I took your advice and turned around and went back where we started. First year I have been about to completely let a whole farm rest. Thanks to non-selective grazing methods. Glory to God!
We film at 4K 60fps with our iPhones. It smooths out your film so detail can be seen with the movement. It will help us see the litter and grass better when you’re walking or panning👍 Btw I was pulling my hair out too until I realized that warm seasons are springs and won’t lay down no matter what. Great video topic. Thanks
I think it’s so cool that with you Regen guys, your knowledge is gained by walking the pastures every day, seeing what they eat, seeing how the forage responds etc., and not about what chemicals to put in the cattle or on the fields.
Yes we are very interested in learn how you teach new cattle to the hot fence. Ours have never been around electric fence. So we want to start easy with them. They are docile, Hereford. We are in North Texas.
Very sorry. I get so caught up in what I’m saying that I get a bit crazy with the camera. Never been motion sick so I forget that others need a steadier hand
The founder and first director at Peace Valley Nature Center pointed out that critter paths in nature are usually a meandering, windy, curvy path. She never wanted a walkung trail to be straight.
Yessir! Best thing ive tried yet was grazing this hard. Didnt cover 50% of the place this year and have already returned to where i started. You seen season long stockpile with red clover dominant stand? It is ridiculous think this year. Already laid down and started growing upward again. Its beaufitul. 2024 is the year ive been looking for since 2020. So much precipitation.
@grazing365 yeah man! Still haven't touched the back half. It's wholly lookin though. Top of the ground back there looks like cottage cheese. All kinds of roots on surface. Next year though, depending on how wrll the full-season stockpiled ground does this winter, I may resort to haying it. Lots of time left for good cool seasons to come up thru the mess. I have a chicory and horsenettle problem back there. Thought I'd got rid of the horsenettle a couple years ago. Bur it came thru the dead clover mat stronger than I've ever seen. I'm hoping it's serving a much needed soil function. Currently trying to knock these c4 grasses back on the front half I've been grazing to allow fescue to come up thru and stockpile. If i can get across it in time it should work our great. Needing more cows. Lol.
There’s a couple missing switches and one with almost the entire tail gone. The cow with the missing tail arrived that way. She was a roped out heifer, so I assume it’s rodeo related. The missing tail switches occurred during winter and I’m not sure the cause other than really cold weather. Neither cow had any fescue stockpile or hay. 🤷♂️
I took your advice and turned around and went back where we started.
First year I have been about to completely let a whole farm rest. Thanks to non-selective grazing methods.
Glory to God!
That’s awesome! Thanks for sharing that. Made my day
We film at 4K 60fps with our iPhones. It smooths out your film so detail can be seen with the movement. It will help us see the litter and grass better when you’re walking or panning👍 Btw I was pulling my hair out too until I realized that warm seasons are springs and won’t lay down no matter what. Great video topic. Thanks
Started this as well
I think it’s so cool that with you Regen guys, your knowledge is gained by walking the pastures every day, seeing what they eat, seeing how the forage responds etc., and not about what chemicals to put in the cattle or on the fields.
Thanks. It’s definitely an advantage being in the herd and pasture daily
Very important episode.
Thanks
Great Information Thank You
Glad it was helpful!
Awesome! Thank you for the content. Definitely want that video series
You got it!
Yes we are very interested in learn how you teach new cattle to the hot fence. Ours have never been around electric fence. So we want to start easy with them. They are docile, Hereford. We are in North Texas.
Coming soon!
Good evening, I like the content and the message. we are similarly grazing. Just a tip, it hard to watch with the camera spinning around so fast.
I’m gonna faint! 😂
Very sorry. I get so caught up in what I’m saying that I get a bit crazy with the camera. Never been motion sick so I forget that others need a steadier hand
They are sure going after it 😮 It should recover great 😊! Love your videos
Thank you!
The founder and first director at Peace Valley Nature Center pointed out that critter paths in nature are usually a meandering, windy, curvy path. She never wanted a walkung trail to be straight.
In bucks county pa
@richardspeakes2883 Yes. Carolyn "Corey" Jarin
Yessir! Best thing ive tried yet was grazing this hard. Didnt cover 50% of the place this year and have already returned to where i started.
You seen season long stockpile with red clover dominant stand? It is ridiculous think this year. Already laid down and started growing upward again. Its beaufitul. 2024 is the year ive been looking for since 2020. So much precipitation.
Great job! Good luck. Still going well?
@grazing365 yeah man! Still haven't touched the back half. It's wholly lookin though. Top of the ground back there looks like cottage cheese. All kinds of roots on surface.
Next year though, depending on how wrll the full-season stockpiled ground does this winter, I may resort to haying it. Lots of time left for good cool seasons to come up thru the mess. I have a chicory and horsenettle problem back there. Thought I'd got rid of the horsenettle a couple years ago. Bur it came thru the dead clover mat stronger than I've ever seen. I'm hoping it's serving a much needed soil function.
Currently trying to knock these c4 grasses back on the front half I've been grazing to allow fescue to come up thru and stockpile. If i can get across it in time it should work our great.
Needing more cows. Lol.
Hey Ben the lord is blessing you
Thanks
Hey, Ben. Can you clarify "grazing season" in your Grazing 365 system/method?
Growing season is spring flush-fall flush
😊
❤❤VIDEO ❤❤great information ❤❤
Glad you liked it!!
Why does the cow have her tail cut off
Likely fescue toxicosis
There’s a couple missing switches and one with almost the entire tail gone. The cow with the missing tail arrived that way. She was a roped out heifer, so I assume it’s rodeo related. The missing tail switches occurred during winter and I’m not sure the cause other than really cold weather. Neither cow had any fescue stockpile or hay. 🤷♂️
@@grazing365 I messed up and put my cattle on some really hot fescue, had a couple girls get foot sore and slipped a tail on a steer. Rookie stuff😁
@tickcreekranch you sure aren’t alone in that! I make rookie mistakes every day!