Excellent content, and wonderful videography! Love the personal touch on all the details, and also Lance's interviewing style. Looking forward to more!
Those girls are living the life! They will not fully realize that until they are grown and their appreciation will continue to grow over their lifetime! God bless your family. You are doing it right my man!!! And it takes a wonderful wife to keep everything rolling, bless her!
what are weeds? They're plants you didn't plant, that you don't want. "weeds" only show up because there's excess nutrients, water, and light; and if you take up those resources, "weeds" don't really get started (or at the very least, not competitive). Combine taking up the excess resources with something useful/controllable with no-till, and you really don't have "weeds". Like the interview stated, they still have chemicals, but they only really use them if things get out of hand (invasive species like Canada Thistle, Johnson grass, Amaranth, ect)
Excellent content, and wonderful videography! Love the personal touch on all the details, and also Lance's interviewing style. Looking forward to more!
Glad you enjoyed it!
@minnesotanrcs did he really only get 60 bushels an acre for the 60 inch rows?
Those girls are living the life! They will not fully realize that until they are grown and their appreciation will continue to grow over their lifetime! God bless your family. You are doing it right my man!!! And it takes a wonderful wife to keep everything rolling, bless her!
This is true father and farmer.
I dig this guy.
Regenerative ag is all so good.
Awesome!!!
Thanks!!
I'm from India,Which better 30 or 60 inches
He said 60 inches. More light, more growth. Same number of seeds, just planted closer in the 60-inch plot.
Looks like a deer hunters dream
is he using round up to killweeds?
I doubt it.
what are weeds? They're plants you didn't plant, that you don't want. "weeds" only show up because there's excess nutrients, water, and light; and if you take up those resources, "weeds" don't really get started (or at the very least, not competitive). Combine taking up the excess resources with something useful/controllable with no-till, and you really don't have "weeds".
Like the interview stated, they still have chemicals, but they only really use them if things get out of hand (invasive species like Canada Thistle, Johnson grass, Amaranth, ect)