Good vid, I thought I was seeing the Great southern lights from Central Qld, but it was only the Jackson family harvesting, 😂😂, Very very dry up here, Happy safe farming, Cheers ❤️🤠🦘🦘🇦🇺
Thank you for sharing With the low current draw and extremely high output and longevity, LED lights have really made it easier to see and much safer. 🤗💪🙏🇺🇲🇨🇦
I enjoy all that the Jacksons produce, both the food and videos, thanks. A side benefit is that I am learning a tiny bit about farming and all the work required without leaving the suburbs.
1.6 tonnes / acre is 1.8 tons/ acre on my calculation or 21.6 x 3 bushel bags / acre and that is exceptional given virtually no in crop rainfall. Congratulation, clearly that inveree soil will grow babies. Great drone shots you will be hiring yourself out soon. Glad you made the weather window.
Tonnes per hectare, Ime still trying to convert it to bags to the acre 😂😂, wonderful vision and editing Matt, thanks for sharing it, it does my heart good just looking at it.
It’s so piece full it’s like dreaming a dream of open spaces very nice 😢 I enjoyed this lot Thanx mate ..Hope you have a bumper harvest cheers 🙏❤️💪👍😁😁🍺🦘🦘🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺
It's a lot of fun harvesting rapeseed at home. No need for a side saw to divide the cut. In France, colza plants are sometimes 1.80m long, or lie flat, and if you don't want to pull out tangled hairs and gin, you need a vertical saw. Height does not determine yield. On average 2.5t to 5T, often 3 to 4t/ha. France
What changes to the headers are made between wheat and quinoa? The drone footage really showed to benefit of the auger to bring the crop in to the centre. 👍
I had ask in the past if you would show more video if ya'll roading equipment just to get a sight seeing tour of the country and in several videos since then you have done just that so thank you very much I enjoy it and it is always fun at high speed too you can still get a view, and of course the accelerated movement is humorous.....did ya'll bale your wheat straw it was clear you were spreading it behind the combine so I doubt you did so I take it those bales were the neighbors.....there is always debate here about the price paid per bale vs the cost of replacing the nutrients removed with the bales and some areas need the dry matter for soil tilth and regular fertilizer is not going to supply that only manure....if I am not mistaken ya'll only run a little cattle and that is independent of the main operation......last comment I really love the equipment line up you can tell it was bought for the ability to repair on the farm and to have parts availability from multiple suppliers not just the dealer.....goes perfect with the family skill set and mindset....ok one more comment do you pay extra attention to sealing up the chaser bins and mother bins and trucks for canola.....it is so small you can lose a literal ton with just a small gap in something
I would not worry about the American's for their ancient measurements. Let them work it out. The American farmers I've watched this year 25 bushels/acre down to 8.welker farms. But remember they get subserdised by government. Australia 🇦🇺 farmers are the greatest battlers in the farming world.
Try growing 115 bu/ac soybeans down there, or 315 bu/ac corn. You won’t reach half those number lmao. So it’s cool you guys are helping the global farming effort but Australia and New Zealand don’t produce a quarter of what gets done in North America. If it wasn’t for us and Canada the worlds population would be about half what it currently is. And don’t forgot where most of your machinery is built and designed, good ole USA 🇺🇸
As always MATT a great video there’s nothing like driving thru Australia and seeing harvest at night, it is so much easier on people and machinery in our climate. How does BRAD like his new header front, could he possibly give us his thoughts on it please. Also how about the name of the company making the LED lights and where from please.
Ahhh Bannana’s and wheat…That figure would be 60lbs of weight, 2,000 lbs to the ton…Make it easy leave moisture out….Curtis does make us americans laugh
Dad said 3 bushels to the bag. 12 dagw to the ton. That would be 2400 lbs ton. Against 2200 lbs tone that he is talking. So more or less 4 ton x 12 bags 48 bags to the ha. Or about 38 bushels to the ac. In bananas. Or 19 bags in old time talk in Australia
Howdy Matt, Just whatching the headers work and spread trash . If you weren't to burn it ,would this add to your soil biomass ? Or is the Australian environment too dry to adequately breakdown the plant matter ?. Must say I'd be lost if I stepped into one of thise machines.. the chamberlain may be the only one Id be able to get around .
Hi! For us we leave the stubble standing so it slowly breaks down and protects the soil from losing moisture, the microbes eat up any biomass quickly here because they are going all year round😁
@@thejacksonbrothers yes . Whatching top soil blow away is not a good movie . The coanola being so stringy ,it obviously has a hood fibre content , would be very slow to break down and impead the following seeding ( the stubble does as you have shown ) . Its great to see cropping in action .and appreciate the millions of $$ of equipment needed . Farming really is a passion.
Matt i have an inquiry to make. Your not looking for any young employees, are you? Live down near the Mudgee area. I am great with machinery. Have lived on a cattle farm all my life and have done a lot with headers, E.T.C. I love your videos and what you guys do. Lachie
One Aussie Ton = 2,240 USA pounds.....1 Hectare = 2.47 Acres......One USA Bushel = 60 Pounds......so 4 Ton/Hectare X 2,240# = 8,960# / 2.47 Acre/Hectare = 3,627.5#/Acre / 60#/Bushel = 60.46 Bushel/Acre which is a very good yield for dryland at least in most of west Texas for a dryer year
The lights we were testing are called MURDA lights for those interested. They and be found online at
murdalighting.com.au/
I hope the fires aren't effecting you guys.
You should be very proud of the filming and shots that you have taken they are very well done. A feather in your cap. Congratulations
Thanks!
Nothing better at harvest time than everyone stopping for a bite to eat all together. Confident nothing will be left Great drone footage safe harvest
Awesome job video great country side nice see as far as eye !!😊😊
Those lights are fantastic,certainly show up the working area plus more.
Wow. You really have that drone pilotage nailed !
Good morning from a very wet east coast of Scotland
Morning!
Good video Matt. Glad you guys are getting some good weather for harvest.
Those led lights on the Challenger opens up the night for you
Good vid, I thought I was seeing the Great southern lights from Central Qld, but it was only the Jackson family harvesting, 😂😂, Very very dry up here, Happy safe farming, Cheers ❤️🤠🦘🦘🇦🇺
Thank you for sharing
With the low current draw and extremely high output and longevity, LED lights have really made it easier to see and much safer.
🤗💪🙏🇺🇲🇨🇦
I love the group dinner in the field! It's extra work for the catering crew, and disruptive to home life, I'm sure, but I see huge value in it!
Top quality harvest video 🚜🌾🌾
Good to see that harvest is going well for you guys there. I hope that it keeps going well. Thanks for sharing 👍
I enjoy all that the Jacksons produce, both the food and videos, thanks. A side benefit is that I am learning a tiny bit about farming and all the work required without leaving the suburbs.
Another terrific video mate. Great drone footage. Love it.
Thanks!
Those lights definitely blinding when there pointing straight at you
Thank you for the great footage of your crops and lovely country!
Good content team enjoy your videos
I loved the drive between the two farms. Great countryside.
1.6 tonnes / acre is 1.8 tons/ acre on my calculation or 21.6 x 3 bushel bags / acre and that is exceptional given virtually no in crop rainfall. Congratulation, clearly that inveree soil will grow babies. Great drone shots you will be hiring yourself out soon. Glad you made the weather window.
Tonnes per hectare, Ime still trying to convert it to bags to the acre 😂😂, wonderful vision and editing Matt, thanks for sharing it, it does my heart good just looking at it.
Really appreciate the encouragement! Thanks
The lights are much better than before !😊
Enjoyed this. The lights look awesome
Thanks Matt for bringing us along ur journeys love your work and you have some real nice country
Great Video, There's nothing like harvesting at night, thanks for sharing
All going well Matt 🦘
Gorgeous weather for the job, if nothing else 😀
Outstanding drone work mate!
It’s so piece full it’s like dreaming a dream of open spaces very nice 😢 I enjoyed this lot Thanx mate ..Hope you have a bumper harvest cheers 🙏❤️💪👍😁😁🍺🦘🦘🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺
It's a lot of fun harvesting rapeseed at home. No need for a side saw to divide the cut. In France, colza plants are sometimes 1.80m long, or lie flat, and if you don't want to pull out tangled hairs and gin, you need a vertical saw. Height does not determine yield. On average 2.5t to 5T, often 3 to 4t/ha. France
From a truckie's perspective... You can't have too much light. A 2nd alternator is always an option
You must live in God’s country very pretty with the mountains in the background. Can’t believe how high that canola is.
Great job everybody, Double thumbs up
Said it before ,say it again,love your work
What changes to the headers are made between wheat and quinoa? The drone footage really showed to benefit of the auger to bring the crop in to the centre. 👍
It’s canola not quinoa
@@gardnep yep! Typo
Great! Hope to see some headers POV
Very nice
4 ton no rain very nice. Here no rain no grain
I had ask in the past if you would show more video if ya'll roading equipment just to get a sight seeing tour of the country and in several videos since then you have done just that so thank you very much I enjoy it and it is always fun at high speed too you can still get a view, and of course the accelerated movement is humorous.....did ya'll bale your wheat straw it was clear you were spreading it behind the combine so I doubt you did so I take it those bales were the neighbors.....there is always debate here about the price paid per bale vs the cost of replacing the nutrients removed with the bales and some areas need the dry matter for soil tilth and regular fertilizer is not going to supply that only manure....if I am not mistaken ya'll only run a little cattle and that is independent of the main operation......last comment I really love the equipment line up you can tell it was bought for the ability to repair on the farm and to have parts availability from multiple suppliers not just the dealer.....goes perfect with the family skill set and mindset....ok one more comment do you pay extra attention to sealing up the chaser bins and mother bins and trucks for canola.....it is so small you can lose a literal ton with just a small gap in something
Loved it
Is the new Feed Storm working well as you would have hoped? do you set it different for other crops? working hard as usual!
It allowed us to go about 5-6kph instead of half that so it worked well👍😁
1 tonne (1000kg) per hectare seems to equal 14.87 bushels per acre, although the figure I found didn't specify crop or moisture content.
Good morning from Texas
Morning!
Hi Matt could you tell me how wider cut your headers are love your videos always look forward to them.
Thanks! One is 45ft and one is 42
Great job
Another awesome video Matt,
From kiwi land.
I would not worry about the American's for their ancient measurements. Let them work it out. The American farmers I've watched this year 25 bushels/acre down to 8.welker farms. But remember they get subserdised by government. Australia 🇦🇺 farmers are the greatest battlers in the farming world.
Australia and New Zealand no government subsidiary treats, henceforth they work smarter and intelligently. 😊😊😊
That’s the theory😂
Try growing 115 bu/ac soybeans down there, or 315 bu/ac corn. You won’t reach half those number lmao. So it’s cool you guys are helping the global farming effort but Australia and New Zealand don’t produce a quarter of what gets done in North America. If it wasn’t for us and Canada the worlds population would be about half what it currently is. And don’t forgot where most of your machinery is built and designed, good ole USA 🇺🇸
Great video
FYI Matt ( 1 ton per hector = 14.869 bushels per acre so 4 ton per hector = 59.48 Bushels per Acre )
As always MATT a great video there’s nothing like driving thru Australia and seeing harvest at night, it is so much easier on people and machinery in our climate.
How does BRAD like his new header front, could he possibly give us his thoughts on it please.
Also how about the name of the company making the LED lights and where from please.
Thanks👍 yep the smart auger worked great and the company is called murda lighting😁
Good job guys
Ahhh Bannana’s and wheat…That figure would be 60lbs of weight, 2,000 lbs to the ton…Make it easy leave moisture out….Curtis does make us americans laugh
Dad said 3 bushels to the bag. 12 dagw to the ton. That would be 2400 lbs ton. Against 2200 lbs tone that he is talking. So more or less 4 ton x 12 bags 48 bags to the ha. Or about 38 bushels to the ac. In bananas. Or 19 bags in old time talk in Australia
Howdy Matt,
Just whatching the headers work and spread trash . If you weren't to burn it ,would this add to your soil biomass ? Or is the Australian environment too dry to adequately breakdown the plant matter ?. Must say I'd be lost if I stepped into one of thise machines.. the chamberlain may be the only one Id be able to get around .
Hi! For us we leave the stubble standing so it slowly breaks down and protects the soil from losing moisture, the microbes eat up any biomass quickly here because they are going all year round😁
@@thejacksonbrothers yes . Whatching top soil blow away is not a good movie . The coanola being so stringy ,it obviously has a hood fibre content , would be very slow to break down and impead the following seeding ( the stubble does as you have shown ) . Its great to see cropping in action .and appreciate the millions of $$ of equipment needed . Farming really is a passion.
Do you cart your own grain to town or are the trucks owned by carriers?
in the last video some of the trucks had a company name on them so I believe they were hired in
We have a family fried that owns a truck company that carts most of it
how far is it between all your blocks mileage wise
The furthest one is the south lease block which is about 60klms away👍
Matt, is the triple rig a contractor? Beautiful unit.👍🏴
Yep👍 a friend has a trucking business and comes to help out😁
What size is the new shed, she's an absolute beauty?
It’s 45m x 24m 👍
You didn't windrow the canola? Matt
Matt i have an inquiry to make.
Your not looking for any young employees, are you? Live down near the Mudgee area. I am great with machinery. Have lived on a cattle farm all my life and have done a lot with headers, E.T.C.
I love your videos and what you guys do.
Lachie
What does tons per hector mean for us in the USA
1.5t per hectare is about 27 bushels per ace according to google👍
One Aussie Ton = 2,240 USA pounds.....1 Hectare = 2.47 Acres......One USA Bushel = 60 Pounds......so 4 Ton/Hectare X 2,240# = 8,960# / 2.47 Acre/Hectare = 3,627.5#/Acre / 60#/Bushel = 60.46 Bushel/Acre which is a very good yield for dryland at least in most of west Texas for a dryer year
Yes it can be quite confusing when you have Metric Tonnes, Imperial Tons, Litres, Imperial Gallons, US Gallons etc .
@@peternewman958 stone weight
20 bags to the acre in old lingo
Especially a hard year like this one.
According to google there is 36.74 bushels to 1 metric ton….😅😅😅😅
Can you get me a job on that farm I’m planning to go to Australia next month
Bags to the acre i can understand. Tonnes to the hectare are like a foreign language. Need the calculator.
It was bags back when I was a kid but we changed over somewhere over the years😂
21.6
where are you guys from
Straylia .
what town@@stewatparkpark2933
Hi mate, we are from northern NSW👍😁
yeah righto@@thejacksonbrothers
Those led lights on the Challenger opens up the night for you
Can you get me a job on that farm I’m planning to go to Australia next month