America's Dairyland at the Crossroads (Documentary)

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  • Опубліковано 19 тра 2024
  • This documentary follows four Wisconsin farm families, including one that exited dairy, as they share their stories and hopes for a future that hinges on the next generation, new technologies, and even alternatives to dairy farming.
    This documentary was provided courtesy of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel: www.jsonline.com/story/news/2...
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    #documentary #farming #dairyfarm

КОМЕНТАРІ • 54

  • @rajib.T-cg1ow
    @rajib.T-cg1ow 9 місяців тому +7

    My highest respect goes to dairy farmers and dairy entrepreneurs for your hard work that feeds many souls and the world. We hope that businesses affected by the crisis during the Covid19 pandemic and during the current crisis can recover and grow even more. My prayer that God will make a way where there seems to be no way anymore. Gbu all

    • @EarthSurferUSA
      @EarthSurferUSA День тому

      I notice, that when there is overbearing government control over any industry that free people built in the first place, we tend top just let it happen with no protest,---and pray more. Did God give us a brain that can figure out reality for nothing?
      Son---we now live under a dictatorship. The only growth, (false growth), we will see economically from here is from short term government subsidies, which also eliminates craftier competition that can do a better job. If you would try to figure out reality, you would not depend on good feeling platitudes that we were taught (as nice), that are nothing but hot air.

  • @rickboer7715
    @rickboer7715 3 місяці тому

    i'M GLAD THAT YOU still HAVE AERIAL FARM PHOTOS FOR YOUR MEMORIES

  • @bouji_
    @bouji_ 9 місяців тому +1

    One of my buddies told me once, "if you aren't milking 8k cows, you may as well just get out of the way."

  • @marjoriejohnson6535
    @marjoriejohnson6535 9 місяців тому +7

    I wouldn't mind paying a little more for dairy products if i knew it was going to the farmer. The middle man , and retail. ( especially retail ) are the ones profiting.

    • @EarthSurferUSA
      @EarthSurferUSA День тому

      We would be paying less, much much less, for better product, if we did not let the government tell us what to produce and sell. If we did not let communist steal our free ente4rprise, and good court system, from us.

  • @bradlansing3744
    @bradlansing3744 4 місяці тому +1

    I grew up in Wisconsin, and my Dad's family were farmers. I had Uncle, who was a Dairy farmer he had about 100 head of Dairy cows. He was very smart he devsivfied. He had a beef farm and produced veal for years. He was always thinking outside the box on how to make money and still be a productive farmer. He also had a cheese factory at one time had a cheese factory, but closed do to the changing
    times. I would have to say that the small Wisconsin dairy farmer has a lot of challenges on how to produce quality dairy products and make a living.

    • @skyboy1956
      @skyboy1956 28 днів тому

      Veal comes from dairy farms. When a male calf is born, it is of no use to a dairy farmer. They are taken away from their mother so they won't consume her milk. Most are fed various fake milks and grain for a few weeks, then slaughtered to make hotdogs or processed meat. They are to unhealthy to live much longer due to poor nutrients. About 20% are raised on their mothers milk then fed grains, after 2-16 weeks slaughtered for veal. That's where veal comes from.

  • @krissyb1980
    @krissyb1980 2 місяці тому +2

    I figure if these big factory style farmers that milk around the clock were outlawed for being a public health and environmental risk you would see a bunch of these small farms dotted around the country spring back to life. Wouldn't that be beautiful? The only thing stopping it is money in politics.

  • @LedgemereHeritageFarm
    @LedgemereHeritageFarm Місяць тому +2

    We had a dairy until 2012. The land and equipment had long since been paid off, but there was no local infrastructure anymore and nobody wants to work on a farm during the summer anymore. There were at least 40 dairies in my county when I was a kid and there’s not even 5 now.

    • @skyboy1956
      @skyboy1956 Місяць тому

      It was a good run. Time to move on, plenty of alternatives.

    • @EarthSurferUSA
      @EarthSurferUSA День тому

      Rural Freesoil Michigan, (Stakanis, sp, farms). A local farmer of generations just fired much of his local staff (some were retiring age I imagine), to take advantage of Governor gretchen whitmore's offer to pay $500.00 a week to house each of the many illegal aliens (with no vetting), to replace the guys own neighbors.
      Willie has been so beat up by these regulations (now switching from dairy to beef also, and has not produced a thing in months during this transformation to date), that he will follow any communistic policy that offers him money. In any industry,---he is not alone.

  • @tapertim
    @tapertim 9 місяців тому +1

    When we were milking cows in western South Dakota in the 70s there were 110 grade a producer’s and quite a few b producers by 2005 only one left now they are done

  • @margaloone7970
    @margaloone7970 Місяць тому

    I am so sorry for your loss. However I think the loss of a small family farm is a loss for all of us.

  • @rodhonco5681
    @rodhonco5681 26 днів тому

    The answer to higher milk prices to the Farmer is Supply!
    The struggle is getting Farmers to agree COLLECTIVELY to reduce Supply.
    Make that happen and limit imports and Farms can survive!

  • @screwplanplaybook7121
    @screwplanplaybook7121 Місяць тому +1

    Buy local and support your Farmers and Ranchers.

  • @markvanderknoop131
    @markvanderknoop131 5 місяців тому +2

    Lely has compleet system from fresh grass to the milk storage. Then you can a run 60 or 120 cow hurd by 1 man.

  • @rickboer7715
    @rickboer7715 3 місяці тому +1

    Support your local farms

  • @fgonzalez78959
    @fgonzalez78959 11 днів тому

    Farming is expensive period. Alot of people love beef and milk and dont realize what it takes ..

  • @LtColDaddy71
    @LtColDaddy71 8 днів тому

    1st let me say, this is heartbreaking. If it’s ok, I’d like to give my perspective. I’ve been a dairyman, farmer and rancher since 2001. It’s not imperative that I be particularly good at any of them, it is important that I take advantage of the overlapping of all of them. I only milk a girl 3 months out of the year. She spends 6 months nurturing her calf, and 3 months dry. The dairy portion of our operation involves embryo transfer of world class beef genetics, in to world class milk dams. Dairy is just a way to get SOME cash flow from my breeding dams, instead of having a bunch of mama’s eating my grass and giving me a calf. I get the calf (most of the time) and a little cash flow.
    Then there is the grain farming. My livestock are my fertility. I don’t buy anything in. The key to making money is to not have anything in (invested) a crop. Infrastructure is another killer. I took advantage of some programs to put up barns several times. Aside from an area for milking and processing, they never had a cow in them. As I was able, I converted them to other uses. I don’t like equipment or firing up an engine. It all costs money. I do it as little as possible.
    I put sheep out with my cattle, goats and pigs in my timber, and roll prairie schooners full of poultry across every acre. It involves working sun up, to sun down, 365 days per year. But an interesting thing happened. I “got” big, and did it fast. As a kid, I watched the 80’s happen, and it hardened me and made me determined to do it, and do it on my terms.
    If I can’t get what I want for a crop, I WONT GROW IT! We’re on the organic side, which brings 40-60% more revenue, and in our case, our yields drag about 15% over all. It’s not a bad deal, because of our methodology, we have next to nothing invested in a crop, excluding the value of the land. We have a set minimum we want to make, and won’t do it if we can’t make it. Which means we have many more crops that we can grow well, compared to a conventional operation. Whatever we can contract, we do, the rest is for cow chow.
    The government, banks, ag academia, the Merc, and Wall Street ruined farming. Pack up your toys, and find some real friends to play with. You can’t win with them. 9 out of 10 of the very farmers you love and respect, will not respect you. You are that “guy/gal.”

    • @EarthSurferUSA
      @EarthSurferUSA День тому

      I love reading from guys with experience in an industry, if they are old/smart enough to understand how we used to do it for a comparison.
      But one line you said, hit it out of the park: "I don’t like equipment or firing up an engine. It all costs money. I do it as little as possible."
      That was the machinery that made more production, and wealth generation possible.
      What you are actually complaining about (and trying to find a way around it being as free with your choices as possible.), is communism taking over our industries, and telling us what to produce or sell. The answer? Demand our individual liberty protected by law back, and our free enterprise system back (with a speedy and fair court system again that protects our individual lbierty. Anything else is legal lawlessness), that us free people created in the first place. Both our liberty and our free enterprise, was given to communism (who does not believe in either) by our federal government. Looks like McCarthy was right.

  • @CelestialBow
    @CelestialBow 9 місяців тому +4

    You get the politician to speak and her words just seem so empty. To think of these farmers dealing with such a hard job with so little support from society that just buys their products for cheap its really horrible how we've designed this economic system. Making food and animals into a commodity to trade but its a living thing - the cows the grass the people etc - make them into dollar figures it just causes so much disrespect across the board. And trying to push massive CAFO dairies, which will support far less jobs, far less livings, bring less money into the community, so a handful of wealthy land owners and businesses can be alone owning their thousands of acres with everyone else having to go to the city to work a job far from the realities of food and life? What is this?

    • @skyboy1956
      @skyboy1956 28 днів тому

      facism at it's finest ! !

  • @2khoso
    @2khoso 2 місяці тому

    ❤❤❤

  • @skyboy1956
    @skyboy1956 Місяць тому

    @5:50, this kid struggles with supply and demand. If there is no demand, supply swells and price decreases. If it decreases to the point it is not profitable to produce milk, farms will shutter, which has been happening for a few years now. Since dairy is linked to so many health concerns in humans why would I buy dairy products?

  • @Gems-of-Hope-Rocks
    @Gems-of-Hope-Rocks 9 місяців тому +1

    47:50 Introduction of the Robotic Milkers

  • @johnthelesserofthethirdoft863
    @johnthelesserofthethirdoft863 Місяць тому

    We are paying much higher for cheese and dairy items, are the diary farms making the money they need? Or are the corporations that buy the milk keeping the profits and refusing to negotiate better prices?

  • @mikedee-oq1ir
    @mikedee-oq1ir Місяць тому

    future contracts why and why not

  • @mikedee-oq1ir
    @mikedee-oq1ir Місяць тому

    8000 cows 13000 acres seems excessive

  • @oddstuff123
    @oddstuff123 Місяць тому +1

    Really weird the way they keep saying "hispanic labor" like it's a dirty word, why does the ethnicity of the people in our communities even matter in the discussion of their employment? Seems like the real problem nobody wants to talk about is that "hispanic" by and large means "underpaid"

    • @aubreymontgomery2647
      @aubreymontgomery2647 20 днів тому

      Because a lot of them are not even US citizens and are illegal…

  • @CelestialBow
    @CelestialBow 9 місяців тому +3

    The idea that the technology will attract young people is ridiculous. Maybe if they never have to be near see or smell the cows and their manure piles. As a young person, while I have a lot of respect for the larger operations, I would never want to work for one. I have worked for rotational grazed grass based dairies, this gets you out on the field enjoying the smells and sights. I would not want to be stuck in a bard with hundreds of massive Holsteins that are chowing down on their feed mix and feeding their calves in hutches. The robotic future, and these large farms, they make for less people, less camaraderie, even less youth will stay until these places are just robot run ghost town dairies? What kind of future is that?

    • @skyboy1956
      @skyboy1956 Місяць тому

      Hopefully there will be no dairies in the future. Nothing in dairy is required to sustain human life.

  • @thekibby8375
    @thekibby8375 2 місяці тому +2

    Tammy Baldwin, another empty suit

  • @jurmainmarsam2788
    @jurmainmarsam2788 10 місяців тому

    llp

  • @EarthSurferUSA
    @EarthSurferUSA День тому

    The 1st communistic propaganda in the film at min 2:45: "Everything is always evolving, (by what means?), so you can't be afraid of CHANGE. And then you are going to change, always have, always will, (still no defining the means or premise of change).
    Notice, they never define the components that create change. Are the components such as they were in the past USA, when the most advancements were made, when the people competing in the industry competed freely, and gladly accepting change that made them more productive and improve quality with those new advancements that we created with the more free industrial resolution? Or is this undefined CHANGE forced by dysfunctional government rule over our lives? It depends on if we accept the communistic rule over our lives,---like this man did? Which is the reason why our industries in demand, are failing. This man accepted government force over our lives. And I did not expect anything different form the media today. Just 3 min in the vid. I will let you find the rest of the propaganda. You need the practice, or we lose everything we built as a more free people to these dysfunctional dictators. I just took the "candy coating", (and this meaningless guys quote) off the subject, that's all.

  • @edyann
    @edyann 9 місяців тому +7

    Plant based milks are very popular now, thank goodness. And way more delicious.

    • @michaelwalsh9145
      @michaelwalsh9145 9 місяців тому +11

      Cows milk is plant based ya clown, BTW you can’t milk plants.

    • @awtractor9924
      @awtractor9924 9 місяців тому

      "Plant based' milk is not real milk, its milk substitute! What fantasy world are you living in?

    • @zeramina
      @zeramina 5 місяців тому +3

      Thank goodness!

    • @edyann
      @edyann 5 місяців тому +4

      @@zeramina Right? Been drinking organic soy, rice and almond milk since 1990! And now we have coconut, macadamia, etc. Makes me so, so happy! I totally get the hate. :)
      Have a great rest of your weekend!

    • @TheJdeere4020
      @TheJdeere4020 2 місяці тому

      plant milk isn't real milk, it's poison

  • @vernmello7691
    @vernmello7691 Місяць тому

    What a lousy story. No real information

  • @user-os7ld4wq8n
    @user-os7ld4wq8n 14 днів тому

    Farmers are doing all the work and taking most , if not all the risks, and it's the middleman that is raking in all the profits, nothing new there. Something has to be done on the governmental level to correct this problem, a problem that will not correct itself.

  • @Miacxbx
    @Miacxbx 9 місяців тому +1

    Es erweckt den Wunsch, es nachzumachen!👄