5th generation SE Washington, USA. I am currently working for the neighbors. I left the family farm to go and do my own thing. Come with me, as I take you in the cab through rolling hills as well as some of the steepest farmland in America. Business inquiries @ struthersfarming@gmail.com
Wow I am glad we don't have such fire dangers around here. It is not so dry here. Good job of showing the scale of the fire and what would happen if it wasn't contained. Thanks and good job Trevor
Yah, in 1966 when 18 foot header was appearing on the Palouse and my Dad said it was to long and wouldn't work ... Hello American farmers....YOU ARE YOUR WORST ENEMY....😅😅😅😅😅😅😅
At least we know the end of the story before these videos. That definitely helps the feeling of impending doom in watching through this. Thanks for the video. 🙂
Trevor, this was another excellent video - thank you! What a beautiful place to live and farm. Wasn't as hilly as I was expecting for the Palouse, so this must be a flatter area. We have a lot of grass seed in the Willamette Valley in Oregon; it's interesting to see how it's done in the Palouse with the bluegrass. You obviously do a bunch of editing with these videos, with the cutaway to the drone shots, to being back in cab, and with subtitles so we know what is being said. The question I have is how in the world are you able to get the drone shots at the same time while you're in cab? That's just some amazing work to do all that at once. Thanks again for these great videos of one of my favorite places on the planet. 😉
I fly and they drive. Asking questions to them while they drive adds another layer, that Im not to yet! In the bankout driver video with bailey, i was in another machine following them around.
We were in Idaho driving around and the terrain was very similar to this and I was thinking to myself how do they plant and harvest this , it’s so steep . Now I know , thanks for sharing. Very cool
@@TrevorStruthers because internet I won't say where, but I'm pretty sure I know where you're at - I go by there during the winter when I ski at Bluewood. Also do Search and Rescue in Columbia and Walla Walla County. I do 4x4 stuff and think it's nuts how steep of hills you farm.... and amazed. Good luck with the channel.
Skoro siejecie ziarno w tak trudnych terenach gleba musi byc naprawde dobra ja kosze na plaskim ale urosnie tylko zyto owies a ostatnio duzo daje corn ale patrzebuje duzo nawozu dap pozdro z Poland
Every time I watch your videos I feel I should move out there and take up farming. But being a 48yo disabled vet I can’t keep a schedule due to the bad days being pretty bad.
Hey there hand, So I've driven damn near all over this state, I've lived over here in Renton since 2001. I've always thoughy that those golden rolling hills were simply prairie grass like in south central Commifornia. So it's rather impressive that a farmer not only planted something up there, but those combine harvesters are fucking LEGIT!! I've been wanting to try my hand at some this stuff after playing Farming Simulator with my kids, but there's no goddamn way I'm even suggesting to someone that i try my hand at harvesting in one of those harvesters on a hill like that? Nope. I'd be down with chasing grain with the cart though. I watch another farmer up in Canada-A (Farming And Easy) and another one in Minnesota (Millennial Farmer) and one more in the UK (Pemberton Farms) and now you. Really interesting watching how there needs to be farmers growing all these different crops for any number of uses. It would be cool if next year i could bring my boys out to watch some fields being worked, yall ain't but a couple hours from me. I think just watching machinery being prepped for work would be sufficient as I'm not gunna try and chase anything thru those hills. Keep on keepin on bro, stay safe and I'll keep watching 🇺🇸🤘😎🤘🇺🇸
@TrevorStruthers so I'm guessing that the whole leveling system on those harvesters are all automatic? What a bitch it would be to have to do all that manually. That's some impressive stuff though. Most I've ever seen is the draper tilting one direction to the next to stay level with the ground. But they're not farming hills that weren't really meant to be farmed 🤣