Thank you very much for having us! It's been a pleasure.
@chalisblurАй бұрын
Thank you for sharing your knowledge and experience! Great inspiration for the rest of us. God Bless!
@kellipatton82636 күн бұрын
@@FarmBuilder we need to learn this as a nation...self-relience and regenerative farming.
@drafthorseswithalexa2 ай бұрын
Jordan and family are a real inspiration in the regenerative ag movement - followed him since his Justin Rhodes appearance and have implemented similar things around our farm (including the shipping container brooder), and his attention to record keeping/financials is overlooked by so many. Many thanks for this, as he needs much more exposure/credit for what he is contributing!
@HeiferUSA2 ай бұрын
In fact, they are fantastic people!
@savageairsoft92592 ай бұрын
Great video! Thank you both. Jordan is one of the best
@majestiictv2 ай бұрын
What incredible content. Thank you for always doing great work Heifer and thank you for the tour of this wonderful farm!
@HeiferUSA2 ай бұрын
Thank you for watching! Very glad it can be helpful :D
@PrismaticFarmАй бұрын
I eagerly consume any and all content from Jorden! So excited!
@BenjiBeard2 ай бұрын
Tons of great information! Thanks for sharing
@HeiferUSA2 ай бұрын
Thanks for watching!
@elliekennedy29522 ай бұрын
My parents lived on a farm for 42 years and rented it all that time. The owners were wealthy and used the farm for a tax write off. The owners paid al taxes, insurance and upkeep. It was 360 acres and most of the land was useable. Plenty of hay fields, pasture, creeks with water year-round and a Hugh two story house and big red barn. This was in Ohio, now the great grandkids have it and never put a penny in it for repairs or upkeep. It breaks my heart to see such a big, beautiful farm falling down. My parents have passed on now. The farmhouse and barn were built in 1875.We never had a lease and paid the rent at the end of the year. 300.00 for the year. I know that is way off your story, but I just needed to tell it.
@HeiferUSA2 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing! We understand how hard is to upkeep your own farm and the effort every person put in it❤️
@dreamangelsgarden5078Ай бұрын
My great grand parents were farmers from Ohio, now I'm in Texas for the 3rd generation. It'd be so nice to take the family back to Ohio with 360 acres.
@janieterrel681Ай бұрын
Thanks so much for this amazing video……it is awesome to see these innovations in practice and how this generation of stock raisers are adapting to this ever changing environment we live in. Thank you for being innovative and protecting the land for future generations❣️❣️
@HeiferUSAАй бұрын
Glad you liked it! It's very encouraging!
@spencerkahwai4455Ай бұрын
I really enjoyed your presentation.......I value innovation and it's clearly in evidence......keep it up, Harare. Zimbabwe, Africa
@HeiferUSAАй бұрын
Thanks for watching!
@joesfarmАй бұрын
Great video! Jordan is a great guy and a wealth of knowledge!
@HeiferUSAАй бұрын
Couldn't agree more!
@Marleena1332 ай бұрын
Glad to hear your voice again, we missed you
@williamgreen6889Ай бұрын
Love this, just gave me so many more ideas on what we can do with ours. We were just using ours for freeze dryer foods. Love your channel. .
@HeiferUSAАй бұрын
Sounds great! Glad it helped!
@drogobero44793 күн бұрын
Cool stuff with the forest forage. Glad that he had the side by side comparison towards the end. For you discerning listeners, he specifically mentioned the ungrazed forest as being in its regrowth phase which I find intriguing. Most US forests rely on treefall and dead groundcover that fosters our saplings to birth the tall strong tree species of our forests. While he is undoubtedly creating a beautiful ecosystem in the soil for his forage and for his grazers, there wont be much of if any new sapling growth to replace the big cover in the system. That’s probably 1-2 hundred years from happening though all the while he’s creating a healthy and vibrant habitat for his livestock. In a roundabout way, this is probably the best and healthiest way to naturally terraform a landscape from one type, which is forested, to something akin to a more open prairie. The push and pull is fascinating and has amazing potential for long term study Thanks for the video!
@HeiferUSA2 күн бұрын
Thanks for watching! We appreciate your thoughtful observations!
@ronaldharmon98912 ай бұрын
Jordan I remember you talking a bit about the cull cows🐄 on your channel I like the way you went in depth on that topic in this video👍
@HeiferUSAАй бұрын
We're glad we could cover most of it :D
@V12Legends2 ай бұрын
Great video! Thank you both.
@HeiferUSAАй бұрын
Our pleasure!
@rochrich12232 ай бұрын
The breeding sow sets (sounders) stay together since they were gilts. (Cuts down social conflicts) As they fail getting bred or otherwise failing out the sounders get smaller until they are half size then they all go. If you want to sound highfalutin, that is a stoichiometric decision rule.
@duncand51482 ай бұрын
Awesome worship and awesome teaching. If you want to know how to come into the presence of God correctly and have God move on your behalf, then it would behoove you to watch and listen to this teaching. The teaching is accurate and straight from the Bible. Folks you can’t come into the presence of God any old kind of way. There is a model that we must follow. That model is beautifully presented and correlated in this video. Great job Bro. Seth. TGBTG in Jesus name.
@elizabethwilson91262 ай бұрын
I am in Australia. Loved your farm operation. The integration was an inspiration. Fantastic
@HeiferUSAАй бұрын
Awesome! Thanks for your words!
@toddcaskey99842 ай бұрын
Awesome marine
@fidelsseecoomar32792 ай бұрын
Such impressive systems ,Jordan is a great teacher. Would feeder goats and sheep be able to create a similar silvopasture. 🤔.
@CharlesMccullough-g2h2 ай бұрын
@@fidelsseecoomar3279 yep it’s all about not over grazing and when you move them reseed and water That way when they get back to the original start they will have new food,the ground has recovered and your building the soil all at the same time
@dnawormcastingsАй бұрын
Great looking farm 🇳🇿❤
@HeiferUSAАй бұрын
We agree!
@AndriaJasmer47Ай бұрын
this amazing video…
@HeiferUSAАй бұрын
I'm glad you like it!
@eddiejohnson345811 күн бұрын
just a idea for you to move those big 20 by 12 around the field easier on the feet of the first 3 poles going down run a skid but it still be hard to move them from field to field because if you don't have the width on your roads it's almost impossible to move from field to field
@HeiferUSA9 күн бұрын
Thanks for sharing!
@peterparsons714111 күн бұрын
Leasing needs to be more widely adopted. Sure it might be a little more challenging to setup correctly but I believe the benefits are so significant that we can’t ignore it.
@HeiferUSA9 күн бұрын
Yeah, it's important to at least discuss it!
@TheoneandonlyRAH2 ай бұрын
What does Jordan think about the pasturebird autonomous system? Augur system for the feed?
@FarmBuilder2 ай бұрын
Its impressive.
@TheoneandonlyRAH2 ай бұрын
@@FarmBuilder thanks j or l! would you be taking any inspiration from them for your system? or do you not think your scale would support it?
@FarmBuilder2 ай бұрын
@@TheoneandonlyRAH the pasturebird system is a $150k building that supports 6000 birds per cycle year-round. The cost of automated systems are justified by the production. The DPRC would not IMO as the equipment would have to be removed for the winter uses and the cost per unit would be high. Also the maintenance of the system would require a higher level of technical expertise by the staff. Somewhere between buckets and the full auto system we'll find a good solution!
@LyTieuHan97Ай бұрын
Why is the land so flat and beautiful where you live? In my area, it's all high hills and mountains
@HeiferUSAАй бұрын
Surely your area has its perks as well!
@FarmBuilderАй бұрын
ha, we have plenty of hills too!
@williampatrickfurey2 ай бұрын
I consider that drilling through swamp to hit the aquifer level and then adding filter feeders would possibly restore the "clogged" habitat in some areas; i assume hydroelectric damming did more harm than good. "Carrington Event of 1859 and free energy catalogued during telegraph communications for the time of the auroras" should yield you something towards Nikola Tesla's truth, my friend.
@HeiferUSA25 күн бұрын
Thanks for sharing!
@mckennahicks52592 ай бұрын
What’s his channel called
@HeiferUSAАй бұрын
Farm builder! You can find him here: kzbin.info/door/11kHJNUV88Qp-Sz06N1o1A
@bo4arrow2 ай бұрын
"lifetime lease" is code for family land.
@FarmBuilder2 ай бұрын
@@bo4arrow nope, it is not family land.
@LeylaGouaho2 ай бұрын
f you want to sound highfalutin, that is a stoichiometric decision rule.
@DadnatronАй бұрын
I don't understand why you are grazing the cull cows for a year or longer? You aren't growing them out to maturity, therefore, if you buy them 'light', with some decent forage, I would expect them to be fat and ready (300lbs) in far less than 12mo. What am I missing?
@FarmBuilderАй бұрын
Couple reasons - 1. We market as grass finished and we want a full season in our system for quality purposes and so it's the same as buying stockers and finishing for a year. 2. We don't preg check them and want enough time for any calves to be born. We've had calves drop almost 9 months after buying the cow.
@НемањаКостић-ц2яАй бұрын
What minerals do you give to cattle?
@michaelfelder2640Ай бұрын
Humanoid robots as a solution are for sale in 2026.
@ronniebrue7875Ай бұрын
I just went on their site to check out meat prices. Good Lord, who in the world are they marketing to, the Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous??? That food better show up with Gordon Ramsay ready to cook it.