You need to offer workshops for people that want to start farms. I ran 20-30 Beefmasters here in Texas for years, and the younger generation is starting to show interest in farming/cattle.
Am 21, worked with horses and dogs my whole life. This year will be the year I purchase some land, trying to get ahead of the game as most people inherit their land
Every now and again, a You Tube recommendation thows up a gem. I work in IT and live in about as town environment as possible (London, UK) but this channel is wonderful. Pete, you have a wonderful way of explaining things that is rare. Great channel.
Just came across your channel. Thanks for your excellent work. You've done an amazing job creating a comprehensive, rigorous, and definitive guide to small sustainable grass-fed livestock farming. But the most important part is your sharing the heart, the love, the culture that is farming. I was in school in the early 80s when waves of family farms were "failing" (financially). My right wing roommate coldly said "If they can't compete in the free market, they shouldn't be farming. " While I thought to myself "Farming is the very foundation of civilization. If a farmer can't support their family farming, we are all in trouble. "
Pete, in this video you mentioned cull heifers and making decisions about sending certain animals off. If you make another video about herd management or such could you describe what your looking for in breeding stock and also cull animals?
Great video. My Dad and Grand Dad were both cattlemen. They had an AI business in the early 60s, very early in the AI technology. They were both pilots and had several airplanes for the business and went all over the country inseminating cows. We were a 100% Black Angus operation. Again great video.
I really like these informational videos I'm interested in starting a farm because has about 70-80 acres of land that is unused. I've always been interested in this career field. I'm 14 by the way I just wanted to say that so you know you have young fans out there.
Hi another young guy(16) interested in farming here. Im from the netherlands. My parants have a 150 acre farm. What other farm channels are you watching, i really like richard perkins and ive watched some of joel saletin videos.
EXCELLENT INFORMATION FOR A LAYMAN LIKE MYSELF!!! U BROKE DOWN EVERY ASPECT FOR THE BEGINNER IN MY OPINION…. THANK YOU FOR SUCH VALUABLE AND MUCH APPRECIATED INFORMATION!!!! ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️🙏🏿🙏🏿🙏🏿🙏🏿🙏🏿🙏🏿
Hi Peter, great video. I'm a new subscriber, and I'm finding your presentations enjoyable and informative. I'm at the startup in my farming venture. I decided I needed a lifestyle change after a lifetime career of combined military and security protection. I'm 2 generations removed from an ancestorial dairy farming legacy, so I thought I would return to my heritage, so to speak. I'm located in rural NSW Australia, which once was prime cattle grazing country, but is now mainly planted out with viticulture and has become one of Australia's premier wine regions. I have managed to secure a blank 40-acre grass land block with a good water supply. I plan to establish a small Lowline Angus breeding herd, which I believe is similar in characteristics to your Dexters. From this foundation herd, I hope to generate income through a boutique paddock to plate butchery providing organic grass fed angus to the table. Thank you for your generosity in putting out these informative videos.
Excellent video that is full of great information, as usual. Your teaching style and the information you share is fantastic. We are considering starting a small beef herd and you are 100% responsible for making us seriously consider going with Dexter's.
We have spayed our feeder heifers for the last number of years and I wish I had started this 20 years ago. The gains are substantial (100+ pounds & we grass finish) and the ease on fences and herd management is SO worth it. We pay our vet to come out and by the end of the day we average about $15-$20 a head to accomplish. A decent head gate or preg shoot is all you need. I was stubborn and fought my vets advice for years, but I assure you once you start the program you will never go back. Great job on your herd management!
Pete! You went in depth of this stuff before but not this good! I learned new terminology and learned what is best! Thank you for this informative video Pete.
My compliments on your finely tuned and efficient operation! Every once in a while some turkey shows up and throws the operation into a tizzy, but this is really well done!
Very good Pete. But the other option/s are to buy in weaner calves or yearlings (if you are really small &/or don't want to breed your own) or partner up with another farmer (or two...) and share a bull (or two, three...) Both of these are a bit tricky, but as Joel says "there's no perfection this side of eternity."
Great video, Mr. Pete. You always explain things in an understandable way that gives me confidence to try new things. We raised a few goats and sheep for a couple of years and harvested our own calf once. We are considering buying a bred cow or two calves. Thanks for sharing this.
Great video! I love how informative your channel is :) I also love how tiny your Dexters are! My neighbors keep very large Herefords and the other farms around me primarily raise Angus. I'm concentrating on sheep at the moment, but one day I'd love to get some dairy cows.
Thanks Pete for the information. We are just about to pick up our first bull for our small belted Galloway stud, 4 cows. Even though we are in a different country & climate you have such practical advice that has helped us on our journey. 🍻
We end up leasing a bull every year for breeding purposes. With our more mild climate we get them in the off season so our calves are born early spring. We only have 2-3 to be bred. And not enough space for a bull anyway.
Pete first, I thoroughly enjoy your videos. They are extremely informative, thought provoking, humorous (yes I do cringe at some) and really, really well put together. I have watched this video a few times and every time I learn more. I have about 15+ acres of pasture in southwest Virginia. I am in the process of ordering/buying 4 or 5 heifers (hopefully a spread of age, but still less than 4 years). I am getting Red Ruby Devon (more of a rare breed - but VERY gentle, grass eating/converting genetics and good mothers) so I will be using AI ( which due to rarity of breed will be $$) for a while as my herd builds (and hopefully I can find more land). I am new to this... so I will be gluing myself to your videos. Thank you!!
I think a great "Small Farmer Sunday" video would be a discussion on where to go for help and support, particularly if you're starting out. You're a great storyteller and I'd love to hear that story (admittedly you may have covered this I haven't seen 100% of your videos yet). I don't know what kind of farming your dad did, is he one of your resources? This sort of info would be particularly helpful to families with no farm roots on where they can go beyond family to get questions answered if they're stuck.
Great info, I am starting small with Santa Gertrudis cattle on 69acres with 10 heifers AI bull #1, the offspring will be breed to second AI bull #2 I will keep some cavs heifers for replacements, the rest will sale to feedlot. Small cattle ranch in Texas
Great video on managing cattle on a smaller ranch. We got some gems from here. We artificially inseminate now and determining if that's the best route for us.
I worked on a dairy farm about 35 years ago in central New york. The farmer I worked for had holsteins. He had quit using bulls years earlier because they were so unmanageable and dangerous. Even his milking cows were bossy and mean. I would get beat up pretty good by them. I can only imagine the attitude that the bulls must have had for him to get rid of them. I was only 14 years old at the time. My experience with them was bad enough that I wouldn't even consider them as a breed to raise in the future.
I’m from Florida, we run mostly angus. Around here I have never heard of anyone being concerned with inbreeding. It’s very common for people to keep heifers from their heard and then turn them loose with the bulls
Hey Pete you should try unrolling hay in the fields in the winter to feed your cows. It’s not a waste of hay I’m down in Ct and started doing it last year and it’s made a huge difference in my fields when they grow back in the spring. Farm strong!
Thanks. I would rather pass the hay through the cattle before spreading it on the fields. Our fields are impassable with the tractor for a good part of the winter, and as I said, they get trashed by cattle traffic when we’re in mud season.
Never realized you were in central nys. Where abouts are you? Love your channel and the way you farm. Reminds me of my dad and grandfathers way of farming. Easy to see you care for your animals. Also,we use similar machinery. (Old and worn out but still gettin it done). 656&574 gasers. 477 nh haybine,276 nh baler
I love the gentleness and friendliness of your cows.. Do you handle them in a certain way to facilitate this? We are new to owning cattle. I just bought my first Dexter heifer a week ago. Although used to human interaction, she is still wary and won’t allow herself to be touched. I have her in a pipe pen, while working on gentling her. We have 3 lowline Aberdeen Angus in an adjoining paddock. They came off of a very large operation, were unhandled also, but would come up to a (feed) truck. I’ve bucket trained them and, after about 3 weeks, I am beginning to get them eating out of my hand and (occasionally) sneaking a quick pat on the face. We have about the same amount of acreage as you, but it was formerly just a pasture, so not as much infrastructure as you do. This little Dexter girl, I’m hoping to make a milk cow.. she’ll come up close to eat cubes, but not yet from my hand.. I don’t want to turn her out with the others until I can touch her and (ideally) be able to halter her and lead.. we are getting a two more lowlines this week. That will give us a total starting herd of 6 (including my heifer), 2 bred and due soon, and 2 possibly bred and due in the summer/fall. That is enough for us for now... This video is coming at the perfect time for us... we’ve been discussing the pros and cons of getting a bull.. even maybe a 2021 bull calf to grow and be our herd bull, for a while at least...
Very good system, yrs ago, 40 or so, my father RIP, kept polled Herefords, bulls travelled between growers, is it just untraditional or lack of nearby other Dexter growers that prevents this in your area. Great channel, reminisce a lot watching it.
Thanks for all of the info Pete! It sounds like I shouldn't hesitate to buy a 2 year old steer in the spring to grass finish in order to butcher in the fall. I've always thought I needed yearlings for better meat. That definitely would open up more options for me in my area.
You need to offer workshops for people that want to start farms. I ran 20-30 Beefmasters here in Texas for years, and the younger generation is starting to show interest in farming/cattle.
Im 29.... looking at land in TN to homestead and farm
Am 21, worked with horses and dogs my whole life. This year will be the year I purchase some land, trying to get ahead of the game as most people inherit their land
I’m 27 and you aren’t wrong
I just inherited a house with no plans to sell. I just can't buy land right now. That's my hold up. There's not enough information on how to do this.
@@JasonEyerlyit’s unfortunately prohibitive, just save save save. Land is so expensive these days
Every now and again, a You Tube recommendation thows up a gem. I work in IT and live in about as town environment as possible (London, UK) but this channel is wonderful. Pete, you have a wonderful way of explaining things that is rare. Great channel.
Thank you Vannor!!
Just came across your channel.
Thanks for your excellent work.
You've done an amazing job creating a comprehensive, rigorous, and definitive guide to small sustainable grass-fed livestock farming.
But the most important part is your sharing the heart, the love, the culture that is farming.
I was in school in the early 80s when waves of family farms were "failing" (financially).
My right wing roommate coldly said "If they can't compete in the free market, they shouldn't be farming. "
While I thought to myself "Farming is the very foundation of civilization. If a farmer can't support their family farming, we are all in trouble. "
Thank you! Large-scale industrial farming left the free market long ago...
The small farms didn't "fail," it was a designed corporate takeover.
Thanks for sharing buddy god bless you and your family
Thanks to all service members thank you for everything you have sacrificed for our freedom
Thank you for answering all my questions about cattle.
Perfect timing! I so enjoy your channel. Y'all have a Happy and safe, Memorial Day🇺🇸🇺🇸
Coco would like one of those giant cow brushes. Looks like she is using you as a scratching post. =D
I'm happy you made a book pete ! Looking forward to it 😃
Have a great Memorial day weekend and Thanks for sharing the Cow 🐄 being Baptized as well.
Dad is tell you did a great job 👏.? Have a great week and be safe. Thank you from us.
Thank you Stephen!
Pete, in this video you mentioned cull heifers and making decisions about sending certain animals off. If you make another video about herd management or such could you describe what your looking for in breeding stock and also cull animals?
This was the most informative video I've ever seen. Thanks for sharing🙏
Great video. My Dad and Grand Dad were both cattlemen. They had an AI business in the early 60s, very early in the AI technology. They were both pilots and had several airplanes for the business and went all over the country inseminating cows. We were a 100% Black Angus operation. Again great video.
I really like these informational videos I'm interested in starting a farm because has about 70-80 acres of land that is unused. I've always been interested in this career field. I'm 14 by the way I just wanted to say that so you know you have young fans out there.
Hi another young guy(16) interested in farming here. Im from the netherlands. My parants have a 150 acre farm.
What other farm channels are you watching, i really like richard perkins and ive watched some of joel saletin videos.
EXCELLENT INFORMATION FOR A LAYMAN LIKE MYSELF!!! U BROKE DOWN EVERY ASPECT FOR THE BEGINNER IN MY OPINION…. THANK YOU FOR SUCH VALUABLE AND MUCH APPRECIATED INFORMATION!!!! ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️🙏🏿🙏🏿🙏🏿🙏🏿🙏🏿🙏🏿
This is so helpful to know how to move forward with our sheep and cattle. Thanks Pete!
Excellent primer on raising cattle on a relatively small farm.
Continued success. 👍
Far and away the best starter video I've seen. I loved the annual plan explained.
Hi Peter, great video. I'm a new subscriber, and I'm finding your presentations enjoyable and informative. I'm at the startup in my farming venture. I decided I needed a lifestyle change after a lifetime career of combined military and security protection. I'm 2 generations removed from an ancestorial dairy farming legacy, so I thought I would return to my heritage, so to speak. I'm located in rural NSW Australia, which once was prime cattle grazing country, but is now mainly planted out with viticulture and has become one of Australia's premier wine regions.
I have managed to secure a blank 40-acre grass land block with a good water supply. I plan to establish a small Lowline Angus breeding herd, which I believe is similar in characteristics to your Dexters. From this foundation herd, I hope to generate income through a boutique paddock to plate butchery providing organic grass fed angus to the table.
Thank you for your generosity in putting out these informative videos.
Excellent video that is full of great information, as usual. Your teaching style and the information you share is fantastic. We are considering starting a small beef herd and you are 100% responsible for making us seriously consider going with Dexter's.
Yes, we stay away from grain also. Can,t wait for our first beef
Very fascinating ! I’m a city boy raised , secret prepper and live my homesteading life through a few great channels! Thank you for sharing
We have spayed our feeder heifers for the last number of years and I wish I had started this 20 years ago. The gains are substantial (100+ pounds & we grass finish) and the ease on fences and herd management is SO worth it. We pay our vet to come out and by the end of the day we average about $15-$20 a head to accomplish. A decent head gate or preg shoot is all you need. I was stubborn and fought my vets advice for years, but I assure you once you start the program you will never go back. Great job on your herd management!
Why spay them if you don’t mind me asking?
Thank you nice break down on your farm planning process
Pete! You went in depth of this stuff before but not this good! I learned new terminology and learned what is best! Thank you for this informative video Pete.
This is a truly great video that answers so many questions for someone even thinking about doing this. Love your channel!
My compliments on your finely tuned and efficient operation! Every once in a while some turkey shows up and throws the operation into a tizzy, but this is really well done!
Hi Pete. Great information. You’ve helped me tremendously. Thank you.
Very good Pete.
But the other option/s are to buy in weaner calves or yearlings (if you are really small &/or don't want to breed your own) or partner up with another farmer (or two...) and share a bull (or two, three...)
Both of these are a bit tricky, but as Joel says "there's no perfection this side of eternity."
Great video, Mr. Pete. You always explain things in an understandable way that gives me confidence to try new things. We raised a few goats and sheep for a couple of years and harvested our own calf once. We are considering buying a bred cow or two calves. Thanks for sharing this.
Thank you for educating me as a city boy and now at 55 retiring to start being a type rancher lol thx
We already feed the bull in Washington, plus the bulls on the farm.
Great video! I love how informative your channel is :)
I also love how tiny your Dexters are! My neighbors keep very large Herefords and the other farms around me primarily raise Angus. I'm concentrating on sheep at the moment, but one day I'd love to get some dairy cows.
Thanks Pete for the information. We are just about to pick up our first bull for our small belted Galloway stud, 4 cows. Even though we are in a different country & climate you have such practical advice that has helped us on our journey. 🍻
We end up leasing a bull every year for breeding purposes. With our more mild climate we get them in the off season so our calves are born early spring. We only have 2-3 to be bred. And not enough space for a bull anyway.
Love the information you share with us. The cows must have been thrill when you let them move to a new pasture area. Be well.
Pete first, I thoroughly enjoy your videos. They are extremely informative, thought provoking, humorous (yes I do cringe at some) and really, really well put together. I have watched this video a few times and every time I learn more. I have about 15+ acres of pasture in southwest Virginia. I am in the process of ordering/buying 4 or 5 heifers (hopefully a spread of age, but still less than 4 years). I am getting Red Ruby Devon (more of a rare breed - but VERY gentle, grass eating/converting genetics and good mothers) so I will be using AI ( which due to rarity of breed will be $$) for a while as my herd builds (and hopefully I can find more land). I am new to this... so I will be gluing myself to your videos. Thank you!!
Love the connection you have with your cows,,
Another great video Pete!
Such a great lesson, love the channel, always a nice view!!
This was awesome. Thanks, Pete!
Verry Nice 👍 i m looking and wait for evry New film 👷🔨Nest kom hai balling . Greetings from Drunen Nederland ☀️
Love your little farm
Great video! New to cattle farming and getting our first herd of angus tomorrow. This video is so helpful! Hello from Australia!
I think a great "Small Farmer Sunday" video would be a discussion on where to go for help and support, particularly if you're starting out. You're a great storyteller and I'd love to hear that story (admittedly you may have covered this I haven't seen 100% of your videos yet). I don't know what kind of farming your dad did, is he one of your resources? This sort of info would be particularly helpful to families with no farm roots on where they can go beyond family to get questions answered if they're stuck.
Dude! looking like a gentleman farmer in those new threads!
Your channel is always educational Pete,good stuff keep them coming plz
Just discovered the channel. Really appreciate the videos and the advice. Keep it up, good sir. 👍🏾
Very informative as usual!!! Thank you 😊
Good video, really enjoyed it.
Thanks! Very informative,
I’m learning so much from your channel. I dream to be a farmer
We appreciate you giving up the goods. 🙂
Like #587
Thanks for the video!
Life is a learning curve!
HINDSIGHT is 20-15!
More of a “meat” greet than a meet and greet.
Incredibly informative post. Thank you Pete!👍👍👍
Just ordered his book on Amazon. Check out his website for link. Happy to support guys like this.
Great info, I am starting small with Santa Gertrudis cattle on 69acres with 10 heifers AI bull #1, the offspring will be breed to second AI bull #2
I will keep some cavs heifers for replacements, the rest will sale to feedlot. Small cattle ranch in Texas
Hello pete you are a master peace. God bless you sir keep on rockin
Great video on managing cattle on a smaller ranch. We got some gems from here. We artificially inseminate now and determining if that's the best route for us.
great education thanks a heap.....you always give us the real deal it is so refreshing...
Thanks for going through the process. Very informative.
I worked on a dairy farm about 35 years ago in central New york. The farmer I worked for had holsteins. He had quit using bulls years earlier because they were so unmanageable and dangerous. Even his milking cows were bossy and mean. I would get beat up pretty good by them. I can only imagine the attitude that the bulls must have had for him to get rid of them. I was only 14 years old at the time. My experience with them was bad enough that I wouldn't even consider them as a breed to raise in the future.
I went into a really bad bar the other day. It was a real vile inn!!
Thanks for the break down on cattle.i knew some stuff but u made a good pkg.
Excellent information indeed! Excellent video! TY
Pete can't wait to see the baby calves. How are the piglets? Love the videos and info. Tell the family hi. ❤️💜💙💚
Always informative Professor Pete.
I’m from Florida, we run mostly angus. Around here I have never heard of anyone being concerned with inbreeding.
It’s very common for people to keep heifers from their heard and then turn them loose with the bulls
The video and information I’ve been looking for, thank you.
Thanks Pete. Great advice.
Hey Pete you should try unrolling hay in the fields in the winter to feed your cows. It’s not a waste of hay I’m down in Ct and started doing it last year and it’s made a huge difference in my fields when they grow back in the spring. Farm strong!
Thanks. I would rather pass the hay through the cattle before spreading it on the fields. Our fields are impassable with the tractor for a good part of the winter, and as I said, they get trashed by cattle traffic when we’re in mud season.
Very interesting topic. I don't eat meat or dairy but no denying, cows are way cool. Thanks for sharing.
Great Job! Nice video on the subject of raising beef!
They were so adorable.
Never realized you were in central nys. Where abouts are you? Love your channel and the way you farm. Reminds me of my dad and grandfathers way of farming. Easy to see you care for your animals. Also,we use similar machinery. (Old and worn out but still gettin it done). 656&574 gasers. 477 nh haybine,276 nh baler
Thumbs up from The Dooley's of Michigan
Very informative, thank you.
Great video!
Congrats on a 100 thousand subs!!!
I love the gentleness and friendliness of your cows.. Do you handle them in a certain way to facilitate this? We are new to owning cattle. I just bought my first Dexter heifer a week ago. Although used to human interaction, she is still wary and won’t allow herself to be touched. I have her in a pipe pen, while working on gentling her. We have 3 lowline Aberdeen Angus in an adjoining paddock. They came off of a very large operation, were unhandled also, but would come up to a (feed) truck. I’ve bucket trained them and, after about 3 weeks, I am beginning to get them eating out of my hand and (occasionally) sneaking a quick pat on the face. We have about the same amount of acreage as you, but it was formerly just a pasture, so not as much infrastructure as you do. This little Dexter girl, I’m hoping to make a milk cow.. she’ll come up close to eat cubes, but not yet from my hand.. I don’t want to turn her out with the others until I can touch her and (ideally) be able to halter her and lead.. we are getting a two more lowlines this week. That will give us a total starting herd of 6 (including my heifer), 2 bred and due soon, and 2 possibly bred and due in the summer/fall. That is enough for us for now... This video is coming at the perfect time for us... we’ve been discussing the pros and cons of getting a bull.. even maybe a 2021 bull calf to grow and be our herd bull, for a while at least...
Wow! That was a lot of good information.
Great info. Thanks.
Are you related to the Larsons in Wells, Vermont?
They grass feed dairy and meat.
Shared Stockman's Grass Farmer with me. Doing the right work.
fantastic video so informative. Thank you so much for this excellent video
Very very very informatiive and thank you to share your calendar
Another very informative video.
The eerie silence after asking the cattle if they wanted to do a meat and greet.. lol. Bad pun...
Very good system, yrs ago, 40 or so, my father RIP, kept polled Herefords, bulls travelled between growers, is it just untraditional or lack of nearby other Dexter growers that prevents this in your area. Great channel, reminisce a lot watching it.
Great video Pete.
The cattle are beautiful. 👍👍💞
Great video. I want cows. Great stories in all the comments....I read all of them.....funny jokes, love the information. Thanks.
Marty and Doc from Back to the Future😊
You should start your own cattle dating site. Great video Pete 🐄🐄🐄🐄🐄🐄🐄🐄🐄
Mmmm... A dating app for cows you say? It could be called Meat Grindr.
Meat and greet. You are killing me here. lol
hi i want to be a farmer like you btw i love your vids
No one gets Doc and Marty? Back to the future!
Great info. Nicely done. Thank you.
Love your Dexters
Thanks for all of the info Pete! It sounds like I shouldn't hesitate to buy a 2 year old steer in the spring to grass finish in order to butcher in the fall. I've always thought I needed yearlings for better meat. That definitely would open up more options for me in my area.