All About The Farm Our family farm is first and foremost a homestead farm. We eat the food we grow and livestock we raise. As a customer, you can trust that we only sell the highest quality produce and pasture raised livestock. If we won’t eat it, we won’t sell it to you.
We Grow Good Food That sounds almost too simple, but in a world of increasing food regulation, industrialized food production and synthesis, truly good food has become hard to find.
Our Methodology We strive to follow a migration-style method of agriculture. This means our chickens, cows, pigs and goats are moved on a schedule to new pasture and forage helping promote better soil ecology and a more healthy farm.
We had an almost identical situation in regards to the cattle stopping at the shadow of the new shelter. Our pens are mostly an old wood setup so we didn’t want to spend the extra time trying to redirect traffic but it became one of the most annoying and time consuming things trying to get the cows through that shadow point. Glad y’all had an easier time with the metal fences.
We have never had issues with ‘pasty butt’. Once in a while we’ll have one or two, but it’s rare. I believe the best thing to prevent it is good clean bedding, plenty of water and grit from day one. Thanks!
We have the 1006NT. It plants about 10-feet wide. It is almost 15-feet wide. We have a 70hp Kubota M7060 with 4WD. The Kubota pulls it with no problem. Thanks!
@@thelazyacresfamilyfarm3252 yes sir. Got the word this week. It will have to be purchased online and sent to you. So now instead of one step. You going and purchasing. Now it’s has to be vet ordered you submit the prescription and wait to be verified and sent out to you. Awful times.
We had a very hot and dry summer and our winter had some of the coldest temps in 40-years. With that said, the stand isn’t great. We’ve mowed it a couple of times to control weeds. Hopefully, it will get better. Thanks!
This post sums up Wendell Berry's wisdom in ten short minutes. : "The pleasure of eating should be an extensive pleasure, not that of the mere gourmet. People who know the garden in which their vegetables have grown and know that the garden is healthy will remember the beauty of the growing plants, perhaps in the dewy first light of morning when gardens are at their best. Such a memory involves itself with the food and is one of the pleasures of eating. The knowledge of the good health of the garden relieves and frees and comforts the eater. The same goes for eating meat. The thought of the good pasture and the calf contentedly grazing flavors the steak. Some, I know, will think it bloodthirsty or worse to eat a fellow creature you have known all its life. On the contrary, I think it means that you eat with understanding and with gratitude. A significant part of the pleasure of eating is one's accurate consciousness of the lives and the world from which food comes. The pleasure of eating, then, may be the best available standard of our health." -- Wendell Berry
Hey Ryan. Every had your sweet corn pollenate only on half the side of the ear. Just pulled i dont know dozen ears. No ear worms. But half the ear beautiful half the ear nothing. Just the white little kernels immature. Never seen ever ear do a complete half.
the joy of watching those videos is to watch the cows going from the old pasture to the new one and see them going at the new grass ,but here we always see them after the fact , a bite disappointing
I run a circular sawmill and a farm I have a wagon just like that one I use it for a lumber wagon and a hay wagon it’s one of seven different ones I have it’s a great wagon
I've learned the secret to growing an exorbitant amount of clover and sedge. You see, you set out to grow a perfectly manicured stand of St. Augustine and you'll have it in no time.
We purchased in early 2019 at the Kubota dealership in Marianna, Florida for considerably less than that -roughly 30% less. It’s a great drill. We’ve overseesed approximately 300 acres with good results.
The four Reason's homestead Davis Round bakes of Bahai grass and Bermuda grass are usually around $40 per bale. Square bale perennial peanut hay can very from $8-15 per bale depending on availability. Thanks
Yo Lazy Acres it's CHRI5 TEN TFF the RU-vidr from London UK how nice vid bro sounds like hard work trying to grow maize on your farm I have just taken you up to 49 subs bro stay connected an check me out when you get a chance
We have a rocking chair that looks almost identical to the ones on your porch! Nice store, looking forward to following your channel. Glad we saw you on Lynda's House of Chill this morning :)
I hear you loud an clear on this one! Nothing worse than spending hard earned cash on junk! Love experiencing the family farm through your channel - New Friend here from the Dragon