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Greg Judy identifys grass species in paddock.

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  • Опубліковано 27 тра 2019
  • Manage for diversity in your pastures. Your animals will thank you for it. Go to greenpasturesfarm.net for more info.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 57

  • @spoolsandbobbins
    @spoolsandbobbins Місяць тому +1

    best video of Greg's. Hear the passion! Educational too!!

  • @trevorgreycattleco
    @trevorgreycattleco 5 років тому +14

    And that’s raising cattle in a nut shell folks. Healthy pastures equal healthy cattle which equals healthy protein for us. Greg is on the tip of the sword of the food production revolution. I use to day dream about selling a bull for big bucks. Now I say dream about changing the food culture. Having chefs search me out for my pork and beef. To feed people healthy food that benefits our health and our environment. Fight the fights worth fighting for.

  • @clearvuehomeinspection7793
    @clearvuehomeinspection7793 3 роки тому +3

    What a fantastic person to listen to! Great stuff

  • @EcosystemDesignConsulting
    @EcosystemDesignConsulting 5 років тому +17

    I watch these videos everyday. Thank you, Greg.

  • @NS-pf2zc
    @NS-pf2zc 5 років тому +9

    I was just telling my husband I wanted to learn more about our grasses. This was timely!

  • @Tillie490
    @Tillie490 3 роки тому +6

    Thanks for the class in grasses. It was something I’ve been wondering about. I need to listen to more of your videos for the education! Love stopping by to enjoy the farm...😚 🐂 🐑

  • @bunnibravo4647
    @bunnibravo4647 3 роки тому +3

    Love this such a great attitude and informative video 👌

  • @JohnMarsing
    @JohnMarsing 5 років тому +10

    Thanks for giving your viewers the rundown on the various grasses. One day I would like to be managing a herd of cattle, so knowing the grasses would be very helpful. Thanks Greg Judy

  • @relentlessmadman
    @relentlessmadman 3 роки тому +1

    listen to the wind blow listen to the grass grow! these things are good to know even if you live in the asphalt jungle!

  • @OklahomaState
    @OklahomaState 8 місяців тому

    Thank you

  • @Driven1981
    @Driven1981 3 роки тому +1

    Wonderful pasture mix:)! I see your about to get your steps in😀. Getting ready to put up some fence👍! Good stuff brother.

  • @billymaldonado483
    @billymaldonado483 5 років тому +1

    The diversity is amazing!!!

  • @Bill-1005
    @Bill-1005 3 роки тому

    Glad o found your grass vid. What o was looking for…blessings to you!

  • @Ptitnain2
    @Ptitnain2 5 років тому +1

    Thanks for all the sharing infos, I have both your books and I love those videos.

  • @Skashoon
    @Skashoon 3 роки тому +3

    Would also like to see this for summer grazing grasses and legumes, etc. Also toxic plants and weeds that can kill livestock. Thanks

  • @COMB0RICO
    @COMB0RICO 3 роки тому

    That was awesome! Thanks from Texas.

  • @kaikoserpa6655
    @kaikoserpa6655 2 роки тому

    This was lovely! Thank you

  • @micah_lee
    @micah_lee 2 роки тому

    Hey Eastern gamagrass! The only native plant shown in this video! Plant native! Like he said, drought tolerant and perfect because it is best for the soil and weather conditions that are present in the eastern US! (Because it is endemic to here!) All of the other grasses make it seem like we are in europe and asia. We aren’t.

  • @wenatahakwano3718
    @wenatahakwano3718 2 роки тому

    Thanks for the content

  • @allenferry1268
    @allenferry1268 3 роки тому

    Thank you belatedly for this video. It's hard to identify forages from those cute little pictures you find and when I ask my county agent to identify them all he says " I don't know but a cow will eat it."

  • @Digger927
    @Digger927 5 років тому +2

    Your timing is impeccable Greg! I was building fence today and on the way back to the shed I was driving around the pastures checking out the grasses and weeds and I saw a couple I wasn't sure about. One I was unsure about was the bluegrass, I have a lot of it and I didn't seed it, I was pretty sure it was bluegrass but I was shocked at how much of it there is. I'm still not sure what the other one is but it's got a tan-ish seed head and is about 24-30" tall, it's a cool season is all I can tell about it. It may be the canary grass but it didn't have leaves nearly as large as what you showed there.
    The serecia is really coming in now, any advice on battling that junk?

  • @vemacrinnon1286
    @vemacrinnon1286 Рік тому

    Hi #Greg Judy. Love your videos. This one is silent though, no soundtrack. Please could you reupload this one again with the sound sir?
    I've been looking forward to one where you really get into the forage species mix in your beautiful pastures, as I'm in the UK, and am interested in emulating your pastures with our native equivalents. Much love and well wishes to you and yours. Ve

    • @gregjudyregenerativerancher
      @gregjudyregenerativerancher  Рік тому +1

      It was loaded with sound. I have no way of going back and reloading that video. I delete them after several months from my phone to free up space.

    • @vemacrinnon1286
      @vemacrinnon1286 Рік тому

      @@gregjudyregenerativerancher Thanks for the fast response Greg. I tried watching it on my Android and it plays there, so must be a YT or Google tech problem. Looking forward to part 4 of the 5 acre farm series.
      God bless from England. Ve

  • @ryanwebb6478
    @ryanwebb6478 5 років тому

    Great video!!

  • @iramcclure6189
    @iramcclure6189 Рік тому

    Man could live good baling hay like a mad man in the summer and set back and collect money for as many as he could bale

  • @os3208a
    @os3208a Рік тому

    How would you recommend one learn about and how to identify the different grasses and forages on a property? Thanks!

  • @johnscarboroughregenerativ7240
    @johnscarboroughregenerativ7240 5 років тому +1

    Thank you Greg for the good info! Could you do a video on Weeds in your pastures?I love how clean your pastures are.
    I trying to understand what I can do about the weeds in my pastures thank

    • @trevorgreycattleco
      @trevorgreycattleco 5 років тому +1

      John Scarborough it’s only a weed if the cows don’t eat it.

    • @NS-pf2zc
      @NS-pf2zc 5 років тому +3

      @@trevorgreycattleco Yep! Mine eat all kinds of weeds. Thistles, plantain, dandelion, multiflora rose. They'll eat tree leaves too. It looks like a salad bar out there!

    • @SteveDodsonatDodsonOrchards
      @SteveDodsonatDodsonOrchards 4 роки тому +2

      Pretty sure my sheep would walk over tons of grass on their way to eat a weed get 🐑

    • @charleswalters5284
      @charleswalters5284 2 роки тому

      Bushhog if u must then feed hay on it ;add fertility

  • @davidhickenbottom6574
    @davidhickenbottom6574 3 роки тому

    Will timothy grass thrive in a grazing rotation?. I have a diverse pasture in New England. This is my first year grazing I have K 31 orchard grass some rye and white and red clover. One year later quite a bit of Timothy in the pasture.

  • @nukalavenkatreddy2749
    @nukalavenkatreddy2749 10 місяців тому

    dear Mr Greg/ I am from south india/ i am very much interesting in sheep farming and already i maintaining. I need your help what are pasture s and rhodes clover grass are suitable my whether. temperature is between 32to44 degrees

  • @troybishoppthegrasswhisper3703
    @troybishoppthegrasswhisper3703 5 років тому

    Good stuff Mr. Judy. So you don't worry about all the seedheads and plants diminishing their grow? We are pruning on our 2nd turn behind the cattle because we have too much rain and are stocked more for later grazing. GW

    • @gregjudyregenerativerancher
      @gregjudyregenerativerancher  5 років тому +1

      We were trying to clip some of the pastures behind our cow mob. It rains everyday almost, so no clipping! What we did get clipped is absolutely gorgeous, beautiful long new leaves growing back very quickly.

    • @gregjudyregenerativerancher
      @gregjudyregenerativerancher  5 років тому +1

      We were trying to clip some of the pastures behind our cow mob. It rains everyday almost, so no clipping! What we did get clipped is absolutely gorgeous, beautiful long new leaves growing back very quickly.

  • @cindywoodrum5037
    @cindywoodrum5037 3 роки тому

    I live in Georgia on 5 acres. I have no earthworms because of hammerhead worms. Is this a problem and no good?

  • @dntbh8in
    @dntbh8in 5 років тому +1

    How do you go from crop land to grass without seeding. The first few years would be all weeds? Graze through that?

    • @gregjudyregenerativerancher
      @gregjudyregenerativerancher  5 років тому +5

      You have to get the soil food web thriving. This requires, trampling carbon, manure pats, urine patches and rest. Repeat recipe. Be patient. Most cropped land has very little biology existing in it. You are starting with a blank slate. On the weed issue, graze off what they will eat, then mow off rest of them. On your first spring grazing rotation, do not graze the crop land off more than 2/3rds of the height. You want to encourage the beneficial grasses that may be there to compete with the weeds.

    • @dntbh8in
      @dntbh8in 5 років тому

      @@gregjudyregenerativerancher Thanks Greg. Live the videos learning alot from them

    • @andreafalconiero9089
      @andreafalconiero9089 4 роки тому +1

      ​@@gregjudyregenerativerancher I'm looking at doing something similar (converting arable to pasture), and was thinking of seeding a highly diverse mix of perennial legumes and grasses together with a fast growing annual like oats or rye that's sparsely seeded to function as a nurse crop in the first year. I plan to use a rod weeder and harrow to break things up, and then broadcast the seed mix and use a cultipacker to get things started. Once the nurse crop is ready, it could be taken off with a combine (or just cut high) to encourage tillering and regrowth of the perennials below.
      Aside from the cost of seeding, do you think there would be any drawbacks to doing it this way? My concern is that many of the beneficial species I'd like to introduce (sainfoin, birdsfoot trefoil, etc.) don't even exist in the seed bank or surrounding areas, since this land has been cultivated for many decades. Just letting it go to weeds and waiting for the grasses to supplant them seems like a much slower process. Eventually I'd probably end up with a decent sward of grass, but probably not nearly as much biodiversity, and not necessarily the mix of species that would make for the most productive pasture.

    • @gregjudyregenerativerancher
      @gregjudyregenerativerancher  4 роки тому +5

      @@andreafalconiero9089 Just be careful on purchasing a lot of seed that may not be adapted to your environment. Maybe try a few pounds of each before jumping in and buying full bags of seed that may never come up on your farm. I prefer to use what is in the seed bank, it might surprise you what is there already. Been seeds being dropped there for thousands of years, some are still viable.

  • @thomascushing3760
    @thomascushing3760 Рік тому

    I had an animal science prof at Ohio State around 1970,Dr Jack Judy.Any relation?

  • @brandondickerson2785
    @brandondickerson2785 2 роки тому

    Is there a book with this info in it?

  • @iramcclure6189
    @iramcclure6189 Рік тому

    Ide rather bale it. Spruce the place up with a little fertilizer and grasses like you gotty gets thicker then hair on cats back ! Make 5 bale to the acre and that stuff will bring premium in bale

    • @gregjudyregenerativerancher
      @gregjudyregenerativerancher  Рік тому +1

      I will stick with the 4 legged machinery harvesting their own hay right where it is grown. My machinery runs on sunlight harvested thru green leaves, not diesel fuel.

  • @bryanhauschild4376
    @bryanhauschild4376 2 місяці тому

    No spiders, no cows?

  • @aBuAraDaH
    @aBuAraDaH 3 роки тому

    Hi my friend i would like you put there name i couldn't find them easily

  • @johnmirbach2338
    @johnmirbach2338 3 роки тому

    😁✌👌👍🖖😎

  • @route66express
    @route66express 5 років тому

    How do you deal with thistle when you are developing a new farm? We all know how much you love spraying chemicals on your pastures.

    • @gregjudyregenerativerancher
      @gregjudyregenerativerancher  5 років тому +4

      Manage for what you want, not what you don't want. It is a lengthy topic which will be in my new book. Hope to have it out this fall.

    • @spoolsandbobbins
      @spoolsandbobbins Місяць тому

      Maybe borrow some goats to eat the thistle first, sow native grass and watch your seed bed hatch.