Це відео не доступне.
Перепрошуємо.

Farming in Switzerland!

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 16 сер 2024
  • Farming in Switzerland! Today we got to tour two farms in Switzerland. The first farm is a very modern farm with a lot of automation and technology. They also had a handful of very nice tractors and equipment. The next farm we visited was more on the traditional side of a Swiss dairy. He milked 20 Brown Swiss in a tie stall barn similar to ours. You could tell he focuses a lot on his herd's genetics and makes sure every cow is very efficient and healthy. Thank you to both of these farms for giving us a tour!
    Subscribe Here
    / gierokfarms
    Check out our Instagram for a behind the scenes look!
    / gierok.farms
    Also you can watch us on Facebook!
    / gierok-farms-105252235...
    Our Tiktok
    / gierok.farms
    If you want to send us mail you can here!
    Gierok Farms
    P.O. Box 706
    Eau Claire, WI
    54702

КОМЕНТАРІ • 115

  • @nashcobb3056
    @nashcobb3056 Рік тому +5

    thank you

  • @jdeere8850
    @jdeere8850 Рік тому +6

    This is even closer to us.
    The JD dealer Forrer Landtechnik is only 5 minutes from here. 🚜

  • @davidkimmel4216
    @davidkimmel4216 Рік тому +5

    Thank You Thank You so much for taking the time out of your vacation to talk farming in the community you were visiting.
    Beautiful farms and beautiful community. Thanks again 😊

  • @wolfeislandexcavating5426
    @wolfeislandexcavating5426 Рік тому +4

    Thanks for sharing

  • @hakimlassouag7297
    @hakimlassouag7297 Рік тому +4

    Injoying your hiliday.

  • @stanhensley3082
    @stanhensley3082 Рік тому +6

    So very very cool 😎. Thanks 😊.

  • @virginiagraber9070
    @virginiagraber9070 Рік тому +3

    Thank you. WOW. 👏👏👏🥁🥁😊(Naaman)

  • @br927
    @br927 Рік тому +3

    I know a guy that works on installing & maintaining DeLaval robots! I have a John Deere! 52 B, and a 53 massey harris # 15 ground drive manure spreader!!

  • @georgeleray5657
    @georgeleray5657 Рік тому +4

    That's what I also wanted to see arin great video and trip I also live across the street from all Holstein dairy farm her in north central Massachusetts they milk just under 200 cow a big percentage of there milk go into Gouda cheese at there own plant on the farm.

  • @anthonyhengst2908
    @anthonyhengst2908 Рік тому +5

    I understand that Swiss Farms are almost always clean. Like show places. Someday I would be excited to see that myself.

    • @7pdude
      @7pdude Рік тому +1

      it's the entire country and the way of how the people like to keep their stuff.

  • @grantburnett
    @grantburnett Рік тому +4

    Thank you so much for shareing such a nice video.

  • @artszabo1015
    @artszabo1015 Рік тому +5

    Awesome!! Excellent video!!
    Art & Melissa from Ohio

  • @heatherkohlwey8379
    @heatherkohlwey8379 Рік тому +4

    Thank you so much for sharing this video. I'm so happy for you to be able to go there and be with your family and tour the farms. I now have a strange craving for Swiss cheese. Stay safe, and God bless.

  • @yolundadelorenzo6840
    @yolundadelorenzo6840 Рік тому +3

    Very very cool!

  • @dennis82468
    @dennis82468 Рік тому +11

    Man...their machines and farm is spotless. Very beautiful

  • @geraldsundberg3610
    @geraldsundberg3610 Рік тому +4

    There are some very good videos on youtube on haying in Switzerland.

  • @johnwoody4905
    @johnwoody4905 Рік тому +3

    Good video farmers there must make a lot more money. The first one must have over 3 million investment in equipment. Take care be safe and well.

  • @johnhenderson299
    @johnhenderson299 Рік тому +4

    Great video

  • @bapasrcadventures3619
    @bapasrcadventures3619 Рік тому +13

    So awesome to see the farms there. I can’t believe the automation. Kind of cool but I love the old ways.

  • @DonWelter
    @DonWelter Рік тому +3

    Looks like they take a LOT of pride in upkeep of their farms!!!

  • @andreas515c2
    @andreas515c2 Рік тому +3

    Hi, very nice video.

  • @kenrobertson4569
    @kenrobertson4569 Рік тому +5

    some nice equipment for only 55 cows.

  • @tombauer1582
    @tombauer1582 Рік тому +3

    Thanks for sharing the video. Very interesting!

  • @bobrat
    @bobrat Рік тому +4

    Thanks for taking us along on the tours. Beautiful Contry and Farms ♡

  • @robertmarino2158
    @robertmarino2158 Рік тому +6

    Wow , what a great job you did in talking about the dairy farms on your visit , amazing , thank you , you made it happen George & mom must be very proud also , stay safe !

  • @Serg.81
    @Serg.81 Рік тому +4

    🐄👍👍👍

  • @jerryhill681
    @jerryhill681 Рік тому +4

    Amazing the automation on such a small farm. They must get more for their milk.

    • @brockwaymt
      @brockwaymt Рік тому

      Seriously. In upstate NY most farms that size went out of business years ago.

  • @michaelbenson2024
    @michaelbenson2024 Рік тому +3

    Wow
    How nice to see both farms and their approach to animal husbandry.Brown Swiss has always been my favorite dairy cow but our farm had 100 yr old stock from Great grandads stockers.Thanks so much for the tour. Your bride must be so proud of your dedication to your craft.

  • @tommcmillan3143
    @tommcmillan3143 Рік тому +4

    Very nice! Thanks for sharing!

  • @TheJimmybud
    @TheJimmybud Рік тому +4

    What a awesome video, learned a bunch about Switzerland dairy farms

  • @drknockers5716
    @drknockers5716 Рік тому +4

    Awesome video

  • @doncc6080
    @doncc6080 Рік тому +3

    Nice to see small farms in Europe doing well. Wish we had more here in The USA.
    Thanks for the tour really enjoyed it.

    • @7pdude
      @7pdude Рік тому +2

      over here dairy is quite the challenge for small farms, too. i'm not too familiar with the swiss market but over in germany you're in trouble if you milk less than a 100 cows. due to recent events milk prices have recovered quite a bit but there's still a lot to catch up with from the last years.

    • @erik5757
      @erik5757 Рік тому

      Well, europe is big, and alot of countries that are very diffrent from eachother. In Sweden is quite hard to survive as a smal farmer. Most here today is medium and large farms.

  • @350mack
    @350mack Рік тому +3

    I like the new ways but ill always love the old ways. Just a better way

  • @jasonswenson8782
    @jasonswenson8782 Рік тому +4

    I must admit I'm jealous!!!

  • @guernseygoodness
    @guernseygoodness Рік тому +10

    Wow, I love how the dairy barns have wood siding and they are so aesthetically pleasing. I’m tired of seeing the same rectangle, metal sided barns/buildings with no eaves here in the US.

  • @joutdoorsmen23
    @joutdoorsmen23 Рік тому +3

    Beautiful thanks for sharing your trip

  • @munierahmed5669
    @munierahmed5669 5 місяців тому +3

    Beautiful ❤️❤️❤️ village

  • @geraldsundberg3610
    @geraldsundberg3610 Рік тому +5

    They must have some very good quality hay.

    • @7pdude
      @7pdude Рік тому

      yeah, presumably harvested still quite wet and then dried at the farm. this way you keep a lot more leaves which often get destroyed / ripped off by tedder and pickup tines.

  • @reginabraok939
    @reginabraok939 Рік тому +5

    Beautiful experience

  • @rogerjessie4137
    @rogerjessie4137 Рік тому +4

    Wow what a great video keep them rolling!

  • @mdismailhossain-hl7vb
    @mdismailhossain-hl7vb Рік тому +2

    Nice farm nice video I love Switzerland from Bangladesh

  • @Nico-xv3sm
    @Nico-xv3sm Рік тому +3

    Nice video!

  • @atticuskilby515
    @atticuskilby515 Рік тому +4

    Cheese making is an art form and the Swiss are known for their magnificent cheeses. Did you try some while there? I find it interesting that they do not feed silage to cows that produce milk for the cheese. Thanks for sharing your trip with us.

    • @7pdude
      @7pdude Рік тому

      silage contains certain micro bacteria that'll find its way through the cow into the milk. if you only make young and soft cheese out of it, it's normally not a big issue. but the longer you want to mature the chesse (older, harder cheese) the higher the risk becomes that the micro bacteria blows up the cheese like yeast does to a dough. once the cheese rind is cracked you can no longer store or mature the cheese but have to eat it soon. so you have to filter the bacteria out of the milk (chemicals, mechanical filtration etc.) or don't put it in the milk in the first place.

  • @gregfuller4318
    @gregfuller4318 Рік тому +5

    The Iowa farmer has that system in his place

  • @antonfeichtenhofer911
    @antonfeichtenhofer911 Рік тому +3

    The reason for feeding no silage is that the creamery produces rawmilk-cheese like Emmentaler. Byproducts from silage can get to the milk and affect the quality of the cheese during the maturing process. And maybe they don´t feed egg-white for protein, it´s probably a case of "lost in translation" because protein is "Eiweiss" in German which is egg (Ei) + white (weiss). Thanks for the interesting video!

  • @robertmacleod4058
    @robertmacleod4058 Рік тому +9

    There is an award wining cheesemaker near me -Jasper Hill - that only feeds dry hay to their cows. They absolutely believe there is a significant effect on cheese flavor.

    • @rogerschlitter5116
      @rogerschlitter5116 Рік тому +2

      I grew up on a dairy farm and the local cheese plant could tell when cows were put on pasture in the early summer. Most people did not like taste compared to when the cows were primarily eating dry feed.

    • @christophniggli4750
      @christophniggli4750 Рік тому +2

      In Switzerland if they make cheese out of raw milk your not allowed to feed silage only hay or let them out on pasture, the silage bacteria's disturb the fermentation from the cheese

  • @prescotthuidekoper658
    @prescotthuidekoper658 Рік тому +2

    Modern version of Cow Bells!

  • @dave_from_mo
    @dave_from_mo Рік тому +4

    Just awesome farms

  • @jazzerbyte
    @jazzerbyte Рік тому +4

    That was a great set of equipment - the automated hay dispenser was amazing.

  • @hayfork100
    @hayfork100 Рік тому +4

    What an education. The milking robots were a shock to me (a non-farmer). Very interesting to how they do things in Switzerland.

    • @hughmarcus1
      @hughmarcus1 Рік тому

      Robotic milking is very common across Europe now, though 90% of the kit is Lely. This farm is really small to have converted to robots. Typically the farm size needs to be between 120-200 cows to justify the conversion costs.

  • @colorado1088
    @colorado1088 Рік тому +5

    The new barn addition looked like it had huge wooden beams. I thought Europe harvested its large timber long ago.

  • @mikeburgan7675
    @mikeburgan7675 Рік тому +2

    Awesome!

  • @FreeloaderFarms
    @FreeloaderFarms Рік тому +5

    Great video! Those were both very beautiful farms, and awesome scenery!

  • @jamesmarsh4957
    @jamesmarsh4957 Рік тому +3

    really interesting , so good to see how things are done in other places in the world , thanks for showing us

  • @Alejandrogarcia-fp1fr
    @Alejandrogarcia-fp1fr Рік тому +2

    nice video

  • @kimcwhite6509
    @kimcwhite6509 Рік тому +5

    So fun & interesting to see your ancestors/country and how they operate their dairies. I have to say, I love the Swiss cows better. Idk if they are healthier or have better longevity, but isn't their milk higher is fat? Really beautiful farms, both of them! Thx💙

  • @ryanwaege7251
    @ryanwaege7251 Рік тому +2

    I'd guess the creamery makes their cheese with unpasteurized milk. Which means no heat to destroy toxic byproducts of fungal or bacterial activity in silage.

  • @timstevens2866
    @timstevens2866 Рік тому +2

    Interesting tire tread on that Deere, looks like a cross between tractor and truck tires

  • @lwinnekins4303
    @lwinnekins4303 Рік тому +3

    Interesting to see how it's done elsewhere. Automation is great, but the investment has to be huge. It would be interesting to see the numbers justifying the investment. Happy for you that you and your wife are able to see family in Switzerland.

    • @kswaynes7569
      @kswaynes7569 Рік тому

      You have to block out the old way of thinking that you as the farmer have to do everything yourself. In the US, the cost of an employee is over double his wages and he/she is just an employee not the owner (attitude towards the animals or machinery). The automation operates 24/7/365 with maintenance, the owner wants rest and sleep, his family wants vacation and activities. Automation is not cheap but it provides the owner, his time, to concentrate on his animals or diversity of the operation or his equipment. The hardest part in retrofitting a farm to automation is usually the existing facility, it's easier/cheaper to start with a new, dedicated to automation, facility. Still, it's not a cheap investment but a long term investment, especially for a father that wants the farm to stretch generations. Remember the old song "How you gonna keep them down on the farm, after they see Parie (Paris)"

  • @LoganLong6620
    @LoganLong6620 Рік тому +4

    Beautiful Dairy farms. I wish all the dairy’s here in the US were like that. I agree that 62lb average on dry hay diets are milking very well.

  • @Dusty22-fox
    @Dusty22-fox 6 місяців тому +2

    Cute dog

  • @arthurok327
    @arthurok327 Рік тому +2

    Howdy ya'll,
    Ya that was really Cool seeing all that automation going on, very interesting and definitely less labor intensive, on the down side, that's also alot more things to go wrong.. I thought it a little strange, that they don't feed silage, we've always as part of the feed we give to our herd, is silage, I'm curious to know what that does to the taste of they're milk and cheese ??
    Oh and one more thing, I had to turn down the volume on my t.v. not sure why you felt you needed to hey all threw the video lol
    Great video with Great content, enjoyed that, Stay safe and Farm on my Friends, Peace

    • @slobee3448
      @slobee3448 Рік тому +1

      When old people try a hay milk, they all say it tastes just like it used to in their childhood, when silage was non existent, just hay feed over the winter and grazing the rest of the year. So is the taste of meat, unbelievably tender. Hay products are also more expensive, but quality always is🤷🏼‍♀️
      As for no silage feed, its byproducts can get into milk, and since milk used for traditional swiss cheeses is not pasteurised, it can cause a lot of problems.

  • @ronzezulka6646
    @ronzezulka6646 Рік тому +1

    Inspirational

  • @marionstorm9004
    @marionstorm9004 Рік тому +3

    The horns of the cattle were all growing back away from the face. Do they use anything to train the horn direction so they're less dangerous to other cows? Are horned Brown Swiss more agressive (bossy) toward polled cows?

  • @mcd5082
    @mcd5082 Рік тому +2

    Beautiful

  • @jasonstone6499
    @jasonstone6499 Рік тому +2

    Looks amazing!!!

  • @Adam_Poirier
    @Adam_Poirier Рік тому +3

    That robotic crane is nuts. The feed mixer is also robotic?

    • @7pdude
      @7pdude Рік тому

      the feeding process can be automated by almost 100%. you have to restock the piles where the crane picks up the different components but as long as the crane has something to pick up it can throw it in the mixer that can then drive autonomously along the cows to lay down the feed. also allows for different mixes for different groups (like dry cows).

  • @bryanginder5903
    @bryanginder5903 Рік тому

    That brownswiss calf looks like it was mixed with a linebacker the way it's face looked and back!!

  • @stevebarlow4448
    @stevebarlow4448 Рік тому +10

    It doesn't matter how much the cows are making each day, it matters how much profit there is. You can't have all these swanky overheads and high feed cost if it is not paying for it's self

  • @strong40
    @strong40 Рік тому +2

    The farmers must get paid better in Switzerland than the US

  • @jonathanbarone4708
    @jonathanbarone4708 Рік тому +1

  • @NeilGastonguay
    @NeilGastonguay Рік тому +2

    How are such small farms profitable? Do they get government subsidies? All that automation must be a big initial outlay.

    • @jamesmarsh4957
      @jamesmarsh4957 Рік тому +1

      they do most do in the EU , except for UK where we in a right mess because of our incompetent Government

    • @7pdude
      @7pdude Рік тому +2

      ag subsidies are THE biggest expense, however they come with a lot of rules and control over how you have to run your farm. plus it's a huge redistribution of wealth because the subsidies keep the prices in the stores low so less wealthier people can live a good life, too with the wealthier high-tax-payers paying part of their meals.

  • @dave_from_mo
    @dave_from_mo Рік тому +2

    I thought I heard parts of Europe weren't allowed to use fermented feeds by law, so now silage.

    • @UnkleAL1962
      @UnkleAL1962 Рік тому

      no GMO grains allowed over there either....I think - no expert on that.

    • @7pdude
      @7pdude Рік тому +3

      @@UnkleAL1962 you can use imported GMO feed, but you are not allowed to crow GMO crops. some farms run under a non-gmo program by choice as something in between conventional and organic. i don't know of any legislative restrictions on silage, even a lot of organic farms use (and are allowed to use) silage. however there are creamerys that only take silage-free milk because silage brings certain micro bacteria into the milk that can blow up your cheese, especially the old ones.

  • @gregj3515
    @gregj3515 Рік тому +1

    farming as it should be....

  • @mikeduffy7271
    @mikeduffy7271 Рік тому

    Great video. Are u going to la forge. It must be just down the road😃

  • @nirvairsingh1678
    @nirvairsingh1678 Рік тому

    👍👍👍

  • @dusanklemencic3424
    @dusanklemencic3424 Рік тому +1

    Don,t be to exiting.
    This is not comercial farming,here comes a part of income from some another source or subventions.
    I farming 400 km east from Swiss in EU and I know wery well how comercial farming goes.
    55 cow,s can not cowered all this machinery

  • @Blackwellll3066
    @Blackwellll3066 Рік тому +2

    Really cool video, Europe is weird when it comes to farm equipment cuz ya don't see the big equipment like ya do in Wisconsin....

    • @Blackwellll3066
      @Blackwellll3066 Рік тому

      @Garnet Holman dam that's small 9 feet 8 inches

    • @7pdude
      @7pdude Рік тому

      @@Blackwellll3066 in europe there aren't many rural areas left. lot's of other infrastructure, buildings, roads, people ... when you travel from field to field chances are the road leads through narrow village and city centers where there's buildings right next to the street.

  • @gregburris4947
    @gregburris4947 Рік тому +1

    How are automatic milkers Justified with a 50 cow herd? I've heard of them in the US but not with that small of a herd. Loved the video.

    • @7pdude
      @7pdude Рік тому +2

      boils down to supply and demand. especially for old cheese, creamerys like to use silage-free milk since silage brings in certain micro bacteria that'll blow up your cheese when you plan to make an old / mature one. and there's not too much supply of silage-free milk since it's normally easier and cheaper to use silage.

    • @christophniggli4750
      @christophniggli4750 Рік тому

      In Switzerland farming is really heavy subsidized from the government I would say half of the farm income

    • @7pdude
      @7pdude Рік тому

      @@christophniggli4750 that's even true for all of europe. helps the governments to get their hands on private property (subs come with many rules farmers have to comply with) and is a tool of redistribution of wealth: prices in stores stay low, so even the less wealthy can afford pretty much anything with the high-tax-payers paying part of their meals.

  • @oskarkessler2957
    @oskarkessler2957 Рік тому

    DOS the farm with milk Roboter have an electrical emergency backup system

  • @evenwold8120
    @evenwold8120 8 місяців тому

    go to norway pls

  • @bobrat
    @bobrat Рік тому

    Does the modern farm have a social media account?

  • @shirleysmith159
    @shirleysmith159 Рік тому

    Not to get personal but what is the little bag on your waist

  • @benrogers5808
    @benrogers5808 Рік тому

    I didn’t see any of those annoying bells that effect the cows hearing.

    • @7pdude
      @7pdude Рік тому +2

      bells are mostly used in the mountains where cows can spread across huge areas with lots of trees and are therefore often hard to spot just by eye but can be heard when they move.

  • @jerry-fu7yb
    @jerry-fu7yb Рік тому +1

    Stop yelling.

  • @sureshv.a.ssuresh2454
    @sureshv.a.ssuresh2454 Рік тому

    Sir I need someone work

  • @davelively1901
    @davelively1901 Рік тому

    Well Swiss cheese has more value :)

  • @dr.michaelr.foreman2170
    @dr.michaelr.foreman2170 Рік тому +1

    LOL You don't need to yell. I am not deaf.

    • @7pdude
      @7pdude Рік тому

      difficulties when it comes to voice overs ... can be a bit a challenge to match all levels from live recording as well post production

    • @dr.michaelr.foreman2170
      @dr.michaelr.foreman2170 Рік тому

      @@7pdude LOL I was only teasing. I am content creator too so I know.

  • @akhtarali9230
    @akhtarali9230 2 місяці тому

    Hallo Guten taag friend ich mach dise job bitte sende off mich saponcer visa ?