I've heard of it. The youtuber I follow has been using it for years. LOL Matter of fact at 1:32 you got a clip from his channel....
@bonniehyden96214 сағат бұрын
I'm new to Rot. Grazing: still researching and learning. I have 4 pygmy goats. They've become my "guinea pigs". Challenge at the moment is to keep 2 Adults and 2 kids out of my large yard where I have planted a small garden and wish to plant edible and medicinal plants. Watching this video makes me 🤔 ... think of my yard fence as perimeter fence. Plan at the moment: add 2 more electric wires at bottom of existing 2 strand electric fence. Then, set up temp., movable paddocks outside that perimeter on remaining land. My husband is battling advanced cancer so I'm doing this alone, with occasional help from adult children. Daily attention to my "herd" would be up to me and our 36 yr old Down Syndrome son, who has become quite a good goat herd with just our dog and a bamboo stick! 🤭🤗 ... but he does need a break. If anyone has suggestions for temp, movable electric fencing on a Social Security budget ... I'm all ears! Edit: yes, my plan is to expand my herd and I'd >like< to have a larger breed of goat. I'm thinking of asking our neighbor if I could borrow his herd of 8 Boer goats. 🤔 ....or maybe even borrow Brother-in-law's cows. ...still pondering.
@logantauson78915 сағат бұрын
Wonderful video, thank you so much. I wonder if you could go into the appropriate rotations for different animals regarding how much land you have. How often to rotate on a half acre, fully acre, how to maintain good pasture for these animals and their health
@RegenerativeFarmersofAmerica14 сағат бұрын
Unfortunately there isn't a calculated answer. It depends on rainfall, forage types, animal mixes etc. It's an art, not a science. I would check out our video on partial graze versus total graze
@henrysylvester-williams914316 сағат бұрын
Thank you for the information. I appreciate all of your video content.
@armanlagi21 сағат бұрын
Isn't unilever is on the same level as nestle when it comes to shady business practices?
@RegenerativeFarmersofAmerica16 сағат бұрын
Definitely not saying they are an ideal company. Just covering their work in the regenerative space. I don't think there's any large corporation with all good practices. They are understanding like Pepsi that their supply chain is in jeopardy
@josephpatterson4042Күн бұрын
Never heard over it dairy farmers here in Pennsylvania have been using it for years
@azfarazuno3870Күн бұрын
They tried to get farmers to raise it in the 70s, no one would buy the crop. It has a nasty taste.
@TomTom-rh5gkКүн бұрын
Sorghum grows wild in Connecticut.
@stevenmoomey2115Күн бұрын
On the Eastern Shore of Maryland, they are working on Strains that are more tolerant of salt in the soil. They already have developed Rice Strains that will grow in Salty Soils, constantly damp, not flooded fields. Also working on Perennial Grain Crops for a double Late Fall-Winter-Early Spring Harvests.
@catherinemckenney6317Күн бұрын
is sorghum the same thing as Milo
@mesh12482 күн бұрын
Not knocking the video maker but how can triticale a genetically modified product fall under the organic foods market…. Goes against everything organic is… that tells u bs the organic market is…
@michaelhowell25412 күн бұрын
Pfft! Every Trekkie knows!
@5364310gb2 күн бұрын
Look at Russia for food safety? LMO! They are such a paragon of virtue. They would rather kill their own people brutally rather than have them eat something that MIGHT be bad for them.
@dalechenoweth9152 күн бұрын
Star trek fans have heard of it.
@robertmense89063 күн бұрын
What about using triticale for a wildlife food plot?
@johnberry11073 күн бұрын
You may be the only person that does not know of this crop? Been used and ignored depending on your social status or social rebellness. Stay safe.
@HO-os8ry3 күн бұрын
Lol failure..you can not feed a nation this way let alone the world
@RegenerativeFarmersofAmerica3 күн бұрын
Bummed you didn't watch and see the evidence to the contrary:)
@lostpony48854 күн бұрын
Quatro Triticale in Star Trek tribbles ep
@rodneyh71514 күн бұрын
Ive heard about it for 35 years
@raynorsebring99404 күн бұрын
With that much nutrition, no wonder tribbles do so well on it!
@Naturalcrusader4 күн бұрын
Know about it just can’t find it any where
@billbradshaw32744 күн бұрын
Thanks much for the update.
@sheriealfowler9255 күн бұрын
All things we have now are modified hybrids. Cattle, chicken, horses. All plants are hybrids modified by man If you don't consume them you are going to starve!
@marigoldtransportationgrou80165 күн бұрын
If it’s not what God created I don’t want it. I try my best to stay away from crops and foods that scientists tinker with. Just my opinion. 🙏🏾
@ropanemanja5 күн бұрын
Ne postoji namernica koju čovek nije modofikovao, tako da zapravo i nemaš neki izbor.
@karlrovey4 күн бұрын
Good luck finding crops and foods that we haven't cultivated into their current forms (first via natural processes, and more recently in the lab).
@aktab94 күн бұрын
People who scream about GMO are just ignorant morons.
@ellenorbjornsdottir11664 күн бұрын
The gods (plural!) may have made the earth, but people made, among other things, the Netherlands, tractors, scythes, glass, kettles, paper, and generally so much of the beauty in our world - it's all made by people, or with the guidance of people. Perhaps if the gods did not want us to do this tinkering, they would not have created us, or set into motion the effects that resulted in our creation out of the Great Rift Valley in Africa, in the first place.
@tjn22544 күн бұрын
@@ellenorbjornsdottir1166bro smoke some more of that shit
@thenextpoetician63286 күн бұрын
Indeed, however that chemtrail @5:32 is off-putting.
@RegenerativeFarmersofAmerica6 күн бұрын
It's hard to find videos and images without them anymore
@thenextpoetician63286 күн бұрын
@@RegenerativeFarmersofAmerica No kidding. Cartoons to funeral processions ...
@billbradshaw32744 күн бұрын
It does look like a chem trail.
@Stan_in_Shelton_WA19 сағат бұрын
Con trail as in condensation but you will believe crazy ideas over sane ones so call them chem trails.
@thenextpoetician63285 сағат бұрын
@@Stan_in_Shelton_WA You're an expert, eh? They started experimenting in 1946. First public application in 1953. On second thought, you're stupid, or a troll. :)
@michaellalanae72286 күн бұрын
How cancerous is it to the body since the body may not recognize it it may store it as fat or empty calories .
@markkallstrom56727 күн бұрын
Many livestock farms double crop triticale & corn silage .
@markkallstrom56727 күн бұрын
We have used Triticale for decades on our dairy [ sold dairy ] . We now double crop sweet corn then Triticale . The Triticale is pastured in the late fall early winter . Then '' IF NOT '' overgrazed in the fall it will grow back the next spring to be high moisture round bails .
@user-mi4du9rd1j7 күн бұрын
Is it trademarked or patented? That will probably determine whether or not it becomes a really major crop in the US. If they can't monopolize it, the Big Ag corps will not want it competing with their profits.
@ellenorbjornsdottir11664 күн бұрын
Modern varieties are yeah
@SkyDavis1002 күн бұрын
Just get a variety that works in your area and plant it over and over. There isn’t hybrid Trit varieties. No GMO traits have been made so no one can patent a specific genome. So you can’t get sued.
@SkyDavis1002 күн бұрын
@@ellenorbjornsdottir1166thats BS
@buckaroobonzai29097 күн бұрын
Can you make beer with it?
@ellenorbjornsdottir11664 күн бұрын
Yes, ofc
@downbntout7 күн бұрын
As a rotation component, good. Mineral mining champ!
@davidford6947 күн бұрын
Canola is GMO?
@TaniaBasson-qr5vm7 күн бұрын
Canola is treated with pesticides and fungicides in the field. so as far as a chemically treated crop goes, it's one of the worst culprits. There have been some experimentation to increase yield and speed of harvest, but none of those have gone very far. It's mostly about how it's treated in the field
@saskwatch1237 күн бұрын
Most commercial canola grown is GMO.
@davidford6947 күн бұрын
@@saskwatch123 A bit disingenuous of me. I knew the answer. Before canola could be a successful crop it was necessary to breed out the odd "skanky" plant that ruined whole batches. This was done right there in Saskatchewan, one of the earliest uses of GMO. The head of the NRC lab that did the work was Warren Steck. I have coffee with him quite often. Amazing man.
@saskwatch1237 күн бұрын
@@davidford694 I was a student in the Crop Science Dept in the 90's. I knew some of the students who worked there at the time.
@4thllamaofthealpacolypse7127 күн бұрын
"You've never heard of". If you're a tribble ...
@paytonturner14217 күн бұрын
I wonder if this grain can be used to feed livestock by giving them a diverse diet of grains and grass to feed them and make their meat more healthy.
@TaniaBasson-qr5vm7 күн бұрын
Almost entirely. As horse feed, it hasn't been experimented with a whole lot. But it can make up 70% of the other bovine's diets. Fowl and goats need more variation in greens, and pigs need to have some supplementation with carbohydrates , but that's to be expected. It's pretty comparable to alfalfa and sorghum, and is one of the few grains that can fulfill bovine's dietary needs with up to 70% or more. Especially as a whole, stem, root, leaf and grain.
@ellenorbjornsdottir11664 күн бұрын
No, livestock who are fed triticale, wheat, or rye are unsafe for people who have celiac disease, same as the triticale, wheat or rye itself.
@poetmaggie17 күн бұрын
The best animal feed, is the food the animal would eat if human did not interfere, for herbivores it would be a variety of free growing plants and for meat eaters it is meat and for omnivores it's a variety of natural growing plants and meat that are eating natural foods.
@NortheastHobbyfarmer7 күн бұрын
I learned about triticale in the sixties when it was the theme of an original Star Trek episode.
@catherinemacleod49853 күн бұрын
That was the double haploid variant, Quadro-Triticale.
@henrysylvester-williams91437 күн бұрын
Once again, thank you for your video content. As someone new to farming, I find your videos very helpful. Keep up the good work
@ShawnRitch7 күн бұрын
I'm skeptical but hopeful
@marigoldtransportationgrou80165 күн бұрын
Amen
@ellenorbjornsdottir11664 күн бұрын
See if there's any seed vendors about you and sow it.
@NEWSNOWTV17 күн бұрын
this reminds me of the Star Trek episode the trouble with tribbles
@EarlyMusicDiva6 күн бұрын
Spock: "Quadro-triticale is a high-yield grain, a four-lobed hybrid of wheat and rye. A perennial, also, I believe. Its root grain, triticale, can trace its ancestry all the way back to twentieth-century Canada." Kirk: "Mr. Spock, you've made your point."
@Dorpers897 күн бұрын
7:37 that bail
@Dorpers897 күн бұрын
good stuff
@elviegloriaagad34388 күн бұрын
How to stock for a months before run out to feed
@saeeddokhnan451910 күн бұрын
We are here in Middle East trapped with corn importation while the sorghum grows nicely on the rainy season with nothing to add such fertilizers or constant irrigations
@robertfischer38011 күн бұрын
Sorghum syrup on cornbread ❤😋
@HolyFamilyHomesteadWV12 күн бұрын
What I cant give to the chickens or traditional compost is going in the black soldier fly bins. Then my chickens get the larvae. I’m just not sure how to manage during the winter when BSF aren’t active.
@HolyFamilyHomesteadWV12 күн бұрын
And be careful hauling waste from grain eating animals. Some hay/straw producers use an herbicide that won’t break down for YEARS. So it could basically sterilize tour garden for up to 5 years if you add it to your compost and that compost is applied to your garden.
@jeff-hh9mc13 күн бұрын
Alfalfa is expensive to plant and requires a lot of water to maintain. What I heard of value from this video was to utilize -annual cereal rye / buckwheat and red or white clover.
@TheRifouly15 күн бұрын
Machallah
@Ohio9816 күн бұрын
Amazingly non biased
@realwealthranching14 күн бұрын
But untrue
@williambryan280417 күн бұрын
I started watching your video and immediately noticed something. I have taken Jim Elizondo's Real Wealth Ranching where he teaches total grazing. Under his program, the animals are not left in the paddock any longer than with a partial graze. Ideally, he likes to make his paddock just big enough so the animals will eat between 85% and 90% of the total forage. This means the paddock size is smaller than with a partial graze. After 24 hours (generally) the animals are moved to the next paddock. Jim encourages moving the animals 4 times a day. This causes the animals to eat more quickly, because they are competing with the herd or flock, and eat everything instead of being selective. Because more of the plant is eaten, there is less stalk left and when the plant grows back is has a higher concentration of leaves than a partial graze. Also, because the paddock size is smaller than with a partial graze, as @practicalsheepman stated, there is a longer rest period between grazing. Leaving the animals on the paddock for too long results in overgrazing. Overgrazing occurs when the plant starts to grow back and is then eaten again before it has had a chance to grow and recover from the first graze. This is my second year doing total grazing. Last year the grass was pretty sparse and I had to graze my full 5 acres. This spring, I grazed just under 2 1/2 acres and went back to the beginning instead of grazing the full 5 acres. The other half is being kept as a stockpile and allows the grass a longer break. It will be grazed next year while the half I'm grazing now rests. The grass I returned to (about 50 days later max) was almost waist high and had already gone to seed. Under Jim's program I should have returned when the plants went into the boot stage, instead of going back when the seed head had formed.
@GooffuX11 күн бұрын
Who TF has time to move animals 4 times a day? That's supremely impractical!
@williambryan280411 күн бұрын
@@GooffuX I don't have the time, so I only move once per day. He has done research and found the best gains in soil health happen when the animals are moved 4 times per day. Nothing further.
@JackThorКүн бұрын
with 5 acre how many cows do you have?
@williambryan2804Күн бұрын
@@JackThor I'm running sheep. I have 11 sheep right now, which is just over 2 animal units. I'm only using half of the pasture and can't keep up with the grass. Before I had a steer (about 700-800 lbs.) and about 3 sheep. I had just over 1 animal unit and I had a lot of bare dirt, some coastal Bermuda, and the mesquite was coming in.
@bradharris250317 күн бұрын
Crock of shite. It'd be good if the videoproducer understood what was being discussed. The "total graze" method is misunderstood here 100%. Feels like a government propaganda video. Dishonest to the T.