2024 - my fifth year farming row crops (Corn and Soybeans) in Nebraska, USA! Follow along as we learn how to farm...together! My channel features vlog-style videos of everyday life on the farm, as well as equipment demos, collaborations with other farmers, and off the farm, outdoor fun. I'm here to educate people about farming in the midwest while I'm learning myself. Incredibly grateful and thankful to God for this opportunity to share my life's story with all of you. Thanks for being here!
contact@tablerock.com
Laura Farms PO Box 536 Aurora, NE 68818
Check out Laura Farms branded clothing line here - www.bunkerbranding.com/pages/laura-farms
Channel Sponsors:
Universal Motion Components, Innovating Pivot Irrigation Powertrain parts since 1978 www.umcproducts.com/en/
Chief Industries: A Nebraska-based, family owned company comprised of 7 diverse brands. chiefind.com/
What ever you do , BE CAREFUL around any manure tanker trucks and their fumes. 2 young guys just got killed by me when one of them fell into the truck after he smelled the toxic crap and the other one tried to save him and he was overcome by it , too. SAFETY FIRST...ALWAYS !
IDAHO FARMERS ARE BEING SHUT DOWN BY THE STATE GOVERNMENT. WATER CURTAILMENT. NO WATER TO FARM,! CROPS HAVEALREADY BEEN PLANTED. MASSIVE FAMILY FARMS WILL GO UNDER. POTATO's will be in short supply.
Hi Laura! I have an interesting question for you on your next Q&A video, I was wondering why aren't you growing sweet corn on your bigger acres of land for human consumption or Wheat, apples, potatoes or green unions. Instead your growing for industry commodities?
I can answer that for you. She would go out of business if she tried it. Wheat is a viable crop in her area, as in it would grow well and she could plant and harvest it with her equipment and there are places to sell it. But most years she'd lose money growing it. It's not profitable in her area. There's not enough demand for it. All the rest require specialized equipment and specialized markets, none of which exist in her area. And some of them simply aren't adapted to her area. The demand for those crops is more than satisfied in the current production areas. There's no reason to produce things that have no market.
I so enjoy the work you do on your farm. I know I speak for many others when I say you are the cutest little farmer I've ever seen. Keep up the great work.
Laura get grant to do a surfing video again with all the rain oyu have gotten lately. We are south in kansas and you get what passes us. I remember you surfing the ditches full of rain so lets see it again. You had a full motorcross suit on. Probably 4years or more ago.
I feel so privileged to be able to ride along in the tractor cab and listen to the chat about what's going on out there in the crop. I noticed that the far end of the fertilizer on the inside of the turn is actually going backward over the ground. 😲
Laura, you are the only farm channel I watch. I watch a lot of movie reactors, science channels, anything to do with aviation, some gaming channels, trucking channels, etc.
Try an English farmer called Harry's farm on RU-vid, the field your doing now is probably the same as his whole farm,crazy thing is this season the ukgov pay him more to set it aside than grow corn 😊
My top RU-vid is Lumina Acres for health reasons they started with 28 acres. Three years they bought a 500 acre farm in New Hampshire. Second RU-vid is The Holister Homestead. They have 4boys and 2 very young girls. What I like is how they ‘teach’ their children. While these do not farm like yours, in their own ways do a different way to farm.
Hello you should check out Bells Farming it's about a couple who farm here in central Maine. She's new to farming but is learning it fast and she's not afraid of getting dirty and doing the hard jobs
That was super cool to see! I'm an electrician and the company that I work for did the electrical for a 170 ft grain bin for Frontier co-op near Plattsmouth recently, so I am familiar with many of the components you showed in this video.
Sorry Laura, while cleaning a bin is hard work, it sure isn't the sweatiest job on the farm. That is reserved for throwing hay bales in a hot barn. A steel bin is hot, but you only have to be in there for a short time. Stacking 60-70 lb square bales in a hot barn all day is far and away the sweatiest job.
You might like my gardening channel www.youtube.com/@gettingdirtywithglenn I share my experience and knowledge of 45 years of being a Landscape Architect and designing and building large residential and estate gardens. I also share how gardening, biking and kayaking have helped with after the loss of my wife of 34 years last year.....
Our March planted corn has had nearly 19" of rain. Our local corn crop is probably 30% tasseled. New crop soybeans were late. Currently wheat harvest is in full swing. Our hay ground has us running crazy. With the rain we've had, haying is behind. Headed out this morning to wipe out 60 acres of grass & clover!
And I would like to say.. we don't state 0r usda eat meat.. we have our own Buffalo 🐃 ranch . We still like the old west .. before 1492.. Buffalo 🐃 is the best meat.. that's why my tribe has it's own ranch. And they distribute the meat every time they harvest.. nothing go's to waist. 😊