the complete guide to creating great pastures for your Dexter cattle

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Just a Few Acres Farm

Just a Few Acres Farm

Күн бұрын

If you are considering creating pastures for your Dexters or other cattle by reclaiming overgrown fields or crop land, or if you are searching for the best ways to maintain your pastures in optimal health, this is the video for you! I offer a complete guide to creating and maintaining great pastures, including 4 different methods for how to plant pasture, how to evaluate, test, and prepare the soil, the best pasture plants for both grazing and hay production, how to maintain your pasture to increase its production year after year, and the best methods for grazing your pasture.
website: justafewacres.com/
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email: peterelarson3@gmail.com

Пікірлер: 447
@d.j.c.7234
@d.j.c.7234 2 жыл бұрын
I have purchased books and listened to seminars by all the well known regenerative advocates and was always left with the question, how do "I" get started. This video breaks down that process into practical instruction. Now, two years later, I must say that EVERYTHING you advise in this video is spot-on. And, since I don't ever leave comments, I'll add a thank you for always sitting down at the end of your videos to rationalize why you do things. Fatherly advise in a way. My wife and I really appreciate it, and all you do. Thank you!
@JustaFewAcresFarm
@JustaFewAcresFarm 2 жыл бұрын
Hey, that’s great! Glad to hear you are on your way!
@christinaham2380
@christinaham2380 2 ай бұрын
I TOTALLY AGREE. We are buying some acres and totally need to replenish the land. Just beginning is hard as you want to do it right!
@wayupnort6271
@wayupnort6271 8 ай бұрын
Just revisiting this video in 2023 and it’s remarkable how this channel has progressed in terms of subscribers from celebrating getting to 1000. Well done Mr.Pete, you’re now over 400K! Not only did you transform your pastures but your channel has blossomed as well! 👍🏻
@deborahsimmons2414
@deborahsimmons2414 2 жыл бұрын
More than 1 year later and I find the information here to be timeless wisdom!!! Thank you so much for being the kind of human being who would rather help another human being than to suffer through either hearing or seeing their failure. In my book, that’s what angels do. 😃👍
@rorywynhoff1549
@rorywynhoff1549 3 жыл бұрын
Regenerative Ag is coming back... finally. It is amazing how quickly the soil can come back even after almost a century of mono-cropping mismanagement... Thanks for your videos, glad I found you.
@zebwalton979
@zebwalton979 Жыл бұрын
Regenerative Ag has been utilized by farmers since the late 80’s. Media won’t report on it though... it’s all about ‘climate change’
@michiganfarming1955
@michiganfarming1955 4 ай бұрын
7:12 hey that drag harrow looks familiar lol, not upset in any way for using the video clip, thank you for being around my channel. Found your channel few years ago, really enjoy watching your videos. Stay warm Pete!
@silasderoma4726
@silasderoma4726 4 жыл бұрын
"Our best crop is rocks.". That brought a chuckle! I really appreciate the helpful information you share here on your channel.
@JustaFewAcresFarm
@JustaFewAcresFarm 4 жыл бұрын
Thanks Silas! I wish I could sell those rocks "self service."
@davemi00
@davemi00 3 жыл бұрын
Silas DeRoma - too bad the Pet Rock fade has faded.
@dugnantz6140
@dugnantz6140 3 жыл бұрын
Tree Climbing maybe it’s time to bring back the pet rocks 🤣🤣. I still have mine in it’s little box
@silasderoma4726
@silasderoma4726 3 жыл бұрын
@@JustaFewAcresFarm "Pick Your Own: rocks"
@gonicjon
@gonicjon 3 жыл бұрын
Coulda made a fortune back in the pet Rock daze/craze
@davenhla
@davenhla 3 жыл бұрын
Western Sweet Timothy grass, Red clover, a little Alfalfa. If you hunt around youtube, you can find Department of Agriculture videos from the 50's/60's where University study was done on "forage blends" looking for nutrition, energy, and just as importantly, how the cattle actually feed on it. Somewhere in the 80's people quit putting Timothy grass in, and soon after clover because "it didn't dry as fast" for the clover and "not as much energy" for the Timothy. Cattle like variety, it makes them happy, happy cattle will eat more, which means they gain more(or make more milk) Timothy grass is a godsend if you plan on baling any hay. Fluffs the windrows, drys fast. You can do the soil test before you till. Doing it that way you can make a plan before you start. Plow, top dress, use the drag to "mix it in". As for planting, moldboard plow and a spring tooth drag works best. Don't be afraid to burn a little more fuel to cover with the drag an extra pass, it will save your seat and teeth later when you have to mow and bale the hay on the field. Especially the headlands. Make sure the teeth on the drag are down in the dirt! Especially if you bought a "classic" drag, the teeth were designed to bolt shovels on, but most farmers didn't bother it was too much work and the drags were inexpensive. They should be down in there enough to make the tractor work, otherwise you won't smooth the field and bust the clumps well. I WOULD DO THIS EVEN WITH CASH CROP LAND for pasture use. Odds are really good cash croppers were no tilling(doesn't work, been proven but its faster and DNR likes it for erosion) or using a heavy disc to stir the top up and replanting. Tilling deeper to make the soil "lighter" as well as bury all the trash on top makes the seed bed much nicer. Plows and drags are inexpensive even if you have to buy, and will hold their inexpensive value if you want to sell them later. Make sure to check condition of the shares on a plow if you pick one up. Look for welds. Old Oliver plows work best, Case is good(because Oliver made them) and Allis Chalmers made a nice plow. IH plows work good in lighter soils, or black earth. Melroe plows are excellent, but require more ground speed. JD plows work well in wide widths(like 16 or 18") at slow speeds. They will all do the job if set up properly. Grain drill will be most accurate. A nice old Moline or Oliver "Superior" pulled out of an old machine shed works wonders. We planted with a "big steel wheel" 8 foot Oliver with wood bins on it all the way up till the late 80's, when we bought the neighbors old Brillion because it had the cultipacker rolls built into it. For stones we used an old manure spreader with the rear end missing(the usual demise of the machines anyway from back then, beater would rust to bits). We would knock the floor out and put thick planks in. Fill the wagon, but not extreme, back it into the low land or otherwise, grab the planks and twist/turn on edge. Rocks fall out the bottom. Obviously don't overfill or it will be too heavy. Bucket tractor is still easier, but if you have a big crew of help the wagon is faster. People raising beef as a hobby should really watch videos like this. Sending the cattle down to whatever area you have and letting them eat whatever swamp grass, quack grass, etc. they can find is a good way to get underweight cattle, and they will taste bad too boot if you have them butchered. Nothing will make you stop and say "huh." and look a the person next to you at the table then biting into a nice looking piece of beef roast and finding out it tastes like Canary grass that got rained on 4 times. Proper forage makes the food taste better, it's not just all for the cattle's enjoyment.
@enuajsifoto
@enuajsifoto 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for all this valuable information!
@highroad3580
@highroad3580 2 жыл бұрын
We started about 15 years ago with having pine woods removed destumped and the ground graded by a pro with the right size equipment. Saved us time and money. We seeded and covered the seed with hay in any spots that were bare as the grass grew. Added lime. We hand picked up an old garbage dump and any old glass, etc. as it washed up. The grass took hold and we rotated horses on it for a few years. Then we got into dairy goats and eventually sold all of the horses. Now we rotate the goats between two established pastures. We never use fertilizer, but do mow about three times a year as we found that there is less edible grass after it goes to seed. Also, mowing high with a bush hog puts down carbon. Works very well for us and the herd. Pastures are lush and diverse with very little trash grass or weed.
@davidrobillard4080
@davidrobillard4080 Жыл бұрын
Another option when mowing, is adding wood ash to an existing pasture. The high potassium in wood ash really explodes any of existing legumes. You can pay the trucking fees and have a lot of it brought in as the ash is given away for free. We use the wood ash from our wood stove as well. We burn 3 to 4 cord of wood a year, I spread it throughout the winter. My pastures were pretty rough when I started, but the red clover is now blowing up.
@daviddjerassi
@daviddjerassi 3 жыл бұрын
I just hope young farmers are watching this video what a excellent workshop,thank you ,not a stone left un turned ,hahaha.
@philipschultz5007
@philipschultz5007 3 жыл бұрын
Young farmer (more of a homesteader) here, watching this.
@chronotriggerfan
@chronotriggerfan 2 жыл бұрын
We are :)
@beachbumpower7018
@beachbumpower7018 3 жыл бұрын
I learned more practical knowledge on farming from this video than I have in my entire life.
@andrewschofield8232
@andrewschofield8232 2 жыл бұрын
I have a small gardening business and manage my 2 x very large allotments (parish council rental plots) over the last 25 x years here in England UK. I have established the most wonderful grass garden lawn for a client this spring. From a virgin builders plot of very poor soil. It is quite remarkable that each step you have mentioned on an agricultural level are almost identical to what I have done with my client's garden landscape project. Except.......no cattle grazing this (field) lawn! HaHa. Bravo sir - excellent, most enjoyable KZfaq video.
@todphillips3935
@todphillips3935 2 жыл бұрын
When we moved to our acreage, it was all weeds, 7 foot tall weeds. I mowed it down with a single blade snapper from the 1980s. Admittedly, I sprayed a lot. I pulled weeds for the first year relentlessly. That’s great information that you gave. From my experience, mowing was the key. The weeds were so bad for the first and second year. I kept mowing. The grass seed was in there and the grass won and I haven’t done anything with my pastures for about six years and they still look absolutely fabulous. Oddly, the sheep took care of the Canadian thistle. They loved it. Weird. Canadian thistle used to be our number one enemy.
@tennesseegirl5539
@tennesseegirl5539 2 жыл бұрын
Mine is iron weed....😖 but getting better after one year of mowing
@todphillips3935
@todphillips3935 2 жыл бұрын
@@tennesseegirl5539 It took me two years of mowing and spraying. Admittedly I did spray hard. I had huge pastors of Canadian thistle and other stuff I don’t even know what it was
@tennesseegirl5539
@tennesseegirl5539 2 жыл бұрын
Hard work pays off. Plus, I find it very relaxing. I enjoy mowing. My horse was so fat this year and healthy, I only fed her oats once a day and she looked better than she ever has!
@todphillips3935
@todphillips3935 2 жыл бұрын
@@tennesseegirl5539 I enjoy mowing also. I haven’t had time. This last season I only mowed one time. I’m the only one doing chores you’d think with a house full of kids I could enjoy the place a little more.
@tennesseegirl5539
@tennesseegirl5539 2 жыл бұрын
@@todphillips3935 that's too bad. My Dad made me work at home. I hated it then but now I'm glad he did.
@mountainfrost7095
@mountainfrost7095 3 жыл бұрын
Gentleman sounds like a professor giving lecture. 👌
@radioguy1620
@radioguy1620 Жыл бұрын
Great video and explains why my field is getting more lush grass every year with only mowing. a good to the point video.
@brianhoxworth3881
@brianhoxworth3881 7 ай бұрын
I have found bush hogging 4 times a year really helps establish grasses and choke out the weeds.
@matthewkesler1175
@matthewkesler1175 2 жыл бұрын
I work alone so to handle rock I use a skeleton type rock bucket on my skidloader.The skidloader is like having two of me but one doesnt get tired.Plus the rock bucket is made to grub out boulders and large rocks.I once hand cut a cow lot full of canada thistle with a blade type weed cutter.It was late afternoon mid to late July.That evening the cattle came up and ate all those wilted thistles like they were candy.I was surprised.The weed inspector made me cut my pastures thistle.The cows had paths all through them.I was curious so I crawled on a path or two.It was cool in the thistles and grass was growing really well under them.But I had to rotary mow it or face a fine.The state University thistle study field was across the gravel road.They didn't mow it .It was wild,8 -9 foot tall thistles. I mowed mine and the pasture immediately burnt up.Then Russian ryegrass moved in,produced a heavy thatch and now it needs tillage.So the thistles actually werent the worst .Apparently thistles have a deep Taproot and bring up sulfur.
@randybuchanan2110
@randybuchanan2110 3 жыл бұрын
I very much enjoy your videos. I am a pharmacist in north Florida and livestock farm. I have beef cows and Kiko goats. I cut my own hay as well. I have picked up some great ideas from your channel. Thanks.
@annetracy77
@annetracy77 2 жыл бұрын
wow, you've gotten 200 times more subscribers in 18 months! the homestead movement is huge!!
@BRUtahn
@BRUtahn 2 жыл бұрын
It needs to be, for the future.
@lkhfun6575
@lkhfun6575 2 жыл бұрын
You mentioned getting your 1000th subscriber in this video. Now, 16 months later, you are at 170,000 subscribers. Congratulations! Build it (good content) and they will come. 😊
@courtneyhandy6061
@courtneyhandy6061 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you SOOO much for this video, I love them!! My boyfriend and I just bought our first farm, and we need to revamp our hay fields and this video told me everything I needed to know! I LOVE your channel!
@qdtsg8
@qdtsg8 2 жыл бұрын
Curious how it ended up going! :) Did you guys end up using any of Pete's methods? We're thinking of taking over 25 acres of clear cut logged land and are thinking we'll use pigs and seed after them.
@ricoramos9864
@ricoramos9864 3 жыл бұрын
You are such a joy to listen to. You really enjoy your life. I share your joy.
@Laufowler1980
@Laufowler1980 3 жыл бұрын
Sadly I found this video to late. Now I Can se all the mistankes I made when making my field. Thanks for a Great video though!
@franc362
@franc362 3 жыл бұрын
Never is too late
@davedrewett2196
@davedrewett2196 3 жыл бұрын
First thing. Get electric fencing. Use a hot tape front and back worked out on a days grazing for your whole herd. Sow seed directly into that days grazing area just using the broadcast method. Put your whole herd concentrated into that area for the day. Your livestock will hoove that seed to the soil surface and due to the high density stock numbers will tromp any uneaten hayed off grasses to the ground where it will help cover the seed and retain moisture. If you have very high grass like in the first shot vetch is very good mixed with other species. The next day another area of a days grazing next to the first one is done the same. It’s important to move the back fence behind so as to stop stock from going over the ground they have just been on. This process is repeated until you’ve reseeded your pasture. It’s important to have the right amount of stock for the land available so you allow pasture recovery and it’s only grazed once you see the first yellow leaves so as to retain some litter and provide enough roughage for correct rumen function. This is all a very cheap system and over time as you establish more perennial diverse species you will at least double,your stocking rates because basically you’re growing more feed. I strongly disagree that your stock won’t eat thistles and that they should be mowed down. You should never mow, it’s a waste of fuel plus it’s a miss understanding of the function of thistles because they are mother nature’s chisel ploughs that provide biological services for free. They are tap rooted and once they die provide a deep watering and aeration service for zero cost plus they pump sugar exudates into the soil feeding micro organisms. They also provide a lot of habitat for baby lady beetles because they produce sugars that attract aphids. None of this can be achieved without a planned grazing system. You need to estimate your feed days for the next six to eight weeks and make stocking rate adjustments to match the feed estimates. If you don’t do that you will be buying fodder and there is not much point in doing that.
@RobynFfrancon
@RobynFfrancon 3 жыл бұрын
Interesting, thanks.
@thundarrb5788
@thundarrb5788 2 жыл бұрын
👍🏼😎
@margomoore4527
@margomoore4527 4 ай бұрын
A donkey or some goats might eat the thistles.
@MacStrengthCo
@MacStrengthCo Жыл бұрын
1000 Subs on this video! Look at your channel now. Doing awesome. Well done and keep up the great content. Debating rejuvenating our pastures as the drought has taken it's toll on them.
@peachykeen7634
@peachykeen7634 Жыл бұрын
Really appreciate how you lay out these options. May the Lord bless and reward you for bringing all this stewardship information back to the people. We will keep this wisdom and pass it on to our children. We can’t yet afford a tractor... so here we go. I chuckled at “character building exercise” for the kids. Same here.
@jackdotzman2908
@jackdotzman2908 Жыл бұрын
Great vid. Appreciate you taking the time to explain in detail how you achieved excellent pastures for your cattle. Thank you. From Missouri
@dwaynekoblitz6032
@dwaynekoblitz6032 3 жыл бұрын
And now you have over 65K subscribers! Not surprised. Your content is excellent!
@choosetobehealthy2975
@choosetobehealthy2975 2 жыл бұрын
And now 154,000.......way to go Pete.
@jjr6929
@jjr6929 2 жыл бұрын
1,000 subscribers a year ago....now at 148,000 subscribers....you are obviously doing something right. Glad I found your channel !!
@nickstraw1952
@nickstraw1952 3 жыл бұрын
We have the largest pig producer in our country a few miles away. Apart from the breed stock on his own farm, all the weeners and up live in outside "free range" pens about the size of half a soccer field on other farmers land. About 10 in each pen, they have an arc, get fed and watered everyday and have a decent life before their one bad day. The farmers get paid a little, but their fields get thoroughly cleaned of weeds and roots. Copious manuring and tilling. End of the year's contract, a drive over with a chain harrow and the field is set for cropping again. Economic changes mean many farmers locally are slowly changing from arable to pastoral. The fields do really well post pigs with grasses sown straight away, and can be certified organic pasture a year earlier if you want. Pigs will do the same in woodland and with appropriate fences along hedgerows, destroying the brush and weeds and prevent over crowding of saplings so management is much simpler.
@SarahPerine
@SarahPerine Жыл бұрын
I'm hoping my pigs do this! They're off to a great start!
@treefiddy2470
@treefiddy2470 5 ай бұрын
As nature intended
@ZE308AC
@ZE308AC Жыл бұрын
I love Thistle, spiky weeds, and Sudan grass.
@mattcraztex9940
@mattcraztex9940 3 жыл бұрын
WOW 1 year ago you had only 1000 Subs now nearly 100,000 Subs. Way to grow the audience. Clearly people have a big interest in home grow organic food.
@Mr.LetMeOverthinkThis
@Mr.LetMeOverthinkThis 2 жыл бұрын
So glad to come across your account. Really nice video. Its awesome to hear you thank your subscribers for reaching 1000 and to see 1 year later you're over 200k!!! That's insane. Congrats.
@strictlyconservative8777
@strictlyconservative8777 11 ай бұрын
Just subscribed today and I am thankful I found you. How incredibly important this is. I travel all over the country and all I see are overworked fields depleted, dead and dried up. Looking for land for small-scale homesteading and creating pasture is where I will begin. Thank you!
@woodstocklions5343
@woodstocklions5343 2 жыл бұрын
Great video, learning a lot! Another option for seeding pasture/hayfield in between a drill and a broadcaster is a Brillion style seeder, kind of a combo of a broadcaster and culti-packer. Old ones can be found fairly cheap and they're very simple, mostly ground driven things I believe. At least ours is.
@Coldlegend214
@Coldlegend214 2 жыл бұрын
1k subs? My man you provide such great info that In just a year you’re at over 150k congrats and thank you
@rcronin1
@rcronin1 2 жыл бұрын
Ummm... ? 187k
@elizabethblane201
@elizabethblane201 2 жыл бұрын
@@rcronin1 Um . . . ? 228K in Jan, 2022. Pete doesn't just grow great pastures.
@anyaoberkirsch7015
@anyaoberkirsch7015 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you thank you, thank you! I'm looking at purchasing an old farm that has 13 acres of old farmland, and no one has been able to tell me how to turn that into pasture/hayfield.
@barrybr1
@barrybr1 3 жыл бұрын
You're a natural educator. Thanks for the great vid.
@springhollerfarm8668
@springhollerfarm8668 2 жыл бұрын
I love having the time to check out some of your older stuff, Pete. I have seen most, now. I have the first one of the two you showed here on the farm we just bought, it has been let go about a decade and January and February of this year, our first 2 months, were fraught with running the chainsaw and burning brush. I got a tractor, sorry, it's not red, and I got it fixed up now I am fixing up the old bush hog from the back 40, then I can truly begin working on the pastures.
@markmcquillan1074
@markmcquillan1074 3 жыл бұрын
We have a 30 acres horse farm, and trying to buy 12 more strictly for hay. I came across these videos and they are awesome. Very informative. Thank you.
@MyBelch
@MyBelch 11 ай бұрын
4:53 "Our best crop is rocks." I hear you brother, I hear you.
@sherrymay5243
@sherrymay5243 9 ай бұрын
I spent my childhood picking rocks. It is indeed character building as well as sibling bonding. We used what was called a stone boat, a heavy metal sled that was low enough to lever the big rocks on and off. I still have a beautiful large 35lb chunk that is multi-colored red/white/blue that decorates my gardens and reminds me of times gone by.
@andreafalconiero9089
@andreafalconiero9089 3 жыл бұрын
Amazing video! Every sentence is jam-packed with great advice. Thanks very much for this presentation!
@larrykline6700
@larrykline6700 3 жыл бұрын
Pet, this is Larry, I am with you on felling about the small farm. I will pray for every day
@denjhill
@denjhill Жыл бұрын
Great information. Great presentation. Thanks!
@HeritageFarmsTexas
@HeritageFarmsTexas 3 жыл бұрын
Wow, that may be one of the best how to videos I’ve seen. I think your options are spot on. We are living that scenario at the moment.
@02Huntet
@02Huntet 3 жыл бұрын
oh my God!! Key words here “ higher PH will crowd out the weeds” 🥳🤩🥳..... my husband needs to hear this it’s everything I can do to keep him from discing it all up Again!!
@GetRhythm2011
@GetRhythm2011 2 жыл бұрын
WOW. What a GREAT find this video is. You answered all the questions I was hoping the CSU Extension Agent would. I just met with him earlier today, and he said to spread Urea over the pasture, incorporate it as best I can with a drag to maximize grass growth, and not to worry too much about seeing clover right now. It's first week of September in Western Colorado. Seriously, THANK YOU ENORMOUSLY for sharing this exceptionally educational How-To guide to pasture regeneration. You bet I subscribed to your channel right away, saved this link, and shared it to fellow grass farmers for grazing. Thank you for including very critical points about exactly WHEN TO GRAZE AND/OR WHEN TO CUT FOR HAY as well. Incredibly helpful information here.
@MikeyMuse52
@MikeyMuse52 3 жыл бұрын
I laughed out loud - "our best crop is rocks." 😆😁
@TheNativeTwo
@TheNativeTwo 11 ай бұрын
This is the second time I've watched this video. First time I didn't really understand it all. It required a bit of experience first. I have 2 acres pasture and I am running a small flock of sheep and goats on it. I can see the wisdom in all these steps now. After my first discing and harrowing, rocks were everywhere... Amongst other other junk found in the fields. And there are many weeds the goats or sheep just don't want. And if I wait too long to graze it or mow it, the grass goes to seed and dies back. So after watching it again, it all makes a lot of sense now.
@aussiepressconferences.4755
@aussiepressconferences.4755 Жыл бұрын
Always a pleasure to hear your voice. Thank you,
@sheilasantiago3715
@sheilasantiago3715 4 ай бұрын
Just watched this one. In 3(ish)years you've gone from 1,000 subs to over 430, 000. Good for you! 😊
@futtermanfarms6791
@futtermanfarms6791 7 ай бұрын
thank you. really great vid. I'm a CA date grower. Moving to TX and planing on farming with my son. This will be really great help!
@kcthomas786
@kcthomas786 10 ай бұрын
If big commercial farms did this we would be a healthy people. Regenerative farming is they way it should be and so rewarding thxs for making videos to help people to understand and also do it the right way!
@robertcole9391
@robertcole9391 Жыл бұрын
Good advice. It is a labor of love. Takes 2 to 3 years to bring back a pasture. And lots of money invested in essential minerals. You'll have to till those in. And avoid corn fields. The soil is burnt from all the nitrates.
@erwinbrubacker7488
@erwinbrubacker7488 Жыл бұрын
Yes Sir, it can be a rocky road,lol. On horse drawn equipment, after springharrowing we used a drag, built out of oak planks, well we loaded up that bad boy many times.
@arvbergstedt3303
@arvbergstedt3303 2 ай бұрын
One of my favorite signs years ago in Dads shop. Quality is like buying oats. Nice clean good oats will cost you a fair price. If you’re satisfied with oats that have already been through the horse, they can be had a lot cheaper.
@MyNameIsChristBringsASword
@MyNameIsChristBringsASword 3 жыл бұрын
Compost tea is supposed to re-establish the beneficial bacteria which requires warm water, mollasses and compost with an aquarium bubbler to keep air in the bucket until bacterial growth is at a peak, then dilute and apply.
@toddglime6709
@toddglime6709 4 жыл бұрын
Congratulations on the 1k! We are trying to start our dexter herd next year and are soaking up all of your great knowledge for across the farm!
@JustaFewAcresFarm
@JustaFewAcresFarm 4 жыл бұрын
Thanks Todd!
@davemachoukas6175
@davemachoukas6175 8 ай бұрын
Went back wacth again. Thank you pete
@markreynolds9715
@markreynolds9715 2 жыл бұрын
Hi Peter just so refreshing to watch your videos no bull just the good oil After 30 years at sea and 12 months to go it will be my tern Cheers Mark
@floorpizza8074
@floorpizza8074 Жыл бұрын
Only 4 months to go!
@ryangalea5040
@ryangalea5040 2 жыл бұрын
Very good video 👍
@agoodgurl2k
@agoodgurl2k 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you for blessing us with all this valuable information. Hay crop science in a nutshell! 😇
@FuerstenbergE
@FuerstenbergE 2 жыл бұрын
Amazing the amount of growth on your channel!! Congratulations!!!
@josephsullivan1760
@josephsullivan1760 3 жыл бұрын
Love all of your videos ! Tons of information and always right to the point!
@wrinkledm
@wrinkledm Жыл бұрын
Lol Pete... Love your videos but still snickering at the 1000 subscriber comment. I look over and see you are now at 334k subs.. Well done sir.
@Mr44magnum0706
@Mr44magnum0706 Жыл бұрын
Just commented on his newest video about that, mind blown 🤯
@blueeyephil
@blueeyephil 3 жыл бұрын
Just found your channel today, suscribed and have watched several of your videos. One thing you didn't mention and may not have available in your area. We can rent a no till seed driller from our county farm service. As well as they sell seed. We use that method to revitalize pasture and hay fields from time to time. There is a per day charge as well as an acre charge on it. It has a meter. I does take a a decent size tractor to pull it. We can also rent a heavy roller at a pretty modest price to help put rocks back down in the ground or to roll if you seed after tilling. You produce interesting and informative videos. Keep up the good work.
@Skashoon
@Skashoon Жыл бұрын
This video has renewed my fervor for expanding my acreage by adding an adjoining 5-8 acres of fallowed land that’s a mess. Briers, brambles and junk weeds have overtaken it. This would give me 5 times the pasture (just have 1.25-1.5 acres now) and open up livestock options for sheep, expanding my pig herd and maybe a cow or two. First, I need a tractor and disk to do the hard part. (I’m 67 and single) I’m going to think long and hard before making any final decisions, but it’s giving me optimism. Thanks Pete!
@bobthomson1350
@bobthomson1350 3 жыл бұрын
Great video Pete - love your tractors
@JScottCee
@JScottCee 3 жыл бұрын
So glad I found your channel. Great info! 👍
@starkravingranch1505
@starkravingranch1505 3 жыл бұрын
Pete teaches me a ton with every video. Now I just have to see if all this works on hilly pastures.
@j.maxwaddell2557
@j.maxwaddell2557 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you for the great information. I appreciate you sharing your land knowledge
@davidf.7782
@davidf.7782 Жыл бұрын
Great video Pete!!! That bright red bracket holding the alternator looks great!!!
@funnywolffarm
@funnywolffarm 3 жыл бұрын
Nice down-to-earth examination of the process. Thanks!
@BeldingHillFarms
@BeldingHillFarms 3 жыл бұрын
Exactly the video I was looking for!! Subscribed
@hausbruer
@hausbruer 3 жыл бұрын
Great info! We will be starting our new pasture this year and this helped a ton
@josephacuna8389
@josephacuna8389 3 жыл бұрын
I love watching your videos so much good information I’m glad I subscribed to your channel, next your I’m gona be starting my own family farm we can’t wait!!
@davidb.beasley7359
@davidb.beasley7359 3 жыл бұрын
Pete, thanks for the very timely and informative presentation. Smoothing my field is one big concern. It beats me badly just mowing. So one objective I have is to smooth it so I can move at a faster speed. I'll be revisiting this video.
@SoffiaTiaMaria
@SoffiaTiaMaria 2 жыл бұрын
1000 Subscribers?! It's now 239k and I'm soo happy for you 😊
@bradyboy1952
@bradyboy1952 3 жыл бұрын
Use to joke, in Brady Township, that if rocks were gold, we'd be Fort Knox, lol. BK.
@SuperDuty23XL
@SuperDuty23XL 3 жыл бұрын
Am trying to get some pasture going this fall ( if we ever get some rain here in the Midwest) . We just have a couple of acres but you’ve given me some great ideas . Thanks for an informative video!
@kennicholls9787
@kennicholls9787 3 жыл бұрын
Congrads on 1000 subs. Keep up the great channel. I am an old farm boy and I love the way you operate. Reminds me of my youth in Alberta.
@jedetraktor_cz
@jedetraktor_cz 3 жыл бұрын
love your vids , greetings from Czech republic from horse and sheep hobby farmer
@jhenshaw187ify
@jhenshaw187ify 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you for the information im from southern Arizona and i really been wanting to get into hay as my first crop keep up the great work
@chrismccartney8668
@chrismccartney8668 2 жыл бұрын
Nice to hear a Rock Farmer speak..... I live in London and have a tiny garden but my best crop is broken bricks as a number of old houses were demolished these flat then replaced I kept digging up old victoriana bricks in fact when I got fifty I sold them to guy doing a renovation/extension as he wanted old London bricks which very hard and differing colours so sold for 3 pounds each 20 years ago so a good no work crop..
@JohnSmith-fs4dx
@JohnSmith-fs4dx Жыл бұрын
Pete - incredible help here. Thank you.
@HisWayHomestead
@HisWayHomestead 2 жыл бұрын
this is a lot of great information... I'm going to have to watch this one over and over to make sure I get it all! thanks Pete!
@Grizzlife
@Grizzlife 2 жыл бұрын
Well put together with old school methods. Thanks!
@macbaker5884
@macbaker5884 3 жыл бұрын
Wow an I just subscribed . I’ve been raising few beef for 40 years . I started like you did brush hogging an grazing An it’s come back good . I agree with everything you say here your a smart man like me lol
@TJPisano151
@TJPisano151 3 жыл бұрын
Love your insight and humor
@hazelcreekheritagefarm8092
@hazelcreekheritagefarm8092 3 жыл бұрын
Exactly the info I have been looking for. Thank you so much for your wealth of knowledge!!
@kevindonnelly7787
@kevindonnelly7787 3 жыл бұрын
Thanks Pete. great video, very informative, exactly the help i needed!
@larrymoore6640
@larrymoore6640 4 жыл бұрын
Congratulations on reaching your first goal on UTube. Thank you for all your help and tips. Good things take time but in the long run are worth it.
@JustaFewAcresFarm
@JustaFewAcresFarm 4 жыл бұрын
Thanks Larry! It takes some patience for people to find new channels on KZfaq. I'm glad you found us!
@ritaspug2
@ritaspug2 3 жыл бұрын
This was a great informative video! Just what I needed. I am a first time farmer with zero knowledge and a nearly dead old corn field as my land. Lots of sunflowers and weeds and only scrub for the goats. Have to hay feed my horses entirely. Didn’t know where to start! I have only been able to overseed winter rye so far,Thank you!
@josephdionne2094
@josephdionne2094 3 жыл бұрын
Really enjoy your videos! Very informative and easy to understand. Thanks for the good works.
@riflebear1711
@riflebear1711 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the very direct and professional instruction. I really appreciate it.
@SKEvolved
@SKEvolved 3 жыл бұрын
I found this very helpful. Thank you! -Steve
@gobigandgohomeschool4882
@gobigandgohomeschool4882 Жыл бұрын
Happy to be a new subscriber!
@MyClutteredGarage
@MyClutteredGarage 3 жыл бұрын
Wow two months ago you hit 1,000 subs and now you have over 7,000. Congratulations! This gives me hope! Thank you. -Ed
@jesuslovesyou8865
@jesuslovesyou8865 3 жыл бұрын
Just under 20K near the end of July. This channel is growing fast. Congrats!!!
@markblackwood3121
@markblackwood3121 3 жыл бұрын
I so much enjoy your detailed review of a Liam husbandry and East till basics. I do not know if you get time to review much history but I think you would enjoy the farming management of medieval European farms. Roughly similar in size. Farm management parallels your activities. Really interesting and satisfying to watch your channel and enjoy. Thank you for sharing your window. Sometime perhaps note somewhere on your channel where one can purchase some Dexter beef. Looks like a well marbles grass fed. My back ground is Hereford purebreds. Lots of corn but pretty docile animals also. I grew up in a 400 acre farm central Iowa. Different issues different answers.👍👍
@howdyshaun6139
@howdyshaun6139 2 жыл бұрын
Love going back and watching your older videos... We have 100ac of rocks to pick... Starts next week :P
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