Molly you are making a lot of new friends on this because you are very easy to like! Best wishes to you and Shane and happy Memorial Day. USN 1971-75 Tonkin Gulf Yacht Club CVA-41
Hi Molly, great videos. I’ve commented before on how hard you all work. Great. I live in rural New Zealand on a couple of acres and while I’m not farming we are surrounded by sheep, dairy and cropping farms. Interesting to see the differences in farming practices. I lived in CT for a couple of years and visited Maine, a lovely state. Thanks for posting such informative videos. Pete
Hey Pete! Thank you so much for commenting! We really do appreciate it! Rural New Zealand sounds amazing! I have only seen it on the tv! I wish we had more animal farms around us! Thank you so much for watching!
Friend from New Zealand here, just love watching world wide farming. I've found over my decades of farming that water will show you where it naturally wants to run or sit so instead of trying to reroute it un naturally it's best to work around it.
There’s your new average shot vlog pit , that might be a good place for that when you dig out a little more distance Length, lol ❤❤ thanks BigAl California.
Molly you tell Shane to weld you up a rock 🪨 box 📦 so you don't have to put rocks in my tractor. 😅😅. And slow down on the road you scare me ha ha. Great job another great video ❤.
Thank you Molly and Shane,brilliant as always🤗,loved the drone footage 😊 I've just finished the first cut of silage which took 4 days and this week coming I'm hedge cutting for most of the week 😀 thanks again til next time 👍 UK 🇬🇧
Hey Pete! Awesome on getting your first cutting done! I’m learning a little about that from another channel! Thank you for always commenting and watching! O hope your week is great!!😊🫶🚜👍🏻
After watching your videos in the last 5 to 6 months I'm amazed how much I've learned! Your a great teacher and influencer! Say hi to Shane for me! A by the way, alot of farmers like the ones in upper New York that have alot of rocks, they have slug hammers that makes it easier to bust out the big rocks!
Hey there! Thank you very much for watching! I’m glad I have been able to teach you some things! Yes I larger hammer would work good. It’s funny I’m still getting a list together of all the things I need in my tractor & truck for field work. Thank you again!
Loved the drone footage. A big difference in how your trees are coming out and the trees here in Pennsylvania. Our hay is ready to bale but just can’t get the weather to cooperate. Farming has different challenges every year I guess. Thanks for sharing your video.
As of today mostly everything is green! We have had great weather the past week and we got some rain today so things should really start to take off! We have all of our potatoes and grain corn planted, and now we are working on the last few plantings of sweet corn!
At 11:23 when you two were eating lunch, the clouds are amazing! That's why I love spring tillage/planting and mowing hay in early June in Central New York. We have the best skies. And, whatever you did, you look especially great! Shane is a lucky guy.
I grew up farming corn and cotton with Dad. The corn was for our cows, chickens and pigs. We always had a large garden which I still maintain today. In the mid sixties we began farming on a larger scale with rice and soybeans. As I was finishing high school Dad decided to quit farming and get a factory job so I went to college and graduated in 1980 as a Registered Nurse. After 43 years in the hospital, I retired in 2023. Turning dirt is still in my blood.
Hey there! Thank you Very much for telling me your story. I come from a family of nurses. My mother and sister both. I hope your garden does great! Thank you very much for watching and commenting :)
I live in the Willamette Valley in Oregon. The countryside looks some the same as there,but we are between two mountain ranges. When I farmed I raised sweet corn, green beans, strawberries, boysenberries, wheat , alfalfa and other seed crops. The valley today has lots of grass seed crops, perennial rye, tall fescue, fine fescue, bent grass. Also the largest hazelnut producing area in the US. Some nursery crops, hops, and a few blackberries. So it's fun to see the similarities and differences. Thanks for the videos of farming in Maine!
I can just imagine being between two mountains! Sounds like wonderful farm country! I did not know that about hazelnuts! Thank you very much for watching and commenting!
Good morning Molly, The drone footage was awesome it adds a cool dimension to the video. I don’t farm but friends of mine have 300 acres that they raise cattle on, I help them especially during hay season in return they let me hunt on their property.
Hey there! I think that’s great that you help them during hay season. We have a lot of people who hunt and never ask to help with anything. You are a good neighbor! Thank you very much for watching and leaving me a comment!
Not a farmer here, but love learning and watching your videos. Retired packaging engineer, designed and installed many packaging systems and vision systems (not so much for farms) so this is how I started watching you guys. However, I got sucked in seeing all the aspects of your farm life. Best wishes to you and Shane as you continue to develop your business (even more). Love seeing how self sufficient you are and Shane's many essential skills. I have to think because this channel is so popular, you must get a lot of random "visits". I can see another Magnolia Silos in the future LOL.
Hey Bob! Thank you so much for taking the time to leave a comment! We do really appreciate it! We haven’t gotten many visits yet. But then again we aren’t really at the farm and packing house this time of year. Thank you for watching us Bob!
I love watching anything to do with farming I farmed until age 35 & then worked seasonal for different farmers now almost 70 but I still love farming, keep up the good work.Allan from NB Canada.
My first job was on a farm, it was a cattle farm We moved 500 head every couple months to a new pasture Another great video Can’t wait to see your hard work pay off
Cattle farm sounds very interesting! I have only seen our friend Larry’s cow farm. Thank you very much for watching and telling me a little about your experience in farming. I wish my first job would have been on a farm!
Love the videos. My grandmother was a Bell. She was born in Oklahoma but her roots trace to the east. She came from farming but became a rodeo...wild west show... performer, in the 20s and early 30s. From now on Shane and yourself will be called Cuz. Be well.
Hi Molly! A Nice 30 + minute drive back to home base. Great drone footage of an irregular sized field and more good information for us armchair farmers. Have a blessed day week. Greetings from Central PA.
Hi Molly and Shane , its always nice to see you guys working any having fun working. We are retired and no longer farming, I trucked for year's ,farming and Ranchin at the same time. My wife and I worked together in the field for years also. We raised a lot of hay ,alfalfa, grass, and grain hay. I never could get my wife to run a baler,😂 She saw what a pain it was sometimes. Ha. Have a Great Weekend. 😊
Hey Steve! Sounds like you did a bit of everything all at once! I really enjoy hearing about other husband and wife working the farm together! Thank you for always watching and commenting!
Good job Molly. We're a small Certified Seed Potato farm in Aroostook County (70 acres farmland) and we still have a week of planting left. Planting Potato Plantlets and Potato Minitubers are our slowest crops to plant. We don't start planting potatoes until the soil temp hits 50oF at 6am (6" depth) which this year was Saturday May 18, right on target with the 30 year average. We warm up and sprout all our seed before we plant our 24 varieties using a homemade Tuber Unit planter. Jim at Wood Prairie
Jim this sounds super cool! I know we have chatted a little in past videos. I’m curious to know more about the potato plantlets! I still don’t know the whole process of how the first potato is grown from the actual see part. Also can you tell me what varieties you are growing, and about how much of them. 25 is a lot! You can email me if you want to bellfarmsinc1937@gmail.com thank you for all your support! 🚜🫶💚👍🏻
@@BellsFarming Hi Molly, I just sent you an email describing the Potato Plantlet process. We watched your recent video where you were planting an experimental Potato variety. What is its name?
We started our Wood Prairie mail order business 35 years ago (now catalog plus web-store). We sell our Maine Certified Seed Potato crop Farm-to-Mailbox direct to home gardeners and market gardeners in all 50 States. We know how much of each variety we can sell in a year so we grow small amounts - rarely more than an acre per variety - to meet our retail customer demand. Megan and I have handed down the farm to the next generation, so we now we're farm hands working for our son, Caleb.
Loved this video. One of my questions was answered. I wondered how all the stubble was going to be ground up to rid the field of it, and it's just a matter of discing it what looks like more than one pass. Farming is a fascinating industry. I'm amazed that genetics and science play a big role in it as well, as you mentioned in one of the previous videos you shared. Thank you for sharing. I hope you're having a great growing season this year, as I'm looking forward to catching up with your latest videos. Have a great day. 😊
Another great video Molly. Love watching you in the tractor out in the fields. When I was 14 or 15 I started working on a hay farm I loved it driving all the farm equipment and tractors. It was awesome. ❤
Excellent video. Love the drone shots. LOL and Shane's timidity. Woke up to thunderstorms today. Yesterday was beautiful sun and warmth. All headed your way in a day or two. I live on a gravel bed. I can have a lake out front and it'll be gone in 10 min as soon as it stops raining. Again, enjoyed your chatter and experiencing riding along with you.
I was born & raised on a farm in Pa. Owned 2 farms & rented 2. Totaled about 300ac. After Dad passed I did it myself with 1 Farmall M & 1 Super M. Raised potatoes, feed corn ,wheat, barley, oats, peas, hay. Raised 15,000 meat chickens a year, had usually 30 head of Hereford cattle & a few pigs. Sold all our potatoes to Weis for potato chips. Retired now & really miss being on a tractor.
That’s a lot of work to do! I think about what it would be like to try animals on our farm, but I don’t think we have enough time to bring on anything else. We are totally maxed out. Sounds like a very rewarding life. I hope you are able to enjoy retirement! Thank you very much for watching and commenting! 🚜🚜 I’ll drive the tractor for you:)
Have you considered using the gravel from the unused gravel pit to fill in the erosion damage? So nice to listen to smooth music watching a pretty lady farming!
They will do some field maintenance this year over there. Yeah they have to bring some equipment over. I’m so glad you enjoy the videos and the music! Thank you so much for watching!
I am an old Iowa farm boy! I grew up on a farm in north east Iowa, and we farmed 1200 acres of corn, beans, and had a small beef cattle operation and farrowing center. I left and moved to south Texas in 1980 and lived in east Tennessee for 28 years. My wife and I thought we wanted to retire in south Florida and spent four years in that toilet and moved back to Tennessee. We live on Mowbray mountain outside of a little town named Soddy Daisy.
Hey there! Now that was a large farm! Thank you very much for sharing your past! I always wanted to work with cattle. Maybe someday. Thank you for watching and commenting. Ps sounds like you are in a good retirement spot in Tennessee!
Just my wife and myself here dryland farming in central ND. wheat, corn, canola, soybeans, barley, and a few sunflowers in the area, alfalfa and native hay, with cattle mixed in. 44th crop for us. Oh, (: We put rocks on rock piles instead of the bushes! Some of the piles get pretty big(: HA!
Hey there! You guys are a farming couple too! 44th. Crop! Wow that’s really something to be around of! You like I I just throw the rocks wherever hahahaha maybe I should start a wall hahaha thank you so much. For watching and commenting! We have thought about growing sunflowers! Might do that in the near future.
Yay another great Video Molly! Keep up the great work! The best morning coffee video to start my days with!👍🤗 (I farm 100 acres of mostly hay land in Ontario. One dozen Limousin beef cattle, cow/calf. Approximately 20 acres of mixed grains as feed and crop rotation.)
Thank you for starting your day with us! I would love to work on a cattle farm one day hahah thank you very much for watching. You grow all your own food for your cows? An extra?
Hi Molly,, farmer grant here from Minnesota,, took over farm after 32 years military, just me, 150 acres, 100 pasture hay ( for small bales ) 25 acres corn for grinding ( feed to sell ) 25 acres cover crop for neighbors,,having a great time,, - farmin 😎
Another Great Video 👍 Great content, keep up the great work! Growing up my dad farmed about 1200 acres in Idaho, we grew potatoes, mint and corn seed. Loved growing up working outside! This channel brings back all my childhood memories of my dad and I who passed away in 2021. Love this channel!
Thank you very much! You are always one of the first to watch my videos and always leave a nice comment! I’m so glad our daily life brings you joy and good memories! 🫶
Molly and Shane! Looks like you guys are in the thick of field preparations and it looks like you are enjoying every moment of it! Shane needs to let you kiss him on camera, he’s so funny not wanting to film that. I’d be boasting on camera with my wife! Great video!
I became very happy that you thanks for all of your fans who watching and subscribe you your drone footage are really give a breathing view which is pleasureable and your videos are very interesting you are doing a great job thank for making video i enjoy your videos and i also love your UA-cam channel because you gave response back to your fan
Hey there! Thank you so much for leaving me this comment! I think the drone footage is awesome! We have t had a lot of time to play with it yet, but it gives just an amazing view! We never knew how beautiful the fields looked from above! I really do appreciate everyone who watches and takes the time to leave us comments! You guys really are what makes these videos fun! 🫶🚜💚👍🏻😊😁
Hi there, crop farmer here from Saskatchewan Canada. Just getting ready to go pre work my last field today then hopefully get it seeded tomorrow and that will be a wrap for planting this year. Your channel showed up on my youtube feed during your last video so I subscribed. It's nice to see how farmers in other areas are doing and how they run their operations compared to mine. Thanks for the videos and good luck with the rest of planting!
Hey there! Thank you very much for leaving a comment! I also find it fun to watch other farms and see the similarities and differences. And there always room to learn something! Thank you and happy growing season!
My husband farms for wildlife,,, he mowed, disced and planted about 10 acres of corn that is grown for duck hunting. Now he has moved on to mowing which will be for better forage for deer this winter.... very small farming BUT ..
I really enjoyed reading about all the farmers from all over the world in your comments. That was a great question to ask your followers. I've had a rewarding life as an engineer but always thought I would have loved being a farmer.
Hey there! It’s very cool that you read others comments! I’m very lucky everyone is very kind and positive! Farming is very rewarding! It’s hard sometimes, but everything can have its ups and downs. Thank you very much for letting me know you check out the comments of others. And thank you for leaving one yourself! You guys really make this fun! 😊🚜💚🫶👍🏻
Hello. I live in Sweden and watch your videos. you have very large fields to work on in Sweden. You explain in a very good way in each video. I'm not a farmer but I love machines and farming anyway. I collect tractors in scale 1/32 😉. keep making videos because i'm checking them out. etc. Bjorn
I was the hired man for a Soy Bean and Field Corn farm. We farmed 2600 acres. We were a JD green operation running the larges JD equipment possible. Soy Beans were Pioneer Seed Beans that we stored on site until the plant called for them. Occasionally they would plant food grade yellow and white. Yellow would go to Frito-Lay and white to elevator that sold to Taco Bell and famine organizations around the world.
Wow!!! Very impressive. Did you do farm work your whole life? We are definitely a JD farm. We have two tractors that are not. But one of them is an antique now, but still in use. Very cool! I bet you had giant silos! Thank you for sharing!
Hello Molly and Shane, As a reaction to your question. I am Stefan and I am from The Netherlands in Europe. I grew up a the dairy farm owned by my parents. The are retired farmers now. I work as a parts manager at a New Holland dealership. I am still very interested in all farming going on and love te see what farmers over the world are doing. Keep up the videos.
Hey there Stefan! Thank you so much for watching! I bet the dairy farm was a great place to grow up! I’m happy you are still involved with the farm world! My had dad had a nice New Holland tractor. I remember when he came home with it from the dealership! He still uses it! He was not a farmer but uses it for projects and wood cutting. We lived in the country. Thank you! 🚜🚜🫶
Enjoy watching farming in other regions. We work about 2,200 acres in N Central Alabama. Cotton, corn, soybeans, wheat, milo. Our corn is tasseling now, beans up, cotton just emerging. Getting hot and sticky down here now! Be that way til October!
Oh wow! Yeah you guys have a much longer growing season! Very cool. That’s a lot of acres!!! I never have gone to Alabama! I hope you guys have a great growing season! Thank you for watching and commenting.
We do 2500 acre's north east Ohio lot of moving like y'all almost done planting corn is done like 40 acres of beans on to side dressing n spraying God bless be safe
Thank you for telling me, I grew up in north east Ohio. We are almost done with sweet corn plantings few more plantings. Will be side dressing potatoes in another week or so
Molly(The Cindy Crawford farm girl),I guess there is a lot of preparation that goes into your fields before you start planting your crops??I love seeing your four doggies on camera and they are beautiful doggies 🐕 that you all have(your kids)...❤😊😊😊
Ha! I like that one. Cindy Crawford haha yes the land needs a bit of work to get ready for planting. Lots of fields. I’m so glad you like the dogs! They are the best! Thank you very much for watching and commenting 🐕🐕🐕🐕🚜😁💚❤️
Great video once again. Things look good considering all the water issues. Can you give the date and temperature in your videos? Always nice to see where people are in planting and the variables in temps. Nothing like rock farming.
Thank you! I will try to start doing that! I will apologize in advance because sometimes it takes me. While to get my videos out! I have 2-3 more day of shooting I need to make videos for from the last two weeks. Then I’ll be caught up! Thank you again for watching and commenting :)
I am Todd. I work for county farms. We grow 3900 acres of potatoes in the mars hill area. We also have a farm in limington 145 acres of potato’s and around 300 acres of potatoes in the Rumford/bethel area. Love your videos.and the farm owns the fry plant in washburn.
Oh wow! That’s a lot of acres! I’m sure I have seen I have seen some of your fields when I was in the county! I think I remember hearing that you guys drive your tractors to Bethel from mars hill. Not sure if that is true or not, I would love to come check out the farm sometime when I’m back in the county! Thanks for watching Todd!
@@BellsFarming we drive the harvester and windrower from bethel to limington and back. We haul equipment from mars hill to limington with lowboys to plant in the spring. I stay in limington for the summer to take care of the crop till we dig. Then come home to help harvest. Yes you definitely should come visit the home farm. You can stop in limington anytime in the summer. It’s on skip road in limington. It about 400 acres in one field with 3 pivots. Putting a new one up next week for the 4th.
Hi molly and shane I am from Queensland Australia farm cattle, wheat cereals,mungbeans legumes, sometimes grain sorghum and barley rhodes grass for hay, mix of irrigation pivots and dryland cropping run a couple 7630 john deeres and some smaller ones aswell. R62 gleaner header
Ok... First off all !. My crops are under constants supervision during the daytime. I am not sure what to expect in terms of yeild, but growth is fast as we have hot weather here ( in Denmark ), I grow two sorts, and one seems to be taller than the other. I really do hope that my 2 x 3 tomato plants in Capillary Boxes will give me lots of tomatos. They are just outside my office window.
I grew up working on dairy farms around the area here in western ny . We had 300 milking cows . When the economy fell the farm shut down.. I then worked for Case IH until I decided to become a wrangler out in Yellowstone. After that I decided to help run my family's horse boarding stable and now I run it with my brother.. we board around 36 horses and hold rodeos. We plant our own feilds and make hay for all our horses every year.. it's something I am proud of but soon we will be getting back into beef cows and start a new adventure .. Farming has always been my way of life . Idk what I'd do with out it
Adam your life sounds awesome! I think you should be very proud of all that you are doing, and ready to take on more! I just started ridding lessons this year( never been on a horse before ) and I love it! So much fun. You just forget about everything else while you’re ridding. You will have to leave me some updates on how everything is going! I would love to hear about the horses and soon to be cows! I wish I was a cowgirl!
Hi Molly, another great video! You look gorgeous. Love your long hair. Your a real pro . It baffles me how rock keep popping up. The rock goblins put them out at night haha. The dron shots are really cool. Thanks Molly
Just our of bed, got my coffee, and now catching up with my favorites in entertainment. Just say that this older man down here in the Smoky Mountains of East TN found this John Deere buried in mud from front to rear, in a place I had no idea existed - even tho I had been there on business twice. So I subscribed and have enjoyed every issue since. Molly, you do not talk like a lot of the others in Lewiston (Loiston). I will follow and enjoy. Do be careful all of you. Jim
Hey Shane and Molly! Wow, you guys had some major flooding in your area! Those are some serious soil erosion washouts in some of your fields. You may need to look at bringing in an excavator or dozer to fill in the gullies and restore your farm land. The farm fields in my area of southern Michigan look much like yours, absolutely beautiful! Newly tilled and planted and already starting to germinate. Along with field corn, soybeans and winter wheat, our farmers also plant potatoes, sweet corn and tomatoes. Keep the great work on your fields. You guys are awesome!
Hey Randal! Thank you so much for commenting! Sounds like you have busy days! Lots of things in motion! A lot of our sweet corn is already piping out! Yes at some point we will get to do some work in around the fields! Thank you so much!
Good morning Molly and Shane, it is always fun watching you getting your work done. I see Shane is not into P.D.A "Public Displays of Affection" lol. As i have said before i am in Canada`s east coast, more precisely Sussex, New Brunswick. I have worked on a dairy farm milking around 50 - 60 Ayrshire cows for the past 38 years. I started out working right out of high school for my brother- inlaws father until 1994 when he took over the farm. My brother inlaw started his semi - retirement last year and the cows went to auction last October. When we were milking the 200 acres we farmed went to 20 acres of barley or oats 35- 40 acres of silage corn , then the rest was silage and dry hay. There are no plans to sell the farm, but there are possible future plans of the next generation making something happen. Best of luck to you guys on the rest of your growing season and i will always be looking forward to your next video.
Thank you so much Sheldon! I watch Tay farms, (I don’t know if you do) and I have really enjoyed learning about milling and dairy farming form her. I hope you guys get the next generation going so you can see the farm in action from retirement! I’m still trying to figure out the first crop, second crop nutrition. Thank you so much for watching and commenting! And you’re right about Shane and PDA hahaha I just can’t help myself! 😊😊🚜💚👍🏻😁
I’m from northern Ontario Canada. I grew up farming but don’t anymore. Now friends hay our fields. I grow my own potatoes though. I planted Yukon gold, kenebec and Pontiac potatoes this year.
I loved seeing you and Shane's little "tailgate date." Quality time is a must! I personally would be camera shy myself, so i don't really blame him. You seem to have a great relationship. Im sure it's not perfect. None are, but you guys are great! As far as farming for me, I grew up on a small horse and cattle ranch. But now my wife and I farm a whopping 20 by 30 patch of purple hull peas, a few watermelon, and a few tomato plants! 😁
Hey Phillip! Thanks for commenting. Shane and I are very lucky, we are best friends! I think we got it right with each other! ❤️😊 I’m just getting into horses. Boy are they fun to ride. I think I have a long lost dream to be a cowgirl! Hahah good luck with your garden! Keep me updated!
I grew up around farming. Perused a career in the city. Retired in Florida now. I miss it. Thank you for the farming fix on UA-cam! I enjoy your channel!✌🏻❤️🇺🇸🙏🏻
Molly you are making a lot of new friends on this because you are very easy to like! Best wishes to you and Shane and happy Memorial Day. USN 1971-75 Tonkin Gulf Yacht Club CVA-41
Thank you very much! We are getting rain here today! Guess we won’t need to set up Irrigation just yet!
Hi Molly, great videos. I’ve commented before on how hard you all work. Great. I live in rural New Zealand on a couple of acres and while I’m not farming we are surrounded by sheep, dairy and cropping farms. Interesting to see the differences in farming practices. I lived in CT for a couple of years and visited Maine, a lovely state. Thanks for posting such informative videos. Pete
Hey Pete! Thank you so much for commenting! We really do appreciate it! Rural New Zealand sounds amazing! I have only seen it on the tv! I wish we had more animal farms around us! Thank you so much for watching!
Friend from New Zealand here, just love watching world wide farming.
I've found over my decades of farming that water will show you where it naturally wants to run or sit so instead of trying to reroute it un naturally it's best to work around it.
Thank you!
What a bumpy ride ,I’m glad you love what you’re doing ..
There’s your new average shot vlog pit , that might be a good place for that when you dig out a little more distance Length, lol ❤❤ thanks BigAl California.
Very good idea Al! 🫶😊🚜
I am a retired engineer and just love watching strong women working hard in a rough industry. We need you so don’t ever stop.
Thank you very much mark! I appreciate the support!
The scale of the size of that land we are seeing from the drone is awesome! Its massive the fields! Great footage and thank u
Thank you very much!
@@BellsFarming ПРИВЕТ КРАСОТКА ТЫ ЗАМУЖЕМ ИЛИ ЕЩЕ ПОКА СВОБОДНА
Hi Molly and Shane 👋🏻 Thank you 💚 Have a wonderful Memorial Day 🫡🇺🇸 God Bless 🙏🏻 Appreciate you my friends 🫶🏻
Hey! We had a great weekend! Thank you very much for the well wishes 🫶🚜💚😁😊👍🏻
Molly you tell Shane to weld you up a rock 🪨 box 📦 so you don't have to put rocks in my tractor. 😅😅. And slow down on the road you scare me ha ha. Great job another great video ❤.
Hahah I’ll get on the rock box! Thanks you so much for watching and commenting!! 🫶😁🚜💚
Thank you Molly and Shane,brilliant as always🤗,loved the drone footage 😊 I've just finished the first cut of silage which took 4 days and this week coming I'm hedge cutting for most of the week 😀 thanks again til next time 👍 UK 🇬🇧
Hey Pete! Awesome on getting your first cutting done! I’m learning a little about that from another channel! Thank you for always commenting and watching! O hope your week is great!!😊🫶🚜👍🏻
Those gravel pits look like an opportunity for the men to get back into old timers motocross
Hahah yeah. I was working on the “old track” field a couple days ago. Thinking about dirt bikes!
After watching your videos in the last 5 to 6 months I'm amazed how much I've learned! Your a great teacher and influencer! Say hi to Shane for me! A by the way, alot of farmers like the ones in upper New York that have alot of rocks, they have slug hammers that makes it easier to bust out the big rocks!
Hey there! Thank you very much for watching! I’m glad I have been able to teach you some things! Yes I larger hammer would work good. It’s funny I’m still getting a list together of all the things I need in my tractor & truck for field work. Thank you again!
Loved the drone footage. A big difference in how your trees are coming out and the trees here in Pennsylvania. Our hay is ready to bale but just can’t get the weather to cooperate. Farming has different challenges every year I guess. Thanks for sharing your video.
As of today mostly everything is green! We have had great weather the past week and we got some rain today so things should really start to take off! We have all of our potatoes and grain corn planted, and now we are working on the last few plantings of sweet corn!
At 11:23 when you two were eating lunch, the clouds are amazing! That's why I love spring tillage/planting and mowing hay in early June in Central New York. We have the best skies. And, whatever you did, you look especially great! Shane is a lucky guy.
Miss .Molly you're a natural great video
Thank you!
I grew up farming corn and cotton with Dad. The corn was for our cows, chickens and pigs. We always had a large garden which I still maintain today. In the mid sixties we began farming on a larger scale with rice and soybeans. As I was finishing high school Dad decided to quit farming and get a factory job so I went to college and graduated in 1980 as a Registered Nurse. After 43 years in the hospital, I retired in 2023. Turning dirt is still in my blood.
Hey there! Thank you Very much for telling me your story. I come from a family of nurses. My mother and sister both. I hope your garden does great! Thank you very much for watching and commenting :)
I live in the Willamette Valley in Oregon. The countryside looks some the same as there,but we are between two mountain ranges. When I farmed I raised sweet corn, green beans, strawberries, boysenberries, wheat , alfalfa and other seed crops. The valley today has lots of grass seed crops, perennial rye, tall fescue, fine fescue, bent grass. Also the largest hazelnut producing area in the US. Some nursery crops, hops, and a few blackberries. So it's fun to see the similarities and differences. Thanks for the videos of farming in Maine!
I can just imagine being between two mountains! Sounds like wonderful farm country! I did not know that about hazelnuts! Thank you very much for watching and commenting!
Would love to visit New England some day going to Wisconsin and Michigan this fall!
Good morning Molly, The drone footage was awesome it adds a cool dimension to the video. I don’t farm but friends of mine have 300 acres that they raise cattle on, I help them especially during hay season in return they let me hunt on their property.
Hey there! I think that’s great that you help them during hay season. We have a lot of people who hunt and never ask to help with anything. You are a good neighbor! Thank you very much for watching and leaving me a comment!
Not a farmer here, but love learning and watching your videos. Retired packaging engineer, designed and installed many packaging systems and vision systems (not so much for farms) so this is how I started watching you guys. However, I got sucked in seeing all the aspects of your farm life. Best wishes to you and Shane as you continue to develop your business (even more). Love seeing how self sufficient you are and Shane's many essential skills. I have to think because this channel is so popular, you must get a lot of random "visits". I can see another Magnolia Silos in the future LOL.
Hey Bob! Thank you so much for taking the time to leave a comment! We do really appreciate it! We haven’t gotten many visits yet. But then again we aren’t really at the farm and packing house this time of year. Thank you for watching us Bob!
I love watching anything to do with farming I farmed until age 35 & then worked seasonal for different farmers now almost 70 but I still love farming, keep up the good work.Allan from NB Canada.
Thank for another episode. City-dweller here.
Hey city dweller! Thank you very much. 👍🏻👍🏻
Always great to watch
Thank you very much!
Tater lady I'm glad you started this channel for numerous reasons
Thank you very much! Your dog is very cute by the way :)
My wife and I went by the farm last weekend but it was too late to stop. The store was closed. We'll get there some time this summer.
Yes we are open later in the summer! I’ll see you guys in august!
Only helped the neighbours while I was young(14-19). Sure do miss the farm/tractor work.
It seems like a lot of young people have their first jobs helping out at a farm! We hired teens in the summer to pack corn with us :)
Fantastic video really great to watch
Thank you very much!
My first job was on a farm, it was a cattle farm
We moved 500 head every couple months to a new pasture
Another great video
Can’t wait to see your hard work pay off
Cattle farm sounds very interesting! I have only seen our friend Larry’s cow farm. Thank you very much for watching and telling me a little about your experience in farming. I wish my first job would have been on a farm!
I love these vlogs so much. I learn so much.
Thank you very much for watching!! And commenting !
Lovely Suspension going on there Molly - ❤Xx 🇬🇧
It's really funny to me seeing that green nose going fast in the sped up parts. Love the videos. Thank you for all the hard work!
:)🚜💚💚
Love the videos.
My grandmother was a Bell. She was born in Oklahoma but her roots trace to the east. She came from farming but became a rodeo...wild west show... performer, in the 20s and early 30s. From now on Shane and yourself will be called Cuz.
Be well.
I like it! Cuz! I would love to see a photo of your grandmother is costume! I bet it was awesome! Thanks for sharing that history with me! 🐎👍🏻
Thank you Molly and Shane I believe because of your tips I'm on par to double my potato crop this year..
That’s great! Good luck!
Hi Molly! A Nice 30 + minute drive back to home base. Great drone footage of an irregular sized field and more good information for us armchair farmers. Have a blessed day week. Greetings from Central PA.
Hey Steve! Thank you very much!!! I don’t mince the drive :)
The goldfish😃looks like it might rain
Thank you for the regular episodes. I really like watching and learning.
You are very welcome! Thank you for watching!
Morning Mrs Molly… Really appreciate all the hard work you put into your videos I really enjoy them… THANKS 😊
Thank you Tommy! 🚜👍🏻🫶😊💚
Great video, the drone footage was incredible!! I really enjoy the field work stuff. Thank you so much for sharing!!
Thank you very much for watching!
Your drone footage looks like a beautiful painting
Thank you! Now that a great idea, I should paint something from the drone footage! Thank you!
Great Drone footage and farm looks great
Thank you! I really liked the shots from directly above the trees!
Love the drone shots! Beautiful country
I find the drone footage with this music hypnotic😎
Haha I thought it was pretty chill!
Hi Molly and Shane , its always nice to see you guys working any having fun working. We are retired and no longer farming, I trucked for year's ,farming and Ranchin at the same time. My wife and I worked together in the field for years also. We raised a lot of hay ,alfalfa, grass, and grain hay. I never could get my wife to run a baler,😂 She saw what a pain it was sometimes. Ha. Have a Great Weekend. 😊
Hey Steve! Sounds like you did a bit of everything all at once! I really enjoy hearing about other husband and wife working the farm together! Thank you for always watching and commenting!
You sure get a lot of work done Molly.
Thank you very much!
Good job Molly. We're a small Certified Seed Potato farm in Aroostook County (70 acres farmland) and we still have a week of planting left. Planting Potato Plantlets and Potato Minitubers are our slowest crops to plant. We don't start planting potatoes until the soil temp hits 50oF at 6am (6" depth) which this year was Saturday May 18, right on target with the 30 year average. We warm up and sprout all our seed before we plant our 24 varieties using a homemade Tuber Unit planter. Jim at Wood Prairie
Jim this sounds super cool! I know we have chatted a little in past videos. I’m curious to know more about the potato plantlets! I still don’t know the whole process of how the first potato is grown from the actual see part. Also can you tell me what varieties you are growing, and about how much of them. 25 is a lot! You can email me if you want to bellfarmsinc1937@gmail.com thank you for all your support! 🚜🫶💚👍🏻
@@BellsFarming Hi Molly, I just sent you an email describing the Potato Plantlet process. We watched your recent video where you were planting an experimental Potato variety. What is its name?
We started our Wood Prairie mail order business 35 years ago (now catalog plus web-store). We sell our Maine Certified Seed Potato crop Farm-to-Mailbox direct to home gardeners and market gardeners in all 50 States. We know how much of each variety we can sell in a year so we grow small amounts - rarely more than an acre per variety - to meet our retail customer demand. Megan and I have handed down the farm to the next generation, so we now we're farm hands working for our son, Caleb.
Good morning from Manitoba Canada you have a great day love your videos
Hey there! Sorry for the late reply! Been busy. We had a wonderful weekend. Thank you so much for watching! Have a great week!
Loved this video. One of my questions was answered. I wondered how all the stubble was going to be ground up to rid the field of it, and it's just a matter of discing it what looks like more than one pass. Farming is a fascinating industry. I'm amazed that genetics and science play a big role in it as well, as you mentioned in one of the previous videos you shared. Thank you for sharing. I hope you're having a great growing season this year, as I'm looking forward to catching up with your latest videos. Have a great day. 😊
Another great video Molly. Love watching you in the tractor out in the fields. When I was 14 or 15 I started working on a hay farm I loved it driving all the farm equipment and tractors. It was awesome. ❤
Thank you very much! I wish my first job would have been on a farm! I got a late start! Haha thank you for watching and leaving a comment!!
Ohh yeah some👍 good farm work getting done ✅
I grew up on a small dairy farm in Prince Edward Island, Canada. I really enjoy your videos. Great to watch.
Thank you Glenn! I always wanted to be around cows!
Great video again, this is my favourite channel UA-cam
Thank you so much Tim! Have a great Sunday🌞
Excellent video. Love the drone shots. LOL and Shane's timidity. Woke up to thunderstorms today. Yesterday was beautiful sun and warmth. All headed your way in a day or two. I live on a gravel bed. I can have a lake out front and it'll be gone in 10 min as soon as it stops raining. Again, enjoyed your chatter and experiencing riding along with you.
Thank you very much for always commenting and watching!!!
It’s amazing farming a field for years and rocks still appear
Yes! They always make their way up!
I was born & raised on a farm in Pa. Owned 2 farms & rented 2. Totaled about 300ac. After Dad passed I did it myself with 1 Farmall M & 1 Super M. Raised potatoes, feed corn ,wheat, barley, oats, peas, hay. Raised 15,000 meat chickens a year, had usually 30 head of Hereford cattle & a few pigs. Sold all our potatoes to Weis for potato chips. Retired now & really miss being on a tractor.
That’s a lot of work to do! I think about what it would be like to try animals on our farm, but I don’t think we have enough time to bring on anything else. We are totally maxed out. Sounds like a very rewarding life. I hope you are able to enjoy retirement! Thank you very much for watching and commenting! 🚜🚜 I’ll drive the tractor for you:)
Thanks everyone that has served and is serving now for my country thanks, BigAl California.
Have you considered using the gravel from the unused gravel pit to fill in the erosion damage? So nice to listen to smooth music watching a pretty lady farming!
They will do some field maintenance this year over there. Yeah they have to bring some equipment over. I’m so glad you enjoy the videos and the music! Thank you so much for watching!
I am an old Iowa farm boy! I grew up on a farm in north east Iowa, and we farmed 1200 acres of corn, beans, and had a small beef cattle operation and farrowing center. I left and moved to south Texas in 1980 and lived in east Tennessee for 28 years. My wife and I thought we wanted to retire in south Florida and spent four years in that toilet and moved back to Tennessee. We live on Mowbray mountain outside of a little town named Soddy Daisy.
Florida, the wasted land. One of the best places in the USA to grow fruit and it is wasted on condos and housing developments.
Hey there! Now that was a large farm! Thank you very much for sharing your past! I always wanted to work with cattle. Maybe someday. Thank you for watching and commenting. Ps sounds like you are in a good retirement spot in Tennessee!
Hello Molly and Shane From Northwoods Michigan, love the channel, (the sound you made when you threw that rock, lol)
Hahahahaha
Just my wife and myself here dryland farming in central ND. wheat, corn, canola, soybeans, barley, and a few sunflowers in the area, alfalfa and native hay, with cattle mixed in. 44th crop for us.
Oh, (: We put rocks on rock piles instead of the bushes! Some of the piles get pretty big(: HA!
Hey there! You guys are a farming couple too! 44th. Crop! Wow that’s really something to be around of! You like I I just throw the rocks wherever hahahaha maybe I should start a wall hahaha thank you so much. For watching and commenting! We have thought about growing sunflowers! Might do that in the near future.
Yay another great Video Molly! Keep up the great work! The best morning coffee video to start my days with!👍🤗 (I farm 100 acres of mostly hay land in Ontario. One dozen Limousin beef cattle, cow/calf. Approximately 20 acres of mixed grains as feed and crop rotation.)
Thank you for starting your day with us! I would love to work on a cattle farm one day hahah thank you very much for watching. You grow all your own food for your cows? An extra?
@@BellsFarming Yes I grow all of the hay and grain that my herd needs. Also sell about 300 round bales of hay to a local feedlot.
Ladies and gentlemen...boys and girls...STRAIGHT HAIR MOLLY IS IN THE HOUSE! 😊
HahHahaha you make me smile!
Hi Molly,, farmer grant here from Minnesota,, took over farm after 32 years military, just me, 150 acres, 100 pasture hay ( for small bales ) 25 acres corn for grinding ( feed to sell ) 25 acres cover crop for neighbors,,having a great time,, - farmin 😎
Hey farmer grant! Sounds like a great farm! What a wonderful why to retire! Well not retire but change of pace! Have a wonderful week!
Your time lapse farming reminds me of the TV show Street Hawk with his implausibly fast motorbike.
Hahah in reality I’m only going about 18mph hahah
Another Great Video 👍 Great content, keep up the great work!
Growing up my dad farmed about 1200 acres in Idaho, we grew potatoes, mint and corn seed. Loved growing up working outside! This channel brings back all my childhood memories of my dad and I who passed away in 2021. Love this channel!
Thank you very much! You are always one of the first to watch my videos and always leave a nice comment! I’m so glad our daily life brings you joy and good memories! 🫶
Molly and Shane! Looks like you guys are in the thick of field preparations and it looks like you are enjoying every moment of it! Shane needs to let you kiss him on camera, he’s so funny not wanting to film that. I’d be boasting on camera with my wife! Great video!
Hahah thank you always!
"interesting day out here, that's for sure". yes it is......from 13.00 on.......very interesting!
All the footage from the drones was amazing.
I love seeing the fields from above. It’s so new to us too!
I became very happy that you thanks for all of your fans who watching and subscribe you your drone footage are really give a breathing view which is pleasureable and your videos are very interesting you are doing a great job thank for making video i enjoy your videos and i also love your UA-cam channel because you gave response back to your fan
Hey there! Thank you so much for leaving me this comment! I think the drone footage is awesome! We have t had a lot of time to play with it yet, but it gives just an amazing view! We never knew how beautiful the fields looked from above! I really do appreciate everyone who watches and takes the time to leave us comments! You guys really are what makes these videos fun! 🫶🚜💚👍🏻😊😁
Hi there, crop farmer here from Saskatchewan Canada. Just getting ready to go pre work my last field today then hopefully get it seeded tomorrow and that will be a wrap for planting this year. Your channel showed up on my youtube feed during your last video so I subscribed. It's nice to see how farmers in other areas are doing and how they run their operations compared to mine. Thanks for the videos and good luck with the rest of planting!
Hey there! Thank you very much for leaving a comment! I also find it fun to watch other farms and see the similarities and differences. And there always room to learn something! Thank you and happy growing season!
My husband farms for wildlife,,, he mowed, disced and planted about 10 acres of corn that is grown for duck hunting. Now he has moved on to mowing which will be for better forage for deer this winter.... very small farming BUT ..
Hey it is farming! Don’t short change yourself! 🚜💚👍🏻😊
I really enjoyed reading about all the farmers from all over the world in your comments. That was a great question to ask your followers. I've had a rewarding life as an engineer but always thought I would have loved being a farmer.
Hey there! It’s very cool that you read others comments! I’m very lucky everyone is very kind and positive! Farming is very rewarding! It’s hard sometimes, but everything can have its ups and downs. Thank you very much for letting me know you check out the comments of others. And thank you for leaving one yourself! You guys really make this fun! 😊🚜💚🫶👍🏻
Molly you & your family are awesome, enjoy your videos so much, ty Steve
Hey Steve! Thank you so much for watching and the kind words!! 🫶
Hello. I live in Sweden and watch your videos. you have very large fields to work on in Sweden. You explain in a very good way in each video. I'm not a farmer but I love machines and farming anyway. I collect tractors in scale 1/32 😉. keep making videos because i'm checking them out. etc. Bjorn
Thank you very much for watching! I bet all your tiny tractors and equipment are super cool! You probably have an amazing fleet! 🚜😁👍🏻
I was the hired man for a Soy Bean and Field Corn farm. We farmed 2600 acres. We were a JD green operation running the larges JD equipment possible. Soy Beans were Pioneer Seed Beans that we stored on site until the plant called for them. Occasionally they would plant food grade yellow and white. Yellow would go to Frito-Lay and white to elevator that sold to Taco Bell and famine organizations around the world.
Wow!!! Very impressive. Did you do farm work your whole life? We are definitely a JD farm. We have two tractors that are not. But one of them is an antique now, but still in use. Very cool! I bet you had giant silos! Thank you for sharing!
Good Morning you two Has rained cats and dogs for three days. My fields are lakes..... I get a drone off this morning to show progress.
Good morning Colin! Send me another message when you have your video up! Have a great day!!!
@@BellsFarming ua-cam.com/video/CbHF5ySjDG4/v-deo.html
one big field.love the clone footage.see ya later
Love you dad!
Molly, we do grain in South Central Ky. We currently do 1600 acres and as of Memorial Day we have 150 acres left to plant, if it stops raining.
Hey there! You’re almost there! Hopefully the weather will start drying up! Thank you so much for watching and commenting!!
Hello Molly and Shane,
As a reaction to your question. I am Stefan and I am from The Netherlands in Europe. I grew up a the dairy farm owned by my parents. The are retired farmers now. I work as a parts manager at a New Holland dealership. I am still very interested in all farming going on and love te see what farmers over the world are doing.
Keep up the videos.
Hey there Stefan! Thank you so much for watching! I bet the dairy farm was a great place to grow up! I’m happy you are still involved with the farm world! My had dad had a nice New Holland tractor. I remember when he came home with it from the dealership! He still uses it! He was not a farmer but uses it for projects and wood cutting. We lived in the country. Thank you! 🚜🚜🫶
Love your vids.Keep 'em comin'. From Falmouth, Cape Cod.
Thank you!
Good morning to you and Shane hope you guys have a wonderful Memorial weekend and able to relax and enjoy the day. Keep up with the great videos!
Hey Keith! Thank you very much!
Enjoy watching farming in other regions. We work about 2,200 acres in N Central Alabama. Cotton, corn, soybeans, wheat, milo. Our corn is tasseling now, beans up, cotton just emerging. Getting hot and sticky down here now! Be that way til October!
Oh wow! Yeah you guys have a much longer growing season! Very cool. That’s a lot of acres!!! I never have gone to Alabama! I hope you guys have a great growing season! Thank you for watching and commenting.
We do 2500 acre's north east Ohio lot of moving like y'all almost done planting corn is done like 40 acres of beans on to side dressing n spraying God bless be safe
Thank you for telling me, I grew up in north east Ohio. We are almost done with sweet corn plantings few more plantings. Will be side dressing potatoes in another week or so
I love the smell of fresh turned earth in the morning Shane is my hero have a good Memorial Day weekend
Thank you very much! I love that smell too! And the colors
Molly(The Cindy Crawford farm girl),I guess there is a lot of preparation that goes into your fields before you start planting your crops??I love seeing your four doggies on camera and they are beautiful doggies 🐕 that you all have(your kids)...❤😊😊😊
Ha! I like that one. Cindy Crawford haha yes the land needs a bit of work to get ready for planting. Lots of fields. I’m so glad you like the dogs! They are the best! Thank you very much for watching and commenting 🐕🐕🐕🐕🚜😁💚❤️
Great video
Great video once again. Things look good considering all the water issues. Can you give the date and temperature in your videos? Always nice to see where people are in planting and the variables in temps. Nothing like rock farming.
Thank you! I will try to start doing that! I will apologize in advance because sometimes it takes me. While to get my videos out! I have 2-3 more day of shooting I need to make videos for from the last two weeks. Then I’ll be caught up! Thank you again for watching and commenting :)
I am Todd. I work for county farms. We grow 3900 acres of potatoes in the mars hill area. We also have a farm in limington 145 acres of potato’s and around 300 acres of potatoes in the Rumford/bethel area. Love your videos.and the farm owns the fry plant in washburn.
Oh wow! That’s a lot of acres! I’m sure I have seen I have seen some of your fields when I was in the county! I think I remember hearing that you guys drive your tractors to Bethel from mars hill. Not sure if that is true or not, I would love to come check out the farm sometime when I’m back in the county! Thanks for watching Todd!
@@BellsFarming we drive the harvester and windrower from bethel to limington and back. We haul equipment from mars hill to limington with lowboys to plant in the spring. I stay in limington for the summer to take care of the crop till we dig. Then come home to help harvest. Yes you definitely should come visit the home farm. You can stop in limington anytime in the summer. It’s on skip road in limington. It about 400 acres in one field with 3 pivots. Putting a new one up next week for the 4th.
Hi molly and shane I am from Queensland Australia farm cattle, wheat cereals,mungbeans legumes, sometimes grain sorghum and barley rhodes grass for hay, mix of irrigation pivots and dryland cropping run a couple 7630 john deeres and some smaller ones aswell. R62 gleaner header
:)
Molly, y'all are phenomenal as ALWAYS. Keep up the great videos,and enjoy life !
Thank you very much! Life is good!
Ok... First off all !. My crops are under constants supervision during the daytime. I am not sure what to expect in terms of yeild, but growth is fast as we have hot weather here ( in Denmark ), I grow two sorts, and one seems to be taller than the other. I really do hope that my 2 x 3 tomato plants in Capillary Boxes will give me lots of tomatos. They are just outside my office window.
You better keep an eye on the tomatoes! I had some 🐛 eat mine up so quick last year! Thank you for watching and commenting!!
I grew up working on dairy farms around the area here in western ny . We had 300 milking cows . When the economy fell the farm shut down.. I then worked for Case IH until I decided to become a wrangler out in Yellowstone. After that I decided to help run my family's horse boarding stable and now I run it with my brother.. we board around 36 horses and hold rodeos. We plant our own feilds and make hay for all our horses every year.. it's something I am proud of but soon we will be getting back into beef cows and start a new adventure .. Farming has always been my way of life . Idk what I'd do with out it
Adam your life sounds awesome! I think you should be very proud of all that you are doing, and ready to take on more! I just started ridding lessons this year( never been on a horse before ) and I love it! So much fun. You just forget about everything else while you’re ridding. You will have to leave me some updates on how everything is going! I would love to hear about the horses and soon to be cows! I wish I was a cowgirl!
Hi Molly, another great video! You look gorgeous. Love your long hair. Your a real pro . It baffles me how rock keep popping up. The rock goblins put them out at night haha. The dron shots are really cool. Thanks Molly
Thank you Chris! I like to do my hair occasionally 😊 the rocks are always being pushed up from the frost! Hahah but I like your theory heheh
Just our of bed, got my coffee, and now catching up with my favorites in entertainment. Just say that this older man down here in the Smoky Mountains of East TN found this John Deere buried in mud from front to rear, in a place I had no idea existed - even tho I had been there on business twice. So I subscribed and have enjoyed every issue since. Molly, you do not talk like a lot of the others in Lewiston (Loiston). I will follow and enjoy. Do be careful all of you. Jim
Thank you very much Jim! We will be safe! Have a wonderful week! Yes I am not originally from Maine. I grew up in Ohio! 🚜💚😊
Hey Shane and Molly! Wow, you guys had some major flooding in your area! Those are some serious soil erosion washouts in some of your fields. You may need to look at bringing in an excavator or dozer to fill in the gullies and restore your farm land. The farm fields in my area of southern Michigan look much like yours, absolutely beautiful! Newly tilled and planted and already starting to germinate. Along with field corn, soybeans and winter wheat, our farmers also plant potatoes, sweet corn and tomatoes. Keep
the great work on your fields. You guys are awesome!
Hey Randal! Thank you so much for commenting! Sounds like you have busy days! Lots of things in motion! A lot of our sweet corn is already piping out!
Yes at some point we will get to do some work in around the fields! Thank you so much!
Good morning Molly and Shane, it is always fun watching you getting your work done. I see Shane is not into P.D.A "Public Displays of Affection" lol. As i have said before i am in Canada`s east coast, more precisely Sussex, New Brunswick. I have worked on a dairy farm milking around 50 - 60 Ayrshire cows for the past 38 years. I started out working right out of high school for my brother- inlaws father until 1994 when he took over the farm. My brother inlaw started his semi - retirement last year and the cows went to auction last October. When we were milking the 200 acres we farmed went to 20 acres of barley or oats 35- 40 acres of silage corn , then the rest was silage and dry hay. There are no plans to sell the farm, but there are possible future plans of the next generation making something happen. Best of luck to you guys on the rest of your growing season and i will always be looking forward to your next video.
Thank you so much Sheldon! I watch Tay farms, (I don’t know if you do) and I have really enjoyed learning about milling and dairy farming form her. I hope you guys get the next generation going so you can see the farm in action from retirement! I’m still trying to figure out the first crop, second crop nutrition. Thank you so much for watching and commenting! And you’re right about Shane and PDA hahaha I just can’t help myself! 😊😊🚜💚👍🏻😁
@@BellsFarming Thank`s for the reply, and yes i do watch Tay Farms as well.
Thanks Molly 👍🏻👍🏻Shalom Shalom to both you and Shane! Have a great Sunday, hopefully you can get the day off and a good Memorial Day.
Hey Ed! We did kinda take Monday off. We did some house projects, it was raining here. Thank you for always watching and commenting!
@@BellsFarming you’re welcome…my pleasure.
I’m from northern Ontario Canada. I grew up farming but don’t anymore. Now friends hay our fields. I grow my own potatoes though. I planted Yukon gold, kenebec and Pontiac potatoes this year.
Awesome! I hope your weather is good! Good luck with your potato crop! Thank you very much for watching and commenting!
I loved seeing you and Shane's little "tailgate date." Quality time is a must! I personally would be camera shy myself, so i don't really blame him. You seem to have a great relationship. Im sure it's not perfect. None are, but you guys are great! As far as farming for me, I grew up on a small horse and cattle ranch. But now my wife and I farm a whopping 20 by 30 patch of purple hull peas, a few watermelon, and a few tomato plants! 😁
Hey Phillip! Thanks for commenting. Shane and I are very lucky, we are best friends! I think we got it right with each other! ❤️😊 I’m just getting into horses. Boy are they fun to ride. I think I have a long lost dream to be a cowgirl! Hahah good luck with your garden! Keep me updated!
Very cool drone footage. Thanks for sharing.
Thank you!
I’m enjoying seeing all the the land and you’re brave to venture all that wilderness .loveyou kids
Thanks bunny love you too
I grew up around farming. Perused a career in the city. Retired in Florida now. I miss it. Thank you for the farming fix on UA-cam! I enjoy your channel!✌🏻❤️🇺🇸🙏🏻
Thank you so much for watching!! 🚜😊👍🏻💚