Gabe Brown Interview! kzbin.info/www/bejne/kJyXeIZtiaeNaK8si=_7ulntC9QvpSWdZK
@amandaeubanks174710 ай бұрын
Thanks for the great information. So inspiring!
@SowingProsperity10 ай бұрын
Thank you!
@sherylpriest879910 ай бұрын
1:30 This is very well done and gives me hope for the future. The beef and chicken I buy from Logan and Neva at Me & McGee tastes so much better than what I can buy at a grocery, I can’t go back.
@SowingProsperity10 ай бұрын
We love y'all. Thank you for everything ❤️
@melissaglover732010 ай бұрын
I enjoyed this video, and I hope that we have more farmers who will practice regenerative agriculture.
@SowingProsperity10 ай бұрын
Me too. Thank you sweet lady. 😊
@sotwines10 ай бұрын
What a great model Will has developed. Thanks Logan for the inspiring video.
@SowingProsperity10 ай бұрын
It's a fascinating model! Thank you
@MAsM4EVR10 ай бұрын
This was a wonderful documentary! I hope it inspires others towns and farmers and that it becomes a movement towards eco-friendly farming. But first, we have to support our local farmers!!!
@SowingProsperity10 ай бұрын
Thank you and I agree! ❤️
@amberhaynes292210 ай бұрын
Loved it! Great information that needs to be out there.
@SowingProsperity10 ай бұрын
Thank you!
@StanDenman-f4t10 ай бұрын
Excellent! Watch this to see what you should be eating. Thank you Me & McGee Market.
@SowingProsperity10 ай бұрын
Thank you, my friend!
@thepitpatrol10 ай бұрын
Well worth the watch. As a commercial poultry grower I can tell you that this is what we all should be aiming for, whether it is steering our own operations this way, or simply purchasing more of our items we use everyday from folks that are doing it this way. Most thing that amount to anything, and are worth anything, start small.
@SowingProsperity10 ай бұрын
Amen!
@charleslemagne20210 ай бұрын
Great documentary. And all shot within a single day and with only 2 people. Fantastic. I wish all people involved in this endeavour all the best - greetings from Germany🇩🇪.
@SowingProsperity10 ай бұрын
Thank you so much. It was a great experience. ❤️
@pgreen88699 ай бұрын
Thank you!
@kcahill277710 ай бұрын
Fantastic 👏🏻 . Thanks Logan
@SowingProsperity10 ай бұрын
Glad you liked it!
@darinbennett363810 ай бұрын
Logan, thanks for sharing this documentary with us. Great lessons of wisdom from someone who learned the hard way...life lessons. Great insights that people can apply wherever they live in the country/world and help bring life back to their community. The fly-over states are where change is happening and will continue to happen. It's going to take commitment to hard work but the outcome is well worth the effort. Keep up the great work, Logan.
@SowingProsperity10 ай бұрын
We've got this! Thank you so much 🙏🏼
@bonniehyden96210 ай бұрын
I'm reading. I'm watching. I'm listening. I'm planning. Life isn't ideal to start any of this right now. But one day... soon. I hear you, Mr. Harris. No. I >feel< what you're saying. You and all the others building regenerative farms.
@SowingProsperity10 ай бұрын
You got this! 💪
@bonniehyden96210 ай бұрын
@SowingProsperity , husband is going through a serious health crisis. There are things I think I can do. ...maybe plant cover crops after I get soil tested. 🤔 I'm slowly sneaking up on a plan.
@veziqiniso442510 ай бұрын
Hi Logan, thanks for getting out there and connecting with folk like Will, Gabe, Joel etc. & exploring their stories & operations, and providing access to this through your videos and podcasts. As a foreign language speaker (English 😊) the captioning / transcripts across the screen really help where the combo of audibility & accent (the deep south drawl in this case) combine to make it difficult to follow some bits of the conversation and get value out of the content. Its probably quite a feat of work to caption all the discussions but id encourage you to consider doing so for more of the contents of this particular video documentary so that its more shareable for those places where English is a foreign language or folk are unfamiliar with particular accents. Greetings from Southern Africa; another place where heart, mind, landscape and livelihood regeneration is so relevant too. Thank you, enjoying the journey with you guys. And thank you to Will, Gabe, Joel and the others that you've visited with or interviewed for sharing your farms and knowledge and stories with us.
@SowingProsperity10 ай бұрын
I appreciate your message! You make a wonderful point. Thank you. I know I definitely have a Southern accent compared to many. Your support means the world.
@veziqiniso442510 ай бұрын
Thanks Logan; your narration is mostly easy to follow for english-speaking viewers
@tristanhurley902910 ай бұрын
We’ll done!
@SowingProsperity10 ай бұрын
Thank You!
@tambakongoh3 ай бұрын
#Tamba #nourish
@lcostantino79315 ай бұрын
I love this farm n purchase from them ...my son who NEVER liked beef liver ,ate n said it was sweet n delish ....all need to support these farms ..
@jrobertgrack934210 ай бұрын
Awesome! At the 14 minute mark he mentions they don't want to pay $x for food, but he doesn't mention they'll shell out over a $1000 for a cell phone. Which do you need to live? Go ahead, eat your cell phone, try it! Plus, when he mentions can we feed the whole of the population or do we need to have a combo regenerative & industrial farming. We need zero industrial in my opinion. Why are we growing corn for fuel? Why do we throw away over 30% of food as waste in stores, restaurants, etc over a few specks on an apple or other fruit or veggies because of a blemish. With the obesity in our society, I think we can surely decrease the size of a helping of food as well. We have been brainwashed into a culture of waste, waste, waste. We need some reprogramming and self respect for ourselves, the land and the animals we grow.
@SowingProsperity10 ай бұрын
I sure can't argue with you. We just have to keep having these conversation and supporting the ones doing the work. 🙏🏼
@lcostantino79315 ай бұрын
deliriously happy.....so sweet....as is their meat ...
@michaellinnebur769410 ай бұрын
I can't even imagine what the local government would do if people in Colorado try to do any of this stuff .land of the free to shut up read the rule book and get back in line ; 😡👎
@MistressOP5 ай бұрын
If white oak can get you to eat a christmas goose I think it would be so huge for farming. BEcause gooses herd, ducks herd. You can run like 3000 ducks about as easy as 500 with the right tools. and they will herd follow and move. And also get upset about being left behind. It's like every country that doesn't have a subsidy system as electoral college dependent as ours is huge on the duck, the goose, the goat, and the sheep. Cattle are there but too much focus on cattle is understood as an issue.
@troybishoppthegrasswhisper370310 ай бұрын
sure would be nice to see some good grass in the film instead of cows in a wintering area
@SowingProsperity10 ай бұрын
Yes, it was January and just two of us to film over a span of a day. Our focus was more on the resilience of the food system rather than on regenerative agriculture practices. There are already excellent documentaries like "Carbon Cowboys" and "Kiss the Ground" that cover those aspects well. 😊
@bejshepherd9 ай бұрын
This is how it should be, but just an observation: “Externalized prices . . .” Corporations brought us industrialized farming, driving down cost for better and worse. Most consumers work for those corporations, which have driven down costs largely through driving down labor costs. If you look at the retail prices on this farms products, your average consumer is priced out, BECAUSE they work for the corporations that industrialized farming. Don’t get me wrong - this is TERRIFIC. But it is very niche, because sick or not, your average consumer cannot afford the product and still pay for everything else required for life.
@SowingProsperity9 ай бұрын
I think there is a lot of hope and we can overcome the downside of the corporatocracy we live in. I believe if 25% of the population used 25% of their food budget for locally-grown food, especially meat, a monumental shift would occur.
@micksullivan29826 ай бұрын
This audio stinks
@SowingProsperity6 ай бұрын
My bad
@DestinationJapan958 ай бұрын
This guy still has the wrong mindset on debt though, there’s literally no reason at all to go into debt for regenerative farming
@SowingProsperity8 ай бұрын
Hard to argue with what he's built and accomplished utilizing debt to build a profitable business.
@DestinationJapan958 ай бұрын
@@SowingProsperity not really, his expenses are that of a conventional farmer still. He talked about some of his beef and business side of the farm in a different interview with Carbon Cowboys