Oh i get it, he had a source of water to work with....... This wouldn't be possible with lands that doesnt have that luxury.
@uncivilizedengr4873Күн бұрын
u got a fly problem bro. ur poor cows
@MichaelCGrumley12 күн бұрын
Brilliant!
@ljones67673 күн бұрын
Question about the greenhouse with the wall of grass clippings. Is the decomposing grass smell overpowering?
@chadsproduceКүн бұрын
When you use the grass clippings just barely cut they smell very good and don’t smell. Have a sweet smell. Thanks for watching.
@criminal__86153 күн бұрын
so what do you do when you rotate but come to the last paddock that is fresh and the first paddock you started in has not had the rest period required for it to be gazed on?
@EarlGraf4 күн бұрын
My only thought is. How much different this world would be. With proper water distribution. Responsible family planning, less war, less greed. This planet obviously can provide. The problem is human nature.
@Cristofre4 күн бұрын
I think he said that he had planted some Eastern Red Ceder in his hedge. Last year I cut down dozens of those around my property after finding out they carry a disease that causes apple, pears and some other types of trees to get that fungus which eventually kills the trees. I'd been perplexed why so many of my trees were declining and dying year after year. So far some of my damaged fruit trees seem to be doing better this year.
@nativeeurope12994 күн бұрын
Need more people like this, sadly those pushing Kalergi, 2030, and Gates agendas want to see less of them. But a well functioning society needs more.
@rubyredlopez44 күн бұрын
Having the ciws Graz with no water 😐 bcuz they knock over the water is no excuse
@Pineapplejim5 күн бұрын
1:00 missed opportunity to say, that works really WELL 😅
@pushinpositivity335 күн бұрын
This is an amazing conglomeration of ideas & techniques working cohesively! Definitely gave me tons of ideas for my future citrus greenhouse here in Denver. Much Love & Positivity to you 👊
@dchall86 күн бұрын
Good vid. It reminds me of that time back in the 90s when we had a rancher come talk to our organic gardening club about his cow-calf operation. The biggest thing he did different from the rest of the ranchers in his county was he didn't deworm his animals. He found that Ivermec dewormer also is poisonous to dung beetles. So when he stopped deworming, the dung beetles returned to his ranch. Of course a few of his animals got worms. Those animals were culled immediately and their siblings were put on watch for worms. In a short time he had a herd that was resistant to worms. He also had a landscape punctured with 10s of thousands of holes from the dung beetles. When it rained, no matter how hard it rained, all the water was captured in the beetle holes with no runoff or erosion. He also found that certain cows and bulls did not get flies. He made sure to breed those together and now he has a herd that doesn't get flies - at least not like you normally see flies on livestock.
@user-xb1ht4py2v7 күн бұрын
How mich do those straw logs weigh? What size bag are you using for them? It looks like you already have holes in the straw logs, but they are not in th efruiting room yet, do you cut those in before the log goes into the fruiting chamber or are those tears , or some other reason?
@abdulazizsaleh86507 күн бұрын
I hope this Gentleman can give more information to the people..to let them understand and appreciate the years of farming... I wish if he allow the public to visit his Farm.... Im sure i do learn things from this episode...as many people did.... Please keep doing this informative episodes...we do appreciate it 💯 Thank you 🇸🇦💐🙂
@StefanoCreatini6 күн бұрын
We are filming the entire grow season with him and releasing it here
@ericsn61587 күн бұрын
Lovely garden. Thanks for sharing. ❤ And which fruit is 7:17 that?
@dylano72427 күн бұрын
Im a colorado native. And say him daming water in the state of Colorado is illegal. Colorado has the strictest and most regulated water laws in the country. Our water goes to other states, and water retention is illegal in the state. There are many colorado land owners who are in jail and prosecuted, fines into the millions for daming water , making ponds, and altering the water table. Dont be surprised this guy is in jail and looses his property. Not because i think its wrong but because of Colorado's corrupt democrat party running this state and the epa.
@Nubya667 күн бұрын
at 11:03 did you say it will cost 3000 or less or 33000 or less?
@StefanoCreatini7 күн бұрын
The smaller amount of
@chadsproduce7 күн бұрын
Thanks to the low price of 2x4s now we have built three new ones 30x10 for 900$ each materials. We get the mulch for free as we are a drop off spot and can convert into a compost heated greenhouse for free. Have avocados planted inside now.
@Nubya667 күн бұрын
@@chadsproduce that’s so awesome
@NicholasAlt7 күн бұрын
This is awesome 👏 🎉🎉
@user-lx8nc6is7m7 күн бұрын
Viewing from Detroit Michigan USA 🇺🇸
@micke67058 күн бұрын
this is awesome
@joelalain8 күн бұрын
records low for his city is -27 C. does he has a backup plan if it drops that low?
@chadsproduce7 күн бұрын
Remember we have been doing this for over 10 years and have had temperatures drop below zero. Overall things are warmer now. Good comment.
@AlpacaRenee9 күн бұрын
Re goats: if your fences won’t hold water, they won’t hold goats. Thanks for the inspiration!
@lisashirtz72249 күн бұрын
Very nice!
@PazuzuDarkVoid9 күн бұрын
I’m pretty sure that the ‘lemon spinach’ is sorrel or rumex 😊
@chadsproduce9 күн бұрын
Thanks for watching. ❤
@Xertusxin10 күн бұрын
Great video
@StefanoCreatini8 күн бұрын
Thanks!
@flz0010 күн бұрын
What a legend
@itcantbetruebutis777810 күн бұрын
It begins with water access
@420hottboxx11 күн бұрын
Can someone please explain the water thermal mass. I have done a lot of gardening and I do not fully understand what is going on with that.
@chadsproduce10 күн бұрын
Water warms during the day. Gives off that heat at night. Works awesome. Acts as a moderating agent to extreme heat or cold. The mulch around the sides holds in this heat even better. Thanks for watching.
@angelahind560811 күн бұрын
My neighbour was so mad that i planted a red grspe beside his green grapes and i found out why the hard way .his besutiful green graps had turned to purple from my one plant .I was devastated l.
@cacogenicist11 күн бұрын
Obviously not a HOA neighborhood, thankfully. 😊
@chadsproduce10 күн бұрын
The neighbors tell me all the time they are GLAD I am there. Because I am a buffer zone to the ugly four story HOA looking condos you see in the video. The neighbors would have them right in their backyard if I wasn’t there. The neighbors want a beautiful farm and orchard looking out their backyard window. Not more overbuilt condos. We need more urban farms and less HOAs. You can’t raise any food on a HOA. Sorry friend. 🎉
@TheSaint2811 күн бұрын
Lee hemp seeds should upload more videos 😊 i only found 3 on KZbin
@kumatmebro31512 күн бұрын
AI thumbnail 🤡
@burntblonde292512 күн бұрын
I love how caring he is, towards his animals
@austinsugden928412 күн бұрын
Just bought some seeds. 14 bucks for 25 seeds free shipping! Hell ya
12 күн бұрын
his hands, when tasting the grapes, TELLS THE WHOLE STORY! that is wat you need to remember!
@lindaallen241212 күн бұрын
What a wonderful way to look at farming, if only all could farm this way, you feel the world and share it with all the world would be a very beautiful place and enough for everyone
@Kaw-rasu13 күн бұрын
Do you have some kind of degree in ecology, or is there a good way to learn a lot about this to do things like you do? I would love to do something like this in my lifetime.
@concetta196013 күн бұрын
I'm curious about this irrigation pipe he's using. anyone know what its called and where I can locate it in Arizona? I like the slide closures
@StefanoCreatini13 күн бұрын
It’s called gated pipe
@MegaFisser14 күн бұрын
where do you buy the bareroots ?
@StefanoCreatini14 күн бұрын
What kind of bare roots? I got a large list of nurseries for different types. Rusty Mangrum nursery is great, large cheap fruit trees
@MegaFisser13 күн бұрын
@@StefanoCreatini okay I will check em out something I can buy in bulk
@user-by2ml8qx8r15 күн бұрын
sungguh tempat yang nyaman bebas dari keramaian, bebas dari tetangga yang usil, hasil Pertanian yang sehat, hidup Damai dan Tentram, salam dari Indonesia
@Chingon2thebone15 күн бұрын
I wonder if that’s possible to replicate in the Anza-borrego desert
@Mrx-qz1ol15 күн бұрын
I need to chill with 70 year olds
@fredtheuberdriver15 күн бұрын
Looks like this is on the Western Slope.
@benmarxxshow15 күн бұрын
I really love all of what's being done! Chad is doing a great service to his community, and I'm impressed! Thanks for showing everyone his farms, Stefano! I'll have to look into a Harbor Freight tool shed, and then using water barrels and wood chips. I'd probably want to investigate/add some sort of geothermal heating element by digging 4 feet deep, and running tubes under ground to circulate the air. But even without that, the price is too good for the results I've seen, and it doesn't seem like a huge piece of land is necessarily required, which is excellent for me and my little 1/4 acre lot. Thanks again!
@YardPrep0016 күн бұрын
Check out Arkopia solar greenhouse build if you live in the real cold
@StefanoCreatini16 күн бұрын
That’s a great greenhouse and design
@geebee86416 күн бұрын
Where is your well ! Thanks 🙏
@GiaNicci10016 күн бұрын
SUPER interesting..
@joeyc.185417 күн бұрын
Awesome,👏
@tomhill171317 күн бұрын
Good luck my friend
@organicrecreations133818 күн бұрын
I found this to be a highly informative and sustainable low cost option for food production. Growing all year round in the northern hemisphere is tricky as the light casts shadows depending on one's location. He's fortunate to be having such wide open skies and year round sun to work with. His method of producing his starts is solely electricity reliant. It would be nice to find ways to grow in dark spaces, but without the costs involved with keeping the plants properly lit. Solar power options for indoor lighting would surely be more sufficient, but how practical is it long term? I'd love to know more about indoor lighting options for plants in general. LED lights verses glass bulbs... the benefits for utilizing aluminum foil like he has done. Low cost materials, but is the waste from all this truly sustainable for the planet? It's cool to take in what is working for others and I find the art of food crafting to be a constant healthy challenge to experiment and see what works for your area, soil type, etc. Very helpful video, thanks for producing it for our shared wisdom.