Wow, my grandmother had a bowl of beets on the table at almost every meal. She said they had iron for my blood. I couldn't get up until I ate 2 slices. Tasted like I was eating dirt. Good memories, miss you grandma!
Smart engineering to harvest those beets.In planting those beets must have genetics to have them to be the right size in general throughout the field at the same time. Beets may as some people say taste like dirt, but you can't beat beets!👍👍
My cousin planted some carrots and a contractor had one of there pickers to dig them. It was a very well built machine! Nothing like we’d ever seen in southeast Georgia! Thanks again for sharing BTP You should do a video on Tobacco harvesting.
Very good video. It’s interesting to see how all the various crops are harvested. Years ago, in S. WI, a truck hauling beets to the cannery spilled a small pile of red beets in an intersection. Cars repeatedly ran over the beets and it looked like the worst kind of carnage you could imagine.
Fabulous. Great change up from the big fields of Western Kentucky. You bring good things for us to know about how our food gets planted and harvested. You're the best!
my father married into a farming family just outside of Lincoln, Nebraska. They Rotate Corn & Soy beans every year & between the three brothers they farm Over 30k acres. 🌻Super Farmers🌻 all that large equipment is a sight to see!!! he used to go out there & help them in the fields come harvest but he's retired Now. 😎👍🚜🚜🚜🚜🚜
I would say he was WAY overloaded. Even if he only had two dumps from the cart that's 68000 pounds. Approaching 100000 GVW. Hope the DOT wasn't watching.
Very interesting. I can just about recall watching my dad using a topper as part of harvesting red beet in the UK early 1970’s. His tractor didn’t have a cab so he looked like a beetroot after that job.
nice vid jason, we've harvested carrots with belted toplifters over here in scotland sometimes if the weathers been ok and the weeds weren't a problem in amongst the shaws, the old asalift harvester had the same style front wheel as this machine, very similar looking
I love the Western NY videos I’m from there and have spent mist my life running 1514 carts in hay and corn silage doing custom harvesting. I’m surprised how slow they dump by the time I start to come up to the truck I can dump much bigger loads in about 1-3 minutes depending on the conditions
Your videos are stress reliever from girlfriend's mouth lol U should come to south Louisiana and film cane season..it kicks off round Sept.15...corn and soy running behind dis year bc of rain..so gonna be Interesting with 3 things going on same time...lots of older style equipment used...get on hwy 71 from colfax to 190 krotz spring zone...plenty to film.
we grow a lot of diffrent vegetables in my part of scotland and theres lots of specialist equipment used for various jobs, thats why i like BTP he shows lots of cool stuff from over your way, its great seein how other folk harvest diffrent stuff in their parts of the world 🗺️🏴
Thank you for the video . I was wondering why just 3 rows at a time . I really enjoy your videos as I use to be a farmer in Kansas it's interesting to see how other crops are harvested
I had to stop back this morning & check out the vid again. Noticed at the end, that semi trailer isn't sitting right. I wonder if the airbag is out on the 5th wheel. Also noticed the tandem on the trailer isn't right either. Wonder what was up?
im glad you said that as when that lorry drove away i thought there was something amiss at the fifth wheel too, not used to how american lorrys sit when full loaded tho so wasn't sure 😂
Funny thing, you opening the segment with a supermarket. Vogel engineering is located in Brunswick Michigan. It's production facilities and offices used to be a independently owned I.G.A. grocery store when I was a child. You hit close to home, around the corner, is Gerber baby foods facility.
That is a 7330 Premium. It has a 1 row harvester. It is used to open up the field because the VOGEL side unloads if it was used on the opening pass the dump cart tractor would mash several rows of beets.
Live not to far from Vogel! A lot of really cool stuff coming out of there! They have made some crazy triple mower set ups and a even a 9x9 round baler!
Thank you for watching. I would like to feature tomatoes. They seem to be mostly in Indiana. I hope to film them sometime. I do have peas, lima beans and sweet corn on the way.
My brother works on this farm! When did you film this? He usually drives the red Pete shown here. Might have been him driving the tractor and dump cart. They also purchased a second one last year, 4 rows for carrots. Thanks for the great videos!
Who in the world thought that you could afford to pay for all that equipment with something such as a table beet lol either way cool video man keep it up
@@rackleysbluetickkennels7310 yes,, but its fysics! as long as the cargo fall out easy becouse of gravity, it never will tip over, becouse anything outside the wheelbase fall out. But if you say glued a 17 ton block of concrete inside of the trailer, and tipd it fully,, the trailer would tip over. hehe
Very cool.never seen red beets being lifted before.why dont they drive the semis beside the harvestor?woikd same some money by not needing the two extra hands running the four wheelers.
There are a few factors. Veggie harvester are slow moving machines. The cannery only wants so many acres a day. The cart filled with 17.5 tons in a pass down and back on the field. In. 20 acres you are going to move a bunch of red beets for the cannery to process.
I’ve been running these Byron 1514 carts for about 6 years now on my family’s custom farming business in Western NY doing hay and corn silage and they are and aren’t unstable. Hay is a bit of a pain to dump out so I use the unstableness and rocking ability to trickle in the hay which at times is a bit tippy but it works. Corn silage flows smoother but you still have to be careful
I spent many a summer in the early 80's helping my mom and grandma pick amd can beets out of our big garden and loved to eat them. Now, I can't stand the things.
Nice video...interesting how each crop has it's own harvester.
Wow, my grandmother had a bowl of beets on the table at almost every meal. She said they had iron for my blood. I couldn't get up until I ate 2 slices. Tasted like I was eating dirt. Good memories, miss you grandma!
That's what they taste like to me as well. But my wife loves them.
Smart engineering to harvest those beets.In planting those beets must have genetics to have them to be the right size in general throughout the field at the same time. Beets may as some people say taste like dirt, but you can't beat beets!👍👍
Very interesting. I glad you get around we learn a lot about the different aspects of farming from your videos. Thanks for sharing
I enjoyed this very much as it was different/new from the normal Big Tractor Power video of corn & wheat.
More like this please
That truck was haulin, holy moly!
Nice seeing the unusual equipment. Both the harvester but the byron trailers was nice to see as well
Keep up the great videos.
My cousin planted some carrots and a contractor had one of there pickers to dig them. It was a very well built machine! Nothing like we’d ever seen in southeast Georgia! Thanks again for sharing BTP You should do a video on Tobacco harvesting.
Neat! I’ve never seen that before. Also, can we appreciate how nasty that Kenworth sounds at the end?😍
Beetroot is usually sold fresh on put into glass jars this side of the pond.
Never seen them harvested before.
Wonderful unique video btp... 👍👍
Very good video. It’s interesting to see how all the various crops are harvested. Years ago, in S. WI, a truck hauling beets to the cannery spilled a small pile of red beets in an intersection. Cars repeatedly ran over the beets and it looked like the worst kind of carnage you could imagine.
Fabulous. Great change up from the big fields of Western Kentucky. You bring good things for us to know about how our food gets planted and harvested. You're the best!
Sweet . Never seen beets been harvest.
You mean being
my father married into a farming family just outside of Lincoln, Nebraska. They
Rotate Corn & Soy beans every year &
between the three brothers they farm
Over 30k acres. 🌻Super Farmers🌻 all
that large equipment is a sight to see!!!
he used to go out there & help them in the fields come harvest but he's retired
Now. 😎👍🚜🚜🚜🚜🚜
More produce harvesting!
Never seen that done. That was cool
This is a cool video about how beets are harvested
That was 1 heavy trailer.
I would say he was WAY overloaded. Even if he only had two dumps from the cart that's 68000 pounds. Approaching 100000 GVW. Hope the DOT wasn't watching.
Awesome Video Buddy!!
My InLaws harvest sugar beets here in Southwest Ontario Canada with a ROPA Tiger 6.... this was a great vid! Thanx for the share!
Really enjoyed the video. Its nice seeing how different crop are harvested.
Very interesting. I can just about recall watching my dad using a topper as part of harvesting red beet in the UK early 1970’s. His tractor didn’t have a cab so he looked like a beetroot after that job.
Great video. Always enjoy watching the specialty crops being raised and harvested.
Wayne Vogel, of Vogel engineering, is like John Deere and Cyrus McCormick combined, times ten. The machines he creates are amazing.
Great video. I learned something new. Never seen red beets harvested.
@bigtractorpower we grow green beans, cauliflower and onions in western Oregon. I think you’d enjoy filming the cropping diversity out here!
nice vid jason, we've harvested carrots with belted toplifters over here in scotland sometimes if the weathers been ok and the weeds weren't a problem in amongst the shaws, the old asalift harvester had the same style front wheel as this machine, very similar looking
Il would be interesting to follow the truck at the factory to see the finish producr
I'd love to see more unique harversers and crops
I love the Western NY videos I’m from there and have spent mist my life running 1514 carts in hay and corn silage doing custom harvesting. I’m surprised how slow they dump by the time I start to come up to the truck I can dump much bigger loads in about 1-3 minutes depending on the conditions
Very interesting. I deliver things to Vogel all the time and have never seen their machines in action. Thanks for this video.
Very cool. Thank you for sharing. I have a video on their Cucumber harvester on the way.
Nicd find and good video work.
Build equipment to harvest your crops and sell them on the market smart business practice.
Always wanted to know how beets get harvested. Thanks!
Thank u BigTractor. ❤️👍🏻
Wow are rare rare harvesters there both model AND the real thing but all cool!! Best way to get through production💪🏼😁 Great video 👍🏻
Nice video. Lots of beets in Michigan!
Your videos are stress reliever from girlfriend's mouth lol
U should come to south Louisiana and film cane season..it kicks off round Sept.15...corn and soy running behind dis year bc of rain..so gonna be Interesting with 3 things going on same time...lots of older style equipment used...get on hwy 71 from colfax to 190 krotz spring zone...plenty to film.
We grow peanuts and cotton along with grain here in Southern Virginia. It's the unique machines that are the coolest
we grow a lot of diffrent vegetables in my part of scotland and theres lots of specialist equipment used for various jobs, thats why i like BTP he shows lots of cool stuff from over your way, its great seein how other folk harvest diffrent stuff in their parts of the world 🗺️🏴
Hai máy john deere nhìn ngầu quá 😎
At first when I saw it I was like what kind a John Deere is this very interesting thanks for sharing
Great video! And I really enjoy watching different products being harvested.
Really enjoyed this video.
We use Vogel in Michigan for cucumbers too
Thank you for the video . I was wondering why just 3 rows at a time . I really enjoy your videos as I use to be a farmer in Kansas it's interesting to see how other crops are harvested
You've got to stop somewhere.
That's an interesting machine👍😁
Great video, keep up the great work👍
Awesome video
First time seeing that and absolutely fascinated by it, like to see more
More of the Odd please
I had to stop back this morning & check out the vid again. Noticed at the end, that semi trailer isn't sitting right. I wonder if the airbag is out on the 5th wheel. Also noticed the tandem on the trailer isn't right either. Wonder what was up?
im glad you said that as when that lorry drove away i thought there was something amiss at the fifth wheel too, not used to how american lorrys sit when full loaded tho so wasn't sure 😂
Hi BTP great video!👌🇵🇹🇵🇹
Funny thing, you opening the segment with a supermarket. Vogel engineering is located in Brunswick Michigan. It's production facilities and offices used to be a independently owned I.G.A. grocery store when I was a child.
You hit close to home, around the corner, is Gerber
baby foods facility.
Back in the day we had a sugar beet factory in fort Fairfield Maine the closed it back in 70's but yes beets are delicious food
Here in Oregon we grow sugar beets for the seed. Harvest them with combines and with the pickup attachment.
I'd like to see that done on a video
Pretty cool machine, was that JD 6330 with a dump cart or did it have a small beet harvester hooked to it
That is a 7330 Premium. It has a 1 row harvester. It is used to open up the field because the VOGEL side unloads if it was used on the opening pass the dump cart tractor would mash several rows of beets.
@@bigtractorpower cool
You should do Grape harvest in Western NY, We run An OXBO/ Korvan 3016XL , all out grapes go to Welch's for Juice and Jelly!!
Another nice unusual harvester 👍👍👍
Thank you. You are Reggie through the veggie crop videos 😁. My favorite harvest to film.
@@bigtractorpower Ha ha yeah the veggie harvesters are cool 😎
Live not to far from Vogel! A lot of really cool stuff coming out of there! They have made some crazy triple mower set ups and a even a 9x9 round baler!
Awesome video my friend, Love red beets
Excellent video BTP. Any chance of seeing tomatoes being harvested ? Thanks and thumbs up !
Thank you for watching. I would like to feature tomatoes. They seem to be mostly in Indiana. I hope to film them sometime. I do have peas, lima beans and sweet corn on the way.
@@bigtractorpower, Thank you !
@@bigtractorpower, could you get videos of onion and potato harvesting equipment as soon as an opportunity presents itself? Thanks.
Very interesting. Enjoyed it very much.
Id like to see all those harvesters you mention? Always wondered! Thanks BTP!
I take it Redbeet is the same as Beetroot as we know it in England?
Nice.
My brother works on this farm! When did you film this? He usually drives the red Pete shown here. Might have been him driving the tractor and dump cart. They also purchased a second one last year, 4 rows for carrots. Thanks for the great videos!
What farm is this? We are near Canandaigua.
@@klightfoote The farm is in Kendall, west of Hamlin.
Awsome 👍👍
I am from Western New York. Wherd was this farm ?
I like different. 👍
Bears, Beets, Battlestar galactica
Who in the world thought that you could afford to pay for all that equipment with something such as a table beet lol either way cool video man keep it up
Beets? BEETS?! GAAAAAAK! Anything but beets. Say it isn't so. Lol! Cool video though. Very neat equipment.
Just wait for my Lima bean video 😁
@@bigtractorpower AAAAAAAAACK! Lol! I look forward to the equipment :vD
I filmed the Lima Bean harvest just down the road from this Vogel on the same afternoon.
@@bigtractorpower Are they running an Oxbo in those beans?
Schrute Farms is looking good now! Dwight putting that office money to use. Where's Mose at?
@@MidwestFarmToys I see you don't understand sarcasm or humor! Fits your picture perfectly actually, smile from time to time. Cheers!
I was wondering, with the way the harvester empties how do they do headlands?
How does that trailer not tipster when dumping over the side like that
filled tire?
Has tractor weights on low a hanging bracket on left hand side of the frame.
@@rackleysbluetickkennels7310 yes,, but its fysics! as long as the cargo fall out easy becouse of gravity, it never will tip over, becouse anything outside the wheelbase fall out.
But if you say glued a 17 ton block of concrete inside of the trailer, and tipd it fully,, the trailer would tip over. hehe
Usually weights as well as tires loaded with calcium.
i love this chanel
That video can’t be ......... beat !! 🤣🤣🤣🙄🙄🙄
Very cool.never seen red beets being lifted before.why dont they drive the semis beside the harvestor?woikd same some money by not needing the two extra hands running the four wheelers.
Compaction would be my guess.
Perhaps turnaround time to/from/unloading at the beet factory?
any videos of sugar beets for dairy cows?
I have some sugar beet harvesting lined up to be filmed in Michigan later this fall Michigan later this fall.
All that machine and they didn't add the GPS self-driving feature?
Was that beet harvester made by John Deere
John Deere combine cabs and engines.
Do they ever drop a sick beat?
Now that's just funny! Lol!
What is the MSRP on a beet harvester like the one filmed?
I am not sure. VOGEL’s pickle harvested is $460,000 to $500,000. I would guess this harvester is in the $400,000s.
@@bigtractorpower thank you.
Is that L Brooke farms?
👍👍👍
spinach, root digging harvester???
Vogel makes a spinach harvester and makes other toot digging machines like this red beet harvester. There is not a spinach root puller in the line up.
Works same for sugarcane
20 acres a day seems terrible slow. I did have an afternoon I only combined 15 acres of pinto beans but that was terrible conditions
There are a few factors. Veggie harvester are slow moving machines. The cannery only wants so many acres a day. The cart filled with 17.5 tons in a pass down and back on the field. In. 20 acres you are going to move a bunch of red beets for the cannery to process.
If it ain't green... It ain't mean
Looks like a deere
They always look unstable carts when tipping. Ya got to have ya wits about ya.
I’ve been running these Byron 1514 carts for about 6 years now on my family’s custom farming business in Western NY doing hay and corn silage and they are and aren’t unstable. Hay is a bit of a pain to dump out so I use the unstableness and rocking ability to trickle in the hay which at times is a bit tippy but it works. Corn silage flows smoother but you still have to be careful
✌️✌️✌️✌️
👏👏👏👍👍👍🚜🚜🚜
3 Rows at a time...My God that would be a boring tedious job.
Lol, zzzzz
how that trailer does not tip over or break deifies logic
this the same as beetroot
I spent many a summer in the early 80's helping my mom and grandma pick amd can beets out of our big garden and loved to eat them. Now, I can't stand the things.
Lol
I hope I did ok on the presentation 😁. I have the Cumber Harvester filmed for a video.
Whatcha bet it powered by a DEERE Diesel.