Brad Afdahl and family with their John Deere 4320 on moving their farm and bringing in another generation while not expanding.
Пікірлер: 50
@davegenske8973Ай бұрын
What a great video. Brad is a model of what a dairy farmer should be. Very self reliant and intelligent solving his problems as they occur. Thanks for the video and thanks Brad for spending the time.
@clayegolf56Ай бұрын
I enjoy the tractor videos but as a dairy farmer myself I love the videos with the current or former dairy farmers talking about there start ups and path ways to get where they are at currently! Thanks again!
@guyreasa9467Ай бұрын
None of these videos are really “tractor” videos. They are all too long to be about one tractor. I really enjoy the videos because Ryan interviews real people about the lives they live.
@rockfarmer8095Ай бұрын
I agree!
@jameslathrop7226Ай бұрын
Talking about the peace and the feeling of being grounded while doing chores really brought back memories. Listening to the pulsators and watching the DV300 do its job. Its the best life I have ever known.
@LoganLong6620Ай бұрын
Holsteins, Harvestores, and SoundGards. What more does a guy need? Great video. I’d love to see this farm in person.
@scottblume372029 күн бұрын
Thats an excellent dairyman right there
@hartungdairyfarm0713Ай бұрын
Great story, and beautiful cows and barn. That guy is 100 percent correct on getting started. But now days it's gotten very difficult to find a barn with land and a milk market
@chrisburke84827 күн бұрын
Fascinating conversation. Keep up the good work. Love your channel.
@bradbyington7926Ай бұрын
67 year old retired dairy farmer here. Enjoyed your conversation
@scottschaeffer8920Ай бұрын
Glad to see he & his wife found a farm, he has earned his way, and I congratulate him. Call me crazy but, animal agriculture, and soil health are linked. There’s too much continuous corn out there guys, December corn is trading less than 4 bucks, and our soils are going downhill. Food for thought.
@danw6014Ай бұрын
Another great video. It takes an outstanding dairyman to operate on this scale these days. I think it would be great if you could arrange an interview with George from Gierok Farms Channel. I work on a 400 cow dairy part time. It keeps me connected to dairying but by the time I'm done with a milking shift I'm tired. I had worked on a dairy with a really nice group of cows after high-school. They were all registered and making 85 to 90 lbs on dry square bales, silage and a ration we fed in the barn with the primary ingredient of ear corn. I always tried to be quiet with my handling of the cows but I really learned how to teach cattle to do what I needed after I started working with horses. It's amazing how much easier they are for me now. The modern big dairies aren't operated with the same mentality when it comes to the cows. The owners on a lot of these farms don't even own a pair of rubber boots. They depend on employees who may or maybe not give two craps about any of the cows. There are a hell of a lot of import employees too who in some of my observations are bullies with the cows. My approach is try not to upset her. I'm glad i was able to milk cows in old bank barns in both stanchions and tiestalls for cowmen. They never wanted trouble with their cows. They didn't get into a mental or physical contest with their cows. And they knew whether or not their cows were ok and what to do about it if they weren't. I'd say cow were way better off when the owners did the milking.
@mikeboeckerman2481Ай бұрын
WOW Ryan what a story and that barn! That is something to be proud of.
@dypk-x3n27 күн бұрын
brad and his family should be very proud of what they have achieved (including the award in 2023). thanks for sharing.
@dvdosterloh29 күн бұрын
So much to unpack here, same thing here in west central Ohio, idiot land prices, farm broken up to sell "mini farms" and bare acres. I'm 65 and my son is taking over and i have seen everything you two discussed. Closed herd, quit vacc except for calf pneumonia. Select Sires, my dad was on the board years ago. Did you ever hear or use a bull by the name of Pete. Dad was a part owner of him. Gad the memories. The only thing that we had that he didn't bring up was stray current, damn near broke us but we finally fixed it in spite of the electric coop.Thanks for the video
@CraigJackelАй бұрын
Ryan so glad you showed everyone that the American dream is still possible if you want to work for it. Everyone needs to ask the value of beening self stating, the American Dairy Farmer most definitely is
@classicfarmer5817Ай бұрын
Really enjoyed this video. In 1981 when in 4-H in Indiana we traveled to Holcombe, WI and spent a week with a host family on a dairy farm. Tie stall barn. I didn’t miss a milking while I was there. Great family and memories. Thank you for sharing this video.
@johnstine330Ай бұрын
Great video. I always tell people I could have been a dairy farmer. I run my ranch with the same determination as you guys. All day. Everyday. No exceptions. I don’t know if it is good work ethic or just that I am not interested in doing anything else. Keep’em coming.
@warwickhooper8302Ай бұрын
Thank you for a great video..like the bit about closed herd and bringing in problems..I am in Australia and run a closed herd beef operation these days and your man is right about bringing in problems..thank you again..
@charleswolf27929 күн бұрын
Nicely done, congratulations to the Afdahl family on their success! Best to all of you from Chuck & Pixie
@geesss8675Ай бұрын
Congratulations Bo and Ian. . . May God Bless your life long journey
@Kugerand72723 күн бұрын
Really interesting. Learned a lot.
@lanceewalt2431Ай бұрын
Absolutely loved the small dairy success story starting from nothing . Kept hoping to put eyes on a little bit more of that 4320 , looked like it was pretty clean and dueled up .
@davidbradford1513Ай бұрын
His kids have a channel where they show it, little farm big camera I think is the name
@JasonEldeenАй бұрын
Really enjoy watching your videosthat guy has something very nice to be proud of I can relate the camaraderie between neighbors and other dairy men are few and far between in our area as well.
@CircleTFarms419Ай бұрын
Very interesting story , I love them all, keep up the great work
@tombrenner2189Ай бұрын
Really enjoyed your story! Great work, both of you!😊
@davidkimmel515329 күн бұрын
Thanks.
@aedenjohnson6103Ай бұрын
Excellent interview with an excellent farmer. I am impressed with what he has done. And impressed with the discussion towards the end. I am impressed with the barn an cows and would have liked a few more minutes devoted ro that. Thanks!!!😊
@davidkimmel515329 күн бұрын
Very interesting
@davidbradford1513Ай бұрын
Man, what a great video. I enjoyed every second of this. My dream is to have a place just like this nice and clean easy to take care of something to be proud. Congratulations.
@JjDay-id7vrАй бұрын
Nice interview good hardworking man with good mind set congrats
@dairyfarmmidwest1615Ай бұрын
So happy for you guys keep up the good work God Bless Massey guy here. But have 4320 too
@Ausdem93Ай бұрын
I worked at the Utah state university dairy for about six years. They also had a tie stall barn but milked in a parlor. So twice a day we would unchain the cows, milk them , then chain them back up. It was a pain
@johndeerejimmy4019Ай бұрын
You are talking about the Soundguard cab. They were a great cab if you were of average height and didn’t wear size 12 or 13 boots. We loved those tractors when we had them but we could see that big people didn’t love them as much as us.
@RyanKelly-Wititan2Ай бұрын
I wear size 13s. I love soundgards
@tpfromcentralpa169228 күн бұрын
It was amazing how far the crap operators could go with generational wealth to fund things, all are about gone in my area these days, but it sure would make you scratch your head as to how they lasted as long as they did. They didn't milk cows well, and they didn't crop farm any better, but it was fun to watch. I wish more people had the outlook of this dairyman in the interveiw, there would be a lot less big operators, alot of the issue I think was everyone had to keep up with the jones's when it came to size, and it ended up sinking most of them.
@dvdosterloh29 күн бұрын
Farm master, stainless steel mixer, we had one, used it almost 20 years. The one that reversed was a steiner.
@aedenjohnson6103Ай бұрын
In the 50's many grade A farms around the twin cities had the two level floor milkhouse for easier filling of the flat top tanks.
@andrewbrown8704Ай бұрын
Think I saw an article in Hoard's about when you guys moved into the new farm.
@tylerwelch3520Ай бұрын
My Parents bought 5 acres from Dave and Donna Ray in the early 90’s. Small world
@johnschmidlin5175Ай бұрын
❤👍🇺🇸
@tombrenner2189Ай бұрын
In river falls defense it was a teaching atmosphere. Being cowside in a tiestall was better for class room instruction. Wasnt perfect by any means , id imagine trying to change things in that uw setting took a decade or 2!
@WiedemannPhotographyАй бұрын
Is this home to Little farm big cameras you tube channel? :)
@LittleFarmBigCamerasАй бұрын
Sure is!
@WiedemannPhotographyАй бұрын
Should of had your dad plug the channel. 😊
@RyanKelly-Wititan2Ай бұрын
Yes
@BrandonLinnenbaugh-ei9uk28 күн бұрын
Ryan did you ever think about getting a tripod for your camera