Millennial Farmer, compared to regular farming, explained.

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  • Опубликовано: 19 окт 2024

Комментарии • 112

  • @user-qh1dk3fh5q
    @user-qh1dk3fh5q Год назад +4

    Sir, thanks for your service and the great videos! I live in Michigan and enjoy watching farming channels that use older equipment!

    • @MichiganMarineFarmer
      @MichiganMarineFarmer  Год назад +1

      Wow what a nice comment. Appreciate you taking your time to write that. Where in Michigan?

  • @robertstuckjr2146
    @robertstuckjr2146 Год назад +3

    I drive the grain cart for my son in law, Reading Mi, gotta love the rocks, the rain and harvesting. Your doing a great job! Thank you for your service

  • @glenkellner9936
    @glenkellner9936 11 месяцев назад +2

    Thanks for the video,thank you for your service as well. I appreciate your contribution. I grew up on old equipment.

    • @MichiganMarineFarmer
      @MichiganMarineFarmer  11 месяцев назад

      Thanks for watching! Just trying to give e different perspective

  • @stevendyer6509
    @stevendyer6509 Год назад +4

    We had a 6620 and it was a great combine. We never had one problem.

    • @MichiganMarineFarmer
      @MichiganMarineFarmer  Год назад

      Yeah seems like a solid rig. Wouldn't mind a 9500 4x4 next year

    • @johnhrasko5036
      @johnhrasko5036 11 месяцев назад +1

      We started out with a 6620 in 1989 it was a great unit for our operation at the time. We moved to a 9500 after about 5 years and it was a big difference in power and capacity. Much more comfortable as well. Keep at it it takes time to get some size. By farming land others don't want you can keep the costs down as well and put more money in your pocket

    • @MichiganMarineFarmer
      @MichiganMarineFarmer  11 месяцев назад

      @johnhrasko5036 yeah we had a 9520 a few years ago. Driven a few 9500. Want to get one soon hopefully.

  • @BJPayneWorking
    @BJPayneWorking Год назад +2

    As a retired Marine I appreciate your honest statements and I agree. Semper Fi

  • @duanehopp9729
    @duanehopp9729 11 месяцев назад +1

    I work with a 4520 from 1969. And still working good

  • @lfeco
    @lfeco Год назад +2

    My Pop always would say it's not how fast you get done it's what you have left for your pocket when you are done.

  • @ranger1390
    @ranger1390 Год назад +6

    Thank you for your service. I want to see you succeed with your farm and make more money. I grew up on a 240 acre famly farm in SW MN. We had 1966 JD 45 squareback and a 2 row mounted New Idea corn picker for harvest. When I was a young kid, I thought similarly like you about the "bigger" farmer. Us kids hated spending 2 weeks in the Spring every year picking rock out of the fields. Each of us would get an empty steel grease bucket (5 gal) for us to put the rock in and then carry the full bucket to the Hayrack and go back and look for more rock. Fist size and bigger. Then when the beans were shin high, we'd sharpen up the garden hoe's and walk through the entire bean field and pull/hoe out all the weeds in the summer heat. We took pride in seeing our clean fields. It was a lot of work, but we had good yields. This is my first suggestion, you got to get rid of all the weeds. I would guess you were losing 30% or more of potential yields to the weeds. Especially in dry years it would be way more. You have a terrible Lambs Quarter problem and they will not only take yield but they will also bust sickle sections, straw walkers etc along with running them through the combine pushes up your moisture content with the seeds getting into the bin. So you get docked for high moisture content along with excessive wear, tear and repair on the equipment all means less profitability. We made more money because we didn't have alot of breakdowns, yields were better with less weed competition for moisture. We didn't use alot of chemical weed control cause we cultivated crops. It was cheaper running a 1956 JD 630 cultivating all the crops then it was for cost of spray. the corn got sprayed once only. My "poor me" syndrome changed when Pres. Carter put the Grain Embargo in place, Interest Rates had already gone to 21% and Inflation was 17+% and I watched our neighbors go bankrupt one after another. That's when I got my real education and not from school. All the things that the other kids had that I didn't, well they didn't have anything at all after that. My education: save, work hard, don't take the easy way out, only rely on yourself, be frugal and efficient and NEVER VOTE DEMOCRAT!!! My mom was republican and my dad was Democrat. Carter was the last time he ever voted DFL again.

  • @paulwagner5367
    @paulwagner5367 Год назад +1

    I like your videos keep up the hard work!

    • @MichiganMarineFarmer
      @MichiganMarineFarmer  Год назад

      Amazing reading a comment like this. Means a lot. Thanks for the watch/ comment

  • @jeremymullen5378
    @jeremymullen5378 11 месяцев назад +1

    🔥right on man, I enjoy your channel cuz I grew up with equipment and farming old school like u and your family.. 8820 and 4440 tractor and 555 versatile. Then up to 980s and 9530 and 60’ equipment.. keep on pushing and the rest will all fall into place. Your old man is a good smart guy, listen to him and work together 🔥👊🔥🔨⚙️🏍🚜🌽

  • @royaltydiesel6734
    @royaltydiesel6734 Год назад +1

    Hello sir I love the videos and thanks for your service! I have a question about hay, I picked up 30acres of hay field and it hasn’t been cut yet this year. We finally picked up a disc bine so my question is would I be alright cutting it right now? I’m in southern Indian it seems pretty dry already and it’s supposed to me mid to high 70’s this week. I wanna bale it into some cheap hay or just give it to someone to clean the field up and get some lime and stuff on it before winter. Lmk if you think it’s even worth messing with, or just mow it and let it lay.

    • @MichiganMarineFarmer
      @MichiganMarineFarmer  Год назад

      If you have 3 days to dry cut and round bale. Get off field.

    • @MichiganMarineFarmer
      @MichiganMarineFarmer  Год назад

      If you cut and let sit might mess the field up next year. Depending on how thick.

    • @royaltydiesel6734
      @royaltydiesel6734 Год назад

      @@MichiganMarineFarmer I cut one field today but it’s already pretty dry but still green. I’m not doing the other 20 acres it’s poor quality and mostly broom sedge. Our new to us Kuhn DC353RGC disc bine did well but needs some tlc, can’t wait to bale with our CLAAS Rollant 66 baler. Probably bale it Wednesday or Thursday and I’ll bush hog the other 20 acres

  • @dg4033
    @dg4033 Год назад +5

    we farm across the river in Ontario, our beans run anywhere from 60 - 80 bushels to the acre. You need to pick those rocks, even on rented ground, at the end of the day, its your machinery getting hammered. And you and millenial farmer are you very different operations, and sizes. There is nothing wrong with they way he farms, hes fields are weed free and he picks rocks even on rented ground

  • @lordofhowell7158
    @lordofhowell7158 Год назад +1

    Combine looks a fine machine! Brilliant video 💪🏻 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿

  • @dwitcraft
    @dwitcraft Год назад +1

    I'd like to hear more about your farming. How many acres, crop types, costs/acre, more about you machines, etc. When I lived in CA, they farm all year down there. Tomatoes, corn, soybeans

  • @teamlj77
    @teamlj77 Год назад +1

    Good to see more farmers from Michigan on youtube. Your about a hour south of me..

  • @bigdaddys73nova
    @bigdaddys73nova Год назад

    Getting the job done, i enjoy your videos

  • @jo-nation6692
    @jo-nation6692 11 месяцев назад +1

    Have Y'all tried inter-cropping for better Yield

  • @Sc-jf3yk
    @Sc-jf3yk Год назад

    It doesnt matter the size or age. Depends on what is in your pocket at the end of the day. I own a construction company and we where good size 10-15 employees now we are just 2. Lot less headaches, less stress, everything is paid for, and making the same money with a lot more time off.

  • @randyczapla9104
    @randyczapla9104 Год назад +1

    We still farm this way we have tractors from 1961 that we use all the time keeping it real

  • @steve8smith9
    @steve8smith9 11 месяцев назад

    Glad you exist to tell others what 'real' farming is!

  • @johnwudarcki9315
    @johnwudarcki9315 Год назад

    Couple questions about your combine. Is it two wheel drive ? And if so, do you have trouble with the rear tires packing with mud. I see so many run the tires backwards if only 2 we. I can’t wrap my head around that theory. Only just recently discovered you. I’m near Lapeer, and also watch Kip Segler by Imlay City

  • @FirleFarms
    @FirleFarms Год назад +1

    We farm with a 4400 and a 216 bean head. Gets along just fine still 👍 keep it up

  • @TAHDAHFarm
    @TAHDAHFarm Год назад +1

    Thanks for the ride.

    • @MichiganMarineFarmer
      @MichiganMarineFarmer  Год назад

      Hope it wasn't too rough a ride

    • @TAHDAHFarm
      @TAHDAHFarm Год назад +1

      No, I still have my 6600 with 216 head. I now use a 6620 with a 920 head. From listening to you, you haven't seen my channel, I'm doing things the old way but just trying to keep things working as if they were new or better than new.

    • @MichiganMarineFarmer
      @MichiganMarineFarmer  Год назад

      @@TAHDAHFarm what's the name of your channel?

    • @MichiganMarineFarmer
      @MichiganMarineFarmer  Год назад

      Where you from?

    • @TAHDAHFarm
      @TAHDAHFarm Год назад +1

      TAH-DAH Farm nw ohio

  • @camronmarlo1215
    @camronmarlo1215 Год назад +1

    I run a 6620 combine with a 918 bean head and a 643 corn head

  • @ABF-om9rh
    @ABF-om9rh 11 месяцев назад

    Header sure is feeding good.

  • @jt2988
    @jt2988 Год назад +1

    I love watching the cheap stuff! Thats the real stuff!

  • @terrygrantham7762
    @terrygrantham7762 Год назад +1

    I think your doing great 👍 just keep going.

  • @donaldtull6522
    @donaldtull6522 Год назад

    what difference between your corn varietys and millienies

    • @MichiganMarineFarmer
      @MichiganMarineFarmer  Год назад

      I grow organic corn . No idea what he's running but would love to have half the knowledge those guys got

  • @jo-nation6692
    @jo-nation6692 11 месяцев назад +1

    I miss harvest help on my GrandParent's FARM...i thoroughly enjoyed such experience
    Wish my Grand Parents Farming outfit would consider Organic and or sustainable Techniques...as herbicides, insecticides and artificial NPK in my professional Opinion the problem to Farming...USDA, and EPA ought to do more to rebrand and support Farmers to incorporate Organic without the issues of so much PAPERWORK...i met an Organic Wheat Farmer near me in Kansas and he has to fill out so much Paperwork...seems to me is the problem to enlighten the conventional FARMER
    anyways
    Ive researched some and uncovered much into SUPPORTING and SUPPORTIVE outreach and ideas to Sustainable Farmning

  • @3dranchmanitoba
    @3dranchmanitoba Год назад +1

    As long as you can get the job done without too many issues and get parts reasonably quick, the older stuff will still get the job done. We keep updated as best we can with haying equipment but everything else is 80's 90' vintage. Can' t afford or justify the payments on that new stuff.

  • @jro1919
    @jro1919 11 месяцев назад +1

    I'm confused by the slamming other farmers just because your situation isn't theirs and vice versa.

    • @MichiganMarineFarmer
      @MichiganMarineFarmer  11 месяцев назад

      Did I slam anyone. They know 100× what I know. Was showing a different perspective other than 300,000$ grain carts

    • @jro1919
      @jro1919 11 месяцев назад

      @@MichiganMarineFarmer gotcha. Came off differently. Appreciate you responding to clarify.

  • @jamesvantine3308
    @jamesvantine3308 Год назад +1

    It’s my first season this year, I’m using my grandpas 7720 and 218 head. I’m over here in Lapeer mi

    • @MichiganMarineFarmer
      @MichiganMarineFarmer  Год назад +1

      Good stuff! Nice piece of equipment! Thanks for the watch and sharing your story

  • @djwheels66
    @djwheels66 Год назад +7

    When has Zach complained about 250 bushel corn? I haven’t seen that. He and his dad have grown their operation. Keep working at it and you can too if you make the right decisions on land. ❤❤❤

    • @MichiganMarineFarmer
      @MichiganMarineFarmer  Год назад +2

      No hate at all. Was an exaggerated statement. Appreciate the watch and comment sur

    • @MichiganMarineFarmer
      @MichiganMarineFarmer  Год назад

      Sir

    • @djwheels66
      @djwheels66 Год назад +1

      @@MichiganMarineFarmer My apologies if I came across angry or rude. You’re doing great!

    • @MichiganMarineFarmer
      @MichiganMarineFarmer  Год назад +1

      @@djwheels66 Not at all. Appreciate everyone opinion. Just glad people are enjoying my videos. Fun ass hobby

  • @piperdoug428
    @piperdoug428 Год назад +1

    if ye follow my videos you see i used to be part of a 3000 acre crop farming, we ran big NH combines (CR9.90) and NH quad track (T9.615) but family sold up so me n wife are ranching on our own with older stuff and im far more happy, combined oats with my IH 766 pulling a 914, and i got an AC8550 for tillage and just picked up a White 8x18 plow

  • @johnwudarcki9315
    @johnwudarcki9315 Год назад +1

    Not a farmer but up around Lapeer I see a lot of beans still in the field. I’m not far from Hunt Farms and I haven’t seen many of their trucks going by.

    • @MichiganMarineFarmer
      @MichiganMarineFarmer  Год назад

      I actually seen a hunt farm video from 1980 on youtube randomly. Wonder if it's the same crew

    • @jamesvantine3308
      @jamesvantine3308 Год назад +1

      It is the same crew, they started to combine this past Wednesday down my road. I started to combine the 8th and been out of the field ever sense

    • @MichiganMarineFarmer
      @MichiganMarineFarmer  Год назад

      @@jamesvantine3308 weird I randomly seen . Looks like a huge farm

    • @jamesvantine3308
      @jamesvantine3308 Год назад

      They farm around 12,000 acres now

  • @chadgutshall8165
    @chadgutshall8165 Год назад +3

    Sounds to me like your jaded that you aren't one of those "big RUclipsrs" make due with what you have and be happy as much as I love what I do I'd love to be back on farm

  • @baldmaggots
    @baldmaggots Год назад +2

    Here for the cheap stuff, keep it running.

  • @joshkimball4976
    @joshkimball4976 Год назад +1

    Having the same issues getting beans off in SW Michigan. I prefer to run the older equipment. Easier to work on and no government juice.

  • @hawks2252
    @hawks2252 Год назад

    good vid bud.

  • @nitram739
    @nitram739 11 месяцев назад +1

    The big boys have to have big yields to pay for the fancy overpriced equipment!

    • @MichiganMarineFarmer
      @MichiganMarineFarmer  11 месяцев назад

      No hate! Was just giving a different perspective

    • @nitram739
      @nitram739 11 месяцев назад

      I’m sorry, but I do have a little bitterness towards the Big Boys. The bigger they are usually the more cut throat they are, and would fuck their neighbor for ground! Someone had to say it! If the big boys wouldn’t receive welfare from the government it would be easier to stomach!

  • @dudekseeds8586
    @dudekseeds8586 Год назад +1

    I farm east of you bout 45 miles with older equipment as well my combine is celebrating it's 50th yr as well as full time insurance job so if you are looking for farm auto or crop insurance give me a holler

    • @MichiganMarineFarmer
      @MichiganMarineFarmer  Год назад

      We are all covered all ready but appreciate the info. What combine is it? Thanks for the watch

  • @camronmarlo1215
    @camronmarlo1215 Год назад +1

    Your welcome

  • @johnwudarcki9315
    @johnwudarcki9315 Год назад +1

    Biggest thing I see is are you making money? I’ve learned that input is proportional to yield.
    I wouldn’t be surprised about Millennial that way. JUST watched him get his combine fixed on a Sunday. But in my mind they should be working 7 days a week, farmers do.
    As to older equipment, half the channels I watch run older equipment. One young guy runs a 4520(?) articulate, even though there’s lots of new stuff on the farm, he’s just starting out.
    I have no clue how they pay for million dollar equipment

    • @MichiganMarineFarmer
      @MichiganMarineFarmer  Год назад

      Yeah it's a size of farm× quality ÷ time to do it

    • @johnwudarcki9315
      @johnwudarcki9315 Год назад

      Considering nobody wants to work anymore, yeah. If you’ve ever rode a hay wagon, you know what real farm work is.
      Yeah, I’m that old

  • @groth3395
    @groth3395 Год назад

    it's called a POD not a "kernel"...criminy sakes. I'm impressed you have 7.68 subscribers

  • @miguelkendrick7137
    @miguelkendrick7137 Год назад +1

    Mike from parc

    • @MichiganMarineFarmer
      @MichiganMarineFarmer  Год назад

      Damn we finally have some diversity on the page! Everyone hide your children!!

    • @MichiganMarineFarmer
      @MichiganMarineFarmer  Год назад

      Send me your address in message or text ill send a shirt. Appreciate the help and good convo today

  • @davidrichter6210
    @davidrichter6210 Год назад +1

    I run the same vintage. My bottom line is better is better in the overall picture. At least your not a chest thumper.

  • @raywhite1442
    @raywhite1442 11 месяцев назад

    You need to do something instead of jacking your jaw