I'm a small farmer and this is the best video I've watched in forever. You people give me hope. My guy said things were way wrong several years ago. I'm glad I'm doing it my way. Long live small farmers! Vote with your money.
@animalsarebeautifulpeople30944 жыл бұрын
The reason why small farmers went out of vogue is because of DEMAND. There is just not enough LAND and RESOURCES for everyone to eat pastured animals. Going back to pasture raised CANNOT BE THE ANSWER WHEN YOU HAVE NO FREAKING LAND AND factory farming was the only answer IF PEOPLE INSIST ON STUFFING THEIR faces with butchered bodies of innocent babies.
@animalsarebeautifulpeople30944 жыл бұрын
The very last piece of chicken flesh I bought was from a small farmer like you - who raised his own chicken and he actually killed his own chicken. The strange thing is, it wasn't until I paid the man who actually did the killing that I realized it was the demand I created by eating the meat that caused the killing of innocent beings whose flesh i certainly did not need to eat. That's when I finally went vegan. I was the cause of the cruelty and unwatchable violence in the end. Doing it "your way" or not, the animal exploitation way IS ALWAYS WRONG and there is NO RIGHT WAY TO DO THE WRONG THING.
@wendyscott84254 жыл бұрын
@@animalsarebeautifulpeople3094 Well, then, I think you should take this up with God or Mother Nature or whatever you think created this world because it's much worse in nature what happens to innocent animals than what happens on regenerative farms where the animals live beautiful lives on green pastures with fresh grass every day and whose lives are calmly and humanely ended pretty much painlessly after a couple of years of this idyllic existence. Have you seen what happens when a wolf kills an elk? Or a bear kills a salmon or other small animal? Ever seen a pack of lions kill an elephant on a nature show on TV? Orcas torture their sea lions for a long time before they finally kill them and eat them. In fact, every creature on this planet lives off the remains (living or dead) of other creatures. You may think you're doing the world a favor by going vegan, but there's nothing balanced about a vegan diet. It doesn't take a lot of meat to keep someone healthy or satisfied, but eating some raised on a regenerative ranch does much good for the planet. Ruminants make the plants grow through stimulating (mowing), fertilizing (with their waste) and pushing organic matter into the soil with their hooves, which makes the soil rich in carbon and keeps its microbiome healthy. Plants and animals (and humans) evolved together. They need each other. And you're quite wrong about how much land it takes to raise enough cattle to feed everyone. So much grassland has been turned into desert because of faulty agricultural methods, there's a ton of it out there that could easily support millions of ruminants, certainly enough to feed everyone if they only had it a few times a week. Besides, four times the number of cows can thrive on a holistically managed pasture than one where they are just allowed to eat the plants down to the ground. So when you get tired of being on your restricted diet, try a steak from a regenerative farm. It will be packed with nutrition of all kinds and will be wonderfully satisfying, and it will support farmers who are going against the tide and restoring carbon and water to the soil where it used to be instead of heating the planet and raising the oceans.
@fiddlesticks98874 жыл бұрын
Good to see animals treated with respect. Just because we are going to eat them doesn't mean that they don't deserve a good life. Huge respect to farmers who go down this path. I raise my own food and always give them the best I can.
@westtexas806 Жыл бұрын
It means since we are going to eat them we should treat them the best we possibly can. They should have clean air food and water. They are what will allow us to live for a certain amount of time. The thankfulness for them dedicating their life to allow us to carryon should be reciprocated. Anything less shows a lack of character.
@westtexas806 Жыл бұрын
@Anti Zenith Activist I know Chinese eat cat n dogs. It's served at every Chinese buffet in America. I worked in pest control in college and sprayed many Chinese buffets and at night they set traps to catch strays. But what does that have to do with my comment.c
@westtexas806 Жыл бұрын
@Anti Zenith Activist according to your science and oxfords science eventually they will evolve to be intelligent. I think y'all call it evolution. You know Darwin's theory where nothing became something. Then something became bacteria. Bacteria became fish. Fish became monkeys. Monkeys became humans and then oxford. So you should believe that cows are on the same tract but slower. It's your science not mine. I believe God put creatures here for us to have dominion over.
@arielthepom Жыл бұрын
@@westtexas806 that’s illegal 😢
@westtexas806 Жыл бұрын
@@arielthepom what's illegal
@SemperAugustusBubble7 жыл бұрын
This almost brings tears to my eyes. Watching the care and love that many of these farmers show for their animals is beautiful and really highlights the difference between pastured animals and confinement animals.
@hdj81Vlimited2 жыл бұрын
its only 1%, the rest is force-fed with soja.......
@Bruhhfsfs7 жыл бұрын
I'm vegan but I'm very glad to see improvements like these in animal agriculture, these farmers definitely deserve support.
@thejack91785 жыл бұрын
No they don't they still kill and torture animals and destroying the environment
@thejack91785 жыл бұрын
@Red October idiot animal agriculture are the biggest reason for global warming, spices extinction, ocean pollution, deforestation and the list goes on if we don't stop it in then next 10 years climate change will be irreversible and we will all die in the next 100-200 years same with these small farms they destroying the local environment killing predators and other animals that destroy their fences. And what are most of corn and soy produced for to feed to livestock you dumb fuck. And anyway all the small homesteads that slaughter animals will disappear fast after the bigg ones gone. So shut the fuck and start thinking about your future generations instead of only your self.
@warrior70hhs4 жыл бұрын
@@thejack9178 I encourage you to look into Joel Salatin of Polyface farms, he produces 1000s of healthy, happy animals for human consumption while at the same time IMPROVING the quality of the land the animals are grown on. His system of rotating grazing, composting, and property management generates ridiculous production potential with a positive environmental impact.
@3Sphere4 жыл бұрын
@@thejack9178Yeah, you have two major problems Jack. #1 You are highly propagandized. What you believe is simply not true and you are very crass and arrogant about what you believe which pretty much screams that you don't know what you are talking about. Anger is not a substitute for knowledge because if you really knew the truth, you wouldn't be angry. #2 You are way behind the curve. Events are overtaking the corporate farming and ranching disasters every year. Rotational grass fed grazing, organic farming and a ground swell of new tech combined with the old ways are rising from the grassroots and crashing onto the farming and ranching scene. People are going back to the land in force. They are repairing the damage to the land and creating complex, healthy ecosystems wherever the new paradigm is being tried. Farming is becoming personal and local once again. It really is a revolution and it is very deep and very multi-dimensional in nature. warrior70hhs mentioned Joel Salatin. He's one of the godfathers of the revolution. Joel has a number of books which are VERY inspiring and exciting. Greg Judy is another prophet of the new organic movement and you should read a book or two of his and go watch a few of his KZbins. They are very enlightening. It is really very exciting and very beautiful what is happening. You should tap into it. If you knew the truth, your anger would fade into delight. Your hate too. Many beautiful things are on the move as indicated by many people in this video. You should have watched and listened more carefully. By the way, I hate to break it to ya but Global Warming is a scam and a hoax invented by despicable global elites who want to take away all your freedom and your money and plunge you into slavery.
@animalsarebeautifulpeople30944 жыл бұрын
@@warrior70hhs "1000's of healthy happy animals for human consumption"
@troydavis44524 жыл бұрын
This was a very well done documentary on farming, showing the small farm of the future with some great farming pioneers taking that first big step to care for and raise animals safely and humanely
@johannesvantuyl11 жыл бұрын
Hearing farmers that work with the earth and animals for 34 minutes was well worth the time to educate for that space of time. Thoroughly enjoyed it. Susan
@creativekoala972110 жыл бұрын
Great video. We raise our own sheep and chickens, and bought a pig to butcher in the fall, as well as hunt for our meat. I can hardly stomach the idea of buying commercially raised meat anymore. We butcher it ourselves, make our own sausage and I know exactly how it was processed. It is a lot of work, but my children know where their food comes from, and are learning valuable skills. I bought a store bought chicken the other day and my 3 yr old asked , 'Whose chicken was that? Who killed it?' I think this is the way it is supposed to be.
@janesuzannestreeter18275 жыл бұрын
If you live anywhere near Amish folks, even if you ain't got no pasture, you can buy a steer or a couple pigs and pay them to pasture and butcher for you.
@nicks57584 жыл бұрын
Fat are u vegitarien be should
@Khamomil4 жыл бұрын
Apart from the greatness of pasturing livestock, there is definitely a bond between animals and farmer that doesn't exist in industrial settings, and in small scale operations the farmer can truly enjoy his work because he has time to slow down and watch the animals, which in a field or barnyard are beautiful and sometimes funny or amusing.
@kathmandu1575 Жыл бұрын
It's healthy in all ways.
@CHC4EFT10 жыл бұрын
Sustainable Farmers are the real rock stars and backbone of America. Great video
@WandaMartingaga3 ай бұрын
You hate this too?
@garyjohnson90378 жыл бұрын
I agree, small farms but more of them is the future. but even the cities and towns need to transform everyone helping to grow or manage the animals. people must learn to be sustainable farmers again. good documentary
@garyjohnson90378 жыл бұрын
+Mottled Mutt good question, I do not know the answer, but I will say that local and state government officials are more concern with mowing and appearances than allowing people to intelligently live. all you need to do is drive around and everything, yards, fields, along roads must be mowed and groomed or you get fined for not maintaining your yard. people run around with weed killer when weed (I hate that word) weeds are very important for a healthy environment. of course on a farm farmers want to get ride of weeds, but bees and other beneficial insect need these so called weeds for a healthy environment. we almost need to go back to before the industrial and chemical age to put people to work, start treating animals humanely. Technology has made life easier but are we happier!!!! we need to reshape our cities into a sort of green society, drastically reduce vehicals by changing the reasons we need to drive to work. our whole way of life needs to change, if we are ever going to begin to save this planet for future generations. but unfortunately people can't see a different way of living because we have become to spoiled to this me me me society were everyone want to have wealth and power and no one wants to get his/her hands dirty. everyone wants to be the chief or slave owner. why do you think they brought blacks from Aferica as slaves, the wealthy owners needed cheep labor and someone to do the work. today we have replaced slaves with machines and industrial farms so developers can get rich building expensive homes that people have to mow the yard to maintain appearance's. oh, they brought blacks as slaves because whites and native Americans would not do the work!!!! if we are going to turn things around we must allow people the freedom to live on a small farm without it always being driven into the ground be the large guys with deep pockets. stop the bankers from driving you off your land when times are hard. we to start protecting the little independent farmer from large corporations and wealthy powerful investors who do nothing but make money and live off of everyone else. the people currently running state and local communities are just as bad as they set the standards and make many of the rules and laws that place burdens on people to conform to stupid rules, like maintaining your fields and lawns just for appearance. I believe we all need to take a few steps back in time in order to change directions and help everyone back to work making this country a greener, healthier and happier world for people and animals again. well, that's my opinion, and if I was running for president this would be one of my priorities towards accomplishing. but unfortunately there are going to be some serious climate issues that will impact us all because those in power only thought of wealth and power and ignored the reality of what we are doing to this world because of the path we are on that we need to get off and back to basics. as for your question, what impact would that mean on this subject?
@garyjohnson90378 жыл бұрын
I believe they have something simular, though, I don't know the details. But I hear ya, I see it everyday people doing what they want to do without thinking much of the consequences. When I built a shed and walk way, in this yard on a hillside, I put a lot of thought into the water run off, this yard was in California, they don't get much rain but when they do there is always water run off To contend with. In life we must always plan/prepare for the future by understanding that we are but stewards of this earth for but a short time. The earth is not here for us, but for us to take care of, and it will take care of us. We are but a tiny living organism living on this planet, not all together unlike some organism living on us, that will only live as long as we do. I wish you well and hope you take advantage of that program you told me about. Good luck.
@247rug4 жыл бұрын
One of the major problems is people, consumers, tell us to raise our animals this way but do not want to pay when it comes to the added cost. When egg prices dropped I had several people ask why our egg prices weren't comparative to grocery stores. I explain how ours are raised in comparison and still the price won over our free-range, kid carried and named chickens.
@ladymargaret6186 Жыл бұрын
Truly said😞😞
@jameshunt2905 Жыл бұрын
This right here is the perfect opportunity to explore with people exactly why better choices and investment in better environments, better quality of life for animals, healthier animals, and supporting the stewardship that is so badly needed...... time to engage in actually putting back what is taken while also enjoying better health, better food and and a resilient environment!
@WheatleyGLaDOS9 жыл бұрын
This is my favorite video on compare and contrast between organic farming and industrial farming!
@KozmoDyne10 жыл бұрын
This might be one of my favorite documentaries. These people had a lot of good, revealing things to say. I was especially impressed by Dave Whitman the pig farmer. I am a big fan of ethical ranches, and I think he is a true maestro on the topic. His approach to ranching should be the textbook for ethical ranching. It is so, so, SO much more natural than these CAFO places that are often a horror. I am not saying that every ranch has to be a paradise. I just mean that many good people would be ashamed if they saw how some places are run to make their food. I pine for the times when the animals that sustained our life, rather ranched or hunted, were celebrated and revered. We have lost that through our distribution, and I think it wounds our character as a species to be so distanced from how our food is made. We can do it without suffering and would be better for it.
@txusto200110 жыл бұрын
HGvt
@frankenz6610 жыл бұрын
Agreed
@loraynecaburubias90799 жыл бұрын
Fudd Duddly Amen to what you said. Animals deserve our respect. While there's no need to shun meat products from our diets as there's all types of needs and preferences, neither should ethics be excluded in our food production. It takes little to consider how we can treat the animals that feed our bodies with gratitude and respect when we slaughter them as well as when we consume them so that the sacrifice of their lives is not wasted by our indifference. All lives cling to dear life and experience fear when that life is under threat. Let's not forget that.
@terrya12525 жыл бұрын
If you think this video is good you should look up Joel Salatin on KZbin.
@kylebullard47808 жыл бұрын
I truly believe livestock who were raised happy in a traditional farm set up taste better than the livestock who were raised in factory farms. I'm from a small town in Oklahoma we have cows everywhere and a couple smaller pig farms so I'm kinda familiar with the industry and I think the meat compared to what you get in the store is much better. I recall hearing animals who are stressed out before slaughter produce lactic acid in the meat and that causes the meat to be of leaser quality. I don't know if that's the truth but i can taste the difference.
@animalsarebeautifulpeople30946 жыл бұрын
Kyle Bullard animals are tortured all their lives in unnatural factory farms :_(
@animalsarebeautifulpeople30944 жыл бұрын
Kyle Bullard Imagine you talking about dogs and cat meat industry - "I truly believe cats and dogs who were raised happy in a traditional farm set up taste better than those raised in factory farms" - how psychotic you would sound. It's quite interesting that two years ago when I first started doing research into animal agriculture I really thought the problem was ONLY factory farming and not the practice of exploiting animals itself. Of course fatory farming is abhorrent but I've also learned that the practice of forcing moms to have babies so we can fatten up the babies to chop them up and eat them - IS UNTO ITSELF INHERENTLY WRONG. Then I learned just how smart and loving all "food animals" are, if given half the chance to be who they are. They are no different from cats and dogs. Not only are they no different from cats and dogs, but we have zero need to consume their bodies and their secretions to be healthy and happy ourselves. We are just holding onto "tradition" and "habit" and "social norm" when we insist on continuing to eat animals. The last two years of my life i have consumed zero animal flesh, zero animal secretions like milk and eggs, and my health is better than ever, I eat better than ever (vegan cuisine is the best and the healthiest) and I am even helping the environment since animal agriculture - particularly these farms with "pastured" animal victims, are lethal to the environment kzbin.info/www/bejne/h3SmY6qpbs19b9U
@@animalsarebeautifulpeople3094 Um, no, pasture-raised animals are not lethal to the environment, quite the opposite. Animals and plants evolved together. If you eliminate the animals because you want to be nice to them, you'll end up with plants with very little nutritional value. Your health is no proof that your diet is superior. You could have had great health even if you hadn't changed your diet. Some people eat bad diets and still seem to be healthy. Some people eat good diets and become sick. Comparing pets to farm animals raised for the products they provide is just using our emotions against us. In some countries, as awful as it may seem, people do eat dogs. Go figure, I wouldn't, but there's no accounting for taste. I happen to like "animal secretions," especially when they are produced humanely in healthy environments for the animals and plants they eat. I had my weekly ration of 2 strips of bacon and 2 eggs today. Yum! I once considered becoming a vegan before I realized the benefits of regenerative agriculture, but when I found out they can't even have honey, I realized this is was a rather extreme way to eat that would pretty much make me a pain in the ass to any friends that happened to invite me over for dinner. We don't need to eat a lot of meat. Occasionally is better than three times a day, and that's what I do. So far, I'm fine. No COVID, no other diseases, and I'm 74. To each his own, but I happen to think caring for our soil and the global climate is more important than satisfying my own superior sense of morality.
@steinderbush11 жыл бұрын
That,s the good way, going back to pasture fed animals!!!! You have better food ,better for the environment, might be a little more expensive but you don,t need to eat meat everyday!! thanks for this video, hope people get awake in time!!
@woodspirit984 жыл бұрын
You mean you don't need to eat meat everyday.
@steinderbush4 жыл бұрын
@@woodspirit98 ??
@homebuddha Жыл бұрын
Conventional agricultural practice placing strain on the ecology and biology of the land and it’s productivity. It’s a systemic flawed formula that depletes or in most cases destroys a vital element of the ecosystem creating a chain that impacts flora & fauna necessary in maintaining a healthy ecosystem. We can learn more by observing nature, if we let go of our need to control her and stop thinking we know best for her and be open to what she knows is best. The soil, the plant life, the insects, the microbes, the birds, the livestock, the seasons, the weather, the temperatures, the climate, the air, the sun, the moon cycles, these are the professors. We are but a part of all that is connected on the land. Our function as intelligent human beings is to be natures students, stewards, curators nurturing her harmony and balance. Thumbs up to these farmers who have turned their back’s on the industrialised farming system to find balance revitalising traditional farming practices.
@DougStanhopesNiece10 жыл бұрын
The woman at the end summed it all up for me. I must be the change I want to see.
@cowboyyoga6 жыл бұрын
Just an amazing wonderful video! It's so supportive for us people who want to be that back to the Earth Farmer. Thank you for this video! )))
@tomjeffersonwasright22888 жыл бұрын
At 12:40 "Grass roots people voting with their food dollars every day". Mr. Kim Seeley is also a political prophet as well as a farmer. He describes the most powerful tool of the American people to set this country right. Let's do it !
@janellesadler10 жыл бұрын
God bless these farmers. Buy from them and use your dollars to send a message.
@friedonions5454 жыл бұрын
Thank you ALL ...I enjoyed and learned from this effort.
@hobbitpony19611 жыл бұрын
Very good film showing both sides! See you can bring both sides without hate and being a jerk. Excellent job!
@nowone2111 жыл бұрын
Excellent film. Thanks.
@juanleahy220210 жыл бұрын
Yes, quite agree.
@animalsarebeautifulpeople30944 жыл бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/h3SmY6qpbs19b9U check this out for a more complete view of what this all means.
@mikeaskme35307 жыл бұрын
I really liked this video, one thing they failed to mention though is suburban sprawl. To much farm land is being paved over. I really think if we spent our taxes in a more logical way, we could revitalize the cities and get more people into farming especially the young. I also believe when we do this we can bring back the butcher shops. This would also have the added bonus of bridging the communication gap between rural and urban populations. Just my thoughts on this would like to know what you fine people think.
@marleemarleemarlee10 жыл бұрын
This short documentary made me so happy! When I learn about things I love for school it really makes me a happy camper :)
@jguido611 жыл бұрын
I thought it was a very informative video. I am a vegetarian but for anyone who wants to make a conscious healthy choice in what they eat and how their food choices will impact the earth, then this is a short video that wont lose you along the way......
@zpetar7 жыл бұрын
16:55 And that is real treasure. Spending time with family and people you love. Many people people don't understand it any more it is not all about money.
@krissyb19802 жыл бұрын
Small farms give animals a better life. What folks who didn't grow up farming don't understand is ours in your blood. You do everything for those amimals, and the land. Farming is your soul. I hope it gets better for small farmers, we have struggled enough financially.
@Sunburn200710 жыл бұрын
There is no question open pasture farming produces better quality meat. When the animal gets to live normally and engage in its natural instinctive behaviors, you get a better product.
@benjamindejonge3624 Жыл бұрын
You don’t need to feed the world, but provide your community with real food is the great achievement
@lordcarve Жыл бұрын
Feed our communities first. Then our counties, then our states, then our country, and ONLY THEN once all Americans are not hungry feed our national neighbors.
@ktbcp11 жыл бұрын
How wonderful to see animals outside breathing in the fresh air. Pure happiness to watch. I recall the days when I was younger and saw this for myself. I am going to quote the Bible now. Bible: Proverbs 12:10: A righteous man has regard for the life of his beasts. But the compassion of the wicked man is cruel. In other words, even when a wicked man thinks he is compassionate - he is still in the level of cruelty. We should look after our animals in a respectful way.
@akeem12214 жыл бұрын
During industrialization humans shifted to industrialized agriculture, now we are heading back to the path we left. some good farming methods to practice can be conservation agriculture, permaculture, and natural farming.
@CherryIofficial9 жыл бұрын
I wish to do sustainable farm in US and not sure where to start... I am here in Birmingham AL and I want to start with a backyard farm and grow from there...
@robertpayne27175 жыл бұрын
Try to find and engage with an older farmer and exchange labor for knowledge, look for property farmland you can possibly lease or rent on crop shares be prepared to expend a lot of labor...look and research the historical/Heritage breeds of livestcock.. whether hogs chickens or sheep and Cows.. I prefer Tamworth hogs on Semi-confinemen/Pasture
@kazzana9013 Жыл бұрын
The internet is a great source of information. Joel Salatin would be a good place to start your research. He gives all the practical, fundamental advice you could wish for.
@whatyourlifestyle998 Жыл бұрын
I been a farmer most of my life and always been natural grass feed cattle. Now , almost 60 I'm going into pigs and all open land producing. It is the natural way to farm
@akbbb1111 жыл бұрын
- 27:00..well said...for all these animals sacrifice for us, we should respect their welfare & living qualities in their short life...especially touched on what he says 27:35...wish all our farmers has the heart of this gentleman...
@dejaland10 жыл бұрын
This is the way it is supposed to be... I wish the world would see this.
@Chapsikan28013 жыл бұрын
Great to see things changing for the better 🙏
7 жыл бұрын
Beautiful movie
@lydialas56442 жыл бұрын
@Hello Philippe How are you doing
@zf888811 жыл бұрын
FYI...This film briefly shows Cleckner Farms (Duane and Sheila Cleckner) sold in Whole Foods Markets in the DC area..
@bijanae5 жыл бұрын
I'm vegetarian atm, but it's good to see support for better practices, even if they lead to the same eventual end.
@Automedon24 жыл бұрын
I am also vegetarian but I don't see death as a tragedy - in humans or animals. It is the quality of life and humane death that is important. If those things could be guaranteed I would have a lot fewer qualms.
@kazzana9013 Жыл бұрын
There is animal sacrifice in eating plants too. The number of animals that die growing food crops far exceed the number of animals killed for meat. Besides poisoning by herbicides, insecticides etc, monoculture crops deprive a huge array of animals their habitat as well as killing the soil life that provides nutrients to plants. It takes less than one bovine to feed myself for an entire year. I support your choice of whatever diet you deem fit for your body, but know that choice results in the death of more life. Plants, vegetables, fruit and grains are also waste substantially more than meat from spoilage during transport, retail and in our homes. How often have you binned fruit and vegetables that have started to decay? Being a vegetarian is not an ethical choice, it is just a choice. I totally agree that we need to change our farming practices to mimic wild herbivores in order to keep our soil healthy, as it is the soil microbes that provide the nutrients to plants. I consider many of the current, industrialized practices vile.
@yonelajafta5478 жыл бұрын
Sustainable Agriculture is the future of farming!!!
@Automedon24 жыл бұрын
I hope this movement becomes a reality quickly - before all the small farms become sprawling McMansion subdivisions.
@erichoaglund10 жыл бұрын
thank you for this awesome video. i want to start a farm and this was very inspirational.
@frozeneternity9310 жыл бұрын
I enjoyed watching this and it is definitely a step in the right direction
@larryarsenault Жыл бұрын
A lot of people might say to this, "So what?" But some years back I left L.A. to some acreage in Oregon and was raising sheep and chickens. The seep were on pasture and the chickens (for our own use so not that many) we had in the hay lost with lots of room to run around and scratch When I first cooked their eggs the difference in color was striking. The yolk was almost orange making the commercial egg look pale and sickly. And the meat had twice the flavor, rich and good. We weren't raising the sheep for sale not meat but occasionally i would have an older one slaughtered. It is said that older sheep's meat smells and is tough, not so goo. But ours were tasty, not tough at all. Best they had a fairly long and pretty good life. I'm not a farmer, but I have to believe, if a farmer can raise pasture fed animals he and she can sell them direct to people at a fair and profitable price if they know how to do it. And that's not all that hard physically. But understanding pastures, healthy soil, healthy environments and something about the animals and willing to do work, you'll probably do just fine.
@ChilcoteForestryServices9 жыл бұрын
dumb question - how do you feed pasture cows through the winter? Do you hay part of the acreage?
@lydialas56442 жыл бұрын
@Hello Chilcote how are you doing
@delsurf719 жыл бұрын
Great video. As a person who does not have a multi-generation small farm to take over but dreams of a life commitment like this; what resources are out there to get started? I am close to middle aged, have a family, am a few years into my 2nd career and live in a mostly urban environment. With my little piece of ground I grow a garden and compost my vegetable waste either in backyard composters or with my basement vermicompost set-up. I would gladly trade this for a situation like any of these farms. I know I could do it if I had a successful plan to get started and it isn't some crazy idea that would hurt my family. If there are those resources that anyone knows of please pass it along. Again, great video.
@kazzana9013 Жыл бұрын
Check out Joel Salatin; Learn some skills, lease land a practice.
@iansarault46578 жыл бұрын
Interested in more, look up Joel Salatin.
@mikepowell86114 жыл бұрын
Greg Judy and Alan Savory as well.
@iwantosavemoney10 жыл бұрын
what a great documentary this is just awesome give power to the small farms that are doing it right. good stuff
@tomdungey85054 жыл бұрын
Animals make us human. Its all about our conection to the earth its all created to fit together. Nice video.
@steinderbush11 жыл бұрын
I take my hat of for those farmers who go back and grow pigs the old way ,like it was in the 1950 ,s My grandmother allways had 3 piggies and they where fed with leftovers, vegetables and rye porridge! Man that meat was good and tasty!! I hope people get smart and choose natural meat!!
@chrisschmidtkunz914811 жыл бұрын
If Tyson chicken and all their suppliers went out of business in the next 5 years, it would not be a bad thing. I hate to buy any chicken at any store these days. I have to go to an Asian market to get a regular chicken these days. I'm starting my own farm / ranch. I've had it with big agro and gov subsidized garbage. I'll be doing it the right damn way with chickens, beef, pork, and turkey. I'll even be raising bugs for feed. The big part of it will be aquaponic for both the fish and vegetables.
@chrisschmidtkunz914811 жыл бұрын
Yeah, and it will only cost more for those city boys who put their BMW's above the health of their families and don't care about their environment. I'm not an 'environmentalist;, I'm a land steward. Keeping people off the land and letting it take care of itself is as ludicrous as allowing the corporations do what they want to the land when it affects the health of the land and the people.
@cygnus19655 жыл бұрын
I hope you are rich, I’ve been trying this and it’s not easy. Best way to make A million farming is to start with 2 million.
@kazzana9013 Жыл бұрын
I live in suburbia and have chickens for my egg supply. No so fussed on their meat as it is low in fat.
@needmoreramsay4 жыл бұрын
God bless these organic/natural family farmers.
@authorcharlieboring Жыл бұрын
One of the problems with raising smaller outdoor farming operations in the disappearance of smaller meat processing operations.
@kazzana9013 Жыл бұрын
Yes, that needs to be remedied. It is shocking how many large processing plants have gone up in flames recently.
@DavidSanchez-uo2cn9 жыл бұрын
JEREMIAH JONES, YOUR A BAD ASS. STARTING AT 21 YEARS OLD, HAT'S OFF TO YOU.....
@manoelmonteiro9963 Жыл бұрын
Gente maravilhosa que tem há mente aberta, para colocar em prática algo enovador, O Deus como eu queria poder fazer algo desse jeito, sendo aqui no Brasil, pois tenho tanta terra produtiva mais não tenho dinheiro pra seguir em frente. Que Deus abençoe sempre vocês aí gostei muito de ver ❤❤❤❤
@cvwbronx11 жыл бұрын
Thanks to all those brave farmers!
@downbntout2 жыл бұрын
This wisdom feeds my soul
@paulagreen58489 жыл бұрын
I think EVERYONE should watch this, IF YOU EAT YOU SHOULD ESPECIALLY WATCH IT!!!
@BreakingGravityPT2 жыл бұрын
Makes me proud to be a Hopkins Alumnus!
@haloswarm8 жыл бұрын
It's amazing how the idea has changed in just a few years
@davidsonlankford11684 жыл бұрын
Has it changed or you just saw a video and you think it has changed?
@gerrywalsh6853 Жыл бұрын
The funny thing is that they are saying the industrial farming is a problem but the laws and local regulations restricts the small guys. The reason I say this is I have been fighting my local manisipality on the ability to do things on the farm. I have been turned down on a small bioreactor to recycle fish waste from the fishery near me. Or the mushroom operation that I run that was not supported do to the fact that it was unproven in my area. Or the lack of protection from trespassing. Not saying this as a pore me but jest the uphill battle farmers have. People in power would rather outsource our food than to grow it next door. Since taking over the farm I have a politicians hat, public relations hat, security hat, soil biology hat, a botany hat, veterinarian hat, mycoligy hat, macanic hat, accountant hat. So the farm is the pinical of society only the best of us can be a farmer in these days. The military says be all that you can be. But without the farmer everyone would be nothing. So if you think you are tuff enough to hold up the rest of the world be a farmer. It is frustrating and heartbreaking but also the most fun and soul filling joy that you can experience.
@mrstevebournias12 жыл бұрын
very nice info on natural pasture-based farming bravo kudos to all of you
@jamieholland895111 жыл бұрын
This is such an informative video about sustainable food resources. A lot to think about.
@mikepowell8611 Жыл бұрын
What if we used wood chips to absorb the hog waste? Then use the woodchips as mulch to grow your own hybrid poplars to make more wood chips to turn into more mulch and so on and so forth? The problem is you are getting the pig poop wet. Don't do that! We want to dry it out. Then we want to spread it out. But like he said I don't want them to stop raising hogs. Its just we are going to have to find ways of doing things that are more synergistic and kill more then one bird with each stone.
@lesliefish4753 Жыл бұрын
There are industrial-sized biogas digestors available to farmers. These digestors cook methane out of the sewage, and the methane is sold for heating fuel -- including electricity generation. When the last methane has been processed out of a batch, the leftover solid "digestate" makes high-nutrient fertilizer.
@JohnDoe-jq5wy Жыл бұрын
Thank you for your superb presentation ☺️
@paulglover19146 жыл бұрын
Hey Jan! Fine video.
@lydialas56442 жыл бұрын
@Hello Paul how are you doing
@robertpayne27175 жыл бұрын
If you look at an old recipe book(cook Book) You'll see where they'll call for a whole fryer 3and 1/2 to 4 lbs. Most you can find are in the 5 lb. Average and that was my Mom and Grandma would have started to call a Broiler or Stewwer
@lydialas56442 жыл бұрын
@Hello Robert how are you doing
@Heritagepostfarms12 жыл бұрын
Thank you! This is how farming should be!
@teachatami45 Жыл бұрын
Chekner family farm, I lift my hat off to you.
@elksquid10 жыл бұрын
I'm a young person who wants to farm! Working 8-5 M-F trying to save up enough $.
@karstenmarshall-otto812210 жыл бұрын
im glad to see another person like me, although i'm fortunate enough to be in school for agriculture right now, in a few more years ill be working my ass off to get some land. good luck friend
@creativekoala972110 жыл бұрын
We worked very hard to buy 7 acres, and are able to do a lot to provide our own food. It is just too hard to get any amount of land here (Alberta) without being in debt up to your eyeballs. Good luck.
@shreekanth49807 жыл бұрын
Beautiful information thanks a lot
@steveparker43438 жыл бұрын
Wonderfully heartwarming!
@ddiamondr112 жыл бұрын
Thank you! We need to end factory farming. If we consume animals, we must treat them humanely. My grandfather was a mixed farmer. He would have been horrified by a pig barn and cattle feed lots.
@PaulinaAmaralMedeiros10 жыл бұрын
nice video .The hogs look well treated and happy
@αναβαινειν10 жыл бұрын
I have enjoyed watching it! Thank you!!
@jaredlamoreaux99849 жыл бұрын
So I live in Utah and am very interested in getting back to my farming heritage. Any advice or resources that I can leverage here in the west?
@janesuzannestreeter18275 жыл бұрын
When I was a girl being raised on a farm in eastern North Carolina some 55 years ago, pigs got a few acres of mixed pasture, forest/wood lot with lots of nut trees including oak and pecan trees, a mudhole on one of the low sections where we had a spigot we could turn on for them in the heat of summer and no shelter at all except for the pigging house where the sows pigged. Pigs can take care of themselves. The trick is to make sure your fencing can keep them in...pigs are escape artists. Winters they got feed in addition to forage and when the sows pigged we got the pigs separated and got in there with needle nosed pliers and picked the tusks from the front of each little jaw, upper and lower. They ain't got roots yet, at that age...can save a farmer a nasty hog cut later if you flip those tusks out within three days or so of birth. That's also when you introduce them to the vet.
@dhnphn1489 Жыл бұрын
We all have to understand one simple matter. Without confinement operations, where will the needed foods come from? Yes I was born and raised on a family farm where the bottom line goal was to feed the family and have enough to pay the bills. We worked our tails off and didn't have a lot to show for it. Each to their own and let's all work to keeping and leaving our land in better shape than when we started
@TheJackMac90911 жыл бұрын
I'm glad I found this video it was very informative.
@johnbutterworth1369 Жыл бұрын
well That was awesome! I live in WNC and know now why they dirt belt here has failed. It would be great if investors used the natural farming as the standard and leased land to those that want that life style. The whole industry would go back to the 1940s style farms. Young people could exchange Ideas and the whole farming life would go into an extreme reversal from what ruined the dirt belt. The only bugs we will be forced to eat will be the natural farming bug. This should go viral and I think it will. Thanks to all the farmers that stick to their guns, no pun intended.
@troydavis44524 жыл бұрын
Small farms are the future, true cost of meat should be imposed and reductions must be made in human consumption of meat and farms must transition to Sustainable Farming Practices.
@kazzana9013 Жыл бұрын
We have not become healthier since we increased our consumption of carbohydrates. It takes less than one bovine to feed me for a year. I grow fruit and vegetables, which I feed to my chickens for an egg supply. I live in suburbia. To reduce meat consumption is to harm human health. Chronic disease is now at the highest rate in recorded human history, so I disagree with your declaration of what we must do as you have failed to take in consideration all the confounders. Meat is the proper human diet.
@williamta94084 жыл бұрын
Those pigs look so healthy and happy.....
@terrya12525 жыл бұрын
Do a Google and KZbin search for " Polyface Farms , Joel Salatin " runs a permaculture style farm rotating pigs, cows, chickens and a few other things on sections of pasture the organic way! It helps the animals, soil and plant life and the people eating it. KZbin search Justin Rhodes also. He learned a lot from Joel Salatin.
@Automedon24 жыл бұрын
He was just on Joe Rogan's podcast. Search it - it's quite interesting.
@hughrblackwell7 жыл бұрын
Good on you guys. Worldwide this is the only way to farm. I'd love to do with goats here in Australia
@SANDGLASSUS7 ай бұрын
When we were children, we went herding cows. Our childhood was very interesting
@Marialla.11 жыл бұрын
Something that wasn't touched on in this film but goes hand-in-hand is that small farms trying to raise animals naturally often suffer from prohibitive regulations enforced by the USDA, which were designed to keep factory farms non-lethal. The two systems aren't really compatible, and it is unfair to expect a 100-pig farmer to conform to the same infrastructure expectations as a 30,000 hog operation. Pastured animals are healthy almost by definition. Small farmers should get more breaks.
@Mudh0ney1611 жыл бұрын
You show a picture of a lagoon filled with manure and expect viewers to just assume it's polluting something. Very clever, but that technology is exactly what keeps the surrounding environment clean and contains the manure so it can be used for fertilizer later. If it were destroying the land we would have no crops on our farm...
@herdingcats38506 жыл бұрын
The Buffalo River in Arkansas has a hog factory which is polluting it. Shame, shame. There will always be more people, but there will never be more land.
@froofroo55589 жыл бұрын
how does one get the numbers for such a farm? .. ie acres per cow etc
@froofroo55589 жыл бұрын
+Will Yerburgh unfortunately i live overseas ... i would very much like to learn the actual facts in order to make a rat8ional decision. I really like hte concept
@jamescc20109 жыл бұрын
Very good farming...back to everything natural, not just for profit.
@mybeefcows12 жыл бұрын
just like point out that at 3:00 that waste water is being dumped into manure lagoon to keep it from polluting the water systems
@gogomountain10 жыл бұрын
When there are comments like "farming should be a way of life, not a way of making a living" and "we should go back to the way it was in the '40s and '50s" you know they are fighting a losing battle.
@CreazioniPinnacolo11 жыл бұрын
hey i work in kenansville. I was wondering what the reach building was I pass all the time. Id like to come talk with you guys!!
@javierlope7334 жыл бұрын
how much cots a farm... i need to buy
@jesanteltro299810 жыл бұрын
how to apply in this farm as a labour?
@izolyator11 жыл бұрын
Thanks for treating those hogs with respect big guy
@markdewhirst83702 жыл бұрын
Great video thanks
@kaylorpaniagua12424 жыл бұрын
Awesome video. I have began working on my land getting ready to be a small free range farm in East Texas. Thank you for the information. If anyone would like to contact me I would appreciate that since I have questions about set up and infrastructure. Thank you
@amiblackwelder10 жыл бұрын
Cane Creek Farm Eliza Maclean She is awesome. I completely agree with her. At 29 minutes into the video, you can see her farm. “Thing will cost a bit more, but we will eat less of them, be healthier, and we will savor more and enjoy life more.” We can all do our part to get this clean up of our Earth, by buying organic, local, and growing what we can the safe and sensible way. If we don't buy the poisons, they won't sell it.