Greg Judy Feb 2019

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  • Опубліковано 26 бер 2019

КОМЕНТАРІ • 92

  • @roscorude
    @roscorude 5 років тому +70

    "Folks..." I could listen to greg all day talk microbes and cattle....!
    Thanks Greg

    • @hikerJohn
      @hikerJohn 4 роки тому +2

      If I were younger I would love to do this for a living. I also watched all of Joel Salatins videos but he seems to have quit posting on UA-cam. Has he fallen out of favor or what? I like his idea of having chickens follow the cows to eat the maggots.

    • @V2k2010
      @V2k2010 4 роки тому +2

      @@hikerJohn I am almost 50 years old and disabled and yet i plan to try and get started within the next year or so....leasing land and taking it from there. See what good i can do.

    • @hikerJohn
      @hikerJohn 4 роки тому

      @@V2k2010 I'm 65 and have to finish hiking the PCT first :o)

    • @jsbrooks72
      @jsbrooks72 4 роки тому +1

      I played the video while driving to work, while getting ready for work. I find myself studying alot. Almost 50 and trying to figure out a way to make this work.

  • @nancythomas-wardm.b.a2993
    @nancythomas-wardm.b.a2993 4 роки тому +13

    Prepared breakfast, dinner and had better than a university degree at the same time! Amazing. Wowzer

  • @WendyAchatz
    @WendyAchatz 4 роки тому +39

    I love that he talks about his past mistakes and how started thinking about what he was doing, and changed from driving over his microbes, and/or burning...wise man.

    • @pokeweed10k15
      @pokeweed10k15 4 роки тому +4

      A lot of old time farmers REFUSE to even consider doing anything different. It took balls to admit he wasnt doing things right

    • @hadnick1
      @hadnick1 4 роки тому +3

      Also the picture of his first time mob stock grazing way too long... @1:05:00

  • @Goodtimes523
    @Goodtimes523 5 років тому +21

    This was great - I only have a greenhouse and 4 apple trees but the principal still applies thanks!!!

  • @Exploregen
    @Exploregen 5 років тому +26

    Big fan of Greg Judy

  • @BikeAndFish1
    @BikeAndFish1 4 роки тому +5

    Learning a lot from this chap.... Amazing.

    • @BikeAndFish1
      @BikeAndFish1 Рік тому

      Hello me 2 years ago!!
      Keep learning and Pray to Allaha to help me make it.
      In Sha Allaha..

  • @AndrewGasser
    @AndrewGasser 4 роки тому +7

    I watch this at least once a week. Learn something new every time.
    Molly? Who’s Molly?!!?

  • @GODBLESSES
    @GODBLESSES 4 роки тому +6

    Thank you for your work and teachings. I send to others.

  • @johncourtneidge
    @johncourtneidge 4 роки тому +4

    Thank-you. Agreed. Best wishes from England

  • @kirtusstruthers3175
    @kirtusstruthers3175 4 роки тому +3

    Thank you for sharing this. Greg Judy is a rock star!

  • @tolbaszy8067
    @tolbaszy8067 4 роки тому +5

    Greg Judy is sharing the ultimate cover crop seed mix, that is ironically a mono-culture: PASSION! Thank-you, sir!

  • @Msmora76
    @Msmora76 4 роки тому +3

    another awsome video full of great wisdom!! i love the bit about reading a newspaper under his belly!!

  • @Peter-yk8tw
    @Peter-yk8tw 6 місяців тому

    OMG so humiliating, I always thought that was cow shit in a pasture not french pastry on dinner table. Really very interesting and helpful , you Mr. Judy are not typical. Thank you

  • @shaunmcaloon8278
    @shaunmcaloon8278 4 роки тому +5

    You guys got it hard over there with all that snow! in New Zealand we get 120 to 150% Lambing
    We have been farming like this for generations the electric fence is amazing

    • @sproket168
      @sproket168 4 роки тому +2

      We've still got a lot to learn but yes we use a lot of the same principles.

  • @jpp9876
    @jpp9876 2 роки тому +1

    You are a big picture rancher. You have all the disciplines covered to efficiently produce livestock. From animal health and efficiency to controlling quallity of grazing and other feeds. You understanding and improving soils is just an important part of this.

  • @COMB0RICO
    @COMB0RICO 4 роки тому +1

    That was great! Thanks from Texas.

  • @the2012fad
    @the2012fad 4 роки тому +6

    Thank you - really excellent info!

  • @davidhickenbottom6574
    @davidhickenbottom6574 5 років тому +8

    The hamburger absolutely that's going to be my focus. I'm a retired butcher I despise supermarket ground beef so gross. I mostly eat venison. Greg I shot a beautiful doe in New Hampshire last fall talk about finished and fat cover. Zero agriculture just acorns and beech nuts. Here in North East big market for grass fed. We have some small farms not being used I will be trying to put back to grazing.

  • @carfixhelp1631
    @carfixhelp1631 4 роки тому +1

    A few years ago,
    I used to work out west
    And used to drive hours just to go to work and back home daily.
    On them long, straight, flat roads it came to me that all that road tar was like a BIG SCAR on the earth!
    And the earth, like our skin is always trying to heal the skin and remove the scar.
    May GOD bless you Greg with all the work your doing.

    • @grassfarmer42
      @grassfarmer42 4 роки тому +1

      How long will it take to get to work on horse back?

  • @BacktotheBasics101
    @BacktotheBasics101 4 роки тому +2

    Great video thank you so much.

  • @puhigeoffreywaynefuimaonok8656
    @puhigeoffreywaynefuimaonok8656 4 роки тому +2

    wonderful work greg

  • @nobleenchantpbkc8082
    @nobleenchantpbkc8082 2 роки тому

    Thank You Sir Judy!

  • @hikerJohn
    @hikerJohn 4 роки тому +1

    As a landscaper I use to plant Elaeagnus umbellata, it's a beautiful shrub with a great fragrance. I never knew to just now that it was considered an invasive species. I never saw a wild one out here on the left coast.

  • @SirWilhelm777
    @SirWilhelm777 5 років тому +7

    @30:38 laughed to hard at the tractor driving over the steak dinner.

  • @gystol9418
    @gystol9418 5 років тому +8

    Great stuff

  • @stephengriffin4612
    @stephengriffin4612 2 роки тому

    Doesn't Greg make you feel better about life and America? Better than a whole herd of politicians.

  • @ricdenali4213
    @ricdenali4213 5 років тому +5

    A wise man.

  • @cattlesource3580
    @cattlesource3580 4 роки тому +2

    Greg thank you so much. I started with 3 bottle calves watching you videos. In 2017. Inow have 4 leases and 71 momma's here in Texas I am 80 to 90 miles south east of Dallas. can we grow fescue? we get all of our rain from January to June in drought years . And more rain in the Fall in an good year. It seems to me the best Choice with no horses

    • @cattlesource3580
      @cattlesource3580 3 роки тому

      I do have ponds on the propertys but they are not long term as of now. I was actually just looking at your 100,000 pounds per Acer every day with a sixty day rest and thought I could buy a small place say 30 Acer's and with the stockpiled fescue allowed it grows could save three monthly payments on hay I would not have to buy. Also and main reason for interest in fescue is that our winter's are so mild it could grow all year it would have a lot I life to it.

  • @davidhickenbottom6574
    @davidhickenbottom6574 5 років тому +7

    What's crazy up here is you either see moon scape pasture or empty land no grazing. People claim grass fed or pasture raised what aI joke sad. My goal is to follow your way some thing to be proud of thanks for all you teach.

    • @dirtroadfarmsjimmideanreen2458
      @dirtroadfarmsjimmideanreen2458 4 роки тому

      Ever since I got turned on to Greg Judys video lessons I've been looking around my neighborhood 4 miles and miles around there is no grazing there's a few fields of hay that are bailed, but everything else is cash crops

    • @davidhickenbottom6574
      @davidhickenbottom6574 4 роки тому

      @@dirtroadfarmsjimmideanreen2458 they love making hay up here. Some feed hay 365.

  • @chiledoug
    @chiledoug 5 років тому +9

    I really miss Missouri..love Clark miss my $3 gal raw milk..raw milk butter

    • @MistressOP
      @MistressOP 5 років тому +6

      the crazy thing we got organic dairy farms going out of biz right now. then you tell em you know that raw butter makes ghee and people buy that. they look at you like your crazy. then you tell them ghee is more healthy from grass-fed cows than coconut oil that gets ship overseas. I want to cry for the dairy farmer. they got no idea how much money they leave on the table. I wish a lot of the local guys would start there own brand instead of these bought-out companies that shaft them

  • @gabrielmills7225
    @gabrielmills7225 4 роки тому +8

    Folks, find you a heifer with fine bone structure. Those big boned heifers are high maintenance.
    Where were you before I got married Greg? Coulda saved me a lot of heartache.

  • @villagecarpenter2266
    @villagecarpenter2266 5 років тому +9

    If he has not done one already Greg should do a TED talk!

    • @thethrill04
      @thethrill04 4 роки тому

      village carpenter What is a TED talk?

    • @savedfaves
      @savedfaves 3 роки тому +2

      Greg doesn't need no TED talk. This talk was better, longer and more fact-filled than a TED talk.

  • @ashleyshrader6679
    @ashleyshrader6679 4 роки тому +4

    With clover, tou can add bees.

  • @rosstemple7617
    @rosstemple7617 5 років тому +2

    I’ll be saving this one. Wow so much information! Great presentation. One of my questions is if God didn’t make a monoculture why don’t we have it in amongst livestock as well. Don’t goats eat weeds?

    • @buddingnaturalist
      @buddingnaturalist 4 роки тому +1

      Goats occupy scrubland in nature-generally rocky, highslope, twisty-tree areas. Cows (bison and other grazers) occupy grassland-flat, few to no trees for miles on end. They don't eat from the same storey either. So it's not a monoculture to separate them, it's niche exploitation, same as nature does.

  • @chiledoug
    @chiledoug 5 років тому +5

    Sometimes the Amish in that area listen to much of the garbage the USDA people that are at the auction tell them..

    • @rosstemple7617
      @rosstemple7617 5 років тому +1

      CHILEDOUG KIZERIAN Ugh. They’ll listen to the gov then not vote. I believe the meninites do the same thing. There’s a mass exodus out of PN right know because of the liberals. But if they voted the liberals would not have so much power to implement crappie legislation. Talk about shooting your right foot and bandaging the left.

    • @WendyAchatz
      @WendyAchatz 4 роки тому +3

      I just visited a huge Amish community in Northern Michigan. They are all doing 100% grass fed, beef, dairy, sheep. AMAZING! I'll be posting soon all about what they are doing (and how they don't take help from the gov.)

    • @chiledoug
      @chiledoug 4 роки тому

      @@WendyAchatz I am not knocking them

  • @buildingwithtrees2258
    @buildingwithtrees2258 4 роки тому

    Can someone share a link to the talk about northern hay feeding he was referencing? He seemed really impressed, but didn't say how it's done. Unless it's just using bale feeders?

    • @wildrangeringreen
      @wildrangeringreen 4 роки тому

      up in Minnesota, Montana, and Alberta, it's pretty common for cattlemen to arrange round bales out in their pastures prior to winter due to the amount of snow they get (sometimes it's too much work for the cattle to get down to the grass until it thaws a little). They strip graze it still, but the cattle also eat off and lay on the bales spread out in the field.

  • @maryjemisonMaryjay1936
    @maryjemisonMaryjay1936 4 роки тому +2

    Very intelligent 🤓

  • @davidwalters9462
    @davidwalters9462 5 років тому +2

    Seeds can actually last over 100 years. So the Gama grass makes sense. I've read of stories of perennial grass seeds 200 years old still germinating.
    My question is this>>> how does one combine annual cereal and annuals more generally WITH mob grazing. 90% of what we eat is annuals, not perennial foods. What do we do? Can mob graze, then no-till plant and right afterward bring in cattle, or maybe sheep, to lower the height of the grasses and cover crops?

    • @bernardpollmeier153
      @bernardpollmeier153 5 років тому

      look into pasture cropping in Australia

    • @andreafalconiero9089
      @andreafalconiero9089 4 роки тому +1

      Search for "Gabe Brown" here on UA-cam and listen to what he has to say. His system works and it does include a certain amount of annual cropping, if that's what you want to do.

    • @przybyla420
      @przybyla420 4 роки тому

      You could rotate between the two, converting old cropland into pasture for awhile and then eventually back to pasture, chickens would be handy there to work behind the cows.

  • @GhanashyamGhimire
    @GhanashyamGhimire 4 роки тому +1

    Who's the South African rancher Greg keeps referring to? I'm not a farmer but picked up interest in regenerative farming practices after seeing Allan Savory's TED talk and had been seeing lots of videos of Joel Salatin, Greg Judy and Allan Savory on UA-cam. But haven't heard of the gentleman Greg mentioned so far and it sounds interesting

    • @Skashoon
      @Skashoon 3 роки тому +3

      Ian Mitchell-Innes. There’s a video here on YT with Greg and Ian.

    • @GhanashyamGhimire
      @GhanashyamGhimire 3 роки тому +1

      @@Skashoon thanks! I'll check out Ian

  • @kirkjones5745
    @kirkjones5745 7 місяців тому

    What is the best beef cattle you suggest for grass finished in Ontario

  • @jasonsimmons4319
    @jasonsimmons4319 4 роки тому +2

    I dont know much about cow physiology. Why would grazing on a lot of young clover be harmful to the cow?

    • @dirtroadfarmsjimmideanreen2458
      @dirtroadfarmsjimmideanreen2458 4 роки тому +3

      They get what's called, "The Bloat" they get sick from to much clover, they need a mix of grasses and clover.( learned that from Greg Judy!)

  • @HoneyHollowHomestead
    @HoneyHollowHomestead 4 роки тому

    Gee, wonder why I left NJ?! 😉

  • @C.Hawkshaw
    @C.Hawkshaw 3 роки тому

    So the Ivomec kills the dung beetle? Or the dung beetle just doesn’t want to eat an Ivomecced patty? Pretty cool that the dung beetle takes the patties down to the roots.

  • @thedisneykid2884
    @thedisneykid2884 4 роки тому

    Do you throw seed when ur starting with bad ground?

  • @ajb.822
    @ajb.822 4 роки тому

    Other ways to melt wax without ruining a skillet, guys ! Ask around, google it etc. :) !

    • @Skashoon
      @Skashoon 3 роки тому

      Dollar store aluminum pan. Set it on some blacktop and it’ll melt just fine. Otherwise set it in a pan of hot water on the stove, like a double boiler.

  • @jmholguinguerrero7404
    @jmholguinguerrero7404 4 роки тому

    Here is one of Dr. Patricia Richardson´s soil critters videos! @Greg Judy Regenerative Rancher
    ua-cam.com/users/results?search_query=dr+pat+richardson

  • @admiralawesomeable
    @admiralawesomeable 4 роки тому +1

    How would you manage drought? When you have no other option but to over graze.

    • @attilanemeth8215
      @attilanemeth8215 4 роки тому

      Bales can help. Good question. Too good to talk to public about it :D only microbes and other philosophies :D

    • @idiocracy10
      @idiocracy10 4 роки тому +8

      you have to reduce stock, and then feed hay. If you have to sell off your whole herd, do that and start back at grazing other peoples cows until you can afford a new herd. protect your microbes. Your soil health is your business, the livestock is how you monetize it.

    • @attilanemeth8215
      @attilanemeth8215 4 роки тому +1

      @@idiocracy10 preach!

    • @leelindsay5618
      @leelindsay5618 4 роки тому

      With better management of cattle, often droughts are mild because the soil is covered, water infiltration is better and the soil acts like a sponge. Reducing cattle numbers won't be nearly as bad as conventional grazing.

  • @aBuAraDaH
    @aBuAraDaH 3 роки тому

    Why the clover kill
    Does that kill goat sheep camel please answer my friend

  • @kimberleebell98
    @kimberleebell98 3 роки тому

    Aren’t Autumn Olive berries one of the healthiest on the planet?

  • @dirtroadfarmsjimmideanreen2458
    @dirtroadfarmsjimmideanreen2458 4 роки тому

    Who knows where Greg gave this seminar???

    • @Skashoon
      @Skashoon 3 роки тому

      Sounded like N Dakota from what I gathered.

  • @rolfschnaufi6480
    @rolfschnaufi6480 5 років тому

    In 48:00: If the farmer wouldn't have ballet it, it would have gone too mature. Or how to graze in the midsummer?

    • @wildrangeringreen
      @wildrangeringreen 4 роки тому

      move the animals more frequently, so they keep up with the grass. snipping the ends off sets the grass back quite a bit when it comes to producing seed.

  • @Mike_ICP
    @Mike_ICP 3 роки тому

    I want to be a farmer

  • @bdlit7165
    @bdlit7165 4 роки тому

    I think it's a good idea to start taxing for water run off. It would make people learn to keep the water.

  • @ajb.822
    @ajb.822 4 роки тому

    The work with not beat nature into submission... exactly. Folks like to blame Christianity for the dominance mind-set, yet what did Jesus say ? He said it's sinful man who has ideas of leadership like that ( y'all can go look for the verse yourself. It's in the gospels somewhere ) - He says for us to be like Him, which is to be a servant-leader. Which is where I'm going with this. Husbandman. An out-of-use term for being a steward of the land or animals, which was understood to mean good stewardship. Which should inform us as to what it means to be a husband to a wife, also. Someone who helps her flourish, who respects & serves her best interests, and not meaning anything condescending by that ! Anymore than it's condescending for him to need her support & help & wisdom. She submits cuz God is holding him accountable for them as a couple, so, he deserves her co-operation ! Nothing offensive in that ! We each have a job, we each have a sinful nature that wars against being content with our own job, and with doing a good job of it, but it's possible, when we submit to God above all. Sorry if off topic here, but to me this all affects each other, realzing what these terms signify, & getting rid of unnecessarily being offended or misled by them.

  • @rgolianeh
    @rgolianeh 4 роки тому

    I think farmers should start giving some of the land they own back to nature.