Been watching you for a few years. Watching you have your calves put to sleep for dehorning touched my heart. Compassion for your animals is paramount. Never miss your videos. Congratulations on your subscriber count. ❤
Already a subscriber, but just came across this old video. Enjoyed your summary, especially your mentioning Texas. I'm from central Texas. Both Grandpa's had dairies in deep south Texas. No one followed in their footsteps. My son though, is looking for a career in the dairy industry once he gets out of college. Maybe marketing or advocacy. Anyway, I now know what the "Once a Day..." means. Keep doing what you are doing and keep the videos coming.
Loving it. Appreciating your honesty and open approach with presenting the good and bad things at your farm.good to have this comparison to where we are in mid Wales uk
Excellent vid, I much appreciate your look back at your very varied history! Some awesome places you've worked. My brother farms in Shropshire on the home farm. I did work with my Dad but we didn't get on! So I joined up & served 22 years in the British Army & met / married my Bulgarian bride along the way - actions have consequences - so here I am living in Bulgaria!
Fair enough, sometimes it works and other times it doesn’t with family. Woah 22 years in the army is quite a while! I did live in aldershot for a while when I was in the UK, my wife got a job there teaching when we first went over. That’s awesome too I don’t think I’ve had anyone from Bulgaria leave me a comment before!
Hi Andrew, i absolutely agree we need to see more kiwi dairy farmers on youtube, ive been looking for something like this for years. We can learn so much from you chaps with your low cost milk production and labour saving ways of getting stuff done. Maybe you could delve into costs of producing milk in a future vid. Congrats from South Africa
Hello man, i love your videos. I'm a dairyman in the south west of France, once a day milking too and calvings in the end of the winter. But my farm is just 30 hectares. (sorry for my approximative english)
@@TheOnceADayFarmer just around 25 cows and the heifers. But here we don't have all the paddocks around the farm like you, and we have subsides. Even in France it's a little farm. ;)
Well this has answered several of my questions. I live in NY state and run Frisians. That famous city is on the Atlantic coast and I am 3/4 of the way to the Canadian border by Lake Ontario.
From the Midlands in the UK in between Nottingham and Derby and on the edge of the stunning Peak District the oldest National Park in England......although I am not a farmer I am very keen on the Wagyu breed...and if I had a farm that is the breed that would be my focus. I believe that farming Wagyu is very slow paced BUT Andrew if you get the opportunity to diversify I would love to see the evolution of a NZ Wagyu herd.....having said that I love your Jertsey cattle...they are really easy on the eye and seem to have a sweet temperament. Thank you for sharing your videos and I believe over time you will, like the cream you produce, rise to the top...Just like Tom Pemberton who is doing really well as a young farmer and as a TH-cam influencer. Good luck to you and your family 👌👌👌
There are a few places over here that grow wagyu for export mainly to Japan I think. Tom’s done exceptionally well for himself and thoroughly deserves it too, I’ll never be that big on TH-cam but thought I would give it a crack and see what happens 👍
Congratulations on 1000 subscribers Andrew! Thanks for sharing how dairying is done in NZ. I farmed for 22 years here in Vermont USA milking 80 Holstein cows. Our dairy operated much differently, milking twice a day 365 days a year in a 8 bale parlor, feeding a TMR blended for high production (775 kg ms/cow) but requiring much higher inputs. I must say your system has a lot of appeal. Your NZ low-input OAD system is much better able to provide the work life balance you mentioned. Keep the videos' coming!!
You are correct. Vermont is a small state but Dairy and Maple Syrup are big. It is winter here now and has been pretty mild so far being -5 C currently although we generally do get at least a few days/nights each year that are -30 C. We can graze for 4-5 months but not as intensively as you. We use pasture mostly as a supplement and to get the cows out of the freestall barn and off concrete. I assume there are differences in how dairies are operated in other areas of NZ. Perhaps a topic for another video? @@TheOnceADayFarmer
Far out that’s cold! That’s pretty much the reason we can keep them outside during the winter because we don’t go near those low temperatures. Yep that’s a good idea, I was thinking in the future to do some videos on different farms
Super stuff Andrew, thanks very much for info,so glad I found your channel. I'm enjoying catching up on your old videos and continuing with your new ones. I'm here in Éire (Ireland )
Congrats man, I'm dairy farming in Ireland, milking 100 cows. I enjoy your channel, your lucky to have got all that traveling done, I'm sorry I never went to New Zealand a few years back. Keep it up
Hi Andrew, I am born and bred irrigation dairy farming in Victoria Australia, and now farm dryland cropping and black Angus, and what I have always found interesting with NZ and Ireland actually is your methods of pasture management. In my opinion the methods of strip grazing and the way that you guys sync in with your pastures and herd is second to none, farming at its best. Congratulations on your channel being a success and will enjoy your future videos
Hello from Ireland. Great video and thanks for sharing your story I watch the same guys you watch but it has been great to find your chanel and see how dairy farming is done on the other side of the world. Loving the videos keep then coming
Enjoy your posts. Watching from Brisbane, Australia. Born & raised on a dairy farm near Dannevirke NZ, so I can relate to how you do things. Onwards to 10Ksubs.
Congrats Andrew and thanks for sharing your encouraging story. It is a blessing to live and work with your dad. I will get back to you later on the Jerseys for cross breeding with Holstein and Simmental in Sub-Saharan Africa, because I heard they stand the heat.
Hi i am from turkey and i am helping my dad in our farm sometimes. You are telling your farming story clearly your country are very natural everywhere green You very lucky You re working ambitiously in your farm keep on telling your story i chasing on u
Great job mate awesome to see a farmer from this half of the world starting a channel we farm in Victoria, Australia milking 120 jerseys and freisians with a similar system to yours look forward to more great videos
Congratulations on 1K+ subs. And good for you for getting out into the world for some adventure! Thanks for sharing your story. From an old city guy in California, USA.
Congratulations on 1000 mate . keep it up 👍 , theirs a really good Irish farming channel called Keane farm life that you might like to check out 🇨🇮 , grass based system but housed in winter for 2-3 months
amazing, watch all of them only from Auckland and love our dairy farmers. Keen to see in-depth vids on calving mating heat stress crops methane rules pugging etc
Love seeing your guys way of dairy farming. It would not be possible here in Canada. We only are able to have our animals on pasture for 4 to 5 months of the year. Keep up the videos, my family and I enjoy them very much.
Congratulations on 1000 subs Andrew, watching your videos from Ireland here. Really hoping to get out to NZ once I get my Agriculture degree finished up and seeing your system really motivates that. Keep up the great content!
Love the channel. Great to see how you guys work in NZ shame I didn’t do any farming while I was there in 2011, one day maybe, Brilliant country though. Keep up the good work!
Nice vlog! Nice content. I am a dairy farm assistant here in the south island particularly in ashburton. I am also vlogging but i only use our local language filipino (not good in english) How i wish i could vlog in the farm too. New subscriber here.
Congrats on the 1000 subs! I am swedish but lived in Zimbabwe as a teenager. Your farm and nz dairying is verry impressive I try to adopt some of it in our cold climate. I would like to know more about the layoute of your farm and how you use the bulls. Are drones deductable in nz?
Love the videos bro. Making me miss living in NZ only a couple years ago now.milking cows in te awamutu. Keep going mate love the content awesome :) from brighton, England.
Haha don’t forgot Waikato viewers lols love watching suskdutchkid and 10 dairyman as well, I was thinking about making videos about the farm, what editing software do u use and the camera as well, I was thinking just a GoPro for now
Congrats on the 1k subs man. Another thing you guys do differently is that you only milk once a day. Can you tell me more about it and how it compares to other methods. I am from India and just about to start a dairy farm of my own and such unique perspectives as yours are very helpful.
@@TheOnceADayFarmer - If you don't mind sharing, can you tell me what's the average milk yield you are getting per lactation. I am really enamored by your approach as till now, I've heard of people shifting to milking three times a day but never someone going to once a day like you guys. Also, were you guys ever milking twice a day earlier and if yes, what's the difference you saw in milk yields. You could probably do a video on this as well.
I'm from northeast Iowa, we were dairy farmers but everyone in our area has sold the cows and each farm milked about 55 to 100 head now. My family raises beef, corn soybeans and hay. Its pretty odd seeing open to the outside milking barns in other countries considering it gets about 20 below in the winter here. And the twin row corn planter you had hired was it a green one?
Yeah we have a pretty timid climate compared to you guys over there so we’re able to. We even grow more grass through the winter than in the summer! No it was a blue one I think. One of the German makes.
Thanks and good question, last year we had an 11.5% empty rate, and I think the average was about 15%. Haven’t scanned for this year yet but hoping to get under 10%. And we have been full season OAD for 5 years.
We in Ireland try to copy nz style farming as much as possible. Grass grass and more grass. Unfortunately our winters are wet so cows may come in. We try for 9 to 10 months grazing. Great to see sunshine and cows out with yee. Always wanted to go to nz before I took over farm here but never made it. Kept up the videos. Everybit as interesting as bigger youtobers.
@@TheOnceADayFarmer be under pressure now with kids and stuff to make it. On our honeymoon I had option of going to nz or Canada. But it was your winter and Canada summer so we went with Canada. Cracking country too through the rockies and up to alaska. Its on the bucket list.
Hi we dairy farm out here in Oregon/U.S.A,we pasture our cows also and love the hedges around your paddocks,could you tell us what kind of bushes they are?
Been watching you for a few years. Watching you have your calves put to sleep for dehorning touched my heart. Compassion for your animals is paramount. Never miss your videos. Congratulations on your subscriber count. ❤
Northern California, here, watching you with Joy. It's Great you gave us a bit of your life's journey to this point. Much appreciated.
Thanks for watching 👍
Hi and well done for everything you do👏! I did find your channel few days ago and I find it really interesting.
Btw, I'm watching this from Romania 🙂
How cool! Thanks for watching I really appreciate it, and I’m not sure if I’ve had any one comment from 🇷🇴 before 👌🤙
Greetings from Poland
Awesome! Thanks for watching 🤙
I'm glad you make videos, a lot of good info at the same time have a good time
Already a subscriber, but just came across this old video. Enjoyed your summary, especially your mentioning Texas. I'm from central Texas. Both Grandpa's had dairies in deep south Texas. No one followed in their footsteps. My son though, is looking for a career in the dairy industry once he gets out of college. Maybe marketing or advocacy. Anyway, I now know what the "Once a Day..." means. Keep doing what you are doing and keep the videos coming.
🇺🇸 Enjoyed hearing about your many travels and always good to see your stock and how you manage them. Thank you for sharing!🐂🐂😷👍
Loving it.
Appreciating your honesty and open approach with presenting the good and bad things at your farm.good to have this comparison to where we are in mid Wales uk
Thanks really appreciate it 👍
Many congratulations keep doing what you are doing and it won't be long before your next 1,000 + all the very best Mate xx
Thanks much appreciated 👍
Excellent vid, I much appreciate your look back at your very varied history! Some awesome places you've worked. My brother farms in Shropshire on the home farm. I did work with my Dad but we didn't get on! So I joined up & served 22 years in the British Army & met / married my Bulgarian bride along the way - actions have consequences - so here I am living in Bulgaria!
Fair enough, sometimes it works and other times it doesn’t with family.
Woah 22 years in the army is quite a while! I did live in aldershot for a while when I was in the UK, my wife got a job there teaching when we first went over.
That’s awesome too I don’t think I’ve had anyone from Bulgaria leave me a comment before!
great video Andrew 👍
Hi Andrew, i absolutely agree we need to see more kiwi dairy farmers on youtube, ive been looking for something like this for years. We can learn so much from you chaps with your low cost milk production and labour saving ways of getting stuff done. Maybe you could delve into costs of producing milk in a future vid.
Congrats from South Africa
Hey! Thanks, yep that’s a good idea too
Im a NZ dairy farmer down south, i dont post full videos but do post shorts weekly
Hello man, i love your videos. I'm a dairyman in the south west of France, once a day milking too and calvings in the end of the winter. But my farm is just 30 hectares. (sorry for my approximative english)
No that’s great English 👍 how cool, how many cows are you milking?
@@TheOnceADayFarmer just around 25 cows and the heifers. But here we don't have all the paddocks around the farm like you, and we have subsides. Even in France it's a little farm. ;)
The Netherlands here, worked 8 months on different farms on the South Island in 16/17, best year ever!! Love to see how you farm!
That’s awesome! Glad to hear you had a good time out here.
Thanks for watching!
Well this has answered several of my questions. I live in NY state and run Frisians. That famous city is on the Atlantic coast and I am 3/4 of the way to the Canadian border by Lake Ontario.
Looks like a beautiful spot in NY state 👌
Addicted. Pretty sure this week I have watched all of your videos. Keep up the great work!
That’s awesome and thanks for watching them 👍
Love your work
Congratulations 🍾
Thanks Phil!! 🤙
From the Midlands in the UK in between Nottingham and Derby and on the edge of the stunning Peak District the oldest National Park in England......although I am not a farmer I am very keen on the Wagyu breed...and if I had a farm that is the breed that would be my focus. I believe that farming Wagyu is very slow paced BUT Andrew if you get the opportunity to diversify I would love to see the evolution of a NZ Wagyu herd.....having said that I love your Jertsey cattle...they are really easy on the eye and seem to have a sweet temperament. Thank you for sharing your videos and I believe over time you will, like the cream you produce, rise to the top...Just like Tom Pemberton who is doing really well as a young farmer and as a TH-cam influencer. Good luck to you and your family 👌👌👌
There are a few places over here that grow wagyu for export mainly to Japan I think.
Tom’s done exceptionally well for himself and thoroughly deserves it too, I’ll never be that big on TH-cam but thought I would give it a crack and see what happens 👍
Congratulations on 1000 subscribers Andrew! Thanks for sharing how dairying is done in NZ. I farmed for 22 years here in Vermont USA milking 80 Holstein cows. Our dairy operated much differently, milking twice a day 365 days a year in a 8 bale parlor, feeding a TMR blended for high production (775 kg ms/cow) but requiring much higher inputs. I must say your system has a lot of appeal. Your NZ low-input OAD system is much better able to provide the work life balance you mentioned. Keep the videos' coming!!
Thanks and that’s cool to hear! Vermont is a big dairy area isn’t it ? You would’ve had pretty harsh winters there too?
You are correct. Vermont is a small state but Dairy and Maple Syrup are big. It is winter here now and has been pretty mild so far being -5 C currently although we generally do get at least a few days/nights each year that are -30 C. We can graze for 4-5 months but not as intensively as you. We use pasture mostly as a supplement and to get the cows out of the freestall barn and off concrete. I assume there are differences in how dairies are operated in other areas of NZ. Perhaps a topic for another video? @@TheOnceADayFarmer
Far out that’s cold! That’s pretty much the reason we can keep them outside during the winter because we don’t go near those low temperatures. Yep that’s a good idea, I was thinking in the future to do some videos on different farms
Super stuff Andrew, thanks very much for info,so glad I found your channel. I'm enjoying catching up on your old videos and continuing with your new ones. I'm here in Éire (Ireland )
👍
Keep up the good work from Canada
Thanks!
Congrats man, I'm dairy farming in Ireland, milking 100 cows. I enjoy your channel, your lucky to have got all that traveling done, I'm sorry I never went to New Zealand a few years back. Keep it up
Thanks!
Congrats!! Upstate N.Y. USA
Thanks
Hi Andrew, I am born and bred irrigation dairy farming in Victoria Australia, and now farm dryland cropping and black Angus, and what I have always found interesting with NZ and Ireland actually is your methods of pasture management. In my opinion the methods of strip grazing and the way that you guys sync in with your pastures and herd is second to none, farming at its best. Congratulations on your channel being a success and will enjoy your future videos
Hey Steve from across the ditch, thanks heaps it’s much appreciated!
Great introduction vlog...congratulations on hitting 1k..watching all the way from the sunny☔🌫🌧🤣🤣🤣☘🇮🇪 Emmerald Isle 🇮🇪☘
Thanks!
Hello from England just subscribed love your country came over two years ago i come again when this virus is over
Hey, hopefully it won’t be for too much longer 🤞
I always thought of you as an Auckland kind of guy... congrats on the 000,s
Haha cheers Hogg!
Great videos, 10th generation farmer is great also
Thanks! Yep he’s pretty interesting
Cracking video Thank you so much great video!!
Hello from Ireland. Great video and thanks for sharing your story I watch the same guys you watch but it has been great to find your chanel and see how dairy farming is done on the other side of the world. Loving the videos keep then coming
Cheers mate much appreciated!
Enjoy your posts. Watching from Brisbane, Australia. Born & raised on a dairy farm near Dannevirke NZ, so I can relate to how you do things. Onwards to 10Ksubs.
That’s awesome and thank you!
Well done Andrew, love watching and listening, keep going!
Thanks
Congrats on the the 1k. Just keep doing what you are now. Its great. Its a slice of heaven.
Thanks!
Greetings from Japan! Lucky I discovered your channel. Looking forward to the upcoming videos!
Wow Japan that’s awesome!
Just subscribed, watching from Waiuku....spent part of my childhood on my pops dairyfarm on the Aka aka flats....cheers Bud
Welcome!
Congrats Andrew and thanks for sharing your encouraging story. It is a blessing to live and work with your dad. I will get back to you later on the Jerseys for cross breeding with Holstein and Simmental in Sub-Saharan Africa, because I heard they stand the heat.
Thanks!
Hi i am from turkey and i am helping my dad in our farm sometimes. You are telling your farming story clearly your country are very natural everywhere green You very lucky You re working ambitiously in your farm keep on telling your story i chasing on u
Thanks and that’s awesome!
Well done. From South Africa
Thanks!
Congrats on 1000 subs!, Love the videos! From Hawkes Bay.
Thanks!
Great job mate awesome to see a farmer from this half of the world starting a channel we farm in Victoria, Australia milking 120 jerseys and freisians with a similar system to yours look forward to more great videos
Thanks!
Amazing videos keep it up co fermanagh n Ireland
Well done. Here Andre rego from brazil smoll dairy farmer I have been in Australia for 3 years working dairy too.cheers...
Thanks and that’s awesome!
Congrats on hitting 1k loving the vids keep them up, from Shetland Scotland
Thats awesome and thanks!
Thanks for great videos , from SE Minnesota USA
E
Thanks
Well done on hitting 1k mate on and upwards Ireland
Thanks
Congratulations on 1K+ subs. And good for you for getting out into the world for some adventure! Thanks for sharing your story. From an old city guy in California, USA.
Thanks!
Great video Keep it up👍👍
Thanks 👍
Watching from Germany. Watching saskdutch kid and the 10th gen. farmer too. Instaned subscribe a few weeks ago. Keep up the good work. :)
Thanks! Yep there a good watch
Congrats on the 1K mate! Cows are looking well in the background there! 👍
Thanks!
Congratulations on 1000 mate . keep it up 👍 , theirs a really good Irish farming channel called Keane farm life that you might like to check out 🇨🇮 , grass based system but housed in winter for 2-3 months
Thanks! Yep I follow them there pretty cool and make really good videos
Choice video man, respects from another waikato farmer here! Congrats on the 1ks. Road to the 100K for the silver thing next hah!
Awesome and Thanks! Haha 100k that’s definitely a wee way off, I’ll be happy with 10k one day 👍
Nice work mate ! From Mid Canterbury
Thanks!
Watching from a little island called Bornholm in DK, - so nice to follow your Jersey diaryfarm living out there👏🏼
That’s awesome! Thanks
Congratulations!
Thanks
amazing, watch all of them only from Auckland and love our dairy farmers. Keen to see in-depth vids on calving mating heat stress crops methane rules pugging etc
Thanks and I’ll keep those topics in mind
Congrats keep doing great jobs man.
Thanks
Love seeing your guys way of dairy farming. It would not be possible here in Canada. We only are able to have our animals on pasture for 4 to 5 months of the year. Keep up the videos, my family and I enjoy them very much.
our winters are nothing compared to yours! Thanks for watching!
Congratulations. I really enjoy your videos in free time.
And I just wants to know what production you doing per cow/year.
Thank you
Hey, we’re doing around the 300kgMS/cow, hoping to be a little higher this year tho.
Thanks for watching 🤙
Wales🏴
Great show Andrew, I'll never get to NZ so you're my ticket. Good Luck!
Thanks!
Congratulations on 1000 subs Andrew, watching your videos from Ireland here. Really hoping to get out to NZ once I get my Agriculture degree finished up and seeing your system really motivates that. Keep up the great content!
Thanks
Well done mate on hitting 1k. You’ll be 10k in no time! Greetings from Ireland
Thanks
Great been here since 180 subs wish you great success
Thank you very much!
Love the channel. Great to see how you guys work in NZ shame I didn’t do any farming while I was there in 2011, one day maybe, Brilliant country though. Keep up the good work!
Thanks!
watching from Canada, New Brunswick! congrats on 1,000 subs
Thanks!
Watching from Germany, your reigt mann it's verry interesting to see how it work on your Farm.
I See from Germany too. Concratulation! Thanks for your awesome videos!
Thanks!
Good work and well done on hitting the 1k mark, keep them coming!
Thanks
Good you for getting 1k subs watching for Morrisville
Thanks
Interesting life so far,sounds like a great team effort ,thanks for sharing,AND it is hard to beat a good Andrew 👍
Haha definitely
Watching frrom France, great vids !!
Thanks
Good to have some background very interesting, well done on 1000 subs, from Manilla, Australia
Thanks
Nice vlog! Nice content. I am a dairy farm assistant here in the south island particularly in ashburton. I am also vlogging but i only use our local language filipino (not good in english) How i wish i could vlog in the farm too. New subscriber here.
That’s awesome man the South Island is so nice! Thanks for watching
Congrats on the 1000 subs! I am swedish but lived in Zimbabwe as a teenager. Your farm and nz dairying is verry impressive I try to adopt some of it in our cold climate. I would like to know more about the layoute of your farm and how you use the bulls. Are drones deductable in nz?
Thanks! I’ll try add some of that into the future videos for ya and I will be getting a drone at some point
Love the videos bro. Making me miss living in NZ only a couple years ago now.milking cows in te awamutu. Keep going mate love the content awesome :) from brighton, England.
Thanks heaps! I’m only just down the road from TA
Haha don’t forgot Waikato viewers lols love watching suskdutchkid and 10 dairyman as well, I was thinking about making videos about the farm, what editing software do u use and the camera as well, I was thinking just a GoPro for now
Yeah man there good to! I just use a go pro but check out some videos on TH-cam about vlogging it might help, there’s so many different options
Congrats on the 1k subs man. Another thing you guys do differently is that you only milk once a day. Can you tell me more about it and how it compares to other methods. I am from India and just about to start a dairy farm of my own and such unique perspectives as yours are very helpful.
Thanks and that’s cool! We went OAD because the jerseys convert to it quite well and our summers get so dry, plus it suites our lifestyle too.
@@TheOnceADayFarmer - If you don't mind sharing, can you tell me what's the average milk yield you are getting per lactation. I am really enamored by your approach as till now, I've heard of people shifting to milking three times a day but never someone going to once a day like you guys. Also, were you guys ever milking twice a day earlier and if yes, what's the difference you saw in milk yields. You could probably do a video on this as well.
I'm from northeast Iowa, we were dairy farmers but everyone in our area has sold the cows and each farm milked about 55 to 100 head now. My family raises beef, corn soybeans and hay. Its pretty odd seeing open to the outside milking barns in other countries considering it gets about 20 below in the winter here. And the twin row corn planter you had hired was it a green one?
Yeah we have a pretty timid climate compared to you guys over there so we’re able to. We even grow more grass through the winter than in the summer!
No it was a blue one I think. One of the German makes.
Congratulations on the 1k subs, 2 questions how long have you been oad and what’s your in calf rate compared to district/twice a day milking average?🤠
Thanks and good question, last year we had an 11.5% empty rate, and I think the average was about 15%. Haven’t scanned for this year yet but hoping to get under 10%. And we have been full season OAD for 5 years.
We in Ireland try to copy nz style farming as much as possible. Grass grass and more grass. Unfortunately our winters are wet so cows may come in. We try for 9 to 10 months grazing. Great to see sunshine and cows out with yee. Always wanted to go to nz before I took over farm here but never made it. Kept up the videos. Everybit as interesting as bigger youtobers.
That’s awesome, maybe you’ll make it down here one day. Thanks!
@@TheOnceADayFarmer be under pressure now with kids and stuff to make it. On our honeymoon I had option of going to nz or Canada. But it was your winter and Canada summer so we went with Canada. Cracking country too through the rockies and up to alaska. Its on the bucket list.
Fair enough I’d choose a holiday in summer over winter any day haha
Parabéns... congratulations are you the fifth generation of Jersey breeder in your family?
Thanks! I’m the 4th but it’s not the same herd as the 1st and 2nd generations
Hi we dairy farm out here in Oregon/U.S.A,we pasture our cows also and love the hedges around your paddocks,could you tell us what kind of bushes they are?
Barberry or privet or a mix of the two chances are
Hey, yep there barberry hedges. Get them trimmed once a year
Aberdeen Scotland
Awesome! Home of the Angus I think?
@@TheOnceADayFarmer spot on
my faurit cow jarsi
Do you leave you calves on your cows ?
No we feed them in mobs
Can you please do a day in a life
Yep I’ll do one soon 👍
Ok thanks
Hey from holland , maybe an interesting youtube channel for you THE HOOF GP and see how much followers he has ))))))) now during the covid 19
Hey! Yep I follow him, he’s a pretty good watch
How many cow do you have Sir?
310 jersey cows
How many litres of milk do you send a way in a day
Tanker has just picked up 3500 litres
@@TheOnceADayFarmer sounds good. Great videos really enjoying them. 👍
Thanks!
I milk 200 jerseys in CT USA in a 50 stall rotary all registered are your jerseys registered and what do you have for milking equipment I have Delaval
That sounds like a good setup, we have Waikato milking system and no there not registered but I might in the future