Can we ask for more? This man shows his successes and his mistakes. I can’t say failure because it’s gonna recover. How do I know? Because Greg Judy said so!! Thank you Greg for being a positive example to everyone who will take the time to listen. 👍🏻
Typical pasture around here is a lot shorter than that. 30 inches of rain and pastures are burnt up by end of july. Rolling bales to feed cattle on land that is generating no money. Greg your blowing up! You were at a few hundred subs not to long ago!! Good job keep up the good work!
Greg, I’d love to see the two sides too. Jim Elizondo, who I’m sure you know, suggests this “non-selective” grazing is how it should be done because of the forage diversity that results. So, for those of us not in fescue country I’d love to understand your take on the balance... especially for stockers, etc.
I noticed some perimeter and inner fence rows in the background of this video. If these fence rows are charged when the sheep are in the paddock, do you make adjustments to allow them to graze these rows to keep them from overgrowing with brush? This would most likely apply to perimeter fences. Thanks for the video.
I am from Australia and our summers are hot and dry, you have green grass in summer when even our grass on the side of our roads is dry , I love what you do , just want to plan our farm in our environment . What are the key things that you should think I should do Love your site
Can we ask for more? This man shows his successes and his mistakes. I can’t say failure because it’s gonna recover. How do I know? Because Greg Judy said so!! Thank you Greg for being a positive example to everyone who will take the time to listen. 👍🏻
Typical pasture around here is a lot shorter than that. 30 inches of rain and pastures are burnt up by end of july. Rolling bales to feed cattle on land that is generating no money.
Greg your blowing up! You were at a few hundred subs not to long ago!! Good job keep up the good work!
That’s really interesting getting to see a side by side comparison of overgrazing vs perfect residual pasture!
Thank you for teaching so well
God Bless You!
Greg...please do a video of this paddock in 60 days so we can follow it and see if it grows back fine, which I expect it will.
It will be the best paddock in our next rotation
Greg, I’d love to see the two sides too. Jim Elizondo, who I’m sure you know, suggests this “non-selective” grazing is how it should be done because of the forage diversity that results. So, for those of us not in fescue country I’d love to understand your take on the balance... especially for stockers, etc.
@@gregjudyregenerativerancher Cool, thanks!
yep a follow up at 30-60-90 would be great.
Please do show us!
Very helpful Greg. Thank you.
You’re the best teacher! Thank hou
Thanks for passing this knowledge along! Tim @ Cliffside Acres
Very interesting perspective!!!
Over grazed , or over stocked - either one will have this results .
I enjoy your videos .
Wow I had no clue ……thanks Greg
Thank you!
I noticed some perimeter and inner fence rows in the background of this video. If these fence rows are charged when the sheep are in the paddock, do you make adjustments to allow them to graze these rows to keep them from overgrowing with brush? This would most likely apply to perimeter fences. Thanks for the video.
Magnificent! Thank-you!
I am from Australia and our summers are hot and dry, you have green grass in summer when even our grass on the side of our roads is dry ,
I love what you do , just want to plan our farm in our environment .
What are the key things that you should think I should do
Love your site
@The Doctor didn't expect the ending to your reply. But i was thinking about the same thing haha. 🐻
Graeme Hand has an excellent presentation on Regenerative Grazing for Australian conditions. th-cam.com/video/_riEUde0g8g/w-d-xo.html
I just watched a video where the farmer put his cows in a contraption so he could shave their hooves. Is this necessary? God bless!
That is crazy, just remember that when you feed cattle grain, that grows hoof and horn!!!!!!
@@gregjudyregenerativerancher Thanks!
They mostly trim dairy cattle cause there on cement 24/7 and have a lot of foot problems
What a difference that made!
After you get the cows out of the paddock do you drag the manure or just leave it there to decompose
Leave it alone.
I have reading some .I read come back farms is there any other author's you recommend .
Greg Do you have to go on to your pastures and break up the piles of manure or is that total taken care of by nature??
From what I understand In other videos he has said he don't do anything to them and it takes care of itself.
Good info.
Will the cattle eat the horse nettle?
No ours will not eat it
My goats ate it after it was cut and dried before it went to seed
do you ever let your pasture grow tall?
Can you film this pasture before it gets grazed again. It would be nice to see the effect
I suspect that if you added 30 to 40% larger area for this paddock that this would of worked out ok.
Overgrazing a piece would be okay if you did it for the purpose of overseeding, ideally right before a thumping good heavy rain
hope the sheep are doing well sir.
Where's your article in pH? There's no context for your talking about that here.