How to build new hi-tensile electric fence around a pond.
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- Опубліковано 3 жов 2024
- How to build new hi-tensile electric fence around a pond. Using the right materials, building hi-tensile electric fence is a snap. Check out my books for more profitable tips for your farm on our website: greenpasturesf...
Eating lunch, enjoying my favorite farmer, and boom he sticks his hand in a cow patty....lol...
And plays with the worms 🪱
You are so right my friend, inflation is very real. Thank you for the early morning laugh over that one!
You can not spend money like drunken sailors and escape inflation. Now they are going after a 4th stimulus. Our country is broke, but we keep digging the hole deeper.
@@gregjudyregenerativerancher exactly. I wish more people understood that.
@@duotronic6451 Today is doing too far exceed the Jimmy Carter years. All you have to do is look at the people who've lost their jobs since the new president and look at the price of oil since the new president. We are on that same path but going much faster and much further.
Get you someone who looks at you the way Greg Judy looks at worms
The silvo pasture is looking great, and the number of worms under each pat is incredible. Can't wait to see it again in a few weeks. Have a wonderful day 😊
Off to a great start Greg. You and jan have a blessed day.
Great tip on Ivomec and how it impactsthe soil biology. Save it cor the recent unpleasantness. It works great vlr that! :-)
this one was GOLD! Just ordered my first timeless fence. thanks for all you do to help us newbies stay on course.
Awesome! Thank you!
at 22;49 wow look at that green.. and like the longer videos... Thank ya sir
Thanks for all the extra bits of info, Greg. Your awesome!
If you get a chance, could you make a video going in detail about grounding your electric fences. A little confused on how to set up to make sure they are properly grounded. Thank you
I love listening to you. The way you live is really cool. I grew up with an uncle who had a factory chicken farm, cows and other stuff. It makes me want to farm like this at his place!
I just googled earthworm poetry
So far I have read Ode to an Earthworm by Joe Lamp’l Growing A Greener World and the
Earthworm poem by Dennis Camire
I am looking forward to reading Anne Sexton and Mr. R’s Science Poems and the rest once I have a little more time .gosh gee willikers what am I doing I think that I must thank you for the inspiration without it I would never have thought to do the search!
I'd appreciate another look at your 5 wire boundary fence H brace construction next time your putting them up.
Two things:
First...about the "Ivermec guy". He needs to understand that Nature is smarter than all of us out together. Let most bugs be our friend. Bugs Not Drugs!
Second...in summer, shade is imperative whether it is provided by an invasive or not. Use that shade those autumn olive provide until something else is established. People tell me the same thing about locust trees. They can be a pain, but we control them and other shade trees are establishing. Most people don't understand biologic principles.
Timeless post are the best right now. We have a 4 wire perimeter fence. A doe ran through it full run. Never hurt it; it flexed and returned to it's original shape.
There is not a better post out there than Timeless posts, if there was I would be using them.
Well said about inflation! We love our timeless posts and we got free shipping by bigger order. We tried the ivomec,chemicals, and other bad inputs and this is way better speaking from experience. Managing WITH nature!
That makes alot of sense about the livomax. All the parties at the ranch I work at are dead, years of wasted manure and free workers
i can't believe i'm watching this at 5 o'clock in the morning... hmm... well.. i guess i can...
Good information!!!
Nice Fence 10/10.
Some areas in the Northern part of our planet don't want worms b/c they eat too much of the forest-mulch which lowers native deer populations, IDK exactly how. I'm way south so the heat outcompetes these worms as a threat to deer-habitat. I kinda like the bio-digesters producing gases from the mowed fields for energy instead of overstocking land & winter-barns with cattle (the current Europe dilemma).
Inflation is here I am having to raise prices in my business as I get material increases.
Greg
I just subscribed!
So will you pump water from that water source to the top of the high ground then?
Seams like that low spot will be just a muddy mess if you water live stock there?
Thanks, Andy
Greg, why not come out with a cheaper ebook? Love your work. Ty vm
Why no overflow pipe on the tire tank? Only see your inflow pipe coming out of the ground. Thanks.
It has a 4 inch pipe overflow plumbed into the bottom of the tank.
Got any ram pumps? Just starting a Silvio pasture project gobs of information in your videos, autumn olive major problem here but Cattle rub on them a lot too for insect control
Our whole family enjoys your videos. Thank you! What tree spacing are you looking for when you open up your forest like that? We're looking to turn some dense, scrubby, and generally unhealthy forest in NE Oklahoma and turn it into silvopasture.
70 -100 feet spacing
@@gregjudyregenerativerancher Thanks!
GREG, will those TIMELESS posts hold up 4in. field fence? they looked a lot easier to drive into the ground than steel posts, your silvo pasture looks almost like a park, just beautiful, thank you for sharing and the tips, have a safe and blessed day
Yes the 1.75 and 2 inch diameter posts are unbelievable tough and strong.
@@gregjudyregenerativerancher thank you have a blessed day
I have a question and a suggestion. Could you use a larger Timeless post for your corner rather than the 1 1/4" fiberglass? If you put a fingerfull of grease under that PVC shutoff cap it will help it slide off after time.
Timeless Fence sells corner assemblies
Why do you use the "rachet-stye" tensioner, rather than the "in-line" tensioner (no cuts, way faster)?
The Daisy in-line tensioners are sold out.
Where are the Greg Judy hats
On our website: greenpasturesfarm.net
Mr. Judy something that I would very much like to see and I think a lot of other people would value it too. I think we're in a time when society worldwide is declining and a lot of things that we take for granted right now might not be available in the near future.
There are five or six UA-cam channels that I am gaining a lot of practical knowledge from, about raising animals, farming, gardening and homesteading. I worry that these things can disappear overnight. If you and they put your presentations on a DVD arranged by topic that would be a very valuable thing to have in any persons Library. If it were divided by subject matter such as; 1. acquiring, repairing and maintaining land. 2. Developing water resources and delivering water. 3. Evaluating animals and taking care of animals health and feeding needs. 4. How to develop a healthy pasture. Ect. It would be very usefull on a path to self-sufficient living. I have your booka and many others. Words and pictures are great but seeing it being done adds value.
That is something that I'm sure many people would buy and I know that I would immediately. Thank You
Get his books.
Oh yeah, about that cost issue. Helicopter money=inflation!
I have Ivermectin on hand, for just in case. Raising goats, but a breed that tends to be parasite resistant. But I did lose a doe my first year into them to worms. I don't have all my fences set up yet, but I am finding that when I let my goats out to free range they tend to do the rotating themselves. They are constantly moving. When I do have to feed hay I do not feed them on the ground. And, they are 90+% on browse, not pasture.
Ivermectin is toxic trash (which is where you should toss it... There are lots of much better ways to care for livestock, google and youtube can show you hundreds, and also try talking to friends...er...smart friends LOL!). Goats, if you give them good access to a good variety of vegetation/browse (pasture, trees, bush, scrub, creek, etc.), they will take care of themselves and you may never need to give them any supplements for anything. Lock them down to pasture (sometimes you don't have land with that kind of biodiversity), and you are going to have to keep a close eye on their nutritional needs. Goats, on the right land, with lots of variety to wander, manage themselves and are the easiest livestock to own.
@@timtation5837 I keep it on hand, for just in case. MY goats free range during the day. I have a creek, but never see the goats drink from it. They will drink from a puddle before they drink from the creek. I even have a rain water catchment set up in their barn for them. Which in our area, is ideal. I have a very goat friendly environment that provides a diet natural for goats, not locked down to a grass only pasture.
What is your PSI on the wire? What do you cut it with?
180,000 psi. Use Knipex cutters to cut it
Hey Greg, How does one go about getting your array of posts when they're not in your region? 400 miles is a rather long distance to go for acquisition. Any suggestions would be appreciated.
Make a vacation out of the trip. Come and stay in our airbnb, do a mob cattle move with us and go home with your posts😀
Im having the same problem in the southwest. Found a company in TX but shipping doesnt make sense.
Are them post used for grounding purposes also?? Thanks
No they are not ground rods
So what are your thoughts on dragging the manure
It is a waste of time and resources.
Laying hens do an amazing job dispersing manure. I know your not a chicken guy greg but you have a perfect operation for it... even have the dogs
@@gregjudyregenerativerancher you be here by
2x4by 8ft 7.39 in Ohio
If I were to ever torture anyone I'd rub them head to toe with an old hairy fiberglass post. ROFL.
I'm a little upset, I was pulling manure pats over in my pasture and I found very few earthworms. I guess I have a ways to go yet.
Give it time the worms will come, I'm waiting as well I reclaimed a pine forest very small area. I have grass and clover not too many worms yet. Ill be grazing in a month. Best of luck.
If you are using chemical worming on any of yer livestock, the earth worms will die. If you import manure from animals that were recently wormed, that manure is toxic to earth worms and soil. It can take land time to recover from toxic worming from the past. Sometimes non organic hay can wreak havoc. Chemical farming was invented by the Germans Between WW1 and WW2, before then, everyone knew how to keep their worms employed and working hard for the farm. Embrace the good technology and science, reject the toxic crap (pun intended).
@@timtation5837 I have not used any wormer since I got my livestock beginning in late 2019.
Doesn't look bankrupt to me anymore
😁🐮🐂😎