My grandfather did ranching till they were called home & luved every minute of it & having healthy cattle is VITAL! He would whistle for his cattle to be feed & his bunch would almost run!
You touched on a point Trinity. It takes a lot of calves to support a family, plus the ranch hands and their families. For everyone to buy vehicles, insurance, pay taxes, and even to buy gas to get to town, which could be a half hour or more away. Frankly i don't know how it can be done anymore.
Mountaineer!!! And people who support this channel !!! People’s pleas be honest and million thanks you for showing people how ranching is really like …. Trinity 🎉thank you for showing us
I to was a ranch kid living on a ranch in New Mexico that my Great Uncle Homesteaded. Growing up there was a rewarding experience. Riding a school bus from the ranch to school was over an hour. Stops were a few other ranches along the way. Neighbor ranchers helped each other for branding and roundups. Working on the ranch was exciting in that there was wild life of all sorts. Hunting and fishing were amazing and fun family experiences. Working cattle on horse back occurred most of the time. Winter feeding was a daily event. Roading cattle from a distant part of the ranch occured as the result of winter protection and summer gracing (rotation grazing). Farming aided in growing feed and hay for winter feeding of the herd. Horses amounting to about 25 head aided in changing our mounts where many miles were rode in a day of checking cattle along with fence, water, grass, etc.
Being native Hawaiian and having family that are Paniolo (Hawaiian Cowboy), I used to dread helping out on the ranch when I was a kid. Now that I am older, I have a better grasp at what my family was trying to teach me when I was younger. I appreciate videos such as yours that teach a lot about the life of a rancher. Aloha my friend.
Great Job Trinity.....you showed a lot of the details of a modern cow calf operation, and you greatly educate the public of handling of cattle with the proper care. Cow people are the greatest.
I enjoy the content so much, as I miss all the days of my youth on homesteads,farms, it's a comfort to see the day to day even if through your channel. Thank you so much from a Oklahoma country gal living in Washington who misses the simple life in the outdoors daily.
The ranchers had all they needed to do with 130+ calves to vaccinate yet still gave you quality of their time for you. Great that you jumped in to work the chute. Good interview. Thanks for posting.
That was awesome!! My maternal grandparents were mainly farmers but ran a small herd of cows. I remember branding time, and letting the cows into the barn lot to get to the watering trough. It was such a simpler time back in the 70’s and 80’s.
Great content and video Trinity! Almost missed church watching on this cold Sunday morning ☺️ Thank you for the great channel from northeastern Washington.
Thank you Trinity...that was great...to the Vet...doing his part...and everyone else doing their job...truly a group project...nice to hear something from just about everyone...this farm did have a nice setup for running those cattle through the shoots...also amazing to hear how much each cow treated cost... something non farmers of livestock don't often know or hear about those facts...Great Video..
Thank you for your videos. Always very interesting. We have friends who live in Big Timber. Have visited them many times. We and they are originally from Northern New Jersey. We all grew up on small dairy farms. Love Montana! ❤
Another fantastic video Trinity, oh how I appreciate these hard working guys and gals, and how you show us them doing what they do. This my friends is what true living and working is all about. May God bless them and you also, keep that BEEF coming
I stumbled across your channel for your Review of Yellowstone. But this is very interesting to see how ranching, farming works in US. Im irish living in England so its very different. Thanks for sharing this 👍
Having a last name that starts with a B, i was excited to find and buy a B brand for my ag collection. I was sooo disappointed to learn what it was for. 🤦♀️ (We don't watch Yellowstone, we watch Trinity!!!!)
I'm really enjoying your shows! Being 72 years old, my Cowboying is almost over. Had to put down one of our 25 year old Longhorns last night. She weaned her last calf when her hip gave way. Not fun, but that's one reason I carry a 30/30 . Sorry Valentines Day today, as I got my tractor stuck, lots of rain, trying to drag her off to bury her. Good neighbors with tractors is a must! She was born on the place, and is buried on the place. 25 years, 24 calves. Good cow! Circle of life!
Was a Ranch hand in Northern AZ for 5 years and it was best job i have ever had.. Great video for sure. Thanks for sharing. Things went very smooth no WRECKS. That's a good day of working cattle..
Just another aspect to unknown lives lived. I grew up around occasional livestock operations, one family friend raised clydesdale & arabian horses in Ridgeville SC, as well as cows, pigs & chickens... it was always so amazing.
Trinity good video my friend. I found your channel when you broke some ribs on your horse, I came here from New York city. Back in 1990. Been here south east of billings by about 8 miles. Moved here for the camping, hunting, etc. What part of montana are you in ? THANK YOU Frank. Marullo..
Love your videos ❤️👍 Raised on farms in P.A. Dutch farm country. I SO miss this way of life 🥲 Yes, it was hard work, but I loved every minute of it & learned very young how important farming is, not only to our friends & family, but to the whole country. I had to move to A.Z. about 10 years ago to care for my mother. Before she passed, ended up with a crap job (because of the flexible hours) incurred a spinal injury & now I can't do anything I used to love. Horse back riding, volleyball, hiking, mobile pet grooming etc. I now own a Pet and House Sitting Service & plan on saving up to move back to P.A. to be around my friends & family that still live mostly off the land. Most raise chickens (for eggs & meat) ducks (their eggs are great for baking) pheasant and quail. They still hunt every fall/winter for Turkey, Deer & Elk, which we butcher ourselves & store in a chest freezer. Friends own pig farm & we purchase & pay for them to butcher that for us. All have big gardens, & what we don't grow or raise, we head over to the Amish farms or the Farmers market to pick up any other essentials. I've noticed I was much healthier living like that, as no chemicals or processed foods. I wish more people would live like this (if possible) & not rely on a grocery store for everything. It's nice to be able to just head outside to the coup every day for fresh eggs or down to the garden for salad fixings or whatever veg you're having w/dinner. I applaud you, Sir, for living the life you do. God bless 🙏
Interesting video. I remember back in the early 80's taking some cattle to the market and a couple of our cows tested positive for bangs disease. The got branded on the jaw with the letter B and had to go directly to slaughter. The state inspector gave me the option to castrate any bull calves if I wanted to take them back home, which is what I did. We had to quarantine for a period of time, can't remember the duration now, but we couldn't sell any cattle or bring any more cattle to the farm until after everything had been retested two or three times and all negative results at the end of the quarantine period.
I admit I clicked on this video because the words cattle and tattooing caught my attention! In America, we have a well-loved western movie that we watch about branding the cattle and sometimes the loyal workers as well! The cowboys consider it an honor to be tattooed showing they work at this certain ranch! Only in America, I guess!
In people, bangs is called undulant fever. Like the vet said, it stays with you for life. Fever and aches that come and go (undulate) for life if you don't get ahead of it when first exposed.
I just subscribed watching your shorts. I worked many years ago at the Little Horseshoe and then the Padlock. I loved that Montana country. All of it. Your putting on some good videos that the city folks need to watch to see what takes place in the raising of the beef they eat. Havagudun cow man.
The top down drone shots, (I'm guessing?), are really excellent! Several of your videos have used them lately, these two, the reconnecting with Calibar ones, and I really appreciate the cool perspective shots. Also really interesting way to see the corrals and alley layouts for processing. Great stuff Trinity! Thanks!
Cool beans there guy! Love all the people that come together on days to get a job done! hope the cold weather is not so bad over there now...starting to warm a bit here in Missoula but still cold at night! Stay warm and thank you for the videos....keep them coming! You see any of them balloons over your way - take a shot or two at them...I'm sure Malmstrom would appreciate it!! LOL
The requirements for brucellosis must be state by state because I remember we would have the vet out to vaccinate and tattoo their ear and we would snip off extra teats. We no longer have to do it here in Michigan. I remember one guy I worked for one time said that before we had antibiotics when a cow got mastitis she most likely died. Now she can lead a productive life for years. I'm ok on horseback. Not so much with a rope. Been around dairy cows and sheep my whole life. Would love to work on a place like that and for people like those folks.
I watched your Yellowstone show take and I knew the brusalosus story line was BS . I’m surprised the being a rancher in real life would distort the facts . Was curious if any one from the production company reached out to you about your you tube vidio ?
Pretty neat, hard working people, thank you! I noticed all were wearing the same hats, they wouldn't happen to be stormy Kromers would they? I live in UPPER PENINSULA of Michigan where the hats originated, the man who developed the hat is a good friend of ours. Just curious, looks very similar, would be neat if they were.
I always wanted to learn to ride horses but unfortunately horses don't like me for some reason - they will let me curry comb them or feed them apples or carrots but wont let me ride them 🤔😒
I remember my dad talking about Bangs when I was young. We down in Texas don't want bangs around here either. Do they vaccinate all calves or only heifers? That's a nice looking bunch of cows.Thanks for the video.
I am pretty sure that once a calf is over one years old you can no longer Brucellosis vaccinate it in Wisconsin. It has been many years but I am pretty sure that was the law. We also had to worry about Leptospirosis and tuberculosis. The brucellosis was only the female calves also if I remember correct. Dogs get brucellosis also, they used to get shots for that on the farm for a couple years when the local herd of deer had brucellosis. Also vaccinated the swine for multiple things including pseudorabies, no idea what it is. The list of vaccinations for dairy cattle is very long, seemed like you are always doing some vaccination. Stay safe and healthy Sir.
I guess I still don't understand about ranch hand pay. The ranch supplies each family a house with all modern utilities like electric, plumbing, gas? internet???? What about pay and when you get old do people stay with a ranch for 20-30 years? Do they supply insurance? If you're old and didn't earn much and can't work anymore do they still give you a place to live and insurance? I guess I'm looking at it as a lifetime career with low pay for the lifestyle as you guys mention. I just see lot's of problem areas.
My grandfather did ranching till they were called home & luved every minute of it & having healthy cattle is VITAL! He would whistle for his cattle to be feed & his bunch would almost run!
You touched on a point Trinity. It takes a lot of calves to support a family, plus the ranch hands and their families. For everyone to buy vehicles, insurance, pay taxes, and even to buy gas to get to town, which could be a half hour or more away. Frankly i don't know how it can be done anymore.
Mountaineer!!! And people who support this channel !!! People’s pleas be honest and million thanks you for showing people how ranching is really like ….
Trinity 🎉thank you for showing us
"You do it, for the moments, that are awesome." - Trinity Vandenacre Another amazing video.
I to was a ranch kid living on a ranch in New Mexico that my Great Uncle Homesteaded. Growing up there was a rewarding experience. Riding a school bus from the ranch to school was over an hour. Stops were a few other ranches along the way. Neighbor ranchers helped each other for branding and roundups. Working on the ranch was exciting in that there was wild life of all sorts. Hunting and fishing were amazing and fun family experiences. Working cattle on horse back occurred most of the time. Winter feeding was a daily event. Roading cattle from a distant part of the ranch occured as the result of winter protection and summer gracing (rotation grazing). Farming aided in growing feed and hay for winter feeding of the herd. Horses amounting to about 25 head aided in changing our mounts where many miles were rode in a day of checking cattle along with fence, water, grass, etc.
Being native Hawaiian and having family that are Paniolo (Hawaiian Cowboy), I used to dread helping out on the ranch when I was a kid. Now that I am older, I have a better grasp at what my family was trying to teach me when I was younger. I appreciate videos such as yours that teach a lot about the life of a rancher. Aloha my friend.
Thanks for taking us along. Continuing to learn about those who faithfully provide for the rest of us.
Great Job Trinity.....you showed a lot of the details of a modern cow calf operation, and you greatly educate the public of handling of cattle with the proper care. Cow people are the greatest.
I enjoy the content so much, as I miss all the days of my youth on homesteads,farms, it's a comfort to see the day to day even if through your channel. Thank you so much from a Oklahoma country gal living in Washington who misses the simple life in the outdoors daily.
The ranchers had all they needed to do with 130+ calves to vaccinate yet still gave you quality of their time for you. Great that you jumped in to work the chute. Good interview. Thanks for posting.
Beautiful, the whole thing! Thanks for sharing.
great video for people to see, thank you
That was awesome!! My maternal grandparents were mainly farmers but ran a small herd of cows. I remember branding time, and letting the cows into the barn lot to get to the watering trough. It was such a simpler time back in the 70’s and 80’s.
Great content and video Trinity! Almost missed church watching on this cold Sunday morning ☺️ Thank you for the great channel from northeastern Washington.
Thank you for sharing what Ranch Life is really like !
Take care
Thank you Trinity...that was great...to the Vet...doing his part...and everyone else doing their job...truly a group project...nice to hear something from just about everyone...this farm did have a nice setup for running those cattle through the shoots...also amazing to hear how much each cow treated cost... something non farmers of livestock don't often know or hear about those facts...Great Video..
Great Video!!! Awesome camera angles and views, soundtrack.... Great Job!
Love your videos! You’re so real and so are your guests! It’s refreshing! Thank you and God bless!
I totally enjoyed this episode, Trinity. Excellent content, great info, superb sky!
Thank you for your videos. Always very interesting. We have friends who live in Big Timber. Have visited them many times. We and they are originally from Northern New Jersey. We all grew up on small dairy farms. Love Montana! ❤
It makes me wonder, if this brucellosis vaccination can make humans very sick, what affects does it have on the cattle?
Very educational Trinity
Great job explaining what was going on and why.
Another fantastic video Trinity, oh how I appreciate these hard working guys and gals, and how you show us them doing what they do. This my friends is what true living and working is all about. May God bless them and you also, keep that BEEF coming
I stumbled across your channel for your Review of Yellowstone. But this is very interesting to see how ranching, farming works in US. Im irish living in England so its very different. Thanks for sharing this 👍
It’s my pleasure. I am so glad you enjoy it. 👍
Didn't want this video to end! Thank you so much 😊
Now that was an excellent blockbuster !
Having a last name that starts with a B, i was excited to find and buy a B brand for my ag collection. I was sooo disappointed to learn what it was for. 🤦♀️ (We don't watch Yellowstone, we watch Trinity!!!!)
The music Itchyboots uses lol it dose not seem right without a motorcycle. Lol
all I can say is thank you, what a treat to be seeing part of their life .
I'm really enjoying your shows! Being 72 years old, my Cowboying is almost over. Had to put down one of our 25 year old Longhorns last night. She weaned her last calf when her hip gave way. Not fun, but that's one reason I carry a 30/30 . Sorry Valentines Day today, as I got my tractor stuck, lots of rain, trying to drag her off to bury her. Good neighbors with tractors is a must! She was born on the place, and is buried on the place. 25 years, 24 calves. Good cow! Circle of life!
Was a Ranch hand in Northern AZ for 5 years and it was best job i have ever had..
Great video for sure. Thanks for sharing. Things went very smooth no WRECKS. That's a good day of working cattle..
I watched this video twice. Thank you for bringing us great content! I always learn something watching your videos.
Love your videos… Keep up the good work ❤
Great video man thanks for sharing
Would be interesting to do a video on how much a ranch hand/foreman/manager makes. I know it's not a lot and there are a lot of factors.
Another excellent video,thank you,Trinity.
Great video, thank you for sharing
Just another aspect to unknown lives lived. I grew up around occasional livestock operations, one family friend raised clydesdale & arabian horses in Ridgeville SC, as well as cows, pigs & chickens... it was always so amazing.
These videos truly make me dream of this life 🙏🏿
Well that was fun! A lot to learn. That's all I got.
Trinity good video my friend. I found your channel when you broke some ribs on your horse, I came here from New York city. Back in 1990. Been here south east of billings by about 8 miles. Moved here for the camping, hunting, etc. What part of montana are you in ? THANK YOU Frank. Marullo..
Do you have your heifers bangs vaccinated at your ranch?
Love the lifestyle
Where did the bison and elk get brucellosis that could be passed on to cows?
Great video
Always enjoy your vlogs so much.
Love your videos ❤️👍 Raised on farms in P.A. Dutch farm country. I SO miss this way of life 🥲 Yes, it was hard work, but I loved every minute of it & learned very young how important farming is, not only to our friends & family, but to the whole country. I had to move to A.Z. about 10 years ago to care for my mother. Before she passed, ended up with a crap job (because of the flexible hours) incurred a spinal injury & now I can't do anything I used to love. Horse back riding, volleyball, hiking, mobile pet grooming etc. I now own a Pet and House Sitting Service & plan on saving up to move back to P.A. to be around my friends & family that still live mostly off the land. Most raise chickens (for eggs & meat) ducks (their eggs are great for baking) pheasant and quail. They still hunt every fall/winter for Turkey, Deer & Elk, which we butcher ourselves & store in a chest freezer. Friends own pig farm & we purchase & pay for them to butcher that for us. All have big gardens, & what we don't grow or raise, we head over to the Amish farms or the Farmers market to pick up any other essentials. I've noticed I was much healthier living like that, as no chemicals or processed foods. I wish more people would live like this (if possible) & not rely on a grocery store for everything. It's nice to be able to just head outside to the coup every day for fresh eggs or down to the garden for salad fixings or whatever veg you're having w/dinner. I applaud you, Sir, for living the life you do. God bless 🙏
Great video keep them coming please
This was one of your best videos. THANK YOU
Glad I found this channel, just randomly popped up on my feed, funny thing is I never even heard of the show Yellowstone until I started watching lol
Is this a Stormy Kromer advertisement?
Question with drugs for animals becoming illegal without a vet script this year, how is it going to affect you?
Thank you. Your videos are always entertaining and informative.
Interesting video. I remember back in the early 80's taking some cattle to the market and a couple of our cows tested positive for bangs disease. The got branded on the jaw with the letter B and had to go directly to slaughter. The state inspector gave me the option to castrate any bull calves if I wanted to take them back home, which is what I did. We had to quarantine for a period of time, can't remember the duration now, but we couldn't sell any cattle or bring any more cattle to the farm until after everything had been retested two or three times and all negative results at the end of the quarantine period.
I admit I clicked on this video because the words cattle and tattooing caught my attention! In America, we have a well-loved western movie that we watch about branding the cattle and sometimes the loyal workers as well! The cowboys consider it an honor to be tattooed showing they work at this certain ranch! Only in America, I guess!
Again, a wonderful, informative, educational and entertaining video.
You do a great job! Thanks!!
In people, bangs is called undulant fever. Like the vet said, it stays with you for life. Fever and aches that come and go (undulate) for life if you don't get ahead of it when first exposed.
Wow, so technical. Can you please do a whole episode on brucellosis? Where/when I grew up, it was not treated so seriously.
I just subscribed watching your shorts. I worked many years ago at the Little Horseshoe and then the Padlock. I loved that Montana country. All of it. Your putting on some good videos that the city folks need to watch to see what takes place in the raising of the beef they eat. Havagudun cow man.
The top down drone shots, (I'm guessing?), are really excellent! Several of your videos have used them lately, these two, the reconnecting with Calibar ones, and I really appreciate the cool perspective shots. Also really interesting way to see the corrals and alley layouts for processing. Great stuff Trinity! Thanks!
Good work for the cattle and the ranch
Cool beans there guy! Love all the people that come together on days to get a job done! hope the cold weather is not so bad over there now...starting to warm a bit here in Missoula but still cold at night! Stay warm and thank you for the videos....keep them coming! You see any of them balloons over your way - take a shot or two at them...I'm sure Malmstrom would appreciate it!! LOL
The requirements for brucellosis must be state by state because I remember we would have the vet out to vaccinate and tattoo their ear and we would snip off extra teats. We no longer have to do it here in Michigan. I remember one guy I worked for one time said that before we had antibiotics when a cow got mastitis she most likely died. Now she can lead a productive life for years.
I'm ok on horseback. Not so much with a rope. Been around dairy cows and sheep my whole life. Would love to work on a place like that and for people like those folks.
What exactly is brucellosis and what does it do to the cattle?
Causes the cows to abort the fetus prior.
@@lukecp thank you.
Thank you Trinity for another great video very interesting 👍
I watched your Yellowstone show take and I knew the brusalosus story line was BS . I’m surprised the being a rancher in real life would distort the facts . Was curious if any one from the production company reached out to you about your you tube vidio ?
That Austin fella seemed like a real nice guy!
Love to hear you explain what it means to kidnap a kid to a ranch. I heard locals say, that kid needs to be kidnapped to a ranch.
Great video Trinity . Thank you
Pretty neat, hard working people, thank you! I noticed all were wearing the same hats, they wouldn't happen to be stormy Kromers would they? I live in UPPER PENINSULA of Michigan where the hats originated, the man who developed the hat is a good friend of ours. Just curious, looks very similar, would be neat if they were.
Great video.
I always wanted to learn to ride horses but unfortunately horses don't like me for some reason - they will let me curry comb them or feed them apples or carrots but wont let me ride them 🤔😒
Trinity I misplaced your email address would you mind sharing it again?
I remember my dad talking about Bangs when I was young. We down in Texas don't want bangs around here either. Do they vaccinate all calves or only heifers? That's a nice looking bunch of cows.Thanks for the video.
Hey Trinity, I love the videos! I really like that coat of yours and I was wondering where you got it?
Very cool 😎
Good stuff!! 👍🇺🇲👍
awesome
She does a few little things on the side lol. It's easier to push cows than take care of the kids and the house
I am pretty sure that once a calf is over one years old you can no longer Brucellosis vaccinate it in Wisconsin. It has been many years but I am pretty sure that was the law. We also had to worry about Leptospirosis and tuberculosis. The brucellosis was only the female calves also if I remember correct. Dogs get brucellosis also, they used to get shots for that on the farm for a couple years when the local herd of deer had brucellosis. Also vaccinated the swine for multiple things including pseudorabies, no idea what it is. The list of vaccinations for dairy cattle is very long, seemed like you are always doing some vaccination. Stay safe and healthy Sir.
Superb video ! Greetings from Zimbabwe
another interesting video. educational. keep making videos. you are good at it.
Great video of a real day
Nice drone shots!
I guess I still don't understand about ranch hand pay.
The ranch supplies each family a house with all modern utilities like electric, plumbing, gas? internet????
What about pay and when you get old do people stay with a ranch for 20-30 years?
Do they supply insurance?
If you're old and didn't earn much and can't work anymore do they still give you a place to live and insurance?
I guess I'm looking at it as a lifetime career with low pay for the lifestyle as you guys mention. I just see lot's of problem areas.
This is so interesting!!
💞
15:45!!!!!!
Your obnoxious I'm impatient but I'm interested in ranching and you do interesting topics of the subject
I could be a ranch hand. But my wife wants money.
😂
Doesn’t sound like the most informative vet!
Trinity vandanacre cruel, repent for the sin ..next birth be the calf to go through same trial in hands of another wicked Trinity vandanacre Junior s
Prof Chita, you are unbelievably ignorant of the whole process here. Maybe need to get a real education?!
No snow?
Sent you a Dm on instragram. Great job.