Brag away, you have earned the right to. While other farmers are saying "This is the right way, it's what we learned in school", you are open minded, open to discovery and learning new things, prepared to experiment and trial, even to learn by failing. You apply intelligent analysis, take sensible risk, and above all you seek out to explore old ways and wisdom.
i hope that the rest of your farming communities take note and adopt practices like yours. could go a long way to ease difficulties during such tough times...
When cows run and bellow, they are very happy. Glad you have worked so hard to keep your fields going and most happy it worked with so little time to prepare that you actually needed it in a life or death near experience. Praying for less heat next year, but I don't know about that. I fear it's the same and God will provide.
Hey Simeon I love your channel. We raise thirty head of beef shorthorns here in Quebec, similar conditions to you. My Swedish cow speak is weak but I think the cows were saying thank you , not complaining about the pasture. The low bellow was calling her calf to come quick to the buffet! More close ups of the herd please, especially the babies, and sending every possible wish and prayer for better weather to our farm brothers and sisters suffering horrible weather conditions in every part of the world. Love and tears to those who are having to face heart breaking decisions about the animals they love so dearly.
You are lucky that you have swampy land, Simeon, because that's why the grass is still green. More power to you and your family. Hello from Alberta, Canada. Much love, cat.
Stumbled onto your site and am now hopelessly hooked on learning new things each time. Being a retired gramma and gardener, now in an apartment complex; I can only guess there is something I need to learn here. Thank you for sharing. Hugs.
It's funny how the cow at 9:30 came over to ask for a better field. It takes a while to see the personalities of cattle and come to know what they're thinking.
Thank you for another great video, and it doesn't matter if you copy what someone else does, if that person that inspired you taught you right spread the word! Loved the other farms of Sweden video and would love to see more! Thank you for sharing!
Forgot to say that i love the way that you farm. Being totally a natural farm. Carry on with the videos. Thank you for sharing your way of life with us.
I have a hut in almost abandoned village and completely abandoned field near it. Now it sprouts most beautiful wild flowers every now and then. It turns yellow at spring with globeflowers. It became blue and purple in the middle of the summer with knapweed. White with chamomile. It is most gorgeous sight I've ever seen
It is so wonderful that in this homesteading community, you can inspire one another! I love watching your family as you live your daily lives on the farm and I love those Highland cattle! Thank you for sharing.
Hello Simeon. I enjoy your videos and admire your dedication. I live in an area that was settled by Swedish farmers. We have an abundance of families named Johnson, Stevenson, Nelson, Carlson, and more! Not too far from where I live is a preserved Swedish settlement established in the mid 1800’s which puts on festivals several times a year. The old colony church is used for Christmas music sung by a local chorale group. Sitting in that church in late December, no heat, lit by real candles in the overhead chandeliers and the songs sung acapella, that really transports you back in time.
I have been following your channel almost from the beginning (I went back and caught up when it was still quite young.), and I used to smile inwardly when you referred to Sally and a few others as a 'herd'. But now, they are really looking like a herd instead of a handful. It is so good to see that they are growing and flourishing. This is a testimony to your husbandry, good stewardship, and effective practices.
It's so fascinating how the animals do certain jobs for the land. I never knew the chickens do what they do for the land. I have learned a lot from you!! Thank you😀Mother Nature and mankind working together....fascinating!!!❤️❤️
So green with so little rain, you must be doing something right. Once again the cattle are beautiful. Amazing to see them come running when you call. I have the opposite weather difficulty, yesterday was the first day in what seems like months with no rain. It was overcast all day then early this morning the thunderstorms started. It's like a bog. Your filming and video editing are really becoming top quality. Keep up the good work and please continue sharing. Blessings to you and your family.
Well it's Sweeden but all of Scandinavia has had one of the worst droughts in half a century. As he said in the video, most have started on their winter feed now, and most are forced to scale down their herds. Here in Norway they are shipping hay from Washington now.
Frode Haugsgjerd the ground stores a lot of water. No rain for 2 months will not turn pasture into something that is barren or dry. If two months of unpredictable weather forces you to cut down and import feed then thank your stars you do not live in California.
You should be proud of what you have accomplished!! Cattle look great and should provide your family with wonderful tasting meat! Smoked whiting looked delicious!!! Love the channel keep up the great work!!
So thankful I found your channel 8 months ago. I'm from Oregon, and just found out your wife is an oregonian. Such a joy to learn from you and watch your beautiful family!!!
These cattle look so happy and healthy. We don't have cattle but 3 horses on small acreage. We are letting our pastures be much more natural. Only cut twice a year, no plowing at all. We have lots dandelions, clover and other plants. The birds love our long grass and eat the seeds. Also seeds fall to ground which reseeds the pasture. We also compost horse manure and spread on fields.
Congrats for your initiative! I have a horse too, and i try to let him in the most natural way i can. I have to buy corn to feed him due to the littleness of the yard, but the field is very fertile and almost complete his necessities even in the winter, when most of the grass die. Continue, i'm sure that your horses are loving it!
How awesome! Your videos always amaze me each time I watch them. When I feel down or sad I always replay your videos. They make me smile and feel so good. Thanks for sharing your life with us and to me. Your farm is so beautiful and peaceful. Wish I was there. I being disabled and confined now to my 1 bedroom apartment leaves me limited to even get out much anymore. Using a walker its not easy. How I would love to walk thru the woods to your lake, or thru the fields there. I am amazed of how your cattle come when you call them. The one answering you when they arrive on new field, "thanks we need more to eat" I love it. The calves are really growing so fast and look so healthy. They all do. Your an awesome farmer. How blessed you are. May the Lord continue to bless you and your family and all your livestock always. God bless you.
slycat1939 , There is no reason that you can not be an indoor mini-farmer. I live in a climate quite similar to Simeon's. So you know that it does get cold here in N.E. Ohio. ut I do grow citrus and other plants. My livingroom has large windows that face both due east and due west. I am also growing some ginger that I originally purchased at a supermarket . I grow many things in large containers. I do not walk very well so the containers are sitting on wheels. (available at Loews or Home Depot ) which makes them easy to move around. I try to collect rainwater to water the plants with. I also use the water that has been used for boiling vegetables. See my comments above. You would be surprised at how much the greenery will be appreciated during the winter months. In addition to being able to harvest your own tomatoes. Yes , tomatoes will grow inside in large containers.
Simeon, I do so appreciate your videos! If we lived near you, I would most like be an annoying neighbor, as I am unbelievably drawn to your highland cattle! You whistle, and they come like a pack of dogs. It is wonderful the relationship you share with them, and they know you. Your pastures are doing so well, and you are an inspiring channel for anyone seeking knowledge of independent living and growing healthy food. And yes, I will also enjoy the new adventures of farms of Sweden!
Love how the herd comes a running when you whistle i get a kick out of that every time. Looking at your fields you wouldn't think there has been a lack of rain. I like how you are taking the long view on things it looks like it is beginning to pay off in the quality of the land.
omg...they LOVE IT! So glad you understand all you do for the natural farming!!! So many farmers can learn so much from you. Keep up the great work you do!!! God Bless, Sherry :)
I'll bet your fields and pastures are topics of conversation at the nearest coffee shop and tavern. The herd growth is most exciting. I bet your beef customers cant wait for more. Plenty of hay and winter stockpile. It's always a treat to watch the herd hit fresh salad bar areas. Great job.
you need to talk to my lawn mowing guy.. lol I tell him no chemicals and mowing only. If it's green it's ok with me. I don't want a golf course, I want a yard that is green, and good enough for the dog to pee on. No weed killers or pesticides allowed!
allentown Gal Hi from New Hampshire. For 30 years I mowed my own yards ( front and back, that's plural, right?) I had a messy variety of grasses growing, where they could. The soil, what soil?, was terrible on that 1/3 acre. In the back yard there was an abundance of broadleaf weeds, without which there would be no green back there. So, another reason to let nature do the work it does so well. Where I'm living now, there are large patches that neither the grass nor the weeds want anything to do with.🙄 Oh well, less to mow. Regards, Patricia 👵🏻😉
Love your channel. Your farm is gorgeous, healthy, vibrant and intelligently thought out and planned. Well done! And the fish-?! I’m drooling missing my Icelandic fish. This reminds me of it. Nammi nammi
So thankful for your careful management of the resources God had given you, it blesses me to watch all you do your farm is so amazing and so is your family, thanks for sharing your life with us
Simeon, thank you for another awesome video. I know that in the past here in Scotland, that when you wanted an area cleared that rough hill ponies and cows first, then sheep and goats. It was the sheep and goats that kept the grasses to a manageable length. In Lewis it is mainly the Hebridean Blackface sheep that are kept as they can survive on the moorland mosses and heather. ATB🎇
Simeon, if you get a chance, could you get an aerial shot of all your pastures showing the areas of rotational grazing? Yearly identical drone shots could illustrate you're progress. Thanks for all you do !
wonderful video sir and very interesting why you do what you do on your farm to make it work for you and your family. The Fish oh my it looked soooo good!
I really enjoy your vids. Very informative. I don't have a farm and I live in LA. But I love to learn and you help me with that. Also Because I'm stuck in a city I enjoy seeing nature at least and ever since I first saw Highland Cattle I have been taken with them. Thank you so very much.
The Smoked Fish made me really hungry! The farm honestly looks really great the fields are lush even during a drought, I wish my own front yard looked that good in the drought this year weeds and all.
Smoked fish! Yum!! The pasture rotation just makes so much sense! The health of the animals eating of the herbs like dandelions and other things people consider weeds is so much better then the animal being forced to eat only alfalfa . Or grain.
others need to start following your example with your pastures if they want to continue to be profitable and productive. a question: during this drought have you any swales to avoid run off of the rain?
Simoen, in the future are you going to use a mobile electric fencing system to keep your herd in a tighter space, to have them have a bigger impact on your ground, and then move them every day? Currently I am fascinated by Alen Savory and his technics that have inspired Joel Saliton quite a lot. You are doing a great job so far. Weiter so, und viel Erfolg.
Simeon, I enjoy your channel so much! I am writing a novel which features a farm in it where meat animals are raised. I want my portrayal of it to be authentic and accurate. Your videos have already informed that to a certain degree. Could you please do a video talking about how you explain meat animals to your children and what their responses have been? It would help so much to hear about that. Thank you for all you do to make your area of the planet a better place and your people better people for Our Lord.
glad to know you are not using machines so much, must save quite a bit on fuel. I have stopped using my rotovator now that I am using the no dig method of gardening. Would you consider using animals to replace your tractor etc in the future. Good video thanks.
Brag away, you have earned the right to. While other farmers are saying "This is the right way, it's what we learned in school", you are open minded, open to discovery and learning new things, prepared to experiment and trial, even to learn by failing. You apply intelligent analysis, take sensible risk, and above all you seek out to explore old ways and wisdom.
Those cows and bulls are a beautiful breed, absolutely beautiful
i hope that the rest of your farming communities take note and adopt practices like yours. could go a long way to ease difficulties during such tough times...
I’m glad your pastures are doing so well and that your cattle have so much food to eat! The calves are so cute big furry babies!
When cows run and bellow, they are very happy. Glad you have worked so hard to keep your fields going and most happy it worked with so little time to prepare that you actually needed it in a life or death near experience. Praying for less heat next year, but I don't know about that. I fear it's the same and God will provide.
Always happy to see the cattle. Especially happy to see the calf healthy after it's infestation. Good job, papa.
Hey Simeon I love your channel. We raise thirty head of beef shorthorns here in Quebec, similar conditions to you. My Swedish cow speak is weak but I think the cows were saying thank you , not complaining about the pasture. The low bellow was calling her calf to come quick to the buffet!
More close ups of the herd please, especially the babies, and sending every possible wish and prayer for better weather to our farm brothers and sisters suffering horrible weather conditions in every part of the world. Love and tears to those who are having to face heart breaking decisions about the animals they love so dearly.
You are lucky that you have swampy land, Simeon, because that's why the grass is still green. More power to you and your family. Hello from Alberta, Canada. Much love, cat.
Am not sure whether you got my 2 messages via facebook about my own journey of farming in central Alberta … cat.
Oh, and the smoked fish … sigh … so awesome. cat.
It is time for others to learn from you. You are accomplishing something the other farmers need. Beautiful!
Home sick in bed....your beautiful video brought me peace....thanks.
Your fields look like they are withstanding the conditions, good job, and the cows look like they are Happy as can be.
Stumbled onto your site and am now hopelessly hooked on learning new things each time. Being a retired gramma and gardener, now in an apartment complex; I can only guess there is something I need to learn here. Thank you for sharing. Hugs.
Really wish more people would understand that diversity in "grass" is so much better.
I applaud your return to the natural way of farming. Marvelous!
I love the way you are taking care of your land. And I'm really liking the highland cattle.
The cows are looking good, the fields are looking good, you are doing something right..great video
I love the Idea of the Great Farms of Sweden!!! Peace, Love and Light my friends!
so many people don't have a clue what natural farming is about...leaving 'dandelions and other wild flowers'...'I applaud you for knowing all this!'
Your cattle look so healthy and full,
It's funny how the cow at 9:30 came over to ask for a better field. It takes a
while to see the personalities of cattle and come to know what they're thinking.
“You should be happy. Other cows don’t have anything! “ Love it!
Thank you for another great video, and it doesn't matter if you copy what someone else does, if that person that inspired you taught you right spread the word! Loved the other farms of Sweden video and would love to see more! Thank you for sharing!
Thanks for following up about the calf who had the maggot issue, so glad to see it is healthy and happy!
Forgot to say that i love the way that you farm. Being totally a natural farm. Carry on with the videos. Thank you for sharing your way of life with us.
I have a hut in almost abandoned village and completely abandoned field near it. Now it sprouts most beautiful wild flowers every now and then. It turns yellow at spring with globeflowers. It became blue and purple in the middle of the summer with knapweed. White with chamomile.
It is most gorgeous sight I've ever seen
Марина Петрашко : It sounds lovely! !! Wish I could see it!!🙏😚💕💕
It is so wonderful that in this homesteading community, you can inspire one another! I love watching your family as you live your daily lives on the farm and I love those Highland cattle! Thank you for sharing.
Hello Simeon. I enjoy your videos and admire your dedication. I live in an area that was settled by Swedish farmers. We have an abundance of families named Johnson, Stevenson, Nelson, Carlson, and more! Not too far from where I live is a preserved Swedish settlement established in the mid 1800’s which puts on festivals several times a year. The old colony church is used for Christmas music sung by a local chorale group. Sitting in that church in late December, no heat, lit by real candles in the overhead chandeliers and the songs sung acapella, that really transports you back in time.
Another lovely story. Thanks for sharing!
I have been following your channel almost from the beginning (I went back and caught up when it was still quite young.), and I used to smile inwardly when you referred to Sally and a few others as a 'herd'. But now, they are really looking like a herd instead of a handful. It is so good to see that they are growing and flourishing. This is a testimony to your husbandry, good stewardship, and effective practices.
It's so fascinating how the animals do certain jobs for the land. I never knew the chickens do what they do for the land. I have learned a lot from you!! Thank you😀Mother Nature and mankind working together....fascinating!!!❤️❤️
So green with so little rain, you must be doing something right. Once again the cattle are beautiful. Amazing to see them come running when you call. I have the opposite weather difficulty, yesterday was the first day in what seems like months with no rain. It was overcast all day then early this morning the thunderstorms started. It's like a bog. Your filming and video editing are really becoming top quality. Keep up the good work and please continue sharing. Blessings to you and your family.
It's Sweden. There is plenty of water in the ground. Wtf are you amazed about? A bunch of head nodders in this channel.
Well it's Sweeden but all of Scandinavia has had one of the worst droughts in half a century. As he said in the video, most have started on their winter feed now, and most are forced to scale down their herds. Here in Norway they are shipping hay from Washington now.
Frode Haugsgjerd the ground stores a lot of water. No rain for 2 months will not turn pasture into something that is barren or dry. If two months of unpredictable weather forces you to cut down and import feed then thank your stars you do not live in California.
Nice video. Its very good to work with this system of moving the cows daily. Greetings
You should be proud of what you have accomplished!! Cattle look great and should provide your family with wonderful tasting meat! Smoked whiting looked delicious!!! Love the channel keep up the great work!!
that smoked fish is making my mouth drool. I love smoked fish!
So thankful I found your channel 8 months ago. I'm from Oregon, and just found out your wife is an oregonian. Such a joy to learn from you and watch your beautiful family!!!
You have a piece of Heaven there! Praying you will be able to keep it, without government interference!
These cattle look so happy and healthy. We don't have cattle but 3 horses on small acreage. We are letting our pastures be much more natural. Only cut twice a year, no plowing at all. We have lots dandelions, clover and other plants. The birds love our long grass and eat the seeds. Also seeds fall to ground which reseeds the pasture. We also compost horse manure and spread on fields.
Congrats for your initiative! I have a horse too, and i try to let him in the most natural way i can. I have to buy corn to feed him due to the littleness of the yard, but the field is very fertile and almost complete his necessities even in the winter, when most of the grass die. Continue, i'm sure that your horses are loving it!
I love watching your cattle run and cavort around. Thanks to you they are happy.
I love how you understand and see how important every plant and insect is... not everyone does, they just dig and scrap the earth
How awesome! Your videos always amaze me each time I watch them. When I feel down or sad I always replay your videos. They make me smile and feel so good. Thanks for sharing your life with us and to me. Your farm is so beautiful and peaceful. Wish I was there. I being disabled and confined now to my 1 bedroom apartment leaves me limited to even get out much anymore. Using a walker its not easy. How I would love to walk thru the woods to your lake, or thru the fields there. I am amazed of how your cattle come when you call them. The one answering you when they arrive on new field, "thanks we need more to eat" I love it. The calves are really growing so fast and look so healthy. They all do. Your an awesome farmer. How blessed you are. May the Lord continue to bless you and your family and all your livestock always. God bless you.
Ps Forgot the fish looked so yummy . Great to stock up on for winter time too.
slycat1939 ,
There is no reason that you can not be an indoor mini-farmer. I live in a climate quite similar to Simeon's. So you know that it does get cold here in N.E. Ohio. ut I do grow citrus and other plants. My livingroom has large windows that face both due east and due west. I am also growing some ginger that I originally purchased at a supermarket . I grow many things in large containers. I do not walk very well so the containers are sitting on wheels. (available at Loews or Home Depot ) which makes them easy to move around. I try to collect rainwater to water the plants with. I also use the water that has been used for boiling vegetables. See my comments above.
You would be surprised at how much the greenery will be appreciated during the winter months. In addition to being able to harvest your own tomatoes.
Yes , tomatoes will grow inside in large containers.
Simeon, I do so appreciate your videos! If we lived near you, I would most like be an annoying neighbor, as I am unbelievably drawn to your highland cattle! You whistle, and they come like a pack of dogs. It is wonderful the relationship you share with them, and they know you. Your pastures are doing so well, and you are an inspiring channel for anyone seeking knowledge of independent living and growing healthy food. And yes, I will also enjoy the new adventures of farms of Sweden!
I really find this pasture restoration interesting.
They come to your call, it is so great to see how you can control this very large breed of cattle. Blessings
Love how the herd comes a running when you whistle i get a kick out of that every time. Looking at your fields you wouldn't think there has been a lack of rain. I like how you are taking the long view on things it looks like it is beginning to pay off in the quality of the land.
Yourvideos are so pretty and peaceful, and loaded with great content!
Enjoyed every minute of it Simeon
omg...they LOVE IT! So glad you understand all you do for the natural farming!!! So many farmers can learn so much from you. Keep up the great work you do!!! God Bless, Sherry :)
I wish more farmers worked this way :)
One of your very best clips....Thank you....
Always enjoy a visit to your farm!!!! Cattle look beautiful!!
I've been learning about wild plants and which ones are edible, all the 'weeds' I look at in a different way now, a lot of them are so usefull
Good for you healthy life healthy children wonderful to see thank you
Such a great way of caring for your fields. Your herd of cattle look so healthy! Beautiful.
I'll bet your fields and pastures are topics of conversation at the nearest coffee shop and tavern. The herd growth is most exciting. I bet your beef customers cant wait for more. Plenty of hay and winter stockpile. It's always a treat to watch the herd hit fresh salad bar areas. Great job.
Hard to unlearn sometimes.
Favorite quote "You should be Happy other Cows don't have anything"! Thank You for sharing your insights!
Bless you guys for what you are doing!
you need to talk to my lawn mowing guy.. lol I tell him no chemicals and mowing only. If it's green it's ok with me. I don't want a golf course, I want a yard that is green, and good enough for the dog to pee on. No weed killers or pesticides allowed!
allentown Gal Hi from New Hampshire. For 30 years I mowed my own yards ( front and back, that's plural, right?) I had a messy variety of grasses growing, where they could. The soil, what soil?, was terrible on that 1/3 acre. In the back yard there was an abundance of broadleaf weeds, without which there would be no green back there. So, another reason to let nature do the work it does so well. Where I'm living now, there are large patches that neither the grass nor the weeds want anything to do with.🙄 Oh well, less to mow. Regards, Patricia 👵🏻😉
It looks so beautiful!
fun to see the young calves gambolling into the new pasture..!
You get bonus points for using "gambolling" in your comment!
Love your channel. Your farm is gorgeous, healthy, vibrant and intelligently thought out and planned. Well done! And the fish-?! I’m drooling missing my Icelandic fish. This reminds me of it. Nammi nammi
So thankful for your careful management of the resources God had given you, it blesses me to watch all you do your farm is so amazing and so is your family, thanks for sharing your life with us
Simeon, thank you for another awesome video. I know that in the past here in Scotland, that when you wanted an area cleared that rough hill ponies and cows first, then sheep and goats. It was the sheep and goats that kept the grasses to a manageable length. In Lewis it is mainly the Hebridean Blackface sheep that are kept as they can survive on the moorland mosses and heather. ATB🎇
So eine schöne Herde! Ihr könnt wirklich stolz auf Euren Erfolg sein!
Thank you for sharing your knowledge and the advantages of your type of farming. I always learn a lot from you. But I covet your lake.....Ha!
I love that you keep things as natural as possible!
That fish looked amazing ♥️👍
It was!
@@simeonandalexHow do you prevent your kids from choking on fish bones?
Simeon, if you get a chance, could you get an aerial shot of all your pastures showing the areas of rotational grazing? Yearly identical drone shots could illustrate you're progress. Thanks for all you do !
Yes! That would be nice to see!
Really appreciate your views on farming!
All love, and best wishes, Claire, Berlin 😘 😘 😘 😘 ✌ 👍 👍 👍
Justin is imminently copiable.
Your endeavors are appreciated. I admire you and pray for ALL of you.
wonderful video sir and very interesting why you do what you do on your farm to make it work for you and your family. The Fish oh my it looked soooo good!
This is an amazing video with amazing content! Well done! Fish looks amazing!
Thanks for letting us know how that calf is doing, I'd been wondering.
I really enjoy your vids. Very informative. I don't have a farm and I live in LA. But I love to learn and you help me with that. Also Because I'm stuck in a city I enjoy seeing nature at least and ever since I first saw Highland Cattle I have been taken with them. Thank you so very much.
The cattle are really looking good Simeon
The Smoked Fish made me really hungry! The farm honestly looks really great the fields are lush even during a drought, I wish my own front yard looked that good in the drought this year weeds and all.
Thank you for sharing those beautiful cattle. I love your highland cattle..
Your older calves look ready for a harsh winter, i hope they are wrong.
Very glad the young one came through so well.
So efficient you are Simeon. Great food. And those cows look amazing. Obviously you master the art of farming with natural methods. Blessings.
Smoked fish! Yum!!
The pasture rotation just makes so much sense!
The health of the animals eating of the herbs like dandelions and other things people consider weeds is so much better then the animal being forced to eat only alfalfa . Or grain.
Y'all are awesome, I'm doing the same thing in the forest in Washington state, up in the Wilipa hills. Blessings
Yes, the college agriculture education, I suffered, taught me many wrong things. Glad to see you are a man, who can think for himself!
others need to start following your example with your pastures if they want to continue to be profitable and productive. a question: during this drought have you any swales to avoid run off of the rain?
You have the cutest cows I've ever seen.
My mouth was watering for that fish, I love smoked fish.
Simoen, in the future are you going to use a mobile electric fencing system to keep your herd in a tighter space, to have them have a bigger impact on your ground, and then move them every day? Currently I am fascinated by Alen Savory and his technics that have inspired Joel Saliton quite a lot. You are doing a great job so far. Weiter so, und viel Erfolg.
Calves are getting big. Nice...
You didn't even flinch a little with those great big horns running towards you!!
Lots of food for thought in this video. Thanks!
Loving these videos! It's great to see your pasturers do so well...the calves look amazing!
Simeon, I enjoy your channel so much! I am writing a novel which features a farm in it where meat animals are raised. I want my portrayal of it to be authentic and accurate. Your videos have already informed that to a certain degree. Could you please do a video talking about how you explain meat animals to your children and what their responses have been? It would help so much to hear about that. Thank you for all you do to make your area of the planet a better place and your people better people for Our Lord.
glad to know you are not using machines so much, must save quite a bit on fuel. I have stopped using my rotovator now that I am using the no dig method of gardening. Would you consider using animals to replace your tractor etc in the future. Good video thanks.
I love those cows! There is just something about those short stout legs and their shaggy coats. Just beautiful
I love you video...can't wait to see a new video
This is so interesting. Those calves are the cutest!!
Beautiful land, beautiful animals
I think I am going to have to try harder and find a calf they are so awesome looking.
I keep trying to count cattle! Are there are four babies and seven adults? Thanks for the excellent video about your farm life.
Oh my word the baby highland cows are adorable
am interested as to how quickly cattle will browse down rough area - ha !
Do you have wolves or bears for the cattle fend off with those large, sharp horns?