Never farmed before, nor do I ever plan to, but I can certainly appreciate the Herculean effort and cost associated with doing that. Thank you farmers! ✊🏻
The cost is off the scale ...... nothing to burn $3-5,000 worth of diesel daily driving $5,000,000 worth of equipment... farm land varies around the world but where I live ... $18-20,000 per acre. Most farmers have at least 1,500 acres .. some 8,000 acres .... BIG business ....
Did not see a single person work hard. Think all the tractors have AC and radio. The chairs are better then the one i'm sitting on right now. I removed manure in stables with my hands. This is a fully automated process. Working hard can also be done in Combodia or other countries. That's why the expensive horses are in Holland. It's just basic economics.
Tbf. No industry has so much mechanical support compared to farming. That's why they do so much. Because they can. Go back 100 years n theid work just as hard for a fraction of the output. Machineries does ALOT of the heavy lifting in farming.
All celebs, poop , all of us poop , weather one rides a bmw or not, no one pious , I killed many ants this morning , while walking , stepped on their colony , we kill bugs with car windshields, we all are products of sin , we got gut bacteria , too.. we are polluters ..
This was not what I was expecting. I thought I was going to watch a big tank of cow doodies swirling around for 10 minutes. I actually learned a little bit....😂
Farmers are the real heroes in all countries. This makes my years of military service worth it. We need to honor our farming soldiers, who feed us all. I salute you.
Interesting thought. If you do some research, you'll realize that what you call organic in the US wouldn't pass any organic criteria in Europe, Asia, or Australia.
@@YossiaNorth you are absolutely correct. No other country in the world accepts US organic as organic. Another interesting fact I learned is if you are a farmer in Russia caught growing anything gmo, you will be arrested and they seize your farm ground. Hmmmm
When I was stationed in Holland in the late 80's we called those field sprayers "Honey Wagons". Let me tell you, it's almost strong enough to make you vomit.
Little wonder food is so expensive. Fewer people are willing to do the work and invest the money to make it all work. Maybe if & when we get hungry enough we'll pitch in & help feed the world. Thank you for showing some of the hard work of some of our "farmers".
More people are willing than you think the main thing keeping them away is the outrageous price of land. In most places you can't get 1 acre for under 10K on the cheap side. Times that by 100 you're a Million deep before even 1 cow is bought.
@@irreccon you're right ! ... around here, farm land is 20K an acre and the farmers I know have 2,500-8,000 acres ! Then, there's the cost of 200-700 head of producing cows and an equal number of young and dry cows. Then, there's milk quota costs.. The price of milk quota in Ontario is around $24,000 per kilogram of butterfat, or roughly per cow. This price can vary by location. For example, in British Columbia, the price of quota is $42,500 per cow. Plus barns, equipment and on .. and on .. and on ...
Hi Lance. Welcome to the channel and your nice compliment. Background music synced to the video seems to be a hate/love situation for my viewers. Without taking a survey, I'm not really sure which one the viewers like best! So, I've started to use a GoPro more to get real-time background sounds and then background music when there's no audio. We'll do that for a while .. Let me know what you think about this approach ...
@@farmerdrone Thanks Nice to learn something new at 72. The farmer had an old wooden tank about 550-800 gallon and would gravity off load it. The mixture was like that that was spread on your fields. My parents had a 610 acre dairy farm up in Northern Vermont . The barn burned down before I was born and then our family moved to Connecticut. Still to this day I like the smell of manure well from a distance. Farming tough and I would shake your hand if I was there and hand you a cold beer.. Thanks again be safe
In Ohio due to our clay levels, we sub soil ours, no one here does surface application due to run off, flies and odor control. Nice to see how other operations are run.
Think also it's great. It very flat there. No trees or other obstacles and the land directly there and not a couple of km away. Some goes for the farming in America with these large irrigation booms. Works great and very cost effective. But i would have blown some air in the manure and mixed it continueasly. You can actually run a old engine on his stuff, to make it almost free. Just make a starting batch in a clean environment with the right bacteria and fungus. Will be great fertiliseren in a very short time period. (Assuming the manure gets hot enough).
As before, I find your access and professional presentation outstanding. What an interesting insight into the cycle of the goings-on at the large farm. Re-using the residues of animal waste efficiently for fertilizer, good idea!
Thanks a lot for your comments ... I get a lot of help and interest from the farms making my efforts to produce these videos a lot easier ... great farmers and awesome to be in, on and close to this big equipment !
I'm amazed they use long hoses like that rather than tank trailers get it to the fields. I'll have to watch when the farmer across the road from me does it next time. Regards from near Carleton Place!
Hoses can be 4-5km ...usually local roads restrict the distance when they use tankers. I posted a few videos from Carleton Place last fall .. the 'Big Guns'
@@farmerdrone So the advantage of the dragline is you can continuously apply the manure, whereas the tanks have to keep going back for refills? I was wondering the same thing.
@@electrolytics First consideration is field location vs lagoon location. If the field can be reached by hose .. no bush, roads, creeks etc .. then dragline. If the field is a far distance and has obstacles .. roads etc .. then tankers .. but, Nitrogen dissipates quickly .. especially if sprayed into the air. Laying the manure gently on the ground and quickly working it into the soil preserves the most. Injecting it into the ground is even better.
This is interesting, I do this a bit different here in the UK. I fill 44m3 tank on a trailer with liquid manure that's pulled along side me & attached to the sprayer that pumps it out using the attached pump. Makes like a lot easier fertilising a 500 acre field. Not sure how big the field is in the video unless I missed it. Just feels like a lot of work that could be avoided.
Midwest USA we use a similar system but use a geared trolley sprayer and it’s cable play out anchored to a tractor can cover 50 acres wide and 200 long in a 24 hr shot
When I was a kid, outside of town was a large farm. Fast forward 40 years when the city has now encroached on the farm. Spring rolls around and so does the annual fertilization of the fields with manure. Neighbours complain like crazy trying to force the farmer to stop this practice…no luck. He was there first and his land zoned as agricultural. Funny to watch though.
@@Renard380 I have a reality video in the works where the video starts with the pouring of a glass of milk and then backtracking to where the milk came from in the first place. It'll be an eyeopener for some ..
I move water for oil well fracks. I wish we had larger spools of lay flat pipe. Ours are 1/4 mile lengths but 10-12” in diameter. At times we move up to 22K Liters a minute. Or 140 bbls a min
Here in Chile we use sprayers. It seems a lot simpler. Also you find that there are Ag Services that you can contract to come in with their tank sprayers and do the whole job. Jim
Hi Chile ! Welcome to the channel. Great to hear from you.... we use both here. Usually dragline (like the video) when the field is in reach of the equipment and tankers when it's not. I have a tanker video coming out shortly ...
It would be cool to see what pumping this onto row's mulched of wood chipboard and greenery and turned into a compost for spreding more organic matter on the paddock 🤔
@@farmerdrone nope..I'm in the Philippines..I do farming too but still learning..I worked in a worldwide seagoing cargo vessel for 13 years but i decided to settle and do some farming😊
I bet your neighbors love you during this week lol. I live in a farming town and the farm down the road use to get loads of Polaroid waste back in the day. The smell was so putrid for two weeks people had to leave their homes and go to a hotel. This happened for 4 years before the community put a stop to it. It was so bad your eyes watered just driving past. What’s crazy is how well his harvest was during those years.
10:00 The shaftcover shall be fixed and not spinning to avoid infury or death. It could be penalized as a worksafety rule violation. Be smart an dont die over a tank of shit :)
I guess with the price of fertilizer this is a cheaper alternative ... Would he nice to know a bit of info like how often the tank is empty and how many fields it covers and how soon after spraying can they plan ... And do they roate this on fields etc...
tanks are emptied twice per year. About 3600 gallons per acre ... 1.2million gallon tank ... 333 acres ... cultivated the next day and planting right after that. Crop rotation is a common practice ...
Damn. I grew up on horse farms. We had a manure pile that I'd attack with the bucket on our John Deere 2120 to fill up the manure spreader a ton or so at a time. This? Holy cow that is a smelly nightmare!
@@farmerdrone Really? Do you go passive aggressive to every person who leaves a relatable, on topic comment that your brain apparently misinterprets? Damn dude lol. And yes, even on little horse farms like ours and every pig / cow farm on the planet, the entire AREA wreaks to high heaven when it's manure spreading time. What is wrong with you anyway?
When I lived in Norway, they did this with sheep manure every Spring. The whole country stunk for weeks! And the solids agitated in the tank do not dissolve, it is just suspended in the liquid.
I hope that's not why you moved!. With all the 'smelly' comments I get, it doesn't really smell that much and in a days time, it's gone ... worked into the soil ...
So ist das halt auf dem Land da stinkt es halt mal. Bei uns ist ja ab nächstes Jahr nur noch Boden nahe Ausbringung erlaubt. Aber die Leute Regen sich ja auch auf wenn der Hahn kräht oder in den Alpen gibt's so gar klagen gegen die Kuh Glocken die Leute sind nichts mehr gewohnt. Und haben nix mehr mit der Landwirtschaft zu tun
Man, just a thought that lies in my head, the smell is too bad or at the end is tolerable? Just a city geek talking here, thank you for this amazing videos what a lovely life
Ooooof! That’s a lot of poop! We’ve got a small herd of shorthorn cattle here in the Scottish highlands and I know how much those 13 ladies can poop…..but you guys are dealing with some serious crap!
@@farmerdrone No way! That's 660 kg of N per Ha which is essentially severe soil pollution and OMofE would shut you down right quick! Perhaps it was 0.3%? 🤔
@@eve-marie6751 nutrients in 1,000 gallons of liquid dairy manure might contain 33 lb of total nitrogen, 13 lb of total phosphorus (as P2O5) and 31 lb of total potassium (as K20)..... about 3%
@@farmerdrone Sorry, no:- 1000 Imperial gallons of plain water weigh at least 10,000 lbs so that much manure would weigh more:- however 33 lb N divided by only 10,000 lb = 0.33% so you're off a decimal place. Sorry, no gold star for you today, Miss Lulu, your eternal Grade Six teacher, is greatly disappointed in you! 🙁
Out of curiosity, is anaerobic digestion ever used with the manure? You get methane which can run a generator and power the dairy/sell electricity, and it reduces the volume of effluent. Solids can get taken off which would be easier to spread, and effluent which could be pumped around easier or used with tankers. (Don't quote me on this, been a while since I've read up on it, but its a good way to treat manure and get energy out at the same time) Sure, big upfront cost, but given the capital involved in that hose and the effort required to set all that up I'd imagine it'd pay itself off reasonably quick, especially with the power generation side.
The cost is beyond reach .. $11M .. for most farmers but there are BioDigesters being built now to service 1800 cows. See my previous video on my channel. The digester produces methane gas and the manure fertilizer goes back to the farmer. Each unit can service 5-8 farms ...
Have you not considered building membrane digesters to ferment this manure and produce biogas? The biogas can be used for cooking, heating, etc., and it also reduces the odor of the manure.
@@farmerdrone I saw that episode. Are these cow dungs transported to the biogas treatment plant, where they ferment them for free and then take them back?
Nice and informative video, but I'm sure with an exhaustive search you could find music that is maybe one or two percent more irritating. Maybe not, though!
@frankfreeman1444 😂 well Frank, I have spent countless hours doing just that. It always boiled down to the old quote that you can't please all the people all the time. I am open minded and I have 2 ears and only one mouth. What would you suggest?
I wonder why not use some type of Slurry Liquid Manure Tanker? Wouldn't this be a more cost-effective solution than replacing miles of expensive hose every few years?
@dawmro Both services are available here. I have not questioned why either is used, but I am about to release a video about the usage of tankers. It's obvious if the fields are a long distance from the lagoon, tankers have to be used.
@@farmerdrone Thanks for answer! I suspected that distance would be the biggest factor. If you could gather some numbers and do comparison of feasibility, cost-effectiveness, initial and running costs and ease of use of those two systems, it could make for interesting content and answer some questions.
Dear gawd, I remember that smell! When it first hits you, it will knock you back a bit. I first saw a tank, twice that size, on a 4th grade field trip in Eastern Washington State. I was absolutely horrified. All i could think about was falling in and drowning in a lake of 💩 poop! In later years I got used to the smells and learned to appreciate the recycling uses of it. I only ever saw tanker spreading though. You wanna piss of your HOA? This will definitely do the trick......for weeks.🤭
Actually, there is very little smell using this method. The field is plowed down within hours. When you spray with tanker trucks and don't plow down, the smell will drift and be there for a while.
The hoses are cleaned out by inserting a sponge ball into the line and it is pushed through the line by compressed air (see video). The hose pickup is about the same as a garden hose reel ...
11.04. " oh shit" is a not that wrong thinking when mechanic has to fix the case 325 in this environment! When the job is done, straight into a bar to observe whom of the people has olfactoric senses and who not😂
I can smell it from here.....in the UK !! over here, slurry is more than likely injected straight out of a tanker, stink stays put where it was injected, in the ground
Well it hailed last week, but the sun is out today. Now we wait to see what is left come harvest. We can't control the weather, but the Lord has kept us here for over a hundred years. This one too will pass.
Very good question .. since lagoons are pumped out .. on average .. 2-3 times a year and we don't get torrential rains like other parts of the world, above average rainfall doesn't affect things too much..
It’s an amazing system. Cows eat grass cows poop farmer pumps poop on to the fields to grow more grass. This is over simplified but most city folks are to removed from their food
237,600 $ just for 3 mile of hoses! damn the investment require to make a living in farming are just absurd! i dont know how farmer make it work! je lève mon chapeau a vous autres les chums!!!
I don't doubt that if one of these farmers sold their milk quota ($24,000) per kilo .., the farm (5,000ac @ $20K per acre, cattle (700 head@$3800 per), calves heifers, millions in equipment ..etc .... they could probably buy a Bugatti in each color offered !!
@@janineclemons746 it's coming .. see my video I posted a couple weeks ago. I went back to the farm with the Bio Digester and I am preparing a new video explaining how the digester works ...
@pw135 There is no pasture .... all land is planted with crops.... the crops need fertilizing... best .most natural fertilizer is ... manure ... which is put on the fields, worked into the ground and the crop is planted....
@pw135 also, these are dairy cows.... milked by robotics... How on earth would that work with 400 cows wandering around a 500 acre field! Also, the 500 acres of land is worth 10 million dollars ! If you think a 12 string guitar is fine tuned .... try farming ...
I do these videos to show the non farming community how expensive it is to farm. I have a great repore with the farm operators to make these. I received several hundred thousand views on my first manure pumping video and this current one is well ahead of the first. I told the owner of this farm we should charge the non farming community $25 to come to the farm just to watch!! Hope you support me and Subscribe. Lots more farming videos on the channel and lots to come ... Les ..
Government and large agri businesses have colluded to destroy the small family farm, It will only end when all that's left is large corporate farms, no more family at all. The only way small family farms can survive is if they form cooperatives again. Look what happened to Dairyland...
I was stationed in West Germany in the early 70s at a remote base and the local farmer didn’t like American servicemen. Well he would always spread the manure when the base was downwind from his fields and boy did it stink. Just thought a laugh is needed sometimes
Seems most video games constantly have obstacles and bad guys coming at you. Farmers constantly have issues to overcome and constantly have the weather not cooperating one way or the other. This farm had to pump the lagoon pronto, but the weather and then a breakdown with 3 days of rain coming was a challenge.
Well, it comes from the back end of a cow ... the barns have automatic floor scrapers and scrapes the manure into a holding tank. When the holding tank is full, it is pumped into a large outside lagoon as in this video. Every 6 months, the 5 million titles are pumped out and spread on the fields as fertilizer to grow new crops.......
Being downwind of that operation gives a whole new meaning to the term " Fresh country air "
gotta love it !
Hah... I grew up living down range of a chicken farm. This would have been way better!
There is nothing like the smell of home
Cows don't smell that bad. Try a French cheese factory. Or birds.
Can’t believe we all eat dung and there’s just no other way
Never farmed before, nor do I ever plan to, but I can certainly appreciate the Herculean effort and cost associated with doing that. Thank you farmers! ✊🏻
The cost is off the scale ...... nothing to burn $3-5,000 worth of diesel daily driving $5,000,000 worth of equipment... farm land varies around the world but where I live ... $18-20,000 per acre. Most farmers have at least 1,500 acres .. some 8,000 acres .... BIG business ....
@@farmerdrone I can’t say I’m surprised with such costs. Egad!
When Hercules cleaned the poop he just redirected the river. Can we still do that?
@@farmerdrone With that much manure you can set up your own biogas production plant and start making some electricity XD. Damn thats a lot.
Farmers dont get enough respect for the amount of work they do none stop, they are always nice and smiling and most of all are HEROS!!!!!!!!!
I think you're going to get a lot of likes from this comment !
Farmers are welfare queen crybabies
Did not see a single person work hard. Think all the tractors have AC and radio. The chairs are better then the one i'm sitting on right now. I removed manure in stables with my hands. This is a fully automated process. Working hard can also be done in Combodia or other countries. That's why the expensive horses are in Holland. It's just basic economics.
Tbf. No industry has so much mechanical support compared to farming. That's why they do so much. Because they can.
Go back 100 years n theid work just as hard for a fraction of the output.
Machineries does ALOT of the heavy lifting in farming.
@@SD-vy7gj For sure ... but it costs a fortune !
I can only imagine the scent of freshly bloomed flowers .... 5 million liters of perfume :D
🤢🤮🤮🤮
All celebs, poop , all of us poop , weather one rides a bmw or not, no one pious , I killed many ants this morning , while walking , stepped on their colony , we kill bugs with car windshields, we all are products of sin , we got gut bacteria , too.. we are polluters ..
You can say they got their sh*t together👍
I'd say they do ... great crew ...
Actually they spread their shit apart they didn’t put it together hehehe
😂😂😂😂 fr fr
Taking the term "Full of shit" to a entirely new level 😅🤣
This was not what I was expecting. I thought I was going to watch a big tank of cow doodies swirling around for 10 minutes. I actually learned a little bit....😂
@randomconsumer510 😅 glad to hear that! ... the tank will be pumped again tomorrow ( twice a year) and I'll be there.....!
@farmerdrone be sure to get good footage of the poop smoothie!
Farmers are the real heroes in all countries. This makes my years of military service worth it. We need to honor our farming soldiers, who feed us all. I salute you.
Thank goodness to didn't film in "smelly vision".
I have that new equipment on order ...
I just wonder how many people don't know what organic means. Awesome design and development of an awesome earthy function
For sure
Everyone who says "this is organic food" has no idea what organic means.
Interesting thought. If you do some research, you'll realize that what you call organic in the US wouldn't pass any organic criteria in Europe, Asia, or Australia.
@@YossiaNorth you are absolutely correct. No other country in the world accepts US organic as organic. Another interesting fact I learned is if you are a farmer in Russia caught growing anything gmo, you will be arrested and they seize your farm ground. Hmmmm
time to move to Ukraine ...
When I was stationed in Holland in the late 80's we called those field sprayers "Honey Wagons". Let me tell you, it's almost strong enough to make you vomit.
Very interesting, thank you for you're time and effort. Great upload.
thanks very much ... lots of travelling and flying time and mega hours on post production editing ..!
Little wonder food is so expensive. Fewer people are willing to do the work and invest the money to make it all work. Maybe if & when we get hungry enough we'll pitch in & help feed the world. Thank you for showing some of the hard work of some of our "farmers".
More people are willing than you think the main thing keeping them away is the outrageous price of land. In most places you can't get 1 acre for under 10K on the cheap side. Times that by 100 you're a Million deep before even 1 cow is bought.
@@irreccon you're right ! ... around here, farm land is 20K an acre and the farmers I know have 2,500-8,000 acres ! Then, there's the cost of 200-700 head of producing cows and an equal number of young and dry cows. Then, there's milk quota costs.. The price of milk quota in Ontario is around $24,000 per kilogram of butterfat, or roughly per cow. This price can vary by location. For example, in British Columbia, the price of quota is $42,500 per cow. Plus barns, equipment and on .. and on .. and on ...
@@farmerdroneall thanks to big government, always making food prices artificially high just so they can get reelected to fix the problems they create
I appreciate the subtle background music... It really compliments the well paced edit
Hi Lance. Welcome to the channel and your nice compliment. Background music synced to the video seems to be a hate/love situation for my viewers. Without taking a survey, I'm not really sure which one the viewers like best! So, I've started to use a GoPro more to get real-time background sounds and then background music when there's no audio. We'll do that for a while .. Let me know what you think about this approach ...
This is probably one of the jobs I really wouldn't like to do
You gotta love farming...
Shitty job no doubt 😅
@@farmerdroneIn this case, dairy farming in particular. Other types of farming don't do this.
@TehButterflyEffect yes... correct. Dairy is more like liquid manure where as beef is more solid....
@@farmerdrone Thanks Nice to learn something new at 72. The farmer had an old wooden tank about 550-800 gallon and would gravity off load it. The mixture was like that that was spread on your fields. My parents had a 610 acre dairy farm up in Northern Vermont . The barn burned down before I was born and then our family moved to Connecticut. Still to this day I like the smell of manure well from a distance. Farming tough and I would shake your hand if I was there and hand you a cold beer.. Thanks again be safe
I can smell that tank all the way from California.
😅 winds are from the west here .... wrong farm .....
@@farmerdrone The smell must have circled the globe. 😆
I really like all the details. No one else does this!
Thanks for the comment. I thought the same so that's why I'm giving it a shot!
In Ohio due to our clay levels, we sub soil ours, no one here does surface application due to run off, flies and odor control. Nice to see how other operations are run.
thanks for the comment, John ,,,
Better done in ohio!
This is a pretty impressive system you have going on here. Very efficient and effective I’m sure.
It does the job.... 1.2 million gallons in 11 hrs....
wow. thanks for sharing. Really interesting and informative.
Thanks Keith .. much appreciated...
If a Dutch farmer does it this way he will probably end up in Jail. Here you have to inject the manure into the ground in a much smaller amount.
I guess that's one of the reasons most of the Dutch farmers are here in Canada .. farming ..
They spray so much toxin in the shit anyway here it doesnt really matter anymore
Nope ...
I thought they sprayed it all on their government buildings 😂
Good thing this isn't a Dutch farming video then huh?
Not like the video had CANADIAN FARMER in the title or anything
Intresting. Never seen Manure spread this way. (I am the son of a Farmer in Germany)
This method will be fazed out as bio digesters are erected across the dairy farmland ... see my latest videos ..
Think also it's great. It very flat there. No trees or other obstacles and the land directly there and not a couple of km away. Some goes for the farming in America with these large irrigation booms. Works great and very cost effective. But i would have blown some air in the manure and mixed it continueasly. You can actually run a old engine on his stuff, to make it almost free. Just make a starting batch in a clean environment with the right bacteria and fungus. Will be great fertiliseren in a very short time period. (Assuming the manure gets hot enough).
With the nice smooth jazz music on this TH-cam video you can quite taste the unbelievable smell this must create
Not much smell this way and it's worked into the ground the next day
smelly jazz
Could you imagine the amount of torque that's being put on that boom
More than a little bit! Expensive hose and lasts 2 years ...
"May the sun, always shine on your crops" 🥰
You like that, do you ... I say that after every video as my "audio signature" ..
HOW DID TODAY GO... SAME SHIT, DIFFERENT DAY 🤣🤣... EXCELLENT VIDEO, STAY SAFE
As before, I find your access and professional presentation outstanding. What an interesting insight into the cycle of the goings-on at the large farm. Re-using the residues of animal waste efficiently for fertilizer, good idea!
Thanks a lot for your comments ... I get a lot of help and interest from the farms making my efforts to produce these videos a lot easier ... great farmers and awesome to be in, on and close to this big equipment !
There is a lot of good fertilizer in that pond
Absolutely correct
I'm amazed they use long hoses like that rather than tank trailers get it to the fields. I'll have to watch when the farmer across the road from me does it next time. Regards from near Carleton Place!
Hoses can be 4-5km ...usually local roads restrict the distance when they use tankers. I posted a few videos from Carleton Place last fall .. the 'Big Guns'
@@farmerdrone That makes sense - I'm guessing much quicker if you can use a hose. But 5km - wow! I'll look for the videos from my neighbourhood!
Less ground compression!
@@MrDriftspirit I never thought of that - that would be an issue particularity when the ground is wet.
Nobody: “Evan, what are you doing?” Me: “Watching cow $hit get sprayed on a field for ten minutes” 😂
😂😂 14 minutes and 20 seconds if you watch it all ....😂😂😂 or ... you could watch it 2 or 3 times!! tell all your friends your new shitty hobby ...
@@farmerdrone😂😂😂
😂😂 I think this is my all-time favorite comment!! 😂😂
Fascinating. I wonder the cost effectiveness of this method over the tanker/sprayers I see over here.
We dragline if it's a clean path to the fields. Tanker if we have to cross roads, fields etc ....
@@farmerdrone So the advantage of the dragline is you can continuously apply the manure, whereas the tanks have to keep going back for refills? I was wondering the same thing.
@@electrolytics First consideration is field location vs lagoon location. If the field can be reached by hose .. no bush, roads, creeks etc .. then dragline. If the field is a far distance and has obstacles .. roads etc .. then tankers .. but, Nitrogen dissipates quickly .. especially if sprayed into the air. Laying the manure gently on the ground and quickly working it into the soil preserves the most. Injecting it into the ground is even better.
This is interesting, I do this a bit different here in the UK. I fill 44m3 tank on a trailer with liquid manure that's pulled along side me & attached to the sprayer that pumps it out using the attached pump. Makes like a lot easier fertilising a 500 acre field. Not sure how big the field is in the video unless I missed it. Just feels like a lot of work that could be avoided.
Midwest USA we use a similar system but use a geared trolley sprayer and it’s cable play out anchored to a tractor can cover 50 acres wide and 200 long in a 24 hr shot
Hi Troy ... wow .. I'd love to se a video of such a big operation. I've seen lagoons that must be 50,000,000 gallons so, it's got to go somewhere!
Super effort by all concerned very well done.xfrom U Kingdom.x
I'll pass that on to the crew .. thanks
When I was a kid, outside of town was a large farm. Fast forward 40 years when the city has now encroached on the farm. Spring rolls around and so does the annual fertilization of the fields with manure. Neighbours complain like crazy trying to force the farmer to stop this practice…no luck. He was there first and his land zoned as agricultural. Funny to watch though.
Everyone knew they were buying a home near a farm.... leave the farmer alone....
Imagine complaining about someone feeding you....
@@Renard380 I have a reality video in the works where the video starts with the pouring of a glass of milk and then backtracking to where the milk came from in the first place. It'll be an eyeopener for some ..
I move water for oil well fracks. I wish we had larger spools of lay flat pipe. Ours are 1/4 mile lengths but 10-12” in diameter. At times we move up to 22K Liters a minute. Or 140 bbls a min
Thanks for this. Always interesting to see and hear things the general public is not aware of...
Ive come to learn the different smell in the air when slurry goes down versus manure. Delicious stuff.... /s
You and me both!
Mooi werk, de boer is troef!
Good system 😊
Glad you think so!
Good job. How long the manure have been fermenting or let decompose before spreading in the field? Thanks
6 months maximum.... it's liquid all the time except for a crust on the top, which is dissolved before pumping as the video shows
Here in Chile we use sprayers.
It seems a lot simpler. Also you find that there are Ag Services that you can contract to come in with their tank sprayers and do the whole job. Jim
Hi Chile ! Welcome to the channel. Great to hear from you.... we use both here. Usually dragline (like the video) when the field is in reach of the equipment and tankers when it's not. I have a tanker video coming out shortly ...
@@farmerdrone thank you kindly. Jim
In Germany or Europe I think they are called honey trucks! 😂
It would be cool to see what pumping this onto row's mulched of wood chipboard and greenery and turned into a compost for spreding more organic matter on the paddock 🤔
wood chipboard is highly toxic as it is manufactured with glues and creosotes. Definitely a no-no ...
i'd love to work there..i can learn a lot👏👏
do you live in Canada?
@@farmerdrone nope..I'm in the Philippines..I do farming too but still learning..I worked in a worldwide seagoing cargo vessel for 13 years but i decided to settle and do some farming😊
I bet your neighbors love you during this week lol. I live in a farming town and the farm down the road use to get loads of Polaroid waste back in the day. The smell was so putrid for two weeks people had to leave their homes and go to a hotel. This happened for 4 years before the community put a stop to it. It was so bad your eyes watered just driving past. What’s crazy is how well his harvest was during those years.
Mmmm ... not quite the same thing ...
What cologne are you wearing? That's midnight pasture, you like?
yes it is ! soon to be in fragrance salons everywhere .. !
When I see these manure ponds, my sweet tooth kicks in. Yum....lol. 😭
and ... it's all sugar free ...! enjoy
" He son, when you get home from school today I need you to wash the tractor "
@@Paul-f7q actually, that's a fun job for a kid!
MMmmhmmMMm. Throw some of that in the freezer for an hour and you've got yourself a nice refreshing treat on a hot summer's day.
The Barley family would agree with you 😅
Mmmm. Lovely, lovely fertilizer. Can I have some for my home garden?
absolutely! take all you want ..!!
How are the equipments cleaned up afterwards?
Hi and thanks for the question. Power washer ... but as you can see, this equipment is used every day in these harsh working conditions
There is still alot of solids on the bottom ive worked for a liquid manure company and we always got 97% of the solids out of the tanks or lagoons
10:00 The shaftcover shall be fixed and not spinning to avoid infury or death. It could be penalized as a worksafety rule violation. Be smart an dont die over a tank of shit :)
thanks for the advice ...
Exactly, that and open chain sprockets /gears
My neighbour died because of that
I went to school with kid in the 70s, his long hair got caught in a pto shaft and it ripped half his face off.
I can only imagine the pain ...
I bet changing that fuel line, if done in that location, was a wonderful experience.
🤣🤣 actually, I can't print any of the words used ...!!😅
“Baby, put on something nice. I’ve got one more field to do and then we can go to that new restaurant you wanted to try.”
It happens all the time...❤
makes you really appreciate that gallon of milk when you grab some at the store
agreed! Every video I make shows work being done to produce one bottom line ... milk!
I guess with the price of fertilizer this is a cheaper alternative ...
Would he nice to know a bit of info like how often the tank is empty and how many fields it covers and how soon after spraying can they plan ... And do they roate this on fields etc...
tanks are emptied twice per year. About 3600 gallons per acre ... 1.2million gallon tank ... 333 acres ... cultivated the next day and planting right after that. Crop rotation is a common practice ...
Good farm
Yes, thanks
Damn. I grew up on horse farms. We had a manure pile that I'd attack with the bucket on our John Deere 2120 to fill up the manure spreader a ton or so at a time. This? Holy cow that is a smelly nightmare!
Actually... no ... not much smell and it's cultivated into the ground right after...
You have great memories.... good for you 👍
@@farmerdrone Really? Do you go passive aggressive to every person who leaves a relatable, on topic comment that your brain apparently misinterprets? Damn dude lol. And yes, even on little horse farms like ours and every pig / cow farm on the planet, the entire AREA wreaks to high heaven when it's manure spreading time. What is wrong with you anyway?
When I lived in Norway, they did this with sheep manure every Spring. The whole country stunk for weeks! And the solids agitated in the tank do not dissolve, it is just suspended in the liquid.
I hope that's not why you moved!. With all the 'smelly' comments I get, it doesn't really smell that much and in a days time, it's gone ... worked into the soil ...
So ist das halt auf dem Land da stinkt es halt mal. Bei uns ist ja ab nächstes Jahr nur noch Boden nahe Ausbringung erlaubt. Aber die Leute Regen sich ja auch auf wenn der Hahn kräht oder in den Alpen gibt's so gar klagen gegen die Kuh Glocken die Leute sind nichts mehr gewohnt. Und haben nix mehr mit der Landwirtschaft zu tun
I live around farms and muck spread season is quite the nasal experience l. I can only imagine what this would smell like.
Spraying the manure creates the most smell. Dragline irrigation is a lot less and it's worked into the ground after application
Nice channel,new sub and hello from bonnie Scotland 🏴
Welcome ! Welcome! .. Our home country ... Motherwell ... now, get all my clansman .. Dalzell .. to subscribe ha ha ...
@@farmerdrone oh hahahaha awesome n i am in Glasgow
😂 we're damn near neighbors...
Man, just a thought that lies in my head, the smell is too bad or at the end is tolerable? Just a city geek talking here, thank you for this amazing videos what a lovely life
The smell is tolerable ... 😅
@@farmerdrone gotcha! Hahaha must be a gift for the soil that goodness! Thanks for the answer! Gonna keep watching the videos its late here in Europe!
@@jonviga You'll be up all night! I have 180 videos .. 😂
@@farmerdrone down for it then!
Ooooof! That’s a lot of poop! We’ve got a small herd of shorthorn cattle here in the Scottish highlands and I know how much those 13 ladies can poop…..but you guys are dealing with some serious crap!
7:18 how many liters do you apply and how much nitrogen is that per hectare?
about 22,000 litres per Ha @ 3%N
@@farmerdrone No way! That's 660 kg of N per Ha which is essentially severe soil pollution and OMofE would shut you down right quick! Perhaps it was 0.3%? 🤔
@@eve-marie6751 nutrients in 1,000 gallons of liquid dairy manure might contain 33 lb of total nitrogen, 13 lb of total phosphorus (as P2O5) and 31 lb of total potassium (as K20)..... about 3%
@@farmerdrone Sorry, no:- 1000 Imperial gallons of plain water weigh at least 10,000 lbs so that much manure would weigh more:- however 33 lb N divided by only 10,000 lb = 0.33% so you're off a decimal place. Sorry, no gold star for you today, Miss Lulu, your eternal Grade Six teacher, is greatly disappointed in you! 🙁
@@eve-marie6751 Well, Miss Lulu has been dead for a long time now ... you forgot to deduct the dry matter ... so, the N remains at 3%
Out of curiosity, is anaerobic digestion ever used with the manure? You get methane which can run a generator and power the dairy/sell electricity, and it reduces the volume of effluent. Solids can get taken off which would be easier to spread, and effluent which could be pumped around easier or used with tankers. (Don't quote me on this, been a while since I've read up on it, but its a good way to treat manure and get energy out at the same time)
Sure, big upfront cost, but given the capital involved in that hose and the effort required to set all that up I'd imagine it'd pay itself off reasonably quick, especially with the power generation side.
The cost is beyond reach .. $11M .. for most farmers but there are BioDigesters being built now to service 1800 cows. See my previous video on my channel. The digester produces methane gas and the manure fertilizer goes back to the farmer. Each unit can service 5-8 farms ...
@farmerdrone Oh that's way more than I expected, wild. Thanks for the reply, I'll check out your other vids!
Have you not considered building membrane digesters to ferment this manure and produce biogas? The biogas can be used for cooking, heating, etc., and it also reduces the odor of the manure.
Cost.... $11M for a digester. See my BioDigester video from 3 months ago
@@farmerdrone I saw that episode. Are these cow dungs transported to the biogas treatment plant, where they ferment them for free and then take them back?
Nice and informative video, but I'm sure with an exhaustive search you could find music that is maybe one or two percent more irritating. Maybe not, though!
@frankfreeman1444 😂 well Frank, I have spent countless hours doing just that. It always boiled down to the old quote that you can't please all the people all the time. I am open minded and I have 2 ears and only one mouth. What would you suggest?
I wonder why not use some type of Slurry Liquid Manure Tanker? Wouldn't this be a more cost-effective solution than replacing miles of expensive hose every few years?
@dawmro Both services are available here. I have not questioned why either is used, but I am about to release a video about the usage of tankers. It's obvious if the fields are a long distance from the lagoon, tankers have to be used.
@@farmerdrone Thanks for answer! I suspected that distance would be the biggest factor. If you could gather some numbers and do comparison of feasibility, cost-effectiveness, initial and running costs and ease of use of those two systems, it could make for interesting content and answer some questions.
Hello i like work this field do you have any options
Dear gawd, I remember that smell! When it first hits you, it will knock you back a bit. I first saw a tank, twice that size, on a 4th grade field trip in Eastern Washington State. I was absolutely horrified. All i could think about was falling in and drowning in a lake of 💩 poop! In later years I got used to the smells and learned to appreciate the recycling uses of it. I only ever saw tanker spreading though. You wanna piss of your HOA? This will definitely do the trick......for weeks.🤭
Actually, there is very little smell using this method. The field is plowed down within hours. When you spray with tanker trucks and don't plow down, the smell will drift and be there for a while.
2:14 A PERKINS IN A MODERN TRACTOR? i thought they quit making perkins a long time ago
cool set up around my parts they just load up spreaders and have at it but they spread mostly chicken poo
I would love to know how the hoses are cleaned out and packed up. They must be enormously heavy with material in them
The hoses are cleaned out by inserting a sponge ball into the line and it is pushed through the line by compressed air (see video). The hose pickup is about the same as a garden hose reel ...
11.04. " oh shit" is a not that wrong thinking when mechanic has to fix the case 325 in this environment!
When the job is done, straight into a bar to observe whom of the people has olfactoric senses and who not😂
What's the lifespan on those hoses? Dragging must really take a toll on them.
Good question... I don't know but I'll find out for both of us.....
lifespan of the 7" hose that is dragged is 2 years. The main 8" feed line from the tank to the field that is not dragged .. 8-10 years ....
@@farmerdrone wooow. 2 years isnt too bad of a lifespan for what happens to it. Appreciate the quick response!
I can smell it from here.....in the UK !! over here, slurry is more than likely injected straight out of a tanker, stink stays put where it was injected, in the ground
Hi Andy thanks for tuning into the channel... //yes .. directly injected is a good procedure ...
Well it hailed last week, but the sun is out today. Now we wait to see what is left come harvest. We can't control the weather, but the Lord has kept us here for over a hundred years. This one too will pass.
Does rain fall raise the level of the tank faster then evaporation lowers the level of the tank? Thanks.
Very good question .. since lagoons are pumped out .. on average .. 2-3 times a year and we don't get torrential rains like other parts of the world, above average rainfall doesn't affect things too much..
@@farmerdrone That is a lot of work, thanks.
That smell must have been tremendous 😂😂
actually .. not really .. and it's but under the soil with a cultivator right after application ..
It’s an amazing system. Cows eat grass cows poop farmer pumps poop on to the fields to grow more grass. This is over simplified but most city folks are to removed from their food
I understand what you are saying....
237,600 $ just for 3 mile of hoses! damn the investment require to make a living in farming are just absurd! i dont know how farmer make it work! je lève mon chapeau a vous autres les chums!!!
yes ... the costs are very high ....
That's why you don't see many farmers driving Bugatti's
@@NavyVet4955 Actually ... they all drive Bugatti's here ... but .. in Canada .. their called John Deere's .....
@@farmerdrone 😂 fair enough, those probably cost more than the super cars.
I don't doubt that if one of these farmers sold their milk quota ($24,000) per kilo .., the farm (5,000ac @ $20K per acre, cattle (700 head@$3800 per), calves heifers, millions in equipment ..etc .... they could probably buy a Bugatti in each color offered !!
That looks like a lost geothermal oppertunity😂😂
There's no real heat in the manure for that ...
Seems like they could collect methane.
@@janineclemons746 it's coming .. see my video I posted a couple weeks ago. I went back to the farm with the Bio Digester and I am preparing a new video explaining how the digester works ...
Bet your neighbors love this time of year with a nice breeze blowing across that !!! 🤢🤢🤢
The neighbors are farmers.. doing the same thing...
@@farmerdrone I know to you all it’s the smell of 💵💵!! I respect that but still rough to deal with!!
You work with the smell for so long you get used to it. The wifey may have a second opinion.
The wife drives one of the tractors ...!
80k for a mile of that hose? damn
Just another day, shoveling shit for a living LOL
good news ...! do shovels were used ..!
So what happens when you have torrential rains , with too much run off of rainfall ???
The effluent is cultivated after application. Rainfall is absorbed it doesn't runoff as most land is tile drained
@@farmerdronelet them out on pasture.
@pw135 There is no pasture .... all land is planted with crops.... the crops need fertilizing... best .most natural fertilizer is ... manure ... which is put on the fields, worked into the ground and the crop is planted....
@pw135 also, these are dairy cows.... milked by robotics... How on earth would that work with 400 cows wandering around a 500 acre field! Also, the 500 acres of land is worth 10 million dollars ! If you think a 12 string guitar is fine tuned .... try farming ...
I wish the community would all pitch in like 5 bucks per person for us farmers. We really need help, and especially the dairymen.
I do these videos to show the non farming community how expensive it is to farm. I have a great repore with the farm operators to make these. I received several hundred thousand views on my first manure pumping video and this current one is well ahead of the first. I told the owner of this farm we should charge the non farming community $25 to come to the farm just to watch!! Hope you support me and Subscribe. Lots more farming videos on the channel and lots to come ... Les ..
Most Canadian dairy farmers are doing better then every one else
Government and large agri businesses have colluded to destroy the small family farm, It will only end when all that's left is large corporate farms, no more family at all. The only way small family farms can survive is if they form cooperatives again. Look what happened to Dairyland...
Agree...
Not sure about that...
That could've been a giant biogas plant with a bit of more investment on the lagoon.
The "bit more" investment is $11,500,000 and it is the works. See my other video on Massive Bio Digester ....
@@farmerdrone well that's a "BIT" :|
When turning, Can flow rate be adjusted on the inside of the turn radius to make coverage more uniform?
That's a good question... I don't know but will find out...
On newer planters yes, this application I have no idea. On most applications (lime, fertilizer) no
The answer is no... the 5 psi is even across the nozzles and is steady
Howe manny m3 you put on a accer?
3600 US gallons per acre or 30,000 litres per Ha.
@@farmerdrone Oke, thanks, it looks more than that it is.
my mans got a wild huge poop hose
I was stationed in West Germany in the early 70s at a remote base and the local farmer didn’t like American servicemen. Well he would always spread the manure when the base was downwind from his fields and boy did it stink. Just thought a laugh is needed sometimes
Well now, that wasn't very friendly 😕
I Think Farming as a video game would wear me out!
Seems most video games constantly have obstacles and bad guys coming at you. Farmers constantly have issues to overcome and constantly have the weather not cooperating one way or the other. This farm had to pump the lagoon pronto, but the weather and then a breakdown with 3 days of rain coming was a challenge.
There's Farming Simulator that includes seasons and weather that can scupper an in-game year of work and lose you money (depending on difficulty).
Try ls22 👍🏻
@@bunnywarren sounds like a regular day of challenges farmers have to face ...
Glad I don't have a smellaphone 😂😂
Where does the manure come from?
Well, it comes from the back end of a cow ... the barns have automatic floor scrapers and scrapes the manure into a holding tank. When the holding tank is full, it is pumped into a large outside lagoon as in this video. Every 6 months, the 5 million titles are pumped out and spread on the fields as fertilizer to grow new crops.......
Now that's recycling ♻️ 👌🏻
You bet... lots in .. lots out .. just the milk extracted..😅
Don't you guys do tillage after spreading manure?
Or is it a American thing not to do it?
Yes... immediately after application
it seems to me they put a lot on this field .
is this a normal application ?
It was a little heavy in one spot but it was plowed down within hours ...
@@farmerdrone
thanks for the rely , im not a farmer and was just curious .