My Simple Backyard Grazing System (for Geese)

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  • Опубліковано 10 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 308

  • @pinkyfromhaughtfarms6550
    @pinkyfromhaughtfarms6550 5 років тому +230

    Thank you for being an ethical farmer. I am a vegetarian for these exact reasons. I understand people eat meat, that's not what upsets me, it's how factory farming is conducted that pisses me off. People need to know where their food comes from, this disconnect that is happening is one thing that's wrong with our broken food system. I have mad respect for people who raise their own meat. I personally could never do it, so that's why I dont eat it. I do source local and humanely raised meat for my husband and son, who are not vegetarian but I still choose to not eat it. I understand this is not an option for everyone, finances or availability where they may live, but that's something that we as people need to work on. Making good, clean, ethical food available to everyone. Love your channel Morgan, keep up the great content💚

    • @Berkeloid0
      @Berkeloid0 5 років тому +37

      You have a very nice attitude - instead of trying to force people to follow your idea, you lead by example, very noble.

    • @cajunjamis9001
      @cajunjamis9001 5 років тому +1

      @K Korona Different strokes...…….?

    • @GoldShawFarm
      @GoldShawFarm  5 років тому +14

      Thanks, Pinky!

    • @pinkyfromhaughtfarms6550
      @pinkyfromhaughtfarms6550 5 років тому

      @K Korona *you're. Troll much? Have a great day✌😁

    • @pinkyfromhaughtfarms6550
      @pinkyfromhaughtfarms6550 5 років тому +6

      @@Berkeloid0 Thank you so much for your kind words💛

  • @littleozarksfarmstead
    @littleozarksfarmstead 5 років тому +38

    Doesn't get any better than a hot cup of coffee and Gold Shaw Farm on Monday mornings 👍💕

  • @paulcourts3627
    @paulcourts3627 5 років тому +55

    When I had rabbits and chickens I used a maggot feeder to dispose of guts after butchering. I saved heart liver kidney to feed dog and cats but everything else went into 5 gallon bucked with holes for flies to get in and maggots to get out. I hung this bucket in chicken run and when maggots fall to ground chickens get protein.

    • @sakarikokotala9160
      @sakarikokotala9160 2 роки тому

      I do the same maggot bucket. Some family members do dispatching on a large scale and use a chest freezer just for my pail.

    • @mosesmboka6520
      @mosesmboka6520 2 роки тому +2

      And the smell?

    • @connorhaley3190
      @connorhaley3190 Рік тому

      Sounds great, but didn’t he have a problem with too many flies around the cattle?

    • @MrBenjaminoneill
      @MrBenjaminoneill Рік тому

      What about attracting predators? Our foxes in the UK would love that and smell it from 8 miles away before it got too wretched...

  • @Steve-ps6qw
    @Steve-ps6qw 5 років тому +68

    You can throw your leg up pretty high to get over that fence...I would have face planted inside the enclosure and then gotten mobbed by geese as the fed would have spilled everywhere...I need a gate, lol.

  • @reighost8399
    @reighost8399 4 роки тому +8

    Your fan-crush on Eduardo is hilarious~! XD Thanks for the pure entertainment!

  • @kierstynn711
    @kierstynn711 5 років тому +35

    I noticed your chickens don't have a roost (perch) to sleep on. With chickens at night to regulate their temperatures they sit on there feet on a perch or something, it would be very beneficial for your chickens for them to have a roost or perch.

    • @austenhead5303
      @austenhead5303 3 роки тому +4

      And easy to build. I'm with Kierstynn. Come on, Mr. Ethical Farmer, make your chickens a perch.

  • @australorp
    @australorp 5 років тому +21

    We are watching a very successful channel

  • @odeimaginations5267
    @odeimaginations5267 5 років тому +14

    It's amazing how readily the ducks start heading to their house when you start yelling "all ducks go to bed!" I love watching your videos! I showed these to my girlfriend and she thought you seemed like the most honest and likeable person in the world. I agree with her :D

  • @rosepomarico6841
    @rosepomarico6841 5 років тому +16

    Oh my goodness I wouldn't share those tasty livers! They're so good for you. Freeze those puppies and have them all year. I just did my chicken butcher, and I kept all the gizzards and livers. So good over rice and veggies! 😋

  • @jaridkeen123
    @jaridkeen123 5 років тому +10

    I always look forward to these videos!

  • @Fulltimer
    @Fulltimer 5 років тому +30

    Somehow you need to get your tractors and geese to the tree farm. Keep trees clear and fertilized.

    • @GoldShawFarm
      @GoldShawFarm  5 років тому +12

      The trees just need to be a little bigger and then that will be the plan. Right now the geese would defoliate the trees. But next year will probably be the year.

    • @icer255
      @icer255 5 років тому +2

      @@GoldShawFarm Great idea, but the I think the ducks and chickens can't reach the foliage of the trees now. But chickens like to dig out plants. :(

  • @italicbudz
    @italicbudz 5 років тому +6

    Those plants though! They look beautiful! 😍

  • @FarmerE
    @FarmerE 5 років тому +5

    I´m amazed you even have geese in your drone shots!
    Great video!

  • @brieannerice5862
    @brieannerice5862 9 місяців тому

    We rotationally graze our geese with our dairy sheep to utilize the most pasture possible.They don't need the choicest bits of forage so it works really well. You could also run your geese behind ruminants if you take the ruminants out sooner.

  • @carlesinseattle7660
    @carlesinseattle7660 5 років тому

    vos oies sont tellement amusantes à regarder, votre sens de l'humour est excellent et votre travail de caméra avec les oies est parfait!

  • @ScarletCandlelight
    @ScarletCandlelight 5 років тому +16

    I was surprised how fast my ducks learned to go to bed

  • @MistressOP
    @MistressOP 5 років тому

    ty for Blush the band at the end of the song. I found a new band and I'm pumped!

  • @KawaiiKasai
    @KawaiiKasai 4 роки тому +2

    First video of your's I've seen and I got so excited about your NOLA shirt lol (I'm about an hour north of there)
    Great video, can't wait to dive into your other content!

  • @wykeishacraft6820
    @wykeishacraft6820 5 років тому +2

    I say you could get your geese's and tractor to a 🌲 farm , this is a great video with nice little 🏠 for the geese's. Great work ,keep it up

  • @Bmatty817
    @Bmatty817 5 років тому +7

    Hey man love your channel I live in the Boston area and i started raising ducks because of your channel! I started with pekin and cayuga you should get some cayuga for your farm!

  • @TealStoneHomestead
    @TealStoneHomestead 5 років тому +3

    I love your channel!! My husband and I live in town while we are paying off our student loans, but were are starting to grow our own food and raise rabbits for meat. We love our rabbits!! When our loans are paid off we plan on getting a small farm :)

  • @vmcougarintn5035
    @vmcougarintn5035 5 років тому +4

    Geese are loud! I think that is why we can't raise them in our subdivision. But, when the wild geese drop in for a visit, oh my! The sound is wonderful and they love my "not" grass too! (as well as the neighbor's pool) LOL Keep on truckin'. You are doing fine.

  • @id6673
    @id6673 3 роки тому +1

    Absolutely love this! Thanks for the videos.

  • @surplusdivision2461
    @surplusdivision2461 4 роки тому +1

    I never feed our geese, grass only. They are free range on my dad’s 120 acer farm. We use them for soil enrichment on our orchard. I didn’t realize I probably have thousands of dollars worth of Foie gras.

  • @nineallday000
    @nineallday000 5 років тому +2

    We rotate 18 geese along with 3 sheep on 1.5 acres and it works out great, so i dont think your estimate is that far off. We buy food for the winter. We use regular electric fence wire, the geese will respect 1 line (have done it before) but we have 4 anyways now because of the sheep. A lot cheaper and easier i think than mesh electric netting (and a bit more lifespan, hopefully)

  • @TheSpiritBaby
    @TheSpiritBaby 8 місяців тому

    I went on a “lifestyle change” (because the diet word is illegal!) two years ago, stopped birth control two and a half years ago, reduced stress, and this year is the first year I have gotten pregnant three consecutive times! This past pregnancy was three months and they keep getting longer. I’m now trying to get more frequent blood tests and thinking about how to make sure hcg grows correctly without interruption. My periods evened out this year and I really believe I owe it to those ginger teas, pomegranate and grapefruit blends, and general lifestyle change (staying away from high sugar, low fiber foods) and eating based on my blood type and to encourage fertility. Look into it! ❤

  • @christianjorgensen4621
    @christianjorgensen4621 5 років тому +7

    Holy smoke that duckling grew up fast!

  • @moments955
    @moments955 13 днів тому

    I have one goose among 12 ducks and she's a fussy bugger. I've read about what to feed them in the winter (in addition to waterfowl feed) so they have a proper goose diet throughout the season but she's sooooo fussy. She tosses whatever I give her (trying to get her used to what we'd like to give her). I'm still working on it but hoping she accepts something soon as winter is right around the corner. Maybe she'll change her tune when she doesn't have the option of grass, but honestly she likes the waterfowl feed and I feel she'll just pound that down

  • @SgtSnausages
    @SgtSnausages 11 місяців тому

    Muscovy do just fine as grazers. I haven't fed mine in years. They graze 9 acres here, 2 ponds of about 1.25 acre total. Don't even have to feed them through winter. They find enough all Winter long. i guess that would depend on snow cover. We generally only accumulate snow in Jan and Feb. Even then, 50-60% of the days have no snow on the ground.

    • @SgtSnausages
      @SgtSnausages 11 місяців тому

      I forgot my main point : Muscovy Duck, in my opinion, are every bit as "sustainable".

  • @Infinite8blue
    @Infinite8blue 5 років тому +3

    Love your editing and memes

  • @eli3568
    @eli3568 4 роки тому

    The way you run your farm is the way all food should be produced. The fact that people are willing to do that to an animal just for a delicacy that is entirely unnecessary...I mean that says something about a person's soul. God forbid people eat a goose liver that isn't excessively fatty...I agree with you. There is nothing unethical about eating meat - provided that the process is ethical. Glad that you are doing it the right way. I'm planning to start a farm operation of some sort, and your channel is an inspiration.

  • @deleo2541
    @deleo2541 Рік тому

    So tempting to just run through the fields singing ‘The Sound of Music’ 😂

  • @TheIntuitiveBodyFoodieNetwork
    @TheIntuitiveBodyFoodieNetwork 5 років тому +2

    I love duck & goose liver. That said, I do not support force feeding geese for foie gras. Goose liver doesn't have to be excessively large for me to want to eat it. It just needs to be raised organically, pastured & humanely such as what you do here. For that I wish to thank you for being such an ethical farmer.
    Product should only take up 10-15% of your time & energy which leaves you with 85-90% of time for promotion & marketing. That said, apart from trying to sell the liver to restaurants, try marketing your geese & geese liver to organic grocery stores for Thanksgiving & Christmas dinners. Once you've established yourself as the distributor to even one local organic grocery store, especially if it's in a big city, you'll never have to look for buyers for your wares. Organic ducks, turkeys & geese are triple to four times the price as their commercial counterpart in my city and people are more than willing to pay the price because they know they're pastured & ethically raised. Never underestimate what people are willing to pay. Too, find a recipe and make goose liver pate and sell it to organic grocery store, at your local farmers markets, at the end of your road or on your farm store as a 'specialty' item. You might even consider mixing & selling the organs of your animals (intestines, heart, liver, brain, eyeballs, kidneys, etc) and marketing it as dog, cat, &/or pig food. A weekend food stand at the end of your road might help local people find you to buy your wares. Finally, you might want to take a look at & link your website to Eat Wild, a website that helps people like me find the food you raise. The possibilities to market your delicious wares are endless.

  • @johnstjean1422
    @johnstjean1422 5 місяців тому

    Order my geese there coming in June looking forward having them

  • @icer255
    @icer255 5 років тому +2

    Great system, you could also run the chickens after the geese have eaten the grass down. So through their scratching and pooping they make the grass grow even higher after each run. Have a look at Richard Perkins from Sweden on UA-cam. Thanks for sharing your story from Germany

  • @kittypewpew
    @kittypewpew 3 роки тому +1

    "Great freezer in the sky" :D

  • @denisebauman7682
    @denisebauman7682 4 роки тому

    there's also the option re: smaller footprint land wise, of sprouted fodder/or sprouting fodder for feed...there are a lot of good resources online on how to go about that-and if one has a space to do it in year round, then it also ensures fresh food for them in winter.

  • @Popupong
    @Popupong 5 років тому +3

    For those wondering, the song at the end is "Blush" by Velvet Moon.

  • @patricksullivan9773
    @patricksullivan9773 4 роки тому

    Have you ever made goose jerky? Not sure about the domestic birds, but for the Greater Canadians we simply breast them out and grind it and season for jerky dehydration. We have made it side by side with deer venison and the same seasonings and most people who try them both favor the goose jerky in blind taste testing. I would imagine you could simply add the livers into the ground breasts as a filler into the jerky mix. If you are trying to monetize your farming jerky is quite expensive and is a tasty way to cure and preserve your efforts. I highly recommend trying this. Other than goose jerky, I am not a fan of the goose meat prepared in any other fashion so this is really the only option I see for use.

  • @monicareid8858
    @monicareid8858 Рік тому

    I absolutely LOVE duck liver (and hearts and gizzards-but the liver is choice!)
    I bet you can preserve your duck and goose liver as they do for fröi gras (sP?) and sell it as a humane luxury food.
    Especially to gourmet restaurants in NY.
    Heck-I’d want them!

  • @jeanniegriffin1692
    @jeanniegriffin1692 5 років тому +1

    Happy to see that, Little Guy, is comfortable, lol🖖🤠

  • @retrolyrical9967
    @retrolyrical9967 5 років тому +1

    I have ducks of my own and I love watching your videos keep the great content up

  • @saeedoc
    @saeedoc 5 років тому

    nice camera shots man. your channel getting better and better.good luck.

  • @MistressOP
    @MistressOP 5 років тому

    if you are in the burbs and want to set up a small goose system. do muscovy ducks they are basically gooses and they don't make much noise

  • @RedRubyFarm
    @RedRubyFarm 2 роки тому

    Love your channel ! I have been wanting to get some geese & your information is very helpful!

  • @carlesinseattle7660
    @carlesinseattle7660 5 років тому +4

    foie d'oie, j'aimerais bien y goûter! Merci pour l'idée !

  • @MrsStevenBrown
    @MrsStevenBrown 4 роки тому

    Look into the “heavy buttermilk/dairy/corn” mash that Bresse French Chickens are fed near the end of their production. No force feeding, but they are caged after pasture and fed this corn/buttermilk mash to fatten up on in the last two weeks....maybe add the mash to the last 3 weeks of the production time...it could produce a more fatty liver naturally..and better marbling in the meat.

  • @honeycaffena4897
    @honeycaffena4897 5 років тому +7

    Thanks for the information, can you share about eggs?

  • @ephantusmacharia6096
    @ephantusmacharia6096 4 роки тому

    It's good my guy I love your work

  • @stankatsura1235
    @stankatsura1235 4 роки тому +2

    For a minute there you looked like Keyser Sose :)

  • @pepecocomax
    @pepecocomax 5 років тому +2

    I'm so confused if that gentleman doesn't fence his geese in how does he protect them against preditors. Love, love, love you videos. They are always so entertaining.

    • @cynthiafisher9907
      @cynthiafisher9907 5 років тому

      I think he’s in Europe and they don’t have as many predators maybe?

    • @AJR-zg2py
      @AJR-zg2py 3 роки тому

      Some areas have no natural predators that threaten their livestock. Shepherds in the UK for example let their sheep roam freely because there are no wolves, coyotes or bears. I imagine that man in Spain doesn't have to worry either about his geese for similar reasons.

  • @thekatt...
    @thekatt... 5 років тому

    I'll bet buddy's pate tastes amazing. A mix with wild genetics, and all natural foods . So much richer I'll bet.
    I wasn't ready for that footage tho. Already traumatized by that one yrs ago. But thanx for bringing more awareness to the public.
    Haven't eaten the stuff myself. But if it came from yours or his ducks ...I would try it.
    ❤️❤️❤️🇨🇦☕️☕️

  • @WhopYaJaw808
    @WhopYaJaw808 5 років тому +17

    0:16 hey some nice "HERBS" hahaha 😏

    • @cynthiamcwhorter6721
      @cynthiamcwhorter6721 5 років тому

      I saw that too

    • @TheMischief9
      @TheMischief9 4 роки тому

      ….. me too ….. lol

    • @bobthedog3337
      @bobthedog3337 3 роки тому +1

      The geese eat it, get the munchies, then put on liver fat. They have trouble getting into the fridge, though.....

  • @ruth_6303
    @ruth_6303 5 років тому

    Your ducks are quiet during roll call. 👏🏽 😊

  • @RahonaStream
    @RahonaStream 4 роки тому

    Thanks to you I trained my khaki campbell ducks to go to bed when I tell them to. Thank you! I've never had such well behaved ducks.

  • @johngordon6161
    @johngordon6161 5 років тому

    Great T-Shirt in this episode!

  • @urkiddingme6254
    @urkiddingme6254 Рік тому

    I've known about the fois gras horror show for decades I really could have gone the rest of my life without that graphic video. Probably won't sleep tonight. Sigh. This is why I stopped reading mail from PETA.😱 But it's good you're educating people.

  • @131dyana
    @131dyana 5 років тому

    Love the geese. Clover is good food for geese.

  • @patricacompton9603
    @patricacompton9603 3 роки тому

    If you feed them frozen corn like we get from the grocery store, just make sure its organic. They will get a fatty liver because they LOVE the taste of it and will eat it up to excess if you let them. Just be careful how much you give them. Some will go to extremes over fresh or frozen corn. Chickens love it too.

  • @tenmilechicks
    @tenmilechicks 4 роки тому +1

    Hmm, so you might recommend 15 geese per acre? Do you maintain this system through your summer months? If so, how hot do your summer months get and how long do the highest degrees last before cooling down again? How often do you change their bathing water? How long is one roll of netting and how many are using for your geese? With it being electric can we assume that it keeps most of the 4 legged bad guys out?

  • @terencechandler845
    @terencechandler845 2 роки тому

    Good on ya man I like your style

  • @lolelelo2210
    @lolelelo2210 5 років тому

    I love how all the ducks run back home into their house when he calls.

  • @muddyfeetaussies
    @muddyfeetaussies 3 роки тому

    Love ducks chickens and geese.. other than they are way messier then chick during brooding stage :) however geese for the win on letting them be lawnmowers.. second would be ducks for eating grasses less feed for short term production (peking) for putting meat into the freezer .. oh not to mention I have australian shepherds and training them to work stock.. don't have space for sheep goats.. too.. chickens are cool.. done the cornish cross thing. Chickens are really really good at tick removal plus their digging is very useful along the stone wall and the house clearing weeds etc.. if you don't have any gardens.. there.. :) just wish getting geese was not so expensive.. oh both ducks and geese are loud.. little buggers like to talk and mess up their daily routine or they feel like you changed something they express it. :) But really most of the time they are pretty quiet..

  • @scubaguy5389
    @scubaguy5389 5 років тому

    being a farmer is hard work. damn

  • @garyseitz6166
    @garyseitz6166 Рік тому

    I like your system.. I'm in Alaska and in winter we get 4 or 5 feet accumulation of snow and no foraging for months. I'm wondering of the 30 geese are you overwintering ome of them, or do you have breeders separate rearing young geese..
    Wile those are grazing on pastures...

  • @cynthiabrennemann3513
    @cynthiabrennemann3513 5 років тому

    Oy. If you could only ship. I've been scouring the area for goose for thanksgiving and I adore a good pate made from duck, goose, and pork liver, even if it is not foie gras.

  • @samanthayates7275
    @samanthayates7275 5 років тому

    The geese are so big!! 😍😍😍

  • @christymitchell3749
    @christymitchell3749 4 роки тому

    We have sebastopol geese on about 2 acres. We lock them in a coop in the barn every night. They aren't for eating though.

  • @mirianoyola9189
    @mirianoyola9189 4 роки тому

    Love ur video! I was researching that organs are very nutritious for dogs.

  • @WatermelonLover
    @WatermelonLover 4 роки тому +1

    “Great Freezer In The Sky” 🤣🤣🤣

  • @letssaveearth4398
    @letssaveearth4398 4 роки тому +1

    I❤️ geese

  • @charlethemagne5466
    @charlethemagne5466 5 років тому

    Really enjoy your videos and your positivity is preety infectious, that's a sub from me

  • @andrewshullick4319
    @andrewshullick4319 5 років тому +1

    Great video thanks for all the information thanks for sharing

  • @jperiksen
    @jperiksen 2 роки тому

    I noticed the 2 pot bushes in the center of your garden there

  • @MrHandoverfist
    @MrHandoverfist 5 років тому

    I like to see the harvest process for the geese....

  • @MistressOP
    @MistressOP 5 років тому +1

    you should redo the house system to one big greenhouse house. for next year. i honestly think geese is the future of xmas in the usa. if you find the right people for the right market. geese and turkey are going to be so important for small farmers and meduim farmers. it's very hard for big farms to do goose right. they can't even fake it.

  • @builtontherockhomestead9390
    @builtontherockhomestead9390 5 років тому

    Part-Time Permies. Mike is a chef.

  • @veronicasanto4098
    @veronicasanto4098 4 роки тому +1

    I'm grazing seven geese on about 1/4 acre of pasture, three rotations, move them about every 4 days. Why? Because as you said, since they graze they require less shipped-in food than other poultry AND b/c other poultry causes erosion on my hillside, tear up garden beds (which I let them access during winter) and damage my fruit and nut tree roots with their scratching, which geese do not do. I am currently cutting back on the number- now that the 6 goslings are fully grown 7 seems like too many for the grass and I probably have too many males for them to abide peacefully once their first breeding season as mature birds comes this February. Totally failed at my first vent sexing attempt today, such a learning curve as with all things homesteading. I am in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia, USA so the grass is slowing down now but in the summer we had a brief balance of grass growth to grazing and at another location nearby I kept my rental "lawn" mow-free and short like a golf course with three geese rotated in three sections for one whole summer. Portable electric netting is essential! I find it amazing that you'll have each paddock not grazed for 9 weeks. Here after two weeks ungrazed, the grass is so long the geese don't really like it. That's why I move em in three paddocks every 4 days. When they get to a new paddock, the growth is about 8 days old and they love it at that length (3-4"). Do you mow your paddocks? Also, my geese refuse to go into a shelter even in winter, but our winters are not as bad as yours must be in Vermont. I'd love your slaughter tips. I used bypass pruning loppers last year but hope to use "the Finisher" this year, a waterfowl hunting tool that severs the brain stem very quickly.

  • @elroy8272
    @elroy8272 4 роки тому

    My friend cooked liver with garlic then dried into jerky for her show dogs.

  • @Steve-ps6qw
    @Steve-ps6qw 5 років тому +2

    I plan on feeding them to my dogs...livers, lung, heart and gizzards...for all the animals that meet their end by my hand. Nothing should go to waste (have you ever composted feathers?)

  • @LWren-nr6ud
    @LWren-nr6ud 5 років тому +2

    A better alternative for backyards would be muscovy ducks as they are very quiet but also eat a lot of vegetation and the males get to a large size.

    • @bonniecaudill1264
      @bonniecaudill1264 5 років тому +1

      Very low in fat and they are wonderful to raise.

  • @garymckenzie7342
    @garymckenzie7342 5 років тому +3

    Love the “Defend New Orleans” tee shirt.

  • @spacealien3073
    @spacealien3073 Рік тому

    :c Yeah a while back I was reading up on domestic geese breeds and learned that toulouse geese are commonly used for foie gras and it made me feel terrible for them. Like geese are cool birds people shouldn't torture them to make specific dishes so hopefully more people choose to be like you and find ways to produce fatty livers in a far more ethical way.

  • @legionofknightsgaming6890
    @legionofknightsgaming6890 2 роки тому +1

    How does your geese not fly off?
    Are their wings clipped or do they just not fly off because its their home?

  • @mannurse7421
    @mannurse7421 2 роки тому

    Bruh that Tshirt. I want it.

  • @lasobaranch9994
    @lasobaranch9994 5 років тому

    cool video, thanks for sharing

  • @Steve-ps6qw
    @Steve-ps6qw 5 років тому

    I could hear the coyote activity....we had one jump a fence last week as it entered our neighborhood. My daughters boyfriend saw it when coming to pick her up at 06:30....I have heard them chattering away around midnight to 1 a.m. one winter night....I was shocked to hear them as I thought there were none in Miami Dade county.

  • @elisaa1620
    @elisaa1620 5 років тому

    You talk a lot with your hands .. it’s hypnotizing 👁‍🗨 ...😂👍🏻

    • @GoldShawFarm
      @GoldShawFarm  5 років тому +3

      😂🤣 it’s my secret to get people to keep watching videos 🤫

    • @elisaa1620
      @elisaa1620 5 років тому +1

      Gold Shaw Farm let me tell you this, I have no intention in raising, touching, feeding or eating ; goose ducks or any sort of bird !! But you do make it so interesting and the loving way you do it you my friend got my hook into watching your vids ! I love nature. And love the old way of life fermented pepper of all kinds hot or mild 🌶 i also make yogurt !!
      I wish you success in accomplishing your dreams and goals !!!

  • @jamesmiller6213
    @jamesmiller6213 Рік тому

    Hello, wondering how are you doing 3 years later? What or who is your market for goose and duck meat?

  • @ctraltdel6510
    @ctraltdel6510 3 роки тому

    Did you clip a wing for the ducks and geese? I'm new to this, looking for ideas.

  • @rebekkah9420
    @rebekkah9420 4 роки тому

    people do horrible things to animals, just for profit. Thanks for not being such a human. I love how well you treat your animals!

  • @drewbakka5265
    @drewbakka5265 4 роки тому

    >what to do with my goose livers
    Its like you have an oil field and say "what do I do with this"
    Also I'd say also use a field system, where you move a pea field build right after the geese move out of it to get the most out of the fertilizer

  • @persephonedgheim6796
    @persephonedgheim6796 3 роки тому

    how many acres is your farm and how much was it all. did you buy a house on the farm or off the farm. was the house in livable condition.

  • @evavenizelou2134
    @evavenizelou2134 2 роки тому

    Can you please tell me what you use for fencing them?

  • @josephtufts7649
    @josephtufts7649 4 роки тому

    Well your speaking to a guy who is bonkers about Honkers. And Goose liver tacos might be up your alley

  • @kmcquack8989
    @kmcquack8989 2 роки тому

    Are geese ever loud at night or super early in the morning? Do they have a time of day they are loudest?

  • @livasta1468
    @livasta1468 4 роки тому

    Dang you could like step over me with that high kick

  • @xyooj96
    @xyooj96 4 роки тому +1

    how much feed do you go thru for your 31 geese? which breed is the quietest geese?

  • @kennethbutler1343
    @kennethbutler1343 5 років тому +2

    I wonder if the geese like to spend the night with any "friend" geese in the 3 pens, or is it just random which goose ends up with which?

  • @steadypresencefarms
    @steadypresencefarms 3 роки тому

    What variety do you use? Hatchery?