@@melvin9898 Copied from Wikipedia: During Top Gear's Patagonia Special, Clarkson revealed that the Porsche 928 was a car that was close to his heart, as he used it to drive to the hospital his father was dying in. Clarkson said that had he had not driven the Porsche 928, he "wouldn't have had the opportunity to say goodbye to [his] dad".
@@lewis4929 You often find farmers care more for their animals than toxic keyboard activists ever will - I see your post does nothing to contradict that view......
The moment Jeremy discovered the sheep were gone and couldn’t say goodbye to them, you could see he was doing all he could to not crack a tear. Despite all the shenanigans on screen, the man has a genuine heart.
Jeremy was so heartbroken. He definitely had a good cry on the way home. I don't think he was expecting farming to be as emotional as it can be. I gotta say I'm really proud of him.
I've known several cattle ranchers in my time who were running a cow-calf operation. You breed the cows and sell the calves. The cows stay around for quite a few years if they throw a good calf. Most of those ranchers have named their best heifers. When they get too old to breed anymore, it's not so easy taking them to the Meat Processing Plant.
@@Joe_J-MT_BoyAt our farm we had the matriarch of the herd die of old age, due to us not being able to part with her in time. She was truly a magnificent animal.
@@goldenhourkodak Sheep is livestock, fact of life, they give wool and when they are too old they are slaughtered. Writing a eulogy for each one isn't going to make life any better. Face the cold hard facts here. We as a species are omnivores which rely on both animal and plant material for food. We have grown to be the dominant species on this planet by learning how to domesticate and survive off both. Sending your livestock to slaughter isn't easy, but I have personally seen how the "idyllic" pasture death looks like. It's not idyllic, it's not easy and its not a pretty picture. A quick clean end, that's more than these animals can expect in the wild.
@@PrinceAlhorian We do not need to do it. End of story. We've gotten past the requirement to exploit animals for their bodies in the modern world. All the pain and suffering they endure for our pleasure is not justified. There is nothing in animals that we absolutely need to kill them for.
My grandma was not a fan of Jeremy Clarkson but when she saw Clarkson's Farm, she was impressed and amazed by his story and what the true side of Jeremy Clarkson is all about. He's a human and we all aren't perfect but he tries.
You should show her the clip about Jez saying goodbye to his father Like so many he has an enormous mouth, and can be a bit of a twat at times, quite a big one, very very often - but at the end of the day, he's not malice, he's just a man, and quite a decent bloke at that
You can tell Jeremy really cares about animals. When I saw this episode I felt my heart break a little at how devastated he looked when he couldn’t say goodbye to them.
That is the first and last time that anyone has described Clarkson as "wholesome". The man is the living embodiment of everything that isn't wholesome. He drinks like a fish, smokes like a train and makes politically incorrect, but amusing jokes about every ethnic group on the planet (especially the English). That non-wholsomeness is exactly why we find his antics so entertaining.
That "Oh kayyy" was devastating 2:15 :[ he was trying so hard to keep himself together, even the abattoir staff were a bit upset, they must get used to it and distance themselves most of the time but Jeremy was feeling so guilty :[
Yeah he was breaking up, and everyone caught on, shut up and let him stiff upper lip his way out of there. I'll bet it's not the first time the abattoir staff have seen people get emotional about it.
"I've deliberately NOT given them names" Same way with me and my hogs back in the day... Can we appreciate how close this one Legend has brought regular folks to us farm-types? Much love, Jezza
Last saturday, i lost my budgie. Still today i cant get over it, so i know how jeremy feels saying goodbye to his sheep. Losing animals is never fun, especially when you have a strong bond with them.
@@thegrandtour The whole thing! Jeremy having a farm! 😂 His relationship with Caleb! His love hate relationship with his sheep! The outlandishly big tractor purchase! 😄 Jeremy being Jeremy and jumping into things that he’s not fully thought through but he gets there in the end. 😄 Seeing the difficulties and complexities of running a farm. Mostly I just love Jeremy’s crack and always have, always entertaining. Hopefully he gets more for his crops this year and things run a little smoother but I’m not going to hold my breath! 😂🍻
I like how the slaughterhouse worker was pretty frank with Jeremy about why this was the only option left to him, and has clearly become more desensitized to the whole process (even having a bit of a laugh about how they’re probably already dead), but is still empathic enough to apologize for Jeremy not being able to say goodbye to the ewes.
Yup, that's farming for you, you need to be ready, don't name them or get to love having them around, it will break your heart. If you name them, you give them a personality, and you will always remmember them... The moment he said, "that one looks sad" that is when he gave it a personality, it was't just "a sheep" anymore, it was "that one sad sheep".
His face says it all. Been a fan of Jeremy clarkson for years. Crying at the end of grand tour and again here. He isn't that bad of a bloke really. I don't know why people mock him. He just says it as it is and people don't like it. Like me been a Yorkshire man myself
Only a farmer would say it's necessary... We can survive just fine on a diet of plants, and it won't cost the lives of billions of animals every year in the process.
@@colonelsanders1349 nah I agree and im chewing on a mf steak right now. humanity doesn’t even need to eat meat anymore all that stuff can be replaced by science now. but humans be humans
My cousins used to run a meat packing business in the country a few hours away from where I live. I remember once being at their shop when they brought in a calf. The calf was perhaps a year old and my female cousin lovingly held the calf's head while her brother brought a tube along the other side of its' head and "bang". The calf relaxed unto a small table and they went to work preparing the carcass for hanging. It was all done with great respect towards the animal with no pain and great appreciation for the animal. I still eat meat, although not as much as I once did for health reasons. After a few months of aging they would butcher the beef and sell it in their store. Every few years my family would buy a quarter or half cow and store it in our deep freeze. That was the way we purchased our meat for a number of years when I was young. Now over 55 years later I still think back on the respect that was afforded the animals that were butchered by my cousins business in the valley. The business now long gone and sold to conglomerates that probably spend much less time raising and caring for the animals they butcher. Some things change not for the better but just for the commercial rewards.
Listen to yourself. Great respect towards the animal? No pain? You know that mother cows cry tears and mourn when their babies are taken away from them?
@@laurentivoli1183 I suggest you live in the real World. By that same logic I guess we shouldn't adopt cats and dogs into our families until their parents kick them out to forage by themselves on the streets like in India.
I saw the pain in his face as he went back to say goodbye, that reminded me of my grandfather, I couldn’t stand seeing him sad and I would do everything in my power to make him feel better, I hate seeing the OG’s sad 😞
@@goldenhourkodak the difference is that he had no joy in doing it and still had to run his farm. Whereas evil people show no signs of remorse. And although I respect your choices to be a vegetarian many other people's sources of food are their livestock or whatever they can grow.
@@timlittle1286 You 'respect' someone's choices not to pay for animals to be killed, how noble of you. That you wouldn't hold it against a person for not contributing to un-neccessary suffering/death of living creatures is quite awakened of you. Unless you are talking 3rd world, no-one HAS to raise and kill animals for money, it is outdated and should be phased out, would you feel bad for the last slave owners clinging to their livelihoods?
@@adamlee3333 you have totally lost the plot mate. Sometimes people have to take the lives of the animals that they raise in order to survive. Are you going to pay their bills or just carry on with the bullshit you just said?
@@timlittle1286 would you pay the bills for slave owners hundreds of years ago? If there's a tribe somewhere that has to eat animals then fair enough, but not in the modern world do people need to be killing and eating animals for food/money. You wouldn't eat a cat or a dog or a giraffe but you would eat a cow or a pig. Why is that? You've been brain washed by an outdated culture/tradition.
I'm 62+ years old and always wanted a farm but I know I could never do it. I get way too attached to animals and could never kill them. Jeremy, I cried a long with you when you went to say good bye and was told they were already dead. So sad, that's why I'm not a farmer. Good luck and God bless you Jeremy, you have a good heart.
I couldn’t have taken them for slaughter,I worked on a pig farm part time when I was at school,we used to take them to the bacon factory near Warrington when they reached the right weight,the look on their faces when they realised where they were was too much for me,they were terrified and couldn’t watch their slaughter,needless to say I never made it as a farmer,the calves were beautiful and couldn’t stand the thought of them being killed after hand feeding and caring for them,it just wasn’t for me and left.
Sadness at killing an animal for food is a normal, natural and healthy response. Losing that connection to your food is when things start to go wrong and become unhealthy (for us and the animals).
@@RaledoTom A healthy life and a swift painless death should be the aim for all live stock. Unfortunately that's not the case. Healthy and unhealthy, in live stocks case, is use to define their life lived. The level of welfare the animals are kept in determines health or lack of it.
@@glennd.3929 Nature is a cold, random and violent thing. Farm animals live very short lives. And the vast majority in factory farms. Their life was artificial and they died on the production line. This abattoir Jeremy goes to and his small farm are not representative of 90% of animal agriculture. No need to kill a sheep, so in my opinion it's immoral to do so
@@townsville69 the way I see it: if it's living a good life, it's immoral to kill it, if it's living a bad life it was immoral to breed it into existence
The thing is, Jeremy will likely have a very different perspective and respect for food and meat after this show, it's what he wanted to share with us all, yes it's devastating and emotional to see your animals die, but yes they're also delicious, the difference being, now he appreciates it more I Imagine, people wouldn't be so wasteful with their food if they were more involved with the journey to their plate.
The fact that he was pretty shook up over how quickly the sheep were taken off to slaughter, then went ahead and utilized their meat in spite of his misgivings speaks a lot for his character.
@@englishatheart you are absolutely right of course, I have decided to use the farm for horse livery instead and grow vegetables, I will have hens and ducks but only for eggs.
This was really hard to see, especially after loosing a loved shepherd that I raised from a pup recently to thyroid cancer. she had a great life but the end is always hard 💔
I mean he did say there was another surprise in store after he got sentimental for his sheep's, before they became a delicacy on his plate. Love this man nonetheless hahaha
The slaughter house/abattoir is how farmers get their animals to be sold. These days there’s very rigorous humane standards on how the animals have to be killed.
I deliberatly chose to continue making beef and it's a moral thing about buying an animal, feeding and caring for it and then selling it to a butcher all with the thought about this animal being killed. But if you want that, you gotta give that life as good of a life as you can.
Used to be a Butcher and have been to the abattoir to see the process involved for cows, pigs and sheep. Didn't affect me. Watching Jezza's reaction as he discovered his sheep had already gone, yeah, that hurt. Worryingly, don't know why.
This reminded me of my mother. When she had a poultry, if we want to get her to eat any of the birds, we kill it and prepare it without her notice. One Christmas we had to buy frozen turkey from the market because she wouldn't eat the one from her farm that we killed for Christmas. She would ask me back then how I was able to eat the birds easily, my reply usually was they're birds and food. I love meat. And when I factor in the labour of running around the city everyday getting their food, then drugs, I believe that eating them was pay enough. I still don't understand farmers bond with their animals. Maybe I will try farming and see if I can get it.
Those sheep have caused him a lot of chaos ua-cam.com/video/iCPJgALNfXo/v-deo.html
Yep true they are quite smart as well like they know how to jumb on to a wall
jeremy: they're dead already
before: i F--ing hate sheep, i f--ing hate them, i can't wait to eat them
Upsetting
Yet also alot of smiles
any update on season 2 please???
This and his Porsche 928 story about his dad are the most humanizing clips of Jeremy on UA-cam
the sadest thing .... i cried.
Can you please provide the link?
I mean there’s the end of the grand tour s3…
@@enis1687 oh my god , i cried too
@@melvin9898 Copied from Wikipedia: During Top Gear's Patagonia Special, Clarkson revealed that the Porsche 928 was a car that was close to his heart, as he used it to drive to the hospital his father was dying in. Clarkson said that had he had not driven the Porsche 928, he "wouldn't have had the opportunity to say goodbye to [his] dad".
This shows the real Jeremy. Behind the bravado and bluster, there's a heart of Gold.
Hahaha, what are you about? He sent them to death and then ate lamb. Heart of gold my arse
@@lewis4929 good too. Lamb is delicious
@@lewis4929 Should have left them for the coyotes or disease instead.
Ah yes, those famous English coyotes
@@lewis4929 You often find farmers care more for their animals than toxic keyboard activists ever will - I see your post does nothing to contradict that view......
The moment Jeremy discovered the sheep were gone and couldn’t say goodbye to them, you could see he was doing all he could to not crack a tear. Despite all the shenanigans on screen, the man has a genuine heart.
Jeremy was so heartbroken. He definitely had a good cry on the way home. I don't think he was expecting farming to be as emotional as it can be. I gotta say I'm really proud of him.
Proud of him for sending his animals to be slaughtered? How Hypocritical 😡
@@quiescence3980 You clearly have never worked on a farm or with animals. Go be angry at something you actually understand.
I've known several cattle ranchers in my time who were running a cow-calf operation. You breed the cows and sell the calves. The cows stay around for quite a few years if they throw a good calf. Most of those ranchers have named their best heifers. When they get too old to breed anymore, it's not so easy taking them to the Meat Processing Plant.
@@Joe_J-MT_BoyAt our farm we had the matriarch of the herd die of old age, due to us not being able to part with her in time. She was truly a magnificent animal.
@@quiescence3980Goodness sake. You precious princess, venture out into the real world sometimes. Broken animals cannot be kept and saved all the time.
Tonight: Jeremy becomes what he swore to destroy - an animal rights activist
You have the right to be delicious! 🍖
@@mrcvry 😋
My god, how horrifying
You are the Chosen One.
when the delicacy goes into his palette, thats not the case anymore xddd
Welcome to joys and tears of livestock farming Jeremy. It's a hell of a ride.
Hell being the word here.
@@laurentivoli1183 bleeding hearts of the world unite
@@PrinceAlhorian Yeah, how dare someone care when horrible things happen?
@@goldenhourkodak Sheep is livestock, fact of life, they give wool and when they are too old they are slaughtered.
Writing a eulogy for each one isn't going to make life any better.
Face the cold hard facts here. We as a species are omnivores which rely on both animal and plant material for food. We have grown to be the dominant species on this planet by learning how to domesticate and survive off both.
Sending your livestock to slaughter isn't easy, but I have personally seen how the "idyllic" pasture death looks like. It's not idyllic, it's not easy and its not a pretty picture.
A quick clean end, that's more than these animals can expect in the wild.
@@PrinceAlhorian We do not need to do it. End of story. We've gotten past the requirement to exploit animals for their bodies in the modern world. All the pain and suffering they endure for our pleasure is not justified. There is nothing in animals that we absolutely need to kill them for.
My grandma was not a fan of Jeremy Clarkson but when she saw Clarkson's Farm, she was impressed and amazed by his story and what the true side of Jeremy Clarkson is all about. He's a human and we all aren't perfect but he tries.
You should show her the clip about Jez saying goodbye to his father
Like so many he has an enormous mouth, and can be a bit of a twat at times, quite a big one, very very often - but at the end of the day, he's not malice, he's just a man, and quite a decent bloke at that
Enough to make a grown man cry.
Or a Woman?
@@EKV8Productions it’s a quote
GET BACK IN THERE TEAR!
You can tell Jeremy really cares about animals. When I saw this episode I felt my heart break a little at how devastated he looked when he couldn’t say goodbye to them.
I felt that, especially when he was leaving and they weren't there anymore.
Same 🥲
“Yeah they’re probably dead’ 😂
I didn't expect. That. But it feels like me and my son being gone. Taken
Bet Clarkson never imagined being brought so close to tears on this show.
The look in his eyes said it all
Saying goodbye to an animal is genuinely one of the hardest things we can do.
well, there's saying goodbye and then sending them to death.
“A aminal*”
*"An Aminal" lol
@@MuhtasimDishan you didn't get the joke. It's called "a animal" and "an cd"
@@fabiank485 actually Jeremy didn't do the article switch as he usually does when he said "an aminal", hence the correction
He got choked up saying goodbye and then choked when he took too big of a forkfull. What a guy.
"You were good son...Real good....Maybe even the best" - Jeremy Clarkson
Well all good things comes to an end
..
Jeremy final goodbye to his sheep is very wholesome 😢 ..😍
That is the first and last time that anyone has described Clarkson as "wholesome".
The man is the living embodiment of everything that isn't wholesome. He drinks like a fish, smokes like a train and makes politically incorrect, but amusing jokes about every ethnic group on the planet (especially the English). That non-wholsomeness is exactly why we find his antics so entertaining.
I wonder if he gave them a second goodbye as he flushed the shepherds pie turned poop down the toilet.
That "Oh kayyy" was devastating 2:15 :[ he was trying so hard to keep himself together, even the abattoir staff were a bit upset, they must get used to it and distance themselves most of the time but Jeremy was feeling so guilty :[
its obviously dubbed, i wonder what he really said
Yeah he was breaking up, and everyone caught on, shut up and let him stiff upper lip his way out of there.
I'll bet it's not the first time the abattoir staff have seen people get emotional about it.
@@roughwaves Yeah, they were super professional.
2:03 you can hear the emotion in his voice. Also notice how the camera crew didn’t travel back with him in his car because he was probably very upset
Luckily, he had some mutton to help him through it
So sorry for how you felt during this time.... No matter what or who they are.... They are still living animals that you at last relate too.
Jezza never fails to impress me. He had genuine glassy eyes. He's a good man.
"I've deliberately NOT given them names"
Same way with me and my hogs back in the day...
Can we appreciate how close this one Legend has brought regular folks to us farm-types?
Much love, Jezza
Such a brilliant program! Informative, shows theory from reality, entertaining, moving, and just beautiful to watch!
Last saturday, i lost my budgie. Still today i cant get over it, so i know how jeremy feels saying goodbye to his sheep. Losing animals is never fun, especially when you have a strong bond with them.
Ugh budgies are so awesome, I lost two of them, it is one of the saddest feelings. I hope you feel better.
That ending was the perfect "Ok I'm over it moment" lmao
He has always had a heart,misunderstood.He and I are alike.🇬🇧
Clarkson’s farm is brilliant and I can’t wait for season 2.
What was your favourite moment from Clarkson's Farm?
@@thegrandtour The whole thing! Jeremy having a farm! 😂 His relationship with Caleb! His love hate relationship with his sheep! The outlandishly big tractor purchase! 😄 Jeremy being Jeremy and jumping into things that he’s not fully thought through but he gets there in the end. 😄 Seeing the difficulties and complexities of running a farm. Mostly I just love Jeremy’s crack and always have, always entertaining. Hopefully he gets more for his crops this year and things run a little smoother but I’m not going to hold my breath! 😂🍻
You could see him fighting back tears when he was leaving and didn't get to say goodbye
I like how the slaughterhouse worker was pretty frank with Jeremy about why this was the only option left to him, and has clearly become more desensitized to the whole process (even having a bit of a laugh about how they’re probably already dead), but is still empathic enough to apologize for Jeremy not being able to say goodbye to the ewes.
Yup, that's farming for you, you need to be ready, don't name them or get to love having them around, it will break your heart. If you name them, you give them a personality, and you will always remmember them... The moment he said, "that one looks sad" that is when he gave it a personality, it was't just "a sheep" anymore, it was "that one sad sheep".
His face says it all. Been a fan of Jeremy clarkson for years. Crying at the end of grand tour and again here. He isn't that bad of a bloke really. I don't know why people mock him. He just says it as it is and people don't like it. Like me been a Yorkshire man myself
1:59
"Heh heh heh, I think they might be dead"
2:15
"Okay."
Oh god, he's barely holding it together.
🤣🤣🤣" I think they might be dead ...sorry....well .. lovely.. thx again" 🤣🤣🤣 There is nothing better than classic dry English humor
well whaddya know, turns out he's a human after all and not entirely an orangutan
joking aside, this was wholesome even if a bit sad
aaaaaand now he's eating them. nvm
@@yodaiam9305 good ol Jeremy
He has the honest look of rsorrow on his face, gotta do what has to be done
Only a farmer would say it's necessary... We can survive just fine on a diet of plants, and it won't cost the lives of billions of animals every year in the process.
@@Metal-Possum Seething Vegan
@@colonelsanders1349 and?
@@colonelsanders1349 nah I agree and im chewing on a mf steak right now. humanity doesn’t even need to eat meat anymore all that stuff can be replaced by science now. but humans be humans
@@Metal-Possum insufferable
My cousins used to run a meat packing business in the country a few hours away from where I live. I remember once being at their shop when they brought in a calf. The calf was perhaps a year old and my female cousin lovingly held the calf's head while her brother brought a tube along the other side of its' head and "bang". The calf relaxed unto a small table and they went to work preparing the carcass for hanging. It was all done with great respect towards the animal with no pain and great appreciation for the animal. I still eat meat, although not as much as I once did for health reasons. After a few months of aging they would butcher the beef and sell it in their store. Every few years my family would buy a quarter or half cow and store it in our deep freeze. That was the way we purchased our meat for a number of years when I was young. Now over 55 years later I still think back on the respect that was afforded the animals that were butchered by my cousins business in the valley. The business now long gone and sold to conglomerates that probably spend much less time raising and caring for the animals they butcher. Some things change not for the better but just for the commercial rewards.
Listen to yourself. Great respect towards the animal? No pain? You know that mother cows cry tears and mourn when their babies are taken away from them?
@@laurentivoli1183 that is utter bullshit
@@laurentivoli1183 I suggest you live in the real World. By that same logic I guess we shouldn't adopt cats and dogs into our families until their parents kick them out to forage by themselves on the streets like in India.
@@chriscutress1702 That is not the same logic. Sometimes the mother only has a few hours with their calf before being taken away.
@@laurentivoli1183 So you're suggesting that a calf is a two hour old newborn when it is "taken away" from it's mother ? I don't think so ...
We don’t feel guilty when we eat but he developed a connection through experience good times bad times, that with empathy. That was real emotions
01:42 ..this line just hurts , cause its soo true
I physically could not let them go, I just can’t man
Me Either, I love my pet sheep to bits
I saw the pain in his face as he went back to say goodbye, that reminded me of my grandfather, I couldn’t stand seeing him sad and I would do everything in my power to make him feel better, I hate seeing the OG’s sad 😞
He didnt look so much sad as just.. shocked really.
At least he has a heart and respect for living things.
Have more respect by not killing living things on purpose
@@goldenhourkodak the difference is that he had no joy in doing it and still had to run his farm. Whereas evil people show no signs of remorse. And although I respect your choices to be a vegetarian many other people's sources of food are their livestock or whatever they can grow.
@@timlittle1286 You 'respect' someone's choices not to pay for animals to be killed, how noble of you. That you wouldn't hold it against a person for not contributing to un-neccessary suffering/death of living creatures is quite awakened of you. Unless you are talking 3rd world, no-one HAS to raise and kill animals for money, it is outdated and should be phased out, would you feel bad for the last slave owners clinging to their livelihoods?
@@adamlee3333 you have totally lost the plot mate. Sometimes people have to take the lives of the animals that they raise in order to survive. Are you going to pay their bills or just carry on with the bullshit you just said?
@@timlittle1286 would you pay the bills for slave owners hundreds of years ago? If there's a tribe somewhere that has to eat animals then fair enough, but not in the modern world do people need to be killing and eating animals for food/money. You wouldn't eat a cat or a dog or a giraffe but you would eat a cow or a pig. Why is that? You've been brain washed by an outdated culture/tradition.
This was actually quite a sad moment but 0:35 got me in stitches 😂
Oh Jeremy we do love you 🙏
Man you could just feel his emotion when they said they were already dead. He just wanted to say goodbye. At least he was able to eat them though
I'm 62+ years old and always wanted a farm but I know I could never do it. I get way too attached to animals and could never kill them. Jeremy, I cried a long with you when you went to say good bye and was told they were already dead. So sad, that's why I'm not a farmer. Good luck and God bless you Jeremy, you have a good heart.
I couldn’t have taken them for slaughter,I worked on a pig farm part time when I was at school,we used to take them to the bacon factory near Warrington when they reached the right weight,the look on their faces when they realised where they were was too much for me,they were terrified and couldn’t watch their slaughter,needless to say I never made it as a farmer,the calves were beautiful and couldn’t stand the thought of them being killed after hand feeding and caring for them,it just wasn’t for me and left.
That shepherds pie did look terrific, to be honest
Sadness at killing an animal for food is a normal, natural and healthy response. Losing that connection to your food is when things start to go wrong and become unhealthy (for us and the animals).
I think killing them regardless of how sad you are about it is quite unhealthy for the animals
@@RaledoTom A healthy life and a swift painless death should be the aim for all live stock. Unfortunately that's not the case.
Healthy and unhealthy, in live stocks case, is use to define their life lived. The level of welfare the animals are kept in determines health or lack of it.
@@RaledoTom if you think about it, it's nature. at least these animals didn't have to struggle their whole life i gues.
@@glennd.3929 Nature is a cold, random and violent thing. Farm animals live very short lives. And the vast majority in factory farms. Their life was artificial and they died on the production line. This abattoir Jeremy goes to and his small farm are not representative of 90% of animal agriculture. No need to kill a sheep, so in my opinion it's immoral to do so
@@townsville69 the way I see it: if it's living a good life, it's immoral to kill it, if it's living a bad life it was immoral to breed it into existence
Him eating them at the end was so funny
Who wouldn't get emotional?
Kids.....kids are cruel, Jack.
I would have been.
.....if i hadnt left with a nice warm chop for tea.
@@deece1482 Do you touch minors? Since when you have been a genshin impact player?
This is why veganism makes sense.
@@goldenhourkodak care to elaborate on that statement?
The thing is, Jeremy will likely have a very different perspective and respect for food and meat after this show, it's what he wanted to share with us all, yes it's devastating and emotional to see your animals die, but yes they're also delicious, the difference being, now he appreciates it more I Imagine, people wouldn't be so wasteful with their food if they were more involved with the journey to their plate.
A friend used to have a sheep farm and he always felt an element of emotion when it come to sending them off to slaughter I think any good farmer does
This is the saddest Jeremy has looked since the 928 story and the end of GT.
The fact that he was pretty shook up over how quickly the sheep were taken off to slaughter, then went ahead and utilized their meat in spite of his misgivings speaks a lot for his character.
"They're dead already!?" lolol
lmfao the worker there was brutal
Atleast he gets to drive his favourite car and enjoy the meal 😅
1:55 Jezza does a thing
Agriculture is not for the kind hearted but the well fed...
Lol when was eating the mutton pie at the end 😂
It’s always hard to say goodbye to a lover
It looks like Jeremy is heartbroken. Saying goodbye to your lovers always is hard.😂
He isn't Welsh...
I feel the same, having just bought a farm myself and planning on keeping sheep I often wonder how I will cope when the time comes.
Don't raise animals to be murdered. It really isn't hard.
@@englishatheart you are absolutely right of course, I have decided to use the farm for horse livery instead and grow vegetables, I will have hens and ducks but only for eggs.
@@advantagemarine7305 Good on you for your conscience mate.
@@alistairwalker2850 just couldn´t do it, in the beginning I tried to justify it by thinking "farming is traditional"
This was really hard to see, especially after loosing a loved shepherd that I raised from a pup recently to thyroid cancer. she had a great life but the end is always hard 💔
The look of hurt on his face says so much about the man .
Those sheep are beautiful looking.
This was sad to watch him get attached to them, for it too end like that......
I'm not crying, you are
I mean he did say there was another surprise in store after he got sentimental for his sheep's, before they became a delicacy on his plate. Love this man nonetheless hahaha
All animals feel. All animals want to live. Make the connection.
all living things feel, all living things want to live, yet we need to eat them, that's just how it goes.
@@kwazooplayingguardsman5615Plants do not feel and do not have any desires. Most of us don’t need to eat animals.
That was close! A british person ALMOST showed some emotion there!
The sheep after finding out they are at the abbttoir :
Baaaaaaaaarksoooon!!!!!
He does rlly seam sad cheer up my man jezza
"lovely!"
Damn, this hit me hard. I expected a silly show and wasn't ready for these feels.
Jezza, lost for words... Never thought I would see that. Poor old sheep but I prefer some nice lamb chops 😋
much love, jezza ❤
Saying goodbye to the animals was always the hardest part of growing up farming.
Smashing office 🤣
I felt really bad for him when I watched for the first time
Those butchers don't muck about 😂😂😂
Jeremy You are very much a human being
'He had a heart!
Dam...hope your doing well Jeremy
Far play on Mr Clarkson 👍. It is really hard soul, sending live stock away. It the live. We all have to go away eventually.
You say goodbye Jeremy to your sheep and I shall say hello to them, as I get my creamy minty gravy ready... Yum Yum !
@2:19 Jeremys face lol 😐
Am I the only one who wonders how farmers can get their animals go…like to market or worse the slaughter house? It mustn’t be easy
It's all about the £££
The slaughter house/abattoir is how farmers get their animals to be sold. These days there’s very rigorous humane standards on how the animals have to be killed.
I know. And I know they are looked after I meant I probably would get to attached to them
it's not easy... but when you gotta pay the bills you gotta pay the bills
I deliberatly chose to continue making beef and it's a moral thing about buying an animal, feeding and caring for it and then selling it to a butcher all with the thought about this animal being killed. But if you want that, you gotta give that life as good of a life as you can.
Used to be a Butcher and have been to the abattoir to see the process involved for cows, pigs and sheep. Didn't affect me.
Watching Jezza's reaction as he discovered his sheep had already gone, yeah, that hurt. Worryingly, don't know why.
Lovely office
Jezza ,what you like,that ending was emotional,and im talking about the pie.
Love this program
They're delicious! 😂👌
Yes jeremy I have same problem not know not 2 have connection with even their life stocks
Poor Shaun....and little Timmy..
It like shell shock. When he left the office.
This reminded me of my mother. When she had a poultry, if we want to get her to eat any of the birds, we kill it and prepare it without her notice. One Christmas we had to buy frozen turkey from the market because she wouldn't eat the one from her farm that we killed for Christmas. She would ask me back then how I was able to eat the birds easily, my reply usually was they're birds and food. I love meat. And when I factor in the labour of running around the city everyday getting their food, then drugs, I believe that eating them was pay enough. I still don't understand farmers bond with their animals. Maybe I will try farming and see if I can get it.
A man works for 30 years to create an image, even punches a producer for not having a STEAK of all things, only to shed tears over a sheep
Really need a campaign to increase the value of wool.
"And with that disappointment, back to the tent."
This Is The Way