When You BUY Livestock - DON'T DO THIS!

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 26 сер 2024
  • Buying Livestock? Don't DO THIS!
    Stop thinking of yourself as a goat or sheep farmer. You need to think of yourself as a GRASS farmer. If you have healthy grass and pastures, you will have healthy goats and sheep. The same goes for cows!
    BEWARE of commercialized breeds! We at first made the horrible mistake of trying to raise a commercial breed naturally with avoiding wormers and medicines. It did not end well.
    If you want to raise healthy strong grass fed animals, you need to find heritage breeds that can withstand not using modern livestock methods.
    Enjoy the video!
    **BE SURE TO CLICK ON THE LITTLE BELL NEXT TO THE SUBSCRIBE BUTTON TO MAKE SURE YOU DON'T MISS ANY FUTURE VIDEOS!**
    If you liked this video and want to see more off grid homesteading content, please subscribe to our youtube channel and share our videos with friends on social media! We love it when you share our videos! Also be sure to visit our blog for amazing homesteading articles that involve solar, growing gardens, raising livestock, and general off grid topics.
    Our Social Media Pages!
    steemit.com/@m...
    / anamericanhomestead
    / homesteadameric
    / americanhomeste
    www.flickr.com...
    www.patreon.co...
    #livestock #raisingsheep #sheepbreeds

КОМЕНТАРІ • 113

  • @ForgingFreedomTV
    @ForgingFreedomTV 7 років тому +15

    Very thoughtful vid Zac. Your so right about the various peoples of the past and their religious practices regarding planting, rain and harvest. I have the great opportunity to visit the Hopi people in Arizona from time to time. My sister is Hopi. ( Long story) to this day many of their dances and ceremonies are centered on bringing Rain for their crops. They have been able to carve a lifestyle out of the desert 🌵 with no irrigation and not much rain for centuries. They grow peaches, cotton, corn and beans. Truly incredible

  • @LivingTraditionsHomestead
    @LivingTraditionsHomestead 7 років тому +1

    Great tip about the animals who are laying down are getting enough food. I never thought of that, and it's a great indicator for us from now on. And, we totally agree with you about homesteading in extreme climates. We were homesteading in Phoenix, Arizona before moving to the Missouri Ozarks. We had a serious realization that if the water was turned off, we would be dead. Hence, moved to the Ozarks. Great info, Zac!

    • @Anamericanhomestead
      @Anamericanhomestead  7 років тому +1

      Yeah, they are up all day, they are not getting enough food. Glad to hear you made that realization about the weather.

  • @rjs700
    @rjs700 7 років тому +7

    sorry i went to the website but it cost im a poor man on a fixed income im on disobility but i follow your channel i live in the country but all i can manage is chickens from a wheelchair thank you and your family somuch

    • @afroddy
      @afroddy 4 роки тому

      Be blessed!

  • @ashleighs3517
    @ashleighs3517 7 років тому +2

    Most good farmers, both current and of old, can tell weather better than any weather app by the sky, atmosphere and their animals, among other things.

  • @beepot2764
    @beepot2764 7 років тому +1

    We started quite a bit from seed this year and we have had great success! Indiana weather is treating us well this year. I totally understand how you feel about just dropping them in the ground, it's like here you go babies good luck! Nice video, I look forward to the summer.

  • @lumox7
    @lumox7 6 років тому +5

    Three sheep names: Tasty, Delicious and Barby Q

  • @Adam.Rushing
    @Adam.Rushing 5 років тому +1

    "Think of yourself as a grass farmer first" loosely quoted...Joel Salatin says the exact same thing. Anytime you find yourself agreeing with him, you're probably doing it right! :)

  • @themyrtlewoodshomestead9371
    @themyrtlewoodshomestead9371 3 роки тому

    That's what's great about this video it has timeliness!

  • @ShalomAcres
    @ShalomAcres 7 років тому +13

    Looks like lots of white clover in your pastures, maybe time to add some bees to the homestead??

  • @ChickaWoofRanch
    @ChickaWoofRanch 7 років тому

    Such good advise on the heritage bleeds... especially for beginners. We've made some of the same mistakes buying "commercial/production" animals expecting them to adapt to a grass-fed diet. Enjoy the content and topics here... keep the good work!

  • @acoatofgold5627
    @acoatofgold5627 7 років тому +1

    As a native Floridian, it is difficult to grow anything and I agree with the air conditioning comment. I want to do only heritage breeds and heirloom crops. I live in the north end of Miami where the beach is about ten miles away via highway and my air conditioner went out. I'm boiling alive, man. my grandparents moved here in the 70s after living in Mexico/Belize most of their lives. I have an aunt who frequents Belize and says the weather is totally different for being closer to the equator. FL heat is nothing like Central and South America. Its because Florida is actually not a "tropical" climate like people think of as the Caribbean; its more closely related to the SE Asia/Thai monsoon climates. If you grow or homestead in FL you can't do American/European anything it HAS to be Asian for any real success 3/4s the year and the last 1/4 you better pray to your god(s) and ancestors that they make it. I tried a traditional summer garden in our spring (planted in February) and only the watermelon will survive this heat as the cantalope gave up growing a long time ago. I'm looking to move to Oregon in the next few years to seriously homestead :) - jacob

  • @Jeremiah--gr8ve
    @Jeremiah--gr8ve 6 років тому +1

    Just some advice that perhaps you were unaware of could help as a natural wormer for all animals is DE=Diatamaceous Earth!

  • @homesteaddiaries656
    @homesteaddiaries656 7 років тому

    Thanks for the reminder. I was heading towards commercial breeds when I originally wanted heritage. Makes me stop and think though...

  • @DerykRobosson
    @DerykRobosson 7 років тому +1

    Something worth considering is that food does not have names, pets do.

  • @NanaTrece9444
    @NanaTrece9444 7 років тому +4

    FYI I am 56 years old and was born in Orlando. My mother is turning 80 and she grew up in Florida. People did live in Florida over 50 years ago and we did it without air conditioning.

    • @Anamericanhomestead
      @Anamericanhomestead  7 років тому +8

      I'm not saying that no humans existed in Florida 50-60 years ago. That is ridiculous. I lived in Florida for almost 4 years. The invention of AC, numerous insecticides invented after WW2 preceded the population explosion in the mainland of Florida. Coast land living is much different than living in the interior. Before 1950, living inland in most of Florida was an extreme rarity. I'm not making this up. That is a fact. You take away all the modern conveniences today like clean water, insecticides and electricity and people will leave Florida in mass. Do you think places like Vegas will still be on the map post SHTF? Nope.

    • @pattiripley7599
      @pattiripley7599 7 років тому +3

      my siblings and i were kids in Florida with no air conditioning. never thought anything of it. My sister spent the entire summer at home one year in a body cast. didn't get out of cast till the week school started. back when school started first week of Sept. We also didn't have tv until I was in high school. family played board games and cards at night together. We loved it. I'd still rather live like that.

    • @NanaTrece9444
      @NanaTrece9444 7 років тому +1

      I agree that the spraying increased the number of people in Florida. However in the Orlando timeline you see over 52,000 people living in Orlando in 1950. While that is nothing compared to cities like NY, Los Angeles and such it still shows that it wasn't a rare occurrence of people living in the middle of Florida. Orlando really boomed when Disney came into the area.
      I agree with Patti life was much better in those days. I actually rode my bike to school. You wouldn't do that today.
      Having said all this I am still grateful for things like computers. It makes channels like yours possible.
      Thanks for all you and your family do in putting this together.

    • @Anamericanhomestead
      @Anamericanhomestead  7 років тому +5

      When I lived there, the joke was that before WW2 you couldn't even get life insurance because of the disease and malaria outbreaks. I'll stand by my statements that Florida wasn't a place most people wanted to inhabit before the invention of the AC. If you took away the grid today, people would leave en mass.

    • @christinearmington
      @christinearmington 5 років тому

      I’m 5 generations Florida. Folk make do, drink ice tea, sit on the porch and sweat. Then jump in the lake! Fortunately my people were Unionists.

  • @2010invent
    @2010invent 7 років тому

    Very good video and good thinking.

  • @TheMrRockysmith
    @TheMrRockysmith 7 років тому +5

    always love your video. wish I could do patron. personally.... we don't name livestock.... makes a emotional attachment... couldn't ask my kids if they thought George was tasty...... they'd never trust what they ate ever again... lol

    • @jimcrawford5301
      @jimcrawford5301 7 років тому +2

      just naming the breeders, not the meat

  • @dadnova1
    @dadnova1 7 років тому

    The best way I know of to get rig of Gofers, ground Squirrels and such is a flexible metal pipe hooked up to an exhaust pipe of an engine and gas them out. As the exhaust will fill every chamber, when they die below ground it also puts the smell of death there, which will keep others away or from coming back.

  • @tom_olofsson
    @tom_olofsson 7 років тому

    Excellent info thanks.

  • @ericb9345
    @ericb9345 7 років тому

    Great video. Really like your paddocks, trying to our barn finished so we can get ours put in.

  • @cheakychic1
    @cheakychic1 7 років тому

    Hey Zach great info

  • @mariayelruh
    @mariayelruh 7 років тому

    Have you thought of rotating some of your chickens through the pastures like Joe Salatin? He says he has much less problems with pests because the chickens eat them. They also kick around the droppings to spread them around instead clumps.

    • @Anamericanhomestead
      @Anamericanhomestead  7 років тому +2

      The pests that we deal with are microscopic. Barber pole worms. Chickens won't help those and other internal parasites. Chickens do however keep a lot of insects down...but we let them free range...we don't keep them in portable tractor cages like Salatin. Because we let them free range around the houses, we have less crawling insects in the houses.

  • @lastniceguy1
    @lastniceguy1 7 років тому

    Gr8 advice.

  • @susannielsen8688
    @susannielsen8688 7 років тому +1

    My name choices: Shirley, Goodness and Mercy!

  • @doubled3119
    @doubled3119 7 років тому +1

    The better the soil the harsher the laws on living off grid for the most part come to think of it actually. Imagine that!

  • @terrywereb7639
    @terrywereb7639 Рік тому

    Did you consider the fact that people who raise heritage breeds of any type of livestock are very likely using husbandry methods that are not those of the commercial growers? Not many commercial growers manage their grazing areas in a regenerative manner.

  • @Adam.Rushing
    @Adam.Rushing 5 років тому +1

    I know it's waaay too late for the naming thing, but you didn't by chance name them Shadrack, Meshack, and Abednigo did you? My spelling may be off on those, but I think you'll get my drift.....

  • @howtogetoutofbabylon8978
    @howtogetoutofbabylon8978 6 років тому

    Yeah, hair sheep!!! We have had Black Belly Barbados.
    So easy to raise!!! The best thing is that the meat is like venison and beef, a red meat that in a stew, nobody would know was not beef.

  • @sylvial6158
    @sylvial6158 6 років тому

    Curly, Larry, and Maureen

  • @growyoufood
    @growyoufood 7 років тому

    nice to see sheep back in the homestead

  • @marthagonzalez6340
    @marthagonzalez6340 6 років тому +3

    Lucy Ethel Fred

  • @thedesertangelhomestead9981
    @thedesertangelhomestead9981 7 років тому

    it is what we are going to be going back to

  • @sfetterly6200
    @sfetterly6200 7 років тому

    Zach, you always have a unique way of looking at things and you're easy to understand, thank you!!!
    Names for sheep ... hmmm I've always liked the name Jacob, so that's my pick for the male. May he have many kids. lol As for the females Deborah and Eve would be my suggestions.
    Thank you for sharing so much of your life with people like myself, I've wanted to do some of how you live, but after viewing you, I want to do so much more. Any chance this Winter you'll do something with deer leather??? Like gloves

  • @mwshel46
    @mwshel46 6 років тому

    Billy, Nanny, and Kid.

  • @andrewm5517
    @andrewm5517 7 років тому

    thank you for all the great video!

  • @michellew8332
    @michellew8332 6 років тому

    Wow...Ps 23:2 makes more sense to me now. God fills us up and satisfies. :)

  • @thehomeplatespecial597
    @thehomeplatespecial597 7 років тому +1

    lol. wellll. Florida is much more than a paved over swamp. The natural world is much more than meets the eye of a temporary college student or a Disney fan. Love y'all and your channel though.

    • @Anamericanhomestead
      @Anamericanhomestead  7 років тому

      I think it's a great place to visit, but I couldn't live there. I love being in the woods too much and in those woods, I'm not the top of the food chain like I am here.

  • @LauraBrekke
    @LauraBrekke 7 років тому

    Native Americans lived in Florida and Arizona. But they were nomads, and moved. It's our settled living conditions that require us to build infrastructure in those areas. We've all forgotten how to live with the environment - some environments require impermanent living, others (like your homestead) have environments that invite settled infrastructure. We all need to get back to living in harmony with the environment (and if we dont like it, we should all relocate!).

  • @loriayres5037
    @loriayres5037 Місяць тому

    I hear a turkey in the background

  • @jasonskerbitz298
    @jasonskerbitz298 7 років тому

    Figured since your sheep are LaCroix breed, you should probably just name the male one LaCroix.... don't really have anything for the "lady" sheep. ;-) I know I'm not a Patron, but that's my suggestion anyway. ;-) Good lookin' pastures this year bro.... homestead is lookin' great.... hope to get up there sometime soon to check out your spread. Shalom. ;-)

  • @vernahelvik8678
    @vernahelvik8678 7 років тому

    I might have been broom corn they look some alike

  • @jaksmith6465
    @jaksmith6465 3 роки тому

    would like a more in depth view on the breeds of animals you have

  • @christianlouis4218
    @christianlouis4218 6 років тому

    How about A01, A02, and A03. Next season, start with "B"

  • @meddler69
    @meddler69 7 років тому +1

    Jack Tripper: Janet Wood Chrissy Snow for the sheep names.... threes company lol

  • @sam-and-angela
    @sam-and-angela 7 років тому

    Hey Zac, what are the approximate dimensions of your paddocks and what type fencing and post spacing do you have? We're planning to follow your lead on sheep. Thanks!!!

  • @gorbashin
    @gorbashin 7 років тому

    I'm not a patron but if someone doesn't nominate Miranda Lambert as a name I'll be pretty sad.

  • @lastniceguy1
    @lastniceguy1 7 років тому

    What's the difference between A/C in Florida or in Tenn, Miss, Louisiana etc? Not to mention dehumidifiers.

  • @Pearl76Perez
    @Pearl76Perez 5 років тому

    When do you shave the sheep and what do you do with their excess wool?

  • @tahimiabreu4284
    @tahimiabreu4284 6 років тому

    I lived in Florida for 22 years and OMG he is not lying! Florida sucks for so many reasons (besides the horrible people)!!!!

  • @TheTexasBoys
    @TheTexasBoys 7 років тому

    Maybe that's why I rest throughout the day...getting enough food!😝TexasMom

  • @christabigfamilyhomestead7365
    @christabigfamilyhomestead7365 7 років тому

    Excellent advice Zac! Thank you! How large are your paddocks?

  • @thewiredfox2691
    @thewiredfox2691 7 років тому +1

    You have to name one Shawn!

  • @scottjenkins4613
    @scottjenkins4613 7 років тому +1

    Breakfast, Lunch and Dinner...names?

  • @howtogetoutofbabylon8978
    @howtogetoutofbabylon8978 6 років тому

    Yeah, twins and triplets, and sometimes two births a year.
    Hair sheep forage more than regular sheep, more like goats.

  • @theversatileartist6446
    @theversatileartist6446 7 років тому

    Nice video, how much land do you have?

  • @RemoteTactical
    @RemoteTactical 7 років тому +8

    I knew a lot of grass farmers in high school .... they're in jail now ;) :D lol

  • @oheebatch_algorytmu
    @oheebatch_algorytmu 7 років тому

    Who you dont get emu ostriches and some goose?

  • @allsorts4041
    @allsorts4041 7 років тому

    Interesting video. You animals look very content :)

    • @Lcab-bh3wx
      @Lcab-bh3wx 5 років тому

      Name the sheep
      Anny. Lielly. Joann

  • @gousa976
    @gousa976 6 років тому

    Name one lamb chops

  • @acoatofgold5627
    @acoatofgold5627 7 років тому

    To make my longer comment short without you having to go through all that: anyplace with more heat than grass or trees needs to be given back to its Natives who eeked a living and its wildlife. i firmly believe australia should never have been discovered. - jacob

  • @MerryElle3
    @MerryElle3 7 років тому

    Jack, Janet, and Chrissy ;)

  • @eddiegastellum6000
    @eddiegastellum6000 6 років тому

    What breed of sheep are they

  • @justsomeguywithaboomerang1891
    @justsomeguywithaboomerang1891 7 років тому

    Name one Lambert.

  • @planetbob4709
    @planetbob4709 7 років тому +1

    Have you ever heard of a guy named Gabe Brown, Ray Archuleta. They both talk about regenerative farming in which they never till the soil. They talk about how tilling destroys the land and it's ability to sustain life thus making farming impossible after a period of time.
    Since learning about Gabe and Ray I cringe every time I see a tilled field.

    • @aycacachi
      @aycacachi 7 років тому

      that applicable only if you are always cultivating the land , else whatever you put there without tilling won't give you much yield

    • @planetbob4709
      @planetbob4709 7 років тому +1

      I am guessing you obviously did not look up Gabe Brown or Ray Archuleta.
      If you had you would understand that tilling destroys soil life which plants require in order to flourish.
      As Gabe brown would say "Do you want to sign the front or the back of a check"
      More organic content in your soil will:
      Increase soil life.
      Compact less.
      Increase water retention
      Infiltrate water faster,
      Decrease erosion.
      Increase yield.
      Tilling will:
      Decrease organic matter in your soil.
      Reduce water infiltration.
      Compact more.
      Decrease soil life by up to 30% per pass.
      Decrease water retention.
      Increase erosion
      Decrease yield.
      Tillage yields a net decrease every time it is done.
      No till and cover cropping yields a net increase the more it is done.

    • @aycacachi
      @aycacachi 7 років тому

      Frank Johnson
      i don't have to look it up i studied enough agriculture
      and you haven't read what i wrote , I'll explain further more
      if you are not working the land and cultivating all the year long it won't affect the soil (negatively) but if you are cultivating one culture a year and that culture for example last for 3 months (meaning you have 9 months not planted) the soil will start to become solid and hard (especially at high temperatures and low moisture) which will result in a little problem for the next plantation which is the root system ability to develop in the soil
      so again , not tilling is a good thing but you have to keep the land busy at least if you are not planting something just raise grass and keep cutting it as the mulch does help the soil too

  • @WhimsicalWonderFarm
    @WhimsicalWonderFarm 7 років тому +2

    Thank you for this info. We have Katadhin Sheep, they are shedding now and look horrible lol
    What do you plant grass wise for them? I'm wanting them all grass fed but they are acting starving all the time and I'm supplementing with a custom made pellet.

    • @Anamericanhomestead
      @Anamericanhomestead  7 років тому +1

      Try Alphalfa pellets, they are almost always non-GMO and still counts as grass fed! :)

    • @Anamericanhomestead
      @Anamericanhomestead  7 років тому +1

      It's a mix or bermuda, fescue and lespedeza

    • @Anamericanhomestead
      @Anamericanhomestead  7 років тому +1

      But there is some clover mixed in as well

    • @WhimsicalWonderFarm
      @WhimsicalWonderFarm 7 років тому +1

      I give then Chaffhaye (fermented alfalfa) is that good enough or do you recommend alfalfa pellets as well?
      Do you lay seed in your paddock? Or is it just whatever is growing?
      Thanks so much for the help.

    • @WhimsicalWonderFarm
      @WhimsicalWonderFarm 7 років тому +1

      Haha ok. Thank you

  • @mellender0
    @mellender0 7 років тому

    lamb chops

  • @StephanLiebenberg
    @StephanLiebenberg 6 років тому

    Don't name your food!!

  • @robertfirestone5743
    @robertfirestone5743 7 років тому

    NAMES BREAKFAST LUNCH DINNER LOL

  • @mostpopular1204
    @mostpopular1204 7 років тому

    Name them alberto,muchacho,and watto

  • @pollyjetix2027
    @pollyjetix2027 7 років тому +2

    go ahead and preach. It's nothing to be ashamed of.
    Yes, some will hate you for preaching. But Jesus said that's to be expected.
    Others preach what they believe... global warming... feminism...
    Don't let them be louder than you. Your message is far more important than theirs.

  • @whatifitistrue7408
    @whatifitistrue7408 7 років тому

    bipity, bopity, and boo?

  • @bradfordfootman7495
    @bradfordfootman7495 6 років тому +1

    Umm, pagans weren't just around 1000 years ago. We're still here. Also, we didn't make up our Gods. As for rain dances. I think there are probably native Americans that still do that. Anyway, love the videos. Keep up the good work

    • @gatorbyte5254
      @gatorbyte5254 5 років тому +1

      Bradford Footman *gods, little ‘g’

  • @aislingmeehan9862
    @aislingmeehan9862 5 років тому

    I mean, all gods are made up, not just the pagan ones. 😉 Sorry, as a pagan myself, that bit stands out to me.

  • @afyounai
    @afyounai 7 років тому

    whats wrong with the beard :))

  • @jasonpatrick7258
    @jasonpatrick7258 7 років тому

    Are you really raise the meat animals on your farm with only grass 100% of the time

    • @Anamericanhomestead
      @Anamericanhomestead  7 років тому

      We try. We did some grain in the winter. With this new breed, we will move to alfalfa pellets and not use any grain.

    • @jasonpatrick7258
      @jasonpatrick7258 7 років тому +1

      I just was wondering because I been raising animals from a young kid and my whole family has also and we had to give them at least corn if not a combination of feed

    • @Greenwashedhipppie
      @Greenwashedhipppie 7 років тому +1

      Jason Patrick I raise hair sheep on only grass and hay. The key is plenty of grass and hay. I do feed a mineral tub in the fall. I also lamb much latter than most people, so I have plenty of grass when the lambs drop. over winter I feed 8 adult sheep, and now have 9 lambs. I also use chickens and now muscovy ducks on the same pasture. This greatly helps with parasites. I have not wormed in years.

    • @jasonpatrick7258
      @jasonpatrick7258 7 років тому

      Can you do cows and pigs the same

    • @Greenwashedhipppie
      @Greenwashedhipppie 7 років тому

      Jason Patrick Cow yes. Pigs, yes if you want to chance having parasites eat a human brain. Swine that have access to pasture will eat rodents and contract parasites that will eat the brain of anyone that eats that swine. Also if pasture swine ever has access to a nursing cow it will ripe out the utter, eat lambs, eat chickens ect. Swine wreak pasture turning it over making next to useless for other animals. If you look up feed conversation rates of farm animals its all based on grain. Pigs are not going to gain weight on grass like a ruminant. Yes, you could make money peddling "pasture" pork to people. You could also peddle crack. Pasture pork is red meat, not white like pigs raised inside pig hell factories . Moving it may be hard, because people are brain washed by the pork the other white meat jingle. I grew up with pigs, and its a stupid amount of work. Pigs are none native to the USA and have no roll in ecology. If it where up to me all pigs be driven into the sea. Thats the long logical answer. The short answer is the Father in Heaven said swine is an abomination to consume.

  • @thisguyrighthere3647
    @thisguyrighthere3647 7 років тому

    In the Bible the SUN is GOD.

    • @Anamericanhomestead
      @Anamericanhomestead  7 років тому +2

      What Bible are you reading?? Chapter and verse please.

    • @thisguyrighthere3647
      @thisguyrighthere3647 7 років тому +2

      The SUN God was perverted into "Son of God." Moderate research shows countless astrological references. Constantine took various books, literature, scripture and belief systems that were important to the unconfirmed masses ("Pagan" Gods- sun, moon etc); altered, added and omitted information, put them together in one book and called it The Bible....Word of God.

  • @doubled3119
    @doubled3119 7 років тому +1

    The better the soil the harsher the laws on living off grid for the most part come to think of it actually. Imagine that!