They are a very different thing. I personally believe it has to do with the processing. For whatever reason, I can chew on raw sugar cane, or eat fruit and feel fine. Processed sugar, cane or beet gives me a headache instantly
I agree with you 100% paralysis I think a lot of people get into it for the wrong reasons keeping up with the Joneses and all that good stuff and then they find out it's real work and well😅
For sure, it is so much better to start small. If you don’t enjoy having an herb garden and a few chickens, a full scale farm is not going to make you like it more 🤣
First off stop telling people to do that Secondly if you do that the yolk can come out while you're cooking it the best way to actually do it and I learned this in culinary arts training that once you boil your egg and it's fully done you take it out of the the water you crack the bottom like he did there but then you put it directly in ice water and when your egg is nice and cool you take it out of the water and the shell literally comes off in one piece
She is mostly Brahman and they are pretty skinny anyways, however yes she is especially skinny right now. We got her that way. She has full access to decent hay, rotated to fresh grass regularly and now getting about 10 lbs of grain with molasses daily. Sometimes though when they were malnourished young, or were full of parasites it is really hard to ever get weight back on them
@@Chasindinner Oh you're in PR, awesome. My good friend is a small farmer here in the states and wants to move down there. How's the farming community there?
It is interesting here. There are some of the smartest farmers I have ever met and very willing to share knowledge. It takes a little time and effort for them to accept people though. You have to spend some time to prove you are here to love the land, and make positive changes, not just a profit.
That’s a big one. Must have been a male. Do the lions ever attack livestock out there? One of them where I live drug a new foal over a fence and ate it.
I am just assuming that you came into ownership of this guy recently, and being that he is both still wild and a stud, you have your work cut out for you. I will check back at a later date and see how this turns out.
Yes, we just got him a couple of months ago. We spent that time getting him tame enough to eat from your hands, but that was about it. To get him any further we had to send him to a trainer, with facilities.
It sucks that these beautiful creatures aren't allowed to live free. I hate thst they are forced into a life of servitude and what about his family? Why was he captured?
Because the 3 mares he was with caused a 5 car pile up. Killing the 3 mares, and almost killing 2 people. Horses have no place in the wild here. These are from horses people let out, or escaped. Most die of malnutrition or parasites, laminitis or the hooves rot off from the moisture, then die of infection while the wild dogs, who people also think should live free eat them alive. Many are killed by cars Once in a while, an unlucky one is captured by a terrible cowboy and used as a pet or riding horse.
If you actually look, I never hit him with the whip. I hit the ground behind him. Second, it is not my fault for not handling him. He was born wild. We captured him a couple months ago and worked with him daily since, but he had to be moved to a training facility now.
In this case you didn't have a chance to work with him when he was little but it does show how important that is if you can. All and all he took it fairly well.