’all have workers that help?
Yummy...
I just picked up a half not to long ago, and it is a bit much, looking at prices in the store, it made OK. Will see.
When we gona get some Clancy custom knives for sale
Ya know a butcher shop would look real good next to the chicken church
Enjoyable and informative content.
Thanks
What was the weight after being processed?
This is awesome, just found yall and I feel the need to point out im no city slicker, im from the country in CT town of 5,000 more farms and horses and cattle than people, BUT, the need to watch farmin after watchin that yellowstone show haha ill admit it got me, this is cool as heck thanks for posting it on youtube. Did you know there was country farms in Connecticut?
Yes! We visit rural New York every year! ❤️