Roy Barton & Dennis Ward: Dirty Hands Farm - Notes From the Hometown Roadshow
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 29 ก.ย. 2024
- We met Roy Barton of Dirty Hands Farm when he shared one of our clips to show his community how he approaches the health of his soils, family, and community.
Roy and his father-in-law were kind enough to share their experience with adaptive multi-paddock (AMP) grazing in Northern Florida, and the conceptual challenges new regenerative farmers can face as they embrace nature.
According to Roy, his land is healthier, his pests are down, and his faith in the future couldn’t be higher.
One of the benefits of going Regenerative is that we're not supporting Wall Street, by continually putting out money for all the synthetics needed to run a conventional farm/ranch. Conventional farming only enriches the multi-millionaires/billionaires.
100%
Exactly, we need much much more non support of Wall St.
I love how he stood up for his belief at the end about how old the earth is. He got an atta boy from me. But I also appreciate how Peter accepted it and allowed for different people to do regen ag for different reasons. Being better stewards of God's creation is a great reason.
Thanks for the shout-out Roy!!! We're wide open up here in NC
darn it, you guys made me tear up again! what a beautiful conversation. hats off to all of you for the change you are bringing, one farm at a time. 👏 👏 👏 👏 ❤
Hello from Milton, FL! I'm learning so much about this farming method and love it.
Love the chicken clean up crew!
So happy to hear that they are processing now!
Buying the processing plant was so smart. Thank you.
I'm down in Citrus County and it's getting too crouded for my liking. I'm thinking of moving north but not quite that north. Maybe I'll concider it.
Ummm I don’t mean to be nit picky here, birds are important. But I think brown headed cowbirds are the ones who hijack other nests. And throw away native birds eggs. Anyone experts out there? I reckon it means you have abundance though!!
What a wonderful interview......he is content, happy, resolute and directed to do what is best for the land and his cows, chicken and pork are benefactors of his efforts.
It's always exciting to hear directly form the farmers and ranchers driving this movement forward!
I'm curious how to respond to friends of mine in Tennessee who say there aren't quail because the coyotes and foxes are eating them. This after I pointed out that the regen rancher in Georgia (I believe) who had them while his neighbor across the road didn't. I suppose they're the typical skeptics, but I sure would like to convince them otherwise. Thank you for all the wonderful info you're providing!
If you're in Tennessee, Sequatchie Cove is one of the AMP farmers featured in our documentary, and they have public events through the year that can show people what is possible! www.sequatchiecovefarm.com/
That's great! I'll share this with them!
Really cool to see this farm…. And to hear the local comment! Keep it up guys!
Casually doxs the dude. But this really is the future of farming.
This is so exciting, makes me want to be a young man and try farming.
Wait a minute, what was with the random birthday balloons?
Zoom has some weird filters these days...
@@carboncowboys Not mad at it, it was just so out of left field in the context of the conversation. I thought I was seeing things.
I'm not sure I'd eat snowpea forage from a paddock grazed one day before....😅
Tradition is peer-pressure from dead people.😂😂😂 Some times its best to keep learning versus blindly following tradition, but tradition can also be learned from.