5 Ways British and American Farmland is Very Different

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  • Опубликовано: 28 дек 2024

Комментарии • 1,9 тыс.

  • @FalbertForester
    @FalbertForester 4 года назад +638

    One type of farming in the USA that is seldom mentioned and almost never included in "crop" definitions: tree farming. The northern tier of states have extensive parts of them that are commercial forests. Every 20 years or so, a crop of trees is taken off them. For my own state, Maine, nearly three quarters of the state looks like wild forest to the uneducated eye. But actually, that's all timberland, where trees are being grown for commercial sale.

    • @martha3445
      @martha3445 4 года назад +27

      I was thinking same thing when I looked at Maine and the Pacific Northwest.

    • @mrow7598
      @mrow7598 4 года назад +16

      I always love watching the semis with Christmas trees heading south on 95... Always puts me in the Christmas mood.

    • @JamesThompson-ol3eu
      @JamesThompson-ol3eu 4 года назад +22

      It is a money crop here in ETX. From here to Alabama, possibly Georgia too. Mostly Pine trees.

    • @billopry9343
      @billopry9343 4 года назад +48

      @@JamesThompson-ol3eu I remember back in the seventies anti logging nut jobs came down into the piney woods and started jabbering about cutting all the “old growth” forests. They left pretty quick when someone pointed out that all those trees were about 20 years old and Texas had more trees then when white people first came into the area. They thought it takes 100 years to grow a tree to marketable size here because it takes that long in northern CA, OR, and WA. Apparently that didn’t think it was very nice that we laughed at them. They went away till they decided the damn owls were endangered and came back.

    • @anthonycunningham8116
      @anthonycunningham8116 4 года назад +11

      The UK also has a tree farming-i believe the UKs forests are managed by something called the Forestry Commission, which aims to maintain a balance between a viable commercial forestry industry, and maintenance/expansion of UK woodlands and forests.
      The UK is apparently 13% forest-which doesnt sound much, and indeed isnt compared to what it was a few hundred years ago, but apparently its a rapidly increasingly number.

  • @kdrapertrucker
    @kdrapertrucker 4 года назад +531

    Most of the corn grown in the U.S. is not the corn you'd eat, it is field corn, it has a very high starch content and is used in industry as fillers, or for certain plastics, or as ingredient in large animal feeds.

    • @Hermenie
      @Hermenie 4 года назад +56

      Or ethanol

    • @rylian21
      @rylian21 4 года назад +39

      Or corn syrup.

    • @madisonbauling5928
      @madisonbauling5928 4 года назад +26

      Corn for all the cows

    • @PilotTed
      @PilotTed 4 года назад +13

      or silage

    • @PilotTed
      @PilotTed 4 года назад +25

      @@madisonbauling5928 Typically they feed grass, hay, oats, and such to cows, not corn. Pigs eat a lot of corn though, they eat a mixture of corn, oats, etc. Depends on the farm really.

  • @irishredhead14
    @irishredhead14 4 года назад +387

    We have a family farm in Indiana, every year we rotate between soybeans and corn. I saw a tomato field one time and I didn’t know what to do with myself.

    • @lauraainslie6725
      @lauraainslie6725 4 года назад +43

      10 years ago we were driving through the melon-growing area of far western Indiana at planting time... it took a while to figure out what was going on. I've also seen bright green waves of mint plants in lake country.

    • @lyllydd
      @lyllydd 4 года назад +15

      Were you cornfuzzed?

    • @SGalli-ff6nf
      @SGalli-ff6nf 4 года назад +12

      Make tomato sauce!

    • @cathipalmer8217
      @cathipalmer8217 4 года назад +18

      This year, the farms near our house were all planted with roses.

    • @julieb3996
      @julieb3996 4 года назад +9

      @@cathipalmer8217 I find that fact somewhat disturbing

  • @DonP_is_lostagain
    @DonP_is_lostagain 4 года назад +493

    The thing about all that corn is that something like 70% is not for human consumption. It's for ethanol fuel and animal feed. Fun fact. Cheers! DonP

    • @machinist7230
      @machinist7230 4 года назад +47

      He mentioned #2 is soybeans, which is also predominantly used as livestock feed.

    • @toxicginger9936
      @toxicginger9936 4 года назад +51

      And then a good chunk of the 30% left is turned into High fructose corn syrup that is in almost everything.

    • @wolfcat1998
      @wolfcat1998 4 года назад +2

      🤬

    • @jeffp3415
      @jeffp3415 4 года назад +14

      The corn fed to livestock, is for livestock that are raised for human consumption - so it's really a distinction without a difference. Also, the ethanol industry produces distillers grains which are livestock feed, so about 1/3 of the output of the ethanol plants is still for food. Same thing with corn syrup, corn gluten feeds are a livestock feed that is produced as a by-product of making corn sweeteners.

    • @AgnesIona
      @AgnesIona 4 года назад +23

      @@jeffp3415 No, there is an actual difference. This Midwesterner dares you to eat an entire cob's worth of Field Corn. Will it kill you? No. Will you like it? Probably not.
      (Sweet Corn=good for corn-on-the-cob, everyday human consumption. Field Corn= good for animals, and chemical/manufacturing of syrups, fuel, etc. )
      Another fun fact: you can eat sweet corn, straight from the field, just pick a cob, shuck it, and chow down. Same principle as an apple tree. It is hungry, you want a snack, and there is a sweet treat.

  • @theMoerster
    @theMoerster 4 года назад +366

    If you're having problems picturing how much a bushel is just remember that it's the same as 4 pecks and that should clear things up for ya.

    • @haroldwilkes6608
      @haroldwilkes6608 4 года назад +43

      since 1824 a bushel has been defined as 8 imperial gallons, or 2,219.36 cubic inches (36,375.31 cubic cm). In the United States the bushel is used only for dry measure. The U.S. level bushel (or struck bushel) is equal to 2,150.42 cubic inches (35,245.38 cubic cm) and is considered the equivalent of the Winchester bushel, a measure used in England from the 15th century until 1824. A U.S. level bushel is made up of 4 pecks, or 32 dry quarts. Two bushels make up a unit called a strike.
      Just trying to help....

    • @LG123ABC
      @LG123ABC 4 года назад +37

      I get 40 rods to the hogshead and that's the way I likes it!

    • @Simonsvids
      @Simonsvids 4 года назад +6

      How many Roman modia would that be?

    • @homerfantastic
      @homerfantastic 4 года назад +3

      Is this a standard bushel or a country bushel?

    • @mktsmith62
      @mktsmith62 4 года назад +4

      @@homerfantastic Nah, I think you're mixing metaphors. What yer referencing thar be the city block and the country mile.

  • @momstermom2939
    @momstermom2939 4 года назад +162

    When I was a kid my English Aunt Ella came to visit for a while. She stayed with family members in various states. When she was in Western Massachusetts, we took her on drives around Historic Deerfield and the Berkshires. She saw the gracious homes with huge lawns. She was amazed. She remarked “All that land, and not a sheep on it!” She thought it was wasteful to grow grass, only to mow it to keep it short...sheep would do the job for free AND you would get wool or mutton!

    • @leftyeh6495
      @leftyeh6495 4 года назад +1

      Mutton.....
      There are few things as disgusting. Explains a lot about the odd shit the Brits eat if they think mutton is edible.

    • @bond1j89
      @bond1j89 3 года назад +2

      Goats are better.

    • @bond1j89
      @bond1j89 3 года назад +2

      @@leftyeh6495 Its not bad it is a little strong for most people, but even I wouldn't eat the stomach.

    • @userequaltoNull
      @userequaltoNull 2 года назад +11

      @@bond1j89 goats don't eat grass, but they love rose bushes. They're browsers, not grazers.

    • @AndyDillbeck
      @AndyDillbeck Год назад +14

      ​@@bond1j89 one thing that I have heard about goats is that if/when they eat grass they eat it right down to the roots, where as sheep only eat the green bits on top.
      So the grass will grow back after sheep, but less so after goats.
      I don't know any goats personally, so I can't verify that I'm correct.

  • @ronclark9724
    @ronclark9724 4 года назад +366

    You really missed a big difference, the American homestead of a quarter section of land. Free land which attracted millions of Europeans to immigrate to the USA. Google Maps satellite image shows the grid of square mile roads, a quarter section is a quarter of a square mile, 160 acres. Even in the more arid areas of the Great Plains you see the quarter sections irrigation crop circles as well. Why 160 acres? During the 19th century that was about as large a farm a farmer could plow with a horse which provided the farmer a middle class income. Check out Kansas. Check out the Homestead Act...

    • @connor2610
      @connor2610 4 года назад +3

      section town range

    • @darkjedi74
      @darkjedi74 4 года назад +14

      That’s especially obvious if you do a fly over of western Nebraska as well. The high plains don’t get a whole lot of rain, so there is far greater need of irrigation in those parts of the country.

    • @jamesdarnell8568
      @jamesdarnell8568 4 года назад +31

      You are correct but overstate the abilities of a horse and plow somewhat. The popular saying after the Civil War was that each farm family needed "40 acres and a mule" to get by. One farmer with one mule and a single-bottom steel plow could plow 40 acres in the month or so he had to get his crops planted in the spring. In the late nineteenth century, most family farms were 40 acres, or a quarter of a quarter section. After World War I, gasoline tractors came into use and farms began to grow. When I grew up in 1950s Wisconsin, most family farms were 120 acres, consisting of interlocking "L" shapes made up of three 40-acre parcels. A full quarter section (160 acres) was considered a large farm. Today, all Wisconsin family farms are "corporate" farms; most have gotten rid of their livestock and just raise crops; and many are over 1000 acres.

    • @rebeccaquartieri5509
      @rebeccaquartieri5509 4 года назад +2

      @@darkjedi74 there are also some underground lakes in parts of the Midwest so I've read.

    • @smylebutta7250
      @smylebutta7250 4 года назад +2

      So much wrong.with this statement. Not enough time.

  • @captainquint
    @captainquint 4 года назад +78

    Our homesteaded farm here in Missouri has been in the family for about 200 years now. We had sheep briefly but my forebearers really disliked them and we've rarely raised them since. Fields even as recently as the 1960s were much more like those in the UK. As machinery grew in size, dividing fence rows were removed and fields became more rectangular. The 30 acre field closest to my house was once divided into 7 separate fields. You couldn't fit a modern combine into those spaces. Modern planting and harvesting equipment is massive.

    • @freewilly1193
      @freewilly1193 Год назад +1

      That homestead should be broken up along with all of the old farms and sold to new individuals who actually want to farm. They are half of why we have a housing crisis in the country.

    • @aricgoetz910
      @aricgoetz910 Год назад

      ​@@freewilly1193 your definitely a commie at heart with that sort of thinking going on in your head

    • @naganomancer
      @naganomancer Год назад

      @@freewilly1193 better dead than red

    • @AllUpOns
      @AllUpOns Год назад +1

      ​@@freewilly1193 Bro nobody wants to farm. The reason we have a housing crisis is because rich people keep buying all the property and renting it out.

    • @matthewhuszarik4173
      @matthewhuszarik4173 Год назад +1

      Interesting my relatives farms in the 60’s and 70’s had very large rectangular individual plots. I believe they had three that totaled 1200 acres.

  • @CAPNMAC82
    @CAPNMAC82 4 года назад +135

    In Texas, the mild winter means being able to get in two crops, even three, selected carefully. Winter wheat or sorghum withe feed corn or cotton afterward are common to see. And the rapid-boll cotton now commonly used goes from green to leafless purple at the end of its season.
    Also, the corn crop is actually two crops. There's sweet corn for human consumption, and feed corn, which is used for animal feeds and industrial applications (like ethanol). Modern feed corn varieties actually stop making chlorophyll and look all dried up as they focus all energy on ear production.

    • @clwest3538
      @clwest3538 4 года назад +2

      And don't forget - that winter wheat is often used to fatten calves ...

    • @johnseawind9558
      @johnseawind9558 3 года назад +7

      Not so mild now!

    • @blairbuskirk5460
      @blairbuskirk5460 3 года назад +2

      And this winter?

    • @9500sasquatch
      @9500sasquatch Год назад +1

      You might be specifically referring to what corn is typically grown in Texas, but there's a lot of variety to corn, there's something like 30 thousand varieties of corn, most of which fit into several categories, sweetcorn, popcorn, flint corn, flour corn, and of course the most widely grown dent/field corn, while almost all field corn is used as animal feed/fuel/industrial use, lots of food are made from dent corn, anything with cornmeal, corn syrup, corn starch are made from field corn

    • @booradley6832
      @booradley6832 Год назад +1

      Yeah hard grain corn is the most common grain in our diets by a mile due to its cheapness and ability to be transformed into so many things. You can make it into a sugar replacement, after all. Nobody thinks about how much corn they're eating when they drink a soda.

  • @88happiness
    @88happiness 4 года назад +42

    A lot of fields in Japan are oddly shaped too due to them being so old going back further in history when more people were farming smaller plots and the plots usually followed the natural contours of the land. After the war the government redrew the lines for some plots to make them square and more accessible to machinery, but you still see lots of small oddly shaped family plots too.

  • @jovanweismiller7114
    @jovanweismiller7114 4 года назад +73

    I grew up on one of those 'rectangle fields' farms you were flying over in Kansas. Especially west of the Appalachians our farms and fields (and many of our States, counties, and townships) are laid out as a result of surveying in the late 18th and 19th centuries. In Britain, many of the farm and field boundaries were established long before surveying was a thing.

    • @LG123ABC
      @LG123ABC 4 года назад +1

      Me too!

    • @hobmoor2042
      @hobmoor2042 4 года назад +4

      Hi Jovan. Surveying isn't a new thing. The Romans were surveying in England with accurate instruments 2,000 years ago. Some archived English boundary maps go back at least 1,000 years.

    • @timothykeith1367
      @timothykeith1367 4 года назад +6

      In Illinois the township system is based on sections, each section being 1 square mile (640 acres), with 36 sections in a township. Many of the sections were laid out with roads as the boundaries.

    • @cynthiadonahey9989
      @cynthiadonahey9989 4 года назад +2

      Just as an aside, amerindian boundaries were generally streams or other geographic formations.. The township system cut these areas up. The oldest cemeteries along with an office of sorts were located in a pattern.generally with a spring. you look for a strangely shaped section.

    • @veramae4098
      @veramae4098 Год назад +5

      English fields and pasture shapes often go as far back as the Saxons (Vikings).

  • @katiestewart8857
    @katiestewart8857 4 года назад +35

    I am from a farming area in Idaho. We don't get enough rain for crops and as a result of the sprinkler systems, many of our fields are circles.

    • @AlexKS1992
      @AlexKS1992 4 года назад

      I guess you live in Southern Idaho? Because I live in South East Idaho.

    • @annehenry6243
      @annehenry6243 3 года назад +3

      Big potato fan here, keep 'em comming!!!

    • @AnikaBren
      @AnikaBren 2 года назад

      That caught my interest when I flew over them. In the ag areas on CA they either flood irrigate or they have big irrigation pipes in wheels that you move across the field.

    • @veramae4098
      @veramae4098 Год назад +1

      Oh. You're one of those draining the Ogallala natural underground reservoir? Faster than nature can refill it? Be sure and keep and eye on those estimated water levels and sell before it's exhausted.

    • @booradley6832
      @booradley6832 Год назад

      yeah im a farmer from an area where we dont have to destroy the earth to make money. You should try it sometime.

  • @justsomeguy107
    @justsomeguy107 4 года назад +282

    As a Kansas native " the most boring state in the Union", thanks for mentioning us. (We build lots of airplanes too)

    • @lacyLor
      @lacyLor 4 года назад +14

      Just Some Guy Are you from Wichita? I love our boring state. 😁

    • @CrazyUncleChris
      @CrazyUncleChris 4 года назад +6

      Newton KS myself

    • @mariotrujillo1673
      @mariotrujillo1673 4 года назад +5

      We also has some of the highest taxes in the country

    • @cathipalmer8217
      @cathipalmer8217 4 года назад +14

      And yet I always think of Kansas as being divided into "the part that looks like Missouri" and "the part that looks like Colorado."

    • @lacyLor
      @lacyLor 4 года назад +7

      Cathi Palmer I wish we had parts that looked like Colorado! And Missouri for that matter. 😂 We have some areas of rolling hills (the Flint Hills are beautiful) and a few modest rock formations. Pretty stuff in my opinion but nothing like the Rocky Mountains or the Ozarks. And definitely not as wooded as either state except real close to Missouri or near rivers. I may be in the minority but think the wide open spaces and hilly areas are quite nice and perfect for farming and ranching of course. 😁

  • @gregmardon6973
    @gregmardon6973 4 года назад +22

    I drive one of them big rigs from coast to coast, after 22 years of doing this job I'm still amazed at how many cattle ranches we have !! I can't even go a whole day without seeing some cattle,i love em anyhow. Often I will wave at them and and yell "Hello cow boo's"

  • @DanielleWhite
    @DanielleWhite 4 года назад +166

    Dry stone walls were common around fields in the northeast US. However, a lot of those farms, like my family's in Pennsylvania, went out of business over the 20th century as it became far more economical to farm the larger, flatter fields in the west.
    The prevalence of maize (corn) in the US diet, even indirectly via livestock feed, leads to a detectable difference in the human body of Carbon 14 (IIRC) and with history in the hair. A friend was one of the chemists involved in the study and one day popped into my office door (I worked at the same university) to say, "Hi! Can I have some of your hair?" for part of that study.

    • @mholtebeck
      @mholtebeck 4 года назад +12

      You will see a distinct difference in farmland developed prior to Civil War and Post-Civil War. The further from Lake Michigan in Wisconsin, the more rectangular the plots are.

    • @maxpowr90
      @maxpowr90 4 года назад +19

      Yep. We also have very rocky soil in the northeast, which is not great for general farming. Raising animals like chicken and cows and in churn, dairy, along with orchards and berry growing are far more common.

    • @ordinarynocturne
      @ordinarynocturne 4 года назад +10

      Yup, I live rural PA and there are still some stone walls scattered around, but they're usually abandoned or on state lands. They're not in my area, but elsewhere in the state they are still some stone cairn-like structures, too.

    • @Dreyno
      @Dreyno 4 года назад +3

      Jane Ryan-Douglas They didn’t need much because the population was tiny.

    • @Dreyno
      @Dreyno 4 года назад +3

      Relatively tiny I meant.

  • @Chaotic_Pixie
    @Chaotic_Pixie 4 года назад +26

    You'll see those stone walls and weirdly shaped plots in New England. Makes sense.
    The whole cows/cattle thing is because we have both vast dairy farms and huge cattle ranches. Totally different beasts.

    • @bond1j89
      @bond1j89 3 года назад +6

      No we make stone walls because we have to get all the f-ing rocks off the field.

  • @Rammstein0963.
    @Rammstein0963. 4 года назад +161

    "I was busy flying a plane and didn't have time for facts."
    Aaaand, Lawrence drops the British sarcasm if the day m 😂

    • @Raiche58
      @Raiche58 4 года назад +5

      And drops in a mighty fine humble-brag as well. 🤗

    • @acmeopinionfactory8018
      @acmeopinionfactory8018 4 года назад +3

      @@Raiche58 He wasn't flying a REAL plane, so no brag, humble or otherwise.

    • @KaiHenningsen
      @KaiHenningsen 4 года назад +3

      @@acmeopinionfactory8018 How do you define a "real plane"?

    • @acmeopinionfactory8018
      @acmeopinionfactory8018 4 года назад +4

      @@KaiHenningsen One that doesn't exist in your laptop's imagination.

    • @Sedgewise47
      @Sedgewise47 4 года назад +1

      acmeopinion factory
      🤔...

  • @kathyp1563
    @kathyp1563 4 года назад +32

    A lot of Ohio farmers seemed to switch from soybeans to wheat, due to the China trade wars. I do love the look of a wheat field. It is so pretty.

    • @4thdimensionalexplorer
      @4thdimensionalexplorer Год назад

      Man i haven't been back in a while. That would be neet to see. My family down in Tennessee grew grain for the livestock but that was only a couple acres or so

  • @johnortmann3098
    @johnortmann3098 3 года назад +69

    RE: the map at 1:58. Much of the dark green color in the Great Plains states is actually rangeland that's never been broken out, not farmland.
    Also, those things at 7:18 are bins for storing grain, not silos. Silos are filled with green whole plant material (corn, alfalfa, grass, etc.) to ferment into silage, which if properly done in airtight conditions pickles itself with lactic acid.

    • @stur4622
      @stur4622 Год назад +4

      Ok, that got lost in the pond too. In Aus/UK a silo is a cylindrical bulk storage structure. Steel or concrete, a few tonnes to as big as you like.

    • @patrickcleburneuczjsxpmp9558
      @patrickcleburneuczjsxpmp9558 Год назад +1

      @@stur4622 The difference isn't the shape -- if you see a big concrete cylinder on a farm it very probably is a silo -- but a silo is used for silage, meaning something that is pickled/fermented, which requires moisture and preventing exposure to air. Silage is used for animal feed. Dry grain, on the other hand, is not stored in silos but rather grain bins like in the photo in this video.

    • @Mysticpoisen
      @Mysticpoisen Год назад +2

      @@patrickcleburneuczjsxpmp9558 That's not necessarily true. Silos are very commonly used for bulk storage without silage all the time. Basically any bottom-unloading silo(which are quite common in the US) or any large community silo aren't likely to be used for silage.
      but yes, those were grain bins.

    • @stur4622
      @stur4622 Год назад +3

      @@patrickcleburneuczjsxpmp9558 my point is that in the rest of the English speaking world we use the term 'silo' as you would 'bin'.
      Could be 100t on-farm, could be the squillion-tonne regional grain depot, could be a large manufacturer storing anything dry/granular. On farm could be grain, or fertiliser. Almost always top loading, generally with a funnel shaped base with angle dependent on what's being stored. Apologies if our etymology is wrong but we call it a silo.
      Fwiw silage where I'm from (AU) is generally plastic wrapped bales, or bales in a plastic-lined pit/trench. Pre-plastic would have just been in the ground covered with earth.

    • @patrickcleburneuczjsxpmp9558
      @patrickcleburneuczjsxpmp9558 Год назад +2

      @@stur4622 "silage where I'm from (AU) is generally plastic wrapped bales, or bales in a plastic-lined pit/trench."
      I think bunker silos (basically above ground pit silos) are the norm in the US today. Plastic wrapped bales are used, too, but I think they'd commonly be called baleage. There are plenty of the tall cylindrical silos (like you see on all sorts of product imagery next to a red barn) still around, but they seem to rarely be used any more.

  • @kimmcconnell3854
    @kimmcconnell3854 4 года назад +55

    The farmland in the Finger Lakes of NY is on rolling hills, it's beautiful.

    • @patrickmartin3322
      @patrickmartin3322 4 года назад +4

      Most of the farmland on the east coast is like that

    • @Dudemon-1
      @Dudemon-1 4 года назад +3

      @@patrickmartin3322 -- The Finger Lakes terrane [sic] is different from the rest of the Eastern US. It's glaciated, with interlake hilltops between broad lake valleys, and other areas having a number of glacial features that give distinctive rolling hills.

    • @brianjonker510
      @brianjonker510 3 года назад

      as is southern Indiana and southern Ohio big parts of Missouri and Arkansas. A slim sliver from on both the seat and west of the Alleghanies from PA to Alabama.

    • @bens2256
      @bens2256 3 года назад

      Same here in central Pa

    • @h.d.groezinger544
      @h.d.groezinger544 3 года назад

      Same here in far northwest Illinois

  • @toby6418
    @toby6418 4 года назад +133

    just saying, theres a town in Kansas called Lawrence

    • @troubledwaters7441
      @troubledwaters7441 4 года назад +4

      There is a Lawrence Massachusetts too!

    • @jtilton5
      @jtilton5 4 года назад +9

      @@troubledwaters7441 which is not a coincidence, 12 families from Massachusetts who were strong abolitionists moved to Kansas and founded Lawrence KS.

    • @troubledwaters7441
      @troubledwaters7441 4 года назад +1

      @@jtilton5 oh wow I didn't know that!

    • @jtilton5
      @jtilton5 4 года назад +8

      @@troubledwaters7441 it's one of those odd little facts I learned when I was in HS and had to learn Kansas History to graduate (Also we learned why we don't like Missouri)

    • @ZombaJuice
      @ZombaJuice 4 года назад +7

      I'm from Lawrence, KS. Named after Amos Lawrence (who was from Massachusetts). Which is why the main drag is Massachusetts Street

  • @jeffdavis6657
    @jeffdavis6657 4 года назад +3

    @Lost in the Pond You may have another video here: Those trees around all the fields you saw, they have a reason they are there. Look up "The Dust Bowl" I doubt it was taught when you were a lad.

  • @rhiahlMT
    @rhiahlMT 4 года назад +90

    You almost can't go out your door in Montana without seeing a cow. Or, at least be within 10 miles of seeing one. The top crop export from this state is wheat. It's beautiful to see the massive fields of gold in the breeze.

    • @suem6004
      @suem6004 4 года назад +5

      Indeed Wheat Montana is where we buy our wheat in 25 or 50 lb bags.

    • @rhiahlMT
      @rhiahlMT 4 года назад +5

      @@suem6004 Yeah, I pick up the, (is it 12 grain cereal?) there along with wheat and flour in bulk. Call ahead and they will put it in a storage container with O2 absorbers for long term storage. I have to stop there on the way to Bozeman from Helena just to get their ham and swiss pastry. 😍

    • @candicehoneycutt4318
      @candicehoneycutt4318 4 года назад +7

      I can't go out my door here in IL without hearing chickens 😂

    • @rhiahlMT
      @rhiahlMT 4 года назад +3

      @@candicehoneycutt4318 LOL, I gave up the chickens. Mountain lion tore the whole coop down. All I could do was stand on the upper deck and watch. If I had to I could set up again, but that was enough to back me off them for a while. I try to drive straight through Illinois. My bank cards won't work there and I have to gas up in Iowa then get to another gas station in Indiana. Problems with too many stolen numbers via the processing companies in Illinois. Which I'm sure is a huge problem in the Chicago area. But, yeah, lots of chickens there.

    • @candicehoneycutt4318
      @candicehoneycutt4318 4 года назад +3

      Rhiahl There's a lot of big critters out here, but not too many mountain lions thankfully. I don't live on a farm, but a lot of people in my rural town raise chickens. We're not really supposed to have cows in city limits, but somebody has one that occasionally escapes and hangs out at the gas station for some unexplained reason lol.
      I've never heard of that happening down here in southern IL.

  • @krebkrebkreb
    @krebkrebkreb 4 года назад +188

    “Britain’s green pastures are generally greener” jokes on you I’m colorblind it’s all blue

    • @ducewags
      @ducewags 4 года назад +8

      Is the blue you see the same blue I see? A friend in school was color blind way back in the day, late 70s. I asked him the same question, and to pick a red crayon. He picked out a light blue. Funny thing, he makes a load of money painting fish trophys. How he does it, I have no clue.

    • @smylebutta7250
      @smylebutta7250 4 года назад +1

      Although the statement isn't at all factual.

    • @krebkrebkreb
      @krebkrebkreb 4 года назад

      smylebutta7250 Look up tritanopia ;)

    • @guywells9455
      @guywells9455 4 года назад +1

      @@ducewags generally colorblindness only applies to one or two primary colors being seen wrong. most other colors are seen as most other people see them. though there are , like everything else on the planet, exceptions to this

    • @itatane
      @itatane 4 года назад +1

      @@guywells9455 very true, and some exceptions can be things that boggle the mind. I have a maternal cousin who was born with achromatopsia. A rare fluke, as there is no known cause for it in his case. (no tumors, no trauma, no genetic predisposition, "just one of those things" according to the doctor.) Yet he memorized all the shades of gray that he could, which allows him to carry on with relatively few hiccups.

  • @shaunw9270
    @shaunw9270 4 года назад +32

    Unnecessary wearing of a baseball cap indoors proves this geezer has integrated well . 😂👌

    • @Gambit771
      @Gambit771 4 года назад +1

      His spelling mistakes as well show that.

  • @suzukibn1131
    @suzukibn1131 4 года назад +6

    I am blown away by the Comments here. Incredible interest and knowledge about land and farming history. Thanks one & all!!!

    • @mosart7025
      @mosart7025 3 года назад

      Yeah I was thinking the same. I'm wondering about the average age of those with all that knowledge. It would be a shame if it all gets lost or no one cares in 10-15 years!

  • @debrawhite751
    @debrawhite751 4 года назад +33

    I was in the north of Wales during lambing season in 2008. I'll never forget it. I was able to go to a farm and got to hold the little lambs. They are so sweet! And the dogs that farmers use are the smartest dogs you can imagine, and so trained and controlled! They are amazing! I do love America for so many reasons, but I will say that we are woefully short on sheep. And thatched roof cottages.

    • @nikkireigns
      @nikkireigns 4 года назад +1

      That sounds like a dream! Were the dogs border collies? My favorite breed. And oh how I yearn for a thatched roof cottage.

    • @debrawhite751
      @debrawhite751 4 года назад +3

      @@nikkireigns Yes, border collies! Wonderful dogs! You and I share a love of thatched roofs. :-)

    • @dasy2k1
      @dasy2k1 4 года назад +3

      If you go to an old fashioned pub in sheep Country you will often find at least one and often more boarder collies curled up in front a log fire in the bar! (this is one reason the bar side of a traditional countryside pub has a flagstone floor and plain wooden chairs - most pubs will have a seperate lounge side with comfier chairs, carpet, and if they serve food tables for that food)

    • @bond1j89
      @bond1j89 3 года назад

      Come out some time to Maine and you can hold a kid (baby goat).

  • @alec4672
    @alec4672 4 года назад +57

    7:20 those aren't silos, they're grain bins.

    • @acrobaticvideos6178
      @acrobaticvideos6178 4 года назад +2

      That’s exactly what I thought.

    • @HoosierRallyMaster
      @HoosierRallyMaster 3 года назад +6

      I never realized that the two terms weren't interchangeable. Thanks for making me do some googling.
      lcdmcorp.com/grain-flow-101/whats-the-difference-between-silos-and-grain-bins/

    • @paulwoodman5131
      @paulwoodman5131 3 года назад +2

      Yes , a silo holds silage, animal feed.

    • @alec4672
      @alec4672 3 года назад +4

      @@paulwoodman5131 grain bins hold animal feed too. It's just a matter of construction and how they're emptied. Grain bins empty from the bottom, silos empty from the top. Along with some other differences. Tower silos are being replaced with bunkers left and right though, easier to maintain. You'd only build a tower silo now if you really didn't have the room for a bunker.

    • @markstover7064
      @markstover7064 3 года назад

      Absolutely correct.

  • @carrieswank
    @carrieswank 4 года назад +42

    Bushel always reminds me of my daughter’s favorite song to sing at night before bed...🎶”I love you a bushel and a peck. A bushel and a peck and a hug around the neck. A hug around the neck and a barrel and a heap...” 🎶 It’s from Guys and Dolls. All sorts of crazy units of measurement in there 🤣

    • @MartinAhlman
      @MartinAhlman 4 года назад +3

      You have to love Guys and Dolls!

    • @msg4925
      @msg4925 4 года назад +1

      Awww-I used to sing that song to my sons when they were boys ❤️

    • @carrieswank
      @carrieswank 4 года назад +2

      @@msg4925 my daughter’s favorite part is the doodle ooldie doo doo part. 😬

    • @SenoraCardgage
      @SenoraCardgage 3 года назад

      I’ve been humming that tune to myself since Laurence’s first utterance of the word!

  • @JervisGermane
    @JervisGermane Год назад +1

    We do have dry stone walls on my family's farm in Tennessee (by which I mean our ancestral farm, not one my family currently lives on) but I was raised to call them stone fences. They're not walls in the sense of stopping people from crossing them; they're only meant to keep animals on the appropriate side. Hence the use of fence rather than wall, I think.

  • @micheledeetlefs6041
    @micheledeetlefs6041 4 года назад +30

    You should check out South African farms. I noticed a lot with round shapes. Apparently there is some irrigation rig that goes in a circle. But they also have an overabundance of sheep. My in-laws thought all Americans were wealthy because we eat so much pork, chicken and beef, but little sheep. They couldn't believe it when i explained how pricey and hard to find lamb can be in the US vs. Beef. Now my nephews want to move here and raise cows!

    • @brycepatties
      @brycepatties 4 года назад +9

      "irrigation rig that goes in a circle"
      Yes, it's called a center pivot. They exist in America too, but they will only make the obvious circle shape when the surrounding land is so dry that nothing else can grow there.

    • @johnbowers6258
      @johnbowers6258 4 года назад +3

      Like from the Texas panhandle, Oklahoma, western Kansas and Nebraska, eastern Colorado, and Wyoming, and the Dakotas.

    • @micheledeetlefs6041
      @micheledeetlefs6041 4 года назад +1

      @@brycepatties Explains why I saw it in SA. The place we were at only gets rain in November and December.

    • @JamesThompson-ol3eu
      @JamesThompson-ol3eu 4 года назад

      @@brycepatties I moved to ETX 3.5 years ago and was astonished to find center pivot operations. It appears mostly dairies that grow their own feed stuff. There is alot of rain fall here - NorthEast Tx - these properties are at the edge of NorthEast TX but the different in color is quite apparent. Really surprised when so much rain fall is here.

    • @Zraknul
      @Zraknul Год назад

      Center pivots in density go from Northern Texas to Southern Alberta in Canada following the eastern rain shadow of the Rocky Mountains.
      It's causing problems because it's using up all the ground water.

  • @stevenmcdonald1901
    @stevenmcdonald1901 Год назад +2

    Those same stone walls can be found in new england. One area in Connecticut where I grew up had walls everywhere although there was no longer any farmland to be found. They are interesting to see in the woods.

  • @cjpenning
    @cjpenning 4 года назад +145

    No public footpaths across fields in the US.

    • @LindaC616
      @LindaC616 4 года назад +3

      I made a point about not having stiles here, and it follows from yours. Thanks!

    • @michellemaine2719
      @michellemaine2719 4 года назад +3

      One of my favorite things about the UK

    • @LindaC616
      @LindaC616 4 года назад +4

      @@genevievenoble8120
      Haha, my friend, a little Scottish grandmother , almost got me arrested twice in one weekend with her "Scots can walk anywhere" attitude

    • @crazypiratesquirrel3038
      @crazypiratesquirrel3038 4 года назад

      cjpenning, is that what was going on at 9:22? I was wondering if that was the hiking footpaths I've heard the U.K. is famous for.
      Are they usually that heavily populated or was this maybe a special event in the area?

    • @cjpenning
      @cjpenning 4 года назад

      @@crazypiratesquirrel3038 I'm not sure what was going on in the video, but the UK footpaths I'm familiar with are just paths the public has a right to use at any time. They cut right across some fields, and the farmers go about their business of plowing and planting like normal.

  • @thequintanahomestead3820
    @thequintanahomestead3820 Год назад +1

    Cool video, one thing I don’t think people from Europe do nearly as often as Americans would be off-roading or riding atv’s. I live in rural West Virginia and my neighbor is an older man from Hungry. He is absolutely obsessed with riding ATV’s said it his favorite thing to do in his free time. When I asked him why nobody rides In Hungry he said very few people could afford such a hobby in Europe.

  • @susanholl5994
    @susanholl5994 4 года назад +53

    Poor Uncle Toby. Think he will ever get a chance to speak for himself?

  • @claud1961
    @claud1961 4 года назад +8

    One thing I saw a while back was a Scotsman commenting on the differences between Scotland and America. One observation went something like, "You go from one end to another and you see the same rocks, trees, grass. Go to America and every few hours you can see a different landscape." This is true and explains a lot of the differences. I grew up in California and have lived in Oregon, Idaho, Missouri, Arkansas, and have been to most of the states. There are so many differences between those states and my current home in Iowa that my mother-in-law, that just moved here from California, feels like she is in a different country. When I drove out here towing a trailer for her, I went from California cropland in the San Joquin Valley, where just about everything is produced- but not much corn- lots of oranges, of course. Over Tehachapi and down into the desert. Passing through Las Vegas and heading into Utah, the scenery is quite varied, but still, flatish until you get into Utah and see the wonderous colors in Zion National Park. This leads you over the Rockies to Denver, and every mile has something new to rubberneck. (Is that work in the British lexicon?) After the descent to Denver, you encounter lots and lots of Midwest farmland.
    To understand the differences, you need to understand the varied weather and humidity. Humidity is something I never considered for the first 3 decades of my life, having never experienced it. We moved to Arkansas in 1994 during December and when summer rolled around I thought I would die! Back home you had 110-degree heat, but all dry. A cheap swam cooler kept you cool and was affordable. In Arkansas and the midwest states, you can't use one, as it causes the walls to become damp like they are sweating. (I talked to somebody that tried it!) So lots of window units here, unless you can afford central air. But we have green all year round until it is killed off by below freezing temps. Back home you had a week or two of green in spring, then it all dies- you can see why the great concern about fires there. I grew up watching borate bombers go over our house, combating wildfires. In fact, the whole place was a tinderbox, and when responding to local calls Police always scan the crowds for one who has a history of arson. Yes, they light fires to see the excitement they can cause.
    What was my point? Oh, the differences in crops, colors, etc. I think it has to do with humidity and all that. The corn here is awesome, like nothing I ever had back home. We have lots of hog ranches, too. But no oranges. We ship them bacon and corn, they send us oranges and melons, or something like that. And I know from Basil Fawlty that Brits get orange juice in a can. We can, too. O is made from the smaller, less sellable oranges. I know, because I worked in an Orange Packing House during the summer. Out here in Iowa I would have tasseled corn, or fed hogs. So there you go, highly researched and ready for public consumption.
    P.S. our sheep would be packing, so don't push us, man.

    • @codenameu.arctos3747
      @codenameu.arctos3747 4 года назад +2

      California alone - driving 80 from San Fran to Reno (4 hrs) - You'll see a wide variety of environments, agriculture, city, and forest. Go north to south, and you'll get even more.

  • @TwistedSither
    @TwistedSither 4 года назад +45

    In the portion of the US where I come from, the no.1 cash crop is "the Devil's lettuce".

    • @rustyrelicsfarm2406
      @rustyrelicsfarm2406 4 года назад +6

      I call it Smiley Weed.

    • @christelheadington1136
      @christelheadington1136 4 года назад +5

      Wildwood weed, wacky tobacy

    • @bulkhungry
      @bulkhungry 4 года назад +1

      Green corn ?

    • @TwistedSither
      @TwistedSither 4 года назад +5

      @@christelheadington1136 "One puff of that wildwood weed and the next thing you know, you're just wandering around behind the little animals."

    • @elultimo102
      @elultimo102 4 года назад +6

      And no, don't store your stash in an oregano jar---- the Narcs knew about that in the 60s.

  • @Zraknul
    @Zraknul Год назад +2

    If you go to drier regions in the US you can also find lots of perfectly round farms. Center pivot irrigation. They're watered by a rotating sprinkler line. They're most common just east of the Rockies from the Northern Square part of Texas, through western Kansas and up to Southern Alberta in Canada.

  • @stephen1991
    @stephen1991 4 года назад +9

    I'm in the epicenter of corn, soybean and pork production, Iowa. It's true that the biggest share of corn goes into livestock feed or ethanol production. I don't know if it's still true, but at one time Iowa was second behind Texas in the number of miles of gravel roads. The roads were needed to move crops to the transportation hubs and back then there were thousands of small family farms.

  • @bullettube9863
    @bullettube9863 4 года назад +44

    The wonderful thing is the fact that American farmers make up less then 3% of the population and feed all of us plus 20% of the world as well! The only other comparable country is Canada, though they have a problem with a short growing season thus they import citrus fruits from California and Florida.

    • @marcusfox2443
      @marcusfox2443 4 года назад

      Australia?

    • @bullettube9863
      @bullettube9863 4 года назад +4

      @@marcusfox2443 California, a state with 40 million people grows more food then Australia a country with 25 million people. New York state, pop 20 million, produces as much wine and food as Australia!

    • @sherrieburcham6287
      @sherrieburcham6287 4 года назад

      @@bullettube9863 but not corn!

    • @bullettube9863
      @bullettube9863 4 года назад

      @@sherrieburcham6287 No not corn, as corn or maize as Europeans call it, can be harvested in cold weather. I remember harvesting corn in November with snow on the ground!

    • @klontjespap
      @klontjespap 4 года назад +2

      the Netherlands is #2 in agri/horicultural export on the world, population 17 million,
      0,6% of the population are farmers.
      the low number is explained by them using high tech tools and methods.
      the export industry is worth roughly 90 billion euros annually, more than half of the USA's exports (~140 billion), 64% to be more precise.
      (the USA is about 230 times bigger in land size, and population about 22-23x)
      14x the amounts produced per capita. (in value) the numbers are mind-boggling.
      therefor this country of 17 million beats Australia's total production by a near 50%, with just its exports.
      in terms of production per capita, or production to land mass ratio, we can't even see the USA in the rear view mirror, let alone canada, so no, not only is Canada not the only comparable country, it's not even remotely close to being 2nd in any metric, the numbers just aren't there.

  • @patrickprafke4894
    @patrickprafke4894 4 года назад +68

    I'll point out the obvious. 2 mountain ranges and a desert take up land volume.

    • @Drengade
      @Drengade 4 года назад

      ...forgive me if i'm wrong, but didn't you make the desert by overfarming?

    • @guitarsauce5978
      @guitarsauce5978 4 года назад +20

      ​@@Drengade The Great Basin, Mohave, Chihuahuan and Sonoran Deserts area all natural deserts in the USA. Unfortunately we do suffer from desertification, the cause is mostly from over grazing rather than over farming, though it certainly lends its hand.

    • @patrickprafke4894
      @patrickprafke4894 4 года назад +13

      @@Drengade no. Most of our desserts are natural.

    • @notrappaport5340
      @notrappaport5340 4 года назад +8

      @@patrickprafke4894 I dunno. All that Cool Whip doesn't seem very natural to me.

    • @patrickprafke4894
      @patrickprafke4894 4 года назад +7

      @@notrappaport5340 hahahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha!!!!!!!!!!!!!! PREACH!
      Darn auto correct. I didn't catch it. Love the humor though!

  • @AgnesIona
    @AgnesIona 4 года назад +6

    7:25 "Sending crops into space" made me laugh-from the other side of story. I live US Midwest. Growing up, I always thought it funny that so many si-fi shows built their ships/rockets in or out of silos.

  • @hoadley18
    @hoadley18 4 года назад +5

    Iowa Great Plains, here. Currently experiencing what I call hayfever season. Now that the crops are out the air is filled with grain dust and all flavors of manure. Love it. 😉

  • @migitri
    @migitri 4 года назад +27

    My mom grew up in a tiny town in Minnesota that relied heavily on farming and fishing. Her uncle owned a farm where he raised cattle and grew corn. I remember visiting that farm many years ago, and I miss going up to that little town. My grandpa sold his house about 7 or 8 years ago and moved down to Florida after my grandma died.
    When I was a kid, I lived in Texas. My family had a friend who owned a small farm and we'd visit frequently. When my siblings and I had too much energy, she'd put us to work wrangling chickens or herding goats.
    Before that, up in New York, I had a first grade field trip to an ostrich farm.
    Now I live in Nebraska, coincidentally about two hours from where my great-great grandpa ended up when he came over from a German colony in Russia in the late 1800s. I don't know any farmers now. I wish I did. I'm moving further into the city eventually to be closer to the hospital, but I would love to wander around on some farmland while my health permits it. There's a farmer who lives just beyond my backyard, but they don't really mingle with us suburban folks. I do get to see and hear them working the corn and soybean fields several times a year though.

    • @nathanielkidd2840
      @nathanielkidd2840 Год назад +4

      Go ask. Make friends. It’s fun.

    • @OriginalBootlegger
      @OriginalBootlegger Год назад +2

      @@nathanielkidd2840 That was my thought, most farmers I know are more than happy to bend an ear as long as you aren't interrupting planting, harvesting, or other time sensitive tasks. Just don't trespass the crop or livestock fields and be friendly.

    • @bonniegierach5027
      @bonniegierach5027 Год назад

      They probably don’t mingle much because they are busy, but most will be friendly, just try.

  • @davidterry6155
    @davidterry6155 4 года назад +37

    Here in the US especially in more arid western states pivot crops meaning the sprinkler pivots from the center of a circle and is not a rectangle are quite common. Also to think the Central Valley of California produces a significant amount of the US crops for such a small region

    • @middlelle
      @middlelle 4 года назад +2

      David Terry That’s because we have two growing seasons. We can produce twice a year

    • @RoseNZieg
      @RoseNZieg 4 года назад +4

      california has the advantage of being volcanically active in geological time and being a huge flood plain, not to mention the weather. the water is a bit iffy now but it's to there.

    • @LG123ABC
      @LG123ABC 4 года назад +1

      They actually started developing center-pivot irrigation systems that could cover the corners of square fields back in the 1970's.
      ruclips.net/video/ZIVyUlJFsZE/видео.html

    • @davidterry6155
      @davidterry6155 4 года назад +2

      Maridel Weaver it even seems like some crops can be harvested a third time especially in the southern San Joaquin Valley My grandparents harvested crops in Tulare county They had over a 100 fruit trees along several acres of other fruits and vegetables on their property in Madera I made money in the summer packing pears in Lake County I drove back and forth through the rice fields all the time Also in the same area during late summer the tomatoes through the Woodland area smells so bad

  • @fredlougee2807
    @fredlougee2807 4 года назад +1

    As an inveterate Anglophile there is something I would like to recommend to you: "Alistair Cooke's America"
    Cooke was a Blackpool lad who took a job with the BBC, came to the US on assignment, and wound up staying. He got his US Citizenship in the late-'30s, conveniently before he would have had to go back home and join up (on account of that guy with the small mustache), and not long after the war ended starting doing recording for a weekly segment on BBC Radio entitled "Letter From America" wherein he explained his new country (or did his best) to the denizens of his old one.
    In the mid-1970s, he hosted a 13-part series produced by Time-Life Films based upon his 1973 book of the same name. It's a fascinating, albeit by no means conclusive, look at 200 years of the existence of the US as only a native Briton could tell it. In writing this I have been looking to see if it available on RUclips, but it seems only individual episodes are hosted on any given channel and the Time-Life section of Internet Archive is grossly disorganized. So good luck, I have just set you a task which might not be do-able.

  • @Ammo08
    @Ammo08 4 года назад +5

    Very interesting. I loved my time serving in the USAF with the RAF and RAAF in the desert. Conversations about things like farming and just everyday life were so much fun.

  • @miniveedub
    @miniveedub Год назад +2

    The animal numbers astonished me, here in Australia we have roughly the same number of cattle as people and nearly three times as many sheep. Oh, and our silos have huge murals painted on them by talented artists and there are silo art maps so you can find them as you travel around the country.

    • @roadtripboy
      @roadtripboy Год назад +1

      One of my favorite pictures from Australia is a storage tank dressed up to look like a giant pineapple.

  • @grondhero
    @grondhero 4 года назад +79

    The party isn't over until the cows come home.

    • @hayliew611
      @hayliew611 4 года назад +3

      Good thing winters almost here then they'll be moved back to stock pens for the calving season so the babies don't freeze to death and be protected from predators here in ND then we can get the party over with XD

    • @jayceperlmutter4317
      @jayceperlmutter4317 3 года назад +1

      Which they do every evening at sundown...

  • @SledgeGaryHammer
    @SledgeGaryHammer 4 года назад +5

    I love the U.K. It's a sentimental travel destination for me. I discovered this channel right after studying abroad in London. and it was like, so cool to hear a british person make the same comparisons i was making, albeit more informed.

  • @gaslighthotel
    @gaslighthotel 3 года назад +4

    One reason for the grid pattern, especially the further west you go is because in colonial times, the English metes and bounds were used as survey boundaries along the Atlantic Coast and spreading out to those areas settled by colonials. However, a system known as Township & Range began to be used in territories acquired some time after Texas joined the Union. In the state of Texas alone, you will find that most of the counties in East Texas are metes & bounds but as you get past the west of San Antonio and up north in the Panhandle you see the Township and Range.

  • @timothymallon
    @timothymallon Год назад +3

    7:30 dry stone walls were a big thing here in the US as well for hundreds of years. If you travel along the east coast of the US, especially in the areas where settlers first came, stone walls existed everywhere and in many cases, still do. Look for Dutch settlements in New York, for example. My family's own farm has stone walls everywhere. We also have an early irrigation system on the hilly areas that incorporates clay tiles, which are basically fired clay tubes and collect run-off water and carries it away from the farming areas.

  • @reginafromtexas2314
    @reginafromtexas2314 4 года назад +3

    I'm almost 60 years old and I'm a Texan. I've only eaten lamb once in my life, at an Indian restaurant about 40 years ago. I can't recall how it tasted, probably spicey. lol! I eat beef probably at least 3 times weekly. Last night I had an awesome filet mignon! :)

    • @annehenry6243
      @annehenry6243 3 года назад

      Okay, both of you, SHUT UP! I had a bologna sandwich with a bowl of tomato soup for dinner!!

  • @joekahno
    @joekahno 3 года назад +1

    The US was settled by people who cared about land ownership after surveying had been well developed. Flat areas like the midwest were divided into township and range, then broken down further into mile square sections. (640 acres) That was still quite large for a Wisconsin dairy farm, so it was quartered with the most common sized farm being 160 acres and the smallest working farm a quarter of that.

  • @jeffnaslund
    @jeffnaslund Год назад +3

    I remember visiting Wisconsin in the 80s and seeing contour farming, which is essentially planting crops according to the lay of the land. Looks pretty cool.

    • @bradleyheck7204
      @bradleyheck7204 Год назад

      It helps keep another Dust Bowl from happening, too.

  • @smolville
    @smolville 4 года назад +7

    "Again! An acre is the area of a rectangle whose length is one furlong and whose width is one chain"

  • @The_Dudester
    @The_Dudester 4 года назад +16

    When I was a kid we spent summers working other people's ranches. I liked it, mainly because my job was "riding fence" (repairing fence-cattle are hard on fences).
    When I was 12 my mother talked me and my brother into converting our 2.5 acres into a farm. Doesn't sound like much but it was a tremendous amount of work. Most miserable year of my life. It taught me to never pick on a farmer. Not only are they dedicated, they understand the soil in a way you can never fathom.

    • @bigscarysteve
      @bigscarysteve 4 года назад +3

      You need to talk to Michael Bloomberg!

    • @brandondavis7777
      @brandondavis7777 3 года назад

      28 years of farming and I'm wondering what kinda cattle your neighbor had to have you fixing fences every year...

    • @The_Dudester
      @The_Dudester 3 года назад

      @@brandondavis7777 Where I grew up, Herefords were the primary type of cattle. I don't know if it's only this type of breed, but they become obsessed with the grass on the other side of the fence. What they will do is line their body up, lengthwise, with the fence and lean until the fence post breaks. Keep in mind that when a ranch is measured in square miles, not acres, the fence posts are the pinon and mesquite trees that make up the scrub in New Mexico. All it takes is one fence post to open about 15 feet of fence, which is more than enough for several cows to get through. AND usually I would find them right at the broken spot in the fence, just munching away. I would get them back on the right side of the fence, mend the fence, then move on.

  • @colinbarthel
    @colinbarthel Год назад

    One of the things I love about you Laurence is your dry, deadpan British humor delivery. Sometimes you deliver your inane and mostly idiotic (but hilarious) jokes so subtly it takes me a half second to catch it and then I have to back the video up to hear it again and laugh in real time ;)

  • @deb5710
    @deb5710 4 года назад +5

    Enjoyed your video and your perspective! As an American, our relationship with agricultural farming and beef cattle go way back in American history. Please research the history of the longhorn cattle, brought to North America by the Spaniards, creating vast wild herds of cattle. Also research the history of Western cattle drives, such as the Chisholm trail to name a few. Finally, research the "Mason County Wars" of the state of Texas, which involved the sheep ranchers vs. cattlemen. Which boiled down to the use of barbed wire (sheep ranchers) and the open range used by cattlemen. This war was both bloody and lawless, one of my ancestors was a Texas Ranger at the time, and was involved in the final arrest of the corrupt Mason county sheriff. Thus there is a reason that beef is still king in America, its as America as the Cowboy!

  • @jasminemorales5415
    @jasminemorales5415 4 года назад

    The urgency in your voice did make me lean forward in my seat to get a better view of the unusual shapes vs. rectangle! Riveting! 😉❤️

  • @cjtzioumis686
    @cjtzioumis686 4 года назад +9

    You will also find many circular fields in the US because they are irrigated central pivot irrigation systems, the water is drawn from an aquifer (unfortunately draining it faster than its replenished which will probably lead to an ecological disaster in the future)

    • @warhawkjah
      @warhawkjah 3 года назад +1

      Those circular fields are mostly in the far west unlike the block fields if the Midwest.

  • @morofry
    @morofry Год назад +1

    In Nebraska, we put circles inside squares using irrigation machines called pivots. Often times the circles are not complete so it's really kind of a shame no one grows canola to make pack-man on satellite images.

  • @suem6004
    @suem6004 4 года назад +11

    Laurence. There is a difference between arable and pasture land. US has more pasture land. But as you say, so few sheep. Wool is an important crop in Britain due to tradition. Not as much in the US. I do handspin so have my shepherds on speed dial.
    Another difference is that your ancient fields are yet surrounded by stone but also but hedgerows. Lots and lots with cute hedge hogs.
    British farmers also dress up as if going on a job interview instead of physical labor. The tweed jackets, wool waistcoats, collared shirt and tie. I think Americans would find that fascinating.

    • @johnbowers6258
      @johnbowers6258 4 года назад +4

      To be fair, Oliver Wendell Douglas wore a wool suit, white shirt, red vest and necktie every day as he worked his farmland, the Haney Farm. But that was in the 1960's.

    • @donkeysaurusrex7881
      @donkeysaurusrex7881 4 года назад +3

      The presence of large predators in North America made keeping sheep somewhat more difficult than cattle. At the same time widespread cotton production greatly reduced the need for wool which in turn drove up the price and decreased the availability of lamb and mutton, the two major byproducts of wool production. You’d only start to see sheep really catch on as some of the drier rangeland in the Western US was settled in the late 1800s by which time Americans were already largely meeting their meat demands with beef and pork.
      Even in the Caribbean where some British colonies developed their own breeds of sheep these ran more towards hair sheep raised solely for meat as opposed to the wool sheep you’ll see in the UK.

    • @bigscarysteve
      @bigscarysteve 4 года назад +1

      @@johnbowers6258 Just as long as he could get his spaghetti on a stick!

    • @bigscarysteve
      @bigscarysteve 4 года назад

      @@donkeysaurusrex7881 Very informative! Thank you!

  • @joannemckinley2487
    @joannemckinley2487 Год назад +2

    Where I grew up in Northern California, the major crops in our area are almonds, walnuts, and rice. California grows many different crops, depending upon the location within the state.

  • @ronstatler9161
    @ronstatler9161 4 года назад +20

    When you come to California, come see the San Joaquin Valley’s farm land. A Completely different type of farmland from what you see in the Midwest.

    • @mournblade1066
      @mournblade1066 4 года назад

      How so? I looked at some photos, but didn't notice any striking differences.

    • @markw-s5734
      @markw-s5734 4 года назад +1

      I don’t know if it’s significantly different but the Central Valley (or California Plains) has a large number of orchards and vineyards compared to the Midwest.

  • @tSp289
    @tSp289 Год назад +1

    The UK's field systems started about 6000 years ago, and for most of that time, nearly all of the population worked the land, so the fields follow terrain lines, contours, streams and many of the old fields were just enough for one family to grow food for themselves and a bit for market, so every square foot mattered, hence the funny boundaries.
    In Wales, you get ever stranger boundaries, as land was generally split between all of the sons of the family when the father died, meaning it kept getting smaller and smaller until someone had a minor war and stole a load from the neighbours (or just bought it). For a period in the 1800s, crown land was allowed to be settled by a family if they could put up a house in one day. If they had the roof up by sunset, they were granted all the land around as far as the man of the house could throw a hammer, that being a measure of how much land he could feasibly work.

  • @DakotaCelt1
    @DakotaCelt1 4 года назад +7

    I grew up on a large grain, sunflower, and sugar beet farm. The farming equipment in Britain is a lot smaller than the US. You need to fly over Western Nebraska where you can see a circle in a rectangle field and that is due to irrigation. My grandparents has sheep, cattle, and chickens.

  • @reliablyrandomoutdoors
    @reliablyrandomoutdoors Год назад

    Big ups Mate! Your deadpan derivery is divine

  • @karozans
    @karozans 4 года назад +16

    Between 1900 and about 1940, the USA had almost 7 million farms on 1.5 billion acres. Today we have only about 2 million farms on 900 million acres.

    • @Tux.Penguin
      @Tux.Penguin 4 года назад +9

      That sounds like the average farm today is much larger and produces dramatically more food per acre. We know the American population has increased significantly, and yet they're being fed from significantly fewer acres.

    • @karozans
      @karozans 4 года назад +8

      ​@@Tux.Penguin Yes, correct on all accounts. I think back in 1900 the average farm was about 100-something acres, and today the average is 400-something.
      My dad grew corn the old fashioned way, like they did back in the 1950s. Today the farmers are WAY more efficient. I think we calculated it up once and my dad would have to go through the entire field 11 to 13 times in a season with a very slow and old tractor that burned a lot of diesel fuel. Today the farmers only go through a field I think 4 to 5 times with new equipment that just flies through. I think a farmer today can plant his 120 acre pivot field in about 4 hours. That used to take my dad 3 or 4 days to do. This saves a buttload of diesel fuel. Plus the new farming methods really save on water and land erosion.
      I think I heard that in the past 20 years, farmers increased production of corn like 117% on the same area of land.
      I would be willing to bet, that if they can crack the GMO code, they will be able to increase corn production dozens of times, while drastically reducing fuel, pesticide, herbicide, fungicide, and fertilizer use.

    • @lacyLor
      @lacyLor 4 года назад +8

      Sadly the majority of the family farms have been bought up by big corporations. It’s just not financially sustainable to run small family farms anymore. And the majority of small farm farmers still holding on are over 60 years old.

    • @karozans
      @karozans 4 года назад +2

      ​@@lacyLor It's not sad really. Mega farmers and corporations are far more efficient. Big corporate farmers buy new equipment and adopt new farming methods easily by hiring number crunchers to calculate the best way to increase productivity. Small farms run by old timers, just don't adopt new technologies and are more likely to drive very old machinery that guzzle the fuel. My dad was still using equipment from the 1960s, 50s, and 40s in the year 2000. Plus big corporate farmers use much bigger equipment that gets the job done much faster and using less fuel. If you calculate the amount of grain a new semi can haul, and then haul the same amount of grain with an old F350 truck, you will find that the truck will burn way more diesel than the semi does.

    • @lacyLor
      @lacyLor 4 года назад +9

      It’s sad to me that the way of life is being lost. Children growing up helping on the family farm, extended families and neighbors helping each other harvest, ect, all being lost to history. Farming is still happening in my family but many generations of tradition it will die out in one more generation, just like it will for many families. My father still farms because he loves it, he barely makes any profit.

  • @newbienoobframebyframe4108
    @newbienoobframebyframe4108 3 года назад

    I can't believe how much you find to contrast and how many things didn't come from England. Love the work bud, keep it up!

  • @stephanierando3477
    @stephanierando3477 4 года назад +19

    You should read some of the history between sheep vs cattle, especially in Texas. The are whole pages of ranch feuding between cattle and sheep ranchers. Basically, cattle ranchers wanted more of the green pastureland for cattle and would start shoot outs to get rid of sheep. Unfortunately, the cattle ranchers won.

    • @jwmcniel
      @jwmcniel 4 года назад +7

      I used to sit and listen to some old west Texas Ranchers talk. One of the old guys raised sheep and the other Old-Timers were Cattlemen. They would go back and forth over sheep versus cattle and Shepherds versus Cowboys. I always got a kick out of listening to them fuss. The old sheep Rancher would look over at me, the preacher, and ask, "Who did God call on when He needed something done? The answer's obvious, a Sheep man man."

    • @bigscarysteve
      @bigscarysteve 4 года назад +2

      stephanie rando, wow, you just jogged my memory. I vaguely recall something in my 9th grade history book about cattlemen vs. sheep men, but I think your post here goes into more detail than my textbook did!

    • @suleskos.2743
      @suleskos.2743 4 года назад +8

      More than anything the feuds had a whole lot to do with the fact that when out on pastureland, cattle eat by actually pulling up the grass with their tongues, as in a sort of grab almost like how we would grab it with our hands except they "grab" it by wrapping their tongues around it. This actually leaves some of the grass still in the ground to continue to grow. Grass maggots, err, sheep, actually bite the grass and do so so close to the root that it often not only left the grasslands damaged but left little if any grass tall enough for cattle to then come and feed on the same grounds. Whereas sheep could still feed after cattle grazed, there is no way for cattle to be able to feed after sheep have grazed. This is one of the reasons that sheep have often been used to keep lawns "mowed", including at the White House, (during WWII I think?). Anyway, just thought Id throw that out there.

    • @haroldwilkes6608
      @haroldwilkes6608 4 года назад +1

      A lot had to do with how they graze - cows graze about 4" above the ground, sheep graze right to the ground. The time for next growth was a problem. A combination of cows and sheep seems to work but you need fields to be able to move them to and if all the fields are in fallow, nobody eats.

    • @lacyLor
      @lacyLor 4 года назад +3

      I don’t think it’s unfortunate. Have you tasted mutton? Lol
      That’s very interesting..

  • @jamesseiter4576
    @jamesseiter4576 4 года назад +1

    You wanna see some square farms? Drive I-90 through south Minnesota. Pretty sure you could calibrate a compass with those fields.

  • @PandaBear62573
    @PandaBear62573 4 года назад +36

    The first time my uncle saw the WTC twin towers he seriously said those are huge grain elevators. Everyone thought he was joking but no he was serious. He really thought they were grain elevators. Yeah he was a farmer in Ohio and Kentucky but he knew he was in New York City. He had left the Midwest as he served in WWII in Europe. It's a funny family story now.

    • @deadfreightwest5956
      @deadfreightwest5956 4 года назад +10

      Ben Carson, the "brain surgeon" insists the pyramids are grain silos. Yours is a funny story, his is a sad one.

    • @haroldwilkes6608
      @haroldwilkes6608 4 года назад +4

      @@deadfreightwest5956 Dr. Carson's thought would fit with "seven fat years and seven lean years - maybe they capped them when no longer needed, don't know, never heard him say that. He's pretty smart though.

    • @fionam3554
      @fionam3554 4 года назад +3

      had to be passing thru way later than WWII - they were built in the 70s

    • @dooler72
      @dooler72 4 года назад +1

      @@deadfreightwest5956 and yours is an ignorant one, Bless it.

    • @kenneththompson1809
      @kenneththompson1809 4 года назад +2

      The WTC twin towers look like the boxes the Empire State and Chrysler buildings came in to observers on Long Island.

  • @HeavenEarthFloral9
    @HeavenEarthFloral9 4 года назад +1

    My one time tour bus experience of the English countryside created a great memory of the giant pigs outstanding on their ground. Each pair had a huge box type shelter. I've never seen this in the U S.

  • @kevingray8616
    @kevingray8616 4 года назад +12

    As a Texan, I was really surprised how much of our land could be farmland.

    • @mrniceguy3750
      @mrniceguy3750 3 года назад +3

      Now it's how much farmland can be Bill Gates..

    • @kevingray8616
      @kevingray8616 3 года назад +3

      @@mrniceguy3750 Based response. Hang in there, these f’ers are going down.

    • @monicaluketich3106
      @monicaluketich3106 Год назад +1

      I'm in rural Texas and most of my neighbors are cattle. I started a small herd of meat goats 3 years ago - makes for interesting conversations with beef ranchers.

    • @booradley6832
      @booradley6832 Год назад

      Texas sucks and we'll all be glad when your state is uninhabitably dry.

  • @califdad4
    @califdad4 Год назад +1

    California grows about 40 percent of the nation's vegetables, and I've noticed they are mostly grown in big rectangular shapes, lots of rice fields near the Sacramento airport

  • @MikeS91712
    @MikeS91712 4 года назад +46

    We don't call them cows in the US, they're called double cheeseburgers.

  • @Jeff121456
    @Jeff121456 4 года назад +1

    Irrigation. In the UK most water comes from the sky so no need for regularly shaped fields. In the US much of our water comes through sprinkler systems that are most efficient in standard field shapes (circles and rectangles). Not to mention that field shapes in the UK were originated before modern tools were invented.

  • @haroldwilkes6608
    @haroldwilkes6608 4 года назад +12

    Square plots, odd-shaped plots - we were sober when we laid ours out.

  • @KristiGibbsLPC
    @KristiGibbsLPC 4 года назад

    Laurence, I think you are the funniest human I’ve ever heard!!! 🤣🤣🤪Your dry sense of humor is so refreshing to this American. IMO, I think it takes much more comedic skill to deliver a joke dryly, and allow it to bring about laughter on it’s own witty and clever merit, than to have a comedian or a laugh track laughing to have to almost lure their audience into laughing. When I first found your channel, you were at around 20,000 subscribers, so no wonder you have 171,000 now. BRAVO!! 👏🏼🤩😎😁

  • @emccoy
    @emccoy 4 года назад +7

    You need to look up the history of the Cattle Ranchers and Sheep Hearders in the US. The Cattle business has been for over a hundred years in the US actively lobbying against sheep and shepherds as they often fight over the same land. This is a big reason we don't have as much demand for mutton in the US. Its a really intresting history to go into

    • @KB4QAA
      @KB4QAA 4 года назад +2

      Now i've heard it all. Conspiracy theories over cows and sheep. No one is stopping farmers from raising sheep. (Ks farmer).

    • @lindasonnemaker4917
      @lindasonnemaker4917 4 года назад +3

      It was in the western states, not yours. Easy to look up the facts. I remember hearing about it from my childhood.

    • @KB4QAA
      @KB4QAA 4 года назад

      @@lindasonnemaker4917 No, he says it is has been going on for the last 100 years and is presently going on. He isn''t quoting history. Pure bunk.

    • @wdizard
      @wdizard 4 года назад +1

      Possibly because the cattle faction alleges that sheep crop the forage plants too short. Among other reasons.

    • @wdizard
      @wdizard 4 года назад +1

      Sheep Wars
      From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
      The Sheep Wars,[1][2] or the Sheep and Cattle Wars,[3][4] were a series of armed conflicts in the Western United States which were fought between sheepmen and cattlemen over grazing rights. Sheep wars occurred in many western states though they were most common in Texas, Arizona and the border region of Wyoming and Colorado. Generally, the cattlemen saw the sheepherders as invaders, who destroyed the public grazing lands, which they had to share on a first-come, first-served basis. Between 1870 and 1920, approximately 120 engagements occurred in eight different states or territories. At least 54 men were killed and some 50,000 to over 100,000 sheep were slaughtered

  • @josephkondrat7084
    @josephkondrat7084 4 года назад +1

    Corn is also used for alcohol used in whiskey and if you look hard when you are filling up as an additive to gas.

  • @smdias65
    @smdias65 4 года назад +15

    "Nine Bushels for Every Brit" sounds like it could be a song.

    • @SMATF5
      @SMATF5 4 года назад +3

      Sounds like a 1960s folk song.

  • @Maptologist
    @Maptologist 4 года назад +1

    Delightful video. I have couple of things to note from some experience in geography and farming.
    The US has a frustrating, yet better than archaic surveying system west of the Mason/Dixon line. It's called the Public Land Survey System (PLSS) where land is divided up in to one square mile sections. Those sections get divided in to quarters, halves, quarters in those quarters, and so on. That's why it's so rectangular. Fun fact, if you drive across the US not on the Interstate system, you will find that a town appears roughly every six miles in well-settled areas. This is an artifact of the PLSS's township and range mechanics.
    Those "silos" you mentioned are actually grain bins. The only things called silos are made to store a material called "silage", which is typically a whole chopped-up corn plant. Silos have become obsolete in favor of bunkers, which are built out of mafia blocks and covered in a tarp held down by old tires.

  • @RoseNZieg
    @RoseNZieg 4 года назад +8

    where i live, the most prominent crops are beans, cucumbers, melons, and pumpkins.

  • @jodidehate501
    @jodidehate501 4 года назад +1

    Did you account for pasture in that land in ag? Most of the West is pasture but not used for crops. And those silos- those are grain bins. Silos are usually taller, either blue, or concrete and used to be found on dairy farms.

  • @Highlanddragon
    @Highlanddragon 4 года назад +3

    I live in North Missouri and yes cattle do out number us but to be fair we like our burgers there are a lot of hogs in the US as well you got get bacon some how.

  • @OMGitsaClaire
    @OMGitsaClaire 4 года назад +1

    One thing I really liked about the UK (specifically Scotland where I visited a friend several years ago) was the amount of cheap lamb available in supermarkets there. In the US it tends to be hard to find and expensive but in Edinburgh where my friend lived it was in every store for a pretty reasonable price. In some cases it was even cheaper than beef. I like lamb; I think it’s really tasty and sheep are a little easier on the environment than cattle, so I wish we had it more frequently in the US. Then I could remake my friend’s lamb stew recipe that was so good.

    • @Sophie.S..
      @Sophie.S.. 4 года назад

      I was really surprised that lamb isn't readily available in the US. Here in Britain it's in all supermarkets and just as common as pork or beef. Lamb cutlets with mint sauce is my favourite!

  • @LoyaFrostwind
    @LoyaFrostwind 4 года назад +13

    "Where's the beef?!" from an old Wendy's commercial from the'80s

  • @huwfylt
    @huwfylt 4 года назад +2

    Interesting. I grew up in New England which has loads of dry stone walls all over the woods which used to all be farm land, mainly sheep grazing land, before the Midwest was colonized. There's still some sheep, but nowhere near what it used to be. Only the stone walls remain.

  • @jameshorn270
    @jameshorn270 4 года назад +8

    I think if you flew over the east coast you would find that the farms resemble British farmes more. The boundaries tend to follow the terrain ub gukkt abd mountainous terrain. However, whe we expanded through the Mid West and the Plains, the land is fairly flat and the land was surveyed before being divvied up. especilly in the Plains where it was given out by the governmen as part of the Homestead Act.Thus the land was handed out in "quarter section, 160 acres (1/4 of a square mile or 640 acres) Further, there seems to have been a tendency to deetermine location of a farmer in terms of quarters of the quarter section. Ask the farmer's wife where he was and she would likely say he was in the north forty (acres) although that would likely actually be either the Northwest or Northeast forty.

    • @jameshorn270
      @jameshorn270 4 года назад

      @@surlyogre1476 Typo fixed
      Thanks

  • @orlock20
    @orlock20 4 года назад

    A large portable laundry basket is about the size of a bushel. Those baskets mimic crop bushels which are round wooden baskets meant for carrying crops out of the field.

  • @blairbuskirk5460
    @blairbuskirk5460 3 года назад +6

    There were more cattle in the UK once, before that whole Mad cow debacle.

  • @deborahclatworthy3885
    @deborahclatworthy3885 6 месяцев назад

    Loving this…I immigrated from Illinois to Devon. Basically from one rural frying pan into a bonfire, sorry, and I would not go back to rectangular farming for all the tea at Twinnings. 😊

  • @frodo7244
    @frodo7244 4 года назад +3

    7:25 Those are not Silos they are called grain bins and they are used to dry and store grain until we (farmers) can get a good price. Otherwise we have to pay a storage fee and sell our grain before we lose too much.

    • @tishbrett
      @tishbrett 4 года назад

      Still called a silo used all over the world for grain corn coal cement etc

  • @Gamer3427
    @Gamer3427 Год назад +1

    It's probably worth noting that while the US has a lower percentage of our land that's using for farming when compared to Britain, there's probably significantly more of that percentage that simply can't be used for farming, due to deserts, mountains, swamps, etc, when compared to Britain.

  • @Big_Tex
    @Big_Tex 4 года назад +72

    You ignore the elephant in the room, which is that Brits call everything “corn”.

    • @blindleader42
      @blindleader42 4 года назад +13

      If there's a lost cause I can get behind it's returning the word corn to its proper (original) usage, meaning any and all cereal crops such as wheat, barley, oats, rice, rye etc.... a n d... maize.
      Maize is a perfectly good word, so why did we stop using it?

    • @glowormrdr6183
      @glowormrdr6183 4 года назад +8

      @@blindleader42 Because...grain?

    • @t5ruxlee210
      @t5ruxlee210 4 года назад +5

      A very old Irish saying : "(The name of someone or something goes here) was looking as forlorn as a lost god in a cornfield".
      The "lost god" being referred to was a pagan harvest idol made up many harvests before but it was no longer renewed yearly , signifying its help was no longer sought. However, disturbing it during any later harvest cleanups was not thought wise.

    • @blindleader42
      @blindleader42 4 года назад +3

      @@glowormrdr6183 What does that mean? "Because...grain". Or don't you have any idea what I said?
      Or do you mean that grain is the right word for what the Brits call corn? No, because grain refers to much more than cereal crops and includes legumes like soy beans and chick peas, as well as several other families of crops.

    • @TheEulerID
      @TheEulerID 4 года назад +7

      Corn is a word that was generic and derived from German origins. When the first. English colonists arrived, they, logically enough, called the indigenous cereal Indian corn. In time, they just dropped the adjective and thus Americans use the word corn for that one grain.

  • @laneclaypool8005
    @laneclaypool8005 6 месяцев назад

    Kentucky used to run sheep on tobacco farms. The tobacco barns were used for lambing in February or March after the tobacco had been taken to market. We had wooden gates that were stacked upright against the barn walls when not being used for lambing. It was very handy to climb the sheep panels (gates) to get in the tiers for hanging tobacco.

  • @danr1920
    @danr1920 4 года назад +3

    That flight simulator is a poor representation of what farms look like. The average farm is much bigger in the U.S..

  • @shannonagins370
    @shannonagins370 4 года назад +1

    Can I just say, I love this channel a lot! There's not a lot of intercultural channels that do a lot of research, and talk about non stereotypical/obvious stuff. He's also pretty funny! 😁😮