Types of Farms You Hadn't Thought of

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No-Till Growers

No-Till Growers

2 ай бұрын

Anyone can get into agriculture if you're creative enough. In this video, I break down some potential options for starting a farm from worm farming, to microgreens, to insect farming and more!
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Пікірлер: 360
@notillgrowers
@notillgrowers Ай бұрын
One thing I forgot to mention in this video is the long history here in Kentucky of growing tobacco as cash crop. People would have other jobs or be conventional (or even subsistent) farmers but then grow a crop like tobacco to make a little extra spending cash for the year (hence "cash crops"). Everyone in the area would chip in a little labor to help get all the tobacco harvested and put up.
@dertythegrower
@dertythegrower Ай бұрын
i have a clip from pbs showing that, and how farmers there switched from tobacco to hemp.. many moons ago 😅
@billshepherd5090
@billshepherd5090 Ай бұрын
Growing up in EKY, many small sustenance farmers would drive a school bus and have an acre or two of tobacco. You don’t see that anymore.
@jvin248
@jvin248 Ай бұрын
They are not called Tomato Horn Worms ! .... Victory Seeds has a wide range of tobacco seed available. Choose several and see what works 'in your context'. If you know how to grow weeds then you know how to grow tobacco (scatter seeds and barely/no cover, they need sunlight to germinate, and start seeds weeks early).
@northerngirlhobbies
@northerngirlhobbies Ай бұрын
I have tobacco started. Great production thank you!
@denniskatinas
@denniskatinas Ай бұрын
I smoke the tobacco pipe every day on the community garden, wonderful vibe, keeps the mosquitoes at a distance, and it attracts Gandalf for visit.
@59kuphoff
@59kuphoff Ай бұрын
As a retired person who does not need farm income, I am experimenting with growing plants (starting with tomatoes) for people who utilize food pantries. One tomato plant at Home Depot goes for $6.50 this year in my area. Doing the math, if I grow 200 plants to give away and they all do well, that is 5000 pounds of food donated. Plus, the added benefit of possibly introducing the idea of gardening to lots of people.
@jvin248
@jvin248 Ай бұрын
Get some US grown tomatoes (imported gets irradiated for pests which also kills seeds) and watch youtube videos for saving seeds and starting seeds (this channel's videos on soil blocks is good) to plant/give away. One tomato will have four or five packets of seeds in them, but they are hybrids that will slightly unwind and tend toward cherry sizes. Buy packets of heirloom seeds and start those, and you'll have skills to save those seeds. Joseph Lofthouse Landrace Gardening is a good channel.
@abydosianchulac2
@abydosianchulac2 Ай бұрын
Sticking with heirloom varieties may help you avoid any legal issues with propagating plants claimed under copyright, too.
@protect_trans_lives
@protect_trans_lives Ай бұрын
Wonderful idea :)
@CindyPak
@CindyPak Ай бұрын
You are a beautiful soul!!
@mathgasm8484
@mathgasm8484 Ай бұрын
My HEB sells them for 1.50 a pop for tomato plants.
@thatguychris5654
@thatguychris5654 Ай бұрын
Other small farm options: - Organic spices (double the price, none of the arsenic etc) - Biochar, anyone could buy from you. From the smallest backyard gardener to the large agro companies. - Fruit and nut tree seedlings, stone fruit and nuts are super easy to start and sell in cups/tiny pots - Heirloom seeds, grow one variety each of anything you can. A tomato plant will yield x20 the profit in seeds compared to selling the fruit.
@Alchemyforall
@Alchemyforall Ай бұрын
Your comment 'please don't undercut the prices set by farmers relying on this income'. So true!
@onegreenev
@onegreenev Ай бұрын
If I feel the prices are on the outrageous side of things I will sell my property/produce for less than the others. I say don’t rip off the people wanting healthy food by charging too damn much.
@Alchemyforall
@Alchemyforall Ай бұрын
@@onegreenev Good point. I was assuming the farmers price their produce fairly.
@Rymorin4
@Rymorin4 5 күн бұрын
@@Alchemyforall price slightly higher than low quality produce in grocery store or same grocery organic but higher quality.
@tealkerberus748
@tealkerberus748 Ай бұрын
Please note that if you are growing mushrooms and you haven't opted for one of the sporeless cultivars, there is a condition called MUSHROOM WORKER'S LUNG that happens when you inhale too many spores and they try to grow in your lungs. It's really not a lot different to what happens to people who live in extremely mouldy houses. Use your PPE and stay healthy out there!
@herelieskittythomas3726
@herelieskittythomas3726 22 күн бұрын
Best advice!!!!!
@classicrocklover5615
@classicrocklover5615 15 күн бұрын
I have a small Mushroom grower offer me his spent Mushroom compost. Should I accept? Or are there dangers I should be aware of?
@minhducnguyen9276
@minhducnguyen9276 14 күн бұрын
@@classicrocklover5615 There's nothing dangerous about it. The spores are created in the caps which are already harvested. And out of the billions spores generated by the mushrooms, only a few hundreds of them can survive if they don't meet the right conditions anyway.
@chelseahartweg2938
@chelseahartweg2938 Ай бұрын
As a disabled person who is working hard on finding her niche as a farmer, thank you for this. I wish more people supported these ventures (and a part time nature) like this
@MeshachShakes
@MeshachShakes 22 күн бұрын
Best wishes Chelsea 🫶🏽
@mattwigley203
@mattwigley203 Ай бұрын
This will be my first year selling compost, but I've been working on it for 5+ years. It's taken that long because I'm a 1 man show. No serious power equipment, just my lawnmower, a small trailer built from wood scraps, several rakes, shovels, and hoes, etc. Some days I feel like my pitchfork is my best friend lol! I've sustained the extended time to get my system down by selling plants. Ornamentals, fruit/veggie starts are my main sellers and I really enjoy that side of the business as well. Anyone interested in doing compost on a larger scale and without "real" equipment, remember that compost isn't an immediate thing you can sell, it takes time. A LOT of time. The material you're piling up today may not put food on your table for a year or more, so you need to have the mindset to plan several years ahead today. But if you stay focused on the future, it will be much more manageable. Great video Jessie and thank you for always being so informative!
@BackyardProduce
@BackyardProduce Ай бұрын
Do you have any advice for how to manage scaling up compost production w/o. the big equipment? I’m trying to make enough compost to power the market garden I’m starting. We are currently making 0.5 yd to 1 yd a month, mainly from restaurant food waste. I plan on using that resource to make potting compost. We also are likely going to have access to trailer loads of grass clippings & shredded leaves from my neighbor who does landscaping. We also can get free arbor chip delivery. This I want to make compost for refreshing the garden beds with. Thanks, Slayden
@winnrea
@winnrea Ай бұрын
Be careful about taking landscaper grass clippings-many (most?) have had broad leaf herbicides applied which will negatively impact the veggies where your future compost is used
@mattwigley203
@mattwigley203 Ай бұрын
@winnrea That's extremely important. I don't think it can be stressed enough. I am fortunate that 100% of my inputs are sourced from our own property. We have 17 acres, 14 or so that are cleared. Basically just a huge yard, not pasture.
@mattwigley203
@mattwigley203 Ай бұрын
@BackyardProduce What I do I wouldn't really call scaling up as much as just adding to. In another reply I had mentioned all of my inputs come from our property. I try to create a minimum of 2 windrows per year, 4-5ft wide and 4ft+ tall. The rows themselves run about 60ft long. The stuff at the far end of each pile will be the newest stuff. I leave about 4-5ft between each row. The piles closest to our house will be the oldest and next to harvest. That gap between each row is where I turn the piles to, alternating farther, then nearer on each turn. I turn them with just my pitchfork myself, so they only get turned a few times per year. If I had more equipment, it would be much more often. Once the new year starts, new piles are started. The 2 from the previous year get no new inputs and turned at least twice. Depending on their size, I usually turn them into each other on their last turn, making 1 big pile. This seems to really speed things up. There's still soooo much more to say, I think it'd be better if I just upload a video. Otherwise, you're going to be reading for a very long time lol! I'll reply back when it's done and uploaded, probably be a day or two.
@BackyardProduce
@BackyardProduce Ай бұрын
@@winnrea I asked him about this when he offered me clippings, and he said the lawns aren’t sprayed. Most lawns around here are not sprayed (you can see the flowers in them now), and if they are it’s with glyphosate & not a persistent pyridine/pyrimidine herbicide like aminopyralid. The only things he will spray with herbicides are weeds in mulched beds or non-lawn areas, for that he uses glyphosate.
@LivingSystemsBiotecture
@LivingSystemsBiotecture Ай бұрын
Something not mentioned but I'd highly recommend is honey bees. I orginally started bee keeping for pollination of fruit and berries but was surprised at the demand for bee products. Bee keeping can take on many different styles of a business. Rent hives for agriculture or at home pollination. Selling nucs or queens. Selling honey, bees wax and many other products. So many opportunities and amazing community. Cheers folks! Happy Farming!
@notillgrowers
@notillgrowers Ай бұрын
totally! Didn't even talk about bees, but yes.
@xaviercruz4763
@xaviercruz4763 Ай бұрын
How to start beekeeping for honey for a family of 5?
@coololi07
@coololi07 Ай бұрын
careful with honey bees. always use native bees if you must beekeep. Importing bees can ruin local wild pollinators and ruin biodiversity.
@williamjones6053
@williamjones6053 12 күн бұрын
​@@xaviercruz4763 just need bees and some form of hive ..you buy package bees and lots of easy to build top bar hive plans using simple tools ..it's easy and enjoyable do some research and you got this ..building the hive with your family is a great start ..best of luck
@shawnueda8909
@shawnueda8909 Ай бұрын
love your comment starting around 11:51 "please don't undercut those who are heavily reliant on food they produce..." PRICE your product appropriately. full time farmer here.
@bradical2723
@bradical2723 27 күн бұрын
I thought it was just alled being competitive... am I wrong? Genuine question
@-.RuhRoh
@-.RuhRoh 20 күн бұрын
@@bradical2723 it is competition, and it’s okay to be competitive or price lower, just it’s good to be mindful of full-time farmers if your gardening is an “on the side” thing and not your main income.
@victorygarden556
@victorygarden556 8 күн бұрын
@@bradical2723 people who do this for a profit and people who do this for a loss are different, and if you lower the market price by selling below market prices “for fun” you ruin people’s livelihood. If it’s for fun just donate to a food pantry so people don’t fall short on bills because doing it for a loss just manipulates the market for no gain.
@Outlander929
@Outlander929 Ай бұрын
I farm part-time and sell the produce to my other half who owns a bar & restaurant. It's working out pretty good!
@MrMillsy1986
@MrMillsy1986 Ай бұрын
That's a grat idea......now how did you wrangle said partner?????? 🤣
@metalchips
@metalchips Ай бұрын
Congrats on the other half
@roostertheastronaut4513
@roostertheastronaut4513 Ай бұрын
Farming and a resturaunt, yall must like working really hard lol
@tealkerberus748
@tealkerberus748 Ай бұрын
@@roostertheastronaut4513 they sound well matched, yeah.
@TheDhammaHub
@TheDhammaHub Ай бұрын
In Germany (at least in rural regions), we have a culture around having a small sales stand based on trust in front of the house where people sell the excess from their gardens or chickens. I like that model a lot but its very much a side hussle and not so much something to sustain yourself off. Yet, I can very much finance things like greenhouses, compost expenses, seeds and many other things like that, as this kind of "enterprise" is tax exempt im Germany as it is only the "unplanned surplus" that you sell. And even if it has to be a legal corporation, it would still bring in a few thousand bucks a year.
@VictoriousGardenosaurus
@VictoriousGardenosaurus Ай бұрын
That's my whole plan for this year. I just want to cover my costs.
@redhen689
@redhen689 Ай бұрын
Lots of people do this in the US too. In some areas it works better than others.
@taitsmith8521
@taitsmith8521 Ай бұрын
That's illegal in the U.S., at least it varies by state and county. When I lived in Oregon there were places like that everywhere. In Texas, where I currently live, the city would fine you at best, throw you in jail at worst.
@ninatrabona4629
@ninatrabona4629 Ай бұрын
I bought some buckwheat honey on the honor system on a back road in upstate NY. Somehow it tasted even better than store-bought honey.
@BackyardProduce
@BackyardProduce Ай бұрын
@@taitsmith8521In my township it’s legally ambiguous to have a farm stand - township says no but the state law might protect it. Fortunately, I don’t need a stand to supply the people I’m trying to help, so they are okay with me. State-wise, market gardens in residential zones are protected under the PA right to farm act, which pre-empts zoning ordinances from municipalities. (That’s my understanding based on reading the law). Self-serve farm stands around me are are common though. They’re made by small farms for selling eggs & vegetables.
@ronaldcummings6337
@ronaldcummings6337 Ай бұрын
I am entering my fourth year of market farming. This may be the first year of profitable market farming. I have had other income the whole time. Most of the proceeds of market farming have gone into tools and infrastructure to date. I live in a food "desert" and it has been an uphill struggle to educate people why they should switch to local produce. I sell at local farmers markets and wholesale to other outlets like produce stands and small grocers. If I had not had retirement income I would have given up long ago. Hopefully sticking with it will make it possible for future farmers to have an easier path to making a full time living.
@CherrieMcKenzie
@CherrieMcKenzie Ай бұрын
Like a lot of people I decided to grow my own vegetables in my backyard in raised beds. In no time I had doubled and then tripled my number of beds while also learning about the chemistry of composting and soil health. And, I really enjoy it in addition to eating pretty well. Who knew!!
@zayinkaph
@zayinkaph Ай бұрын
That's where I'm at with it as well. Plus it puts me closer to YAH teaching me life lessons along the way. 😎
@nolagirlhomestead
@nolagirlhomestead Ай бұрын
I started flower gardening and moved to tomatoes that lead to vegetables. I'm retired and grow now mainly for food and for pleasure. My therapy!
@rulerofthelight
@rulerofthelight Ай бұрын
"Farming is just gambling with an excuse," As a farmer, it's super important to diversify your income streams. For most, it's a 3 season job. I have multiple revenue streams and couldn't be full-time farmer without them.
@sannyattube
@sannyattube Ай бұрын
Hi @rulerofthelight, what kind of streams do you have?
@rulerofthelight
@rulerofthelight Ай бұрын
@sannyattube I import and sell premium hay and fruit from other parts of Canada. I run a rototilling business in the spring and handymanwork in the winter. I run 2 different farms, one a 1/ 3 market garden and a 5 acre of commodity crops(corn, squash, cows).
@Psa141
@Psa141 Ай бұрын
Do you import tart cherries, where's point of sale - farmstand? What province, area? ​@@rulerofthelight
@lisamcdonald1415
@lisamcdonald1415 Ай бұрын
Agri tourism is a great way to make extra money while building your farm. Hosting tours to show others what you are doing and how they to can grow food
@josephstiles-2447
@josephstiles-2447 Ай бұрын
Jesse, you are right on the money about part time agriculture. When I was a kid my father grew trees,shrubs, pumpkins,squash, sweet corn and strawberries..all in addition to a regular job with insurance. It paid for all our vacations and additional items we may not have had. I did the same for the last 40 years plus I did custom planting, trucking, and contract growing. I now grow transplants and perennials full time and broker trees and shrubs and I have a pension and benefits from a 32 year career in manufacturing. I've always felt humans were evolutionarily drawn to agriculture ..it's in our genes and must be expressed..I've expressed it my entire life and mitigated the risk with an outside income stream. It always seemed the smart path. BTW. I just started reading your book, excellent!
@Ndf150
@Ndf150 Ай бұрын
Man I needed to see this video to help pump the brakes a bit. Realizing now that part time farming may be the best option for the wife and I. Thank you! You always put up great content.
@familyfungi
@familyfungi Ай бұрын
Mushroom farms as soil generators has been one of my favorite things to talk about. We grow primary decomposers like oysters, lions mane, reishi, shiitake, among other medicinal and edible varieties. We have been able to transform a degraded lot into a permaculture style diverse, multi-species homestead. However this could readily be scaled up and partnering with someone with a composting system would generate very rich soil, quickly and yield tons of food (literally). Thanks Jesse!
@xaviercruz4763
@xaviercruz4763 Ай бұрын
How long to grow do those fungi you mentioned take?
@amurabe
@amurabe Ай бұрын
Please, never stop what you are doing, you are changing lives, greetings from brazil
@VictoriousGardenosaurus
@VictoriousGardenosaurus Ай бұрын
Started with a couple dozen potted plants 4 years ago. Doubled my growing space every year, now im up to about 4000ft² of growing space. Had my first "big harvest" of turnips, radishes and a smattering of greens. Getting em bagged up right now, to try and set up a table before church services let out. My big block has 11 churches Thanks for your content Jesse et al.
@ericschafer287
@ericschafer287 Ай бұрын
Jumping to the scale necessary to be full time means your expensive mistakes will also be large scale. Starting as a side job and allowing it to grow organically is a self-apprenticeship where you can learn the ropes without being bounced out by bankruptcy. Every effort is subject to mistakes/lessons and they are more common at first. It's better to make them when the investment is small.
@Matt-es1wn
@Matt-es1wn Ай бұрын
Very true
@theburnhams2925
@theburnhams2925 Ай бұрын
In a video STUFFED with quotable quotes the one that "stuck out" for me was "You can grow a LOT of food on a little amount of space." (paraphrased)
@rosehavenfarm2969
@rosehavenfarm2969 Күн бұрын
Willow. For land that is wet. Can sell in fall for fodder, winter harvest for basket maker supplies, spring can sell the wands for others to plant. We use it to control wet spots on our little homestead, and fodder for our hens (and the rabbits we will get in the near future).
@sassafrasred6657
@sassafrasred6657 Ай бұрын
I am rehabbing a former home lot. There are so many surprises under the weeds. Gravel and fill clay over dirt. Trash pits under the soil . Massive landscape rocks. Headless Barbies ect.
@Garden_Muskoka
@Garden_Muskoka Ай бұрын
I have a similar problem with putting in an extensive garden on my property, currently.
@ellenorbjornsdottir1166
@ellenorbjornsdottir1166 Ай бұрын
I have enough pebbles to start a pebble mine! Any time I dig my fork in, I snag on a pebble. If the ALR guys came to grade my home as a farm lot they'd immediately rate it class 4 at best on the pebbles alone, not to mention the poor climate (cold).
@Zednor9
@Zednor9 Ай бұрын
I discovered an area like that at the back edge of my yard, in an old rural property with a few acres. On the surface it was a bit of a depression with lots of exposed concrete chunks. It started harboring a lot of poison ivy, so I started removing the old concrete...then the old burn pile remains..then the old garbage pile. By the time I had removed everything, I had quite a large hole. My wife still gets a laugh out of coming home to what I redesignated as our "new pond". Years later, that's the most amazing part of our yard, with lots of fish, frogs, and other wildlife, including birds bathing in the waterfall, made out of stacked concrete chunks - but now covered with beautiful moss. Trash to oasis, it ended up being quite a transformation.
@TrickleCreekFarm
@TrickleCreekFarm Ай бұрын
Been there and doing it again at a new place as well!! Some of the Barbie’s were so old, a collector paid our children for them! We learned they have Barbie Hospitals that way…also had a town collector who said he’d pay for old medicine bottles and there were plenty of beer bottles our son was shocked folks would pay for. You may be surprised at what is appealing to some…
@smallfarmmaine
@smallfarmmaine Ай бұрын
I work on a farm part time and run a farm stand in my residential neighborhood part time. It has grown each year. As I get better as a farmer and grow my skills and market I make more money. It's a pretty good life. I hope lots of people get a chance to produce food for themselves and their neighbors.
@johndoh5182
@johndoh5182 Ай бұрын
"Out in a largely cedar forest where not much else wood grow" Mushrooms and orchids. Wood grow.
@QuantumLeap11
@QuantumLeap11 Ай бұрын
PNWester here and every summer i go around town to help take care of older folks fruit trees. Fruit gets donated and some I turn into cider 😊 Come back in winter to trim them up for them. Win win
@BarlowRootsHomestead
@BarlowRootsHomestead Ай бұрын
Super duper! We’ve gone the route of the part time farmer and have found it to be wonderful. I (husband) maintain a work from home job and work part time on the farm. My wife manages our family and most of the farm work. We’ve grown steadily as our skills and budget allow and the farm has been self sustaining and helped us build our homestead. At some point the farm will earn enough and we will have enough saved for me to transition to full time farming. We aren’t rushing that process as the current system is working well and we are both very happy in our roles. Thanks Jesse!
@jalifritz8033
@jalifritz8033 16 сағат бұрын
Something I haven’t heard mentioning is growing plants for pigments. A lot of artists, historical reeactors, seamstresses, etc use natural pigments for painting or dyeing fabrics. It’s extremely niche but depending on the plant can even be done on a small balcony.
@tammybyrd1054
@tammybyrd1054 Ай бұрын
I've seem a lot of microgreen farms and one of my fave has been an herb farm. We used to go to an awesome one and it was great. Beautiful place and they did classes, sold things and even had a couple old barns they used and one was a lunch place that was really simple, couple of soups, some bread and tea or lemonade. We used to love going there. The owner passed away. Miss it so much and would love to do one myself. The gardens were beautiful.
@nancyseery2213
@nancyseery2213 Ай бұрын
Thank you for this video. I'm retired and living on SS, but some of your ideas would be very helpful with just offsetting the cost of starting up a new homestead. We hope to move from an urban area to a more rural spot in the next two years and you have given me some very helpful ideas with making the move. I just needed some ideas to help with tight money while getting all of our infrastructures and animal cost inline with our income. God bless y'all and keep growing.
@radarlove462
@radarlove462 Ай бұрын
For wooded areas - i have a friend that paid their farm mortgage for a year with a handful of turkeys. Sold hatching eggs online.
@lynn6799
@lynn6799 Ай бұрын
I'm building a small orchard and a veggie garden along with a bee and butterfly garden plus herbs on .75 acres. We also have a small flock of chickens. Our goal right now is simply less dependence on grocery stores, healthy eating and hopefully at some point, spending less on groceries. Everything unfortunately is expensive right now so it's a little at a time.
@user-ek3zb7xt9e
@user-ek3zb7xt9e Ай бұрын
You have no idea! Blessed dumpster diver here and I can attest to the fact that a ton of compostable things are throw away! I one complex I regularly hit alone could have filled 10 or more dumpsters to the top with leaves(just leaves from leaf blowers)!
@josee.cisnerosjr.7706
@josee.cisnerosjr.7706 Ай бұрын
Shoutout to Josh Statin!!! Miss his videos 😢 Great video Jesse.
@mithall4198
@mithall4198 Ай бұрын
Whatever happened to him? I always enjoyed his vids.
@GrowInGraceGarden
@GrowInGraceGarden Ай бұрын
I was wondering the same thing. Do you know what happened to him?
@brucetepke8150
@brucetepke8150 Ай бұрын
@@GrowInGraceGarden I think he's focusing on his photo gear channel.
@logancollins3030
@logancollins3030 Ай бұрын
Bro did you nonchalantly say “for the majority of my 30 - 11 years”?!? That’s hilarious. Love your videos man. You have helped and inspired me and many others more than you could ever know. ❤️🙏
@ursamajor1936
@ursamajor1936 Ай бұрын
My ancestors all came from Norway and all food growing plots were a gard, no matter the size. Garden meant, the farm. 😊 I've been working my, variously sized, gard for 61 years now. I enjoy your broadcasts. Very educational. Thank you.
@MyTube4Utoo
@MyTube4Utoo 6 күн бұрын
I've got a mushroom grow tent setup in my house, and it works great. I've also got a 4 x 4 grow tent in a spare bedroom that I use to grow vegetables. I also grow on my patio in containers, and in (5) little Aerogarden - type hydroponic gardens. They're good for like micro dwarf tomatoes, herbs, and certain vegetables. Usually dwarf varieties. I've got 10-acres, but seem to have gotten old, went through a couple of surgeries and couldn't really keep it going, so I rented it. I'll always grow food. I don't care where I'm at. There are people making a good living growing in rooms no bigger than an average-sized basement, growing things like microgreens.
@Iatemydog434
@Iatemydog434 Ай бұрын
Pawpaw is a fruit tree that is Native to your Zone 6b. There's even the named cultivar Kentucky Giant. If you'd like to grow fruit. There's an option for you.
@kaelthelion
@kaelthelion 23 күн бұрын
Thank you for the shout out to "real farmers" who have off the farm jobs. I grew up on a dairy farm in SW Minnesota and spent a number of years farming with my dad before starting nursing school last year. My parents shared the burden of raising a family as a full time farmer/nurse combo. Almost every full time farmer I know has a spouse who works "in town" and has a job that provides insurance. Farming is hard and trying to make money doing it is even harder. Good luck to those of you getting into it.
@eyes4eve
@eyes4eve 22 күн бұрын
Thank you! This is really good to hear for people like me who have been part-time farming for a long time with the initial thought of going full-time but then settled into the reliability of having a foot in both worlds. During that transition and realization, I've felt like a failure at times for not following through with that initial plan. I've since come to believe that even if I'm feeding just a handful of family and friends for a season, it's far better than not contributing at all.
@lydiamashcka4362
@lydiamashcka4362 Ай бұрын
Here in San Diego, there is a group of volunteers who will come and pick your fruit for free and will just simply take it away for distribution to food banks and shelters and so on. They don't pay you for it and you don't pay them, but at least the fruit isn't just hitting the ground and rotting. It's a good Samaritan program so you are not liable if one of the volunteers gets hurt on your property, these folks know the risks and come pick your over abundant fruit anyway.
@notillgrowers
@notillgrowers Ай бұрын
That's great. I was just in LA and surrounding areas and I couldn't believe the amount of rotting fruit. Oof.
@francescaurban8985
@francescaurban8985 Ай бұрын
Heck yeah! I am a full time mom, full time GM in food service and part time home farmer. The home farm is to support us as a family. I have learned soooo much from you and I love your humor. The cat is adorable too, by the way. Slowly building my herbs business for tea. Tomatoes and peppers for home.
@mikegear7286
@mikegear7286 Ай бұрын
This is the perfect video for me right now! It came out at just the right time, as I'm starting a small urban farm this season in the center of my home town. Thanks for the encouragement! I hope to sometime see some info on winter greenhouses so I can figure out how to extend my season in 5b, lol.
@kimberley-A1
@kimberley-A1 Ай бұрын
So enjoy these videos! With grocery prices constantly rising we are finding it more and more important to grow at least some of our own food during our short summers. Always looking for tips and tricks to be more successful and more productive! Thanks for sharing!
@mandyb2334
@mandyb2334 Ай бұрын
Found your channel yesterday while looking to research no till methods. We moved across country with our large family to start our own homestead. We finally acquired our dream property and it's a blank slate. I really appreciate channels like yours and look forward to looking through your other content! I'll definitely be getting a copy of your book as well.
@redhen689
@redhen689 Ай бұрын
Did you mention bees 🐝 / honey 🍯? I live in PA, but have a friend in Sweden 🇸🇪 that has a bigård (bee farm). They are a retired couple, but it does produce an income for them.
@notillgrowers
@notillgrowers Ай бұрын
Nope, totally neglected to mention bees but that's a good option as well!
@herbertbisbey215
@herbertbisbey215 Ай бұрын
Thanks for a very inspiring video. This will be my 1st year at the farmers market on my 1/4 acre garden. vegetable
@raynemaxwell2000
@raynemaxwell2000 Ай бұрын
Hey, thanks for all that you do! I've been gardening in the PNW for about 7 years, a Master Gardener for about 4 years, and I've taken on landscaping our four-plex in addition to the annual vegetable garden that I've done for the past 7 years. I think about how much work it is for me just to photograph what I accomplish each year, and I try really hard to imagine capturing videos of what I do... especially if this year goes well, and can be applied to the land we hope to have when we move to our forever home. My father grew up on a farm in Nebraska, and we had a vegetable garden during the summers in Omaha, where he moved before I was born. I didn't think I would grow more than a few veggies when I was a child, but now I can't imagine wanting to do anything else with my life. I'm nearly 40, and my spouse is in his 60s. We both have adult children from the past marriages we were in, and we have 20-month-old twins, together. I look forward to learning more about what I can grow (I really want to grow willow!), and pass on to the next 3 generations! I am excited to show other Master Gardener Program participants what I've learned and achieved. I love what I can give back to my community, and to the land and animals. I hope that someday I can do what you do, to continue the tradition of sharing invaluable information!
@Benjamin.S.S.
@Benjamin.S.S. Ай бұрын
Thank you for the episode. We love all your videos. When we make our move, we plan on buying land and going all in on the small farm.
@kannmann97
@kannmann97 Ай бұрын
Such a great video. Important information for lots of farm curious folks!
@caseywilson812
@caseywilson812 Ай бұрын
You making these videos makes you cool, so thanks . You’re awesome 😁
@carolexo7269
@carolexo7269 Ай бұрын
Love these programs. Thank you so much for all your hard work. Enjoy your quirkiness 😉 🇨🇦
@123WorryFreeGardening
@123WorryFreeGardening Ай бұрын
Thanks Farmer Jesse! We try and think out of the box as well. This is quite helpful.
@MynewTennesseeHome
@MynewTennesseeHome Ай бұрын
Matter of fact, I just started a batch of shiitake, oyster and lion's main logs yesterday... first time with mushrooms. I do have enough land but by myself and no mechanized tools growing for myself and having enough to sell is a slow process. Thanks for all your very informative videos.
@mococlimbing
@mococlimbing Ай бұрын
Thanks man! I have your book and watch all of tour videos and learning so much every minute. ! Im starting my market garden proyect almost no till and preparing the soil. Spanish hidden valley in the pyrinees. Part time for now, as im a high Mountain guidenand i work with mules doing Jobs and trips with clients. Every one of these Jobs are fantastic. Thanks for everything that you share. Im pretty much doing all of what you mentioned....😅
@OrchidboyTroy
@OrchidboyTroy Ай бұрын
Hey Jesse! I’ve been watching for awhile now. I grow orchids right here in the heart of the Bluegrass. Thanks for all of your videos, they’re really appreciated 🙌🏾
@notillgrowers
@notillgrowers Ай бұрын
Orchids! Awesome. I love orchids.
@AbidAli-bv2gl
@AbidAli-bv2gl Ай бұрын
Excellent video. A lot to learn. Good advice
@ayelean9397
@ayelean9397 28 күн бұрын
I needed to see this, thank you!
@tonybaker4316
@tonybaker4316 Ай бұрын
I appreciate you and the time you spend disseminating your knowledge. Especially when you address farming for people with limited mobility like myself who have used a wheelchair since I was 17. I have learned how to build and maintain a garden for my home over the past 4 years. I am in a situation where I will be moving to Ireland next year and want to create a small business. I am happiest when I'm spending time growing and figure if I can find something to grow and sell after I buy a home with some land it would be ideal. Perhaps I will share my experience online like you. I just bought your book and look forward to reading it. Keep up the good work!
@kathycurtis-johnson5979
@kathycurtis-johnson5979 Ай бұрын
I appreciate these ideas and think you should be paid for all the education you are providing. Oh whoops I AM paying you thru Patreon. I should pay you more. TRULY. This info is pure gold!
@janew5351
@janew5351 Ай бұрын
Love the videos! Start a garden just to augment your family's food bill with real organic!
@EmmaEcht
@EmmaEcht 5 сағат бұрын
Loved this video!
@PhillipSeager
@PhillipSeager Ай бұрын
You’re so awesome bro I love watching these videos
@evafredriksson-lidsle4909
@evafredriksson-lidsle4909 Ай бұрын
Thank you so much! I'm getting so inspired!! 🎉😊
@KendallKD
@KendallKD Ай бұрын
Thanks for this and all your content!
@robertcotrell9810
@robertcotrell9810 Ай бұрын
This was a great video!
@adventurecreations3214
@adventurecreations3214 Ай бұрын
Excellent advice that applies to most entrepreneureal ventures. Great video
@vociferonheraldofthewinter2284
@vociferonheraldofthewinter2284 13 күн бұрын
I did the mealworm farm thing and I loved it. My 'babies' multiplied insanely well. I had an indoor setup and it was fantastic. And then I developed an allergy to them. Turns out that the 'mild' shellfish allergy is actually an allergy to chitin. This is the same exoskeleton protein that makes people allergic to cockroaches. All the exposure ripped me up fast and I had to sell the entire farm. I took a huge loss just to get well as fast as possible. Now I need to find the time to go through the allergy shots.
@123WorryFreeGardening
@123WorryFreeGardening Ай бұрын
Totally agree that farming can be one of your more than one source of income. This is a helpful video to look at other ways to get into it.
@TMCRok
@TMCRok Ай бұрын
I want to try to grow and sell trees. Thanks for the encouragement!
@BasicUniversalEconomics
@BasicUniversalEconomics 23 күн бұрын
As a soil scientist i commend you for your support of no till
@SeagullAmIOne
@SeagullAmIOne Ай бұрын
This is an amazing Video!!!! One thing Ive always wanted to do while farming is Carpentry and Art. I know its not conventional farming but growing trees and other products such as flowers for dyes or landscapes for inspiration and peace :) Just an extra thing to put up in ur farmers market booth, a painting for sale for top dollar (or bottom dollar depending on how ur feeling:) made by you or your family :) easy extra money and an advertisment for future products
@lizrd4me2
@lizrd4me2 Ай бұрын
Always good information!
@kannmann97
@kannmann97 Ай бұрын
Love the josh sattin quote!
@naturekins604
@naturekins604 Ай бұрын
You can also make some extra money with under utilized farm equipment in the off season. I set up gardens for people in the fall after harvest is done. You can sell mini garden planters at the farmers market especially if you grow mini veggies like tom thumb peas, dwarf tomatoes and such. Edible planters with a few edible flowers mixed in are very nice ways to use extra transplants that you over planted for instance. Hatching specialty chicks is also a great way to get a lot more money for your eggs, hatching eggs for others who have their own incubator.
@AvaniAmore
@AvaniAmore Ай бұрын
I bought the book and it's fantastic....thankyou!
@hawkspiritweaver6664
@hawkspiritweaver6664 Ай бұрын
Another informative video... Sunday morning coffee with Jesse
@williammcpherson1193
@williammcpherson1193 Ай бұрын
And watch a lot of these videos for inspiration. You’re going to need it from time to time.
@drylandfisheries2984
@drylandfisheries2984 Ай бұрын
If you are in the right area etc fish farming is another idea. Doesn't take a lot of space if your small scale and there are options in it: growing fingerlings to sell to people to stock their ponds or in some areas you can grow them up for the food market ( processing can be an issue here.) The one major downside is this industry is capital heavy for start up.
@rancherrita7512
@rancherrita7512 Ай бұрын
Love your channel ❤
@Moewenfels
@Moewenfels Ай бұрын
I'm repotting my rosemary bush cause thats currently all i can afford, but its still a learning experience i can use later on :)
@1whitecottagelife770
@1whitecottagelife770 18 күн бұрын
I let my rosemary bush grow for years without trimming it and it got woody, I thought I had killed it. I trimmed it down to where I saw a bit of green growth and watered it down and it started growing again. My plan is to slowly cut out the wooden parts, after new growth comes in, and hopefully revive it that way
@brokenmeats5928
@brokenmeats5928 Ай бұрын
I love ALL No-Till Growers videos!
@kaytobe
@kaytobe Ай бұрын
Great video as always. More on business planning for part-time gigs! And on the EVERYONE front, I have chronic illness and it has delayed my farm dreams. So now I am reimagining what that means. There needs to be more discussions about accesibility in farming and taking care of your body at the same time - hard to do in the most physical of jobs, but worth consideration.
@shanemillard608
@shanemillard608 Ай бұрын
Thanks for the video. I'm in the process of picking up almost 5.5 acres of mostly wooded and relatively steep land area as part of our house. Working the woods has been on my mind.v
@lindapotter1982
@lindapotter1982 20 күн бұрын
Maybe plant ginseng depending on the setting.
@rochrich1223
@rochrich1223 Ай бұрын
Handicrafts are a natural addition to rural business and obviously have the advantages of being small, done indoors in bad weather and being available to fill down seasons.
@teresaedwards3659
@teresaedwards3659 Ай бұрын
Thanks for the video!
@davidakerlund6296
@davidakerlund6296 Ай бұрын
mealworm, rat, mouse and quail production are fantastic small scale options as is plug production
@greenmandan
@greenmandan Ай бұрын
I live around lake Cumberland here in KY and I think our growing climate has changed to a certain extent due to the odd winters lol but I'm still growing and adapting and I love my woods soil I use lol
@mwmingram
@mwmingram Ай бұрын
Always wonderful.
@Hashashin_Fidayin
@Hashashin_Fidayin 27 күн бұрын
You could use buried greenhouses for citrus. Ive seen many videos with good producing trees even with Snow outside!
@stjbananas
@stjbananas 22 күн бұрын
I started my small organic banana farm 3 years ago on my islands highest rainforest mountain here in the USVI's. It is the greatest job I have ever had.
@juliahelland6488
@juliahelland6488 Ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing! 💯
@dougwhite9898
@dougwhite9898 Ай бұрын
Great video. Thank you.
@bobjohnson4431
@bobjohnson4431 Ай бұрын
Thanks for the video and your perspective of a "reluctant entrepreneur." I grew up on a family farm, and after some years away doing other things I am now taking over from my parents. We raise beef cattle in South Dakota and my wife is working on developing the market for Wagyu beef. So I'm coming to grips with the fact that my choice involves a fair bit of entrepreneur work, even though the business management side of things is not my strong point. One change I've made is composting the manure from the barn (and even carcasses from death losses), I'm going to look into using that for a marketable product!
@reginaldwinsor2759
@reginaldwinsor2759 Ай бұрын
I live in Newfoundland & Labrador, Canada which is zone 5. Forget growing grapes but root crops do well including corn. I am pretty much self sufficient with the things I grow. I usually grow to much for my needs & would like to have a roadside stand to recover some cost but this is not allowed so I end up giving it away. I just put a sign for free & it is gone in a jiffy. Thanks for the useful information.
@BlueJadeU
@BlueJadeU Ай бұрын
If it's not legal to charge for it, could you maybe put up a small sign asking for donations to recover costs of seed & equipment? ( Could even suggest an amount to donate.) People may be willing to at least flip you bit of money to help with that.
@ellenorbjornsdottir1166
@ellenorbjornsdottir1166 Ай бұрын
You're pulling maize out of the ground in NF? How long is that taking and what are your summers like out there? Where I am, in Prince George, in BC, we have short but brutal summers. Somehow I doubt we'd pull off maize here... but I gotta try my luck.
@jeffhamilton9453
@jeffhamilton9453 Ай бұрын
Great content!
@Dorpers89
@Dorpers89 Ай бұрын
I grew up in Vermont tapping maple trees on sled pulled by draft horses in the winter with my friends.
@gordybishop2375
@gordybishop2375 Ай бұрын
I was a mouse rancher before college. Had like 50 cages and sold them to pet stores mostly for snake food.
@FirstnameLastname-ps4cu
@FirstnameLastname-ps4cu Ай бұрын
Thanks
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