That brings back some memories from bailing at Grandpa's farm. 80 bails a wagon. First time I drove the tractor for grandpa I tipped over the wagon of bales going around a corner to fast. My uncle said that was ok but made me pick up every bale, I was only 10 so that was a very long day. Taught me a good lesson for life. Slow down and do it right the first time. Thanks for posting.
I had a similar first tractor driving experience. My uncle said “whatever you do don’t press that pedal” (the clutch) I was barely tall enough to reach it. So what did I do at the end of a row? Instead of turning into the next row I pushed in on the clutch to stop.. only prob was I had never been taught how to release a clutch. I was relieved of my tractor driving duties shortly thereafter.
Hi Eric, great video, great watching bailing "old school". Helped unload many wagon load when younger, spent all summer on dairy farm in Perry county. Great times and memories!!
It takes a real man to bale hay in shorts. Even in jeans my legs would get cut up. Great video as always Eric. I just love how calm your cows are. It shows great animal husbandry skills. Well done.
@SamSpade Eric's dad several videos back was wearing crocs while walking around in manure😆 alot of peopl commented on that video about the choice shoes to wear
Back in 1970 I started using a 24T John Deere baler, behind a 820 John Deere tractor. Some of the fondest memories now, not so much back then, but it sure did teach me a lot, do mostly big rounds now. I enjoy watching you guys work, you keep busy and get the job done, no time to mess around, I like that. Keep up the hard work, thanks for sharing, have a wonderful remainder of the week.
😂the way the bales were shooting out of the baler shute. They must be pretty light. Most of the small bales we use to make just plopped off the end they were so heavy. Sometimes it took 2 to lift them. Small bales still have a place on farm. Great for propping up and feeding sick cows, feed horses, garden, feed to calves, seats to sit on, nesting material for chickens.
I am glad to see that water way is giving back to the farm. I remember just a short time ago you digging it out laying down top soil and that fabric that the pup was helping you guys roll-out. Today you harvest your first hay...that's success in my book. Thanks again Eric, Aloha🤙
Dutches made me laugh out loud with her “broom attack mode”. And it brought back memories of a dog that I had on my farm years ago that hated booms with a passion too. Great video as always! And thanks for letting me ride along.
I worked on a small dairy farm in the summer time. Loved it and the animals. when changing water pipes to next area I had to watch Mrs. friendly would try and get me bent over so she could knock me down. she thought that was fun. I loved all the animals I worked with. thanks for sharing you life with us. God bless.
Love the segment featuring the "small bale". That was our method for all our haying on our small family dairy farm in eastern Oregon. The rake, the baler, the flatbed wagon... yep that was all we had. Didn't love it as a teenager early 1970s, but it was our family's life... dad and 5 sons did it all. We eventually acquired a bale wagon to make the job a wee bit easier... that was about the time I went off to college. Oh the memories, as I watch your videos. Quite an evolution of everything in the past 50 years.
Brings back memories of me stacking wagons with hay when I was 10 years old. My uncle used to say stacking hay makes a man out of you. Lol I still remember the blisters and sore arms.
Great video! Dad does a nice job as a stunt man. Hope you get the robots working for you. Always impressed with the cleanliness of your facilities. Thanks for the video Eric!
Only thing missing is the tobacco harvesting and you'd have how I spent my summers in the early '60's as a kid from the inner city working on a dairy/tobacco farm in East Earl! The tobacco plants were hand cut, then speared onto wooden slats (think fencing used at beaches) and finally loaded onto flat trailers with hangers installed where the tobacco would hang upside down while being transported to the barn. Nothing has changed very much (with the exception of AC in the tractor cabins) in the 50 years since my stint on that farm. Hay was raked and baled the same way, but we towed a flatbed behind the baler instead of picking up the bales off the ground. Stacked them bales pretty darn high too! Hard work for a kid, but it was fulfilling as I think back to my youth. Thanks for showcasing what you do Eric! 👍
i too had memories brought back. wow its bin a while. im 65 now. was around 5 and not strong enough to buck bails yet so i drove the truck. always was tall for my age so no problem reaching the pedals. by 10 i was stacking on the bed and my sister was driving. thanks for the video it really enjoyed it.
Your getting close to the 500 thousandth sub!!! So cool to watch your channel grow from that boom of subs you got a couple years ago. So crazy to think by fall this will be the 3rd harvest I have watched.
brings back fond memories of halloween hayrides from one small farm town to another etc in southern ILL and hayloft parties in my teens. Also manually stacking small square bales while in high school in the 70s
It amazes me how much you have to remember about whatever piece of equipment your using. For instance the shaft that can be flipped to give more or less rpm’s. I’d be walking around with the user’s manual all the time. But them I’m old and can’t remember what I had for dinner last night! Always enjoy your videos. Keep up the good work.
After we got our Case swather, we did not do a lot of raking hay, more so with straw because the combine left the straw in a rather wide windrow. I see they improved the jack stand you yours, ours had this crazy spring loaded one that would spring to full length when you pulled away. To hook it up to the draw bar, you had to have someone jump up and down on the hitch end to get the spring stand to retract down enough to draw bar height.
Bailing machines are fascinating. The farm machinery in general is amazing. combined harvesters for me are just slightly behind bailers. then probably seeders.. all amazing. Thanks Eric for uploading. and thanks 'dad' (name?) also.
This channel was a good find. Let's hope Eric keeps his style with a growing number of subscribers and not start fixing what's not broken. And freaking thank you for not adding a background music. It's an annoying and unnecessary trend plaguing the majority of video content. My only suggestion is to consider uploading in higher resolution. 4k would be nice. Cheers from Israel
As a teen I worked on my uncles farm here in Texas. We did custom baling mostly alfalfa, 75lb bales. We trailered all bales never dropped them. I thought it was fun back then.
When I was 14 I spent the Summer walking hwys picking up bales like that and stacking them on a trailer, then restacking on the ground. Hard, hot work, but I am glad I did it. Damn hard work, really low pay, room, board, great food and beer on Friday nights. It was a different time.
Eric, I love how you give your cows a chance to make a comeback, that’s awesome. A lot of the dairies by me just get rid of them like an old pair of shoes. Not what God intended. “ I check the hydraulic fluid level… now and then…” lol… that’s like writing on the filter, changed sometime last year… I needed that laugh, thank you so much!
Beautiful happy Momma Cows and a bit spoiled. :) You and Dad do an amazing job and the farm is always so immaculately groomed. Crops looking great too. God Bless your Family.
I can sure remember the square bales ,on the dairy farm that I worked had the power conveyor that shot them into a automated wagon that had conveyors only time we touched the bales was to put on the conveyor to the barn then stack in the mow. But when I helped the other neighbor bale it was a very different story all by hand all 140,000 bales each cutting
Summer job memories from a long time ago. Dad's little friend is a good worker. I think her name's Stella? Little Jack must be growing too. Busy hands makes life beautiful. Cheers 🇨🇦
Man I just realized I've been watching your channel for a couple of years!! I feel like a farmer!! Thanks bro for always inviting us into your world definitely 💯
I remember taking up hay when I was a kid at my uncles diary farm. Some bails would be heavy as hell, the others light. The hard part wasn't the fields, it was throwing the bails up in the hay barn. I'd be up on that stack in the barn and it would be 120+. I was 13-14 at the time and it turned my into a young buck quick.
When we got an electric chain driven bale conveyor to carry the bales from the hayrack up into the haymow, my uncles worried that such an 'extravagant luxury' would prevent us farm boys from becoming men! They shut up quick when we suggested that they come and show us how 'real men' tossed bales. We had a long haymow with a big door at each end. If you were lucky and there was a bit of a breeze, you could open both doors and get some ventilation -- that kept the temp only about 100 or so. If you filled it right, you could leave a middle aisle open for a breeze until late in the season, when it was nearly fall anyway and not so hot.
Where do you get all of your energy young man? You just keep going, whatever needs to be done, you do it. With NO complaining. ( I hope you don't go home and complain to your wife1 ha ha) What a great example. You better plan a big celebration when you reach 400K viewers...it is coming soon. Love to see the older machines come out...I remember using them. And great video work. I know that takes a lot of extra time. Great work in every way. God's peace be with you and your family.
This brought back memories of when we had our horses and we fed them them square bales along with their regular grain. We didn’t grow our own hay but we went to someone else’s farm and picked it up out of the field. So I did my share of hauling hay every summer.
Hey that's great video hey Dad you ought to become a videographer for you were getting some good shots and them bails coming out of that machine remind me when I helped on the farms great shot man keep up the good work and all of you stay safe down there my friends in Pennsylvania God bless 👍👍🇺🇲🇺🇲✌️
When I was about 5 (almost 70 years ago) I watched my grandfather drive the wagon and my dad and uncle load the bails by hand. I still remember thinking this is hard work!
"semi friendly" every cow you own is friendlier than any cow on our 400 head commercial beef herd lol, ours are tame for commercials, meaning none wanna eat you
So for the last 2 years I've only watched Cole the Cornstar and after finding you it's good to see the other side of farming where does strictly corn and soybeans and you do dairy cows. It's a very cool line of work.
this gave me flashback 2 baling hay with grandfather, stacking n hay loft while fighting black & red wasp ... GOOD TIMES ... wouldn't trade the memories for anything !!!
That's the bailing I remeber!! Then tossing it on the wagon, then stacking it, then off onto a conveyor that took it up and dropped it where we stacked it again!!! That was a ton of work.. only to repeat it dormant days!!
Nice video Eric, thank you for showing the work and functions on the farm. I have seen other farm videos that the only thing I see is their faces talking, that gets real boring and annoying. Nice video. Phoenix still dry, but hot, supposed to hit 109'F today. 😩
Good to see you doing old fashion dairy farming work baling (no two i's). trouble with alley scrapers; break out the Hydro 84. I see your parlour has no turn gates. Is hard to get cows lined up to fill that side?
Getting ready for the church barn party. Awsome you take time to do that. Plus there is a swing in that barn as well right? I have hauled many of bail by hand like you guys did. We did that to make money in HS.
Our original baler did not have the bale thrower..I used to ride the wagon with a bale hook and pull them off the baler unto the wagon, (once I was strong enough)..we stacked the bales the same way..then into the hay barn (over the cow barn). More throwing and stacking..you were tired and dirty at the end of the day…look back fondly at those days…
That’s not a lot of hay but it beats a snowball. I used that same rake years ago. when I was a teenager hauling hay for other people was how I made my weekend spending money when we weren’t real busy on our farm.
Hello Eric its been awhile and I'd like to see a new Q&A with you and your dad alot has happened on the farm since your last one. Just an idea I know you guys are busy busy busy but I'm sure alot of fans would like to see an updated episode with you both, also what is the pups name?
We still make a few little bales in a couple of fields close to the river where we can’t get the big gear down there. Back in the 80’s we were making thousands of the buggers. Long, tough but awesome days as a young kid!
Hello sir. I've been watching the video for a month or so, and i had a question about what you do with excessed processed dairy. I actually work in a fieldthat utilizes excess dairy and through a DAF machine and chemical process into water. I was wondering where the product comes from and if you have any experience with that in your area?
If you put the side rake on a draw bar across the 3 point hitch you can raise and lower it easily on the go. That way if it's. It picking up enough you can just lower it from the seat a little or if you come across a rough area like Ground Hog or Gopher holes you can raise it up.
Love the videos Eric! Really sorry if this sounds critical, but can anyone tell me why you guys in North America don't use pick up hitches rather than a drawbar and pin? Its so much safer and quicker!
Farming fascinates me. I'd do anything to get a job on a bigger farm. BUT are you telling me it's a pin connect for most things??idk why I was always under the assumption all attachments were like a ball hook on a regular trailer. Learn something new everyday, even at 6am lol. Thanks man. Love the vids
FACINATING ,,,, THANK YOU FOR YOUR DEDICATION AND PASSION THAT YOU BRING TO THOUSANDS OF US,,,, WELL DONE 👍,,, PLEASE BE SAFE AND HEALTHY,,, THANK YOU 🙏 AGAIN,,, JUST A SUPER CHANNEL,,,, !!!
Ha!!! Those girls have a very high quality of life thanks to you and your family Eric. What a beautiful herd of Holsteins. By the way i read the lips of the girls in the special needs pin. You are correct they are loving that new air flow.
That brings back some memories from bailing at Grandpa's farm. 80 bails a wagon. First time I drove the tractor for grandpa I tipped over the wagon of bales going around a corner to fast. My uncle said that was ok but made me pick up every bale, I was only 10 so that was a very long day. Taught me a good lesson for life. Slow down and do it right the first time. Thanks for posting.
I had a similar first tractor driving experience. My uncle said “whatever you do don’t press that pedal” (the clutch) I was barely tall enough to reach it. So what did I do at the end of a row? Instead of turning into the next row I pushed in on the clutch to stop.. only prob was I had never been taught how to release a clutch. I was relieved of my tractor driving duties shortly thereafter.
Usually also resulted in owing a crate of beer especially if you tipped off those sitting on the stack as well. Stacking bales is an art
Did your uncle also touch ur funny part ? Like Mine behind the old shed
Gives me hope for this country seeing a hard working young man like you. Your parents must be so proud.
Hi Eric, great video, great watching bailing "old school". Helped unload many wagon load when younger, spent all summer on dairy farm in Perry county.
Great times and memories!!
Heyyy someone from pa too cool stuff dude!
It takes a real man to bale hay in shorts. Even in jeans my legs would get cut up. Great video as always Eric. I just love how calm your cows are. It shows great animal husbandry skills. Well done.
10 generations of knowledge passed down... I'd expect it no less
i just wanted to ask do cows feel pain when it's removed thrgh machines, it makes me very sad n how often is a single cow milked?
@SamSpade Eric's dad several videos back was wearing crocs while walking around in manure😆 alot of peopl commented on that video about the choice shoes to wear
@SRT No the cows do not feel pain as the cluster is removed, because the vacuum is switched off. If it caused pain, the cows would not tolerate it
@@srt4853 no, it's relief. Cows like being milked idk where vegans come up with miss information that they use to push there agenda
Back in 1970 I started using a 24T John Deere baler, behind a 820 John Deere tractor. Some of the fondest memories now, not so much back then, but it sure did teach me a lot, do mostly big rounds now. I enjoy watching you guys work, you keep busy and get the job done, no time to mess around, I like that. Keep up the hard work, thanks for sharing, have a wonderful remainder of the week.
Have u tried the new t1000
@@imissme8313 No I sure haven't, have you?
@@Dan-qy1rg it’s a killer machine ;)
😂the way the bales were shooting out of the baler shute. They must be pretty light. Most of the small bales we use to make just plopped off the end they were so heavy. Sometimes it took 2 to lift them. Small bales still have a place on farm. Great for propping up and feeding sick cows, feed horses, garden, feed to calves, seats to sit on, nesting material for chickens.
I am glad to see that water way is giving back to the farm. I remember just a short time ago you digging it out laying down top soil and that fabric that the pup was helping you guys roll-out. Today you harvest your first hay...that's success in my book. Thanks again Eric, Aloha🤙
Dutches made me laugh out loud with her “broom attack mode”. And it brought back memories of a dog that I had on my farm years ago that hated booms with a passion too. Great video as always! And thanks for letting me ride along.
I worked on a small dairy farm in the summer time. Loved it and the animals. when changing water pipes to next area I had to watch Mrs. friendly would try and get me bent over so she could knock me down. she thought that was fun. I loved all the animals I worked with. thanks for sharing you life with us. God bless.
Love the segment featuring the "small bale". That was our method for all our haying on our small family dairy farm in eastern Oregon. The rake, the baler, the flatbed wagon... yep that was all we had. Didn't love it as a teenager early 1970s, but it was our family's life... dad and 5 sons did it all. We eventually acquired a bale wagon to make the job a wee bit easier... that was about the time I went off to college. Oh the memories, as I watch your videos. Quite an evolution of everything in the past 50 years.
Wow, that brought back some memories. That kicker was state of the art in its day. Saved a lot of work.
Brings back memories of me stacking wagons with hay when I was 10 years old. My uncle used to say stacking hay makes a man out of you. Lol
I still remember the blisters and sore arms.
Bales of straw in my opinion were lighter but left the skin in some shape
@@acorndogs904yes straw IS VERY MUCH LIGHTER hay is much more dense especially more heavy when it’s wet
Great video! Dad does a nice job as a stunt man. Hope you get the robots working for you. Always impressed with the cleanliness of your facilities. Thanks for the video Eric!
Only thing missing is the tobacco harvesting and you'd have how I spent my summers in the early '60's as a kid from the inner city working on a dairy/tobacco farm in East Earl! The tobacco plants were hand cut, then speared onto wooden slats (think fencing used at beaches) and finally loaded onto flat trailers with hangers installed where the tobacco would hang upside down while being transported to the barn. Nothing has changed very much (with the exception of AC in the tractor cabins) in the 50 years since my stint on that farm. Hay was raked and baled the same way, but we towed a flatbed behind the baler instead of picking up the bales off the ground. Stacked them bales pretty darn high too! Hard work for a kid, but it was fulfilling as I think back to my youth. Thanks for showcasing what you do Eric! 👍
That square baling reminded me so much more of what I watched my uncle and cousins doing half a century ago! Felt real nostalgic.
I m following this channel since last three years I always found Eric committed to his daily tasks. Well done guy
Same!
I was like wow! Thats a long time..... then I looked and saw, same here! Time flies!
It's a rough life at times, but a good life! There's no day's off on the dairy farm
Thanks Eric for a great video. Great to see both you and your dad. God Bless you and the entire family.
i too had memories brought back. wow its bin a while. im 65 now. was around 5 and not strong enough to buck bails yet so i drove the truck. always was tall for my age so no problem reaching the pedals. by 10 i was stacking on the bed and my sister was driving. thanks for the video it really enjoyed it.
really Awesome cideo Eric. Love seeing your dad and your dads puppy. Thank you guy for all that y'all do .
Great action shots by your Dad catching those bales shooting out. Kudos to him! Fun stuff.
Your getting close to the 500 thousandth sub!!! So cool to watch your channel grow from that boom of subs you got a couple years ago. So crazy to think by fall this will be the 3rd harvest I have watched.
brings back fond memories of halloween hayrides from one small farm town to another etc in southern ILL and hayloft parties in my teens. Also manually stacking small square bales while in high school in the 70s
It amazes me how much you have to remember about whatever piece of equipment your using. For instance the shaft that can be flipped to give more or less rpm’s. I’d be walking around with the user’s manual all the time. But them I’m old and can’t remember what I had for dinner last night! Always enjoy your videos. Keep up the good work.
After we got our Case swather, we did not do a lot of raking hay, more so with straw because the combine left the straw in a rather wide windrow. I see they improved the jack stand you yours, ours had this crazy spring loaded one that would spring to full length when you pulled away. To hook it up to the draw bar, you had to have someone jump up and down on the hitch end to get the spring stand to retract down enough to draw bar height.
Always love your videos Eric. Nice to be able to tag along with you as you do your work. Thanks.
Bailing machines are fascinating. The farm machinery in general is amazing. combined harvesters for me are just slightly behind bailers. then probably seeders.. all amazing. Thanks Eric for uploading. and thanks 'dad' (name?) also.
This channel was a good find. Let's hope Eric keeps his style with a growing number of subscribers and not start fixing what's not broken.
And freaking thank you for not adding a background music. It's an annoying and unnecessary trend plaguing the majority of video content.
My only suggestion is to consider uploading in higher resolution. 4k would be nice.
Cheers from Israel
Love the way the old baler fires out them small bales!
Nice facility! I've been to about 100+ dairies and yours is definitely one of the nicer one's I've seen. Good for you guys :-)
As a teen I worked on my uncles farm here in Texas. We did custom baling mostly alfalfa, 75lb bales. We trailered all bales never dropped them. I thought it was fun back then.
Did he also touch ur funny bone behind the shed like mine did
I've ben watching you for 3 years and I think your the best farmer ever
When I was 14 I spent the Summer walking hwys picking up bales like that and stacking them on a trailer, then restacking on the ground. Hard, hot work, but I am glad I did it. Damn hard work, really low pay, room, board, great food and beer on Friday nights. It was a different time.
Eric, I love how you give your cows a chance to make a comeback, that’s awesome. A lot of the dairies by me just get rid of them like an old pair of shoes. Not what God intended.
“ I check the hydraulic fluid level… now and then…” lol… that’s like writing on the filter, changed sometime last year…
I needed that laugh, thank you so much!
so what happens if they don't make a comeback
@@srt4853 McDonald’s
@@detroitdieselpower1 I know that's what happens generally, I was just asking if this guy does any different.
Always a good day when I catch a 10th gen upload the same day
When I see that thing bail hay it just amazes me how that machine can take a bunch of hay make perfect squares out of it. Thanks for the video.
Beautiful happy Momma Cows and a bit spoiled. :) You and Dad do an amazing job and the farm is always so immaculately groomed. Crops looking great too. God Bless your Family.
That shot at 12:55 was superb! Great camera-man
Looks like somebody showed you how to stack a trailer with small bales ,most youngsters nowadays wouldn’t have a clue!
I can sure remember the square bales ,on the dairy farm that I worked had the power conveyor that shot them into a automated wagon that had conveyors only time we touched the bales was to put on the conveyor to the barn then stack in the mow. But when I helped the other neighbor bale it was a very different story all by hand all 140,000 bales each cutting
Summer job memories from a long time ago. Dad's little friend is a good worker.
I think her name's Stella?
Little Jack must be growing too.
Busy hands makes life beautiful.
Cheers 🇨🇦
Great content Eric ,you guys are greatly appreciated by myself and family.
you take great care of your herd of girls, great to see you so committed to your daily chores
Man I just realized I've been watching your channel for a couple of years!! I feel like a farmer!! Thanks bro for always inviting us into your world definitely 💯
I remember taking up hay when I was a kid at my uncles diary farm. Some bails would be heavy as hell, the others light. The hard part wasn't the fields, it was throwing the bails up in the hay barn. I'd be up on that stack in the barn and it would be 120+. I was 13-14 at the time and it turned my into a young buck quick.
When we got an electric chain driven bale conveyor to carry the bales from the hayrack up into the haymow, my uncles worried that such an 'extravagant luxury' would prevent us farm boys from becoming men! They shut up quick when we suggested that they come and show us how 'real men' tossed bales.
We had a long haymow with a big door at each end. If you were lucky and there was a bit of a breeze, you could open both doors and get some ventilation -- that kept the temp only about 100 or so. If you filled it right, you could leave a middle aisle open for a breeze until late in the season, when it was nearly fall anyway and not so hot.
Did he touch u behind the shed too
Cool to see you doing something different!!! I can't think of a video where you bailed hay. Always entertaining and informative!
Boy do I remember stacking hay each year growing up with our horses!!! Loved this!
Where do you get all of your energy young man? You just keep going, whatever needs to be done, you do it. With NO complaining. ( I hope you don't go home and complain to your wife1 ha ha) What a great example. You better plan a big celebration when you reach 400K viewers...it is coming soon. Love to see the older machines come out...I remember using them. And great video work. I know that takes a lot of extra time. Great work in every way. God's peace be with you and your family.
I see 10th Gen walking with a strut while picking those hay bales up ;) he's feeling his physique!! Keep it up man you'll get huge! Believe me!
Back in my day, small square bales was all we had.
I like this type of baling but hauling the wagons is more fun for me
This brought back memories of when we had our horses and we fed them them square bales along with their regular grain. We didn’t grow our own hay but we went to someone else’s farm and picked it up out of the field. So I did my share of hauling hay every summer.
Thank you for keeping America and the world well fed! God bless you and yours. Insert Paul Harvey's God made a farmer!
Amazing lessons that am freely learning about commercial agriculture. Lots of love from 🇺🇬Uganda
Good video! Back in the day I would pull a rake just like that for 40 acres. That old hay equipment works good.
Im a bit new to the channel so I’ve went back and watching videos ranging all the ways back. Love the angles you use for the videos
The cows looked interested in those fresh squares going right past their noses! Lol
hi, love the vid today. this is one of my fav farming channels
I didnt think watching a hay baler would be so interesting... But seeing it throw the bales was really cool
Your Dad did a great job with the camera, shooting the hay bales as they were ejected from the baler!
Hey that's great video hey Dad you ought to become a videographer for you were getting some good shots and them bails coming out of that machine remind me when I helped on the farms great shot man keep up the good work and all of you stay safe down there my friends in Pennsylvania God bless 👍👍🇺🇲🇺🇲✌️
When I was about 5 (almost 70 years ago) I watched my grandfather drive the wagon and my dad and uncle load the bails by hand. I still remember thinking this is hard work!
I agree Josh ...that was quite a bit of hay in that water way great video thanks for your hard work
When people talk bad about the younger generation, I think of this young man and know they are wrong. Love the videos
"semi friendly" every cow you own is friendlier than any cow on our 400 head commercial beef herd lol, ours are tame for commercials, meaning none wanna eat you
Is there any machinery that you use around the farm for something other than it's intended purpose? Love the videos, keep up the good work!
So for the last 2 years I've only watched Cole the Cornstar and after finding you it's good to see the other side of farming where does strictly corn and soybeans and you do dairy cows. It's a very cool line of work.
this gave me flashback 2 baling hay with grandfather, stacking n hay loft while fighting black & red wasp ... GOOD TIMES ... wouldn't trade the memories for anything !!!
That's the bailing I remeber!! Then tossing it on the wagon, then stacking it, then off onto a conveyor that took it up and dropped it where we stacked it again!!! That was a ton of work.. only to repeat it dormant days!!
Nice to see the IH out in the sun ,like a pit pony in the holidays.
Have you looked into pasture cropping and using the cows to spread the manure in the paddocks through rotational grazing
Nice video Eric, thank you for showing the work and functions on the farm. I have seen other farm videos that the only thing I see is their faces talking, that gets real boring and annoying. Nice video. Phoenix still dry, but hot, supposed to hit 109'F today. 😩
Oh my, that puppy is so cute
Hearing that baler work is almost therapeutic… until you need to unload the wagons lol
You dairy man are really hardworking individuals.
A star is born ....more little dog videos...lol
How good it must be to have an open air barn like this! I wish it'd be that for the one i used to go
Good to see you doing old fashion dairy farming work baling (no two i's). trouble with alley scrapers; break out the Hydro 84. I see your parlour has no turn gates. Is hard to get cows lined up to fill that side?
Yeah if we could go back we would put turn gates and a rapid exit in.
Always a good day when I get to watch a 10th gen vid
Hi Eric and dad you’re video is always awesome lots of work you’re both doing I enjoy watching and always you and all your families be safe 🇺🇸🇺🇸
I love how the hay gets tossed out of he Bailer!
Getting ready for the church barn party. Awsome you take time to do that. Plus there is a swing in that barn as well right? I have hauled many of bail by hand like you guys did. We did that to make money in HS.
So I want to hear more about these barn parties.
Hi Eric, of topic a bit but what did you think of the Amazon stick welder for around $100? Worth buying? Thanks and you have best channel on TH-cam
Our original baler did not have the bale thrower..I used to ride the wagon with a bale hook and pull them off the baler unto the wagon, (once I was strong enough)..we stacked the bales the same way..then into the hay barn (over the cow barn). More throwing and stacking..you were tired and dirty at the end of the day…look back fondly at those days…
That’s not a lot of hay but it beats a snowball. I used that same rake years ago. when I was a teenager hauling hay for other people was how I made my weekend spending money when we weren’t real busy on our farm.
Hello Eric its been awhile and I'd like to see a new Q&A with you and your dad alot has happened on the farm since your last one. Just an idea I know you guys are busy busy busy but I'm sure alot of fans would like to see an updated episode with you both, also what is the pups name?
LOVE ALL YOUR VIDEOS ERIC
We still make a few little bales in a couple of fields close to the river where we can’t get the big gear down there. Back in the 80’s we were making thousands of the buggers. Long, tough but awesome days as a young kid!
Hello sir. I've been watching the video for a month or so, and i had a question about what you do with excessed processed dairy. I actually work in a fieldthat utilizes excess dairy and through a DAF machine and chemical process into water. I was wondering where the product comes from and if you have any experience with that in your area?
Small square bailing is how we did it when I worked on the farm in high school. Course, this was back in the 70's lol.
I've never seen a single axle hay wagon before. That looks like about the most dangerous piece of equipment you guys have!
If you put the side rake on a draw bar across the 3 point hitch you can raise and lower it easily on the go. That way if it's. It picking up enough you can just lower it from the seat a little or if you come across a rough area like Ground Hog or Gopher holes you can raise it up.
Love the videos Eric! Really sorry if this sounds critical, but can anyone tell me why you guys in North America don't use pick up hitches rather than a drawbar and pin? Its so much safer and quicker!
Farming fascinates me. I'd do anything to get a job on a bigger farm. BUT are you telling me it's a pin connect for most things??idk why I was always under the assumption all attachments were like a ball hook on a regular trailer. Learn something new everyday, even at 6am lol. Thanks man. Love the vids
Bailing is my fav videos , I was so happy to see a new one from u hehe, can u also post like 10 videos a day? I really love them thank u big fan
FACINATING ,,,, THANK YOU FOR YOUR DEDICATION AND PASSION THAT YOU BRING TO THOUSANDS OF US,,,, WELL DONE 👍,,, PLEASE BE SAFE AND HEALTHY,,, THANK YOU 🙏 AGAIN,,, JUST A SUPER CHANNEL,,,, !!!
How do you make sure to not get gravel in with the feed to the Heifers? Would them eating any cause their teeth to crack?
Love the vids man been watching for 2 years now failed to miss one yet love from Nottingham uk
Ha!!! Those girls have a very high quality of life thanks to you and your family Eric. What a beautiful herd of Holsteins. By the way i read the lips of the girls in the special needs pin. You are correct they are loving that new air flow.
Seem like your dad is finally getting comfortable with the camera. Lots of love:)